|
By Jacquie Tyre
“Hear ye! Hear ye! Starting next month City Community Church will embark upon a new and exciting ministry. Prepare now to be a part and see the blessings of God pour out through this new work!”
“Prepare now . . . ?” How do I do that?
Does this scenario sound familiar to you? Whether you are a pastor, lay leader, or member of a congregation, opportunities for church-wide involvement come along almost weekly. We usually think of roles like teaching, serving, greeting, gathering or preparing supplies, contacting people, set-up, or clean-up as ways to be involved. But what about mobilizing people to pray before, during, and after the event?
Such moments within church life are optimum times to initiate a new
emphasis on prayer. Whether it’s an outreach event, a new ministry
focus, a stewardship campaign, a sermon series, or a citywide call for
evangelism, this can be an opportunity to engage your congregation in
purposeful, strategic prayer. How? By developing or using an existing
all-church prayer initiative.
What’s an all-church prayer initiative? It is a plan where an entire
congregation (or multiple congregations in a city or nation) are all
praying on the same theme for a set period of time (often one week, a
month, or 40 days, though it can be any length of time that suits your
church). Prayer guides are developed to provide content for a
congregation to pray together. Praying through the Window and Pray!
World are two initiatives that may be familiar to you. The most popular
prayer initiative available today is Seek God for the City, which runs 40 days prior to Palm Sunday each year.
Why hold a prayer initiative? Aside from the tremendous blessing of
God that is released when the body prays together, prayer initiatives
provide a number of benefits to a congregation. First, they bring a
sense of unity in purpose. Second, they will have a long-range effect
on the corporate prayer life of your church. Each time an initiative is
held, a number of your people will get excited about prayer and will
continue to participate in prayer opportunities after the initiative is
over. You will see your ongoing prayer ministries grow following an
initiative.
How do you do an initiative? It’s not difficult! All you need is a
focus, a person who is willing to pray and listen for the Holy Spirit’s
direction and communicate it to the congregation, and a pastor who will
encourage and support the initiative.
Our Story
A few years ago, our church began a stewardship campaign to raise
funds to construct a new sanctuary, fellowship hall, and education
space. Our goal was to have 25 percent of the total cost in hand before
beginning construction. Wisely, the stewardship committee told us that
our prayers for the project would provide the foundation for success.
Teams were set up to oversee the various aspects of the campaign,
including hospitality, printing, information meetings, publicity, and
prayer. The prayer team set to work to develop and distribute a
stewardship prayer focus that would match the campaign theme, “Growing
Up Together . . . In Step with God.”
For several weeks, the weekly church bulletin included a prayer
focus insert with an introductory teaching, Scripture, application, and
prayer point for each day. We also listed specific prayer requests
related to the overall project. Our primary emphasis was not on raising
money, but on growing in grace and maturity as people of God. We asked
Him to prepare our hearts to obey the Holy Spirit’s leading when the
time came to make our pledges of finances and service.
The stewardship campaign concluded successfully, with a higher than
expected percentage of participation. Actual giving exceeded the
pledges made! But perhaps more important was that our people grew in
prayer, both personally and corporately, and we took steps to “grow up
together . . . in step with God.”
Throughout this time, our pastor and church leaders used parts of
the prayer initiative in a variety of ways: for the pastoral prayer,
during corporate prayer times, in announcements, and testifying answers
to prayer. During this prayer initiative, we found that corporate
prayer agreement increased within the congregation. As we followed the
prayer emphasis for the week in our personal prayer times, the Holy
Spirit wove a beautiful tapestry of insight, revelation, and
understanding when we came together for prayer.
How to Begin
A number of prayer guides are available to help you mobilize people
to pray. However, developing your own program that focuses on the needs
of your congregation often provides the relevance that sparks prayer.
Here are some action steps for developing a prayer-mobilizing
initiative for your congregation. While an individual can do this
alone, working with a team has tremendous benefits. If you are working
alone, make sure you seek out people who will honestly critique what
you are developing during the process.
- Pray. Seek the Lord’s timing, wisdom, and favor on
what to do. Then proceed with faith and assurance that He loves to hear
His people praying.
- Contact your pastor, or the designated prayer leader, and discuss the idea.
Any church-wide prayer initiative must have the approval and
participation of the church leadership to be a success. Without it, the
core pray-ers will engage, but the majority will not be mobilized
effectively.
- Choose an emphasis. For your first effort,
consider something that has broad appeal or impact. Big events like
vacation Bible school, backyard clubs, youth missions trips, or
outreach events are great starters. Seasons of the year also work well
(begin an initiative in January, before Easter, or Christmas). Or
develop an initiative around a sermon series. As your pastor preaches
through Ephesians, for example, an initiative that has your
congregation praying through Ephesians at the same time would be a
powerful experience.
- Decide how long the initiative should last. One week is probably too short, and more than three months, too long. We have found that four to six weeks works well.
- Choose a biblical theme or key Scripture. As
much as you can develop your prayer initiative around Scripture, the
more long-term benefits your congregation will reap. Learning to pray
Scripture will not only mobilize prayer, but will foster prayer
discipleship and understanding.
- Pray over the theme or Scripture that’s chosen. As you pray, the Holy Spirit will release insight and direction for how to communicate the initiative.
- Start writing the initiative, seeking the Lord’s guidance.
The first words are the toughest to write every time. The more you
write, the easier the words will flow. Remember, you are simply
defining a place of initiation to get people praying—you are not
providing all they will pray.
- Submit your work to the appropriate church leaders well in advance of your deadline for publishing. Allow plenty of time to accommodate busy staff, last-minute corrections, and printing.
- Pray as the finished project is released to the congregation.
Pray that the Holy Spirit will take the initiative and multiply His
purposes among the people, for His glory and the advancement of His
kingdom.
- Take advantage of the heightened interest in prayer.
Once a specific prayer initiative concludes, it is sometimes a struggle
to keep people engaged. We found that continuing to provide intentional
opportunities for prayer (in small groups and for the entire
congregation), as well as encouragement and reminders, keep the fires
burning. Use this opportunity to remind people of the ongoing prayer
opportunities your church has. Highlight each one during the last
Sunday morning service of the initiative, or the Sunday just following.
Prayer initiatives can launch your congregation into an experience
of joy in God’s house. I have seen a number of churches whose prayer
foundation was greatly increased due to an initiative. Start seeking
God today to see if He might have something special for your
congregation, through a prayer initiative.
About the Author
Jacquie Tyre is the prayer coordinator at Lilburn Alliance Church in
Metro Atlanta and the Georgia State Coordinator for the Strategic
Prayer Network. She regularly produces initiatives for her church and
for Unite Atlanta, a ministry that brings Atlanta-area churches
together for prayer. Her prayer initiatives, Ready for Revival: A 40-Day Heart Journey Toward the Fullness of Christ and The Jabez Prayer Guide (Pray! Books) have been used by thousands.
|