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Pray Forth the Kingdom: 50 Ways You Can Pray Through the Window
By Shane Bennett
The classic cleaning cliché, “I don’t do windows!” has never made much sense to me. Why make a big deal about windows? Now toilets, or maybe ovens, I could see refusing to clean them. But windows? I just don’t get it.
Unfortunately, “I don’t do windows” has been the historic, although unwitting, response of the Church to the lost-ness of two billion people who live in an area of the world that has come to be known as the “10/40 Window.” This window, located between the tenth and fortieth latitudes and extending from West Africa to Japan, is home to 97 percent of the world’s unevangelized people. Wonderfully, though, in recent months, that refrain has increasingly changed to, “Yes, we will do windows. Show us how.”
This article is designed to do just that, or at least to point the
way, by enabling churches to take what is often one of the best first
steps to impact the 10/40 Window: fervent, corporate prayer. Assembled
here are 50 ideas for prayer, some tried and proven, others waiting for
their first implementation. Some of the ideas included here involve the
entire congregation in corporate prayer; some are intended for use by
small groups or even by individuals. Perhaps the best contribution this
collection can make is to encourage you to unleash the creativity already
present in your church to generate prayer strategies that are uniquely
relevant to your situation. If you develop, or already have, ideas that
you would like to share, please e-mail them to
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
with “Prayer Idea” in the subject area of your message. We will collect
ideas and make them available in later resource lists or post them on
the Caleb Project website. Employ these suggestions as your church
joins the burgeoning movement of prayer God is raising up around the
globe for the 10/40 Window.
1. Much Ado about Missionaries For a specified
time, maybe a month or a quarter, focus your church’s prayer efforts on
a missionary family supported by your church who works in the 10/40
Window. Familiarize your church with the family’s hopes and dreams for
the people group they work among. Highlight their ministry and personal
needs. Describe their city and the families they are reaching out
to. Encourage corporate and personal prayer for the missionary family.
If your church doesn’t support anyone working in the 10/40 Window,
contact one of the mission agencies in the Resource Directory at the
end of this article.
2. Virtual Prayer The “infobahn” can be cruised
for Christ! Minding issues of cost and security, obtain e-mail
addresses for missionaries working in the 10/40 Window and distribute
them to online members of your church. E-mail can be a great way to
obtain and distribute prayer requests quickly. Imitate Paul by sending
to your missionaries your written prayers for them. Check out Ephesians
1 and 2 for examples and check the Resource Directory for additional
ways the Internet is being used to pray forth the kingdom.
3. Flags A-Flying Adorn your sanctuary with
flags of 10/40 Window countries. Use them as a general reminder to pray
for these lands or pray for specific ones at specific times. Suitably
sized flags can be ordered from All The King’s Flags (www.allkingsflags.com). It might be helpful to make a key available so people know which flag corresponds to which country.
4. 24 Hours of Power Organize an
around-the-clock prayer vigil for 10/40 Window peoples. Choose a day, a
weekend, a week, even a whole month. Then prepare a roster with hourly
slots and encourage people to commit to praying by signing up for one
or more hours. The prayer time could happen at an individual’s home or
people could be encouraged to come to a central location where 10/40
Window materials and a prayer log would be made available.
5. Prayer Feasts and Famines Use food to focus
your prayers on the 10/40 Window. Whole congregations could gather for
a feast of dishes characteristic of 10/40 Window countries. Small
groups could focus both their palates and their prayers on a specific
people group or region learning about their people while they eat, then
bringing them before God after the meal. Given that 80 percent of the
world’s poorest people live in the 10/40 Window, you may want to tune
your hearts and minds to prayer for them by sharing a meal consisting
only of a cup of rice or a couple of tortillas.
6. Eating Out Through the 10/40 Window If your
idea of “on-the-edge” ethnic eating is choosing the “hot” instead of
“mild” sauce at Taco Bell, this idea may stretch your comfort zone.
Take it from someone who rates the shortterm missions trips he’s been
on by the caliber of food eaten: God has blessed many unreached peoples
with fine cuisine. Plus for some cultures, and the restaurants that
represent them, it is appropriate to eat with your hands. (Take a
moment right now and imagine your pastor eating with his hands. That
should be enough to cause you to implement this idea!)
Here is how it might work: On Saturday look through the restaurant
section of the Yellow Pages and pick a couple of establishments whose
food comes from a place in the 10/40 Window. Many larger cities have
restaurants featuring Chinese, Thai, Cambodian, Turkish, Persian, or
Indian food. Call to make sure the price is in your range. Then on
Sunday, when you get ready to head out for lunch with your friends
after the service, pipe up and say, “How about going to Ahmed’s
Schwarma Shop. I hear it is great!” It might be wise to also have a
“safe” backup, say Chinese, in case your friends are timid. If everyone
hates the food and decides to no longer befriend you, let me know. I
will pay for your lunch! If the waiter appears to be from the same
place as the food, the bold in your group may want to initiate a
conversation with him. People are surprisingly willing to talk about
their home, especially when they are far from it. After eating, spend
at least five minutes together, in the car if you have to, praying for
the people whose food you have just enjoyed. If you have come prepared
with specific information from which to pray, all the better.
7. Portion out the Peoples As a church, you
could cover the whole 10/40 Window in prayer by apportioning regions,
countries, or peoples to different groups within the congregation.
Display a map with pictures of the pray-ers adorning their designated
prayer targets. No one need be left without an assignment: From the
children through the youth and Young Marrieds to the Super Seniors,
every group could lift their part of the prayer burden.
8. Reach out and Touch Someone with Prayer The
next best thing to flying home a 10/40 Window missionary to lead your
church in prayer may be to have one do it over the phone. During a
regular service establish a connection with the forewarned missionary.
After brief words of welcome, ask the missionary to describe his
ministry and then lead the congregation in prayer for it. Follow this
with mention of personal requests for the congregation to lift up
individually. Perhaps one or two could pray at a microphone, allowing
the missionary to hear the prayers offered on his behalf. Given the
restrictive nature of many 10/40 Window countries, guidelines regarding
what can be talked about should be discussed with the missionary before
the actual link-up.
9. Oh No! Not a Slide-show! Everyone has seen a
missionary slide-show that didn’t exactly captivate the audience. How
about one where each member of the congregation narrates the slide-show
with prayer? One church in Denver was led on a “virtual prayer walk”
through Bombay by a prayer team that had just returned from there.
After a brief introduction, one team member slowly advanced through a
series of slides depicting a walk through a number of Bombay
neighborhoods. As penetrating images of families and children,
merchants and street people filled the screen, the congregation
silently lifted up prayers for the people of Bombay. One church member
described the experience this way, “Seeing the slides of India and
praying as if we were walking the streets ourselves helped me
understand what it must have been like for those we had sent overseas
from our church. I realized that my prayers are sharper and more
heart-felt when I can see the needs with my own eyes.”
10. The Oscar for Best Prayer Leader Goes to . . . Add
a touch of realism and interest to your church’s prayers for the 10/40
Window by recruiting individuals to lead prayer while assuming the
identity of someone who lives there. Costumed and accented prayer
leaders could briefly describe the culture and life of their focus
people, then guide the congregation in praying for them. Such a
presentation will be even more effective if delivered in the first
person, “My name is . . . and I come from . . . Please pray for me and
my people.” Members of the youth group or a drama team will be the most
likely candidates to undertake this idea.
11. More Than Just Announcements Your bulletin
can be used to build interest in your church to pray for the 10/40
Window. Include a curiosity-building question in the bulletin for
several weeks before beginning 10/40 Window prayer in your service.
Little bits of information and provocative questions like “The 10/40
Window: Strategic missions target or new tax form for people who live
in glass houses?” will build a sense of anticipation. When the church
begins to pray corporately for the 10/40 Window people will have a
sense of, “Ah, so this is it.”
12. Window Coverings The cover of your bulletin
can be used to further your 10/40 Window prayer efforts. Maps and
photographs of unreached nations and peoples will generate interest and
empathy. Using the bulletin cover to convey such information will also
build a sense that the church is embarking on a significant mission.
13. Bulletin Inserts Many churches suffer from
chronic “Bulletinitis,” that is inflammation, or overstuffing, of the
weekly bulletin. If yours is not one of them, consider creating a flyer
containing 10/40 Window information and prayer requests. By enlisting
the aid of a competent desktop publisher (and there are most likely a
few in your church!), you can design high-quality flyers that are
customized for your church. A page from your favorite prayer guide
could be photocopied for this purpose, after necessary permission is
secured, of course.
14. Posters Bulletin boards and blank walls were
made for posters. And your congregation can be encouraged and equipped
to pray for the 10/40 Window by unreached peoples posters. With a few
in-focus pictures, some current information, and some insightful prayer
requests you can construct an attractive, eye-catching poster. If
poster design is not up your alley, or you just don’t know where to
start, contact the US Center for World Mission and ask about their
Unreached Peoples Posters. See the Resource Directory for contact
information.
15. Prayer Triplets When most American churches
have Sunday morning prayer, only the pastor prays or perhaps members of
the congregation join him individually and silently. In contrast, a
Korean service will often have everyone praying out loud at the same
time. While that may be too great a stretch for most of us, perhaps a
slight shift in that direction would increase the 10/40 Window
prayer a church raises, even while it increases the confidence of those
who pray. Prayer triplets are a good first step. After a clear and
informative introduction, people can be instructed to turn to two other
people and quietly, but audibly, pray for the requests that were
brought before the church. A group song can bring the prayers to a
close.
16. Pray for the Window in the Window As much as
I expect the ideas in this book to fire your prayers for the 10/40
Window, nothing will capture your heart like actually going to, and
praying in, an unreached city. Consider taking a group from your church
on a two-week prayer journey. Walk through the neighborhoods and market
places allowing God to impress on your hearts his desires for the city.
Ask for his kingdom to come there in a mighty way. In addition to
powerful prayers, a prayer journey can also produce amazing long-term
effects on your church. According to a pastor who recently went on a
prayer journey to India, “It is hard to forget when you have met people
and want to stay in contact. It is not just sending checks and
forgetting.”
Read Steve Hawthorne and Graham Kendrick’s book Prayerwalking
to learn to “pray onsite with insight.” Then pick up Caleb Project’s
book on prayer journeys for help in organizing one for your church.
17. Prayerwalks Close to Home Here’s some bad
news and some good news: The bad news is that probably not everyone in
your church can go on a prayer journey (see previous idea). The good
news is that most of the 10/40 Window world has come to our cities,
maybe even your neighborhood. To take advantage of this trend, organize
a prayer walk through an ethnic neighborhood near your church. If
ethnic diversity in your town consists entirely of a family who
recently moved in from California, you may have to go to a nearby city.
Wherever you end up, topping off your prayer walk with a meal at an
authentic restaurant in the neighborhood will likely increase
participation the next time.
18. Hotline to Heaven Generate 10/40 Window
prayer by organizing church members to call one another during the week
and pray over the phone. If participants have the same prayer guide,
they can follow along with each other through a predetermined section.
Praying over the phone may feel weird and uncomfortable at first. But
those who push through the discomfort just may find themselves praying
on the phone for much more than the 10/40 Window.
19. 10/40 Window Sunday School Class Sunday
school is a prime time to educate people about the 10/40 Window and
help them broaden the scope of their prayers. An established class
could dedicate one month, a quarter, or even longer for such study. An
elective class could be set up which would run for a limited time. A
church in Arizona suggests the class time be used like this:
- Ten minutes of instruction on prayer,
- Fifteen minutes spent sharing information about an unreached people, city, or region,
- Thirty minutes devoted to actually praying.
The prayer skills learned and the confidence gained in this class yield fruit throughout the church.
20. Put the Youth Group to Work Put them to
work, but not on a car wash or bake sale. Have the youth cooperate to
develop a prayer guide for the rest of the church. Each person could
take one people group, city, or country in the 10/40 Window, research
their background and needs, and briefly list some prayer requests for
them. Throw in an introduction, get an artistic kid to produce an
eye-catching cover and First Church will have their own prayer guide
produced by their own kids. Even if the books are only prayed through
once, they won’t be forgotten. Who’s going to throw away something
their own son or daughter helped write?
21. 10/40 Window Prayer Rally Almost every
church has relationships with other churches, connections based on
denominational ties, similar vision, or at least common enemies!
Exploit these relationships to increase 10/40 Window prayer by inviting
the churches to a prayer rally your church will host. Send invitations
well in advance of the event, keeping in mind that pastor-to-pastor
communication might be the most effective. You could develop your own
plan for prayer or use a standard concert of prayer format: Pray for
the fullness of God’s presence among believers and the fulfillment
of his purposes to the ends of the earth. Make sure you communicate a
specific ending time and stick to it. Perhaps another church would step
forward to host the next 10/40 Window prayer rally.
22. “Live from the 10/40 Window, This Is Joe Missionary.” For
$500 your church could pick up a decent camcorder for one of your
missionaries in the 10/40 Window. Another thousand will pay for a box
of tapes and a plane ticket for your pastor to deliver the camera. (Of
course, there are other ways to get it there!) Once he has the camera,
ask your missionary to send the church quarterly or semi-annual
video reports on his family, work, and people group. Projected before
the whole congregation or viewed by a dozen people in a home group,
these video prayer guides will provide “live-from-the-scene” material
for your 10/40 Window prayer efforts.
23. “Open ‘Round the Clock” Consider if God
might lead your church to set aside space in your facility for a
24-hour prayer room. The room could be stocked with 10/40 Window prayer
material and made available for private and group prayer. Pictures of
the church’s staff and missionaries could be posted. Logs of prayers
prayed and answered could be compiled and left for perusal and
additions. Security is a legitimate concern for any building or room
left accessible all day and night. A church in Indiana leaves the
outside door to the prayer room unlocked, but locks the door from the
prayer room to the church. Another church in Arizona locks their prayer
room door, but makes the combination available to church members who
call the office.
24. Information for the Asking Many people don’t
pray for the 10/40 Window because they simply don’t know who is there
and how to pray for them. Responding to this problem, many mission
agencies with personnel in the 10/40 Window publish monthly or
quarterly newsletters and magazines highlighting their missionaries and
the work they do, and which provides fodder for 10/40 Window prayer.
Subscriptions to some of these periodicals can be procured for as
little as a request on a postcard. Others carry a nominal subscription
fee. With permission, excerpts could be reprinted in your church’s
bulletin to educate and inspire the entire congregation. Check the
Resource Directory for quality mission agency periodicals.
25. Study the Great Prayers of the Bible One way
to grow in your ability to pray for the 10/40 Window and in your faith
that God will answer is to study some of the prayers recorded in
Scripture. Such a study could be undertaken individually or in a small
group. Perhaps your pastor would consider a series of sermons on
biblical prayers which would correspond to a church-wide 10/40 Window
prayer emphasis. Biblical prayers could be studied on their own or with
the help of a written guide. John White’s Daring to Draw Near (InterVarsity Press) is particularly good.
26. City Sermon Series A pastor in Denver
preached a series of sermons on cities of the Bible during his church’s
month-long focus on 10/40 Window prayer. As the church turned their
eyes and hearts to the unreached cities of today’s world, they also
learned lessons from biblical cities. Seeing God’s interactions with
cities thousands of years ago gave the church faith to pray with
boldness and confidence that God would move in unreached cities today.
27. Sharing Prayer with an Ethnic Church Your
church can add intensity and insight to your prayers for the 10/40
Window by teaming up for a prayer and fellowship night with an ethnic
church that represents a country from the unreached world. Imagine
praying for a mighty move of God in an unreached nation while sitting
next to a person whom God has already saved from that same land! You
and your church will gain insights into the people you are praying for
from the people you are praying with. In turn, your concern and prayers
will encourage, and perhaps challenge, those who have joined you for
the evening. According to Hal Sacks of El Shaddai Ministries, the
oppression and prejudice between people groups in the 10/40 Window are
present in nearly every large city. “God is reconciling formerly
estranged believers from various backgrounds and praying together can
be a good step in that direction.”
28. Window-Focused Concerts of Prayer Some
churches have regularly scheduled “concerts of prayer” in which
everyone gathers to pray for God’s fullness in the Church and the
fulfillment of his plans in the world. In some places several churches
gather on a monthly or quarterly basis to join in a concert of prayer.
Perhaps one of these regularly scheduled times could be devoted to
prayer for the 10/40 Window. Prayers of fullness could be prayed for
the historic churches that still have a presence in many 10/40 Window
nations. God could be petitioned to send out laborers into the white
harvest. Great faithfilled prayers could be lifted to God for the
fulfillment of His purposes, the establishment of His church, among
unreached peoples.
29. Fast for the Window Throughout the Bible and
history, God has called His people to put aside food for a time in
order to focus their attention on Him and His purposes. Perhaps God
would lead your church to fast for a time in order to pray for the
10/40 Window. Such a fast could take many forms and be undertaken by
the entire church or a group within the church. If your church has a
specific focus on a 10/40 Window people group or country, you could
take a day as a whole congregation to fast and pray for them. If you
don’t have a focus like that, perhaps you could lay off one meal a week
to pray for a particular city. Many of the world’s hungriest people
inhabit the cities of the 10/40 Window, so fasting will also, in a
small way, help you to empathize with those you for whom you pray.
30. “Has Everyone Been Served?” After the bread
and juice had been passed throughout the congregation at a communion
service recently, the official serving the communion asked his standard
question, “Has everyone been served?” Pre-selected spokesmen for
unreached people groups began to stand at their places around the
meeting room. One by one they lifted their voices to proclaim, “No, 60
million Turks have yet to be served.” “No, 800 million Hindus in India
have yet to be served.” “No, 21 million Malay Muslims have yet to be
served.” The reality of these statements settled on the congregation
with a palpable soberness. Other less dramatic, but equally potent
means can also be employed to transform your normal communion service
into a powerful time of prayer for the 10/40 Window. As you remember
the Lord’s death and proclaim it until his coming, ask for that
proclamation to extend to the ends of the earth.
31. Window-Focused Worship Your Sunday morning
worship service provides an excellent opportunity to focus the church’s
attention on the needs in the 10/40 Window and the awesome power of God
to meet those needs. Even more importantly, it can remind the church of
the great worth of God who deserves honor and praise from the 2000
people groups who have yet to have a church planted in their midst. In
proper perspective, God’s great glory is, after all, both the reason
for, and the result of, our work in missions. Worship should precede
and permeate all of our prayers for the 10/40 Window.
While many of our hymns and praise choruses focus on how God has
blessed us (an appropriate reality to elebrate!), a little digging will
uncover songs declaring God’s greatness and His plan to demonstrate
that greatness to all peoples. Such God-oriented songs could be
interspersed with Scriptures, like Psalm 67, which reaffirm that theme, with prayers for the 10/40 Window, and testimonies of God’s work there.
32. “Not Another Meeting?!” Few churches want
for meetings and times of corporate gathering. Rather, the question
often should be, “How can parishioners expect to minister to the lost
when they spend all of their waking hours with the found?” This reality
makes some people cringe when thinking about something new, such as
prayer for the 10/40 Window, being added to the church’s agenda. The
church’s mission zealot might respond to such hesitance with, “Prayer
for the 10/40 Window is the most important thing we can do. In fact, it
is the only thing God is really concerned about!”
Knowing that to be untrue, a more appropriate response might be to
dedicate one month of an already established church meeting to learning
about and praying for the 10/40 Window. Many churches have regular
Sunday night ervices or Wednesday night prayer meetings. Perhaps four
of these meetings could be used to learn about and pray for, four
regions in the 10/40 Window.
33. “Been There, Done That.” Few things are as
powerful as first-hand reports of amazing stories. Take advantage of
that fact by inviting a convert from a 10/40 Window city to speak to
your church and lead in prayer for his city. The words of someone who
has followed Christ in the 10/40 Window, whose family may still be
there, and who has tasted some of the sufferings of Christ will
markedly affect your church. You may find it difficult to locate a good
candidate. Check with some of the mission agencies listed in the
Resource Directory. If you are concerned about time in your service,
you may want to conduct an interview with your guest in front of the
congregation. This will also help insure that the congregation is given
specific prayer requests. Humility may otherwise prevent your guest
from asking a church full of people to embrace his burdens and concerns.
34. Your Next Missions Conference Next time the
missions committee gathers to agonize over a theme for the upcoming
year’s missions conference, ease their pain by suggesting they focus
the event on prayer for the 10/40 Window. Under the broad guidelines of
a 10/40 Window focused conference, many of the other ideas in this book
can be implemented. Missionaries can be invited home from the Window to
share, international potlucks can be feasted upon, and, of course, much
time could be spent in fervent prayer for the unreached world. Using
such a theme may result in a greater advance of the kingdom than the
last five conferences put together.
35. Reverse Offering Thrill your congregation by
giving them an opportunity to take something out of the offering plate.
No, not change for a twenty, but rather an opportunity to pray for
change among an unreached people. Send around offering plates that are
filled with brief profiles of peoples or countries in the 10/40 Window.
As the plate goes by people could take out two or three cards. The
peoples on them would then be “theirs” for a week or a month of focused
prayer.
36. “If I Had a Hammer . . .” Help your
congregation visualize the effects of your 10/40 Window prayer by
placing a multipaned window at the front of the sanctuary. After a
corporate time of prayer, take a hammer and break out one of the panes,
illustrating how prayer breaks down demonic strongholds and allows
light to flow into unreached cities. To help church members carry the
vision with them through the week, distribute pocket-sized hammers or
laminated cards with a hammer and the 10/40 Window graphically
displayed on them.
37. Pray through the Newspaper With a little
preparation by a small group leader, an interesting and effective
prayer time can be conducted around the world news section of the daily
paper. Briefly highlight events taking place in 10/40 Window nations,
consider their impact on the advance of God’s kingdom, and then pray
for his hand to move in those situations.
38. The Power of Drama Perhaps someone in your
church writes dramas and would work with you to develop one on prayer.
If that kind of talent is unavailable, look to Caleb Project for
several time-tested and heart-wrenching dramas on prayer. Rather than
putting your congregation on a collective guilt trip, these dramas will
thoughtfully remind them of the Godpromised impact of prayer and give
them hope for the effects of their prayers on unreached people. A
couple of hours of practice will prepare the four to eight people
needed for most dramas. Plus, they are only seven or so minutes long,
which might qualify them for a slot on Sunday morning! Order the
complete set of fifteen scripts, which includes those on prayer as well
as several others. See the Resource Directory for ordering information.
39. “A View from on High” Jay Randall, director
of a humanitarian organization serving the peoples along the Caspian
Sea, has developed an exciting Sunday morning program that gives your
church a view of God’s work in the world from the vantage point of an
angel. Seeing the unfolding drama of global events from an “on high”
perspective will give your church increased faith to pray great prayers
for the 10/40 Window. A missions director from a church in California
commented, “We wanted to present this drama to encourage our people to
‘pray through the window.’ There was much excitement for many people as
they realized the need to reach the unreached.” This drama, "A View
from on High," can be ordered from Caleb Project.
40. A Sunday to Change the World In a similar vein as "A View from on High," Bill and Amy Stearns of World Christian
magazine have made available a one Sunday curriculum that will draw
your congregation into the reality of God’s global purposes. A Sunday
to Change the World has been designed to be relevant to all age groups
in your church. It is a wonderful opportunity to dedicate a single
Sunday to the 10/40 Window that will have long-term results both on
your church and the unreached world.
41. Ramadan Prayer Conducting special times of
prayer concurrent with religious celebrations in the 10/40 Window is a
good way to focus and intensify your prayers. Challenge your church to
pray specifically for Muslims during Ramadan, their month of fasting.
Many Christians even fast during part or all of the celebration.
Because this is a spiritually intense period for the world’s nearly one
billion Muslims, our prayers are particularly important during this
time: not only for Muslims, but also for the missionaries who are
laboring among them. Like many non-Western holidays, Ramadan is
scheduled according to the lunar calendar so the dates vary each year.
Contact a local mosque, Islamic Center, or public library to find the
current year’s dates. Look for a copy of the 30-Days of Prayer for the
Muslim World prayer guide for help praying during this time.
42. Around the World in Five Rooms Create an
enlightening and exciting evening of prayer, by transforming the Sunday
School portion of your facility into five stations on a trip throughout
the 10/40 Window. The rooms could represent five cities in which your
church supports work. They could represent five regions of the 10/40
Window. Or one room could be given to each of the major blocks of
unreached peoples: Tribal, Hindu, Unreligious, Muslim, and Buddhist.
Recruit five sharp people to staff the rooms, maybe in costume and
character. Divide the congregation into five groups and give them a
schedule of rotation. If each group spends 15 minutes in each room
learning about the people there and praying for them, a full circuit
would take an hour and a half. With a bit of introduction and some time
to report back at the end, a powerful two-hour evening of prayer will
result.
43. Focus In and Follow Through A missions
activist in Arizona suggests focusing your prayers for the 10/40 Window
on a specific city that the church chooses. After determining the city
to focus on, many of the other ideas in this book could be used to lift
prayers for that city. The key then is to monitor the resulting work of
God in your city. Through contacts with a mission agency involved in
the city, a specific missionary who you know there, or perhaps even the
newspaper, keep abreast of what is happening in your city. Use both
good reports and crises to inspire your congregation to pray.
44. Get the Global Prayer Digest! The Global Prayer Digest
is one of the best resources for up-to-date prayer information for the
10/40 Window. Produced monthly, this daily devotional prayer guide does
not focus exclusively on the 10/40 Window, but contains much in the way
of helpful information and inspirational accounts of God’s work
throughout the unreached world. Your church may want to purchase
several subscriptions to have on hand. Even better, deliver a strong
push from the pulpit for individuals to subscribe. If you are online,
you can have it delivered daily to your e-mail address. Check the
Resource Directory for subscription information.
45. The 10/40 Window in Print In addition to the Global Prayer Digest,
a small, but high quality body of material is in print which will help
your prayers for the 10/40 Window be more sophisticated than, “God
bless the missionaries.” Caleb Project’s research teams have produced
“straight from the streets” prayer guides for a number of 10/40 Window
peoples.
Often designed to provide a month of daily prayer insight, these
guides are inexpensive, informative, and full of photos. Two other
helpful guides are Praying Through the Window: The 100 Gateway Cities and Praying Through the Window III:The Unreached Peoples.
These powerful volumes were designed for the October 1995 and 1997
Praying Through the Window initiatives, but will remain effective for
years. Look to the Resource Directory for information on obtaining
these books.
46. “The Most Copied Sheet of Paper in History” For
mass distribution, get your hands on the one-page, month-long calendar
of the “100 gateway cities.” Free of reproduction restrictions, this
calendar may be the most copied piece of paper ever. It lists several
key people groups to pray for each day along with the country of their
greatest concentration. Start with a clear master and make as many
copies as you would like. If you are in a big hurry, it could even be
faxed to you!
47. The 10/40 Window on the Screen A popular
maxim states, “Leaders are readers.” While this is certainly true,
savvy leaders are also aware of the power of video. Several
high-quality programs on the 10/40 Window are available. Here are two
that are excellent: To the Ends of the Earth, by Christian Broadcasting Network, introduces believers to the 10/40 Window and the great
impact prayer is having on God’s work there. With both 12- and
28-minute versions, it is flexible for different groups and
opportunities. To help your church or small group pray for a specific
people group, many videos are available. See the Resource Directory for
sources and titles.
48. “But Does It Really Work?” “Does it really
work?” is a good question when you are deciding which laundry detergent
to buy, but it might not be the best question when raised in regard to
prayer. Unfortunately, such doubt can sometime shadow all but the
stoutest of intercessors’ hearts, especially when you are praying for
people you don’t know who live a long way away. Remembering Jesus’
assurances that God hears and delights to answer our prayers helps.
Your church will also be encouraged and invigorated in its prayers for
the 10/40 Window by stories of the kingdom’s advance there. A little
research will unearth a variety of sources full of first-hand accounts
of God’s work in the unreached world. Recounting these stories for the
congregation will build faith and hope for intercession. WindoWatchman I and II,
published by the Information Network (now Window International
Network), recount ways God worked through teams that focused their
prayers on the countries and cities of the 10/40 Window.
49. What about the Church Newsletter? That
classic of intra-church communication: from the lowly one-pager to the
exalted, multi-departmental mini-magazine, the church newsletter has
stood the test of time. It has endured. It has grown. And maybe, just
maybe, it has been worth the cost of the bulk mail stamp necessary to
send it out. Seriously, because many church newsletters have become
familiar information vehicles, they can be great tools to inspire
prayer for the 10/40 Window. Some ideas: Brief profiles of unreached
peoples, fresh reports of God’s work in the 10/40 Window, or a
prayerful look at a current events situation unfolding in the 10/40
Window. Some nice line drawings with a missions emphasis might be good,
too!
50. “Don’t Know Nothin’ ‘Bout Geography” Many
people are hindered in their prayers because they find it difficult to
visualize the 10/40 Window. A concise verbal explanation may not paint
a clear picture, and while the brave among us may try drawing a map on
an overhead transparency, that might only further muddy the waters!
However, the geography whizzes at Global Mapping International in
Colorado Springs have created a set of transparency maps specifically
designed to clarify the concept of the 10/40 Window. The set features
maps highlighting: the countries of the 10/40 Window, the four
religious blocks of the 10/40 Window, the hundred gateway cities, and
five other topics. The original versions of these maps are even
available in Spanish and French! Go to www.gmi.org for more information.
Bonus: A Dozen Ideas for Kids! We would be silly
not to purposely include children in the great rally of intercession
that God is calling around the globe. When parents and teachers allow
kids’ prayers to stop at, “God bless Mommy, and Daddy, and Ruff, the
dog,” they deny children the chance to express awesome, and often
convicting, faith. We also betray our underlying feeling that real
intercession is only for the spiritually mature believer. Hogwash. Let
us eagerly cultivate the seeds of faith present in our kids. We all
know there will be plenty of efforts to trample, peck, and strangle
them. Many of the ideas already discussed can be modified to be
relevant to kids. The following, however, are tailor-made for the
up-and-coming champions of intercession.
1. “Pin the Prayer on the People” Jill Harris, a
veritable treasure house of information on building missions into kids,
suggests a variation on “Pin the Tail on the Donkey.” You have seen it
before: Blindfold, spin, yell, and pin. This time the “pin-on” is a
light bulb or candle shape, and when the child sticks it into a 10/40
Window nation, he prays for the light of God’s glory to shine there.
2. Musical Chairs Prayers Have kids sit in a
circle and sing along with a tape of “Shine, Jesus, Shine.” While they
sing, they pass an inflatable globe around the circle. When the music
stops, whoever has the globe prays for the day’s 10/40 Window
missionary or people group.
3. Kids Pray Julie Brown of Kids Pray, a
ministry of Ameritribes, suggests collecting missionary prayer
cards–-and what missionary isn’t willing to pass along a prayer card?
Put the cards in a hat and, as a prize for a game or event, allow
someone to pull a card out and pray for the family represented.
4. Innocents Abroad This simulation activity
walks kids through the steps necessary to become a missionary in a
10/40 Window nation. Leaders can design passports that are stamped when
various activities are completed. Kids could learn geographic and
cultural facts about an unreached people, sample some of the local
food, and find out how to pray for the people group.
5. You Can Change The World A children’s version of Operation World called You Can Change The World is proving to be great way to equip youngsters to pray for the world.
6. I Say . . . You Say! Advocating for the use
of call and response prayers for kids, Jan Bell, suggests, “Children
are eager to pray, but they depend on modeling. When left on their own,
most of them tend to hold back. So I say a line and have them repeat
it. They like this.” For example, the following prayer can be used as
kids march around a map or picture of a particular 10/40 Window nation.
“Among the gods there’s none like You. No deeds can compare with Yours.
All the nations You have made Will come and worship before You. They
will bring . . . glory. They will bring . . . glory to Your name.”
Connect to Jan’s excellent KidsCan resource network for other great
ideas.
7. Window-Focused Children’s Sermon If your
church has a brief children’s sermon time on Sunday morning, use that
time to unfold one small aspect of the 10/40 Window. For example, ask
the kids if they wanted to come to church this morning, then describe
how many kids in the world don’t have a church to attend even if they
want to. An added bonus: Because it is not directed at them, many
adults pay more attention to this time than to the grown-up’s sermon!
8. Guests Have guests dress up like
representatives from 10/40 Window nations and tell about their
countries. Perhaps kids who are a couple of years older could learn
about a people group and then act as these guests for the littler ones.
9. THUMB Help kids remember the five major
blocks of unreached peoples by the mnemonic: THUMB. T = Tribals, H =
Hindus, U = Unreligious, M = Muslims, B = Buddhists!
10. Map Scramble Write the names of cities and
countries in the 10/40 Window on card-stock, cut them out, and throw
them in a hat. Invite kids in groups of four to each pull one out.
Instruct them, at your signal, to dash to a large map of the world and
find their city or country. After a few rounds, pass the names out and
ask kids to pray for the places they have.
11. Rolling Globe Prayer For the little ones,
say four to six years old, outline the 10/40 Window on an inflatable
globe. With the kids sitting in a circle on the floor, have someone
roll the globe across the circle to another kid. When he catches the
globe, help him to pray for the place his finger is touching.
12. Prayer and Post Profile a missionary family
who lives in the 10/40 Window. After telling their story, with pictures
if possible, ask the kids how they might like to pray for the family.
Write the responses on the board, and then lead the kids in praying for
them. To emphasize the time, have the kids write brief letters to
members of the family they just learned about and prayed for. Ask them
to tell the missionaries what they prayed. Refer the kids to board for
reminders. Be sure to drop the letters in the mail right away.
Resource Directory Many people and organizations can help you put all this into practice; those listed below can also tell you about many others!
Ameritribes (especially KidsPray ministry) PO Box 3717 Flagstaff, AZ 86003 USA Tel: 520.670.9400 www.ameritribes.org
Caleb Project 10 West Dry Creek Circle Littleton, CO 80120 USA Tel: 303.730.4170
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www.calebproject.org
Window International Network PO Box 7287 Colorado Springs, CO 80933 USA Tel: 719.522.1040 USA
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www.win1040.com
Frontiers 325 N Stapley Road Mesa, AZ 85203 USA Tel: 800.GO.2.THEM
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www.frontiers.org
Global Mapping International 15435 Gleneagle Drive, Suite 100 Colorado Springs, CO 80921 USA Tel: 719-531-3599
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
www.gmi.org
Kids Can Make A Difference 4445 Webster Drive York, PA 17402 USA Tel: 717.757.6793
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OMF International 10 W Dry Creek Circle Littleton, CO 80120 Tel: 303.730.4167 www.omf.org
Pioneers 12343 Narcoossee Road Orlando, FL 32827 USA Tel: 800.755.7284
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www.pioneers.org
US Center For World Mission 1605 Elizabeth Street Pasadena, CA 91104 Tel: 818.797.1111 www.uscwm.org
Wycliffe Bible Translators PO Box 2727 Huntington Beach CA 92647 Tel: 714.969.4600
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www.wycliffe.org
Youth With A Mission International Communications Network PO Box 26479 Colorado Springs, CO 80936 USA Tel: 719.380.0936 www.ywam.org
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Notes Related to Specific Items 14. See the USCWM contact information above.
24. Quality mission agency periodicals include: East Asia’s Millions
(OMF’s), Mission Frontiers (USCWM’s), and In Other Words (Wycliffe’s).
38. A video featuring several of the skits performed with instructions for putting them on is also available from Caleb Project.
41. Contact WorldChristian News through YWAM, above, or e-mail
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, www.ywam.org.
44. Order Global Prayer Digest by writing Subscription Manager
Frontier Fellowship at the US Center for World Mission, listed above.
45. Available from Caleb Project.
47. Get the Countdown2000 series from the US Center for World Mission or the Unreached Peoples videos from Caleb Project.
Kid’s Ideas 5. Order You Can Change the World through your local Christian bookstore or check with YWAM (see above).
This entire article is reprinted from Praying Through the Countries of the 10/40 Window (Littleton, CO: Caleb Project, 1997).
Copyright © Caleb Project 2001 all rights reserved. Used by
permission. For more materials related to this article please contact
Caleb Project www.calebproject.org, 1-877 662-1040.
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