CONFERENCE EVENTS

Warning: modoutput_xhtml(/hsphere/local/home/cpln01/new.prayerleader.com/modules/mod_jw_cifs.php): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /hsphere/local/home/cpln01/new.prayerleader.com/includes/frontend.html.php on line 367 Warning: modoutput_xhtml(/hsphere/local/home/cpln01/new.prayerleader.com/modules/mod_jw_cifs.php): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /hsphere/local/home/cpln01/new.prayerleader.com/includes/frontend.html.php on line 367 Warning: modoutput_xhtml(): Failed opening '/hsphere/local/home/cpln01/new.prayerleader.com/modules/mod_jw_cifs.php' for inclusion (include_path='.:/hsphere/shared/apache/libexec/php4ext/php/') in /hsphere/local/home/cpln01/new.prayerleader.com/includes/frontend.html.php on line 367

PRAYER FOR YOUR CHURCH

Outreach/Missions Projects 

 

Lord, I lift up our outreach programs. Remind us to do good and share with others as a pleasing sacrifice to You. Keep us outwardly focused so we don’t become self-absorbed. Help us teach one another to be faithful ministers of Your Son. Enable us to meet people wherever they have a need. Help us minister faithfully as we proclaim the gospel so that the ones we reach might become an acceptable offering to You. (Heb. 13:16; Phil. 2:4; Col. 1:7; Jude 1:23)

 
Home arrow September 2005 arrow Engaging a Congregation to Pray
Engaging a Congregation to Pray PDF Print E-mail
By Jonathan Graf

In the May issue of Pray!, Daniel Henderson correctly asserted that you cannot guilt people into participating in church prayer efforts—only the Holy Spirit can nudge, woo or call them to this. While that is true, there are some things you can do and some principles you can follow that can be a runway to allow more prayer to take flight.


Make Prayer Visible. If you want to see more people involved in the prayer life of your church, continue to keep it in front of them through visible (and regular verbal) reminders. One of the reasons Pray 10 has worked for Susan Jones’ church is that Pray 10 has regular reminders built into it. Many people will sign up for a new prayer initiative with all the right intentions, but most will stop participating in a very shot time. They need constant encouragement. Posters or banners in the sanctuary or well-trafficked areas, weekly inserts in the bulletin, slides in the power point announcements, and/or a weekly prodding from the platform will work wonders. These nudges can come in a variety of ways: testimonials of participants, a comment from the pastor or other leader, a verbal announcement.

A number of churches in Palm Springs, California use an excellent visual reminder to keep people on task with prayer. They are praying for the salvation of thousands of people. Every church has a large picture of a lighthouse on the wall of its sanctuary. On the picture, people have written the names of people for whom they are praying. Every Sunday—even if they have forgotten to pray for the person during the week—people are visibly reminded of their commitment and pray.

Even a prayer conference can fit into this “make it visible” plan, if held annually. One of the best attended local church prayer conferences I have keynoted was at First Presbyterian Church in Schenectady, NY. For years, it has held a prayer conference as close to the first week of January as possible. The church promotes the event for months in advance. It has become a big deal to the people of First Pres, and they come out.

Make Prayer Easy. Most people need help understanding what to pray. No prayer efforts will be sustained long if you do not put practical prayer guides in their hands and explain an easy method of using them. Time spent preparing here will reap huge benefits in participation. You may need to develop your own guides depending on the focus of your prayer initiative or ministry. But with a little searching and tweaking, you can find some excellent guides available on a lot of topics. Pray! has 14 different prayer guides (www.praymag.com); Harvest Prayer Ministries (www.prayershop.org), Waymakers (www.waymakers.org) and Prayer Point Press (www.prayerpointpress.com) also have guides available on various subjects.

Make a Time Commitment. Whatever prayer ministries or initiatives you put before your people, make sure to build in a length of commitment. On initiatives, make them for a month, 40 days, etc. If people see there is an ending point, more will participate. If it is an ongoing ministry (a Prayer Room slot, Pastor’s Prayer Team, Prayer-During-Services Team, etc.) ask people to sign up for only three, four, or six months. Toward the end of that commitment, check to see if the participants want to re-up or not. If people see their commitment isn’t “until I die or burnout,” they will be more open to join in.

No matter what prayer plans and strategies your church chooses to develop, operating in these principles will add to member involvement. As a former local church prayer leader who was often frustrated by lack of participation, I can attest to the fact that many excellent and creative prayer ideas fall flat when these elements are neglected.

--Jonathan Graf is the president of the Church Prayer Leaders Network and the founding editor of Pray!.
 
< Prev   Next >