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PRAYER FOR YOUR CHURCH

Lord, I lift up the children and youth in my congregation to You. May the little ones remain humble examples of what we adults need to become in the kingdom. Let their conduct always be pure and right with reputations that show that they remember You, Creator God. Teach them to declare Your marvelous deeds. May they flee evil desires and pursue righteousness, faith, love and peace. (Matt 18:3-4; Prov. 20:11; Eccl. 12:1; Ps. 71:17; 2 Tim. 2:22)
 
Home arrow November 2007 arrow Tips and Tools
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Proper Guidelines Will Fix the List

 

One way to help bring a balance to the needs on your prayer lists is to regularly distribute guidelines. The guidelines are intended to “weed out” items that bog a list down and keep people from really praying.

These guidelines should cover things like what kinds of requests will be taken, how long will they stay on the list, and garnering permission to post requests. Below are some possible guidelines to consider or tweak. They are a combination of guidelines from Calvary Chapel Port St. Lucie and CPLN advisors.

 

  1. Requests are limited to close family members: spouses, children, grandparents, aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews. This may appear “cold,” but it will certainly cut down on requests—and get rid of the dreaded “neighbor’s third cousin” items that no one gets excited praying for. Remember, the shorter the list, the more likely it will be prayed over.

 

  1. Requests must be limited to acute situations. No travel mercies, God’s guidance, employment issues, or needs that are normal things in everyone’s life. These make fine requests for a person’s small group to pray over, but because they are so common to everyone, a prayer list can quickly fill up with them.

 

  1. Permission to post a request must be obtained. Please do not submit a request for someone without him or her knowing you are doing so. Many people do not want others to know about their problems.

 

  1. Do not put sensitive needs on the public list. While we certainly want to pray about these issues, marriage difficulties and breakups, wayward children, and prayer for salvation issues may not be wise things to post publicly. A church needs to find a more sensitive option to pray for these needs.

 

  1. No unspoken or anonymous requests. We need to reserve the list for needs where people can pray with knowledge. While God knows who you are praying for, only the most dedicated intercessor will venture prayer for such needs. Don’t fill the list with them.

 

  1. Only updated items will stay on the list week to week. Challenge your people that they need to resubmit a request each week, and they need to provide an update with it. This should be some praise, a sign of God’s moving or simply additional information about the need. Most lists have requests that stay on too long. This cuts down on people’s attentiveness to praying for the list.

 

Two other suggestions. First, still look for ways where people’s personal needs can be prayed for—in a service or a prayer room—by trained prayer teams. Second, above all, fill at least half of your list with ministry needs. This will begin to encourage the kingdom praying you desire.

--CPLN and Pat Silensky.

 
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