CONFERENCE EVENTS
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PRAYER FOR YOUR CHURCH
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Single parents
Lord, I lift up the single parents in our church. May they know You as father to the fatherless and defender of widows! Let us be a real family to them when they are lonely. Show us ways to include them and minister grace to them. Stir up practical ideas in us that show Your love and care. Help them relax in Your grace and provision which is more than enough for every weakness and need. (Ps. 68:5, 6; 25:16; Matt. 25:35-40; 2 Cor. 12:9; Phil. 4:19)
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Home The Praying Pastor 40 Days of Prayer Stirred Embers into Flames
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40 Days of Prayer Stirred Embers into Flames |
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By Danell Czarnecki
Since October of 2006 we have seen a significant increase in visitors,
and more than 20 households have joined our church—CrossPoint Church in
Chino, California. Prayer intercessors for every ministry and staff
person have emerged and been put into place. Our staff prays more
regularly for one another and it is not uncommon to see people in a
hallway or office praying together. What happened? Why is God blessing.
In 1969, CrossPoint Church, formerly Calvary Christian Reformed Church,
was literally “prayed” into existence. Prayer rooted itself deep in the
hearts of the early visionaries and was the foundation by which
ministry was developed. In 1983 Pastor Bruce Ballast became the pastor
of this praying church and under his leadership prayer continued to
permeate both ministry and the lives of the people of CrossPoint.
A prayer ministry structure began to emerge. Prayer teams prayed
before, during and after the service, an intercessory prayer team for
the pastors was launched, ministries developed prayer support
structures, phone prayer chains started, a prayer and fasting group
began meeting, prayerwalks through the neighborhoods were held, prayer
teams were established to seek wisdom and support the building program.
Prayer became a part of the life at CrossPoint. The Holy Spirit was
moving and God was listening.
But in the spring of 2005, as CrossPoint Church moved into its new
location and building, we got into the routine of ministry. Soon, many
of our intercessors began to experience unsettledness. They felt a call
to “shore up” and deepen prayer ministry at CrossPoint. There was an
overwhelming sense that our church was called to “be on its knees” in
preparation for what God had in store for us in this new place.
About this same time, our Home Group Team, (the team responsible for
providing leadership to our small group ministry) began exploring
potential materials for our annual Spiritual Growth Campaign scheduled
for the fall of 2006. One of the materials they looked at was Alvin
VanderGriend’s Love to Pray
40-day devotional. Though the team presented two possible options for
study, Pastor Don Klop, our current senior pastor, felt strongly that
the Love to Pray material would be perfect to help the church
through a painful transition. The fact that it was the core of a 40
days of prayer initiative was a plus. VanderGriend’s definition of
prayer, “. . . the conversational part of the most important love
relationship in our lives . . . ” captured the hearts of our leadership
and so we began on a journey to literally saturate the church with
prayer.
The home group and the prayer development teams began to pray about and
then set goals for this 40-day prayer initiative. We had three goals:
to see a deepening in prayer experiences personally and corporately; to
experience a renewal for relational evangelism; and to sense a palpable
presence of the mighty movement of God in our midst.
In October of 2006 the “40 Days of Prayer” campaign launched with more
the 500 participants. The coaches of the groups were equipped and
encouraged along the course of the eight weeks. Following the
initiative one of our pastors shared this about his small group, “All
of us confessed on the first session that prayer was our weakest
spiritual endeavor. We all agreed that our prayer lives were more of a
‘Gimme please God,’ rather than a time of devotional communication with
Him. The 40 Days of Prayer taught us what prayer really is.” One small
group participant shared, “It has changed the way I pray. I’m praying
in a more appropriate, unselfish way. I pray more throughout the day.
It has become a way of daily life.”
One of the lingering fruits of “40 Days of Prayer” has been the renewed
commitment to relational evangelism. The desire to reach out to our
neighbors is rooted in loving them into the kingdom. We found that as
we pray for someone, our heart softens toward them, their heart
softens, than relational evangelism can begin. It was our experience
that some of our groups committed to pray for a particular person for
the duration of the series, resulting in doors opening for God-ordained
moments.
When the whole church is playing the same symphony together, practicing
the same notes and studying in accord with one another, something
amazing happens. The synergy that spills from the group experience into
the worship experience and visa versa is amazing. Entering into the “40
Days of Prayer” brought a sense of unity to the body, healing happened
and a common thread was rediscovered and the fruits are still being
revealed. A renewed commitment to prayer has risen up, prayer leaders
have stepped up and new prayer ministries are being developed.
We pray, God listens, God speaks, we listen; simple, yet so
complicated, complex, yet so simple. God is in the business of changing
lives--and churches--through the power of prayer.
--Danell Czarnecki is the director of equipping ministry at CrossPoint Church in Chino, California.
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