Pandemic Prayer Meetings: Anytime, Anywhere, Anyone, Anything

 

Phil Miglioratti

 

Some congregations schedule a weekly all-invited prayer meeting.

Some abandoned that for periodic prayer gatherings (monthly, quarterly).

Some have begun virtual prayer meetings during the pandemic.

 

Each of these options is an invitation to everyone in the congregation. If you want to pray with the church family, you must be in the room or online.

     Good.

          But not best.

 

Rather than always requiring everyone to come to the same place to pray, we must also take prayer to the places the people already are. This provides a balance between what is usually a customary format (same place, same template) and a freer style that empowering the church to pray anytime, anywhere, with anyone, about anything. Don't abandon the former but utilize the latter to reimagine prayer.

 

Centralized prayer meetings, while a wonderful experience of worship and fellowship, often do little to equip the saints to do the work of the ministry of prayer that builds up the Body of Christ (see Ephesians 4:12).

 

Strategically decentralized prayer meetings -  2 or 3 gathered (or linked) together in Jesus’ name - take prayer into the community … to the places and spaces where real life is experienced; beauty and pain, joy and sadness, light and darkness. The congregation praying out of our seats and into the streets at street corners, cafeterias, business centers.

 

#ReimaginePRAYER...something like this (adopt/adapt to your situation).

  • Announce in every Bulletin and Newsletter and Online:
    • Prayer Meeting. Pray ~ Anytime. Anywhere. With Anyone. For Anything.
    • "Make your life a prayer. In the midst of everything, no matter what happens, always give thanks as you pray, for this is God's perfect plan for you in Christ Jesus. Never restrain the fire of the Holy Spirit" (don't say no when the Spirit asks you to pray).  (see 1 Thessalonians 5:17-19 The Passion Translation)

  • Launch a prayer emphasis
    • "120 Prayer Meetings in 120 Places in 120 Days"
    • Use whatever amount is appropriate. ‘120’ remembers those gathered in the Upper Room when the Church was birthed by the Spirit.
    • Consider using a number that represents the attendance or size of your congregation to indicate every person can participate
    • The objective is to release every member of the congregation to pray. With others. In uncommon-to-prayer locations. To pray for different people-places-things (incidents, ideas and issues).
    • The Prayer Champion (Pastor, Prayer Coordinator) encourages and challenges every person to participate in a “prayer meeting” as often as possible during the length of this ministry emphasis.
    • Encourage every family to have a prayer gathering; at their table, on their street, at the kids’ school ,,,
    • Use different terms if they capture interest more effectively:
      • Prayer Chats - focused and brief
      • Meet-Ups - online or outside
      • Zoom Prayer - gathered online

  • Anytime
    • Teach members that to "pray without ceasing" simply means be ready to pray anytime the Holy Spirit taps your shoulder by reminding you of someone in need or gets you wondering about a stranger.
    • You can pray about something that occurred in the past, but you cannot pray in the pas (you cannot go back and make-up for a missed prayer opportunity). You can pray for the future, but you cannot pray in the future...
    • You can only pray in the present. The “right now”. Even right now as you are reading this. (go ahead, try it then come back) So, “anytime” actually means, "pray NOW!" Prayer gatherings do not always need to be scheduled; they can           be spontaneous.
    • Train members to listen for the call-to-pray; it is an invitation from the Holy Trinity to commune with the Lord Almighty, access procured by Jesus, discernment and direction given by the Spirit.
    • Begin to ask your members to post/email their “anytime” experiences when they have unexpectedly stopped to talk with, listen to God, then share the variety of these “pray NOW” actions to engage and equip the congregation.

 

  • Anywhere
    • Explain how any place can become a space for prayer.
    • Anywhere people live, work, play or learn. Places of influence where culture-impacting decisions are made. Spaces of generational poverty, plagued with pain, spiritual deserts.
    • Pray at work, school, shopping, driving, walk-your-street, at the park, in another neighborhood, at city hall, looking at an Out-Of-Business sign or an abandoned house...
      • Pray one-to-One (you and God)
      • FaceTime a friend to pray with you (whether planned or spontaneous)
    • Gather feedback of the places and spaces where your people are having "Prayer Meeting" during this emphasis.

 

  • Anyone
    • Instruct members how to connect with other members
      • Schedule a Prayer-Chat on the phone
      • Meet-Up to prayerwalk a street or to pray on the steps of City Hall or for the workers at a store or restaurant or hospital
      • Recruit Zoom-Prayer starters for online prayer meetings (2 or 3 gathered in Jesus' name via computer). Use various church communications to post times anyone can join with others in prayer. Start with a brief (5 -15 minute) timeframe.
    • Explain when praying in a public space:
      • Not to draw attention; pray with eyes open in conversational tone.
      • If someone inquires what you are doing: “We are praying for our community – what need is important to you?”
      • Train your team in how to follow the Spirit's leading to pray for someone who is nearby ("We are praying for needs in our community… May we pray for a blessing from God for you?).

 

  • Anything
    • Often prayers are limited to our personal needs
    • Expand the congregation’s vision to praying beyond to:
      • People ~ in the community; the lost, the least, those who lead
      • Places ~:no matter where you pray from, you can pray for different locations: neighborhoods, prisons, hospitals, schools, offices & factories, business & shopping centers . . .
      • "Things ~ ask God for discernment to intercede for the community and the country; the ideas and issues that influence our culture.

 

A small congregation can make an impact on their community. An average-sized church (75 people or less) can easily have 120 Meet-Ups, Prayer-Chats, Zoom-Gatherings in 120 days that spread into the neighborhoods and sectors of the community.

Intercession produces impact that fuels influence.       

The Anytime-Anywhere-Anyone-Anything Prayer Meeting.

No limitation to when, where, who, what.

“Each of you, all of you, allow the Holy Spirit to fill you

with unexpected opportunities to pray.”

 (see Ephesians 5:19)

 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -  

SCROLL...to "Take-Away" in comments below...

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  • TAKE-AWAY

    To help you reimagine...

    • As you were reading, did this seem more relevant to you personally or to your role as a leader or change agent?
    • Where do you agree? Disagree - and why?
    • What did you read that resonates with the leading/guiding you have sensed recently from the Holy Spirit?
    • How can you move from analysis to application to implementation?
    • Who do you need to talk with about the ideas you have encountered here?
    • Finish this sentence: "Jesus . . .
  • I first saw one in a friend’s “Prayer Room” (a middle bedroom of his house), then I saw another one in a colleague’s office. How unique, I thought.  So, I searched until I found my own Prayer Bench and fit it into my Seminary office. I had long believed, and then taught, the discipline of place, in private prayer.  After all, Jesus repeatedly went to specific places to pray (Mark 1:35; Luke 22:39-40). Among other subjects, I kept my class seating charts on the bench, and knelt there to pray for my students before each class, firmly believing that it is best to talk to God about people before talking to people about God.  It was a private place that saw only private times of prayer - or so I thought.  I recently spoke in a church pastored by a former student and was amazed and touched to see him stand before his people and emotionally share what it had meant to him to know that one of his professors had a prayer bench on which he prayed for his students.  Then he told of making his own such prayer bench for his office.  I always expected to teach when standing in front of students in a classroom.  I had not thought about teaching through a simple prayer bench, placed in my office.  Be careful this week, for you know not when, where, or how you teach. 

     

  • From Pray.Network Featured Contributor Cathy Cutrell:

    Your article on Pray for Me is one of the most profound and thought and action provoking in a long time, Phil.

    Thank you for publishing...sending this along to a few more praying friends. 

    Especially important to me is asking good Holy Spirit led questions when we are asked by someone to pray... 
    Another important devotional that fits with your article Pray For Me. ...just turned to it.
  • May God bless you Phil.

    Several times I heard voices asking me to pray. I tried  and still do it. Your article reignited my thirst for the calling. It will help my church and Prayer Ministry members.

    Jesus told his disciples to pray against temptations in Mat. 26: 40-41 and in Mat. 6:13 he said also about it and about deliverance from the evil one and we also find his prayer for his church in John 17:15 about protection from the devil. We are warned that " .....your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour." 1 Peter 5: 8. ( NIV). Your article revives any prayer person called for that job to remain steadily focused till Jesus' return-any time, everywhere. Jesus used to pray very early in the morning. Mark 1:35. And David did  pray in the cave - Ps.57. 

    I am encouraged when I read Revelation 20:6. Our Lord qualified us to pray till that place after the first resurrection and later...We are considered to be in spirit and to pray in spirit as our Father is spirit -John 4:23, 24. Let us draw a lesson from what is being done in heaven by the four living creatures and the twenty four elders. Revelation 4.

    May our Lord Jesus Christ, help me .

  • I agree with your closing prayer.

    short

    simple

    specific

    spiritual 

    Berete Jerome said:

    May God bless you Phil.

    Several times I heard voices asking me to pray. I tried  and still do it. Your article reignited my thirst for the calling. It will help my church and Prayer Ministry members.

    Jesus told his disciples to pray against temptations in Mat. 26: 40-41 and in Mat. 6:13 he said also about it and about deliverance from the evil one and we also find his prayer for his church in John 17:15 about protection from the devil. We are warned that " .....your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour." 1 Peter 5: 8. ( NIV). Your article revives any prayer person called for that job to remain steadily focused till Jesus' return-any time, everywhere. Jesus used to pray very early in the morning. Mark 1:35. And David did  pray in the cave - Ps.57. 

    I am encouraged when I read Revelation 20:6. Our Lord qualified us to pray till that place after the first resurrection and later...We are considered to be in spirit and to pray in spirit as our Father is spirit -John 4:23, 24. Let us draw a lesson from what is being done in heaven by the four living creatures and the twenty four elders. Revelation 4.

    May our Lord Jesus Christ, help me .

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