|
|
 |
prayer
How to Lead a Prayer
Meeting
Purpose of Group Prayer Time
Group prayer was a characteristic of the early Christians.
- Acts 12:12 - Peter went to the house
of Mary where others gathered for prayer.
- Acts 1:13-14 - scripture records that
all with one mind were continually devoting themselves
to prayer, along with the women.
Old Testament characters also participated in group
prayer.
- 2 Chronicles 6:13-42 records Solomon
praying as all Israel gathered around.
Remember that the purpose of your prayer time is
to communicate with God. It's not merely a ritual
to get done or for preaching at each other.
Conversational Prayer
During conversational prayer group members should talk
to God as they would talk to a friend. Encourage the
group (especially a group unfamiliar with group prayer)
to feel free to pray sentence prayers. Everyone is free
to pray, or not to pray, as the Spirit directs. Don't
worry about silence. Allow God to speak to everyone
in the group during times of silence.
Different Elements of a Group Prayer Meeting
Choose one or more of following elements for your prayer
meeting. Be Creative!You can switch the elements
around, eliminate some of them or do something completely
different. Don't make prayer boring or monotonous. It's
an inspirational and enjoyable time where students leave
feeling refreshed and renewed.
- Introduce a prayer topic or
request, one at a time then allow the group a few
minutes to pray for the that. When finished, the
leader introduces another topic or request. Designate
a specific person to close at the end of each time.
This helps insure that the prayer time will not bog
down when everyone has had the opportunity to pray
if they so desire. Below are some examples of topics
that can be used:
- Thank God for His love, forgiveness,
the beautiful day, the ways He is working in peoples
lives, etc.
- Thank God for something that has
happened in your life in the past 24 hours.
- Please help _______________ (yourself
or someone else).
- Thank God for how He will
answer your requests.
- Let the group members share
prayer requests.
- Pray using Scripture.
Have the group use one or more passages of Scripture
as their guide for praying. Choose any passage you
feel is appropriate.
Here's an example:
Read a Psalm of praise (e.g. Psalm
103; Psalm 145; 150) or teach the group to pray using
the following:
- The first person reads a phrase
or verse aloud then prays a simple prayer relating
to the phrase or scripture verse.
- Other members of the group join
in audibly or silently agree.
- The next person reads a different
verse then pauses to pray aloud.
- Others follow with their
prayers.
- Use the ACTS Acrostic.
(This can be developed at length with one or more
studies on each word.) Here's how the ACTS guide works:
Adoration: Worshipping and praising God
with your heart, mind and voice.
- Praise and pray through a Psalm,
sing, adore God, praising Him for His attributes
such as: loving kindness, holiness, compassion,
majesty, etc. Praise Him for who He is.
- Sing a hymn and use the words of
the hymn to guide the your time for prayer.
- Select a few of God's attributes
and spend the time meditating and praising Him
for His character. Share answers to prayer and
notice how these answers reflect different aspects
of His character. Spend time thanking God for
the answers and His faithfulness.
Confession: Agreeing with God concerning
any sins He brings to your mind.
- Review I John 1:5-9
- God will bring to mind what you
need to confess.
- Allow time for confession.
Thanksgiving: Giving thanks to God for
who He is, what He has done, what He will do in
our lives and what He is doing in the ministry;
a prayer expressing gratitude.
- Spend time in thanksgiving
by reviewing I Thessalonians 5:18, Ephesians 5:20,
Psalm 108:3, Psalm 50:23.
Supplication: Asking God for his divine
help to meet needs, solve problems, work in someone's
life, etc.
- Read Philippians 4:6,7; Psalm
116:1,2 and lead the group in supplication by
praying aloud.
- Introduce the PRAY acrostic.
- Praise
- Repent
- Ask for someone else
- Your own needs
- Use scriptures to pray for
the fulfillment of the Great Commission, the three
other critical path
steps.
Evangelism
- Pray that God will prepare
individuals to understand and respond to the gospel
(John 6:44).
- Pray that God will motivate
believers to share the gospel with the unbelievers
(Matthew 9:37,38; Colossians 4:3).
- Recognize that Satan has
blinded the unbeliever, and acknowledge Christ's
victory (Ephesians 6:12; II Corinthians 4:3,4;
II Timothy 2:25,26; I John 3:8).
- Persist in these prayers
(Daniel 10:12,13a; Luke 18:1-8).
Discipleship
- Thank God for them (Philippians
1:3).
- Pray for deliverance from
evil (unprincipled) companions (II Thessalonians
3:2).
- Pray that they will walk
worthy of the Lord (Colossians 1:10).
- Pray for wisdom and revelation
in knowledge of Christ (Ephesians 1:17).
- Pray for them to be strengthened
with might by His Spirit in the inner man (Ephesians
3:16).
- Pray for their unity in the
Spirit with other believers (John 17:23).
- Pray that their love may
abound and that they may approve the things that
are excellent (Philippians 1:9,10).
- Pray for boldness and opportunities
to present the gospel to others (Colossians 4:3,
Ephesians 6:19,20).
- Pray that they may mature
and become fully assured of God's will (Colossians
4:12).
Sending
- Recognize the problem of
the labor shortage in the spiritual harvest (Matthew
9:37,38; Romans 10:1315).
- Make a list of you want to
send as missionaries (Isaiah 6:8; Matthew 9:37,38)
and pray persistently for them.
- Pray for the fulfillment
of the Great Commission in your area and around
the world, according to His command and promise
in Matthew 28:18-20 and 1John 5:14,15.
- Mobilize and teach others
to pray for laborers (2 Timothy 2:2).
- Help expand the group's world
vision by praying for specific country, overseas
mission worker or group. (Your group may want
to adopt a country to pray for regularly.)
- Other Ideas for Prayer Requests
- Christian students would
confess their sins to God and choose to be filled
with the Holy Spirit. Especially that Christians
would break off immoral sexual relationships and
be restored and walk in purity (I John 1:9; Joel
2:23).
- Non-Christians seek God and
come to know Christ.
- The Holy Spirit convicts
professors and administrators to receive Christ.
- God calls out committed believers
in every area of campus. (residence halls, fraternities,
sororities, student government, minority groups,
athletes etc.)
- Evangelistic surveys and
outreaches are done in every dorm, fraternity
sorority and athletic team on campus.
- Christians of different races
become united in spirit, intent on one purpose.
- Spiritual awakening revives
believers and brings large numbers of unbelievers
to Christ.
- Students gain an eternal
perspective instead of defaulting to the usual
temporal perspective that pervades college life.
- Graduating seniors would
go where God calls them and they wouldn't seek
security or materialism but instead serve God
as full-time missionaries in their careers after
graduation.
- The Great Commission (Matthew
28:18-20) becomes the most important mission for
every Christian on your campus and that Christians
become pioneers of faith.
- Christians end all gossip
and criticism.
- Spiritual awakening on campus
affects the surrounding community and hundreds
of students fill churches every week.
- Your zeal and love for Christ
touches many campuses nearby.
- The greatest skeptics of
Christianity on campus are won to Christ.
- For a growing worldwide network
of prayer movements, a college student uprising
for Christ around the world and thousands of missionaries
go to the world.
Other Things to Keep in Mind
- As a prayer request is offered,
have another member be responsible to pray for that
request during the prayer time. This ensures that
each person's request will be prayed for by at least
one other person.
- You may wish to have group members
record on a sheet of paper each request as it is given.
They can refer to the list during the group prayer
time as well as throughout the week.
- Allow group members to volunteer
to pray for requests without assigning them or writing
them down. This way members would rely on their memories
during the prayer time.
- You can pray for each request
as soon as it's given, before sharing the next request.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|