Archive: How to start a Prayer Room in Your Church

Archive: How to start a Prayer Room in Your Church

Archive: How to start a Prayer Room in Your Church

by Jim Leggett

More than two years ago, Good News ran an article by Terry Teykl entitled, “Why You Should Start A Prayer Room.” The article motivated me to start a prayer room in my church of about 100 worshippers (average attendance). Since then, six to twelve faithful intercessors have logged in more than 300 hours of prayer and have recorded roughly 300 answered prayers (interesting correlation!).

I believe our story provides the sequel to Terry’s motivational article. Consider the six steps that we took in starting a prayer room ministry.

STEP ONE: SECURE THE BLESSING OF YOUR PASTOR

There is a spiritual principle of authority here that needs to be respected. No pastor in his or her right mind would refuse a humble offer to have someone else do the work necessary to start a prayer room ministry in the church. Nevertheless, this blessing needs to be secured first.

In my case, I was the pastor. However, since then, I have initiated prayer ministries at a district and a conference level and each time I have sought the blessing of the person in proper authority. No one has yet refused. In fact, those I have consulted gave me ideas I never would have thought of on my own, and I have strengthened relationships with those in authority.

STEP TWO: SECURE A ROOM

The best case scenario is to find a room that is accessible from the outside of the building and that has independent heating and cooling. Those praying in the prayer room will need either to have a key to the door or to know the combination of a door lock.

In our case, no such room existed. We ended up asking the Dorcas Sunday school class to allow us to use a corner in their classroom/chapel which was otherwise being used only on Sunday mornings. In that corner there is now a desk and a chair with a portrait hanging over it of Christ praying in the garden of Gesthemane. Above this prayer desk hangs a printing of what has become our motivational prayer Scripture passage: “As long as Moses held up his hands, the Israelites were winning, but whenever he lowered his hands, the Amalekites were winning” (Exodus 17:11).

Other churches have cleaned out junk closets to use as prayer rooms. Still others have funded the building of an elaborate prayer room or chapel. Many newly planted churches are designing prayer rooms into their architectural plans.

STEP THREE: ASSEMBLE PRAYER MATERIALS

We were now ready to supply our room with prayer aids to help the intercessors who would serve their church in this ministry. As we assembled these prayer helps, we realized it would be helpful to organize them according to a pattern that would walk the intercessor through an hour of prayer. We considered three:

1. Dick Eastman’s Twelve StationsThe hour is divided into 12 five-minute stations: praise, waiting, confession, Scripture praying, watching, intercession, petition, thanksgiving, singing, meditation, listening, and praise.

2. The Lord’s PrayerThe hour can be divided into Praise, Kingdom petitions for the world, nation, denomination, city, and local church, petitions for personal daily needs, confession, prayers for deliverance, and closing praise.

3. The ACTS ModelThe hour can be divided into adoration, confession, thanksgiving, and supplication. The supplication portion is divided into petitions for the world, nation, denomination, city, local church, and personal needs.

We have chosen the latter model, although they all have much in common and require much of the same research and collection of materials. With any of these models, separate notebooks can be organized for each of the major categories (i.e., adoration, confession, thanksgiving, supplication). Items that we use to fill these notebooks include:

  •  the names of national, denominational, and city leaders
  •  the names of area pastors and their churches
  •  the names of the members of our congregation
  •  a listing of our pastor’s personal prayer requests
  •  a map of our city with Isaiah 43:5-7 printed at the top
  •  prayer letters from missionaries whom our church supports
  •  a listing of the church’s mission statement and goals
  •  names of visitors to our church

Many of these lists are too overwhelming for a person to pray for in one sitting; therefore, we have devised 30-Day Rotations to break them into “bite-size” portions. For example, we have a 30-day Rotation for National Leaders which includes daily prayer for the President, one cabinet member, a Supreme Court justice, a congressman, and a state leader. Other 30-day rotations include area churches and pastors, United Methodist bishops, personal requests for our pastor, and church membership lists. Other resources included in our prayer room are:

  • a copy of Patrick Johnson’s Operation World (well-researched prayer requests for every country in the world to be prayed for on a rotation based on the calendar year)
  • a hymnal and other song books
  • a Bible and a Bible-promises resource book
  • stationery, envelopes, and stamps for the purpose of writing short encouraging notes to some for whom we pray (we have a file of national leaders and others who have written us thank-you notes in response to this)
  • a sign-in log (to hold intercessors accountable to their committed time slots and to encourage intercessors that others are praying)
  • a file box of up-to-date prayer requests placed in the offering plate, those phoned into the church office
  • door hangers which read, “In Prayer” or “Vacant.”

One of the most exciting aspects of our prayer room is a spiral notebook entitled, “The Deeds of God: A Record of Answered Prayers of Our Church.” During their time of thanksgiving, intercessors record answers to prayers that they are aware of—especially those that have been prayed for in the prayer room. It has become a habit of mine to share these recorded testimonies from the pulpit about every three months so everyone can be encouraged.

STEP FOUR: CONDUCT AN ENLISTMENT CAMPAIGN

In conjunction with the pastor, an enlistment campaign can be conducted to recruit intercessors for the prayer room.

In our case, I preached a three week sermon series on prayer. Each week we provided a bulletin insert for people to express their interest in attending an informational/training meeting. It was made clear that attendance at the informational meeting was not equivalent to a commitment to pray in the prayer room.

The training meeting was a simulation of an hour long experience in the prayer room. We conducted it in the prayer room itself, and used the prayer notebooks to show how an individual could pray through times of adoration, confession, thanksgiving, and supplication. People were amazed at how fast an hour passed! It was not enough time to pray through all the material.

We ended the meeting by coordinating specific time slots for each person interested. We asked for a commitment of one hour in the prayer room each week for a three month period. At the end of the three months, the intercessor could take a break or commit to another three months. Specific time slots were required to maintain accountability, consistency, and privacy.

Although the pastor does not need to lead the organizational process of the prayer room ministry, the success of this ministry will depend largely on the pastor’s enthusiasm for and modeling of the prayer room covenant. In a non-threatening way, those pastors who have not been the organizational leaders should also be asked to consider participating.

The prayer room coordinator’s job does not stop with the organization and kickoff of the prayer room. Accountability and encouragement can be provided through phone calls and letter writing.

When our prayer room ministry first began, I wrote a letter to each intercessor the same week I noticed their attendance in the sign-in log book. I wrote letters of thanks to all new intercessors.

Roughly once each year we plan a new recruitment campaign. We also include the prayer room as a volunteer option on the time commitment portion of our stewardship campaign cards.

STEP FIVE: BRANCH OUT INTO NEW PRAYER MINISTRIES

The prayer room is not for everyone. We are discovering that the more prayer ministry options we offer, the more people we get involved in prayer. Some of the additional options that our church and others have offered include:

  • Telephone Prayerline in connection with the prayer room
  • Watchman Intercessors: committing to pray during specific time slots at home
  • Shield-A-Badge: adopting a local police officer to pray for daily
  • Cradle-A-Child: adopting the baby of a teenage student mother to pray for daily
  • Worship Anchors: undergirding the worship service in prayer
  • Pastor’s Prayer Partners: personal intercessors for the pastor
  • Telephone Prayer Chain.

Terry Teykl’s book/workbook entitled Making Room To Pray (Bristol House) is highly recommended. Jesus said, “My Father’s house shall be a house of prayer.” Let’s take tangible steps to make that true in our churches!

Jim Leggett is pastor of Grace United Methodist Church in Hearne, Texas.

Archive: How to start a Prayer Room in Your Church

Archive: Healing our Doctrinal Dyslexia

Archive: Healing our Doctrinal Dyslexia

By William J. Abraham

One of the most heartening features of life in the United Methodist Church is the deep yearning for renewal that can be detected at almost all levels of the church. In the patchwork of renewal movements within the United Methodist Church, the Confessing Movement focuses quite deliberately on the need for our denomination as a whole to be faithful to the deep doctrinal treasures of the church across the ages which are spelled out so clearly in the Articles of Religion, The Confession of Faith, and in Wesley’s Sermons and Explanatory Notes on the New Testament. Equally, it calls the church to lift high these doctrinal treasures for the whole life of the church in evangelism, liturgy, mission, pastoral care, social action, and every aspect of the work of the church. Implicit in this call to fidelity, reform, and renewal is the judgment that we have neglected these doctrinal treasures or, more seriously, that we have replaced these treasures with alien doctrinal material, which distorts our tradition, which separates us from each other and from the classical faith of the church, and which undermines crucial aspects of our life and mission together.

Why do we need a confessing movement? There are at least four very substantial reasons.

1. The substance and content of the faith have been called into question in our culture and more conspicuously within the church at large.

We are aware that our culture has become radically more and more pluralistic during the last generation. This is something we neither condemn nor applaud. In the providence of God we are called to serve the gospel at a time of momentous changes. God has sent us forth into a free marketplace of religions, ideas, fads, philosophies, and ideologies. In these circumstances, it is patently clear that we can no longer depend on the culture to transmit Christian faith in the public institutions of the land, such as the law, the news media, the academy, and the public education system. On the contrary, we can expect vigorous engagement in the public arena, if not downright hostile attack. We are not surprised, then, when we find the essentials of the faith called into question by intellectual leaders and scholars.

It is another matter entirely, however, when the faith of the church expressed in our doctrinal standards is called into question by those who want to remake or reimagine the faith in ways which repudiate the great classical doctrines of the church universal. There are those who want to displace the revelation enshrined in the Scriptures by attempting to replace it with an appeal to various forms of reason and experience. There are those who want to reject or set aside the Scriptures because they have invented their own canon. There are those who openly repudiate the Trinity because it is believed to be linguistically oppressive. There are those who reject the full divinity and humanity of Jesus Christ because they think it is supernaturalistic or incoherent. There are those who repudiate the atonement wrought by Christ because they think it is a case of divine child abuse. There are those who reject the universal saving work of Jesus Christ because they think they can save themselves with their own religion. There are those who repudiate the evangelistic and missionary activity of the church because they find it too offensive and intolerant in a pluralistic world. There are those who want to set aside the quest for righteousness and holiness because it does not fit with the mores of a new generation.

In these circumstances it is imperative that the church be clear about its core doctrines concerning the Trinity, the full divinity and humanity of Jesus Christ, and the complete sufficiency of God’s saving action in Christ. In these circumstances silence is a form of collusion. There is at this moment in history a clear need for the church to confess boldly and clearly the faith by which it lives and dies.

2. As a church we have in reality been committed to a form of practical, doctrinal incoherence for a generation or more.

Throughout the last generation the UM Church has been suffering from an acute case of doctrinal amnesia and of doctrinal dyslexia. I have chosen these images very carefully. In the case of amnesia the analogy is self-explanatory. We have simply forgotten our doctrinal heritage and hence have ignored its rich treasures and reserves. In some respects, however, the analogy with dyslexia is more compelling. As anyone suffering from dyslexia knows, the crucial problem is that one sees the relevant marks on the page but the marks are ingested in a distorted fashion. In the case of doctrinal dyslexia, what happens is analogous to this condition. In our case what has happened is that we have turned inside out and upside down the crucial material on doctrine in the Book of Discipline. We have displaced the actual standards of doctrine laid out in the Constitution by concentrating on the highly speculative material laid out in the section on our theological task.

At a crude and popular level we have replaced the great doctrinal verities of the faith, which are laid out so carefully in the Articles of Religion, The Confession of Faith, and in Wesley’s Sermons and Explanatory Notes on the New Testament, with the famous Methodist “quadrilateral.” We have replaced commitment to the great doctrines of the church with a commitment to a speculative theory of religious knowledge. We have replaced content with process, sacrificing the possibility of a publicly agreed common mind to the actuality of a partisan, conjectural theological method.

The consequence is that our identity is now shaped by an interesting but dubious exercise in religious theory of knowledge. On pain of denying our tradition, we are forced to confess adherence to a piece of clever epistemology which was worked out in the 1960s and which is at odds both with Wesley and with the clear content of the constitutional standards of doctrine. In these circumstances the great classical doctrines of the faith, to which Wesley wholeheartedly adhered, are treated as optional alternatives to be received, rejected, remade, or reimagined at will. We have idolized a piece of philosophical speculation and are now reaping the consequences. Not surprisingly, we find ourselves torn asunder by conflicting doctrinal proposals. The quadrilateral effectively fosters this situation. It invites us to evaluate our beliefs and doctrinal suggestions by running them through Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience. As a pedagogical device, the quadrilateral indeed has merit. Anyone who is a teacher can testify to this. However, as a formal proposal in the field of religious knowledge, the quadrilateral is an absurd undertaking, for only an omniscient agent could seriously undertake to run our proposals through the gamut of Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience. Only God could use the quadrilateral and, thankfully, God does not need it. What actually happens, of course, is that folk make a good faith effort to meet this grandiose standard, but the considerations are so diverse and complicated that the result is a wild array of alternatives. The quadrilateral is much like a kaleidoscope. Each time you shake Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience, a different configuration emerges. The result is doctrinal chaos and incoherence. Even Albert Outler, the great architect of the Methodist quadrilateral, was disturbed by its misuse, and late in life expressed reservations about its logic.

This, of course, is what we get when we use the quadrilateral at its best. At its worst, our use of the quadrilateral is like a lateral in football; if you cannot support your position by one element in the quadrilateral then use a lateral pass to tradition, reason, or experience until you get the support you need. In this instance the quadrilateral is simply a camouflage for any and every doctrinal proposal. It is clearly at odds with the much more modest and nuanced appeal to Scripture carefully stated in the Articles of Religion and The Confession of Faith.

It is in this whole arena that we need very significant reform. Currently, the self-image of United Methodists reflects non-commitment to any specific doctrines. At best it adheres to a version of the Methodist quadrilateral. Against this I want to suggest that the UM Church is a confessional church. We have a clear body of Christian doctrine spelled out in our doctrinal standards. Broadly speaking, these standards commit us to the classical faith of the church developed during the patristic period and the Reformation and laid out in the Articles of Religion and The Confession of Faith. Equally, they commit us to the Wesleyan distinctives laid out in Wesley’s Sermons and Explanatory Notes on the New Testament. Where we are currently required in practice to accept a speculative theory of religious knowledge, the UM Church in its Constitution invites us to accept and explore the rich treasures embodied in the classical and Wesleyan traditions. It is high time that we enter into a new doctrinal reformation which comes to terms with this historical reality.

3. Doctrinal considerations are foundational to virtually every aspect of our life and faith, and nothing short of this will challenge the internal secularization of the church as a whole.

The Methodist movement, which sprang up in the eighteenth century, was part of a profound spiritual awakening which cannot be understood apart from the deep gospel truths which animated its leaders and workers. Methodists laid hold of the faith of the church, opened themselves to the active presence of the Holy Spirit, found themselves gloriously converted, and were then propelled into a spiraling movement of evangelism and social action. This was clearly a mighty work of providence which depended on very specific doctrinal commitments such as we find in the doctrines of creation, redemption, grace, justification, and sanctification. Take away these doctrines and Methodism is unintelligible and unworkable. Doctrinal commitments inform and enter into our work in evangelism, worship, social action, pastoral care, ecumenism, and administration.

Increasingly, with the rise of various secular disciplines that reject or ignore theological considerations, there has been a marked tendency to envisage our work in entirely naturalistic, secular, or procedural categories. Worship is reduced to entertainment or to purely aesthetic dimensions; administration is reduced to the logic of management; social action is cast entirely in humanitarian categories; evangelism is interpreted primarily in terms of nominal church membership; pastoral care is cast in terms of therapy; the election of bishops is turned into political campaigning; preaching is reduced to moralism; prayer becomes a form of comfort and auto-suggestion; the Scriptures are reduced to a set of sacred texts; Christian theology becomes an exercise in philosophical or ideological speculation.

The issue of course is a delicate one, for all truth is God’s truth, and we are free, therefore, to baptize all sorts of material for use in the church. Only a fool would refuse to plunder the secular “Egyptians” of our day and generation. However, our first and primary identity in the church is that we are the Body of Jesus Christ, equipped with a whole tapestry of insight expressed in the great doctrines of the faith and overshadowed by the mystery of the living God. Hence, as United Methodists, we live in and for the kingdom of God, not some secular substitute. In our worship we are committed to the great sacraments of baptism and eucharist, where we look to the Holy Spirit to wash us from our sins and feed us with the bread of heaven. We read the Scriptures not as an exercise in sacred archaeology but as the living Word of God. In evangelism, rather than simply adding members to the church, we seek to let the Holy Spirit deliver us from the bondage of original sin. In social action, rather than pursue the ideals of this or that political party, we seek to let God’s rule enter every nook and cranny of our social existence. In pastoral care, we are committed to the cure of souls; in administration we are looking to the Holy Spirit to give the whole church all the gifts that are needed to be agents of the kingdom; in the election of bishops we are seeking to find the charismatic gift of oversight in the church as a whole; in prayer we are entering the very courts of heaven itself; in preaching we are proclaiming and expounding the Word of God; in Christian theology we are in faith seeking understanding.

Conceived in this fashion, our work in the church is encoded by doctrinal themes and convictions. It is not that we somehow conjure up a set of doctrines and then apply them to this or that element in the life of the church. Doctrine is built into the very conception and execution of our work together. In the face of the widespread secularization of our culture and the strong temptation to mimic the ways of the world, it is vital that we remain steeped in the doctrinal riches of the faith. In this way our life and work together can truly represent the action of the Body of Christ and be filled with the direction of the Holy Spirit. Hence we can by grace be a city set on a hill, an outpost of the kingdom of God, and a vineyard truly built of the Lord, rather than one more social club, or our favored political party at prayer, or an insipid nursemaid to the secular state.

4. There is a need to heal the deep alienation and the sense of intellectual exclusion which exists in significant segments of the church at large.

What is at stake here is far from easy to describe. Let me try as best I can. I will do so by providing a tendentious narrative which will deliberately exaggerate in order to make the crucial point at issue. Ostensibly, United Methodism is an open, inclusivist denomination. We have prided ourselves on welcoming the stranger, on providing a spiritual home for those who have felt they were oppressed in other traditions, and on being a community where people are free to think for themselves. Moreover, we have worked exceedingly hard to empower women and ethnic minorities. These are virtues which very few, if any, in United Methodism would want to forfeit. Yet this is not the whole story. At the end of the last century, the leadership of the forbears of modern United Methodism made a strategic decision that has never been adequately faced and worked through. At a time of enormous intellectual and social crisis, we opted to become the leaders of the liberal Protestant movement in North America. Believing that the classical Methodist tradition could not really be defended in the modern world, we adopted a revisionist pose which dismantled the classical faith of Methodism. Like the leaders in most mainline churches we lost our intellectual nerve and elected for massive accommodation to the intellectual elites of the culture.

This was an understandable decision, for liberal Protestants insisted that there was no other way to face the intellectual and social challenges of the day. Hence they felt that they could quietly ignore or dismantle vast tracks of the Christian heritage without shedding any theological tears. This shift—developed quite brilliantly, for example, at Boston School of Theology (which became a kind of Vatican of the tradition as a whole)—was taken as a given by much of the intellectual leadership of our tradition in the twentieth century. Any alternative seemed a perpetuation of a doctrinal dark ages which needed to be enlightened by all that was best in the modern world.

As a consequence, Methodism became theologically schizophrenic. Our roots, our hymnody, our founding documents were wholeheartedly steeped in the classical Christian tradition, but many of our leaders have been deeply alienated from this whole heritage, even though they had to work overtime to provide a semblance of intellectual coherence for themselves. Over time the fortunes of liberal Protestantism have waxed and waned. Liberal Protestantism was deeply challenged by the rise of Neoorthodoxy before and after the Second World War, but this was relatively easily contained by arguing that the work of Barth and the Niebuhrs was really a moment of self-correction in the development of liberal Protestantism. It was, for a time, given bad press with the arrival of the “God is dead” movement of the 1960s, but this was more of a media event than it was a serious threat to the standing orders of the great liberal Protestant experiment. Overall, during this period the intellectual institutions of United Methodism were a closed shop. It was the exception rather than the rule when someone who was committed to the classical faith of the church was permitted entrance. Too often they were dismissed doctrinally as intellectual illiterates.

As a consequence, many faithful United Methodists were shut out of crucial centers of the church’s life. They did what any group will do under such circumstances: they became frustrated, angry, fidgety, and alienated. Being what all United Methodists are, namely, inveterate, pragmatic activists, they also went to work. Over time they funded and built their own institutions, set up their own parachurch organizations and caucuses, got themselves educated, printed their own literature, held their revival meetings at the grass roots, set up an alternative mission society, and above all, poured themselves into evangelism and church growth. At the same time they worked as best they could within the system, being as loyal as they knew how to the church whose faith they treasured.

Liberal Protestantism is again in serious trouble within the academy. It is challenged on one side by the development of various forms of radical Protestantism and on the other side by a resurgent recovery of evangelical and patristic sensibilities in theology. Some academic institutions have even opened their doors, albeit in fear and trembling, to those who do not share the revisionist agenda. The ethos of liberal Protestantism, however, lingers on in the tradition as a whole. Almost all have been preoccupied by a multicultural agenda that focuses on a form of diversity which masks a deep opposition to the classical faith of the church on the grounds that it is incredible and oppressive. The inevitable consequence has been that many conservative and traditional United Methodists remain deeply alienated within the tradition as a whole.

We need a vigorous confessing movement at this moment in our history in order to give voice to those who have been systematically excluded from the central life of the church. Members who are committed to the classical doctrines of the faith need to know that they are not alone, that there are others who share their exclusion, that they can be fully Christian within the United Methodist tradition, and that they can learn and relearn the classical faith of the church. In short, there are many within United Methodism who need a space where they can be healed and intellectually renewed to serve the present age. They need a movement in which they can own their own tradition with integrity and deepen their hold on the doctrinal treasures of the church.

Our concern is with doctrine. Without adequate attention to this crucial dimension of our life together we will become antinomians, pharisees, and intellectual anarchists. Worse still, we will become emotionalists, frenetic activists, and even apostates from the faith once delivered to the saints. With proper attention to doctrine we will continue to be part of that great succession of evangelists, saints, and martyrs who, in the church catholic across the ages, have borne a faithful testimony to our great God and Savior Jesus Christ.

William J. Abraham serves as the Albert Cook Outler Professor of Wesley Studies at Perkins School of Theology, Dallas, Texas. This article was adapted from an address delivered by Dr. Abraham at a national gathering of the Confessing Movement within the United Methodist Church in Atlanta, April 28 and 29, 1995.