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Twenty-two

The Prayer Meeting

“Hello pastor, I am visiting here in Mill Valley and I

wondered when your prayer meeting was?”

That question cut me to the quick: we had no

prayer meeting.

“My mother is quite ill and I flew in from Miami

to be with her. I would like to have some prayer.”

I hung up the phone vowing to begin a prayer

meeting at Miller Avenue.

         

Erroll Hulse has written an excellent tract titled,

“The Vital Place of the Prayer Meeting”. It may

be obtained from the Chapel Library, 2603 W. Wright

Street, Pensacola, FL 32505. (This is a ministry of the

Mount Zion Bible Church in Pensacola.) I can never

do better than what Erroll Hulse has done in that

excellent piece of work on the prayer meeting.

Prayer is, of course, vital to the life of the church

and to every believer individually. I must admit this is

an area in which we are not strong at Miller Avenue

Church and I wish this were not the case. However, by

the grace of God and the leadership of Anatoli Sokolov,

a Baptist pastor and recent immigrant from Moscow,

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The Prayer Meeting

Russia, we now have a wonderful prayer meeting at

Miller Avenue that begins one half hour following the

Sunday morning worship service.

Recently I preached a sermon based upon Acts 6:1-

6. That passage describes a problem that developed in

the primitive church in Jerusalem. The apostles were

distracted from vital ministry because of the necessity

of caring for the widows of the church. To resolve the

situation, the apostles meet with the disciples (the

church) and announced, “It would not be right for us

to neglect the ministry of the word of God in order to

wait on tables.” (Verse 2) Thus issued the selection of

the first deacons who were assigned the task of serving

the widows of the church. The apostles’ intent was to

focus on “prayer and the ministry of the word.” (Verse

4) “Ministry of the word” refers, I believe, to the

preaching of the gospel and to the “apostles’ teaching”.

Prayer, preaching, and teaching go together.

In that sermon on Acts 6, I encouraged everyone

to make a list of the names of those who were

unconverted among their family, friends, and other

associates. Alongside the name I suggested noting the

date of the initial prayer. The point was to pray regularly

for the people whose names were on their list, pray

that they would hear the gospel and be converted. I

believe that it is important to pray for those we think

are unconverted and bring them before the throne of

God on a regular basis, pleading that God would draw

them to Jesus. The prayer meeting is a likely setting

for these prayers.

Our best efforts need to be in the prayer meeting.

Not everyone in the church will come to the prayer

meeting, but those who delight in prayer and feel the

burden of prayer will gather together. The size of the

group is irrelevant.

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For Pastors

That we are taught to pray is abundantly clear from

the Scripture. Through Jesus we have access to the

Father who hears our prayer. We are taught to make

our needs known to Him, and though He knows our

needs before we ask Him, yet we are told to bring our

requests to Him.

Prayer has seemed paradoxical to me. The will of

God will be done. His purpose will be accomplished

because He is the sovereign God, yet in the prayer

meeting we bring our requests before the throne of

grace and have the confidence that God will hear and

that He will act according to His will to bring glory to

our Lord Jesus Christ.

It sometimes evolves that the prayer meeting takes

on the character of a Bible study or a preaching meeting.

However, prayer meetings are best if they are in fact

prayer meetings. A prayer meeting need not be lengthy,

but it needs to be serious. It has been my experience

that the focus should be on prayers for the unconverted,

for those who are ill, and for those who need to be

encouraged in their faith. We can pray for those who

have the rule over us in the secular world. We can pray

for Christian leaders around the world and for churches

around the world. We can pray for difficult

circumstances wherever and whatever they might be.

But it is best if it is a time of prayer and not discussion,

because we have a tendency to want to discus issues

rather than bring them to the Lord in heartfelt prayer.

There are many forms the prayer meeting might

take. Let me suggest three of the most common. One,

after a short exhortation to prayer or the reading of a

verse on prayer, various people can bring any request

before God aloud while the others listen to and “agree”

with the prayer. Two, either sitting or kneeling, each

person can pray aloud or silently, and this perhaps after

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The Prayer Meeting

a short word or two on the subject of prayer. Some of

the best prayer meetings I have ever been in have been

small and we have been on our knees. It was in such a

prayer meeting that God called me into the ministry.

Three, a prayer request is made then someone in the

group recalls a promise in Scripture that speaks to the

request. For example, a request is made for new

Sunday school teachers and then another person (or

the same person) reminds the group of the saying of

Jesus: “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are

few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send

out workers into his harvest field” (Matthew 9:37-38).

Then the specific prayers are made. This pattern can

continue until the meeting time expires. (I think it is

best if there is a definite ending point and that the

leader adheres to it.) There are, of course, many more

forms for the prayer meeting.

Many wonderful things happen in prayer meetings.

During the Third Great Awakening in America, 1858-

1860, the prayer meeting was central, more so than even

preaching. Somehow we are more sensitive to God’s

Holy Spirit at prayer; our hearts may become tender

and open to the words of Jesus. I believe the Holy Spirit

impresses upon us the truth of His word in that quiet,

rare, and wonderful time when we turn our heart, soul,

and mind to the Lord, coming into His very presence.

         

Can you remember a prayer meeting where you had

the sense that you were in the presence of God?

Few have I suppose. What prayer meeting format

seems best to you?

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