Prayer is a bit like apple pie, motherhood, and long weekends: everyone is for them! I mean, is there anyone who doesn’t enthusiastically embrace these fine institutions?
And when it comes to prayer, Christians are particular fans. At most churches, prayer takes place in Sunday services, Sunday schools, youth groups and Bible study groups. If you say “Prayer is important”, you will get little disagreement from believers. Sure, you may get a few questions like “Why should we pray when God already knows what we need?” or admissions like “I guess I should pray more”, but mention prayer to Christians and everyone is on-board... sort of!
Why ‘sort of’? Well, in reality, prayer can be a bit more like the traditional western church than apple pie... more like Mandela’s book than motherhood. Many people have an attitude towards the church which is: “I don’t go very much, but it’s nice to know it’s there”. Many people own Nelson Mandela’s book Long Walk to Freedom but have not actually read it. Many Christians love the idea of prayer, but struggle to actually implement it.
The worrying aspect of this with respect to evangelism (the theme of my pieces on GoThereFor.com) is that prayer needs to be heavily associated with evangelism! Jesus highlights its importance in Matthew 9:36–38:
When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field.”
Paul speaks of his concern for outreach and prayer in Romans 10:1: “Brothers, my heart’s desire and prayer to God for the Israelites is that they may be saved”. In Colossians 4:3-4 he also seeks the prayer support of others for his evangelistic ministry. Furthermore, church history tells us that at those times in the past when people have turned to Christ in large numbers (e.g. the Billy Graham 1959 crusades in Australia) there were wide-ranging movements of prayer. My personal experience has been that Christians in sub-Saharan African spend more time in prayer than the Anglo-Saxon Christians I know—and the church is growing over there!
I mention this not to induce spiritual self-flagellation, but rather to remind us of a truth that is crucial to our outreach. Proclamation (and programs) must combine with prayer. Given that this can often be a bit of a struggle, I mention here three things that are currently being attempted at our church:
About sixty people responded. I send out a short email each week with prayer points on this topic, a passage of Scripture and a story or two.
One recipient emailed me this past week and wrote:
Thank you for your emails. I appreciate you sending them weekly as they prompt me to stop and pray each time I receive them. Now that the habit is set I’m finding it easier to also pray more often throughout the week on a regular basis.
She then outlined how, in answer to her regular prayers, a non-Christian friend she has been praying for was happy to send her children to our church’s holiday kids’ club, and that one child would now be heading along to our church’s Friday afternoon primary school group to try it out. “It’s such a wonderful thing to see God working in this way!” she concluded.
Let’s authentically apple pie our evangelistic prayers!