| Restoring a Vision for the Small Prayer Meeting |
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By Joseph Winger Glancing around the prayer group, my heart sank. Even though everyone was excited and ready to pray for our church, we still numbered only five. While I reflected over the many large prayer events I had attended, feelings of failure flooded my thoughts. All I knew to do was to smile on the outside and silently pray, “Father, I don’t care how many show up. You are here and I am here to do Your will. Your Word teaches that You are ‘not restrained to save by many or by few’”(1 Samuel 14:6 NASB). Within moments a renewed gift of hope and faith entered my heart. Although our numbers were few, here is how the meeting ended that night. We experienced an incredible sense of unity and the manifest presence of God was overwhelming. We all left with the confidence that significant answers to prayer would come through our little gathering. Too often we judge success in terms of numbers. But the strength of God’s kingdom has never been determined or affected by the size of a human crowd. The Bible is clear—God’s power is best demonstrated through human weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9-10). In fact, our Heavenly Father seems to delight in bringing His people to the end of their resources in order to show just how awesome His power is. Remember the story of Gideon? The Lord told Gideon that his army had too many men. God knew Israel would boast of the victory because of their vast number of soldiers (Judges 7:2). So the Lord downsized the army from 32,000 to 300. The result was a miraculous display of God’s strength. When it comes to the size of a prayer meeting, we must never become discouraged with small numbers. On the other hand, we shouldn’t take pride in having a small group either. We must guard against an attitude that says, “We are few because we are the elite special force of prayer warriors.” Likewise, hiding behind an “us four and no more” mentality may be a rationalization for an uncreative, anemic prayer ministry—an excuse for not discipling others in prayer. I believe God is well pleased when we, as Local Church Prayer Leaders, are careful not to despise our “small beginnings.” Yet, we must always seek the Lord for His ways to expand prayer throughout the Church. One CPLN member coined the motto for her church, “Every member is to be a praying member.” She intends to settle for nothing less than seeing her church become truly prayer-based! Regardless of the percentage of church members who become actively involved in the church’s prayer ministry, the basic prayer unit—“two of you” will never change. Jesus established the basic prayer unit when He said, “Again, I tell you that if two of you on earth agree about anything you ask for, it will be done for you by my Father in heaven. For where two or three come together in my name, there am I with them” (Matthew 18:19-20 NIV). Regarding these verses, William Barclay observed that Christ’s promise is for two spheres:
The
church. Jesus is just as present in the little congregation as He is in
a large gathering. He is as much present in the small prayer meeting as
he is in the crowded arena. “Jesus Christ is not the slave of numbers,”
Barclay states. “He is there wherever faithful hearts meet, however few
they may be, for He gives all of Himself to each individual person.” Joseph Winger is a longtime pastor and prayer leader. He was the director of the CPLN before Jonathan Graf. For help on leading a prayer meeting, we recommend the books: Fresh Encounters by Daniel Henderson and And the Place Was Shaken , by John Franklin. |