Saturday, February 24, 2007

SBC @ Prayer: Pastors Prayer Group Perseveres

Prayers of Faith from Joe McKeever

I wonder sometimes about our Wednesday pastors meeting, if they have outlived their usefulness, and then the Lord says otherwise in no uncertain terms.

We might have begun our weekly meeting with 10 people today, but they kept coming in and we ended up with around 25. In the course of the sharing, two pastors volunteered how much these weekly sessions mean to them. One said, "I always know you are going to be here. You have no idea how much that means."

He has no idea how much his words encouraged us. We have 92 churches and missions operating now, and most of our pastors are either knee-deep shepherding their flocks and don't have time to come to these gatherings or they have second jobs and can't get off. Either that, or they're in seminary. But when I'm tempted to think of 25 as a small turnout, I recall that in the pre-Katrina years, that would be a good turnout for our monthly pastors conferences.

A few highlights here. If you want the entire rundown of our Wednesday meeting, this week or any week, go to our associational website www.bagnola.org. Lynn Gehrmann takes notes of the proceedings and posts them there by mid-afternoon.

"We're prayer-walking this Saturday," said David Rhymes. A number of folks from outside this area will arrive at the Baptist Center here at 8:30 am Saturday. Within an hour, they will disperse into a number of neighborhoods where pastors have requested prayer-walkers, and return to the center in time for lunch and a report time. We'll be doing six sessions in 2007. You're invited.

One of our pastors whose church disappeared from the earth has been meeting with his re-gathered people in his section of St. Bernard Parish. Today he reported that the local Presbyterian church--which had fallen onto hard times before Katrina and whose congregation since the hurricane might be a half-dozen hearty souls--is close to turning over the property to his congregation to move in and use for an indefinite period of time.

"What's wonderful about that," he told the group, "is that at first we tried to purchase the property, and they wouldn't sell it. Then we tried to lease it, and they turned that down. Now, they're using the money they got from Bush-Clinton to restore the facility and then they're going to give it to us." It's a God-thing.

Continued at: http://www.joemckeever.com/mt/archives/000499.html

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

SBC @ Prayer: 700+ Commit to "Wesley" Experience

As I shared with you last night, God is moving in awesome ways in the hearts of those at Burnt Hickory Baptist. There is such excitement in what is happening here - And we appreciate your prayer coverage!

We started the Wesley Experience February 12 which asks for the following commitment for 1 month:
1. Meet once each week to pray together
2. Give 2 hours each week to God (Most are volunteering time in ministries at the church)
3. Give God 1/10th of earnings for this month
4. Spend 5:30am-6am every morning in prayer and meditation
5. Witness for God your experiences to others

The 30 minute prayer and meditation is based on the booklet from the Wesley Experience. Each day includes:
1. Verse, meditation, writing out how the verse applies to your life.
(Verses are on sin, confession, God's love, everything is possible with God, etc.)
2. Pray about write out one totally unselfish and unexpected act of kindness you will do today. Later add the person's reaction.
3. Write out how you would like to build and develop your life, being thoughtful and prayerful. (maybe only 1 sentence a day)

WE HAVE 700+ PEOPLE THAT HAVE COMMITTED!!!! PRAISE GOD!!!!

IN ADDITION MANY MORE ARE PARTICIPATING BUT HAVE NOT SIGNED THE COMMITMENT CARDS BECAUSE THEY ARE DOING THE PRAYER AND MEDITATION AT A DIFFERENT TIME.

FYI: This is the booklet that a group at Asbury College did before their revival in the 1970's.

Please pray for our church family the following plus whatever the Holy Spirit lays on your heart:
1. For each person to emerge from this experience with a deeper relationship with God.
2. For each one to do a soul searching like never have before, opening their whole heart to God
3. For each person to evaluate their life and purpose.
4. To cleanse themselves, repent, do restitution with anyone they need to, and turn to a new life in Christ.
5. For protection for each person and their family.
6. That our staff be in anointed with God's direction and sensitive to His love.
7. That the Holy Spirit would flood our hearts with a burning desire for the lost.

God bless you, Barbara Clark

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

SBC Pastor Launches Middel East Prayer Initiative

ASSIST News Service (ANS) - PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609-0609 USA
Visit our web site at: http://www.assistnews.net/ -- E-mail: danjuma1@aol.com


Southern Baptist pastor launches new prayer initiative for the Middle East

By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST Ministries

Wiley Drake

BEVERLY HILLS, CA (ANS) -- Wiley Drake, pastor of First Southern Baptist Church in Buena Park, Calif., and second vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention, has launched a new prayer initiative for the Middle East.

He announced this news during an interview at the 15th Annual Movieguide® Faith & Values Awards Gala, held at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, on Tuesday, February 20th.

"We started a program on Monday of this week at five AM California time where people can call in on a telephone a conference call and we had one of our pastors from the Gaza Baptist Church in Gaza City on the line with us," he said.

"So every morning, at five o'clock, we're going to have a prayer meeting for the peace of the Middle East; and that's going to be every morning. The phone number is 605-772-3900 and folks can put in their access code 399430 and they can pray with us as well as pray for folks from the Middle East. We're making a strong pitch for peace in the Middle East."

When asked if this was for him personally, or also for the Southern Baptist Convention, he replied, "Well, it's me personally but it's also my position as second vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention. Also, I have a radio show called 'The Wiley Drake Show' Crusade Radio and so it's a conglomerate of Christians coming together to pray for what we're calling let's pray for peace in the Middle East."

Drake then spoke about a recent development at the Gaza Baptist Church where Palestinian Authority (PA) police of the Fatah party seized the six-story Gaza Baptist Church building as a watch point against militants supporting the governing Hamas movement.

"They took over the church because it is a tall building -- taller than the police station -- and they wanted it for higher ground," he explained. "In the last two years, the church's roof has been blown off four times; by the Israelis and also the Palestinians; and so we're just working together to try and bring peace to the region.

"We believe there are a great number of Palestinian and Jewish Christians that want to pray together in the Holy Land and we believe that's where the peace is going to come from."

Note: I would like to thank Robin Frost for transcribing this interview.

Note to radio stations and networks. An MP3 audio interview with Wiley Drake on the above subject is available for broadcast from Dan Wooding at danjuma1@aol.com.



* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Friday, February 23, 2007

Training - How To Lead Congregational Prayer


===>Click headline to access information . . .

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Praying for IBSA Associations

BAPTIST IDENTITY: Baptist bodies ‘seeking to be relevant,’ leader says
By Lonnie Wilkey

JACKSON, Tenn. (BP)--Southern Baptist associations and state conventions must face the challenges of the present in order to be viable forces in the denomination, a Baptist director of missions said.

Since the first Baptist association was established in 1707 in Philadelphia, the association has continued to evolve, said Mike Day, director of missions for the Mid-South Baptist Association, based in Memphis, Tenn.

After state conventions came into being and the Southern Baptist Convention was formed in 1845, their roles have become intertwined, Day noted during an address on “The Future of Baptist Associations and State Conventions” at the Baptist Identity Conference Feb. 15-17 at Union University in Jackson, Tenn.

Baptist associations began to face an identity crisis after state conventions and the SBC came on the scene, Day said. That crisis heightened after the SBC Cooperative Program was established in 1925 and state conventions were given the assignment of collecting and dispersing those funds three years later.

Now, as the SBC continues to grow and change, both Baptist associations and state conventions are “wrestling with the dilemma of creating a denominational brand in a post-denominational world,” Day said.

“Both state conventions and Baptist associations are seeking to be relevant,” he said.

Much of what occurs in Southern Baptist life related to its various levels (national convention, state conventions, associations), Day said, is confusing to members of local churches.

As a result, Baptist associations and state conventions are dealing with the “predicaments of the present,” Day told participants at the conference.

Those predicaments include:

-- The duplicated-effort syndrome. “We do the same things at a lot of different levels,” Day said, adding that some associations can assess, train and deploy a church planter. Those same services also are provided by state conventions and the North American Mission Board. He noted that the size and success of the SBC have created a duplication of services.

-- The institution-first syndrome. Day said there are institutions to be cared for, especially on the state convention level. “These are not bad things, but they are expensive things,” he said. “Our need to provide, educate and edify pushed us into the institution business.”

-- The autonomous hierarchy syndrome. Every entity, beginning at the local church, is autonomous. “But we behave as if we require approval of others or that we have the right to approve. It is an implied hierarchy,” Day said, adding that the problem with this predicament is that the “church winds up at the bottom of the pile. In Scripture, the church is on top of the pile.”

-- The codified cooperation syndrome. Day observed that the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 issues a strong set of parameters for how Baptists cooperate. “Yet, almost daily we try to further define what it means to cooperate as Baptists,” he said. “The Baptist Faith and Message is enough to define us.”

-- The thinly spread missions dollars syndrome. “Our missions dollars are thinning out,” Day said. Simply put, fewer dollars are being shared with more ministries at all levels.

-- The lost influence syndrome. “We have lost our influence as denominational entities in resourcing churches to do their jobs. Consequently, churches have lost their influence in the world,” Day said.

The options Southern Baptists have in dealing with the predicaments are to either start a new association or state convention or to establish a new paradigm for associations, Day said, listing several elements of a new paradigm, including:

-- It is church-driven. “A new paradigm affirms the Great Commission was given to churches and not a denomination,” he said.

-- It is priority-based, focused on church starting, church mobilization and leadership development.

-- It is to be resource-focused. Under the new paradigm, the association would have no programs to maintain. “It uses collective resources to assist churches in fulfilling the mission God has given to them,” he said.

-- It is institution-free. “The association of the future may have to own a building but does not have to own camps, ministry centers or schools,” Day said. “That does not mean associations would not support those institutions. It just means they would not own them.”

-- It will be strategically managed, staffed by directors of missions who are catalytic and facilitative in their leadership.

-- It will be regionally located but not geographically bound.

“It is time for us to apply appropriate pressure and stop the bleeding,” Day said. “It is time to eliminate the things that are not contributing to the Kingdom of God.”

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Sunday, February 18, 2007

FBC Orlando: A heart "filled with passion for prayer"

Phil,

If you have time, this church service will really bless you. The message is why I am sharing it...

First Baptist Orlando is Jim Henry's old church...their new pastor, David Uth shares about his recent encounter with God --as to the direction of his sermon topics. He shares openly about what happened to him...

He raises the questions:
Have you lost the "wonder" of God?
Have we lost the "holiness" of God in our churches?

He shares about wanting to share with those at First Orlando that it should be our desire to have "a heart that is filled with a passion for prayer" - Our churches should be houses of prayer and our "passion" should be "to want to converse with God on a daily basis". So what is wrong with us?

He has challenged his people to try when they are alone in their cars to "actively give up the seat next to them in their cars on the way to and from work...to invite God to sit next to them...to actively, LISTEN and to TALK to Him...to PRACTICE the presence of God" for the next 7 weeks! I believe that this is just a glimpse of what God is doing all over the country with our pastors...the Lord is beginning to put it on the hearts of our pastors in our larger churches to "press in" to try to model to their congregations, just how do we become houses of prayer...

Personal note:
David Uth is the Pastor of First Orlando -- "A Passion for His Presence" the first of a seven part series.

===>Click headline for . . .February 04, 2007 Prayer: A Passion for the Presence of God "A Passion for His Presence" by Dr. David Uth

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Week of Prayer ~ Change Your World



2007 North American Missions Emphasis
Theme: Change Your World
Scripture: Ephesians 2:10 (HCSV)

"For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do."

Purpose: To create in Southern Baptists a renewed awareness of the urgent need to affirm, equip, and support those who are making a difference in people's lives on the North American mission field. To encourage Christians to be active in sharing the gospel with their families, friends, and communities. To increase awareness of and participation in giving to North American missions efforts through the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering®.

Rationale: There's an exciting result that happens when Christians obediently answer God's call to faithfully tell His story to others. We see our world change through individuals whose lives have been eternally impacted by Christ. As Christians we are commanded to tell others about the good news of Jesus Christ to all people, and many are doing that with zeal and determination. Others make the excuse that if they lived in a different place, or were able to travel to more extreme places of need, they would be a stronger, bolder witness. But God is concerned with us fulfilling our destiny of allowing Christ to shine through our actions and daily lives and lead others to a personal relationship with Him.

While all Southern Baptists accept the call to share the gospel and make a difference in people's lives through meeting physical and spiritual needs, our North American missionaries have taken their call to share a step further. They are reaching out to all kinds of individuals from drug addicts to people in poverty to the homeless to immigrants, and to ordinary people living a life without Christ. Their call and our support allow them the privilege of devoting their time and energies to sharing the gospel; therefore, we must support them with our prayers, financial gifts, and participation.

Southern Baptists are structured to be on mission together to reach all people. We pool our resources through the Cooperative Program and missions offerings, creating a dynamic synergy that makes our efforts on all levels stronger than they could ever be if we worked alone. Through the North American Mission Board, Southern Baptists are affirming God's call in the lives of our missionaries, sending them out strategically to share His message, and supporting them through our prayers and financial gifts.

National AAEO Goal: $57,000,000
Suggested Dates for Week of Prayer: March 4-11, 2007

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Saturday, February 17, 2007

SBC Leader: Prayer, the First Element of Unity

Jim Henry urges pastors, deacons to pursue unity in Christ
By Trennis Henderson

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (BP)--After more than 45 years of pastoral ministry, Jim Henry has plenty of experience working with deacons and other church leaders.

Henry, who retired last year after nearly 30 years as pastor of First Baptist Church in Orlando, Fla., drew on that experience as the keynote speaker for the Kentucky Baptist Convention’s Feb. 2-3 Pastor/Deacon/Spouse Retreat in Bowling Green.

In addition to Henry leading three sessions on effective deacon ministry, his wife Jeanette led a pair of sessions for spouses on “Dealing with Life Issues in Ministry.”

Affirming that “I have a high esteem for the office of deacon as well as high esteem for the office of pastor,” Henry emphasized the importance of pursuing unity in the body of Christ.

Noting that 1,300 Southern Baptist pastors and church staff members were fired or forced to resign last year, the former Southern Baptist Convention president said, “There’s something not healthy going on in our churches.... We’re having a whole lot of heartaches and problems in our local churches.

“How do we stay together?” he asked before noting, “The pastors and the deacons have a critical role to play in that in the church.”

Citing the Apostle Paul’s teachings in Philippians 1 and 2, Henry said the first element of unity is prayer.

“What holds us together? It’s prayer,” he declared. “I can’t tell you the strength that comes from prayer for one another.”

Paul also emphasized the importance of being partners in ministry, Henry continued.

“We’re all together in this. We’re partners in ministry, sharing fellowship together,” he said. “We’re in it together, to sink or swim.

“There’s a self-sacrificing in ministry ... in order that Christ can live through us,” he added. “That’s a powerful thing to remember.

“You can have differences, difficulties and disappointments,” Henry acknowledged, “but if you are partners, you will not have disruptions.”

Pastors and deacons also “are bound together in a persevering faith,” Henry said.

Citing such historic Baptist doctrines as the divinity of Christ, salvation through Christ alone and the security of the believer, he added, “What holds us together? Jesus Christ and some commonness in some basic doctrinal issues.”

In addition to prayer, partnership and a persevering faith, Henry said, “A very practical thing that holds us together is compassion for each other.

“When we practically say, ‘You’re my brother and you’re my sister and I love you,’ it will keep the church growing stronger and will get us through the disagreements that come.”

Reiterating Paul’s call for Christian unity, Henry declared, “Unity is the highest expression of the Christian faith. When they see unity in a world that is disunified, it’s like a magnet drawing people to Christ.”

Henry said unity is essential in today’s church in order to overcome spiritual warfare and strengthen our relationship to Jesus.

Detailing the difference between unity and uniformity, he noted, “Uniformity comes from pressure from the outside. Unity comes from pressure from the inside and the pressure from the inside is the work of the Holy Spirit. He is the One who compels us to do everything we can do bring unity into the body of Christ.

“It’s the blood of the cross that holds us together,” he said. “When we realize where we are at the cross of Jesus Christ, we understand the call for unity.”

In a session geared toward pastors, Henry shared a list of ways “you can be a pastor your deacons will love to work with and follow.” Among his suggestions for pastors to “be the leader God intends you to be” were:

-- Understand the heart of your people. That includes understanding each congregation’s unique culture and learning the church’s expectations, Henry said.

-- Serve with a shepherd/servant heart. “Some of our pastors think they are too big to get in there with the people and have a CEO mentality,” he cautioned. “It’s very important to be close to your people; they’ve got to know you love them.”

-- Listen to wise counsel. “All of us preachers make mistakes. We have clay feet. We don’t know everything,” he acknowledged. “Get close to the wise men of the church.”

-- Wear humility as a badge of honor. “All of us have to fight the demon of pride,” Henry said. “If you’re going to pastor in a noble way, you must do it with humility.”

-- “Make your own butter.” He exhorted pastors, “Don’t preach somebody else’s sermons. Avoid plagiarism.” He added, “Pastor, you have to make prayer and study a priority. That requires three things: work, discipline and a plan.”

-- Be careful about chasing the latest church fad. “God does not take a cookie cutter and say, ‘This is what I want to happen in every church.’”

-- Make much of Jesus. “After we’re gone, Jesus is still there,” Henry concluded. “It’s all about Jesus; it’s not about us. We’re just His messenger boys for a season.”

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Thursday, February 08, 2007

"Beg God" for Revival


WMU embraces SBC president’s call to ‘beg God’ for revival
By Julie Walters

TALLADEGA, Ala. (BP)--Woman’s Missionary Union affirmed a call to prayer by Southern Baptist Convention President Frank Page in which he urged leaders in the church to “beg God for His reviving Holy Spirit.”

“Revival has to begin within each one of us first ... before we begin to pray for others to have revival,” Kaye Miller, national WMU president, said at the annual WMU January board meeting at Shocco Springs Conference Center in Talladega, Ala., Jan. 13–16. “I want to ask all of WMU to join Wanda [Lee] and me in prayer for spiritual awakening and unity among Southern Baptists so that our focus can be Jesus and then about taking His name to the ends of the earth.”

The affirmation of Page’s call to prayer earlier in January was woven throughout Miller’s address on Jan. 17 but also was brought before the board by Evelyn Blount, executive director of South Carolina WMU, in the form of an official recommendation. The board unanimously passed the recommendation, which called for WMU to accept Page’s invitation to join him in calling Southern Baptists to “pray for forgiveness, reconciliation, and spiritual awakening.”

Miller encouraged, “I pray that we [WMU] won’t miss one single opportunity that comes our way and we will, as Dr. Page says, ‘have a year of unmatched passion for the Kingdom of God.’ WMU is more focused than ever on what He has called us to do and He continues to guide us each step of the way.”

More than 200 people attended the WMU sessions including WMU executive board members, national and state WMU staff members, WMU Foundation board members and staff, and staff and field personnel from the International Mission Board and North American Mission Board.

ANNIE ARMSTRONG OFFERING
Carlos Ferrer, interim chief operating officer of the North American Mission Board, shared that giving to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American Missions surpassed $58 million in 2006, exceeding the goal by more than $2 million===>Click headline to access . .

INTERNATIONAL MISSIONS
During a report from several IMB staff, Gordon Fort, vice president for overseas operations, voiced appreciation for WMU and their commitment to involve others in missions. “Our [WMU and IMB] task is doable,” Fort said. “Our goal is that every tribe, nation and language will have a [Christian] witness.

“God has entrusted us with every resource we need to complete the task,” Fort continued. “There are people out there who are lost -- not because they want to be, but because no one has ever told them about Jesus. How long will they wait until they get their opportunity?”

IMB President Jerry Rankin told the group that countless numbers of people are receiving an opportunity to hear of Jesus for the first time as field personnel reach new people groups and seek to foster church planting movements. Rankin said 104 new people groups were reached with the Gospel through IMB efforts in 2005===>Click headline to access . .

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .

*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Why A "Prayer Summit"?

IRM Logo

We deeply desire that Prayer Summits would affect three realms. The first is the individual. We are very pleased that at almost every Prayer Summit we hear reports of how individual spiritual leaders have fallen more in love with the Savior. What a wonderful privilege to be used of God in this manner. We rejoice when Jesus is more known and loved by His followers.

The second area we want to see affected is the city or community. From the very beginning, it has been our desire to see renewed pastors worship, pray and minister together to see Jesus exalted in their community. It is always encouraging to see this lived out in ways so creative that it is obvious He is the One behind it. We rejoice when Jesus is more known and loved in cities and communities.

Finally, we want to see congregations renewed in their love for the Lord. We long to see more and more congregations renewed and revitalized by the power of God through prayer. Pastors who have been renewed at a Prayer Summit often times take the “Spirit-led, worship-fed, corporate prayer” they experience at the summit back to their congregations. We rejoice when Jesus is more known and loved in congregations.

These three areas related directly to three opportunities I want you to know about. I will be attending each of these times. I am not asking you to do that, but I am asking you to seek the Lord as to which ones will help you and your leadership team grow in the three areas I mentioned above. Please go to the following sites and pray about your involvement in the foll

The National Pastors Prayer Summit (July 24- 26) will help you lead your congregation into a deeper love relationship with Jesus through prayer. Please note that the 24 hours prior to this summit will be an IRM facilitators/Servant Leaders gathering (July 23-24). More information will be coming to you on this later in the month.===>Click headline to access website . . .

* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .


*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org

Week of Prayer for North American Missions - Conference Call for Pastors



As a part of your church's emphasis on the Week of Prayer for North American Missions and the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering, your GA's, RA's, Awana's, WMU or other mission group can enjoy a 25-minute LIVE Telephone Conference with four Michigan Missionary Kids.

Click HEREFREE for complete information and group registration. Register early, limit 250 groups.



"Rekindling

Evangelistic

Passion"
Audio Conference for Pastors
with Pastor John Hays
Jersey Baptist Church, Columbus, OH

Tue. March 20, 2007, 11:30 AM (EST)

CLICK HERE for Information &
FREE Registration



* Try these keywords in the Search This Blog box above: Resource, Idea, Prayer, Pastor . . .


*Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php
for more prayer articles and resources
*To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org
*Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org