Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Q & A: "How to design a summer of outward focused praying for the whole congregation?"

Hi Phil:
I appreciate your prayer information!
Could you please let me know about "How to design a summer of outward focused praying for the whole congregation"?
Thanx much! Have a Blessed Day!


Good to hear from you.

Glad to share some ideas:
  • Prayerwalks - each SS class and fellowship/study group goes on site to pray
  • Prayer Guides - each family/member receives a prayer guide with a daily focus on the community
  • Prayer Card - distribute "30 Days to Prayer for Your City" (from NavPress)
  • Pastoral Prayer - each Sunday a different congregation and community leader or issue is prayed for
  • Prayer Stations - check local ordinances before setting-up a "Free Lemonade; Fee Prayer" station on the street or at a local fair
  • Prayer Sign - invite the community to call or email the church with a prayer request
  • Prayer Night - promote "Six Summer Sessions to Impact Our Community"
  1. Pastoral message (20 min) then 40 minutes of praying
  2. Prayerwalk at nearby schools: Teams dispatched to various campuses, pray, return for debrief (family event)
  3. Devotional (20 min) on praying for lost family and friends followed by 40 minutes of praying by name and need
  4. Prayerwalk at nearby parks: Teams dispatched to various parks, pray, return for debrief (family event)
  5. Devotional (20 min) on praying for issues (problems that hinder the Gospel and hurt families followed by 40 minutes of praying scripture promises of hope and peace
  6. An evening of prayer reports: What has God said, what has God done in these past 5 weeks ... Prayer for what he will say and do the next 5 months ...
If any of these sound useful, let me know if you have detail questions and I'll be glad to help,

phil@nppn.org

P.S. Click headline to hear a teaching on community impacting prayer



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Monday, June 29, 2009

SBC @ Prayer ~ Great Commission Task Force calls for 5,000 Prayer Volunteers


Great Commission Task Force chairman issues call for 5,000 prayer volunteers

Posted on Jun 29, 2009 | by Staff NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--The chairman of a task force charged with helping improve Southern Baptists' service to Christ through their Great Commission mandate has asked for 5,000 volunteers who will pray regularly on behalf of the committee.

Ronnie W. Floyd, senior pastor of First Baptist Church in Springdale, Ark., and The Church at Pinnacle Hills in Rogers, Ark., will chair the 19-member committee, which was appointed June 24 by Southern Baptist Convention President Johnny Hunt. Messengers to the SBC annual meeting in Louisville, Ky., overwhelmingly adopted a motion to authorize the move June 23.

"I am very humbled by the request made of me by SBC President Johnny Hunt to serve as chairman of the Great Commission Resurgence Task Force," Floyd told Baptist Press in a written statement June 28. "The task before us is huge and without the Lord's leadership and power will be impossible.

"This is why my No. 1 concern and request right now is that God raises up at least 5,000 Southern Baptists who will pray daily for our task force members and the work before us," Floyd added. "Through prayer and due diligence, God will direct our path toward the future. Prayer is my No. 1 concern today; please pray for us. This critical assignment placed upon us can be accomplished when we pray."

A website will be created in the near future where volunteers can register their commitment to pray, Floyd said. Prayer points will be sent to those who register.

The vote authorizing the task force charges them with studying how Southern Baptists can work "more faithfully and effectively together in serving Christ through the Great Commission."

Besides Floyd and Hunt, other committee members are: Jim Richards, executive director of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention; Frank Page, pastor of First Baptist Church in Taylors, S.C.; David Dockery, president of Union University in Jackson, Tenn.; Simon Tsoi, trustee of the International Mission Board and retired pastor; Donna Gaines, pastor's wife at Bellevue Baptist Church near Memphis, Tenn.; Al Gilbert, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Winston-Salem, N.C.; J.D. Greear, lead pastor of The Summit Church in Raleigh-Durham, N.C.; Tom Biles, executive director of the Tampa Bay Baptist Association.; Daniel L. Akin, president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; R. Albert Mohler Jr., president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; John Drummond, a layman at St. Andrew Baptist Church in Panama City, Fla.; Harry Lewis, senior strategist for partnership missions and mobilization at the North American Mission Board; Michael Orr, pastor of First Baptist Church in Chipley, Fla.; Roger Spradlin, pastor of Valley Baptist Church in Bakersfield, Calif.; J. Robert White, executive director of the Georgia Baptist Convention.; Ken Whitten, pastor of the Tampa-area Idlewild Baptist Church in Lutz, Fla.; Ted Traylor, pastor of Olive Baptist Church in Pensacola, Fla.


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SBC Leader: Not Seated but Sent

.
Rick Warren learned that a church should not be judged by how many people it seats, but rather by how many people it sends to mission fields. Basing his church on that model, Warren said his church has now sent thousands of people to some 100 nations, and by next year, could be the first church to send people to every country in the world.


===>Click headline to access complete news report . . .


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Thursday, June 25, 2009

SBC Author's Prayer Tips for a Deacon Wife



Some Practical Prayer Tips for a Deacon Wife

Stop, drop, and pray.
A church member stops you in the ladies room to share a need or concern. Stop right there, drop what you’re doing, take her hand, and offer a prayer on her behalf. Prayer changes things. God’s listening!


Pray during church.
Have you ever seen someone check her watch during worship? That won’t happen to you if you are busy praying. Pray silently during the service for the guests, the sermon, child-care workers, ushers, even the announcements.


Pray before you speak.
Whether it’s to teach a children’s Bible lesson or to talk with your best friend on the phone, say a prayer before you speak. Why? Because “out of the overflow of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matt. 12:34 NIV).


Get caught praying.
Teach your children to pray. Pray with them for specific requests. Prayer walk at the church building with them on Saturday morning. Allow your children to see you and hear you pray.
Pray on the phone. When someone calls about a need or problem, voice a prayer before you hang up. Pray aloud, right there on the phone.

Pray during deacons meetings.
Why not begin a new practice of praying when your husband attends a deacons meeting at church? While your husband meets with the pastor and deacons, you have a meeting with God. Pray for wisdom and discernment for the deacons and staff. God’s listening.
Remember what you prayed.

Have you ever kept a prayer journal? It’s an ongoing list of prayer requests you have brought to the Father. Add requests each day to your journal, highlighting answered prayers. Your journal will soon be full of yellow! Steve and I had wanted to have a baby for seven long years before God blessed us with our first son. Years later I found my old prayer journal. Precisely nine months before our son’s birth, I’d written a petition to God, asking Him to bless us with children. And we had three in a row! Oh, I already knew those children were from God, but my written journal and its precise timing reminded me that God was actively listening.


Pray for your favorite deacon.
Your deacon husband needs your prayer support. Pray for God’s wisdom and strength as he serves as a deacon. Remind him of your prayers.


Say it.
Pray faithfully for church staff, deacons, teachers, and other leaders. Tell them you’re praying. Send a note to remind them of your prayers.


Pray by name.
Use a church directory to pray for church members from A to Z. Check off names with a colored pen. When you’ve prayed for the entire list, get a different color pen and begin again.


Pray when you minister.
Delivering a casserole? Say a silent prayer before you ring their doorbell. When you make an outreach contact or visit the homebound, hospitalized, or bereaved, voice a prayer for them before you leave.


Pray on your way.
I know! I know! You’re a busy woman with family, work, church, chores, and ministry. Some days you may feel there is no time left to talk with God. How can you possibly find time to pray? During everyday moments of life, talk with God. Look for minutes when you are exercising, shopping, driving, waiting, or walking.


Shower power.
My daughter, who works with youth in her church, has a unique prayer plan. She made a list of her youth and youth workers, put it inside a plastic report cover, and taped it on the wall in her shower. Every day she prays for each of them. Tape your list by your makeup mirror, ironing board, or computer screen.


Sunday prep prayer.
Begin a new habit. While you’re dressing for church each Sunday, pray. Pray for the pastor and leaders as they prepare. Pray for church members. Think about each thing that will occur in God’s house today and pray. A deacon wife in our church brought her children to the church building every Saturday morning for a few minutes. They walked past each classroom and pew, praying aloud for the people God would touch there on Sunday.


Celebrate answered prayer.
When God answers a specific prayer for a member of your church, invite her for coffee or lunch to celebrate!


Material taken from Deacon Wives: Fresh Ideas to Encourage Your Husband and the Church by Diana Davis (B&H Publishing Group, 2009). Do not alter text.
===>Click headline to order this book...

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Monday, June 22, 2009

SBC Leader: Prayer Can Give Small Churches Big Impact

EdStetzer.com



Small Churches Can Thrive

Posted: 22 Jun 2009 08:04 AM PDT

The July/August issue of Outreach Magazine features my article on small churches. Yep, small churches - I love 'em! Especially when they are thriving on gospel and mission.

As a speaker at a number of conferences each year, I continue to see pastors and leaders going from one workshop to another searching for "THE" answer. They show up and hear amazing stories about implausibly happy people who willingly follow a new vision for their lives and their church.


smallchurch-small.jpgThey have heard all the strategies and promises, but for many small-church leaders, the conferences, led by rock star celebrity pastors, are like "ministry pornography"-- an unrealistic depiction of an experience they'll never have that distracts them from the real and wonderful thing. In other words, the lust of the megachurch distracts them from the mission of their church. (I'm not anti-big church--I preach at a megachurch every week-- but I am also pro-small church.)

The reality is that smaller churches can thrive, too. More than 65 percent of the churches that participated in the research survey for Comeback Churches (B&H)--the book I co-wrote with Mike Dodson-- had under 200 regular attendees. Smaller churches are not always unhealthy churches; it depends largely on their mindset. In our research, we found that the small churches which experienced revitalization often did so around prayer and outreach.

Passionate, Persistent Prayer
Small churches need to stop looking at megachurches and their pastors as role models. They can learn from them, but they must not copy them. In a world that devalues the small, listening to God in prayer and stepping out in obedience are much more important than the latest magic bullet that often misfires in smaller churches.

That attitudinal change can and does happen through intentional prayer for renewal. As we looked a little deeper at survey results, it was interesting to note that the comeback leaders of smaller churches highlighted the need for prayer even more than those at larger churches. When asked, "To what degree did the following [areas] change during your church's comeback?" leaders of the churches under 200 rated prayer as the area most changed.

Smaller comeback churches are often praying churches. Comeback leaders of smaller churches believed even more strongly that real, intentional, strategic prayer made a significant difference in their revitalization process. God can change attitudes in your church through passionate, persistent prayer for renewal.

An Outward Focus
Small churches are not exempt from the call to reach people because they are small. Too many churches of all sizes spend too much time moaning about what they don't have that other churches do have or about what they can't do that other churches are doing. No, you may not be able to do everything that other churches are doing. But that doesn't mean your church can't do something of purpose.

If smaller churches are going to thrive, they must focus their attention on reaching the lost in their communities. Again, delving deeper into our survey results reveals another important point. When asked the same question above, the leaders of churches under 200 rated evangelism as the second area that changed the most during the comeback.

Where From Here?
Prayer and outreach are not exactly revolutionary ideas, but they do change our focus. When small-church leaders have set their hearts on being like the large church, often the results are not positive. However, when they set their attention on God through prayer and on their community through outreach, the right focus produces small churches on God's mission in their context. And that's worth celebrating.

Would love to hear your thoughts on small churches.

What are the challenges and what are the answers to those challenges?

How have you served at a small church and what were the results?




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Thursday, June 18, 2009

Praying for Children

Children’s Day logo

10 Ways to Pray on “Children’s Day”

• National Prayer Leader Offers Special Ideas



America’s church played a vital role in the birth of both Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. So it should be no surprise that the revival of “Children’s Day” on the second Sunday in June (this year June 14, 2009) also embraces a spiritual component.

The website, www.nationalchildrensday.us, and its mirror www.childrensday.us, are offering 10 ways to pray on “Children’s Day” as complied by the Rev. Phil
Miglioratti, national facilitator of city and community ministries for Mission America. He also leads the National Pastors’ Prayer Network and writes a prayer column for Pray Magazine.

“10 Ways to Pray on Children’s Day”
1. Sit on your porch or patio and pray for children in your neighborhood.
2. Take your family (including children!) or a few friends and pray at a nearby school.
• At the flagpole
• Around the perimeter
• In each parking slot (for the faculty, administration, called-in parents...)
3. Picnic in the park ... and pray for:
• Children and parents in the playground
• Teens on the field or the courts
• Gangs that may be in your community
4. Alert your pastor and ask that a special prayer for children take place on Children's Day (invite parents to bring their children to the front for a prayer of blessing).
5. Hand deliver "I/We prayed for your kids" cards (homemade is fine) to family acquaintances.
6. Call a grandchild, niece, or nephew, and ask if you can pray for them over the phone.
7. Secure a yearbook from a nearby school and pray for several of the students each day for the next month (or longer).
8. Become a secret chaplain of a child's sport team - Use the team roster as a daily prayer list.
9. As you peruse the daily newspaper, stop each time a child is included in a story and pray.
10....and when you pray, ask the Lord to bless them, body (health), soul (hope) and spirit (heaven).

Children’s Day observations in the United States date from the 1860s and earlier.

The Methodist Episcopal Church at the Methodist Conference of 1868 recommended
that the second Sunday in June be observed annually as Children’s Day. The
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in 1883 designated the “the second
Sabbath in June as Children’s Day.”

The Children’s Day website offers help and challenges parents, individuals,
churches/houses of worship, schools/places of education, government/community and
businesses to sign commitment cards directed at affirming America’s children. They
pledge to “commit myself(ourself), in the coming year, to love, cherish, nurture
(physical, mental, emotional, & spiritual needs), and affirm...” They can also make a
commitment beyond America to the world’s children.

In 2007 and 2008, Illinois proclaimed the second Sunday in June as Children’s
Day. Several Illinois towns also issued proclamations.

Currently Chase’s Calendar of Events cites Children’s Sunday and notes that The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts issues an annual proclamation for the second
Sunday in June.

Numerous churches and denominations, including the African Methodist Episcopal
Church, African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Church of the Nazarene, now
observe the second Sunday in June as Children’s Day.

Contact: John Ross
(630) 879-8828 (office)
(630) 879-2583 (home)
http://www.nationalchildrensday.us/

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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

SBC @ Prayer ~ Prayer's Impact on Associational Planning

Phil,
Thought you might be interested in what’s taking place here since you have been part of our effort to become prayer-driven as an association of churches. It’s reflected in the attached 2010 Ministry Plan. Previous planning has identified priorities and specific, implementation strategies, along with funding requests. A start-to-finish ministry plan.

This year we experienced a radical departure from precedent (and my normal mission strategizing “MO”). The team was unable to prioritize our core ministries and come to consensus about which one(s) our ministry plan should address. The emerging “breakthrough” is (seems to be) a holy reluctance to declare God’s will. And I think it is being birthed in a genuine desire to be in His will; to see and allow and get in on His moving in deeper, transforming way.

We are really trying to “wait and watch” and be as ready as we can for whatever He has to do to move us toward becoming “Not I, but Christ” churches .. “connected (associated) for Christ’s mission.”


2010 MINISTRY PLAN PROPOSAL

The team was given one basic assignment: to constantly ask the assessment question, “What do we need to do at the associational level to enable our churches to be as faithful and effective as possible in five Core Ministries: Evangelism, Leadership, Ministry, Missions, and Prayer?” and then to conceive and coordinate strategies to accomplish the agreed upon answers.

In the first year of functioning in this way, 2008, Prayer was the Core Ministry selected to receive priority attention. A Prayer Ministries Team was enlisted which designed and implemented strategies that kept the urgency of prayer before all our churches; encouraged churches to grow stronger, more powerful in their prayer ministries; and coordinated association wide conferences and prayer ministries. This year, the Core Ministry: Leadership is receiving priority attention. The Leadership Learning Team is assessing leadership levels and considering how to encourage and facilitate our churches in developing effective Kingdom leaders.

As the planning team moved through this process in the ministry planning retreat for 2010, a priority Core Ministry did not emerge so easily or clearly. In fact, the task of identifying one or more to give priority status became so difficult it was not completed in the retreat. The team sought God’s will through personal and corporate prayer – and even by fasting.

Still, when the deliberations resumed, the lack of consensus continued. In fact, the results of praying and meditating, of meeting and discussing yielded the following result. For its 2010 Ministry Plan proposal, the team does not recommend that Evangelism be given priority attention; does not recommend that Leadership be given priority attention; does not recommend that Ministry be given priority attention; does not recommend Missions as the priority Core Ministry; does not recommend that Prayer be the priority Core Ministry.

More than one participant noted “the quietness” in the meeting, and one observed later that “God seems to be quiet in a number of places.” - which should bother us or at least cause us to ask “Why?”. When the quietness gave way to honest sharing, the realization began to surface that giving one or more of these Core Ministries priority was not the solution to our problem. Certainly, that was not because any or all were unimportant. Indeed, they are the heart of the church’s nature and assignment on earth.

The greater urgency that began to grow in the team’s awareness and conviction was a deeper need in our churches – indeed, in the universal Body of Christ in our day: obedience. One team member shared God’s personal word to him and extended it to our churches in the following way. There is little about any of these Core Ministries that we don’t or can’t under-stand, few situations where adequate resources and training can’t be secured. The real problem is doing them, obeying our Lord as and when He directs. The real challenge God puts to us is, “Release yourself to Me so I can work.”

The discussion led to a deeper sense that programs and resources, missions trips and projects, conferences and collaborative efforts are not the key. We need – and sense, yea, pray – that God is moving us toward a spiritual awakening in our lives deeper than most of us have ever known. It is awakening deeper than revival as we have typically experienced it, “Repent, return, so that you (we) might experience times of refreshing.” – times that feel good. What is needed is for we who are the church, Christ’s body, to be captured by the reality of who we are and therefore what we are to be doing!

The church is changing…too much by our default and by the world’s disregard. Research reveals that the number of Americans identifying themselves as “Christian” – who knows how functionally accurate that identification is – dropped by 10% over the last 18 years, while those claiming no faith has almost doubled, and the number claiming to be “nondenominational” believers has grown from 200,000 to 8 million, a 4000% increase…in 18 years. And our own backyard is just as dry and dusty. When our forty churches today, in a much larger population base, have basically the same enrollment, attendance, and baptismal numbers that the founding 22 churches did fifty years ago, something is greatly anemic!

What is needed? The team senses that our churches need awakening to a desperateness for God deeper than most have known, an awakening to the reality that our obedience will never be adequate, certainly, as long as we think God is here to do for us, or even that we are doing something for God; awakening to the driving passion and guiding compass in the Apostle Paul’s life, “Not I, but Christ” – “I have been crucified with Christ, it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” We need to be awakened to the fact that Jesus died for our sin and was resurrected not just to intercede for us in eternity, not just to return to take us unto Himself for eternity, but He was resurrected to live His life through us right now in the presence and by the power of His Holy Spirit! Christ is our life – not only in eternity, but now on earth!

How will we do that? How can we encourage and help our churches to move from thinking of church as organizational structures, activities and privileges on brick and mortar campuses, to Christ living His very life through us day by day? We, your staff and team don’t know…yet! We don’t know what strategies will be needed…yet! We don’t know what the end-product will look like, particularly corporately or organizationally – even for individual churches.

We can share what we suspect and sense. We have no illusions. It will not be quick. It will not be easy. It will not painless. It will not unanimous, may not impact a majority, and may result only in remnant of radically obedient disciples of Jesus because they are readily available to Him – 24 x 7 – for Him to live His will and purpose through them. Churches may be a lot smaller and more like leaven in our communities, than like palace or search lights on a hill. But then, that’s rather Biblical, isn’t it?

We know that you cannot create this desired result via nice, simple, easy programs that can be packaged attractively, will work forever and accomplish what we want without changing anything or rocking anyone’s boat. We do know that prayer will be essential – there’s no way to access our Lord and Father God without it. Surrender…and therefore likely sacrifice will be essential. Jesus “emptied Himself” so that the Father could send Him – we will have empty ourselves before He can send us, before He can fill us and live through us!

What will we, the church, look like when we are readily available to be radically obedient to Him? We don’t know for sure, but I want to share something of how I think we will look and live, something of how I want to look like and live before my life on earth ends. Major Ian Thomas captures it in his book from years ago, The Saving Life of Christ. He gets to the heart of problem with a rather startling question…

Suppose God were to die tonight! Would it really make any difference to the way you live your Christian life tomorrow? For all you really count on Him as you go about your daily business, or even do your Christian work, would you notice any difference? Would it make the slightest difference next Sunday in the services your place of worship, if God were to die tonight? Would anybody know if nobody told them? Or would the whole machine grind on, with the people in the pew, the parson in the pulpit, and the special offering for the building fund? Nobody ever told them God was dead!

I am deeply grateful to those who introduced me to the Lord Jesus Christ as my Redeemer, but the one thing they did not make adequately clear to me…was that the Christ who died for me, rose again to live in me.

If you are born again, all you need is what you have, and what you have is what He is! He does not give you strength – He is your strength! He does not give you victory – He is your victory!

It is for you to be – restfully available to the Saving Life of Christ,…instantly obedient to the heavenly impulse. It is for Him to do! This is your vocation,…your victory!

The planning team is convicted that when we reach that depth of relationship with our Lord, all our anemia will disappear as we give priority in practice to all these vital Core Ministries.

What then is the proposal from the team?

Out of the quietness God seems to be issuing the challenge to associational leaders and to our churches to seek…

* To grow so desperate for God we will let Him lead where He will, let Him do what He wants to us, in us and through us.
* To grow “Not I, but Christ” spirits, readily available and radically obedient so that Christ can His life through me.”
* To “wait and watch” – through continued passionate prayer and faithful service – for God to show us how this should shape the strategizing, resourcing, facilitating, and implementing of our ministries at the associational level, as “Churches Connected for Christ’s Mission.”

We will put ourselves on God’s time table, believing He’s wanted and been waiting and watching for us to move in His direction much longer than we have.

Jim Cymbala, pastor of the Brooklyn Tabernacle wrote, “God is attracted to weakness. He can’t resist those who humbly and honestly admit how desperately they need Him.”

May that be the spirit that grows in our churches so that He might make His power perfect or complete in and through our weakness.”


P. S. A couple of comments from pastors should interest you, both from large churches. One said to his staff last week, “We need to get rid of calendars and just seek Christ and what He’s doing.” Another believes God is doing in his church and the greater western church what Leonard Sweet has referred to as “rebooting the church.” Another pastor agreed with me – at lunch – that God may well be growing His church into an organism lean and “mean” enough for the pre-Christian climate that is growing in our culture.





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IBSA @ Prayer: EBC Carlinville Pastor Reports Impact of Prayer on VBS


Chad Ozee
Chad Ozee at 1:26pm June 12
Great stuff happening at our VBS!!! Five kids have given their life to Christ, and two others are ready to follow in believers baptism. There are several more who have indicated that they want to talk about that decision tonight, so there could be more by the end of tonight!
Phil Miglioratti
Phil Miglioratti at 1:32pm June 12
Blessed to read this report - Hope some of this is the fruit of a praying church ...
Chad Ozee
Chad Ozee at 1:36pm June 12
Phil, at our prayer breakfast time on Wednesday morning we prayed for three separate lists of kids by name. The first was a list of those who had been asking questions about following Christ. The second was a list of kids without a church home. And the third list was of kids that we weren't sure about their spiritual journey. As of today, three of the kids in the first list have accepted christ, two of the last list have accepted Christ, two of the last list have come for baptism, and 8 kids from the lists are ready to talk tonight! Specific prayers bring specific results!!
Phil Miglioratti
Phil Miglioratti at 2:41pm June 12
OK to post this on my IBSA blog? Remind me of the church name (unless you want it anonymous)

Chad Ozee
Chad Ozee at 10:49am June 13
Hey Phil, feel free to put it on the blog...We ended up with 8 kids from the lists accepting Christ, 2 additional kids are going to be baptized, and 1 of our workers is going to be baptized as well! (I had the opportunity to lead her several months ago, but she had been pushing of baptism.) God is SO GOOD!!! ... Chad's P.S. a few days later: On SUnday we had 14 join the church; 12 by baptism!


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Monday, June 15, 2009

SBC @ Prayer ~ Crossover Integrates Prayer-Care-Share

This summer thousands of Southern Baptists will descend on Louisville, Kentucky, for the 150th gathering of the Southern Baptist Convention. In the weeks leading up to the convention and especially the weekend of June 19-20, volunteers are needed for a series of evangelism and church planting events that have been crafted to help reach the people of Louisville for Christ. Some of the activities include:

  • Prayer Walks
  • Food Distribution
  • Block Parties
Louisville is a great city with great needs. It’s estimated that over 80% of the population of the city is in need of a personal relationship with Christ. If you are already planning on attending the convention, why not make the effort to get involved in Crossover?

To register for Crossover, click here.

Click here for a listing of Crossover Events.



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Thursday, June 11, 2009

Which Column? NT or US?

.
Churches in American have been spiritually drifting away from God for 100-200 years and they do not realize it. Today we have churches that are twisted and deformed compared to the New Testament model. When will WE stop thinking about ourselves and begin to think about the lost people who are walking our streets without Christ? Will we confess our sin and return to truly following Jesus? The church was not meant to be a fortress for Christians, but a gathering place for the nations as people accept Christ as Lord and Savior.

Which column generally describes your church? What are you going to do to help your church approach God’s design for the church?

Larry Richmond, Gateway Baptist Association


Comparison of NT Church to Today’s Church in America


God’s Design for the Church
or
American Design for Church

Fellowship based on mutual experience with the Lord
or
Fellowship based on meal and friendship

Prayed a lot
or
Pray little

Based decisions on what God was doin
or
Base decisions on majority vote

Bold in sharing faith in Christ
or
Few share faith, and then sharing weakly

Holy Spirit leads the church
or
Committees lead the church

High accountability to living their faith
or
Low accountability

Adjusted lives to commands of scripture
or
People fail to adjust lives to scripture

Outward focused, doing ministry and evangelism
or
Inward focus, ministry and evangelism inside the church

Vision: take the Gospel to the world
or
Vision: self-centered, comfortable church life

Started churches
or
Few interested in church starting

Baptized many
or
Baptize few

Saw God moving in amazing ways
or
Seldom notice God moving

Following God = obedience
or
Following God = attend church

World revolves around Jesus
or
World revolves around me

Submission to God and leaders
or
Control what I can

Grew spiritually
or
Not concerned with spiritual growth

Evangelism: invite people to Christ
or
Evangelism: invite people to church

Agenda: whatever God was doing
or
Agenda: whatever we want to do

Give until the need is met
or
Give some of what is left over after spending on me

Join an accepting community
or
Join a holy huddle

Hospital: healing sin sick people
or
Hotel: taking care of members

Walking by faith
or
Walking by sight

Fully trust God
or
Trust our own abilities




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Monday, June 08, 2009

SBC @ Prayer ~ Prayer conferences call for intercession




NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--Calls for intercession have been sent out through the planning of several prayer conferences set for this year. Southern Baptists are being asked to return to the discipline of prayer on behalf of their churches, the nation and the world.

2009 PRAYER AND DISCIPLESHIP CONFERENCE

Spring Baptist Church in Spring, Texas, in cooperation with T.W. Hunt Ministries, will host the 2009 Prayer and Discipleship Conference Aug. 3-5.

"It is our belief that the Lord desires an awakening within the church," the event's website, prayerconference.org, states. "An examination of the past revivals in history has led us to the conclusion that there are two primary factors which were evident in those movements that are lacking today: prayer and disciple-making."

The conference is a call to churches nationwide to return their emphasis to prayer and discipleship, the organizers say on the website, noting that the two scripturally mandated ministries often are afterthoughts or neglected completely in modern church life.

"This must change if the church is to experience the power and presence of God in such a way that it transforms whole congregations," the website notes.

Keynote speakers for the conference include T.W. Hunt, James Merritt, Jimmy Draper, Ken Hemphill and Mark Estep. Hunt is author of "The Mind of Christ"; Merritt is pastor of Cross Pointe Church in Duluth, Ga.; Draper is president emeritus of LifeWay Christian Resources; Hemphill is national strategist for Empowering Kingdom Growth; and Estep is pastor of Spring Baptist Church.

Breakout sessions will address topics such as "How to develop prayer ministries and strategies," "Using apologetics in the discipleship process," "A new paradigm for the discipleship process," "Developing a discipleship strategy that includes children and youth," and "How to deepen your personal prayer time."

Any interested individuals are invited to attend, but the call is going out especially to pastors, church staff and lay leaders as well as seminary students.

Registration is now open online at prayerconference.org; the cost is $99 per person or $125 per couple. Spring is north of Houston, and a list of lodging options is available on the website.

BROKEN BEFORE THE THRONE

In its third year, Broken Before the Throne is an idea conceived by Dan Biser, pastor of Zoar Baptist Church and Fox's Hollow Baptist Church, both in West Virginia. This year Virginia Baptist Avenue Church in Hagerstown, Md., will host the conference Aug. 8-14.

Biser said much of the calamity that has come to American culture today can be attributed to churches neglecting heartfelt prayer. Even a call for increased evangelism, such as the recent Great Commission Resurgence Declaration, must be preceded by biblical prayer, Biser said.

"Let us not go forth without the Spirit of God upon us," Biser said. "Let us not labor in our own strength for the sake of doing the work."

Speakers for the conference include Biser, T.W. Hunt, John McGregor of Canadian Revival Fellowship, evangelist Al Whittinghill and Greg Frizzell, a prayer specialist with the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma.

Registration is requested at brokenbeforethethrone.com for those who plan to attend, and while no fee is mandatory, donations are welcome. A series of devotions by Biser leading up to the event is available on the website, as is a list of hotels in the Hagerstown area.

2009 PRAYER CONFERENCE

The Georgia Baptist Convention will host a state prayer conference with the theme "Speechless 2009: Seeking to Hear the Voice of God" at the Georgia Baptist Conference Center in Toccoa Oct. 19-20.

Speakers will include Frizzell of the Oklahoma Baptist convention; Randy Sprinkle of the Baptist Convention of New England, Jeff Renn of Putnam Baptist Church in North Carolina and Elaine Helms of the North American Mission Board.

Early registration is available through Aug. 3 by visiting gabaptist.org. More information may be obtained by calling the convention's church-minister relations department at 770-936-5364.

EQUIP 2009

On a related note, the Utah-Idaho Southern Baptist Convention is planning EQUIP 2009, "a one stop re-energizing, transforming, family conference that will renew your spirit and equip you to take your ministries to the next level."

The event is scheduled for the Davis Conference Center in Layton, Utah, Aug. 5-7. Church leaders, lay leaders and parents are invited to hear inspirational messages and music and attend training sessions that communicate life-changing Bible truths, according to the website uisbc.org/equip. Camps for preschoolers, children and youth will be offered to enrich the family experience.

Seminar topics for adults include church planting, evangelism, missions, prayer and religious education. The Utah-Idaho convention also will host a commissioning service for UISBC church planters serving as missionaries in the two states.

"You will leave renewed, refreshed and ready to press on," the website states.

Advance registration closes July 27; late registration at the door will be available until capacity is reached. To register, call 801-572-5350, ext. 1, or click on the registration tab at the bottom of the EQUIP webpage. Registration fees range from $20 to $50 per individual before July 27.

Compiled by Baptist Press staff writer Erin Roach.



* Type keywords in "Search This Blog box" above
* Visit http://www.IBSA.org/prayer.php for more articles and resources
* To receive monthly updates on new postings, email phil@nppn.org* Coaching? Teaching? Preaching? on prayer ... Contact Phil@nppn.org