

Is your meeting going to be focused on personal prayer requests, a geographical area, an upcoming event, or people in need in your area? Choose something people can get passionate about so they will be motivated to come. If you plan well and offer a variety of prayer methods and prompts, a meeting as long as four hours can pass quickly. If you are hosting a special one-time event with friends or church members, you might opt for an entire weekend afternoon of prayer. Will it be a one-time or a recurring event? Keep in mind the needs of the people you hope will come when you choose the day, time, meeting length and frequency.įor example, if you are gathering co-workers during the workday to pray, you might choose a weekly time of 30 minutes before work or during lunch. Select a space that offers adequate seating for everyone as well as minimal distractions, such as ringing phones or “people traffic.” You could use your home, a space at your church or a room at your place of business. Those people may decide not to come to the next prayer meeting. If a prayer meeting just keeps going indefinitely, many people will feel uncomfortable leaving. If people want to hang out and continue praying afterward, that’s great, but make sure that people who need to leave can go at the scheduled time. The leader should also make sure the meeting ends on time. Prayer meetings tend to get awkward and uncomfortable without a leader guiding the time and stepping in with transitions or prompts as needed. Special Considerations for Personal Prayer Requests Preparing for Your Prayer Meeting: The Basics If you already know what you are looking for these links might help you get there faster: So pray for the Lord’s direction as you plan each element of the meeting. Good preparation before your event lays a solid foundation for a powerful time of connecting with God and other believers. When a prayer meeting is well organized and there is a sense of expectancy that God’s presence will be felt and He will do something in the lives of people attending, they will be excited to attend. In reality, getting a group of people together to effectively carry out even the simplest task requires planning and organization. Since prayer is as simple as talking to God, many people mistakenly think that a prayer meeting should be able to just happen with little to no effort.

One reason prayer meetings are awkward or boring is that they are not always run according to a plan. So where is the disconnect? How has something as amazing as talking to our loving and all-powerful God become so unappealing? Sadly, prayer meetings are often something we think we should do rather than something we want to do.īut if prayer is having a conversation with the God of the universe, that should be exciting! When you think about prayer meetings, what comes to mind? Do you think of words like “refreshing,” “powerful,” “inspiring” and “important”? Or do you think of words like “boring,” “awkward,” “uncomfortable” and “necessary”? Be honest.
