If the old adage is true that “Vision leaks,” prayer for global mission must gush. We’ve visited church after church with unused prayer rooms, aging prayer bulletin boards, and monthly concerts of prayer that are petering out. Has anybody discovered a secret to keep vibrant the prayers for global vision and mission? Not that long ago, we visited a guy who is the author for a HUGE book on prayer. We asked to see his prayer room (mentioned in his book). It was currently being used to store last year’s Christmas decorations. (We’re not lying.) What do we do to keep prayer vibrant? How do we keep its glory from fading? What does YOUR church do to stay active and keep your members engaged for daily prayers for global mission (or weekly? … or monthly? … or… yikes.. annually at least?). If prayer is the strategy and if it’s supposed to be the main thing we do to get more harvesters, then, … if harvesters are fading, could it be we’re not praying? Does somebody have an answer?

Ideas we’ve seen work:
Find, then don’t let go, an advocate who will schedule and promote prayer in your organization or church. Encourage this person like crazy. This just might be the best and most amazing idea of all. Give this person a title that honors him/her, like, “Vice President of Prayer” or whatever works at your church or org. And then make sure this person has access to anything and everything she/he desires. When he/she asks for platform, budget, time, print, digital, social media, … there’s only one answer that works: Sure. Honestly, this has been CLUTCH in our org. I (Doug) think I could have left the org a decade ago. But please DON’T take our VP of Prayer. Talk about “too valuable to lose.” No money in your budget for a prayer person? Seriously? Do you really want to be that church or org? (So at least make it a stated goal that it’s your very next hire?)

But what has worked for you? Please. We have to find solutions. We can’t afford to let a three-decade uptick of prayer mobilization slide into the sunset. Thanks for any ideas you can share by clicking on Comment following the web or app version of this item.