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This page contains:
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Request Box
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Sending Balloons to Heaven
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Good night prayers
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Letters to God
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'Fishing for Prayer'
Net
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Prayer-Letters to Friends
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Prayer Diary
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Thanksgiving
on Post-it Notes
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Time Capsule
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Prayer baton
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Armour of God
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Request Box
Put a cardboard box marked ‘Prayer Requests’ in
the corner of your office / staff room / student common room with some notepaper
and a pencil to hand. Invite your colleagues / fellow students to put in any
requests for prayer that they may have, anonymous or named. You can promise to
pray for them, either on your own or in a regular prayer meeting with other
Christian colleagues / students. People are often touched by the thought that
someone is praying for them, even if they have no or little faith themselves.
Offering to pray for someone in this way may also open up further conversations
about prayer and your faith in Christ.
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Sending Balloons to Heaven
This is a fun group activity, particularly for
children, though anyone can enjoy it! You will need helium balloons. Write
prayers for, or just names of, people overseas, onto balloons. At a specific
time, all release the balloons, praying together. It is a good symbol of the
‘prayers of the saints’ (that’s all Christians) flying up to heaven for God to
answer. You could even write your address / email address onto a balloon and
see if you get a response from someone finding it!
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Good night prayers
When I was a student we were asked by the
Christian Union to spend a year praying particularly for three friends whom we
would love to come to know Jesus. As a way to remember to pray persistently we
were given three glow-in-the-dark stars to stick on the ceiling above our beds.
It was a brilliant idea because every night when I switched my light off, those
three stars were glowing, reminding me to pray, and reminding me of those three
special people whom God loves (like all of Abraham’s descendents –as many as
stars in the sky)...By the way, all three of those friends of mine became
Christians!
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Letters to God
Some people find
it easier to write down their feelings than to verbalise them. Try writing
a letter to God, expressing what’s going on in your mind. You might want to
say sorry for something, or there may be a situation you just can’t
understand and want to pour out your feelings. Maybe you want to make a
promise to God to do something particular or to change a habit? I often
find that writing something down helps me to understand it or deal with it.
By writing specifically to God, you accomplish all of the above and
leave it in His hands – the best hands to deal with it!
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'Fishing for Prayer'
Net
Get or make a fishing net and stick one end on the wall. Cut out little
paper fish for people to write prayer requests on. Stick them onto the net
so people can read them and pray. If it is more of a private prayer, then
simply roll the paper fish up so it could be a message in a bottle.

- Thanks to the anonymous contributor.
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Prayer-Letters
to Friends
Many people who
are in full-time Christian work write prayer letters to send to friends and
home churches, telling them what’s going on, and requesting prayer for their
work. It’s a great way of keeping in touch and helping people to pray
specifically. However, you don’t need to be a missionary, a vicar or a
bishop to be an important Christian: each one of us has a vital role to play
and has prayer needs, whether in your job, at Church, or at home. In that
sense every Christian is in ‘full-time Christian work’.
If you’re not a
traditional pen-and-paper letter-writer, why not send out prayer-emails to
your contacts? And don’t forget to request prayer on this very site too!
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Prayer Diary
Keeping a prayer
diary is like writing any other personal diary, except that it tends to be
more focused and have a clearer purpose. A traditional diary can sometimes
become rather introverted and self-indulgent! In a prayer diary you write
about your daily experiences in the form of prayer.
e.g. ‘Dear Lord
(rather than ‘Dear Diary’!), thanks for the nice weather today, and for the
chance to do particular activity. I’m worried about name,
please help them with particular problem and help me to know what to
do to help. I’ve been finding difficult task hard at work at
recently, please provide some help for me…etc.’
There may be
ongoing situations written on one page of your diary to refer to generally.
I kept a prayer
diary over some years, using it every few weeks. Every so often I would go
back to read over my thoughts and prayers, and make a note of answered
prayers by drawing a smiley face next to my original requests. I
would then draw a face with a wiggly mouth next to those prayers that
were still awaiting answers, and a surprised face next to the ones,
which had been answered in surprising ways! It was always fascinating and
encouraging to look back. It also reminded me to thank God for answering
prayers: sometimes I had forgotten to do so. You might devise a different
system for making a note of answered prayers.
This idea can also
be used in home / cell / prayer groups for members’ prayer needs, and
similarly looked back upon, as a record of answered prayers.
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Thanksgiving on
Post-it Notes
During a chosen
day, carry around a pen and post-it notes. Make an effort to jot down
every time something positive happens or you are aware of a reason to
thank God. This might be 1) for the sun, which provides the energy to run
the planet, 2) for having a house to wake up in, and food for breakfast, 3)
for having transport to get to school / work, 4) for some kind words spoken
to you during the day…
If you really
thought about it you would probably run out of post-it notes! By the end of
the day you may have a whole pad of blessings. We too often make a habit of
only noticing bad things that happen, and gradually forget about the good
things that surround us daily. This exercise can help alter our perspective
from the ‘glass half empty’ to the ‘glass half full’ mentality.
Understandably,
there might be days or indeed long periods of time when you may feel that
there is little to be thankful for at all. Perhaps you have been unwell or
unemployed for a long time? Perhaps you have difficulties with your family
or job?…and so on. If so, you might find yourself thinking, ‘Well, that’s
o.k. for you, but what about my situation?’ You may find this exercise
emotionally difficult, but on the other hand, it might help you to recognize
some of the good things you do have, and feel a bit more positive. I pray
that this will be the case, if you give it a go. Often it is the people who
face the most trying of circumstances who are examples to others for their
ability to realize how much there is to be thankful for, even in hard times.
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Time Capsule
Many of us make
‘New Year’s resolutions’. Why not think about your Christian life and make
a note of some promises to God to try to keep for a year, or a month, or why
not through Lent? It doesn’t have to be at New Year. Examples might be, ‘I
will try to do a Bible reading every day’ or ‘I will remember to pray
regularly for such and such, who is unwell’ or ‘I will make an effort to
make time to talk to the homeless man I pass every day’. Put the piece of
paper into an envelope and keep it somewhere safe. Make a note in your
diary of an appropriate date to open your prayer time capsule, and then
reflect on what you achieved or didn’t! This activity can be done privately
or perhaps in a small group, if you feel comfortable enough to share your
promises with others.
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Prayer Baton
At my local church, for the last 6 months or
co, the leaders have asked for two volunteers each week (children or adults)
to promise to pray for one hour a day, particularly with the local Church
and community in mind. The following week the volunteers report back
to the whole Church in the service, with their experiences of praying that
week, and then 'pass on the baton' to the next two volunteers. It has
been really encouraging to hear how God has touched people personally and
the Church as a whole through this. One child who volunteered went up
to her bedroom each day, and one day she same down saying that she loved
praying because it made her feel 'all clean'! Other people have talked
about how God has pointed out areas of the town or people to help, or simply
that they have felt blessed by spending extended time in God's presence.
This activity really gets your church praying, and believing that prayer
will change things!
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Putting on the armour of God
In his letter to the Ephesians Paul instructs Christians to be strong in
their faith, especially to resist opposition from evil. He gives us a visual
illustration of a soldier preparing for battle. Each item of armour to
represent an element of our faith.
Ephesians 6: 11-18
11 Put on all of God's armour so that you will be able to stand firm against
all strategies and tricks of the Devil. 12 For we are not fighting against
people made of flesh and blood, but against the evil rulers and authorities
of the unseen world, against those mighty powers of darkness who rule this
world, and against wicked spirits in the heavenly realms. 13 Use every piece
of God's armour to resist the enemy in the time of evil, so that after the
battle you will still be standing firm. 14 Stand your ground, putting on the
sturdy belt of truth and the body armour of God's righteousness. 15 For
shoes, put on the peace that comes from the Good News, so that you will be
fully prepared.* 16 In every battle you will need faith as your shield to
stop the fiery arrows aimed at you by Satan.* 17 Put on salvation as your
helmet, and take the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. 18 Pray
at all times and on every occasion in the power of the Holy Spirit. Stay
alert and be persistent in your prayers for all Christians everywhere.
Why not try getting up in the morning and preparing yourself for the day by
thinking (or saying out loud) each garment as you get dressed, using this as
a prayer of protection, equipping you. (Most of us do not put on a helmet or
a shield but be creative! Perhaps the shield could be your jacket…Let’s be
prepared to stand for Christ!
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Creative Prayer Ideas
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