Welcome to season 2 of the Determined to Dance podcast. I pray that you’ll be uplifted, encouraged, and will move forward each and every day. Today’s episode, Praying for Others: The Local Church, focuses on how to pray for the churches around the community.

Show Notes: Praying for Others: The Local Church

I drove my granddaughter to dance lessons yesterday. She’s taking ballroom dancing and it was my first time seeing her practice with the instructor. They’re working on three dances: the foxtrot, tango, and rumba. Basic steps are involved. The way she walks and glides is more important than I realized. She enjoys the practice but isn’t quite ready for “Dancing with the Stars.”

The evening reminded me of the local church. Two or three people gathered in the name of Jesus. They meet in brick buildings, storefronts, and houses and offer a variety of ways to worship and learn about the God of the universe. You probably have several in your community. Each congregation can make a difference to the people around them, but like my granddaughter isn’t dancing on television yet, most aren’t fifty-thousand-member megachurches.

Instead, they are community-oriented, often with many members of the same family. From twenty to two hundred or so people, they can better the area around them by sharing the love of Christ. And it all starts with prayer.

The apostle Paul worked with churches scattered throughout Asia Minor, Greece, and Rome. He encouraged, rebuked, exhorted, and prayed for each one. If you belong to a local body of believers, you need to pray for them. But you can also pray for other area churches that reach out to the lost, the hurting, and the broken.

In Ephesians 1:16-19, Paul mentions a prayer he is lifting up for the church in Ephesus. I like the simple language The Message Bible uses: “That’s why, when I heard of the solid trust you have in the Master Jesus and your outpouring of love to all the followers of Jesus, I couldn’t stop thanking God for you—every time I prayed, I’d think of you and give thanks. But I do more than thank. I ask—ask the God of our Master, Jesus Christ, the God of glory—to make you intelligent and discerning in knowing him personally, your eyes focused and clear, so that you can see exactly what it is he is calling you to do, grasp the immensity of this glorious way of life he has for his followers, oh, the utter extravagance of his work in us who trust him—endless energy, boundless strength!”

Paul prays specifically:

  1. For the people to know God with intelligence and discernment.
  2. For the eyes or vision to be focused and clear.
  3. The church will know its part in the community.
  4. They’ll understand the wonderful way of life that comes from following Christ.
  5. They’ll see His work in them as they trust Him.

What a wonderful prayer focus for the church. Each body of believers knows God intimately, their vision is clear and focused, and they follow Christ in trust as He works in them and through them. The community church, made up of men, women, youth, and children who live nearby, can touch lives, sharing acts of love and kindness to people who need to know there is a God in Heaven who cares and a church that does also.

We planted a community garden at The Bridge Christian Fellowship this year, the local church my husband and I attend. When you look at worldwide, often chaotic events around us, it seems like such a small way to reach out. But people have been blessed with fresh vegetables such as corn, okra, peas, squash, cucumbers, and tomatoes. Church members tilled, plowed, planted, hoed, and harvested food. A beautiful expression of love that reveals the heart of Jesus. Other churches in our community facilitate a clothing closet and canned food ministry. Some reach out to widows, orphans, local families, and schools.

Again, it starts with prayer. The church prays, and the members pray. We lift each other up because we’re on the same team. Here are a few ideas:

  • When you drive by a local congregation, pray for their leadership and members.
  • Pick two or three churches in your community and pray for them once a week.
  • Find ways to support outreaches of the churches around you.

Jesus intercedes for us at the right hand of God and we pass it on by interceding for those around us. Including the local church. And who knows? Maybe my granddaughter will be on “Dancing with the Stars” someday. And maybe the church you’re praying for will raise up the next Billy Graham or Mother Teresa or a missionary who inspires an unreached group of people. It’s time to start praying. Are you ready?

Father God, we love you and thank you for the community church. What a wonderful vessel to reach people with Your love. We pray that each church around us knows You and the vision you’ve given them. Help each congregation to follow You and trust Your plan and purpose for them. We want to be like You. In Jesus’ name, we pray, amen.

The local church can be a lifeline to those in need of God so let’s continue to pray.

Today’s featured authors are Shirley Crowder and Harriet E. Michael, authors of Glimpses of God: an autumn devotional for women. As Christ-followers, we experience spiritual seasons. Each spiritual season we experience is defined by certain features. This book is focused on autumn—both calendar and spiritual. During our spiritual autumns, we prepare for change and the possibility of difficult days ahead. It also represents abundance and blessings. Learn more at WriteIntegrity.com.

Next week, we’ll look at praying for people who don’t know Jesus as their Lord and Savior. Until then, stay determined to dance…

Click to tweet: Today’s episode on the Determined to Dance podcast, Praying for Others: The Local Church, focuses on how to pray for the churches around the community. #church #podcast

Links:

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Determined to Dance Podcast

Remember: Praying for Others: The Local Church

Video of the week:

I absolutely love music. Each week, I’d like to share a relevant song we can enjoy together.

Author

  • Jennifer Hallmark

    Jennifer Hallmark writes Southern fiction with a twist. Her website and newsletter focus on her books, love of the South, and favorite fiction. She creates stories with unforgettable characters—her stories are a little eerie and otherworldly but with a positive turn. Jessie’s Hope, her first novel, was a Selah Award nominee for First Novel. Her latest novel, Smoking Flax, will be released on January 16th, 2024. When she isn’t babysitting, gardening, or exploring the beautiful state of Alabama, you can find her at her desk penning fiction or studying the craft of writing. She also loves reading and streaming fantasy, supernatural stories, and detective fiction from the Golden Age or her favorite subject—time travel.