DETROIT, MI – The recent National Day of Prayer on May 1st
has sparked great interest nationwide. Various Christian groups rallied
to the cause by dedicating time throughout the day to prayer, while other
groups dedicated even more time to making a simple concept utterly
confusing.
As for the concept, Calvin Jackson, one of the major national organizers
of the day, explains, "Although this day has no particular religious
significance, we make it significant, religiously speaking, by praying
all at the same time. After all, if Christ is here when two or three come
together, think about if two or three hundred million came together! Whoa!"
The premise is of course just that simple, promoting prayer – but
recent events reveal otherwise. As leaders at Riverview Community Church
in Canton, MI began organizing citywide prayer meetings for May 1st, they
realized the immense need for spiritual preparation in the days leading
up to the day. In response, they requested intercessors to pray strategically
for one week for the people who would pray on the National Day of Prayer.
"When I heard that they were asking intercessors to pray for the
day of prayer, one thing kept coming to mind," recalls Dorothy Seymour,
a volunteer intercessor. "But who's going to pray for those
people?" Organizers took her concern very seriously and sought God's
will on the matter. They were given the conclusion that much greater preparation
was needed. That's when events got complicated.
Dirk Buckner, one of Riverview's intercessory team captains, explained,
"At first it seemed simple. We just needed to find additional intercessors
to pray 2 weeks before May 1st for the intercessors who would
be praying 1 week beforehand for the people who would be praying on the
day of prayer. As we began to fill the prayer schedules we started to
realize that at any given point in time there's a finite number
of people who are willing to pray—and, more importantly, not enough
to fill all the prayer spots!"
The organizers were in a bind, but decided the only reasonable solution
was to reuse some of those people already planning to pray on the day
of prayer. In effect, Riverview had some people praying for intercessors
who were praying for them.
"It's hard to know what to pray for someone who is praying
for me. Why don't I cut the middleman and pray for myself?"
asked Larry Weinberg. "Or is it praying for my prayers? I don't
know—it gets a little confusing."
Similar complaints came from many of the intercessors as they realized
they would now be pulling double duty, or "circular prayer,"
as they nicknamed it. Some other skeptics questioned the process, and
asked, "Isn't praying for people who will pray for other peoples'
prayers somewhat redundant?" In an attempt to dispel any skepticism,
Jonathan Weaver, Riverview's Pastor of strategic concerns and events,
effectively explained, "No, it's not."
As if things weren't complicated enough, Riverview also appointed
thanksgivers, to thank God for the incercessors who did volunteer, and
confessors, to confess the sins of a church lacking the appropriate number
of intercessors.
"God is certainly pleased that we did our best with our limited
spiritual resources," reflected Weaver. "We even set aside part
of May 1st to pray for God's help in planning a more
rigorous intercessory recruiting campaign prior to next year's day
of prayer! And I can't wait for it to begin this October!"
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