The Prayer Meeting

These all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication.
—Acts 1:14

And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost.
—Acts 2:4

The value of a genuine prayer meeting is enormous. There, God’s children meet together, not as in church, to listen to one speaker, but instead to lift up their hearts in unison to God. By this means, Christians are drawn closer to each other. Those who are weak are strengthened and encouraged by the testimony of the older and more experienced members, and even young Christians have the opportunity to tell of the joy of the Lord.

The prayer meeting may become a great power for good in a congregation and a spiritual help to both minister and members. By means of intercession, God’s blessing is poured out at home and abroad.

But there are also dangers to be considered. Many attend and are edified but never learn to pray themselves. Others go for the sake of social and religious fervor and have “a form of godliness” (2 Timothy 3:5) but do not know the hidden life of prayer. Unless there is much and earnest prayer in the inner chamber, attendance at a prayer meeting may be a mere formality.

It is well to ask, “What constitutes a living prayer meeting?” There should be hearty love and fellowship between the members.

The leaders should realize how great the influence of such a meeting may be, with its roots nourished by the life of prayer in the inner chamber. Prayer should include God’s people and His church all over the world. Above all, as on the day of Pentecost, there must be a waiting on God for the filling of the Holy Spirit.

Dear reader, I aim to help you in your spiritual life. But remember, you do not live for yourself alone; you are part of the body of Christ. You must include all Christians in your intercession. As the roots of the tree hidden deep in the earth are one with the branches that spread out to the sky, so the hidden prayer life is inseparably bound with united prayer.

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