Prayer of Intercession
Prayers of the People or Prayers of Intercession sermon ideas
View search results for Prayers of the People or Prayers of IntercessionHow do I write a prayer of the people or prayer of intercession?
This prayer includes a broad range of words of gratitude for what God has done as well as petitions for the needs of those inside and outside of the congregation.
The Prayers of the People or Prayers of Intercession can include the following things:
- Prayers for congregational needs
- Prayers for needs of the world
- Silent prayers
- Sung prayers
- Prayers of adoration
- Prayers of confession
- Prayers of thanksgiving
See also Prayer.
Why pray prayers of intercession?
Petitionary prayer is an important recognition of our dependence on God. We have to ask for things. We are not independent generators of goods. Goods come to us through a whole web of interdependence, and God is positioned at the center of it.
We do not understand how petitionary prayer works, and, some of the time, even whether it works. But Jesus told us to do it. And Jesus taught his disciples how to do it. In scripture the Lord's Prayer is all petitions (the closing doxology used mostly by Protestants is a later addition). The petitions center on the coming of God's kingdom, when God's will is going to be done on earth as it is in heaven. This is the "paradigmatic prayer" for Christians (Nicholas Wolterstorff, The God We Worship, Eerdmans, 2015, p. 111). What we want is for what God wants to actually start to happen.
In the providence of God, petitionary intercession may do some good for the people we are praying for, but it is sure to do some good for us. I think we all understand. It's hard to know exactly what the link is between petitionary prayer for others and any improvement in their situation, but we have the weight of centuries behind the conviction that people who know they are being prayed for do better emotionally and spiritually. But the person praying gets better too. Just as it's healthy to praise greatness, so it's healthy to intercede for others—to make their causes our own, to want good for them, to ask for it, to mortify our own self-centeredness and to center instead, for a time, on the lives and needs of others.
How do I write a prayers of the people or prayer of intercession?
There are different models that one could consider using for Prayers of the People or Prayers of Intercession. Using an outline can encourage spontaneous prayer, but maintain a balanced diet between petitions and thanksgiving and remember to think about concerns not only of the congregation but of the broader community and around the world.
Model 1:
- Address God
- Praise and thanksgiving (See Prayers of Praise or Thanksgiving)
- Intercessions for congregational, personal, community, and worldwide concerns
- Statement of unity and praise for God, such as the doxology
Model 2:
Use the Lord's Prayer petitions as a model (the wording of the prayer may vary depending on what the congregation is used to)
- Our Father in heaven . . . (adoration/thanksgiving)
- Your kingdom come . . . (prayers for peace)
- Give us this day our daily bread . . . (prayers for the community)
- Forgive us our debts . . . (prayers for relationships)
- And do not bring us to the time of trial . . . (prayers for the world and for resistance to evil in our lives and the world)
- For yours is the kingdom and the power . . .
Model 3:
Other prayers can be based on scripture. See Scriptural Prayers.
Model 4:
Prayers from the congregation can also be gathered during a service, drawing on a broad range of petitions and thanksgivings. These can be gathered at the end of the sharing time into one prayer or prayed after each request. After requests are made, the congregation can respond with: Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer. or Lord, with thanksgiving, hear our prayer.
Where does the Bible invite us to pray?
God invites us to pray for the needs of others and our world. Doing so is an act of obedience.
- Psalm 32:6, let all the faithful pray to God
- Psalm 124:8, our help is in the name of the Lord
- Romans 8:26–27, the Spirit helps us in our weakness
- Ephesians 6:18, pray in the Spirit on all occasions
- Philippians 4:6–7, in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God
- 1 Timothy 2:1–4, petitions, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings should be made for everyone
How do we begin our prayers?
These biblical prayers offer beautiful and faithful language for addressing God. We can choose to use these words, echoing prayers from throughout all ages, as we address God in prayer.
- Psalm 5:2–3, "Listen to the sound of my cry"
- Psalm 19:14, "Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart . . ."
- Psalm 25:1–2, "My God, in you I trust"
- Psalm 69:13, "My prayer is to you, O Lord"
- Psalm 70:1, "O Lord, make haste to help me!"
- Psalm 102:1, "Hear my prayer, O Lord"
- Psalm 141:2, "Let my prayer be counted as incense before you"
- Psalm 143:1, "Hear my prayer, O Lord; . . . answer me in your righteousness."
Are there prayers in the Bible?
The following prayers are based on particular scriptural texts. Some are close paraphrases of actual scriptural prayers, such as psalms. Others are new prayers built on an image or a theme from a biblical text. These are provided as models of an approach that may be used in conjunction with any scripture text.
- Psalm 8, "O Lord, our Sovereign, how majestic is your name in all the earth!"
- Psalm 103, "Bless the Lord, my soul, and all that is within me, bless his holy name"
- Psalm 121, "I lift up my eyes to the hills—from where will my help come?"
- Psalm 146, I will praise the Lord as long as I live
- 1 Corinthians 12:12–31, unity and diversity in the body
Prayer sermon ideas
View search results for PrayerWhat are the different types of prayer?
There are many different types of prayer that are appropraite for different circumstances and concerns.
- Prayer for opening or closing a worship service
- Prayer of praise or thanksgiving
- Prayer of confession
- Prayer for illumination
- Prayer of intercession
- Prayers of the People
- The Lord's Prayer
- Offering prayers
- Baptismal prayers
- Prayers for celebrating the Lord's Supper
How do I write a prayer for worship?
In corporate worship, prayer too is corporate. Consider ways to invite the congregation to participate actively in the prayer:
- Use phrases like "we offer . . ." or "we join our hearts . . ." or "let us bring our concerns and thanksgivings"
- Use a corporate spoken response throughout the prayer, such as "Lord, hear our prayer"
- Use a sung refrain throughout the prayer
Who hears our prayers?
In the heavenly realms prayer is heard (or overheard) by more than one listener. For one thing, God is triune. Strong trinitarians may conclude that three listen, not just one. But then there's also the heavenly council, the ranks of angels and archangels. Perhaps they hear prayer. For all we know, so do the saints and martyrs. We surely don't know they don't. The point is that we likely pray into a whole cloud of witnesses.
Paul says that not only mere humans intercede. So what if a homeless Christian under a bridge prays to God? He doesn't have a prayer chain from his church to lobby God. The two other guys under the bridge are too out of it to intercede. But what if Christ, our mediator, intercedes for him? What if the Holy Spirit groans over him? What if angels and saints and martyrs light heaven up with their intercessions for him? "Lord—and anybody else who may be listening—hear my prayer."
Prayer calls for reverence before a holy God. Christians are aware that it is God to whom they pray. God is high—in fact, most high. God dwells in realms of glory. God is terrifying in purity, and the sworn foe of all evil. The Bible tells us that God's holiness in the temple was sometimes so intense that the priests had to back up. God was too hot for them that day. Once upon a time people loved God, but they also feared God because God is not domestic, not predictable, not safe at all.
Finally, prayer is opportunity for fellowship with a loving God. We have a God who listens, who loves, who yearns for the best in us. We may pour ourselves out to God, knowing that at the end we will get ourselves back—stronger, cleaner, and more deeply loved than ever.
How do I write a prayer for students and teachers going back to school?
Corporate prayer may provide a good opportunity to acknowledge community events and seasons in worship. For instance, you could offer aprayerof intercession or commission for students and teachers going back to school, as in these examples from our search results:
- "Hear the word of the Lord. I knew you before I gave you life. I chose you before you were born. I send you now to school. Be my people there. Share my love with everyone you meet there. Stand up for my ways in classrooms, in locker rooms, on playgrounds, in lunchrooms, and on the bus." (from Jeremiah 1:4-10) Carolyn C. Brown from Worshiping with Children
- "O Lord, you who have called and equipped the teachers in our community, we pray for them today. Watch over them, provide for them, guide them, sustain them. May you be their sun and shield, so that they might do the work that you have entrusted to them. Amen." W. David O. Taylor
More worship ideas for "back to school" from Zeteosearch.org
Where is prayer in the Bible?
- 2 Chronicles 7:14, "If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, pray, . . ."
- Psalm 145:18, the Lord is near to all who call on him
- Jeremiah 29:12, "When you call upon me and come and pray to me, I will hear you"
- Matthew 5:44, pray for those who persecute you
- Matthew 6:9–13, the Lord's Prayer
- Matthew 7:7, "Ask, and it will be given to you"
- Matthew 7:11, your Father in heaven will give good things to those who ask him
- Matthew 26:39, Jesus prays in the garden
- Mark 11:24, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it
- Luke 23:34, Jesus prays, "Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing"
- Romans 8:26, we do not know how to pray as we ought
- Romans 8:34, Jesus intercedes for us
- Romans 12:12, rejoice in hope, be patient in suffering, persevere in prayer
- Ephesians 6:18, pray in the Spirit at all times in every prayer and supplication
- Philippians 4:6, do not worry about anything
- Colossians 3:15–17, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus
- 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18, rejoice always; pray without ceasing
- 1 Timothy 2:1–4, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings should be made for everyone
- James 5:13, "Are any among you suffering? They should pray."
- James 5:16, prayer is powerful and effective
- 1 John 1:9, if we confess our sins, God will forgive
- 1 John 5:14–15, God hears us
Lord's Prayer sermon ideas
View search results for Lord's PrayerWhere does the Lord's Prayer appear in the Bible?
The Lord's Prayer appears twice in the Bible:
What is the Lord's Prayer?
The Lord's Prayer is the prayer that Christ taught his disciples to pray. As we pray the words from Matthew 6 or Luke 11, we can think about each phrase.
Prounouns
Pay attention to the pronouns. What holds understated importance in The Lord's Prayer is the pronouns, beginning with "Our Father." God belongs to the Christian community together. God is the One who draws us toward one another as children of the same Heavenly Parent.
God's will
Similarly, when we pray "Your kingdom come" and "Your will be done," we are distinctly not praying for our own kingdoms of power or our own desires to be the most important things. The prayer continues in the communal language of "our" rather than "my," and that matters immensely because this prayer does not simply help us to become more Christian. It teaches us how to be Christian together, in community.
The will of God. This is a topic of endless fascination, especially for people in transition. We often hear people say things like "What job does God want me to take?" or "Who does God want me to marry?" Without denying that God is immanent and benevolently invested in our lives, perhaps the request in this prayer is to align our lives to clear biblical, moral injunctions and to align our desires and imagination to the overarching narrative of God's presence in the world. Thus, "Your will be done" is followed up with "on earth as it is heaven." In heaven, God's will isn't stymied by human rebellion, ignorance, or carelessness. On earth, well, we tend to get in the way. So to pray "Your will be done" is to follow John's summation of God's will, "God must increase; I must decrease."
Our daily bread
With a rising awareness of gluten allergies and intolerance, has the petition "Give us this day our daily bread" become obsolete? How does it translate into the Asian countries of my growing-up years, "Give us this day our daily rice?" John Calvin broadens the parameters of this petition so that this request covers everything we need to sustain us through a given 24-hour day. The insomniac might pray, "Give us this day our daily sleep." The lonely soul might pray, "Give us this day our daily human connection and affection." Give to each person what we stand in need of this day. Amen.
Although the parameters of "Give us this day our daily bread" can be expanded to include each of our daily needs, perhaps the greater challenge is for those of us with easily filled bellies to expand our compassion and imagination to embrace those who are haunted by hunger. So when we pray "give us this day our daily bread" we are also asking how we can help to make "daily bread" available to those who are hungry, homeless, or hopeless.
Forgiveness
Nowhere else does the Lord's Prayer falter on our lips as it does when we get to this petition: "Forgive us our sin as we forgive those who sin against us." It is a dangerous prayer for those of us aware of pockets of resentment, unresolved conflict, or the fact that we've abandoned hope that "that person" will ever change. The Heidelberg Catechism tells us that this petition means "Because of Christ's blood, do not hold against us, poor sinners that we are, any of the sins we door the evil that constantly clings to us." (Heidelberg Catechism, Question and Answer 126) Though we might recite this line, by rote or on auto-pilot, it is not the intention of God that this petition is easy in practice. "Rather, in commanding us to forgive, Jesus is inviting us to take charge, to turn the world around, to throw a monkey wrench in the eternal wheel of retribution and vengeance." (William Willimon, {{Lord Teach Us: The Lord's Prayer and the Christian Life}}.Abingdon Press, 1996, 84) As it has been done for us, may we be "fully determined" to demonstrate our gratitude to God in ways that will surprise and benefit those in need of our forgiveness.
For thine is the kingdom
The last line, "for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen." does not appear in scripture but has been added by some protestant traditions over time. This line was not added to the prayer until the early church tried using the prayer in liturgy and found that "lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil" didn't have quite the gusto that a proclamation of a risen Savior and reigning Lord requires. The last word isn't temptation or sin. It isn't suffering or evil. The prayer required a truthful last word, God's great last word of triumph, of resurrection, of life and hope and victory and celebration and peace. The prayer needs to end the way we believe the story will end, with saints gathered around a throne proclaiming the glory of God.