Thursday, October 14, 2010

Raising Kids Who Pray

Raising Kids Who Pray
By Cheryl Sacks 5/27/2009 6:19:33 PM

My friend’s nine-year-old son came home crestfallen from Sunday school one day. “What’s wrong?” his mother asked.

“They wouldn’t pray for my prayer request,” said the boy. “I wanted to pray about the panda bears in China, but they said we should pray for personal things. Why couldn’t we pray about the pandas, Mom?”

I’m sure the Sunday school teacher at my friend’s church wasn’t trying to be insensitive about the dwindling population of pandas in China; but unfortunately, he or she missed an opportunity to affirm the boy’s faith and expectation, two powerful motivating factors when it comes to equipping and empowering children in prayer. Children are motivated to pray about the things that touch their hearts—friends, family, teachers, even pets. We often smile at the innocence of their prayers, some of them quite nonreligious. But that’s the way we want them to pray—naturally.

As they learn to approach their heavenly Father with their daily concerns and needs—and see Him answer—children learn to trust Him as the one who can fight their battles and those of the people they love. They learn to look to Him to provide for them, defend them, and to intervene in the world in real and powerful ways. If we are not quick to listen to even what may seem like “out of the box” prayer concerns, we may miss hearing that child’s heart.

Children, after all, are closer than adults to the approach Jesus tells us to take in prayer: with personal expectation and from the standpoint of a father-child relationship. “Ask and it shall be given to you,” He says in Matthew 7. “Seek, and you shall find . . . if you then know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more shall your Father who is in heaven give what is good to those who ask Him!” This is how children still look at the world.

For all their innocence, children’s prayers, though not as articulate as adults’, are worth listening to. Children, it turns out, share many of our same concerns. Hillary, a small friend of mine, was five or six when she became deeply concerned for a friend in her neighborhood. The little girl was suffering constant respiratory distress as a result of her parents’ smoking in the home. Powerless to help her friend by any physical means, Hillary began to pray that God would move the parents to quit smoking and provide relief for her friend. Sure enough, within a couple of months, without anyone saying a word to them, both parents quit smoking!

And it’s not only personal problems. Children as young as three and four years old can also be sensitive to poverty, hunger, crime, and divorce. I once attended a church service where children and youth were invited to join adults on the platform to help lead in prayer. “Would you pray for the hurting and abused children in the world?” the speaker asked, handing the microphone to a five-year-old boy. With stammering lips and a shaking voice the child began to pray. As he continued to pray for his generation I was amazed at his clarity and focus. “God make the mothers and fathers stop fighting,” he cried. “Tell them it’s hurting their kids.” Another child prayed for the salvation of young people who did not know Christ. Others prayed for revival in their schools and that our nation would return to God. The simplicity of their prayers, accompanied by humility and brokenness, brought tremendous conviction to the hearts of everyone in the room.

The immediacy of children’s prayers can continue through high school. When our daughter Nicole was a junior in high school she started a citywide prayer ministry called Sacred Edge. The first Friday night of every month young people from around the Phoenix area gathered to call out to God for the things affecting their generation—fatherlessness, drugs, loneliness.

These were some gutsy prayers, maybe even what some of us would consider a little “raw.” Yet I would rather see a young person pray prayers from the heart than the most eloquent rote prayer. Jesus spoke to this difference: “When you are praying, do not use meaningless repetition” (Matthew 6:7).

Photo: Jupiterimages/Getty Images

Kids don’t have to wing it all the time: memorized prayers have their place in launching our children’s prayer lives too. The Lord’s Prayer is a biblical framework to help children consider topics of prayer they might not otherwise think about. When Nicole was little, we would pray the Lord’s Prayer together line by line, stopping at each point to pray extemporaneously. What are our temptations? In what ways do we, personally, need deliverance from evil? How do we need to forgive and be forgiven?

The Psalms are another resource for Scriptural prayer for kids. Psalm 91, which talks about God being our refuge and fortress, makes a great prayer for protection. Children can visualize the description of God’s wings covering us in their white feathers, as the Psalmist tells us that we need not fear (vs. 4, 5). This is powerful imagery that can bring great comfort to a child in times of distress. “Lord, cover me with Your powerful wings of protection. I know You will take care of me. Help me not to be afraid.”

Children need to know the name of the Lord is a strong tower; they can run into it and are safe (Prov. 18:10). By praying these Scriptures, they can turn a feeling of powerlessness (very common for children) into confidence that though they may be small, they can pray powerful, strong prayers in Jesus’ name and He will help them.

Scriptural prayers are a great help, too, for adults who are uncertain about their own ability to pray. Here are some additional practical ideas to help you get started, no matter how old (or how young) your children are:

1. Invite your own children into your prayer time. When they see you pouring out your heart in a natural way to God, it will encourage them to do the same. What would a child watching your prayer life learn? If children see us praying in dull, repetitious ways, they’ll get a picture of prayer opposite to what we want them to see. But if we pray from the heart, kids will see the freshness and power of our relationship with God.

2. Create a time for family prayer. It may be extended prayer at meals, at bedtime, or a special weekly gathering. In this way, children learn to pray by listening, watching, and participating. This special prayer time will not only help connect the hearts each family member with the Lord but also with one another.

3. Allow children to be a part of corporate prayer times in your place of worship. Children need to see people of all ages in communication with God—and to hear about the answers to those prayers. Churches need to communicate to children that their prayers and concerns are just as powerful and valued as those of adults.

4. Give kids visuals to help motivate their prayers for issues outside of their own lives and relationships. Children do not think abstractly as adults do. Pictures (such as those from magazines or of children in need around the world) can show them real needs and evoke the kind of emotional response that is necessary to pray prayers from the heart.

5. Help children get to know their heavenly Father. This is perhaps the most crucial point of all. That is because it is more important for them to get to know the Person to whom they are praying than it is for them to pray perfect prayers. They need to realize that prayer is a relationship, not a religious activity, nor is it a “magic” formula. It is important children understand they are praying to their loving heavenly Father in the name of Jesus Christ—they aren’t just wishing upon a star or thinking nice thoughts.

6. As soon as your child is ready, lead him or her in a prayer to receive Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. It’s after all the most important heartfelt prayer he or she will ever pray!

Cheryl Sacks is a conference speaker, local church prayer consultant, and author of The Prayer Saturated Church—A Comprehensive Handbook for Prayer Leaders and co-author of Prayer Saturated Kids—Equipping and Empowering Children in Prayer (NavPress). Cheryl and her husband Hal are co-founders of BridgeBuilders Int’l Leadership Network, a Christian ministry in Phoenix, Ariz.

~Adapted from: http://www.purposedriven.com/article.html?c=140077&l=1~

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