I have just finished reading Red Moon Rising, the book by Pete Greig and Dave Roberts. A book about the adventure that was and is 24-7 prayer. Such a challenging, rewarding and exciting book that I could barely put down.
24-7 prayer is pretty simple; groups of people congregating for one purpose - to spend time with God in prayer. The book walks through how that came to be; showing the amazing coincidences that helped make it happen and painting a picture of God's hand at work.
This movement, 24-7 prayer, has become more than just a holy prayer huddle, it never was that, but it has begun to effect community, sparking life wherever people pray. It makes the verse "if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land" come to life with truth. Groups of people, large or small, giving up sleep and mediocre lives in pursuit of God through the humbling of themselves and through patience and persistence of prayer. And through this they find an exciting example of God's grace. I love it.
Some of these groups of people have become something new and fresh, where they can no longer just meet together on a sunday to meet with God but their lives become reliant on God, prayer and each other.
I remember Shane Claibourne saying something about mega churches, about how often churches get bigger and bigger, taking over large buildings to get as many people as possible through the door, when in fact he thinks that God works in the little things that infiltrate every part of society, little groups of people meeting with God and that in fact, this is where God brings life and revival (or something like that). I think 24-7 prayer is like this.
The model of 24-7 boiler rooms is brilliant. These are places (tagged "third-millenium monasteries") that are open for creativity and prayer 24-7. Where people come together and meet God, where community is formed and lives changed.
"The boiler room was as much about mission and serving others as non-stop prayer. One couldn't be separated from the other"
"We find ourselves dreaming about some kind of crazy network... around the world, praying like mad, ministering to the poor, sending out missionaries and producing amazing works of art inspired in places of prayer. We see many plans, many dreams, masses of potential."
I am struggling to put into words what this means to me - isn't this just church? Or how church should be? People living together, praying without ceasing (on shifts), serving the poor and needy, sharing the gospel, starting fires, impacting lives, worshipping Jesus.
I love everything about 24-7 prayer - the diversity, the commitment, the challenge.
I hope I take something from it, when we pray, God moves. When will I learn?