3 Creative Ways to Encourage Kids in Your Ministry to Pray More
Here are three creative ways to encourage kids in your class to pray even more.
Prayer is an incredible privilege because it’s communication with the living God! Yet we often struggle with new ways to get children involved in prayer that’s heartfelt and meaningful. Would you like to help children renew their excitement about communication with God? Check out the following ideas and resources to invite children into conversation with God.
3 Creative Ways to Encourage Kids in Your Ministry to Pray More
1. P.R.A.Y.
Use the acronym P.R.A.Y. as a model for prayer:
Explain what each word means. Then ask kids how they might apply those words in their own prayers.
2. Light of the World
Read aloud Matthew 5:14-16.
“You are the light of the world…let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.”
Say: A lighthouse keeps ships from crashing into rocky cliffs during fog. A lighthouse shines the way to give people direction.
Ask:
- How do you think we, as Jesus’ friends can be lighthouses in our neighborhoods and schools?
- How can praying help us be lights (and lighthouses) for Jesus?
3. Prayer Journey
Take children on an exciting prayer journey. Set up five to 10 prayer stations around your church. Our focus has been praying for those who serve our community, so we invite people from the community. Last year, our mayor, police chief, assistant fire chief, Salvation Army director, and rescue mission director were some of the people who were at different stations.
Form groups of 10. Give each child a Prayer Passport with suggested prayers for each station. Have groups spend 10 minutes at each station, stamp their passports, and then move to the next station.
Bonus Idea: Adopt-a-Leader
First Timothy 2:1-4 urges “prayers…for everyone — for kings and all those in authority.” So consider praying all year for one leader, such as a government leader, a spiritual leader, or a community leader. Write or tell the person of your kids’ commitment. Pray faithfully and send notes, cards, or cookies monthly to let the person know you’re still praying.
Several years ago I watched a group of children meet their adopted leader, Michigan’s governor. The room buzzed with excitement. One little boy edged closer to the governor and got his full attention. This small child said with incredible conviction, “We pray for you every day, and God answers prayer.”
Susan Sorensen is a freelance writer.
Looking for more teaching tips? Check out these ideas!