Prayer Corps Sign-Up

It’s that time again for our quarterly Prayer Quarter sign up.  Interested in the different ministries and how you can intercede?

Prayer Ministries at Calvary include:

  • Emergency Prayer Chain
  • Prayer Corps
  • Prayer Vigil, and
  • Prayer Partners
  • Bi-Annual Fasting & Prayer (September and March)
For more information, click here.  Sign-up sheets are available on Sundays on the back table.


See You At The Pole

Every year, on school grounds across the country, students and parents alike gather around the flag pole to pray. See You At The Pole has been interceding for over 25 years, and its’ about one simple act—prayer. SYATP is still about students uniting themselves in prayer before God interceding for their generation.

There are two opportunities to unite in prayer with your friends:

DAY: SEE YOU AT THE POLE day is on Wednesday, September 27, at 7:00 a.m. local time. All around the globe, in every time zone, students will be gathering at their flagpoles, praying for their school, friends, families, churches, and communities. SEE YOU AT THE POLE is a day committed to global unity in Christ and prayer for your generation.
 
WEEK: The GLOBAL WEEK OF STUDENT PRAYER (Sunday, September 24 through Saturday, September 30) encourages students to find new and unique ways, places, and times to pray throughout the week. Whether you attend PUBLIC SCHOOL, PRIVATE SCHOOL, or HOME SCHOOL, gather your friends wherever and whenever and pray! The GLOBAL WEEK OF STUDENT PRAYER is dedicated to prayer and launching your on-campus Bible clubs, prayer strategies, and student ministries.
 
Be a part of this extraordinary day/week of prayer. For information about an event near you, visit their website at:  www.SYATP.com


God’s Chosen Fast

God's-Chosen-Fast
 
Every 6 months our church sets aside five days from Monday through Friday to fast and seek the Lord in prayer. I think that, for the most part, fasting is no longer practiced by many Christians in America.  Most Christians in this country see fasting as a kind of medieval, monastic practice that has its roots in fanaticism and is not something we need to concern ourselves with today.
 
However, that is simply not true—fasting is something that was practiced by God’s people in both Old and New Testament times as well as all throughout the Church Age.
 


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