Every church should have a prayer room. Not only should every church have a prayer room, it should be a room where prayers are prayed. It should be regarded as one of the power sources of the church. Money should be set aside for its maintenance and ministry, people should be challenged to be a part of its important ministry, and it should be in a prominent high traffic corridor instead of a place no one can find without a GPS system. Churches have space dedicated for every conceivable ministry and no ministry is more important than its ministry of prayer.
In the past year I have visited two prayer rooms. The first one was hidden. It was hard to find and it looked more like a storage area than a place which encourages and nurtures prayer. It was obvious that it had once actually been used as a prayer room, but it had become cluttered with stacks of tables and leftover chairs. The second prayer room was one I visited some ten years ago when the new church was built. It was equipped and set up for praying. It was a blessing to step inside that space and think about the lives its ministry would touch. It was a place that was like a visible invitation to pray and I sat down back then for a time of praying. Today I was back in that church which was no longer new and I made my way to the prayer room. I could hardly get in the door. Boxes of Christmas decorations, chairs, tables, and all manner of stuff filled it from one side to the other. It was a place of such promise in the beginning. Today I left it filled with deep sadness.
There are many reasons our churches are struggling. There are many reason for mediocrity from the pulpit. There are many reasons churches are more enamored with their history than hopeful for their future. There are many reasons why churches are seeing so few professions of faith. There are many reasons why baptisms are a rarity instead of the norm. Their are many reasons why so many look at the church as an anachronism. The most basic reason is found in the absence of a strong prayer room ministry. It is a much needed and mostly neglected source of spiritual power.