Archive for June, 2017
This Week at Cross Church | The World is Broken
The World is Broken
We live in a very broken world. This is why we are teaching on this subject on Sunday at Cross Church. As we continue in our Genesis series, Did God Really Say, we will deal with the very important subject, Did God Really Say the World is Broken? Please invite others to join you as we journey toward knowing God and His Word diligently. If you missed last week, you can watch online here.
The Opportunity is Before Us
We are entering into some fantastic moments and great opportunities for our Cross Church Family. The Lord is answering our prayers. Be diligent, our God is at work! As God opens the doors for our church, we need to be wise, but always ready to follow the Lord by faith into the future God has for us.
The Church Must Pray
Cross Church, let’s pray with conviction and like it really matters. Why? Because it does matter! When we talk to God, we are talking to King Jesus, King of Kings and Lord of Lords! Not only must the church pray, but pray with deep conviction like it matters and will make a difference. Begin to do this when we pray in public worship together.
This Week, I Am Talking Leadership on the Podcast
This week, I am talking about leadership on the podcast. I am acting as both leader and guest, speaking from my heart. I hope you will listen and be encouraged. You can listen to these 22 minutes here.
Thank You for Giving
Thank you for giving to our Lord through our Cross Church Family. In these 15 weeks from Memorial Day to Labor Day, faithfulness and consistency are important. Wherever we are in the world, making sure we are giving to our church weekly is important and should be a priority for each of us. You can give online while you’re away. Let’s join together in giving to the Lord and His church weekly. We cannot out give God!
Father’s Day is Man Day
On Sunday, June 18, we are celebrating Father’s Day by calling it Man Day! We will be honoring all dads as we have a special day for the whole family. Each campus will have unique opportunities that will make this a fun experience for all in attendance. We believe our message from the book of Genesis will be a challenging word for both men and women. Make sure you invite your dad to church for Man Day! Click on the image below to save and share on social media.
See you Sunday,
Dr. Ronnie Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
The Pastor and His Prayers in Public Worship Services
In the past few years, I have given a clear and consistent call to bring prayer back into public worship services in the church. I want to lift up a specific and significant way to do this today.
We Need to Recapture the Pastoral Prayer
Prayer led by the pastor of the church used to be a normal part of worship services. What was deemed in the past as a part of public worship, has now been minimized, eliminated, or delegated. This is not acceptable or good for the church.
There are several examples in the Scriptures where spiritual leaders called out to God in prayer before the people of God. Their prayers were passionate, from the heart, and meaningful. Prayers offered by the pastor of the church during worship services should be the same way.
When Pastors Pray in Public Worship Services
Prayer by the pastor should be one of the highest moments in public worship services. As the spiritual leader of the church, the pastor is standing in the gap, calling out to God in prayer for the church. This moment of public intercession can be absolutely powerful.
I would like to suggest these things for consideration:
Context
The pastor needs to set the context for this prayer moment. He can do this before or after asking the congregation to bow their heads, preparing to pray. Setting the stage for this moment needs to be an important part of worship planning.
Timing
The timing for the pastoral prayer is very important. Personally, I like to set it just before the offering is received, prior to the final song before the message. Many times, the previous song can help me set the context and the moment. Not only is the timing important, but the amount of time allocated for the prayer is important. Allocate enough time for a four to five-minute prayer led by the pastor. Having latitude to follow the Spirit of God is key in any worship service. If we are not careful, we are going to schedule God right out of our public worship services in the church.
Agreement
Teach your people how to agree in prayer with you. As pastor, they need to be engaged with you while you are praying. They do not need to just be listening in, but involved with you in prayer. They can agree with you verbally while you pray. As we turn the church house into a house of prayer for the nations, people need to become involved as you pray.
Planned
While the pastoral prayer is determined to happen within a set time or to help create an atmosphere, what the pastor prays about should be planned as well. This is very important. The pastor needs to set this in his planning, so he can go forward that moment with purpose. If this is not planned, it can become meaningless and disconnected. The pastor can even list the topics of prayer to the people before the prayer begins.
Conviction
When the pastoral prayer occurs, after setting the context in the best timing within the public worship service, and after planning for this moment, the pastor should pray with a strong conviction. A conviction is not just something that you have in your heart, it something that has you. Convictional prayer will illustrate to the people that you pray because you believe in it, and it really matters. It does work and it does matter, so pray with conviction.
Passionate
When the pastor prays before the church in a public worship service, he needs to pray passionately. The people will become passionate in their prayers when they see modeled before them a pastor who prays with passion. Never should we be afraid to have our emotions involved while we are praying, from enthusiasm to expectation, to weeping, and perhaps even shouting. Regardless, be authentic, but make sure you are passionate.
National and Global
I am convinced that the pastoral prayer needs to be a time the church is led to pray for national and global needs. Pastors and churches need to pray for our national leaders, and about situations existing in the nation and across the globe. If we really believe prayer matters, we need to pray for national and global issues.
Posture
While most of the time I kneel in reverence to God when I do my pastoral prayer, this past week, I walked around the stage while I prayed. This is something I determined at that moment and not before. By the way, I think it is very healthy for the people of God to see their pastor kneel as he intercedes for the people and national and global issues.
Recapture the Pastoral Prayer
Pastor, recapture the pastoral prayer in your public worship services. I promise you, you will never regret it. You are the Worship Leader of the church; therefore, lead like it.
Now is the Time to Lead,
Ronnie W. Floyd