Praying together could reduce your chances for divorce down to 1
in 1500, but how can we do something that sounds
so uncomfortable and foreign?.
-- Ed
Beginning to Pray Together (Part 1 of 2)
By David and Jan Stoop
My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations. Isaiah 56:7
Here are eight suggestions for beginning to pray together that were given to
us by the couples who responded to our questionnaire. They come from their own
experiences and were developed through their own struggles to begin to pray
together.
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Take the time needed to talk with each other about your thoughts and feelings
about prayer and praying together. Do this without pressuring one another or
trying to make the other feel guilty. See if you can agree that this is
something you both want in your marriage. Talk about your fears in as open a
way as possible. Talk also about your expectations up front, so they don't
undermine you later on.
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Pick a specific time and make a commitment to each other to begin praying
together at that time. You'll never get started praying together on a regular
basis if you don't make this definite commitment to a specific, agreed-upon
time.
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Don't be upset if you miss a day. It's important, if you miss a day, to just
start again the next day. Consistency will come over time. Let yourself off the
hook here.
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Decide who will do what. For example, who decides where you will pray together?
Who reminds the other that it is time to pray together? Couples reported that
they couldn't just make a commitment to a time and then assume both of them
would remember. It helped for one person to take on the responsibility to say,
"Hey, it's time for us to pray together." It was interesting to note that for
the couples who were successful, it was more often the husband who did the
reminding.
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Start where you are both comfortable. This means that if only one of you is
comfortable praying out loud, then you don't start there, for both aren't
comfortable at that place. If one of you insists that you pray together
silently, then both can be comfortable at that place and that's where you
begin.
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Set a time limit. It was surprising how many couples made this point. "No
long-winded prayers," they said. One wife wrote, "No long monologues with
fourteen items in them!" Another couple suggested, "First start small and grow
from there. Anyone can pattern five or ten minutes into their lives, as opposed
to one hour." Another couple said, "Start with five minutes and then gradually,
over time, see what happens. Don't try to take too much time as you begin."
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Agree at the beginning that neither one of you will preach in your praying.
Nothing can stop the process like using the time to pray together as a way to
preach to your spouse, or to make suggestions in your prayer. Sometimes just
making this a rule will give a reluctant spouse the freedom to get started, for
a common fear is that one’s spouse will use this time to preach rather than to
pray.
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One husband suggested: "Start with a list of things you want to pray about.
This could be done individually or together. Then pray individually about your
time of praying together before you actually come together for prayer."
From When Couples Pray Together, © 2000 by David and Jan Stoop.
Published by Regal Books, 1957 Eastman Ave, Ventura, California, 93003.