Introducing the BLESS Prayer

May 12, 2026 | Uncategorized

In the 1990’s a neighborhood evangelism model was introduced into the USA. I served as one of the trainers. In one area, we discovered a church of several hundred that grew out of a neighborhood Bible study. In another example, one couple used Christmas as an opportunity to host neighbors for light refreshments and sharing, neighbors who lived next to one another but barely knew each other. The festive informal gathering featured a closing moment in which each neighbor introduced themselves to one another and shared stories of their most meaningful Christmas. Without the host prompting, inevitably, one or more of those stories involved the Christ of Christmas.

Introducing the BLESS Prayer

In some places, such seasonal gatherings have become a highlight of the year and the occasion of neighbors connecting one with another more frequently. Some neighbors have taken such gatherings to another level with summer block parties designed to get everyone out of their backyards and into the same street to meet one another.

Bless Every Home

Now, the Bless Every Home app allows you to see your neighborhood and adopt neighbors for personal prayer. The app sends you the name and location, with reference to your home, of five neighbors daily. You simply click the link, noting that you have prayed for them, met them, or shared Christ with them. It is simple to use and churches can sign up as well to see the neighborhood prayer activity of their congregation with the goal of adopting every home in the city.

SALTY groups

Another tactic has been to take Christ to work. Most of us know, or have a suspicion, that other fellow workers are Christians, often concealing their faith in the marketplace. As we go public with our faith, we gently nudge other Christians to work together to become salt and light in the workplace. Not to aggressively and annoyingly buttonhole people with a witnessing technique that is offensive. But to be discreet witnesses, and to support one another in inviting the presence of Christ into the workspace. These believers would agree to meet, say, at lunch, for thirty minutes, weekly. They would share their concerns and pray together inviting God to come to the place where they spend forty or more hours weekly. They may not own the company or be in a position of management, so they may not have jurisdictional authority. And they may feel that they have little relational influence on the management.

But there is another source of authority. Heaven has commissioned us to be kings and priests. When we have neither jurisdictional authority nor relational influence, what we do have is spiritual authority. This is no small thing. It is not merely metaphorical language. We can humbly exercise spiritual authority by inviting God’s kingdom into the workplace, praying for His will to be done, and for His name to be hallowed – and for a blessing on the company and all who work there. This is a ‘salty’ group. A group of believers who together, are motivating one another to be salt and light at their workplace. They are praying, Supplicating. They are realizing that they are Anointed, even at work, to represent God. They are His Light in what may be a dark place. They are extensions of His Love. Their Talk is wholesome and when appropriate, they are Telling others about the goodness of God. They are prayerfully yielding their lives to the prompting of the Holy Spirit. SALTY!

Operation Andrew

The Billy Graham Association used what was called Operation Andrew. Remember, Andrew brought Peter, his brother to Christ. Andrew became an apostle and impacted nations. But Peter was considered the leader among the apostles. Peter is mentioned 191 times in the New Testament. He gives us two epistles, and Mark’s gospel is considered Peter’s gospel. Operation Andrew encourages believers to list their family and friends, work associates and neighbors, and begin to pray for them. Separate the list into the most open, somewhat open, and closed. Concentrate on those most open. Pray for them daily. Find two other Christians who will use the Operation Andrew model and agree to meet for prayer weekly. Pray for the grace and courage to share the gospel. Pray for those most open on all three of your combined lists. The Billy Graham organization says that the overwhelming success of Billy Graham’s ministry was believers bringing friends. Eighty percent of the crusade conversions involved relational evangelism. Operation Andrew, believers praying for, sharing with, and bringing their friends to the crusade was the key to success.

The BLESS prayer

One of the best acronyms for prayer is the ‘bless’ prayer, which I learned in my work with neighborhood evangelism. Father, today, we BLESS ___(Name)__________.
• We pray that ___________’s BODY would be blessed, healed, rested, able to fully function without pain. We ask for your touch on them physically, for special grace and strength.
• We pray for _______________’s LABOR, their ability to work on the job and at home. That you would grant them strength to be fully functional. Give them mobility. Protect them from accidents. Give them a fulfilling job, one with benefits and compensation worthy of their effort. Bless them in their LABOR, and bless the place where they labor, and the people for whom they work, and with whom they work.
• We pray for __________________’s EMOTIONAL well-being. For their peace. For greater levels of joy – for a fulfilled life. For healthy friends and caring relationships that leave them feeling warm and grateful. Protect them from the bruising and battering that life brings us too often. Let them know your love and grace.
• We pray for _____________________’s SOCIAL circle. For their family. For their children and grandchildren. For family-like friends. That they will not be alone. We pray for healthy relationships. For warmth and love. For them to live in a place where they feel secure and loved.
• We pray for _________________’s SOUL. For them to know you and the power of your resurrection. For them to have a personal relationship with you that transforms them. For their lives to be directed by you, guided by you – and that any design of the enemy or malevolent evil interference would be broken. Let them experience a truly transforming, redirecting experience with Christ. We bless them, praying that they would know your goodness. Amen.

This is the BLESS prayer. It is hardly objectionable. If someone asked you, “Are you praying for me?” You can say without hesitation, “Yes!” And if they probe, “So, just what are you praying?” You can reply, “I am praying for God to BLESS you! – your body, your labor, for your inner life and emotional well being, for your family and social circle – and for you to know how much God loves you!” Who can object to such a prayer?

The bottom line for us is this – we can no longer be silent. In Psalm 39, the consequences of silence are seen. “I was mute with silence. I held my peace even from [saying] good” (Psa. 39:2). David was intimidated in the presence of the wicked (39:1). So, he muzzled himself. As a result, he lost his joy and was overwhelmed with sorry. His heart burned within him, like a convicting fire – he knew his silence was a sin (Psa. 39:2).

Finally, overcome by inner conviction, he broke his silence, “Then, I spoke with my tongue” (Psa. 39:3). He searched for the reason of his intimidation and concluded that life was too short to live in disobedience to God and with a fear of man (39:5). “Every man, at his best state,” David concluded, “is but vapor.” He “walks about like a shadow” (39:5c-6a).

“What am I waiting for?” – he asked himself. “All hope is in God” (39:7). In the end, he discovered a sobering reality. “Hear my prayer, O Lord, and give ear to my cry.” Then note words, “Do not be silent…” His silence had provoked the silence of God (Psa. 39:12). We dare not be silent.

“Whenever God determines to do a great work, He first sets His people to pray” (C. Spurgeon). This reliable principle begs the question: “How does God mobilize his people to heartfelt prayer?” Most importantly, how does God move Christian leaders who shepherd His church to unite in fervent, persistent, biblically focused prayer for the fulfillment of His purposes? By two things mainly: 1) distress over the degradation of the church and the surrounding culture and 2) hope that God will pour out His Spirit on his church and fill it with His fulness until it overflows with transformative impact on society. Many believers are distressed at the current state of things. At the same time, there is much reason to hope for God’s divine intervention in response to passionate, biblically guided prayer.

Believers across America now mourn the debility of the church; its vitality is faltering, its impact fading, its mission neglected, and its devotion to God being undercut by love for this world. Right now we are enduring the largest and fastest religious shift in American history. Its scope is greater than every previous spiritual awakening in our history combined, only in the opposite direction. Christians are being confronted by “spiritual forces of evil” (Eph. 6:12) operating from the heavenly realms that boldly infiltrate every aspect of society, even the church. These dark powers aim to 1) frustrate God’s purpose to bless all peoples on earth through Christ with countless benefits, including righteousness, peace, joy, and justice, and 2)
inflict endless varieties of misery on everyone. When spiritual decline and cultural decay prevail, God’s people rise up to seek the Lord in prayer as the fountain of every blessing, asking him to fill the earth with his glory, pour out His Holy Spirit, inspire his church, and deliver people and cultures from innumerable troubles. Now is the time to pray with desperation for spiritual and cultural renewal, for divine intervention, for the fulfillment of God’s purposes for his church and his creation in Northeast Ohio.

Christian leaders, especially pastors, have a heightened responsibility to press into God with prayer for the church. Biblical precedent shows that gathering church leaders together to engage in heartfelt prayer for the welfare of their community often initiates widespread spiritual and social renewal both in church and society (2 Chron. 7:13-14; 15:8-10; 34:29-32). New Testament accounts show that when Christian leaders unite in prayer, often in response to social and/or spiritual crises, spiritual awakening and gospel advance follow (Acts 1:13-14; 2:1-4; 4:23-31; 13:1-3).

Jesus himself instills expectation of an outpouring of God’s Spirit in response to prayer with this promise: “If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!” (Luke 11:13). Our Father in heaven is especially ready to pour out upon us the blessing we most need and long for, the very Spirit of God who imparts divine life, wisdom, and virtue.

With all this in mind, now is the time for Christian leaders across Northeast Ohio to come together to seek the Lord with biblically grounded, Christ-directed, wholehearted prayer for a God-given spiritual awakening. The trumpet of God is blaring! He is calling us to pray! Join Christian leaders from across our region to humble ourselves, seek the Lord’s face, and be willing to respond through His intervening grace to any changes He calls us to make! (Psalm 110:3)

The Gathering is an extension of the nationwide PATH (Prayer at the Heart) initiative piloted recently in Northeast Ohio. Put The Gathering on your calendar: Sunday, September 24, 6 pm, Calvary Chapel of Cleveland, 709 Brook Park Road, Brooklyn Heights, OH.