
Whenever you aren’t sure, or don’t know, what to do:
Not only is this always good advice to follow, but it’s good advice when dealing with other people. Whenever other people share their difficulties with us, we won’t always know how to respond. We’ll be tempted to give advice—as if we know anything. But prayer’s one of the best responses—if not the best, period.
I know; plenty of people think they know precisely what to do when they hear someone’s troubles. That’s why they immediately offer advice. No, the person sharing their woes didn’t ask for it. Often they just want to vent to someone. But that’s not gonna stop people from inflicting bad advice upon ’em anyway.
Remember Job’s friends? For a week he kept his mouth shut,
Me, I try to keep the unsolicited advice to this blog.
And when we offer to pray for them, let’s not do the similar platitudinous “Oh goodness that’s awful; I’ll pray for you.” Mostly because
- “I’m really offended by what you just said, so you can go to hell. No, wait; I need to sound Christian. ‘I’ll pray for you.’ Yeah, that’s the ticket.”
- “Oh Lord, I don’t care about all your miserable problems. I’ve got my own stuff to deal with. How do I get out of this dreary conversation? ‘I’ll pray for you.’ Good; now I can leave.”
It’s seldom based on sympathy.
Well, don’t be one of those unsympathetic jerks. If you’re offering to pray for people, no time like the present! Stand right there and pray. Doesn’t need to be a long prayer; doesn’t need to be perfect words. Just needs to be you, telling God to help ’em out.
The baseless fear of rejection.
Many Christians balk at the idea of asking to pray for others.
There’s the fear—a
Yeah, you’d think they’d only be this kind of nervous when they’re offering to pray
Like I said, it’s an irrational fear. Maybe twice in my life has anyone ever responded with “No thank you.” Wasn’t any kind of screaming, raging, insulted, demoniac rejection. In fact, had I experienced that kind of rejection, demoniac would be the first conclusion I jumped to—and I’d’ve prayed for them! But prayer doesn’t throw anyone into a rage unless they expect results—and really don’t want those results. You know, like a devil.
Nope; in my experience everyone responds with, “Yes please!” Sometimes surprise, as if prayer has never occurred to them. More often gratitude, or relief. They never even thought of God in their time of need. Finally here’s a solution worth exploring.
Some Christians have turned “Can I pray for you?” into
So if you choose to do likewise, expect their answer to be “Yes please!” or at least “Um… okay.” Be ready to pray.
Praying for them immediately.
I used to advise people, once they got the okay, to follow up with, “Can we pray right now?” I don’t anymore. Don’t ask; just start praying for them. If they expected you to go away and pray for them later, that’s their error. This is happening right now.
Yeah, this sounds a little rude of me. Here’s why it’s not: You’re not going to pray in a way which embarrasses them. See, that’s what people are really worried about when you start praying right away: They’re afraid you’re gonna get all charismatic on ’em. They worry you’ll get loud. You’ll shout.
That’s right. You’re not gonna do this. If you were gonna do this, stop it. Bad Christian.
This is how you pray:
- QUIETLY. Only they can hear you. Nobody else. You’re not putting on a show.
- DISCREETLY. Keep your eyes open. Don’t raise your hands. Don’t drop to your knees. No prayer postures: Don’t look like you’re praying. If the person you’re praying for wants to do that stuff, fine; but don’t you initiate any of it.
- SELF-CONTROLLED.
Don’t get emotionally sloppy. Don’t get weepy. You’re there to console them, not vice-versa. They might be emotional, and are counting on you to keep it together. - BRIEFLY. Keep it under a minute. You read right: A minute. You can pray everything you need to within a minute. If they told you a 30-minute story, you don’t need to repeat the whole thing to God; he already knows it. Summarize. Or “Lord, you know my friend’s need”—it’s a perfect substitute.
- DON’T FORGET TO LISTEN. In mid-prayer, if the Holy Spirit tells you to do anything different from what I’m telling you, follow him, not me. Sometimes he does want you to pray louder, or more publicly, or longer. But not typically. Those are exceptions, customized for each person. The Spirit deals with us as individuals, y’know.
If you’re worried about how to keep your prayers brief, do
I told you it didn’t need to be long, nor loud. Jesus told us not to pray as a spectator sport,
In your prayer, what people are listening for isn’t effective-sounding prayer language. They’re listening for authenticity. They want to hear you mean what you pray. So never pray what you don’t mean. If you honestly don’t know whether God’ll solve their problems, never claim, “God, I know you’ll solve their problems.” All we really know is God can solve them. Usually through us.
You won’t miss your opportunity.
I know; if you’re using “Can I pray for you?” as an evangelism tactic, you’re gonna be tempted to
These prayers aren’t your opportunity to share Jesus. (Actually, your best opportunity comes when God answers the prayer.) If you wanna share Jesus or talk about God’s kingdom, do so before or after the prayer; not during. And if the Holy Spirit answers in mid-prayer, don’t pray it. Simply share the prophecy afterwards: “While I prayed I believe God told me this.” If it’s really from God, again: There’s your best opportunity.
Often you’ll find the people you’re praying for
When you’re done, wish them well. If they have questions about God and want to talk further, jump on that. If not, invite them to church at least. And if they’re not interested, well, you gave it a shot.
Keep taking those shots.

