Men's
Prayer Breakfast Group led worship
On
Sunday, September 5, our own Men's Prayer Group (also known as "Men's
Prayer Breakfast group) led worship at both 9 and 11 am services.
This dedicated prayer group planned the service and Mr. P.E. MacAllister
preached a sermon, entitled, "Some
Friendly Advice."
Northminster
Men's Prayer Breakfast History-
A
Thumbnail Sketch
Like
parts of the Bible, the history of this group goes so far back in
time, memories are imprecise and records are limited. Best recollection
is the origins lay in the patient nurture of Bill Duke and Don Miller,
who in 1958 recruited Jerry Deer and the undersigned to meet with
them on Wednesday mornings in the old kitchen and have a cup of
coffee replete with maybe a sweet roll or a bagel. The purpose was
simple enough: think of the folks in Northminster who were having
problems, are ill, suffering bereavement, facing surgery, losing
jobs, going thru divorce, etc., and say a prayer in their behalf.
Adding to that list, any from our own personal acquaintance as well.
Then we discussed favorite passages from the Bible. Don Miller was
a great collector of our inspiring texts and in the process, broadened
his knowledge of scriptures, which like most of us, was minimal
indeed. After a couple weeks when others had joined, we decided
instead of reading random passages to select a book for study, then
lined out by chapter, who would "do" each segment.
Then
some member said, "Hey! Why don't we get a little card we can
all sign and let folks know that this morning we said a prayer for
them?" In time the group doubled in size since Don Miller was
a great recruiter, and it continued to grow. We graduated from rolls
and coffee to a sit-down breakfast since the chapters took a little
time to work through. One day the Pastor, Wilbur R. Closterhouse,
wondered if it would be OK if he came. We had a closed meeting and
after a fierce debate and a 9-11 vote, concurred that he could come.
(Not really. We enjoyed having him. But Wilbur came on board as
a referee and a resource. He was not entitled to run our show.)
When
we ultimately hit 18 people on average, we had the pattern down
to a pretty neat package. One guy (or often two) signed on to prepare
the breakfast; someone else did the lesson, and a final group cleaned
up the kitchen after we had finished.
Viola!
We were a
self-sufficient, self-sustaining, self-perpetuating unit
with fellowship, a circle of prayer, a
modest course in theology and outreach. This became our
pattern, which continues today.
After
we select a book, one member signs to introduce it and to provide
background on who wrote it, why it was written, and other historical
details. Other members, in turn each week, read the chapter they
have accepted, analyze it, tell us the relevant problems, comment,
as appropriate, on the history of the period and theological considerations.
Questions and discuss follow.
If
all this sounds intimidating, there is no requirement that members
participate beyond the $5.00 meal and breaking bread with the guys.
We no longer clean the kitchen.
We
proceed through the years in this fashion to do our own self-study
of the Bible. By now we have been through it (in random or sporadic
fashion) at least two and sometimes three times. (Genesis alone
would take a year: An introduction, then fifty chapters to analyze
and explain. There are 150 Psalms - three years!) We estimate that
since 1958 approximately 150 men have been involved in this process.
This
has proven to be a great way to become a biblical literate, at least
at the elementary level. And we having heard "the word",
and then figure out how to be "doers" of same.
--P.E.
MacAllister
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