{"id":62,"date":"2008-09-08T11:10:27","date_gmt":"2008-09-08T18:10:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/gotpotential.org\/?p=62"},"modified":"2009-07-07T09:04:47","modified_gmt":"2009-07-07T16:04:47","slug":"doing-church-247","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gotpotential.org\/gods-purpose\/doing-church-247","title":{"rendered":"Doing Church 24\/7"},"content":{"rendered":"
“And will not God give justice to his elect, who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long over them?”<\/em> (Luke 18:7)<\/p>\n I visited a place called International House of Prayer in Kansas City last week. IHOP for short … yeah, like the pancake house, everybody gets the joke.<\/p>\n Here’s the interesting thing about IHOP -they pray …\u00c2\u00a0 twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. They’ve been doing it, non-stop, since 1999.<\/p>\n IHOP does more than just pray, although the phrase, \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcjust pray’<\/em>, says a lot more about what we think of our faith than I’d like to admit. Most churches, if you could call IHOP a church, do a lot more than just pray<\/em>. It may be more accurate to say that they do a lot instead<\/em> of pray … or a lot rather<\/em> than pray.<\/p>\n IHOP does a lot, but what they do<\/em> is pray. That’s what they’re known for – prayer and worship – 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. There’s a church in my town known for its annual ethnic food festival. It’s a pretty good festival too; everybody comes out. But is that really the thing a church wants to be known for?<\/p>\n IHOP has a ministry school, they’ve got a children’s program, they’ve got city evangelism and world evangelism, they’ve got a great bookstore and they’ve even got a coffee shop complete with WIFI. But what their known for is prayer. I don’t know if they’ve got an annual ethnic food festival … probably not … I didn’t ask.<\/p>\n Last Friday I stopped in at the IHOP prayer room – the 24\/7 part of IHOP’s ministry. It’s a room that seats few hundred people. When I showed up at about noon, there were maybe a hundred people inside. There was a worship team (a band and singers) on the stage, and a sound board and video camera set up in the middle of the room. IHOP doesn’t limit 24\/7 prayer and worship to their Kansas City Missions Base; they stream 24\/7 prayer and worship from the prayer room via the internet and, in some countries, on GOD TV.<\/p>\n What I saw in the prayer room was people, young and old – mostly young – praying, reading, writing on laptops. It seemed to be a place of prayer, worship, study and reflection. Imagine that, a place where people can go 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to pray, worship, read the Bible, write out their thoughts, and be with God. Something like that could catch on.<\/p>\n Oh yeah, IHOP has weekly services too. Friday evening, Saturday evening, and three services on Sunday – just like a regular church.<\/p>\n Let me stop right now and clear something up – I don’t think IHOP calls itself a \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcchurch.’<\/em> It’s me throwing around that nomenclature.<\/p>\n IHOP sees their Kansas City facility as a \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcMissions Base’<\/em> and the big building a few miles down the road as the IHOPU (university) campus; it is, incidentally, also the place where \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcForerunner Christian Fellowship’<\/em> meets and where IHOP can hold public meetings that won’t fit in the facilities at the \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcMissions Base.’<\/em> I don’t remember them ever referring to either facility as a \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcchurch.’<\/em><\/p>\n I’m guessing it’s because they understand the difference between a building and a church. During the Friday night teaching session I heard the word \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcchurch’<\/em> a lot; but it was always in reference to God’s people, usually on a national or global scale.<\/p>\n On a national scale, the church in America didn’t fare too well. Most of it, according to IHOP’s director, Mike Bickle, is compromised – it’s lost its first love. It’s more interested in comfort, money and prestige than getting to know its God.<\/p>\n On a global scale the church is the bride of Christ, being prepared for the day it meets its Bridegroom.<\/p>\n Forerunner Christian Fellowship<\/em>, the part of IHOP’s ministry that functions as a \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcchurch,’<\/em> is a local (Kansas City) body of believers; it considers itself a part of the church on a national scale and on a global scale. It may act independently as a local body of believers, but it knows it’s not independent of the \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcchurch’<\/em> in America or the \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcchurch’<\/em> globally. And it seeks to impact the world on all three levels. What it’s not, is a building that people visit once a week to connect with God or their religious tradition.<\/p>\n The truth of this struck me while I was making plans to come for a visit. I had some publishing business to attend to on Friday and since it was close to the weekend, I tossed around the idea of staying on through Sunday so we could attend services. I wanted to know more about what made IHOP tick and I figured attending what I assumed would be the main event, Sunday service, would give me a pretty good picture of what they were about.<\/p>\n