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The Essential Guide to Praying in a Circle

JOHN LOCHER/REVIEW-JOURNAL UNLV football players hold hands during a prayer circle after practice in Ely Nev. Aug. 13, 2007.

Last post, I shared one of my many embarrassing prayer stories. It was basically an example of what not to do. Today, I want to be more helpful. I’ll give you a step-by-step guide to the most important type of public prayer: the group circle.

 

Basics

The hallmark of prayer circles is informality. A group of people–usually guys–gather around and pray before an event. This informality causes the awkwardness. Prayer circles can splinter any number of directions, depending on who’s in charge and what method they’re using.

I’ve assembled a list of simple rules for dealing with each of these methods.

Method 1: Everyone prays in a clockwise1 circle.

This is the best idea. Do what you can to make this happen. You may be skeptical, because it guarantees that you’ll pray. But the benefits are myriad:

And it’s so easy to initiate it: just suggest it when everyone is gathering hand to shoulder.

But Method 1 might not work–the group gathers too fast, the youth leader suggests something else, the words catch in your throat. Or you could be like me and stand, mouth slack, unsure whether to murmur your idea as the circle starts.

In that case, you may have to follow the directions for Method 2.

Method 2: Open Prayer with a Closer

At first, this seems great–what could be more freeing than only praying if you want to? But I don’t recommend it because of the hazards:

Sometimes, you’ll be in a situation where the circle leader doesn’t assign any roles, and the circle begins without any direction.

In that case:

Method 3: No Clear Plan

We’ve all been there. The group has barely gathered into a circle, and the leader dives into the prayer. The rest of the guys dart their eyes looking for cues to begin, forcing a smile to hide their held breath.

Don’t panic. Look to the guy to the leader’s left. He’s the key to the circle.

If he prays next, everything is great. Assume it’s a clockwise circle and go from there. If he doesn’t pray next, things are tougher. Assume it’s open prayer, but be careful–you might become the closer on accident.

If you are directly to the left of the leader, your role is clear–pray next. Everyone will thank you.

Final scenario. The circle leader does assign roles, and you’re the closer. What now?

Method 4: The Closer

If you’re praying in a clockwise circle, the closer’s role is easy. All you have to do is say “amen” with a little extra force.

But if people are praying out of order, closing gets tricky.

Say it’s a group of eight people. The fifth person finishes praying, and a silence falls over the group. How long should you wait before you close?

Better to close too early than too late. A five-beat count is probably best. Basically, you want to start praying just before the moment when heads start raising and the quiet people start blushing.

Also, make it clear to everyone that you’re the last one. Throw in a “in closing” or something. Then everyone else can relax.

There you have it: the essential steps to praying in a circle.

But that’s not all! I also have a serious conclusion.

A Serious Conclusion

Remember a couple things. First: nobody is listening to your prayers as closely as you think. When is the last time you remembered someone else’s prayer even thirty seconds afterward? That’s how everyone else feels about you.

But more fundamentally (and this is easy for us neurotics to forget): the point of the prayer should not be about making yourself look good. Get that, and the rest becomes easier.

Any other thoughts about praying in circles? Or are there any Australians who want an apology?

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1  Our Australian friends, of course, will pray counterclockwise. But seriously, specify direction. Otherwise the guys on the leader’s right and left will look at each other after the leader’s prayer, and it gets awkward.

Photo credit: John Locher

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