Prayer Meeting


We meet every Thursday night at 7 p.m., Calvary Temple, E. Pine Street, Central Point, Oregon.  Friday night at 7 p.m., Alliance Bible Chapel, corner of Siskiyou and Liberty Streets, Ashland, Oregon.  If you want to come to a Prayer meeting please feel free to join us and bring a friend.

EVERYONE IS WELCOME TO BOTH OF THESE.
  • Second Sunday of each month at 6 p.m., all Ashland Fellowships come together at the Alliance Bible Chapel, corner of Liberty and Siskiyou Blvd., Ashland, Oregon, Phone: (541) 482-1425.
We always enter into praise before prayer, because we want to enter into his courts with thanksgiving and God inhabits the praises of His people.  We believe that God's people need to be inhabited as much as possible because there's enough of the flesh in the Church.  God is a consuming fire.  Our specific prayer goal on Thursday is to sing praises to our God and to get broken and become vessels fit for the service to our King.  On Friday, our specific prayer goal is to sing praises to God and to pray for the city of Ashland and to intercede for various churches, pastors, and people (and ourselves, as well).


Prayer is what built this nation,
prayer is what will keep this nation.
This is a proclamation by one of our early presidents, John Adams.


March 6, 1799

PROCLAMATION
As no truth is more clearly taught in the Volume of Inspiration, nor any more fully demonstrated by the experience of all ages, than that a deep sense and a due acknowledgment of the governing providence of a Supreme Being and of the accountableness of men to Him as the searcher of hearts and righteous distributer of rewards and punishments are conducive equally to the happiness and rectitude of individuals and to the well-being of communities; as it is also most reasonable in itself that men who are made capable of social acts and relations, who owe their improvements to the social state, and who derive their enjoyments from it, should, as a society, make their acknowledgments of dependence and obligation to Him who hath endowed them with these capacities and elevated them in the scale of existence by these distinctions; as it is likewise a plain dictate of duty and a strong sentiment of nature that in circumstances of great urgency and seasons of imminent danger earnest and particular supplications should be made to Him who is able to defend or to destroy; as, moreover, the most precious interests of the people of the United States are still held in jeopardy by the hostile designs and insidious acts of a foreign nation, as well as by the dissemination among them of those principles, subversive of the foundations of all religious, moral, and social obligations, that have produced incalculable mischief and misery in other countries; and as, in fine, the observance of special seasons for public religious solemnities is happily calculated to avert the evils which we ought to deprecate and to excite to the performance of the duties which we ought to discharge by calling and fixing the attention of the people at large to the momentous truths already recited, by affording opportunity to teach and inculcate them by animating devotion and giving to it the character of a national act:
For these reasons I have thought proper to recommend, and I do hereby recommend accordingly, that Thursday, the 25th day of April next, be observed throughout the United States of America as a day of solemn humiliation, fasting, and prayer; that the citizens on that day abstain as far as may be from their secular occupations, devote the time to the sacred duties of religion in public and in private; that they call to mind our numerous offenses against the Most High God, confess them before Him with the sincerest penitence, implore His pardoning mercy, through the Great Mediator and Redeemer, for our past transgressions, and that through the grace of His Holy Spirit we may be disposed and enabled to yield a more suitable obedience to His righteous requisitions in time to come; that He would interpose to arrest the progress of that impiety and licentiousness in principle and practice so offensive to Himself and so ruinous to mankind; that He would make us deeply sensible that "righteousness exalteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people;" that He would turn us from our transgressions and turn His displeasure from us; that He would withhold us from unreasonable discontent, from disunion, faction, sedition, and insurrection; that He would preserve our country from the desolating sword; that He would save our cities and towns from a repetition of those awful pestilential visitations under which they have lately suffered so severely, and that the health of our inhabitants generally may be precious in His sight; that He would favor us with fruitful seasons and so bless the labors of the husbandman as that there may be food in abundance for man and beast; that He would prosper our commerce, manufactures, and fisheries, and give success to the people in all their lawful industry and enterprise; that He would smile on our colleges, academies, schools, and seminaries of learning, and make them nurseries of sound science, morals, and religion; that He would bless all magistrates, from the highest to the lowest, give them the true spirit of their station, make them a terror to evil doers and a praise to them that do well; that He would preside over the councils of the nation at this critical period, enlighten them to a just discernment of the public interest, and save them from mistake, division, and discord; that He would make succeed our preparations for defense and bless our armaments by land and by sea; that He would put an end to the effusion of human blood and the accumulation of human misery among the contending nations of the earth by disposing them to justice, to equity, to benevolence, and to peace; and that he would extend the blessings of knowledge, of true liberty, and of pure and undefiled religion throughout the world.
And I do also recommend that with these acts of humiliation, penitence, and prayer fervent thanksgiving to the Author of All Good be united for the countless favors which He is still continuing to the people of the United States, and which render their condition as a nation eminently happy when compared with the lot of others.
Given etc.

JOHN ADAMS.
found at:  http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/print.php?pid=65675
John Adams (1735-1826) Adams was an attorney, diplomat, and statesman; he graduated from
Harvard (1755); leader in the opposition to the Stamp Act (1765); delegate to the Continental
Congress (1774-77) where he signed the Declaration of Independence (1776); appointed Chief
Justice of Superior Court of Massachusetts (1775); delegate to the Massachusetts constitutional
convention (1779-80) and wrote most of the first draft of the Massachusetts Constitution; foreign
ambassador to Holland (1782); signed the peace treaty which ended the American Revolution (1783);
foreign ambassador to Great Britain (1785-88); served two terms as Vice-President under
President George Washington (1789-97); second President of the United States (1797-1801);
he and his one time political nemesis- turned-close-friend Thomas Jefferson both died on
July 4, 1826, the fiftieth anniversary of the Declaration of Independence; Adams was titled by
fellow signer of the Declaration Richard Stockton as the "Atlas of American Independence.
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