Dangerous Topic

Sep 22, 2005 22:34

I'm going to write this even though it may make some people who are my friends think less of me ( Read more... )

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urtotallyrox September 24 2005, 17:17:55 UTC
I am very passionate about SYATP, so I went to the site so I could give you the true history on it. Unfortunately, I am one of those people that believe that God makes people uncomfortable because they do not believe. But don't misunderstand - I am still tolerant of other people's beliefs. I don't agree with them, but I won't slander or mistreat someone because they believe differently than me. If you want to be angry for little clubs, isn't church a club? I don't know anything about the groups you mentioned, but I'm just saying that youth group and church is a club, if you think about it. God calls us to meet together with other believers. I think it's a shame if Christianity is becoming a fad, but I applaud if it is being spread. I don't agree with someone not knowing about the faith they claim to have, but I would love to see Christianity spreading in a positive way, with people knowing the truth. Sorry...I'm kind of rambling now too. Here's the history:

The History of See You at the Pole

A small group of teenagers in Burleson, Texas, came together for a DiscipleNow weekend in early 1990. They came seeking God. Little did they know how powerfully God was about to move. On Saturday night God penetrated their hearts like never before. The students were broken before God and burdened for their friends. Compelled to pray, they drove to three different schools that night. Not knowing exactly what to do, they went to the school flagpoles and prayed for their friends, schools, and leaders. Those students had no idea how God would use their obedience.
God used what He did among those teenagers and others who were holding similar prayer meetings at their schools to birth a vision in the hearts of youth leaders across Texas. The vision was that students throughout Texas would follow these examples and meet at their school flagpoles to pray simultaneously. The challenge was named See You at the Pole at an early brainstorming session. The vision was shared with 20,000 students in June 1990 at Reunion Arena in Dallas, Texas.

Only God had envisioned how many students would step up to the challenge. At 7:00 a.m. on September 12, 1990, more than 45,000 teenagers met at school flagpoles in four different states to pray before the start of school.

A few months later, a group of youth ministers from all over the country gathered together for a national conference in Colorado. Many of them reported that their students had heard about the prayer movement in Texas and were equally burdened for their schools. No other events had been planned, but it was clear that students across the country would be creating their own national day of student prayer. There was no stopping them.

On September 11, 1991, at 7:00 a.m., one million students gathered at school flagpoles all over the country. From Boston, Massachusetts, to Los Angeles, California, students came together to pray. Some sang, some read Scripture, but most importantly, they prayed. Like those first students, they prayed for their schools, for their friends, for their leaders, and for their country.

As in all great movements of prayer, See You at the Pole did not begin in the hearts of people. It began in the heart of God. God used the obedience of a small group of teenagers to ignite what has become an international movement of prayer among young people.

Since 1991, See You at the Pole has grown to God-sized proportions. Within only a couple of years, students were praying in several countries around the world. Now, more than 3 million students from all 50 states participate in SYATP. Students in more than 20 countries take part. In places like Canada, Guam, Korea, Japan, Turkey, and the Ivory Coast, students are responding to God and taking seriously the challenge to pray.

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