PRAYER

Holy Trinity has a devout prayer team who daily lifts up the needs of the church and its people to the Lord. Both male and female prayer ministers are available during every Sunday service to pray, as well as to meet with you during the week for extended times of prayer.

“The test of orthodoxy is not doctrine alone, for doctrine remains incomplete unless it is accompanied by the power to make the doctrine come true.”

- Francis MacNutt

“… pray without ceasing” (1 Thess. 5:17)

Holy Trinity has a devout prayer team who daily lifts up the needs of the church and its people to the Lord. Both male and female prayer ministers are available during every Sunday service to pray with you starting during the administration of Communion. Prayer requests remain confidential (nobody outside of the prayer team will know about them without your permission). To share a prayer request with the team, use the prayer form.

Prayer Appointments

Do you have any need for which you need prayer? Consider signing up for a Prayer Appointment. These are extended, confidential times of prayer and are available to anyone that strive to accommodate the schedule of the one seeking prayer. This is usually offered during the week by a member of our committed prayer team.

If you have any questions or would like to schedule a Prayer Appointment, please contact Daphne Boder at daphneboder@gmail.com or Mark Johnson at markhejohnson@gmail.com.

Services of Public Healing

It is our conviction that our Lord’s ministry of healing continues on through the life of His Church and our tradition provides liturgies for ministering to the sick including laying on of hands and anointing with oil. Accordingly, we offer Services of Public Healing throughout the year after the second service. This year’s are on Feb. 22, Apr. 26, Oct. 11, and Dec. 6.

“I tell you most solemnly, whoever believes in Me will perform the same works I do myself; he will perform even greater works, because I go to the Father.

- John 14:12

“The Christian vocation is to be in prayer, in the Spirit, at the place where the world is in pain, and as we embrace that vocation, we discover it to be the way of following Christ, shaped according to his messianic vocation to the cross, with arms outstretched, holding on simultaneously to the pain of the world an to the love of God.”

- N. T. Wright