National Day of Prayer Celebration set May 2, local observance at CC Courthouse

Published 8:57 am Friday, April 26, 2019

Dr. Ronnie Floyd, president of the National Day of Prayer, has announced that the theme of the 2019 observance on Thursday, May 2, will be “Love One Another,” based upon the words of Jesus in John 13:34, which says, “Love one another. Just as I have loved you.”
“Love can change America,” Floyd said in announcing the theme to a gathering of leaders from across the country.
“We need a baptism of love by the Holy Spirit that will immerse the entire Church of Jesus Christ in America and a baptism of love that will immerse all of America today,” he added later. “From the church house to the state house and all the way to the White House, we need to learn to love one another.”
The pastor and former Southern Baptist Convention president said the theme is one that has potential to engage all Americans because it is biblical, relevant, clear, simple, and understandable.
Even among the vast majority of America that “doesn’t look like us, believe like us, talk like us, and understand us,” Floyd said, “they understand that America’s broken. They may not understand why. But they understand America’s broken, and in their mindset, if there’s a God who exists, He’s about the only one who can fix it.”
Locally, the National Day of Prayer will be celebrated, beginning at 12 noon Thursday at the Carter County Courthouse, with local ministers and city and county officials participating. “It has become a tradition in our county and city to observe the National Day of Prayer, and certainly, our nation needs prayer,” said Pastor Randy Johnson, who is organizing the program.
Looking back at the 2018 National Day of Prayer, Floyd reported that there were more than 50,000 prayer observances estimated to have occurred that day. In addition, the Day of Prayer trended No. 1 nationwide on Twitter throughout the day, and there were around 100,000 social media posts on Twitter and Instagram alone about the Day of Prayer.
The National Observance in Washington, D.C., meanwhile, was broadcast in 200 countries of the world and 1.5 billion homes via Daystar TV, as well as through God TV and 120 radio stations nationwide. The video recording of the observance, furthermore, has had more than one million views on Facebook from 38 countries around the world. In addition, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association tracked more than 3,700 persons who came to faith in Jesus Christ largely due to the national observance and its public appeal to come to Jesus Christ.
“2018 was epic and unprecedented with response, largely due to God’s favor,” Floyd said.
Floyd urged believers across the nation to do everything they can to call people in the United States to unite in public prayer in the days leading up to and on the National Day of Prayer, May 2, 2019.
“This is our message. This is what we will declare. This is what we will believe. This is what we will advance. This is what we will forward. This is the message of Jesus: ‘Love one another, just as I have loved you,’” Floyd said.
The National Day of Prayer was created in 1952 by a joint resolution of Congress, and signed into law by President Harry S. Truman. In 1988, the law was unanimously amended by both the House and the Senate and signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on Thursday, May 5, 1988, designating the first Thursday of May as a day of national prayer. Every president since 1952 has signed a National Day of Prayer proclamation.

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