15 Ways to Make Prayer A Natural Part of Your Everyday Family Life
- Kim Butts

- Dec 30, 2025
- 4 min read
Updated: Jan 26
Parents want their children to grow spiritually strong, yet many parents don’t feel comfortable training them to seek the Father in prayer. If you are struggling with raising up a praying family, here are some suggestions to help you! Step out in faith and learn to pray with and for one another. Be intentional about giving your children opportunities to recognize God’s presence in the midst of your family’s everyday life! If you feel uncomfortable with prayer, be committed to learning with your kids! Children do not have junior Holy Spirits, and it may surprise you how quickly they will welcome the opportunity to learn and grow in prayer. There is no greater thing than learning to worship, communicate with and listen to our Creator, our Father and our Friend! Here are some suggestions to help you on the way:
1. Help your children to become aware of answered prayer. Tell them about the times in your life when God has answered your prayers. Encourage them to share when God answers their prayers – even if His answer is not what they wanted or expected. When you have other believers, especially missionaries and full-time Christian workers in your home, ask them to tell you about answered prayers they have experienced. Point out God’s answers to your children’s prayers – even the smallest requests.
2. Help your children to see the beauty of God’s creation and thank Him for it. Do not miss opportunities to appreciate His handiwork around you. Take time to point out sunsets and beautiful flowers. Thank God for them right then.
3. Whenever you see or hear about someone in need, take time to pray about it with your children. It could be something on the news or in the paper, or something you come across during the course of your day. Teaching them to pray when they see an accident or when you pass a homeless person could have a lasting influence not only on your children, but on those who are prayed for.
4. Wrap family traditions or events in special times of prayer. For example, lay hands on the person with a birthday and bless him or her; thank the Lord for two things that you love about her, etc. When seated at the Thanksgiving meal, go around the table and have each family member pray about what he or she is most thankful for over the past year
5. Pray blessings over your children. Lay hands on them at bedtime or at another time when they are hurting in some way, and pray scriptural blessings over them. Numbers 6:24-26 is a good one to memorize: “The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make His face shine upon you and be gracious to you; the Lord turn His face toward you and give you peace.”
6. Teach your children to prayerfully put on the armor of God at the beginning of each new day (Eph. 6:10-18).Each of us needs to be aware that we are in a spiritual battle and that God has provided us with some very important spiritual equipment with which to protect ourselves and fight Satan. This can be done as a family, but do not ritualize it or make it a legalistic thing.
7.Have family devotions and prayer time. While any time is good, early mornings before everyone goes separate ways is probably the best time. This will remind children that God will be with them throughout the day.https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qcl8jaBQKequ4dgJwI6ORd0nx56YGNGp/edit
8.Put together a family prayer journal. Place each family member’s picture in it, as well as pictures of your pastor and his family, relatives, unsaved friends, and neighbors. Pray through the album together, and encourage one another to pray individually on a daily basis for those represented.
9.Teach children to keep a personal prayer journal. Here they can record personal requests, praises, and answers to prayer.
10.Develop a missionary prayer notebook. Place prayer cards or pictures of missionaries your family and/or church support in a three-ring binder with plastic page protectors, colorful paper, etc. Include pages with pockets for recent newsletters, prayer needs, e-mail messages, etc. Pray through the notebook on a regular basis. Help your children make the connection between prayer and saving the lost. Pray together that the Lord of the harvest (Matt. 9:38) would send workers into His harvest fields.
11.Adopt a people group to pray for – perhaps one of the unreached groups of the 10/40 Window. Pray for your people group daily, research its needs, and be open to what God will do through your family.
12.Develop a family prayer calendar each month. Take turns, or do it together. Put each family event or activity on the calendar, so it can be prayed for.
13.Go on a prayerwalk in your neighborhood. Pray for all the families that live around you.
14. Adopt a leader to pray for. Adopt a local, state, or national political leader to pray for annually. You may wish to encourage the leader by letting him or her know your family is praying. Perhaps consider asking them if they have any specific requests.
15.Participate as a family in prayer initiatives and/or events. National Day of Prayer (first Thursday in May), Praying Through the 10-40 Window, Collegiate Day of Prayer (4th Thursday of February), etc. Encourage your junior high or senior high school children to take part in See You at the Pole (student-led prayer 4th Wednesday of September).



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