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Praying, Day and Night, for Hollywood

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Rupert Murdoch and Jerry Bruckheimer don’t know me, but I’ve been praying for them and their staff.

I belong to a group called Hollywood Prayer Watch. For five years, we’ve been bombarding Hollywood with intercessory prayers. We pray for its children and families. We pray for its drug addicts and dealers and prostitutes and homeless. We pray for people in the entertainment industry. We pray for law enforcement officers who patrol Hollywood and politicians who represent it.

We do this in the belief that prayer can transform Hollywood’s worldwide influence.

On the first and second Saturday of each month, 150 of us from the First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood arrange our schedules so that someone is praying every minute of those days, in half-hour segments.

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Hundreds from other churches and ministries, such as the Monroe Street Christian Church and Hollywood Christian Life Center, also participate. We also are connected to a global prayer outreach numbering tens of thousands through an interdenominational network of prayer leaders.

The global network, International Prayer Council, is headed by a Pasadena man named John Robb. Robb, who has worked in 100 countries since 1976, says he’s asked often, “Why do you [America] ship over your movies that are so full of violence and immorality?” Last year, after he was confronted with the question, he thought to himself, “Why not let the nations pray for Hollywood?” That’s how he linked up his legion of prayer networks overseas with those of us who pray here.

“There is such a potential for God’s transforming power to come in and to make Hollywood a more wholesome place,” says Robb. “We have a lot of hope.”

The woman who launched the Hollywood prayer initiative is the Rev. Jeri Penley of Sylmar. She’s a mother of two teenagers who spends her days working at an Encino brokerage firm as a sales assistant. She and her partner, the Rev. David Andrade, also operate the Strategic Prayer Strike Center in Pasadena, which trains people in intercessory worship.

In January 1997, Penley approached churches, ministries and people she knew in Hollywood and got them to commit.

“The needs are huge, but God is so much greater,” says Helen Griffith, who has been serving as a volunteer coordinator for the Hollywood prayer effort since its inception. Griffith, whose parents served as medical missionaries to Korea in the 1920s, chooses the subjects for monthly Hollywood prayers, offering appropriate Bible verses and specific suggestions for intercessors. Her monthly prayer letter packet arrives at our homes about a week before the prayer slots are scheduled.

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“As soon as I get it, I read it and begin to prepare myself,” says one intercessor, retired electrical engineer Dick Hamilton, 77. His slot is 6 a.m. on the second Saturday of the month. He prays in his bedroom, seated on his bed.

He has no difficulty praying for schools, churches, police officers and firefighters and folks in the entertainment industry. He grew up here, attending Fairfax High School. But Hamilton says he found praying last Saturday for gangs, at Griffith’s suggestion, “tough” because he had no personal association with gang-bangers.

Yet as he prayed, he said, he felt the Holy Spirit interceding in his behalf. “By faith, we have to trust that God knows what’s best.”

Griffith’s suggestions to the intercessors had included praying for understanding and courage for the kids who are invited to join the gangs in Hollywood. Pray for them to resist, she said, and pray that those who want to leave gangs will be given courage to leave and will be protected by God.

My prayer slot is 9 to 9:30 p.m. on the second Saturday of the month. Over the years, this has presented some interesting challenges. I’ve slipped out of dinner parties to pray. I’ve put on dark glasses so I could close my eyes for prayer in airport lounges. Last Saturday night, I excused myself in the middle of an after-dinner stroll to linger on a park bench in Santa Monica to pray for such gangs as 18th Street, Mara Salvatrucha and White Fence. I tried to see them as God might see them, creatures made in his image and loved by him.

Like Dick Hamilton, many of us from mainstream Protestant denominations tend to pray in silence--sitting or kneeling quietly as we present our petitions to God and thank him for what he is going to do.

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But other intercessors, such as those who gather on Friday evenings at the International House of Prayer in Hollywood, approach praise, worship and prayer with spontaneity--even exuberance. The house of prayer, which borrows the Monroe Street Christian Church for its biweekly meetings, tries to re-create the spirit of the Tabernacle of David where praise and worship were said to have continued 24 hours a day for 33 years. With musicians and intercessors working together as a team, they sing, accompanied by a guitar, bongo drums and a rain stick. They read verses from the Bible, especially from the Psalms. They raise their hands heavenward. Sometimes they dance.

The house of prayer is another of Penley’s initiatives. It’s patterned after the International House of Prayer in Kansas City, Mo., believed to be the only place in the country where intercessor missionaries and musicians pray and worship 24 hours a day. Hollywood’s house of prayer draws intercessors from as far as Ventura County.

Pam Wood, an escrow officer and member of the Monroe Street Christian Church, was there in a shirt emblazoned “Addicted to Jesus.” Sometimes, she sat still with her eyes closed in prayer, and at other times, she sang along exuberantly with the praise and worship team.

Some who pray for Hollywood say they have seen results: more PG movies, they suggest; greater receptivity to the Bible among Hollywood’s homeless and prostitutes, say others. The International Prayer Council’s Robb says that in January, 175 people in the entertainment world rededicated their lives to Christ after hearing the Rev. Bruce Wilkinson, the author of the “The Prayer of Jabez,” speak in Hollywood. Robb says a powerful industry figure gave up a $6-million deal involving distribution technology for pornography after his conversion to Christianity.

“It goes against what the world usually thinks ... because we have a very materialistic culture and value system,” Robb says. “But I’m convinced that the Lord wants to bring healing to nations and this is already happening.”

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