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December 1, 2008
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Home > 2008 > September (Web-only)Christianity Today, September (Web-only), 2008  |   |  
In Crisis, Wall Street Turns to Prayer
Financial meltdown triggers prayer sessions citywide.



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Starting early last Sunday morning, the turmoil in New York's financial markets triggered a spiritual response among Christian leaders reminiscent of the response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Cell phone text messages quickly spread calls to prayer. "Barclay has pulled out of Lehman deal," one announced. Wall Street giant Lehman Brothers was finalizing bankruptcy papers; Merrill Lynch was clinching its deal to sell itself to Bank of America. Monday would be devastating.

Many Wall Streeters realized that the crisis could be earthshaking. A. J. Rice, well-respected CEO of the hedge-fund firm Pomeroy Capital, says, "Most people think this is a once-in-a-lifetime thing. In 1987 we had a dramatic shock, but the other shoe didn't drop." This year, a whole lot of shoes have dropped. Wall Streeters have lived with a constant sense of foreboding.

First there was the January sub-prime market crash and its ongoing problems; then the collapses of Bear Stearns and, most recently, Lehman Brothers; and now Merrill Lynch's loss of independence. More than 350 banks are on a watch list circulating on the street. "I was surprised and unsettled when Bear Stearns went under," says Rice. "I worked for them at one time. I knew we were in untested waters."

How Christians respond to the crisis will be a test of their wisdom, courage, integrity, and compassion for the mighty as well as for the humble. One executive told CT, "Our response will answer the question, 'Who is Jesus on Wall Street?' "

Bishop Roderick Caesar of New York City's Bethel Gospel Tabernacle, which has a number of members from Wall Street, says that the crisis is so fundamental to our world that "the church has to be poised for the moment and be prepared to work together."

Last Sunday night many Wall Streeters could not get to sleep. After midnight, an executive at one of Wall Street's leading investment banks, who requested that his name and his company's not be used, lay in bed watching CNBC report that his competitors were going by the wayside. "I was surprised how quickly it had come. By 8 P.M. we knew how Monday would open. I prayed, very selfishly, that my company would not be on the list." He worried "about my family, the economic environment, my church, and community."

His wife rolled over and asked, "Are you really worried?"

"No," he told her. "I am just interested in the news. I work for a really good company."

She asked again, "Are you stressed?"

He weighed what was important to them and answered, "Even if the worst happens, we will still be together as a family and have Christ who loves and cares for us." Reassured, his wife turned back over; 30 minutes later her husband turned off the television. He needed to be at work very early the next morning.

On Monday, Christians on Wall Street set up special prayer meetings for the week. First came the special prayer conference calls on Monday and Tuesday nights. Then, starting Wednesday, extraordinary prayer meetings were scheduled at Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Deloitte, and elsewhere. Pastors began planning to gather for a sidewalk prayer meeting outside of the stock exchange.

Mac Pier of the New York Leadership Center started getting calls from friends who were losing their jobs. "Of course, I prayed with them that God would give them the spiritual and financial resources they need." Pier says that the Wall Streeters who called him were stunned. "It was unnerving to them because of the speed [at which] it happened."





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 37 comments.See all comments
wd   Posted: September 23, 2008 10:25 AM
Christians have been saying "no regulations" "no speed limits" for business. This is what we have now. God will lay it at our doorstep, and the Body of Christ needs real repentance. The only way to avert disaster (disaster = out of control national debt) is to make the sacrifice (taxes!!!) and pay for what we have foolishly committed to Iraq, unregulated business, purchasing houses too big for our incomes... etc. Listening to false prophets like Rush. Foolishness is our Politics. The "me" generation is reaping. Repentance is necessary - in the Body of Christ, let it begin with the church.

AP   Posted: September 19, 2008 12:35 PM
This meltdown is a good thin... any time we are dragged away from our idols (money, stuff, power, prestige, etc.) is a good time.

Isaiah Tor   Posted: September 22, 2008 5:28 PM
The Lord Jesus clearly said that we cannot serve both God and mammon. Whilst one cannot sweep aside the genuine hardships caused upon innocent individuals due to this speculative financial travesty on Wall Street, one must ask the question, do we "pray over the books" so that we are freed into some kind of financial security, and dare we say prosperity, or do we pray over every aspect of our lives in consecration to the Lord and unto the fulfillment of His pupose, so that God's heart's desire in and through the ascended Christ by the Spirit would be executed on this earth. It is pointless to turn to the Lord in times like these, and when things actually get better we become gradually, if not quickly forgetfully of our Lord Jesus who so delivered us in the first place. This is not the resolution of a conundrum, a crisis of faith so to speak. This financial crisis shows us where our hearts has really been-on money and not on the Lord. May we so pray for salvation from the hold of money!

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