Birmingham—I woke up extra early that fourth Wednesday in September to make my way to Falcon Middle School by 7 a.m., situated just off Highway 24 on the golden-yellow plains of Colorado. I was ready to participate in my first See You at the Pole.
As my dad dropped me off 18 years ago, I hopped out of the car and made my way to the circle that was forming around the school’s flagpole. Several students from different grades were there. We huddled close together and grabbed hands. We prayed for our state, our school, its staff and students and for that day to be all about God and glorifying His name.
“Amen,” I said aloud, recognizing what a privilege it was to freely pray in public at my school.
The whole prayer time was “ours.” Just students gathered together. It brought with it a sense of accomplishment, freedom, honor and responsibility. We may have been young, but we took a stand for our faith and learned the importance of prayer along the way.
Sept. 23 marked the 25th annual See You At The Pole, a student-initiated, student-organized, student-led event that started with just 10 students in Texas in 1990 who wanted to pray for their school. In 25 years the movement has grown to see more than 3 million students participate across the United States and in more than 20 countries.
With the theme “UNITED” drawn from Acts 1:14, SYATP 2015 encouraged a time “to commit to global unity in Christ and prayer for this generation,” said Matt Wilson, executive director of First Priority Greater Birmingham, an Alabama sponsor and coordinator of SYATP.
“We are encouraging students, school faculty, families, businessmen and women, everyone, to unite together as a community in prayer for our nation,” Wilson said.
SYATP coincided with the annual Global Week of Student Prayer (Sept. 20–26) when people are encouraged to find new and unique ways, places and times to pray in groups throughout the week for the world, community leaders, schools, staff and families. (BP)
Neisha Roberts