Unity through Repentance: The Journey to Wittenberg 2017

Chapter 23

Praying John 17 Together

You’ve read Chapter 23, and you want more day & night prayer? Don’t worry, we got you!

Day

Night

Entrance to the Hoffnung Kirche (Hope Church), which graciously hosted the night watch in a newly renovated basement area

 
 

Midnight prayer session in the Hoffnung Kirche basement chapel

Midnight prayer session in the Hoffnung Kirche basement chapel, led by the team from the Vienna MHOP.

In 2019 we learned that Gunter, the drummer in the video, had been killed in a farm accident. This was a tragic and difficult loss for the church in Vienna. He is without a doubt now before the throne in worship - this video shows only a shadow of the glory that is Gunter!

Meeting Program with Links to Videos

The schedule of the 2017 meeting gives you a good feeling for how the prayer was structured, and the teams that faithfully filled the sessions, day and night.

 

Wittenberg 2017 Schedule

1 – 5 November, 2017

 

Red = in Leucorea, Black = in Stadthaus, Maroon = in Hoffnungkirche,

Green = on the Streets

 

Wednesday, 1 November

Theme:  John 17:1 Turning our Faces to Heaven

4:00 – 6:00 pm

Registration / Welcome

Leucorea

Gathering Begins at 6:00 pm

6:00 – 8:30 pm

Session #1

Worship

Welcome & Overview

“Turning Our Faces to Heaven”

Phillip Owens

Thomas Cogdell
(Watch -partially- in English)

Henning Dobers
(Watch in German)

8:30 – 10:00 pm

Worship & Prayer

FCJG Lüdenscheid

10:00 – 10:30 pm

Procession to Kirche

FCJG Lüdenscheid + MHOP Wien

10:30 – Midnight

Worship & Prayer

MHOP

Thursday, 2 November

Theme: John 17 – God is Preparing the Marriage Feast for His Son

Midnight–12:30 am

Vigils Bridge Prayer

MHOP Wien + Br. Pietro & Alexander

12:30 – 2:00 am

Worship & Prayer

Br. Pietro & Alexander Dietze

2:00 – 2:30 am

Matins Bridge Prayer

Br. Pietro & Alexander + FCJG Lüd

2:30 – 4:30 am

Worship & Prayer

FCJG Lüdenscheid

4:30 – 5:00 am

Dawn Bridge Prayer

FCJG Lüdenscheid + USA CTR

5:00 – 7:30 am

Worship & Prayer

USA Christ the Reconciler

7:30 – 8:00 am

Procession to Stadthaus

Budapest House of Prayer + USA CTR

8:00 – 9:00 am

Worship & Prayer

Budapest House of Prayer

9:00 – Noon

Session #2

Trialogue #1

 

“God is Preparing the Marriage Feast for His Son”

(Watch the Trialogue)

 

Part 1 - Franziskus Eisenbach
(Watch in German)

Part 2 - Amy Cogdell
(Watch in English)

Noon – 12:30 pm

Midday Bridge Prayer

Phillip Owens & Thomas Cogdell

12:30 – 2:00 pm

Worship & Prayer

MHOP Wien

2:00 – 2:30 pm

Early Afternoon Bridge Prayer

MHOP Wien + USA CTR

2:30 – 5:30 pm

Session #3

“Becoming Christ-Like”

Small Groups

 

“Introduction to Identificational Repentance”

George Miley
(Watch in English)

 

 

Helmuth Eiwen
(Watch in German)

5:30 – 6:00 pm

Vespers Bridge Prayer

Phillip Owens & Thomas Cogdell

6:00 – 7:30 pm

Worship & Prayer

Budapest House of Prayer

7:30 – 8:30 pm

Special Teaching

Walter Heidenreich

8:30 – 10:00 pm

Worship & Prayer

FCJG Lüdenscheid

10:00 – 10:30 pm

Procession to Kirche

FCJG Lüdenscheid + MHOP Wien

10:30 – Midnight

Worship & Prayer

MHOP Wien

 

Friday, 3 November

Theme:  The Rejected Sons – 3rd Stream (Anabaptists)

Midnight-12:30 am

Vigils Bridge Prayer

MHOP Wien + Br. Pietro & Alexander

12:30 – 2:00 am

Worship & Prayer

Br. Pietro & Alexander

2:00 – 2:30 am

Matins Bridge Prayer

Br. Pietro & Alexander + FCJG Lüd

2:30 – 4:30 am

Worship & Prayer

FCJG Lüdenscheid

4:30 – 5:00 am

Dawn Bridge Prayer

FCJG Lüdenscheid + USA CTR

5:00 – 7:30 am

Worship & Prayer

USA Christ the Reconciler

7:30 – 8:00 am

Procession to Stadthaus

USA CTR + Budapest House of Prayer

8:00 – 9:00 am

Worship & Prayer

Budapest House of Prayer

9:00 – Noon

Session #4

Trialogue #2

 

“That They Be Conformed To the Image Of His Son: The Rediscovery of Following Jesus in the Anabaptist Movement 1524-1664”

 

“The Criminalization of the Anabaptist Movement during the Beginnings of Protestantism”

Small Groups

(Watch the Trialogue)

 

Wolfgang Krauss
(Watch in German)




Holger Bartsch

(Watch in German)

Noon – 12:30 pm

Midday Bridge Prayer

Phillip Owens & Thomas Cogdell

12:30 – 2:00 pm

Worship & Prayer

MHOP Wien

2:00 – 2:30 pm

Early Afternoon Bridge Prayer

MHOP Wien + USA CTR

2:30 – 6:00 pm

Session #5

“History of Anabaptists in Austria & Moravia”

 

Summary, Identificational Repentance & Prayer

 

 

 

 

“The Bruderhof Communities”

Franz Rathmair
(Watch in German)

 

Helmuth Eiwen, Hans-Peter & Verena Lang
(Watch in German)

(Watch in English, translation by John Martin)

 

Chris Zimmermann
(Watch in English)

6:00 – 8:00 pm

Shabbat Celebration + Dinner Break

Richard Harvey & Marianna Gol
(Watch snippets of the dancing that broke out!)

8:00 – 10:00 pm

Worship & Prayer

FCJG Wien (in Hoffnungkirche)

10:00 – 10:30 pm

Night Watch Bridge Prayer

FCJG Wien + MHOP Wien

10:30 – Midnight

Worship & Prayer

MHOP Wien

 

Saturday, 4 November

Theme:  John 17:21 – God Invites Us Into The Unity of the Trinity

Midnight-12:30 am

Vigils Bridge Prayer

MHOP + Alexander

12:30 – 2:00 am

Worship & Prayer

Alexander Dietze

2:00 – 2:30 am

Matins Bridge Prayer

Alexander + Fr. Kanaan

2:30 – 4:30 am

Worship & Prayer

Franziskusbruderschaft Kanaan

4:30 – 5:00 am

Dawn Bridge Prayer

Fr. Kanaan + USA CTR

5:00 – 7:30 am

Worship & Prayer

USA Christ the Reconciler

7:30 – 8:00 am

Procession to Stadthaus

USA CTR + Heart of G-d Galilee

8:00 – 9:00 am

Worship & Prayer

Heart of G-d Galilee

9:00 – Noon

Session #6

Trialogue #3

 

“The Mystery of the Coming Kingdom”

 

Small Groups

 

“Discerning Times”

(Watch the Trialogue)

 

Marianna Gol
(Watch in English)

 

 

 

John Dawson
(Watch in English)

12:00 – 2:00 pm

Worship & Prayer

FCJG Wien (in Hoffnungkirche)

2:00 – 2:30 pm

Early Afternoon Bridge Prayer

FCJG Wien + USA CTR

2:30 – 3:00 pm

Session #7A

“Luther and the Stadtkirche - 1517 - 2017 - Then and Now”

Richard Harvey
(Listen in English)

3:00 – 5:00 pm

Session #7B

Prayer Excursion to Stadtkirche (City Church) Proclaiming Jesus as King of the Jews as well as Lord of the Nations
Sr. Joela – “Who is our King?”

7:00 – 10:00 pm

Session #8

Ruth Musical

Kisi Kids

Sunday, 5 November

Theme:  John 17:18, 2 Cor 5:20 – Being Sent for the

Ministry of Reconciliation

9:00– 10:15 am

Session #9

Worship

 

“Principles of Reconciliation”

 

“The Beauty of Completeability

Phillip Owens

 

George & Hanna Miley
(Watch in English)

 

Thomas & Amy Cogdell
(Watch in English)

10:15 – 10:30 am

Break

 

10:30 – Noon

Session #10

Commissioning Service  

Free Church / Pentecostal
Orthodox Leader
Anglican Clergy
Anabaptist Leader

Lutheran Clergy
Catholic Clergy
Messianic Jewish Leader

(Watch in English & German)

Eduard Griesfelder
Drtad Uzunyan

George Miley
Keith Blank
Henning Dobers
Franziskus Eisenbach
Marianna Gol

12 Noon

Hugs, Farewells … and Cleaning Up!

So … Bridge Prayer … ??

You might have noticed the term Bridge Prayer in the above schedule, and wondered - What is Bridge Prayer?

Bridge Prayer is a model of prayer developed by Christ the Reconciler. It bridges Catholic & Protestant modes of prayer (see what I did there?). It also bridges across two prayer sessions in a prayer room.

 Planning 24/7 Prayer for Wittenberg 2017

Chapter 23 of Unity Through Repentance, “A Prayer Meeting Occasionally Interrupted By Teachings,” tells the story of how I received and communicated the vision of 24/7 prayer to the leadership team of Wittenberg 2017. For most of them, it was a new idea. The natural next question was - “How in the world can we pull this off?”

In this section, I expand on how God provided the answers to those questions.


How in the world could we have four days of continuous prayer? Who would lead it? Where would the teams come from?

Well, I had seen numerous similar “impossible” prayer events, that had filled up with leaders and teams. I had faith that the schedule would be filled. After all, this was the 500th anniversary of the Reformation! In my ever-optimistic thinking – who wouldn’t want to come and pray?

I knew that we could bring a prayer team from Texas. Michael and Joelene Michel were worshipers who had spent their college and young adult years in AHOP, then married each other. They now had two children, but Michael’s mother Lori worked for United Airlines, and so she and her husband Joe agreed to catch a flight over and take care of their precious grandchildren. That was one.

I knew that Br. Pietro, a Lutheran monk with the Marienschwestern in Darmstadt, loved to pray in the late night hours. That was two.

We reached out to Alexander Dietsche, the German worship leader living in Israel who had set Richard Harvey’s Judensau lament to music. I had seen his free-flowing worship style in 2016, and had thought then that he would be a natural prayer room leader. That was three.

The dam broke with the wonderful community of Help International. Led by the indomitable Walter Heidenreich, a well known German evangelist, we had gotten to know Help International well when they sent a missionary team from Germany to … wait for it … Austin! In fact, their base was located about 15 minutes away from our home, and we had become friends and had met Walter and other leaders from their home community of Lüdenscheid, Germany. They had a prayer room for 24/7 prayer in Lüdenscheid!

“Can you temporarily move your prayer room to Wittenberg?”, we asked. And when their response arrived, we were overjoyed!. The core Lüdenscheid community would send a prayer team of 40. And the community in Vienna would also send a team. Not only was that teams four and five – we now had the entire night watch covered! We were so grateful.

Another team came from Vienna as well. Over the years, we had gotten to know Gaby Schubert, who led MHOP, a house of prayer in Vienna. Gaby was a true Spirit-filled gift to the body of Christ – faithful, cheerful, responsible, and resourceful. It turns out she was well-connected as well! She not only brought her MHOP team, but recruited a team from Budapest, Hungary. That was six, and seven.

And seven was enough. We could fill all of the prayer hours with these teams.

The leadership team understood the vision. We had the prayer teams and the location for the prayer room.

Our next challenge was – how to structure prayer?

At Christ the Reconciler in Elgin , Amy and I and the leadership team had developed a simple 20-minute prayer model called “Bridge Prayer”. The name had two meanings. One was that it combined ways of praying that were typically Catholic, with those that were more common in the Protestant world. The second was that it was intended to bridge across two longer prayer times in a prayer room, providing a unifying time of prayer between the team that was ending, and the one that was beginning.

Perfect.

We would teach the seven teams how to do Bridge Prayer. Each team would:

Pray Bridge Prayer for 20 minutes with the preceding team …

… then lead prayer for 1 hour and 40 minutes, in the manner of praying they were accustomed to …

… and finally pray Bridge Prayer for 20 minutes with the next team.

In order for this to be successful, each team would have spend some time preparing with the other teams … which meant that Lutherans would reach out to Pentecostals, who would reach out to Catholics, who would reach out to Anglicans, and so on. So even in the preparation for praying for unity, unity would be built.

And so the Lord provided a way for Wittenberg 2017 to be a prayer meeting, occasionally interrupted by teachings.

Another picture of Bridge Prayer - you can see on the right side that I am the Prayer Leader, with Jill Cotita next to me as the Bell Ringer. Phillip is the Musician, along with his team (which includes my oldest child Noah, playing the green guitar).

More Prayer!

How did

Angela Merkel

affect the scheduling of Wittenberg 2017?

Duane Grobman had prophetically encouraged us years before 2017:

“You need a bigger room.”

By which he meant - bigger than the Melancthonsaal in the Best Western, which Julia and I had reserved in 2010 (see Chapter 12). That room could hold 150 maximum.

When he said this, we had an urgency from the Holy Spirit. We immediately emailed contacts in Germany and said, “Investigate other room possibilities.” We learned that a brand new conference center, the Stadthaus, had been built in Wittenberg since 2010 - which is why it wasn’t one of the five rooms on Julia and my meeting room treasure map. It was built specifically in preparation for the 500th anniversary. Which meant it was not reservable for October 31, 2017 - of course!

But … it was reservable for November 1, the day after the 500th anniversary!

“Book it for a week,” we immediately wrote back.

And the Stadthaus was ours from November 1 through November 8.

A few months later, I was in Germany again, and made the one-hour train journey down to Wittenberg from Berlin. I visited the Leucorea - which in 2010 we had found to be the nicest meeting room in Germany. My goal was to reserve it for the 2016 meeting, 500 days before the 500th anniversary. Providentially, even though there were several 500th-anniversary-related events that summer, our dates were available, and I reserved them.

I turned to go.

Then I turned back.

“Just one more thing,” I said. “What about November 1 - 5, 2017?”

“Let me see,” said the very helpful events coordinator. “Yes, those are available.”

“I’d like to reserve those, as well.” And it was done.

Why had I reserved the Leucorea, when we already had the Stadthaus? I honestly couldn’t tell you. I reported back to the leadership team that we now had three rooms reserved for the 500th anniversary, as shown in the graphic below, which we displayed in 2016 to try to explain the (quite complicated) room schedule for 2017.

Well, the Stadthaus called us about a month before our meeting, very apologetically.

“We are so sorry, but you cannot have the meeting room until November 2.”

Why was this?

“Well … you see … Angela Merkel will be there on October 31. And the day after, we will have to clear, clean, and reset the room. So, for you to meet on November 1 is impossible.”

It was a good thing that I had reserved the Leucorea!

We ended up meeting for the first night, November 1, in the same Leucorea meeting room that had held the 2016 meeting. We packed that room out, this time!

Afterwards the night watch teams went to pray in the Hoffnungkirche chapel, and the next morning the procession was from the chapel to the Stadthaus, which received us warmly. In fact, all three meeting locations - the Best Western, the Leucorea, and the Stadthaus - demonstrated throughout the highest levels of gracious professionalism.

Translated by John Martin, I extend a welcome to the Wittenberg 2017 participants in the Leucorea on the night of November 1, 2017. We were in this lovely conference room, a little cramped, but happy and excited to have arrived at 2017!

A small group of us gathered on October 31, 2017 - the actual day of the 500th anniversary - to watch and praying blessings over the official ceremonies. We are in the Melanchtonsaal, the room we originally reserved for "seven years from today" back in 2010.

And in the Stadthaus … I don’t think we would have fit in the originally-reserved room for 100!

One question that might arise is - why make a big deal about the importance of reserving the Melancthonsaal in 2010? We ended up not really needing it, after all.

My response is - it was absolutely needed. It was needed as a concrete anchor in Germany. The ability to tell the Germans we met, “We already have a room reserved” signaled to them that we were serious, and that God was sovereignly involved. It just wasn’t needed, the way we thought it would be needed - when we reserved it. Isn’t that how God works! Our job is to obey - not to have it all figured out. Let’s obey! Without preconceptions! And let God work his wonders …

More Cogdell Travel Fun

The trip to Wittenberg in 2017 was filled with anticipation. It was also filled with various logistical challenges. Justus traveled separately with Amy. My group included not just my other children - Justus, John Patrick, & Clara - but also three friends who were immensely helpful on the trip and throughout the gathering. One was Bob Fullilove, a long-time friend of our family (don’t you just adore his last name! It fits his heart attitude well). The other two were a young couple, Elijah Wall and Abigail Trantham (who, many years later, ended up marrying my son Justus!).

 

The trip started well (kind of) for Clara …

… but the finish was memorably rocky. Clara did amazingly well the whole trip, never crying or complaining - even through multiple plane trips, long layovers, and airport/airplane food. When we reached Berlin, it was night, and we took a bus to the Hauptbahnhof (main train station). Our hotel was just on the other side of that train station, and Amy was in the hotel waiting for us.

When we got out of the bus, a blast of cold fall German wind took the breath from our lungs and knocked down our luggage. Clara started crying for the first time on the entire trip. As we made our way through the cavernous Hauptbahnhof, she was wailing:

“I WANT MY MOMMY! I … WANT … MY … MOMMY!”

Her words echoed throughout the train station. I nervously looked around for police to come running, sure that everyone suspected that we had kidnapped her. Traversing the train station with Clara screaming turned out to be the longest part of the trip! (at least, it felt that way)

When we reached the hotel lobby on the other side, I dialed Amy’s room. “I’m in my pajamas, so why don’t you just come up?” “No,” I said, “I think you need to come down.” And I held the receiver so she could hear her daughter’s “I WANT MY MOMMY!”

Two minutes later Amy emerged from the elevator, in her pajamas, and Clara collapsed into her arms. And was fine the rest of the trip. She was a trooper … and still is!

The Trialogues

Back in Texas, we had prepared three videos to be shown at the beginning of each of the three main days of the program. The idea was to peer inside the counsel of the Trinity, as they prepared for The Wedding Supper of the Lamb - which was our theme for the meeting. Each was bi-lingual - either voiced in English, with German subtitles, or vice versa. The German translation and voicing was done by a team of German missionaries in Texas! They were from Walter Heidenreich’s community, Help International / FCJG, based in Lüdenscheid, Germany. (If you read carefully above, you will remember that this community sent about 40 people to fill up the Night Watch for the 24/7 prayer … we were so thankful! Also, Walter was one of the speakers in an evening session.)

 
 

“... I in them and you in me—so that they will be brought to complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me into this world, and that you have loved them even as you have loved me.”

John 17:23 (IEB)

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Chapter 22 - Searching for Anabaptists

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Chapter 24 - The Joy of Repentance