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If you start every prayer with “Lord, I need…,” you are skipping the first and most important step: adoration. This article explains what it means to adore God in prayer, why beginning with who He is changes everything, and how a few simple, Scripture-fed sentences of worship can rewire your heart before you ever bring a single request.
This article unpacks what adoration in prayer really means, why most men skip it, and how starting with worship shifts your focus from your problems to God’s greatness so the rest of your prayer flows from a right view of Him.
Most men start prayer with “Lord, I need…” You feel the pressure of work, family, money, decisions. You come to God with a full list and an empty heart. The pattern of A.C.T.S. pushes you to start somewhere better: with Adoration.
Adoration is simply worship. You are not thanking God for what He has done yet. You are not asking Him for anything yet. You are telling Him who He is and responding to that with awe.
The word “adore” comes from a Latin term that has the sense of drawing near with love and reverence. It is deeper than saying “I like God” or “I respect God.” It is seeing His holiness, His power, His wisdom, His mercy, and bowing your inner life before Him.
Scripture models this. Jesus teaches us to begin, “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.” (Matthew 6:9, ESV) Before daily bread, before forgiveness, before protection, He starts with worship. He calls us to see God as Father and holy, high above us and yet near.
Adoration does at least three things in a man’s soul:
If you skip adoration, you rush into prayer with a small view of God. Then your fears feel bigger than His promises, and your prayers feel weak and half-hearted.
You can start with Scripture. Take a passage that lifts up the character of God, and turn it into prayer.
Try these steps:
Or use the Lord’s Prayer:
Keep your sentences simple. Short. Honest. You are talking to a real Person.
You can adapt these in your own words:
Tomorrow morning, before you ask God for anything, spend two full minutes in Adoration. Speak out loud who He is. Use Scripture if you need help. Train your heart to look up before you look in.
NEXT: Confession in Prayer: The Hard Step That Unlocks Real Freedom for Men