Brother Dan Watson built an altar for himself and his family. This altar was the place in his home where he would take all his cares and troubles to the Lord. If a child was sick he would take them to this altar to pray and it was there they received their healing. It was this altar that provided the inspiration of a pastor, Michael D. McGuire, to build and disperse 100 altars to the families of the church and some others that have been members. The purpose of these altars is a call to prayer. The altars have no power in and of themselves but provide a reminder to pray.

  Director of Altar Ministry:  Lewis Price

Brother Lewis Price was the primary carpenter of the 100 altars. He measured, cut, routered, put together, and painted many altars. Many other men provided labor in the building and moving of the altars but Brother Lewis made this a labor of love and speaks with a quaver in his voice and a tear in his eye of the hopes that these altars will bring someone closer to God.

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Monday, December 31, 2007                         Longview News-Journal

GLADEWATER — An altar call seemed a good way to get ready for 2008 at one local church Sunday, when members of Abundant Life United Pentecostal Church distributed the first of 100 handmade prayer altars.

"What better way to position ourselves but to go into this new year repositioning ourselves to prayer," the Rev. Michael McGuire said, shortly before a Sunday night communion service that concluded with members and visitors invited to take home a gift filled with the mystery and promise of prayer.

Seventy short benches, or altars, filled nearly every spare aisle space in the Gladewater sanctuary, lighter wooden sides supporting camel-colored seats. The altars were patterned after one that late church member Dan Moody Watson kept in his home for decades.

"He said, 'That's where me and Mama talk to God,' " McGuire recalled Watson, who was buried in overalls with a little, red New Testament tucked into a pocket.

"The altar itself, we recognize, is just a piece of furniture. If we've got a place for our car, if we've got a place for clothes, if we've got a place for food — we don't really have a place in our homes that is set aside exclusively for prayer. If they will see the altar in the home, they will be prompted to prayer. I hope this will catch on and churches in this area will be prompted to do the same thing. Everything we believe in starts with prayer."

McGuire had been inspired by the simple object when he conducted Watson's funeral, where it took a prominent position beside the casket.

Watson's son, John, brought the original with him to church Sunday.

"It was pretty much the center of our home," he said, describing it as the place his father and mother, Mary Jane, would turn for guidance from above.

"Instead of trying to figure out something by himself, he would go to that altar first. This was a man that was very simple, and yet who felt impressed to do this."

McGuire challenged the assembly of about 140 people to start a wave of prayer that could cover the area as more join.

"I believe we can raise up a wall of prayer, like a standard at every home," McGuire said. "It's time that America wake up and realized there's power in prayer. East Texas needs a revival and an outpouring of the blessings of God."