The Copy & Paste  Prayer Emoji! 

As of March 2020 the Prayer Emoji is the #6th most used emoji out of the 3,304 emojis in the Unicode Standard Collection.


Used thousands of times every day the prayer hands emoji is represented by folded hands in prayer typically with blue or green sleeves covering the rest of the arms.


This type of design is used to represent prayer, praying, as well as general thanks.

Did you know? Six billion emojis are used every single day. That's like an emoji a day for almost every person on planet earth! 🌎😲

Click on the button to copy the Prayer Emoji into your clipboard.

The Prayer emoji first became a standardize Emoji in the in Unicode 6 in 2010 and was added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015.

What Readers are Saying About The Emoji Bible:

After only 3 days worth  I am already feeling inspired and refreshed. It relates biblical truths to everyday situations making God's word come to life in a way that's easy and fun to understand!

Amazon Reviewer

After only 3 days worth  I am already feeling inspired and refreshed. This is a true masterpiece. The Emoji Bible relates biblical truths to everyday situations making God's word come to life in a way that's easy and fun to understand!

Amazon Reviewer

Love the emotions aligned with scripture. I love the individual gospels. Excited for the Spanish version to come out so I can take to Panamá. 

Amazon Reviewer

Love this! It's written like you're having a conversation. Easy to follow notes.

Amazon Reviewer

Get Your Copy For Free

Get the Book of James from the Emoji Bible for Free!

Includes Chapter Devotional Study Questions

The Bible. The story of God’s love for His children. Many of us know that we should be reading, studying, and sharing it with each other more but actually doing that? It can be difficult.

But, what if there was a simple book that was just a part of the Bible? What if that book could help you study the Bible piece by piece without making it feel like you’re studying? How would we do that?

The answer? EMOJIs.

Think about it, we’ve been using EMOJIs to attach feelings to things for a long time! That is what this project is all about. We call it the EMOJI Bible. While we may not always see it, the Bible is deeply emotional. By showing these Bible verses next to EMOJIs, we can get a better sense of the feelings contained within, including the writer, the people in the story, the reader, and even God!

The best part is that this book & Bible study is great for all ages. So, if you’re interested in doing a devotional, or online Bible study that will help you understand and relate to Bible verses in a way that makes sharing it easier, we encourage you to check out the EMOJI Bible, starting here with the Book of James. 

Includes Bible study questions for personal or group online Bible study.


Prayer Emoji Icons by the  Device!

The prayer icon will look different dependent on the browser, device or application you are using to enter the emoji or icon. Here are some of the most frequent Emoji collections and how the prayer icon looks for each.

Apple Prayer Hands Emoji

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and Apple TV use the Apple Color Emoji font installed on iOS, macOS, watchOS and tvOS. Some Apple devices support Animoji and Memoji. 

Facebook Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on the Facebook website, Messenger for web, and Messenger for Android. Facebook apps for iOS and Android use native emojis for their respective platform instead of Facebook's own emoji images.

Google Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on used on most Android devices, Gmail Web Interface, Google Meet, and ChromeOS. These are provided as part of the Noto Emoji project. These images are also used for Slack on non-Apple platforms including Windows, Linux, and Android.

Samsung Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on Samsung devices such as the Samsung Galaxy and Galaxy Note series and are updated as part of the Samsung One UI interface layer which runs on top of Android.

Whatsapp Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on WhatsApp. WhatsApp has its own emoji designs which are displayed on all WhatsApp for Android and WhatsApp Web.

Microsoft Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji  on PCs and tablets running Windows 10. These are provided by the Segoe Color Emoji font, although some applications show black and white emojis from an earlier release.

Twitter Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on Twitter and can be inserted via emoji keyboard or picker. Alternatively emojis can be copy and pasted by choosing from the emojis. Twemoji is an open source emoji project, created and owned by Twitter. 

JoyPixels Prayer Icon

This is the icon shown when users enter the prayer emoji using the JoyPixels set known as EmojiOne prior to 2019-03-28. Images from JoyPixels are available under paid licenses, with the initial releases being open source. This Emoji is from JoyPixels 6.0 are displayed below.

OpenMoji Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji with OpenMoji a free and open source emoji library which can be used for a variety of purposes. Available with a Creative Commons (Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International) license.

Emojidex Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji from the emojidex set which can be used on any web site or app that includes the emojidex libraries. User-submitted emoji images which are outside of the standard emoji set can be found on the emojidex website.

Messenger Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on Facebook Messenger before 2017. This emoji set has now been discontinued. Messenger for iOS now uses native Apple emojis, and Messenger for Android and web uses the Facebook emoji set. 

LG Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on LG devices before 2017. New LG phones sold from 2017 onward (G6 and above) use the stock Android emoji set from Google as do any previous LG phones that received the Android 7.0 Nougat update.

HTC Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on HTC devices such as the HTC 10 and HTC U11.
As of 2016, only a subset of emojis are supported by HTC. Non-smiley emojis show on HTC devices using the Noto Color Emoji font from Google.

Mozilla Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appears when users enter the prayer emoji on the Mozzilla Firefox. A set of free, open source emojis from Mozilla planned for Firefox OS. Abbreviated to fxemoji in the open source project, this emoji set is not being actively worked on.

SoftBank Prayer Icon

This is the icon that appeared when users entered the prayer emoji on the SoftBank collection which had its own emoji set for the years 1997—2016. SoftBank (known as J-Phone at the time) created the first known emoji set. 

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