Tag: prayer

  • Rediscovering the Power of the Lord’s Prayer

    Rediscovering the Power of the Lord’s Prayer

    Rediscovering the Power of the Lord’s Prayer

    Prayer as Advent – God with Us

    While the Lord’s Prayer is ancient and familiar, three titles from Energion Publications invite readers to encounter it with fresh eyes. Whether you are looking for a radical spiritual wake-up call, a study on Christian character, or a guide connecting prayer to social justice, these books offer a path to diving deeper into the prayer of Jesus.

    Bold to Say

    Ignite your stalled engine and find power for a radical new start.

    Author: Dr. Geoffrey Lentz
    Focus: Spiritual Ignition and Radical Encounter

    If your prayer life feels stuck or routine, Bold To Say serves as a spiritual wake-up call. Dr. Geoffrey Lentz challenges readers to step out of “comfortable routines” and confront the “revolutionary nature” of this prayer. Rather than viewing the prayer as a simple recitation, this book presents it as a vehicle for surrender and transformation. It is designed for those seeking a bold encounter with a God who is described as both “transcendent and intimately present,” shaking up traditional views to reveal the prayer’s “radical, even weird, power”.

    Ultimate Allegiance

    Orient yourself, choose your direction, ensuring your loyalty and character are aligned correctly with God and community.

    Author: Dr. Bob Cornwall
    Focus: Theology, Character, and Community Allegiance

    Ultimate Allegiance

    “Prayer changes things,” but Ultimate Allegiance asks how prayer changes us. Dr. Bob Cornwall explores how the Lord’s Prayer serves as a means to correct our relationship with the Creator and transform our relationships with one another. This book argues that prayer should ultimately transform “theology… into character and action”. By examining the major petitions of the prayer, Cornwall pushes readers to answer the ultimate question of where they place their loyalty.

    This book is designed specifically for small group or church studies, particularly when used with its related study guide.

    One World

    A map for navigating the specific terrain of the modern world, connecting the spiritual journey to the physical environment around us.

    Author: Bruce Epperly
    Focus: Process Theology, Social Justice, and Practical Application

    In One World, best-selling author Bruce Epperly presents the Lord’s Prayer as a “spiritual GPS” for the modern world. Writing from a process theology perspective, Epperly moves beyond the image of a distant ruler to introduce a “relational, open-spirited” God who is a “fellow sufferer who understands”. This book connects the prayer directly to contemporary issues, such as economic justice, environmental stewardship, and community healing, challenging readers to be “heavenly minded and earthly good”.

    Key Features: As part of the Topical Line Drives series, it offers deep scholarship in a concise format. It includes practical spiritual exercises like the Examen and Lectio Divina, as well as a study guide for conversation.


  • Prayer and the Nation

    The Jesus ManifestoOur Tuesday night hangout was actually recorded around 1 pm central time yesterday. I had a great conversation about prayer, especially prayer in a time of crisis and prayer for our nation with Dr. David Moffett-Moore. What good does prayer do? How does prayer relate to action? You may be surprised at some or Dave’s answers to my questions.


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  • Pathways to Prayer

    by David Moffett-Moore

     
    PrayerCharlie Brown’s  Snoopy likes to dance, chanting, “To dance is to live, to live is to dance!” and he makes a convincing case. He dances with vigor and abandonment. Snoopy throws his whole being into the dance; in return, the dance expresses all that Snoopy is and hopes for.  I like to dance, but I could never make a living at it!
    I suppose arguments could be made for other elements of life to be full expressions of life. I’ve heard the saying, “Some people eat to live, some live to eat.” Musicians focus the wholeness of their being on the song; athletes focus their energy and attention on the game. My wife Becki loves to garden. For a recent retreat, each person was to bring something that would identify the core of their being; Becki took her garden gloves.
    I want to make the argument that prayer can be the dance of our soul, the expression of our life, the wholeness of our being, the focus of our energy and attention, and identify the core of our being. We are born praying; the cry of the newborn is the cry of life. As it is more normal and natural for us to breathe than to not breathe, so it is more normal and natural for us to pray than to not pray. We may hold our breath for a time, but our bodies will soon return to breathing. We may hold our prayers for a time, but soon our spirits will return to their patterns of prayer. As the body must breathe, so the spirit must pray.
    We pray as infants, “I want. I hurt. I’m frightened.” We pray as children, “God bless mommy; God bless daddy.” We pray earnestly as youth, when we first realize our conscience, “I’m sorry.” Anne Lamont suggests three prayers that are most basic and universal, “Help, Thanks, Wow.”  Meister Eckhart claims, “If the only prayer you would say in your whole life is “Thanks,” that would be enough.” C.S. Lewis confesses, “I pray because I can’t help myself. I pray because the need flows out of me all the time, waking or sleeping. I pray because it doesn’t change God, it changes me.”
    We can grow in prayer. We can become more mature, more familiar, more experienced, yet all this is a natural development of our native intuition to pray. Over the centuries countless books have been written on prayer, describing it, what it is and how it works, and offering helps for us to grow in our experience and understanding of prayer.  I have added my own humble supplement.
    My contribution to the Topical Line Drive series, entitled “Pathways to Prayer,” begins with this limitation to its intended scope, “This little volume is not a great treatise on the meaning and purpose of prayer, nor is it a scientific investigation on the function of prayer, nor a psychological examination of prayer’s impact on our lives. It is a simple little devotional intended to offer encouragement for those wanting to grow in their prayer lives, with some suggestions on how to do so. I pray that it may be helpful.”
    To one who was born to pray, from one who hungers to pray, I invite you to read it and join with me in the pilgrimage of prayer.
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