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Ten Ways to Pray: A Short Guide to a Long History of Talking with God

Author Dawn Duncan Harrell
Publisher Stone's Throw
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Book Details
PublisherStone's Throw
ISBN / ASIN0615581749
ISBN-139780615581743
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,588,927
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

DISCOVER in each chapter:
  • a brief story of one saint's approach to being with God
  • clear steps so that you can work the saint's method
  • suggestions for trying the prayer in short bursts
  • ideas for using the method with a prayer partner or group
  • questions for thought and discussion
  • resources for further study

DO YOU WANT to begin or re-energize a habit of prayer? Perhaps you are tired of gimmicks and too busy or bored to read books heavy on theology and anecdote. You would rather talk with God than check prayer requests off a list. Or fall asleep.

Every chapter in Ten Ways to Pray supplies a brief story of one historic saint's struggle to pray and a description of his or her approach to being with God. It keeps the rationale behind each prayer method to a paragraph and the discussion of human longings and Christian challenges short.

Praying, rather than reading about prayer, is the goal, so the bulk of each chapter explains how to work the proposed method. Here readers can follow clear steps easily, but may also find something new when they return for a second try.

Because praying a little is better than not praying at all, this book provides suggestions for how to try a prayer in short bursts when longer periods of time are not available. And it offers ideas for using the method with a prayer partner or small group. Chapters conclude with questions and resources for further study.

This is not a prayer journal, though journaling is encouraged. It's not a book of ancient prayers, though each saint is quoted in his or her chapter. It is neither a theology, nor an anthropology, though it references the first and builds methods around spiritual direction tools that address human nature. Neither is it a Bible study, though Scripture is frequently cited.

You might think of this as Cook's Illustrated for pray-ers. The point is to remove obstacles and add strong, but not cumbersome, support so that people can stop reading and pray.