Three Things the Bible Says About Prayer
In my prayer life I can get lost in the details. This book helps me see the big picture.
In my prayer life I can get lost in the details. This book helps me see the big picture.
In 2003 in Liberia she led thousands of women in protests. Now she is sharing the Nobel Peace Prize. Read what this remarkable woman has to say about prayer and faith.
We all know that prayer is a journey and reading the Bible is a spiritual journey, but shopping for your wife is a trip on a sinking ship through shark-infested waters.
Every day at the bedside of patients, I see the Good Shepherd bring comfort to those who are close to death.
We don’t just read books. It’s often quite the opposite. Books—including the Bible—“read” us. They show us who we are, where we are and what we are.
Eleanor Roosevelt’s favorite prayer may become one of yours, too.
Rethinking the things that stand between us and God as tools for devotion.
Sometimes, out of the blue, you encounter the answer to a prayer you didn’t even know you had asked for.
I can get stuck in a mental loop of self-congratulation and it can seep into my prayer life. Here’s a parable in which Jesus shined the light on just such a prayer.
Training ourselves to hear and enjoy our quiet time with God.
Perhaps prayer is the only human endeavor where trying to do it is doing it. I mean, if God is God, he’s got to hear us no matter what, even if we don’t feel like we’re praying when we are.
Sometimes my prayer list spins out of control and I feel overwhelmed. Then I think, Stop. The answer is devotion, not despair.