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Loading... Prayer: Finding the Heart's True Homeby Richard J. Foster
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. a good book to have a resource for prayer ( )More Lenten reading. Foster takes on a huge spiritual subject and makes it manageable. He briefly describes the various forms that prayer can take, but makes it perfectly clear that there is no wrong way to pray as long as one has a heart for God and wants honest communion with Him. I will purchase a copy of this for my permanent library, as this is a book I will want to refer to frequently. This is a superb compendium of Christian prayer covering every conceivable type of prayer imaginable. It is a rich resource of 21 types of prayer from which I have learnt a lot. Dry at times, really out there at times, inspiring at times. This book covers so much about prayer it almost left me paralized. I probably need to revisit this in small bite sized pieces. And to be honest, sometimes Dick Fo freaks me out. by Richard J Foster Type: Book; English Publisher: London : Hodder & Stoughton, 1992. Edition: 1st British ed | 19 Editions ISBN: 0340584173 9780340584170 OCLC: 221304503 Related Subjects: Prayer -- Christianity. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0060628464, Hardcover)There are hundreds of books on prayer, and much of the advice they contain is likely to be the same. So what distinguishes these books? Call it a kind of wisdom, a sense that here's someone who knows something of God's heart. A good example can be found in this fine book by the Quaker writer and teacher Richard Foster. The author of the bestselling Celebration of Discipline explores various aspects of prayer, which he defines in one place as "the human response to the perpetual outpouring of love by which God lays siege to every soul." Beginning with the simplest forms of prayer--what he calls "ordinary people bringing ... ordinary concerns to a loving and compassionate Father"--he then explores the deeper places where prayer becomes not simply petition but a way of life. He writes of prayer of adoration and rest, sacramental prayer, meditation, and contemplation, and in the final section of the book moves outward into ministry, where prayer meets the needs of the world. In each chapter Foster defines, describes, and gives helpful examples. Above all he writes with grace--in both the artistic and spiritual senses. --Doug Thorpe(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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