In my youth, I memorized prayers in Catholic school. When I became a Christian later in life, I witnessed heartfelt prayers where people just talked to God. I learned to pray by reading the Bible and from listening to others. I came across this book in our library of books that my husband and I recently (finally) unpacked. Not sure if this was his or if it came to me from my mother's library, there is no indication in the book of its provenance. I believe prayer is powerful so when I took this out of the box, I knew I had to read it. The fourth paragraph of the book inspired me tremendously and framed the rest of it. "...the purpose of prayer is not to inform God about our needs, but to conform us to His will. Prayer doesn't change God. Prayer changes us."
The teaching from Pastor Stedman is biblically solid - he provides scriptural references for everything he says, starting with the foundations of why we should pray, how we should go about it, why Christians pray together, and the importance of Christian unity in Christ. I found multiple gems that reframed my perspective on prayer, including this stellar quote: "Jesus never taught his disciples how to preach. He taught them how to pray."
We live in a world that scoffs at prayer yet pushes meditation and self-rumination. The latter idolizes the self while prayer turns our attention to the source of truth and peace. Prayer is our connection to Jesus, and as the author says, "There is in Jesus Christ an adequate answer to any problem. You don't have the answer, but don't need to. He has the answer. Bring the problem to Him."
I highly recommend this book. It is a reminder of who is the foundation of faith and the importance of maintaining a relationship with Jesus through prayer. You'll come away with changed mindset and a more effective prayer life.
My prayer is that all who read it are blessed with the gift of peace that passes all understanding granted by our Lord Jesus through the Holy Spirit.