Written by the best selling author of Where the Hell Is God, this accessible volume is for everyone who wonders how to pray, everyone who wonders what happens when you pray, and everyone who wonders if God hears our
Richard Leonard, the Australian Jesuit priest and film critic, wrote this book on Christian prayer. In part it was a response to reactions to his previous book "Where the Hell is God?" This book challenges us to pray because we are loved beyond measure by an unchanging God. To pray because prayer can change us so that we may change the world. To pray because an array of people before us have offered perspectives for us to be enriched by prayer (e.g. Desert Fathers and Mothers, Benedictine, Carmelite, Franciscan, Dominican, Ignatian ways). This book will help us refine our relationship with God, ourselves, each other and our world. At times it will encourage and console. At others, it will probe, challenge and even stun. Why bother praying? Read this book. Then you might wish to ask the opposite: why bother to not pray?
I think this is a very good book for anyone who is seeking to sort of "jump start" their prayer life, either starting at the beginning or looking to renew a sense of purpose or immediacy to their existing practice. Fr. Leonard is very direct in his advice and commentary, which I believe most readers will find refreshing. And the information he presents (about different schools of prayer, fundamentals of Christian prayer,etc.) provide useful footing for both practical and inspirational purposes. Although this practical aspect distinguishes his work from other spirituality writers (like Nouwen), the end result of Leonard's spiritual direction is much the same--cultivating a closer relationship with God.
Short and sharp defence of his definition of prayer: Asking an unchanging God to change me to change the world.
Yet the author fails to delve into the dilemma of petition not answered. Petition is embedded in the "Our Father" of "Give us our bread". A poverty stricken person finding their family's food on a city's garbage dump, for instance, would have this as their only prayer. By extension, farmers in western countries will pray for rain, and people who are chronically ill will pray for healing. Their vision of God is not necessarily bad but a most powerful king who can change their powerless position. CS Lewis deals with this side of prayer in his book and in letters to Malcolm. However, Richard seems to gloss over it here.
Still, well worth the read. When it comes to pray, I agree with Richard - I need all the help I can get.