Site icon Coram Deo ~

BOOK REVIEWS and NEWS

BOOK REVIEW ~ Prayer: A Biblical Perspective by Eric J. Alexander

Prayer: A Biblical Perspective by Eric J. Alexander. Banner of Truth. 106 pages. 2012.
****

Eric Alexander is a wonderful preacher who I was blessed to hear at a few theology conferences in the past. His chief concern in this short book is to remind Christians that prayer is fundamental, and not supplemental, both in the individual and in the corporate lives of God’s people. This book has the feel of individual sermons that were delivered on prayer put into book form.

Alexander writes that because prayer defies definition, the Bible doesn’t give us a comprehensive definition of prayer. Because the reader would like a definition however, he uses the words of John Calvin, who in his commentary on Isaiah says, ‘Prayer is nothing else than the opening up of our heart before God’.

Alexander shares the following elements of true prayer from the scriptures:

  1. Entering into God’s presence through the access obtained for us in Christ’s sacrificial death.
  2. Worshiping and adoring God for all that he is.
  3. Praising and thanking God for all that he does.
  4. Humbling ourselves before God because of what we are, and confessing our sin and failure.
  5. Supplicating at God’s throne and petitioning him for the good things for which we are totally dependent on him.
  6. Intercession for others.

In this book, Alexander looks at a number of examples of prayer in scripture, such as:

Alexander then looks at difficulties related to prayer, breaking them down into the categories of common, spiritual and practical difficulties.

He ends the book with an epilogue on prayer and preaching. He writes that prayer and preaching belong together in the mind and wisdom and purpose of God. The prayerless preacher is a contradiction in terms, as is the prayerless church.

Although short, this is an excellent book on prayer and highly recommended.

Book News:

Studies in the Sermon on the Mount BOOK CLUB
Won’t you read along with us?

Studies in the Sermon on the Mount by Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

This book made a significant impact on my wife Tammy when she read and discussed it with friends thirty years ago. When I picked up my diploma the day after graduation ceremonies from Covenant Seminary last year I was given a copy of this book. After enjoying Lloyd-Jones book Spiritual Depression (and the sermons the book was taken from), I couldn’t wait to read this book, which is the printed form of sermons preached for the most part on successive Sunday mornings at Westminster Chapel in London. This week we look at

Chapter 12: The Christian and Persecution

Exit mobile version