About this item
Highlights
- A remarkably accessible ancient prayer with contemporary appeal--memorable, physical, genderless, and mystical.
- Author(s): Ken Wilson
- 112 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christian Life
Description
About the Book
An ancient prayer with contemporary appeal--memorable, physical, genderless, and mystical. Like the Serenity Prayer, it appeals to those relying on God to get through their day.
Book Synopsis
A remarkably accessible ancient prayer with contemporary appeal--memorable, physical, genderless, and mystical.
This book offers a step-by-step introduction to the prayer that fosters improved conscious contact with God. With forty short meditations, it draws the reader into the different aspects of the prayer each day and can serve as an easy access Lenten guide. These short essays are designed to mediate an enhanced experience through daily use. Like the Serenity Prayer, it appeals to those relying on God to get through their day.
Review Quotes
"Ken Wilson has mined an ancient gem of spiritual practice and rendered it with a contemporary twist that enlivens body, mind, and spirit. This short guide is a wellspring of wisdom that can carry us through the journey. Like a serum that nourishes the soul, the Sarum Prayer creates and fills the desire for an intimate and abiding fellowship with the divine."
--Rolf Nolasco, Professor of Pastoral Theology Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
on. I'll be using this book for my morning prayers in Lent this year."
--Bonnie Perry, XI Bishop, diocese of Michigan "In this heartfelt book, Ken graciously and gently invites us to join him for forty days in pondering the unique, ancient, yet very contemporary Sarum Prayer. With biblical, theological, psychological, and spiritual insights, as well as personal experiences, he illumines the fascinating, practical implications of this simple/profound prayer."
--Donald H. Postema, author
"All of us need help praying from time to time. The Sarum Prayer stands apart because it incorporates our whole lives and our whole selves. Ken Wilson gives us the time to internalize this prayer so that it can make its way into our prayer lives well beyond our forty days of guided prayer."
--Greg Carey, Professor of New Testament, Lancaster Theological Seminary