How to Pray – by Pete Greig

20 03 2025

A couple of years ago we did The Prayer Course in our homegroups at church, and it was excellent. Soon afterwards, I picked up the book that tied in with it, and FINALLY I’ve got around to reading it!

It’s a really helpful book, looking at different types of prayer at a really accessible level, and with plenty of anecdotes and examples to help apply what’s being said. But bookending all that, he says that it’s most important to just: “Keep it simple, keep it real, keep it up”. I was glad he did that, because I sometimes think we overcomplicate prayer with splitting it up into all these different types and “how to” do each of them – we learn as a kid is that prayer is just talking with God, building a relationship with Him, so I was pleased he brought it back to this.

Prayer is definitely something I’m not great at, but this book didn’t make me feel bad about that, and was written in a way that didn’t feel too clever, fancy or intimidating – it was encouraging! It also comes with a load of recommended further reading and links to an online toolshed of resources, which I’m looking forward to delving into somewhen.

He shared the story of King George VI calling the country to a day of prayer before Dunkirk, which I had no idea about, and gave a great analogy using the boys who were rescued from the cave in Thailand, how there was a long wait for them between being found and being rescued, and how we can liken that to the now and not yet of our Salvation through Jesus.

Definitely a book I’ll be back to dip in and out of.





Too busy not to pray – by Bill Hybels

28 12 2016

One 190 page book for two months? Must be non-fiction!

I was looking for a fairly practical book on prayer and given I’d heard of Hybels and this book for years – plus the fact it was celebrating a 20th anniversary and still worth a reprint, all whilst acknowledging the busy-ness of modern life in the title, this seemed worth a try.

It was a little less practical and a little more theory-based than I had hoped for, (though I appreciate that that is important!), but it had a couple of chapters that were more practical so that was good, and I still turned down many many page corners to go back to!

Most of the sections talk about why we should pray and the fact that God wants us to pray. There’s a strong focus on supplication, although, again, there are sections looking at worship, confession, etc.

Hybels does cover ideas like writing your prayers down, keeping a prayer journal, finding a specific place, and gives one suggested structure for your prayer time. I was hoping for more ideas, but what was there was definitely useful.

too-busy-not-to-pray