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Abiding Amen: Prayer a Secular Age
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Abiding Amen: Prayer a Secular Age in Franklin, TN
Current price: $29.00

Barnes and Noble
Abiding Amen: Prayer a Secular Age in Franklin, TN
Current price: $29.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
In a world obsessed with efficiency and results, where even spiritual practices are often treated as skills to be mastered, Wesley Ellis invites readers into a transformative reimagining of prayer.
Abiding in Amen
challenges the prevailing assumption that prayer is something to be achieved, offering instead a vision of prayer as a gift to be received.
With his characteristic warmth and pastoral insight, Ellis explores the ways in which modern society has conditioned people to seek controleven in their relationship with God. Prayer, rather than being a tool for self-improvement or a task on a spiritual checklist, is a space of divine grace and resonance, where people are invited to relinquish control. He calls for a paradigm shift: from striving to abiding, from anxiety to trust, from results to relationship.
Ellis reminds readers that prayer does not begin with human effort but with God's action. Through engaging storytelling, theological depth, and a sense of humor, he encourages readers to release the pressure of performance and enter into a more liberated, authentic communion with God.
Abiding in Amen
challenges the prevailing assumption that prayer is something to be achieved, offering instead a vision of prayer as a gift to be received.
With his characteristic warmth and pastoral insight, Ellis explores the ways in which modern society has conditioned people to seek controleven in their relationship with God. Prayer, rather than being a tool for self-improvement or a task on a spiritual checklist, is a space of divine grace and resonance, where people are invited to relinquish control. He calls for a paradigm shift: from striving to abiding, from anxiety to trust, from results to relationship.
Ellis reminds readers that prayer does not begin with human effort but with God's action. Through engaging storytelling, theological depth, and a sense of humor, he encourages readers to release the pressure of performance and enter into a more liberated, authentic communion with God.
In a world obsessed with efficiency and results, where even spiritual practices are often treated as skills to be mastered, Wesley Ellis invites readers into a transformative reimagining of prayer.
Abiding in Amen
challenges the prevailing assumption that prayer is something to be achieved, offering instead a vision of prayer as a gift to be received.
With his characteristic warmth and pastoral insight, Ellis explores the ways in which modern society has conditioned people to seek controleven in their relationship with God. Prayer, rather than being a tool for self-improvement or a task on a spiritual checklist, is a space of divine grace and resonance, where people are invited to relinquish control. He calls for a paradigm shift: from striving to abiding, from anxiety to trust, from results to relationship.
Ellis reminds readers that prayer does not begin with human effort but with God's action. Through engaging storytelling, theological depth, and a sense of humor, he encourages readers to release the pressure of performance and enter into a more liberated, authentic communion with God.
Abiding in Amen
challenges the prevailing assumption that prayer is something to be achieved, offering instead a vision of prayer as a gift to be received.
With his characteristic warmth and pastoral insight, Ellis explores the ways in which modern society has conditioned people to seek controleven in their relationship with God. Prayer, rather than being a tool for self-improvement or a task on a spiritual checklist, is a space of divine grace and resonance, where people are invited to relinquish control. He calls for a paradigm shift: from striving to abiding, from anxiety to trust, from results to relationship.
Ellis reminds readers that prayer does not begin with human effort but with God's action. Through engaging storytelling, theological depth, and a sense of humor, he encourages readers to release the pressure of performance and enter into a more liberated, authentic communion with God.

















