God has given us the "privilege of causality". To put it more simply: Something does change when we pray.
The Psalms remind us that there is more than one way to pray and invite us to walk with them on the first steps of a journey into an authentic relationship with God.
Trying to get the mechanics of prayer right can keep us from the most important aspect: coming with an open heart before God.
We are invited to enter into prayer in the same way as a loving parent invites his or her child to come.
While we have the tendency to fill our words with things which don't matter, God has offered us something truly worth boasting about.
God invites us into an intimate relationship that is built on and strengthened by continual prayer.
Like our spirits, our bodies are to be transformed into instruments of righteousness so that we may receive the victor's crown.
God is responsive to true faith, which is rooted in a relationship of trust in the goodness and authority of Christ, as we see in three intertwined stories from the Gospel according to Mark.
Allen Singer, congregational leader of the Zera Avraham messianic congregation, speaks about God turning our mourning into dancing.
We have the privilege of offering to others, not a new law, but a new life — one freed from sin's hold over them.