FTC Disclosure: I received a complimentary copy of this book. These are my honest thoughts.
This book caught my attention because I like studying prayer and learning more about it. However, this devotional proved to be shallow and insubstantial in the very area in which I expected it to be deep and rich with solid content.
It assumed that the reader wouldn’t thank people because of their “age, creed, color, nationality, and political party” and that the reader wouldn’t “utter another ‘thank you’ to God” for the food a waiter brought to them. Both seemed rude assumptions to make about people. In my experience of traveling through 48 of 50 U.S. states, I found that the vast majority of people of all races, creeds, etc. were generally polite, including “thank-yous,” and I have no doubt that most devout Christians thank God for their food whether they are at home or at a restaurant.
The Message and Amplified versions of the Bible were used more than any other even though the author herself claimed, “Interestingly, The Message translates these verses differently than all the other versions of the Bible.” That is not a good thing! The loosest of translations, it often adds words and meanings that are not supported by any other English translation of God’s Holy Word. I kept having to look up the Bible verses in another more reliable translation to be sure I understood what was really being said in the verse before moving on to the “meat” of the devotional entry. For example, Psalm 100 doesn’t talk about a “password” to enter into God’s pasture, but The Message’s translation says there is a password required.
“For [God] is both a tender mother and a strong father to you.” No, God is not a mother at all. Nowhere in the Bible is He described as such. He has compassion and comfort toward us, but this does not make Him feminine.
There was a random Scottish term in “ken,” instead of the American English term “knowledge.” This felt very out of place. I hope it got fixed before this book was published (my copy was an electronic ARC).
“There could be a thousand reasons to ignore God’s voice.” In my experience, there are only excuses, not reasons, for such a thing. And millions of reasons for tuning into His voice.
“Jesus, the Man with the plan.” Similar to “the Man upstairs,” this phrasing felt disrespectful for such a holy, incomparable God.
“God’s words of wisdom (aka WOWs).” This rubbed me the wrong way, but it could just be my irritation at having so many unnecessary acronyms pop up all over the place in the last 15 or so years.
“And you can rest assured your loving Father God will take away all the troubles weighing you down.” I’m not sure where in the Bible God promised to remove all troubles from us when we trust Him. In fact, Jesus promised we would be persecuted, a tried and tested people. The millions of martyrs that have died for their faith in God are proof enough for me that not all earthly troubles will be removed when our lives are lived fully for God.
I was not at all sure what “arrow prayers” were until I researched them. Apparently, they are mainly taught in the Catholic church. They are definitely not mentioned in the Bible. So this sort of teaching felt odd to me. From my personal experience, God has answered prayers as short as “God, help me!” and as lengthy as about five essays crammed together. So the arrow-prayers theory seems untrue for me.
The “prayer maps” were more like journal entry spaces. I didn’t see anything map-like about them.
There were some really good points made in made of the entries. I’m sure this devotional will be helpful for some readers who are earlier in their prayer journey than I. It is my hope that other readers get a lot more good stuff out of this devotional than I was able to do.