From Publishers Weekly
The prayer that Jesus Christ is said to have taught his disciples may be the first one Christians learn as toddlers and the last one to linger as memory fades. Kisly, founding publisher of Tricycle and author of Ordinary Graces and Watch and Pray, offers this slender but insightful volume as an aid for those drawn to focus on the prayer in an intense and disciplined manner. Reminding her readers that sometimes the words can become rote and routine, Kisly urges them to view the prayer as a way of developing a closer relationship with God. Where some spirituality writers would include personal anecdotes or evocative stories, Kisly encourages readers to practice self-examination anew each time they begin to pray. Her essays on each phrase of the Lord's Prayer invite the reader to use meditative techniques, like conscious breathing and posture, to cultivate attentiveness to God's presence. As a further spur to contemplation, Kisly includes reflections on the Lord's Prayer from Christian writers, from the 12th-century saint Francis of Assisi to contemporary author Lauren Winner. She concludes the book with suggestions for accompanying the prayer with body movements drawn from ancient Christian postures. The author's austere and sometime imperative style is not for everyone, but there is a wealth of possibilities here for those interested in moving from reciting the Lord's Prayer to using it as a foundation for the practice of prayer. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Sojourners
"If you've been reciting the Lord's Prayer for so long you don't hear the words anymore, pick up (this book)."
Book Description
With warmth and grace, Lorraine Kisly invites us to enter the radiance of the Lord's Prayerthe "prayer of fire"with our bodies, minds, hearts, and spirits. Many of us have recited the prayer countless times, but when have we last listened to it? Through simple practices, readers find within the Lord's Prayer the path to a deep and intimate relationship with God. Rich with theological and spiritual insights, The Prayer of Fire exposes the barriers that keep us from "the Presence waiting for us in the silence."
About the Author
Lorraine Kisly has studied and worked with the texts of the great religious traditions for more than twenty years. Her previous books include Ordinary Graces: Christian Teachings on the Interior Life and Watch and Pray: Christian Teachings on the Practice of Prayer. She currently serves as Editor-in-Chief of Parabola: Myth, Tradition, and the Search for Meaning.
The Prayer of Fire: Experiencing the Lord's Prayer FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
The prayer that Jesus Christ is said to have taught his disciples may be the first one Christians learn as toddlers and the last one to linger as memory fades. Kisly, founding publisher of Tricycle and author of Ordinary Graces and Watch and Pray, offers this slender but insightful volume as an aid for those drawn to focus on the prayer in an intense and disciplined manner. Reminding her readers that sometimes the words can become rote and routine, Kisly urges them to view the prayer as a way of developing a closer relationship with God. Where some spirituality writers would include personal anecdotes or evocative stories, Kisly encourages readers to practice self-examination anew each time they begin to pray. Her essays on each phrase of the Lord's Prayer invite the reader to use meditative techniques, like conscious breathing and posture, to cultivate attentiveness to God's presence. As a further spur to contemplation, Kisly includes reflections on the Lord's Prayer from Christian writers, from the 12th-century saint Francis of Assisi to contemporary author Lauren Winner. She concludes the book with suggestions for accompanying the prayer with body movements drawn from ancient Christian postures. The author's austere and sometime imperative style is not for everyone, but there is a wealth of possibilities here for those interested in moving from reciting the Lord's Prayer to using it as a foundation for the practice of prayer. (May) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
Kisly is the former editor of the distinguished journal Parabola and founding publisher of the equally distinguished Tricycle. This delightful book on the Lord's Prayer displays the intelligence and good judgment we have come to expect from Kisly. Her own extended meditation on the prayer, which she terms "a laboratory for watching and praying," is followed by a mini-anthology of inspired paraphrases of the prayer, from those of St. Francis of Assisi and Dante to the more contemporary Phyllis Tickle and Christopher Bamford. Kisly concludes with a fascinating appendix offering simple body movements, based on ancient Christian postures during prayer, to be used while reciting the Lord's Prayer. Highly recommended. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.