A Letter to Jabez
A Letter to Jabez: Response to a Prayer
- Author: Neal E. Snider
- Length: 88
- Edition: Paperback
- Publisher: Augsburg Fortress Publishers
Description of A Letter to Jabez:
Letter to Jabez is a critique of the best-selling prayer phenomenon The Prayer of Jabez. Writing in the form of A Letter to Jabez himself, Snider is generous with praise when it is warranted but challenges many of Wilkinson's assumptions and contentions about prayer and offers a corrective to them. This book will be beneficial to Christians, including pastors and other ministers, who desire a vital and traditional corrective to the human-centered approach to prayer encouraged by followers of the Jabez phenomenon.
Information on A Letter to Jabez from the publisher:
In A Letter to Jabez: Response to a Prayer, Neal E. Snider provides a critique of the best-selling book by Bruce H. Wilkinson called The Prayer of Jabez. Writing in the form of A Letter to Jabez himself, Snider is generous with praise when it is warranted but challenges many of Wilkinson's assumptions and contentions about prayer, and offers a corrective to them. The book will be beneficial to Christians, including pastors and other ministers, who desire a vital and traditional corrective to the human-centered approach to prayer encouraged by followers of the Jabez phenomenon.
About Neal E. Snider:
Neal E. Snider has been a Lutheran pastor since 1960. Upon his retirement in 200 he was named Pastor Emeritus at Bethlehem Lutheran Chruch in Marysville, Washington.
Description of Neal E. Snider, author of A Letter to Jabez:
In this book, Neal E. Snider provides a critique of the best-selling book by Bruce H. Wilkinson called The Prayer of Jabez. Writing in the form of A Letter to Jabez himself, Snider is generous with praise when it is warranted but challenges many of Wilkinson's assumptions and contentions about prayer, and offers a corrective to them. The book will be beneficial to Christians, including pastors and other ministers, who desire a vital and traditional corrective to the human-centered approach to prayer encouraged by followers of the Jabez phenomenon.

