1st Edition

What Are We Doing When We Pray? On Prayer and the Nature of Faith

By Vincent Brümmer Copyright 2008
    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    Vincent Brümmer's classic book on prayer from 1984 provides a comprehensive philosophical analysis of central issues regarding the nature and practice of prayer. What do we do when we ask things of other people, when we thank them or praise them, when we express penitence for what we have done to them and ask their forgiveness? And how does doing these things in relation to God differ from when we do them in relation to other people? And what does this entail for the existence and nature of the God to whom we pray? This new edition has been substantially revised and updated. Three new chapters have been added which develop in detail a hint by G.K. Chesterton that faith 'is not a thing like a theory but a thing like a love affair.' Since prayer is the expression of this 'love affair' it is also the clue to understanding the nature of faith. These chapters contribute significantly to the current academic interest in spirituality by showing how Brümmer's analysis of prayer helps us to understand the nature of spirituality, of faith and religious belief, and of theology. Spirituality is not aimed at achieving religious 'experiences' or mystical 'knowledge' about God; it is primarily aimed at attaining the religious form of life and at coming to see the world in the light of faith. Religious belief is not merely a cognitive enterprise like science; it cannot be divorced from spirituality and the life of faith, and is therefore fundamentally existential and not merely intellectual. Serving as a valuable core text for students, this book also contributes to a number of current debates in theology and philosophy of religion: the debates on realism and religious belief, on the rationality of faith and the nature of theology, on the relation between religious belief and morality, on the relation between science and religion and the lively debate among evangelical Christians in America on the 'openness of God.'

    Contents: Preface; Part I Prayer: Introduction: putting prayer to the test; Therapeutic meditation; Praying for things to happen; Prayer and the goodness of God; Prayer and the agency of God; Praying and relating to God; Praying and relating to the world. Part II Faith and Religious Belief: Prayer and the nature of faith; The eyes of faith; Faith and the nature of religious belief; Index.

    Biography

    Professor Brümmer was born in South Africa in 1932. He studied philosophy and theology at the universities of Stellenbosch, Harvard, Utrecht and Oxford and was professor in the Philosophy of Religion at the University of Utrecht from 1967 to 1997. His writings include Theology and Philosophical Inquiry (London 1981, Philadelphia 1982) (also in Dutch), What are we Doing when we Pray? (London 1984) (also in Dutch and in German), Speaking of a Personal God (Cambridge 1992) (also in Dutch), The Model of Love (Cambridge 1993) (also in Dutch and forthcoming in Korean), Faith and the Modern World. Lectures and Conversations in Iran (Tehran 2004), Atonement, Christology and the Trinity (Ashgate 2005), Brümmer on Meaning and the Christian Faith (Ashgate, 2006).

    Prize: Winner of the Andrew Murray-Desmond Tutu Prize for Christian and Theological Books for 2009 'Vincent Brümmer is a well-known world-class philosopher, who has also put his talents at the disposal of Christian theology. I always regard What Are We Doing When We Pray? as obligatory reading for the Philosophy of Religion at any level. With clarity and sophistication, this book addresses the practical question of whether prayer makes a difference. Brümmer addresses the classic difficulty raised by Kant and others about whether prayer is only a private mental exercise or more than this. The first edition has long been out of print, and this was a tragedy. I warmly commend this newly revised and expanded edition.' Anthony Thiselton, University of Nottingham, UK 'This revised edition of this classic offers many new insights concerning the nature of faith and the relational character of God. Vincent Brümmer makes stimulating company on a journey of philosophical reflection and spiritual exploration.' Christoph Schwöbel, University of Tübingen, Germany 'Professor Brümmer identifies clearly the significant theological complexities that arise when petitionary prayer is considered in relation to God’s power and goodness and offers in each case a thoughtful, helpful perspective.' David Basinger, Roberts Wesleyan College, USA 'As always, Brümmer is wonderfully clear and extremely insightful on how prayer guides the "eyes of faith" to understand God.' John Sanders, Hendrix College, USA ’Brümmer certainly raises some interesting questions and subjects them to logical scrutiny that quite often proves illuminating... this book could be beneficial for those interested in Christian faith and practice as well as those undertaking a more philosophical examination of the relevant issues.’ Theological Book Review ’Brümmer’s is a concise and sophisticated book that addresses the practical question of whether prayer makes a difference in the lives of believers.