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God on Mute: Engaging the Silence of Unanswered Prayer

God on Mute: Engaging the Silence of Unanswered Prayer

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Author: Pete Greig
Publisher: Kingsway Publications
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £4.39
You Save: £3.60 (45%)



New (6) from £4.39

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 17596

Media: Paperback
Pages: 346
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1

ISBN: 1842913174
EAN: 9781842913178
ASIN: 1842913174

Publication Date: April 4, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New. Shipped from UK Mainland. Delivery is usually 2 - 3 working days from order by Royal Mail, International Delivery is by Airmail.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - God on Mute: Engaging the Silence of Unanswered Prayer

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Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The Best   January 15, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is quite simply the best, most honest inspiring and hopeful book on 'why prayers are unanswered' I have read (and I have read many)
As a chronic pain sufferer who has passed on my condition to my 2 children and am watching my parents daily deterioration, I found this author to be profoundly inspiring and encouraging.



5 out of 5 stars Honest, intelligent, and funny as well   December 5, 2007
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Pete Greig is a very committed Christian, who founded a prayer movement called 24-7. 24-7 has been hugely influential, has spread across the globe and has generated literally thousands upon thousands of amazing stories of answered prayer. So when Pete's wife Samie has a terrifying fit, is diagnosed with a massive brain tumour, has brain surgery and is left with epilepsy, Pete is ideally placed to pray for her and see her illness healed and her epilepsy disappear. Isn't he?

That isn't how things work out. Pete prays all right, and so do many others, but the sickness remains. So here you have the leader of a global prayer movement, who really knows the power of prayer and sees prayers answered all the time, having to wrestle with the fact that his own prayers for something that desperately, desperately matters to him aren't being answered at all. How can he reconcile this with his faith?

The result is one of the best Christian books I've read in a long time, one of those books that you keep buying extra copies of to give away. It is written with honesty and integrity: not trying to sugar-coat the pain of what he and Samie have been through, but wrestling with it and trying to understand it. Pete has brought together a great many strands of theological thought, and has made them accessible. This should be compulsory reading for every Christian.



5 out of 5 stars A very honest book   October 29, 2007
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This is the book that many people have been waiting for and certainly one I found very real and relevant to me. Pete is writing from the heart of his experiences of coping with his wife Samie's diagnosis of a brain tumour just as the 24-7 prayer movement that he "accidently" found himself heading up (a whole other book which is another amazing read- "Red moon rising")was really taking off, and closer to home, just after he and his wife had their second baby. A turbulent enough time for any family with a new baby and managing an exploding international prayer phenomenon, without the devastating news that Samie has to undergo life saving surgery. The book's subtitle is "engaging the silence of unanswered prayer" and on many levels their major prayer was answered, Samie survived the brain tumour, however she is left with a severe form of epilepsy which has a major impact on her and Pete's day to day life and that of trying to bring up a young family. This is the main crux of the book, her life is saved but why is she left with this condition and how does it benefit anyone? Pete sums it up here on page 133 of the book..."for me, it has been the relentless battle with Samie's epilepsy during the past six years rather than the initial diagnosis of her tumour that has provoked me to address the painful reality of unanswered prayer. Why doesn't God heal her? Is the problem my unbelief? Is it a matter of spiritual warfare? Is it simply the Fall? Why doesn't Jesus do what He did 2,000 years ago? Is it His will for Samie to suffer? Why would He want such a thing? I wouldn't wish seizures on my worst enemy. It's not as though another assault on my wife's body is going to further world peace or even deepen our faith in a way that the previous 10 seizures did not." This is the honesty and humour that is demonstrated throughout the book, but it isn't just a personal memoir, Pete has a background in theology that adds great weight to the book which is cleverly crafted from start to finish around the events of Maundy Thursday to Easter Sunday with a great message of hope and faith despite the pain.


5 out of 5 stars Invitation to Engage   July 30, 2007
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

There's no way I can be objective about Pete Greig's writing as its impact on me over the last three years has been massive and at the heart of a whole resurgence of energy for God and the kingdom coming that is marking my life and relationships just now. But I'll try ...

God on Mute is the best grapple with the agonising question of un-answered prayer that I know. It is for real. Primarily because it springs out of Pete and Samie's story of what is so very demanding in their lives. But also for the way it connects with the experience of Jesus: facing his fear in Gethsemane; utterly alone on the cross; dead silent in the tomb; speaking into his friends' deepest fears on the day of Resurrection. I have wept with this book. And I know I will return to it for its specific teaching which is well organised and accessible, not only for individual readers but as a resource for group study and reflection.

The overall impact for me is a challenge about being more bold, specific and persistent in intercession; I realise that the main reason I don't know the real agony of un-answered prayer is that so much of my praying has been so open-ended that it would be hard to determine what was answer and what was lack-of-answer. Through Pete's writing God is inviting me to a much deeper engagement than that.



5 out of 5 stars Laughter is the best medicine   June 23, 2007
 14 out of 14 found this review helpful

I love Pete's outlook on life and faith and as he's an absolutely fantastic writer to boot I'd have probably read whatever he published even if it was called 'Lard On Toast'. But the fact that he's writing about prayer - specifically unanswered prayer - makes me even more hungry to hear what he's got to say. I've heard Pete speak on a few occasions about the process of coming to terms with his wife Samie's brain tumour and his honesty has always been incredibly moving and motivating. That his home life was imploding just as he was being thrust forward as the figurehead of a rampant global prayer movement (24-7 prayer) seems an irony too cruel to bear. So having said all this you might find it a bit strange that I've chosen the following portion to quote, but here goes:
"Outwardly I tried to give an impression of stoic endurance, and there were times when I felt very calm. But I was also scared that Samie might die if I didn't pray enough, or if I didn't have enough faith, or if I didn't fast enough, or if I didn't bind some disembodied principality, or if I didn't repent of some root sin, or if I didn't strap her body on a stretcher bound for Lourdes, or if I didn't agree with Benny Hinn."
When I read those lines, which come after a whole chapter fraught with heart-break, I laughed like I'd not laughed in a long time. It was like a release valve letting out the pressure of my own doubts and fears, which a book like this inevitably leaches to the surface. Here's my point, and the thing above all else that I want to applaud Pete for, laughter is a spiritual gift. To be able to write a book touching on some of the most emotional and sensitive issues people will ever face, and to do so with a gracious, contagious smile is about as close to Jesus as you can get I think.