Prayer in the New Testament


Prayer in the New Testament is presented as a positive command. The People of God are challenged to include Christian prayer in their everyday life, even in the busy struggles of marriage as it brings people closer to God.
Jesus encouraged his disciples to pray in secret in their private rooms, using the Lord's Prayer, as a humble response to the prayer of the Pharisees, whose practices in prayer were regarded as impious by the New Testament writers.
Throughout the New Testament, prayer is shown to be God's appointed method by which we obtain what He has to bestow. Jesus healed through prayer and expected his followers to do so also.
Prayer, according to the Book of Acts, can be seen at the first moments of the church. The apostles regarded prayer as the most important part of their life. As such, the apostles frequently incorporated verses from Psalms into their writings. for example is borrowed from and other psalms.
Thus, due to this emphasis on prayer in the early church, lengthy passages of the New Testament are prayers or canticles, such as the Prayer for forgiveness, the Lord's Prayer, the Magnificat, the Benedictus, Jesus' prayer to the one true God, Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Believers' Prayer, may this cup be taken from me, Pray that you will not fall into temptation, Saint Stephen's Prayer, Simon Magus' Prayer, pray that we may be delivered from wicked and evil men, Maranatha.

Types of prayer as categorized by Gilbert W. Stafford

According to Gilbert W. Stafford in Theology for Disciples, there are eight different types of prayer in the New Testament: