PRYR
July 18, 2026

The Old Words Are Not Tame

By Tyler Draper
A public-domain paper on prayer from E. M. Bounds, presented for focused reading and spiritual formation.

Prayer is not an escape hatch from the world. In the older Christian writers, it is usually the opposite: a way of standing still long enough for God to tell the truth about the world and about us.

The source text, drawn from E. M. Bounds, turns on a simple pressure: the soul cannot heal itself by becoming more articulate. It must be addressed, searched, forgiven, and led.

The author is not trying to be novel. That is precisely the relief. The prayer belongs to a Church old enough to have buried many fashions.

That is why these older pages matter for PRYR. They are not content decorations around a product. They are witnesses. They remind us that prayer is not a wellness habit with stained glass on it; it is the creature speaking back to the Creator, and learning, slowly, to mean what it says.

The modern instinct is to curate the self. The Christian instinct is harsher and better: confess the self, receive mercy, and be remade into love. Every durable prayer eventually presses there.

If the line feels severe, stay with it. Severity in the saints is often just mercy without cosmetics.

Source boundary: this post reflects on Our Lord’S Sacerdotal Prayer, attributed in the corpus to E. M. Bounds. No outside sources used.