A Nashville
woman has come up with an iPhone app for the prayerfully challenged,
Nashville’s City Paper reported last
week.
Laura Landress’s Prayermaker is available at the Apple store – somehow appropriate to us Luddites, as it was a apple, you’ll recall, that led to our common downfall.
Laura Landress’s Prayermaker is available at the Apple store – somehow appropriate to us Luddites, as it was a apple, you’ll recall, that led to our common downfall.
Prayermaker
enables users of different faiths (so far, Catholic, Hindu, Jewish, New
Thought, and Protestant) to create personalized prayers to offer up to their
deity of choice.
“It fills a
need to help people find the words to pray when they need those words,”
Landress said in a brief Q-and-A with the paper. “The idea came from a desire
to help people have a prayer life that is easier to have on a regular basis.”
If this is as eloquent as she gets, let’s pray that she’s not the one writing
the prayers.
If we’d come
up with the idea, here’s the interview we’d conduct with ourselves.
Why would anyone buy your Prayer Home
Companion? Isn’t the idea of prayer is that it’s supposed to be heartfelt?
Why does
anyone buy a greeting card? They’ve got a feeling in their heart, but they may
have a problem putting it into words.
So you’ve got a prayer for every
occasion?
We’ve got
all the major ones covered. Prayers for success, prayers for health and well
being, prayers for world peace or an end to poverty…
Then where does the personal part
come in?
Well, within
our framework of main categories, users can choose from hundreds of
subcategories to custom design a prayer for their specific needs.
It sounds like a cookie-cutter
approach to prayer.
Not at all.
We provide our users with a whole multitude of ways to express their
individuality.
Give us an example.
How about I
show you one? Here’s our Home screen. Let’s create a prayer for our Uncle Joe,
who’s got cancer. We touch the “Sickness” button here, then, from the pull-down
menu we choose “Diseases,” then either “Fatal Diseases” or “Possibly Fatal
Diseases,” then “Cancer.” If we wanted to specify the type of cancer, that’s an
option.
Now we’re
prompted to choose the prayee: “Self,” or “Other.” We select “Other,” and now
we see our choices are “Relative,” “Friend,” or “Other.”
Can we look at the “Other” menu?
Ok. We’ll
touch “Other,” and we see a long list of choices, like “Celebrities,” “Complete
Strangers I Read About and Was Moved By,” and “General.”
“General?”
That’s where
we would go to request a cure for cancer.
I see. Back to Uncle Joe.
All right.
We’ll back out of this screen and choose “Relative.” Now we select “Uncle,” and
it brings up a series of questions designed to create a profile of our Uncle
Joe. Here’s where we encourage users to get creative. After they’ve filled in
the basic info on Uncle Joe, they’ll see prompts like “Choose three of the
following adjectives to describe your uncle,” and a long list of adjectives, plus
the option to provide their own.
They can
either answer these prompts or elect to skip them. So their prayer can be as
simple or elaborate as they want to make it. In any event, with so many choices
available, every prayer will be unique. The idea being to make sure that your
prayer makes it through to God.
Makes it through?
Just think
of how many prayers your God – whoever He might be – has to listen to every
day. The more professionally crafted the prayer, the more likely it is to catch
His ear, wouldn’t you say?
Maybe so. We’re done now?
Just about.
We touch “Create Prayer,” and wait a few seconds…and our custom-made prayer
pops up for our review. Now we can Edit, Send, Save, or Cancel the prayer. If
we select Send, the prayer is sent and we’re offered the option of sending this
prayer again or another one at a specified date and time, of which our phone
will remind us.
Where does the prayer get sent?
Facebook.
Facebook?
Where else? Everybody’s on Facebook.
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