I started The Circle Maker: Praying Circles Around Your Biggest Dreams & Greatest Fears by Mark Batterson the other night and have not been able to put it down.I told Katie this morning that she needs to stop reading whatever she's reading and read this book. It was that good and challenging. There were a few things that jumped out to me from the book.The first was the idea of drawing circles around prayer. Praying specific prayers. I've preached before on this idea and find that praying specific prayers stretches my faith and I see God move in powerful ways because of it. But I like the idea of circling something. For me, I've begun circling places I believe God wants us to plant Revolution Churches in Tucson. So this was a great reminder.Another point was having a vision beyond your resources. I've already blogged on this idea, so I won't belabor it, but suffice to say, if you can afford or pull off your prayers or dreams, they are too small. Another was the question Mark asked, "Is there a limit to God's power?" All Christians would say no, yet we pray as if there is. We pray small prayers, believe possible things. This is the foundational question of prayer. Is there a limit to what God can do.By far, the most life changing idea from this book was when he said, "Stop praying for something and start praying/praising through something." God has already given us the promise of answered prayers and power in Scripture. Start praising God for what he will do. For me, I started to think about our adoptions and that God has already chosen children for our family, so instead of asking him to complete the adoption, I've begun thanking him for these children and praising through it. I believe God has put on my heart the prayer of planting a movement of churches around Tucson so that everyone is within a 10 mile drive of a Revolution Church and that 1 million people will enter the kingdom through Revolution (in my lifetime or beyond), so I'm beginning to pray as if that promise has already happened and giving God the glory for it.While all of this is good, it is easy for this idea and the way Mark communicates it for someone to walk away and think of God as a vending machine. Pray this and you'll get more than what you prayed for. Give this and God will give you 10 times what you gave. This is a tough line to walk when it comes to faith. Mark handles it well by bringing us back to the glory of God and how that needs to be the heart of our prayers and asking. He handled this well by comparing it to John the Baptist. One of Jesus' closest friends, John is beheaded, while others are being healed, raised from the dead, walking after years of being lame and John does not get rescued. It's a tough place to be, it is a dark place to be, but it is also a place that pushes our faith and asks if we truly believe in God and his sovereignty and his plan. The other reality is that sometimes God tells us no and doesn't answer our prayers the way we want them. Sometimes he doesn't bring healing like we hoped.Here are a few other things that jumped out to me:-Bold prayers honor God, and God honors bold prayers. God isn't offended by your biggest dreams or boldest prayers. He is offended by anything less. If your prayers aren't impossible to you, they are insulting to God. Why? Because they don't require divine intervention.-Prayers are prophecies. They are the best predictors of your spiritual future. Who you become is determined by how you pray. Ultimately, the transcript of your prayers becomes the script of your life.-The greatest tragedy in life is the prayers that go unanswered because they go unasked.-"God does not answer vague prayers."-We usually focus on what we're doing or where we're going, but God's primary concern is who we're becoming in the process. We talk about "doing" the will of God, but the will of God has much more to do with "being" than "doing."-Faith is the willingness to look foolish.-If you aren't willing to be perplexed, you'll never be amazed.-Many of us pray as if our problems are bigger than God. Our biggest problem is our small view of God.-God is great not just because nothing is too big for Him; God is great because nothing is too small for Him.-All of us love miracles. We just don't like being in a situation that necessitates one.-Show me your vision, and I'll show you your future.-The degree of satisfaction is directly proportional to the degree of difficulty.If you are looking for a book that will stretch your faith and prayer life, this is a great book to start with.[...]