The Prayer of Jabez: Breaking Through to the Blessed Life is a book by Bruce Wilkinson published in 2000 by Multnomah Books as the first book in the "BreakThrough" book series. It is based on the Old Testament passage 1 Chronicles 4:9–10:
In the book, Wilkinson encourages Christians to invoke this prayer for themselves on a daily basis:
The book became an international bestseller, topping the New York Times bestseller list[1] and selling over nine million copies by 2002.[2]
The book has also been criticized and compared to the prosperity gospel.
Wilkinson, a pastor, had preached sermons on the topic and in 2000 asked Multnomah Books to publish his pocket-sized Prayer of Jabez prior to the National Day of Prayer. The book sold a record eight million copies in its first year of publication and was the bestselling nonfiction book of 2001.[3] It was on The New York Times Best Seller List for 94 weeks.[4] The Prayer of Jabez received the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association Gold Medallion Book of the Year award in 2001.[5]
The prayer, after being popularized by the book, "found its way into...House committee hearings on Capital Hill" by 2001. Wilkinson was invited to the National Day of Prayer by President George W. Bush the same year.
The popularity of the original book has led its publisher, Multnomah Press, to extend the line to a number of derivative works targeted at niche audiences, as well as to offer the books in audio and video formats. They also authorized a wide array of official "Prayer of Jabez" merchandise including key chains, mugs, backpacks, Christmas ornaments, scented candles, mouse pads and a framed artist's conception of Jabez himself. A line of jewelry was introduced in 2002.[6]
Jabez
Some, such as evangelical author Berit Kjos, have taken issue with the form of the prayer, citing Jesus' admonition against "vain repetitions" in .
The prayer of Jabez became very popular within sections of the fundamentalist Pentecostal Christian movement, particularly in churches associated with the New Apostolic Reformation, Kingdom Now theology, Dominion theology, Five-fold ministry thinking and other parts of the Spirit-filled Christianity movement.
The concept was critiqued by The Christian Century as "markedly individualistic and insulating". A 2001 review in The New Republic referred to the book as "in many ways, the ultimate anti-self-help book" in that it encourages readers to rely entirely on God as there is "no inner power or strength that we must struggle to tap."[10]
Several works critiquing Jabez have been released. The Mantra of Jabez : A Christian Parody by Douglas M. Jones (Canon Press,) was published in 2001. The Cult of Jabez... and the falling away of the church in America, a book alleging an un-biblical premise of Wilkinson's book, reached as high as number 77 on Amazon's top 100 books list in 2002. The Jabez you Never Knew: Hebraic Keys to Answered Prayers, by Norm Franz, was written to give a historic perspective on the account of Jabez, and to criticize the original work for its emphasis on rote prayer.[11] The recording artist Derek Webb said that his controversial song "Wedding Dress" was written after he saw Wilkinson speak about The Prayer of Jabez.[12] The Ceili Rain satirical song "Gold God" takes issue with this concept (if not the book) as well, noting the God who "expanded my territory" is "like a Visa card".[13] [14]