If you’ve never kept a prayer journal, you’re missing one of the most underrated spiritual practices available to you. And if you’ve tried and abandoned it, this might be the article that helps you start again — differently. A prayer journal isn’t a diary of your feelings. It’s a record of your conversations with God. And looking back at it is one of the most faith-building things you can do. — Why Keep a Prayer Journal? It externalizes your prayers When prayers exist only in your head, they drift. Writing forces you to be specific: specific about what you’re asking for, specific about what’s weighing on you, specific about what you’re grateful for. Specificity makes prayer more honest and more powerful. It creates an evidence trail This is the big one. When you write down your prayers and the dates, you can look back and see what God did. The thing you were terrified of a year ago that resolved. The person you prayed for who came back. The door you were desperate for that closed — and the better door that opened instead. Over time, a prayer journal becomes the most convincing argument for faith you’ll ever encounter. It quiets the mind Writing slows you down. In a world of rapid-fire stimulation, the physical act of putting pen to paper (or even typing slowly) creates a space to actually think and feel — not just react. — 7 Prayer Journal Ideas to Get You Started 1. The Gratitude + Request Format Split each entry into two sections: Grateful for: three specific things from the last 24-48 hoursAsking for: what you’re bringing to God today Simple. Consistent. Powerful over time. — 2. Scripture-Prompted Prayer Start by reading a psalm or a short passage. Then write a prayer responding to what you read. Let the text do the work of structuring your thoughts. Good starting psalms: 23, 34, 46, 62, 103, 121. — 3. The ACTS Method (Written) Adapt the ACTS prayer structure to journaling: A — Adoration: write a few sentences about who God isC — Confession: be honest about where you’ve fallen shortT — Thanksgiving: list specific things you’re grateful forS — Supplication: write out your requests — 4. Prayer for One Person per Day Each day, write a focused prayer for a specific person. Rotate through: spouse, children, friends, colleagues, people who have hurt you, people you’re worried about. Over a week, you’ll have prayed specifically for 7 people in your life. — 5. The “Dear God” Letter Write your prayer as a letter. Start with “Dear God,” and just write. This format is surprisingly effective for people who freeze up with formal prayer language — it feels more natural. — 6. Answered Prayer Log Keep a running list at the back of your journal specifically for answered prayers. Date when you prayed. Date when you saw an answer. Over time, this list becomes extraordinary. — 7.
Need more guidance?
Need a personalised prayer for journal ideas?
Say a Little Prayer generates personalised prayers instantly — describe what is on your heart and get prayers tailored to your situation. Get AI guidance and even live video chat when you need to talk.