Title: | Praying in Public |
Subtitle: | A Guidebook for Prayer in Corporate Worship |
Published: | July 27, 2021 |
ISBN-10: | 1-4335-7289-3 |
ISBN-13: | 978-1-4335-7289-0 |
Category: | Church Ministry |
Retail Price: | $19.99 |
Binding: | Printed Caseside |
Trim: | 5.25 in x 8.0 in |
Page Count: | 176 |
Praying in Public: A Guidebook for Prayer in Corporate Worship
By Pat Quinn, Foreword by Kevin DeYoung
Press Materials:
Praying in Public: A Guidebook for Prayer in Corporate Worship
By Pat Quinn, Foreword by Kevin DeYoung
A Comprehensive Guide to Corporate Prayer
Leading corporate prayer is an intimidating experience. Many Christians know the experience all too well: standing before the congregation, not knowing what to say or how to say it, and fumbling through the prayer. What they need is a simple, step-by-step guide on how to pray thoughtfully and boldly in public.
Praying in Public by Pat Quinn is a comprehensive handbook designed to help Christians think about, prepare, and pray biblically rich, gospel-centered prayers as an act of corporate worship. Surveying examples of historical prayers such as the Latin Liturgy, the prayers of John Calvin, and the Westminster Directory as well as his own corporate prayers, Quinn offers 7 guiding principles for effective public prayer. Praying in Public brings clarity to congregational prayer so that praying in public will be a source of joy instead of a source of fear.
Author:
Product Details
Table of Contents
Part 1: Overview and Principles
Introduction
Chapter 1: Adoration, Confession, and Supplication
Chapter 2: Bible-Saturated Prayer
Chapter 3: Trinitarian Prayer
Chapter 4: Thoughtful and Reverent Prayer
Chapter 5: Gospel-Centered Prayer
Chapter 6: Theological Prayer
Chapter 7: Well-Prepared Prayer
Part 2: Sample Prayers
Chapter 8: Prayers of Adoration
Chapter 9: Prayers of Confession
Chapter 10: Prayers of Supplication
Chapter 11: Composite Prayers
Endorsements
“We miss so many opportunities when public prayers in our churches are ill-prepared, uninformed, scattered, unbiblical, or nonexistent. Pat Quinn has served us immensely by providing a theologically informed, pastoral, Christ-exalting, clear, and insightful book that will serve anyone who has the privilege of leading God’s people in prayer. Loaded with examples of actual prayers, Praying in Public will make your public prayers more biblical, thoughtful, and God glorifying.”
Bob Kauflin, Director, Sovereign Grace Music; author, Worship Matters and True Worshipers
“The contemporary church desperately needs to recover a vision for the reformation of the pulpit pastoral prayer. Though well-intentioned, the pastoral prayer too often descends into something that is shallow and ill-conceived and reflects the spiritual poverty of the one praying. Pat Quinn’s book is a gold mine of reflection and practical aid to improve the pastoral prayer. I am convinced that if pastors and other leaders follow the instructions given in this marvelous book, congregations are going to be immensely blessed. I believe that many Christians, especially young Christians, learn to pray following the model of the pastoral prayer they hear on Sundays. My prayer is that this book will aid in the reformation of Christ’s church.”
Derek W. H. Thomas, Senior Minister, First Presbyterian Church; Chancellor’s Professor, Reformed Theological Seminary
“Praying in Public is a unique book and a very needed book. While we have many books on private prayer, few books walk us through a practical pastoral theology of corporate prayer—praying in public. Pat Quinn not only guides us through seven biblical principles of corporate prayer, he also illustrates these beautifully for us throughout his writing.”
Bob Kellemen, Academic Dean, Dean of Students, and Professor of Biblical Counseling, Faith Bible Seminary; author, Gospel-Centered Counseling
“As the modern church seeks to reach the present generation, it needs old solutions, not new solutions. Awakening in our day will occur as the church itself is revived. And that reviving will stem from a renewed spirit of prayerfulness. Here is a book to help lead the church down this path upon its knees for its own good and for the good of the world it seeks to reach. Pat Quinn provides practical help and rich examples to ignite prayerfulness in the life of readers and their local church. I have the honor of serving alongside the author at University Reformed Church. I can testify that Pat Quinn can write so adeptly about praying in public because he is a man whose life is suffused with praying in private. He has taught me much over the years and you will find him to be an able guide as well.”
Jason Helopoulos, Senior Pastor, University Reformed Church, East Lansing, Michigan; author, Covenantal Baptism; The New Pastor’s Handbook; and The Promise
“This book delivers on its promise. Any Christian leader with the responsibility of praying in public will discover both guidance and resources in this helpful and instructive book. If you find The Valley of Vision useful in preparing for prayer in corporate worship, you’ll want this book. I know of no better volume on this important subject.”
Donald S. Whitney, Professor of Biblical Spirituality and John H. Powell Professor of Pastoral Ministry, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; author, Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life; Praying the Bible; and Family Worship
“Decades ago, when I was a youth pastor, I had the opportunity to preach at the local Christian high school’s chapel services. When the teens had all returned to their classrooms, Pat Quinn sat down with me and gently and pastorally provided me with a much-needed correction to how I approached the passage I had taught. Now I’m a middle-aged pastor, and Pat has done it again, but this time through a book. I encourage you to let this godly pastor sit you down and challenge you to humbly lead your congregation to the throne of grace in prayer.”
Noel Jesse Heikkinen, Teaching Pastor, Riverview Church; Regional Executive Director, Acts 29; author, Unchained and Wretched Saints
“While Jesus condemned those who parade their private prayer life publicly (‘to be seen by men’), he also taught his disciples how to pray rightly in public by both his example and precepts—even as they requested for him to ‘teach us to pray.’ So with Paul’s exhortation—‘I desire that in every place the men should pray, lifting holy hands’—I heartily commend this volume as a distillation of biblical insight on how to pray ‘everywhere rightly.’
Harry L. Reeder III, Senior Pastor, Briarwood Presbyterian Church