Designed to be read in 15-20 minutes a day, this beautifully produced 31-day liturgy will give focus and purpose to your daily quiet time while teaching you historical prayers, creeds, and catechisms that point you to Christ. A 31-Day Devotional in a Liturgical Style, Featuring Daily Scripture Readings, Historical Prayers,...
Designed to be read in 15-20 minutes a day, this beautifully produced 31-day liturgy will give focus and purpose to your daily quiet time while teaching you historical prayers, creeds, and catechisms that point you to Christ.
A 31-Day Devotional in a Liturgical Style, Featuring Daily Scripture Readings, Historical Prayers, Catechisms, and Creeds
Every Christian knows the importance of a daily quiet time with the Lord. But anyone who's been a believer long enough has likely experienced seasons that feel more mundane or routine, leading to aimlessly skimming a couple of Bible verses or praying the same prayer over and over.
In *Be Thou My Vision*, Jonathan Gibson has created a 31-day liturgical guide designed to provide structure to the daily worship of individuals and families. Each daily reading includes a call to worship, adoration, confession, assurance, creed and catechism, the *Gloria Patri*, a prayer of illumination, Bible reading, intercessory prayer, and the Lord's Prayer. Designed to be read in 15-20 minutes a day, this beautifully produced liturgy will give readers focus and purpose to their daily quiet time while teaching them historical prayers, creeds, and catechisms that point them to Christ.
"In *Be Thou My Vision*, Jonny connects us to the Reformation’s historic forms of prayer and confession, catechesis, and the lectio continua reading of Scripture. It’s a feast, and while providing only thirty-one days of different prayers, I believe the book can be profitably used all year, and year after year. Get it and use it!” – Tim Keller, Founding Pastor, Redeemer Presbyterian Church, New York City
“Jonny has gifted us with a project not only of theological and historical retrieval but also, more deeply, retrieval of our own hearts, often wayward and wandering, distracted and distressed. This simple but rich liturgy takes our hearts and leads them back to the Lord with pastoral care and theological integrity. A deeply edifying and useful guide.” – Dane C. Ortlund, Senior Pastor, Naperville Presbyterian Church; author, *Gentle and Lowly* and *Deeper*
Designed to be read in 15-20 minutes a day, this beautifully produced 31-day liturgy will give focus and purpose to your daily quiet time while teaching you historical prayers, creeds, and catechisms that point you to Christ. A 31-Day Devotional in a Liturgical Style, Featuring Daily Scripture Readings, Historical Prayers,...
Designed to be read in 15-20 minutes a day, this beautifully produced 31-day liturgy will give focus and purpose to your daily quiet time while teaching you historical prayers, creeds, and catechisms that point you to Christ.
A 31-Day Devotional in a Liturgical Style, Featuring Daily Scripture Readings, Historical Prayers, Catechisms, and Creeds
Every Christian knows the importance of a daily quiet time with the Lord. But anyone who's been a believer long enough has likely experienced seasons that feel more mundane or routine, leading to aimlessly skimming a couple of Bible verses or praying the same prayer over and over.
In *Be Thou My Vision*, Jonathan Gibson has created a 31-day liturgical guide designed to provide structure to the daily worship of individuals and families. Each daily reading includes a call to worship, adoration, confession, assurance, creed and catechism, the *Gloria Patri*, a prayer of illumination, Bible reading, intercessory prayer, and the Lord's Prayer. Designed to be read in 15-20 minutes a day, this beautifully produced liturgy will give readers focus and purpose to their daily quiet time while teaching them historical prayers, creeds, and catechisms that point them to Christ.
"In *Be Thou My Vision*, Jonny connects us to the Reformation’s historic forms of prayer and confession, catechesis, and the lectio continua reading of Scripture. It’s a feast, and while providing only thirty-one days of different prayers, I believe the book can be profitably used all year, and year after year. Get it and use it!” – Tim Keller, Founding Pastor, Redeemer Presbyterian Church, New York City
“Jonny has gifted us with a project not only of theological and historical retrieval but also, more deeply, retrieval of our own hearts, often wayward and wandering, distracted and distressed. This simple but rich liturgy takes our hearts and leads them back to the Lord with pastoral care and theological integrity. A deeply edifying and useful guide.” – Dane C. Ortlund, Senior Pastor, Naperville Presbyterian Church; author, *Gentle and Lowly* and *Deeper*
Be Thou My Vision: A Liturgy For Daily Worship$44.99
Unashamedly taking the lead from the Book of Common Prayer, Gibson helpfully reminds us of the theology of humanity meeting with God: it starts with His Word, humanity responds in repentance, we meet with God's gracious forgiveness in Christ, and we proceed on that basis of God's leadership in the Word-based Lordship of Christ to His glory, and our blessing. So good to also be blessed by the prayers lifted from various historic prayer books, and considered Christian thinkers and disciples through the ages. As well, the combination of different creeds, and the Catechism(s) contained in the Appendix make this a stimulating and rich resource for deepening a guided time with the Lord each day. Can't recommend it more highly.
A
Anonymous
I do not recommend this product
Rated 2 out of 5 stars
3 years ago
Daily Liturgy in Anglican Style
The book reminds me of The Book of Common Prayer used by the Anglicans in there daily devotions. This in Part 1 introduces and develops a rationale for a daily liturgical worship. Part 2 gives a whole months worth of daily liturgies beginning with a """"call to worship"""", scripture readings, praise, prayers and reciting of confessions ending with the Lord's Prayer. Finally the book ends with 5 Appendixes. Personally I feel this book was designed as a way of introducing people to a structured way of doing personal or family worship. It personally did not resonate with me nor would I use such a rigid structured daily devotional. It might appeal to some but in which case I would rather recommend The Book of Common Prayer.