https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XW3U8NUclEw

What is Encouraging About This Generation of Young People?

In God's goodness to me, I had the opportunity of being a campus pastor at Jackson State for the previous nine years. Now,  I'm the senior pastor at Redeemer Church, a multi-ethnic church here in Jackson, and our congregation is a young congregation. We have a thriving young adults ministry right now that I have loved and that I enjoyed watching the Lord shape and mold that their belief in the church gathered. It is important to them when the Bible is preached, and the Gospel is preached, and Jesus is exalted, and the Gospel is applied to real issues and things that are going on in their lives. They are there. They are committed. We have a nursery problem right now because so many of our young people are here that we don't have room for their children. [epq-quote align="align-left"]They want to serve and to have relationships with people who have been walking with Jesus longer than they've been alive.[/epq-quote] What I love about this generation is that they also believe in the church scattered. They believe in their faith intersecting their work and intersecting where they live and how they live and what they get involved in outside of the walls of the local church. I'm very encouraged. I'm encouraged by their desire to be a part of something bigger than them. I'm encouraged by the sobriety in approaching the faith. I'm encouraged by the way that they want their faith to intersect their lives. They want to be discipled. They want the Titus 2 type of ministry where they want to come into a church and have community. They also want to come in the church to serve and to know and to be known and to have relationships with people who have been walking with Jesus longer than they've been alive. So, I'm encouraged as a pastor to lead this next generation of God's people.

Megan Hill has given us a primer on prayer that is both useful and eloquent. Many of us, myself included, are prone to entertain an untruth about prayer: that it should always be easy and spontaneous, free of any hint of discipline or forethought. Megan empathetically and expressively lifts our eyes toward a higher vision, grounded in the truth of Scripture, of prayer as a delightful duty to be practiced, savored, and shared.

Jen Wilkin, Director of Classes and Curriculum

Megan Hill is a wise and godly woman, a friend, and one of my favorite authors. She writes to move us to pray together in our homes, communities, and churches. She does three things in particular to help us to pray together in this book. She offers us encouragement, experience, and counsel―all richly biblical and theological. The chapter “Praying with the Church” is by itself worth the price of admission. The book is brief enough to be read in a sitting and deep enough to be savored for a semester. If you and your brothers and sisters in Christ pray together with more hope, delight, and expectancy because of reading it, I am sure that Megan will feel her aim is realized.

J. Ligon Duncan III, Chancellor, CEO, and John E. Richards Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology

When Megan Hill prays, one feels the force of an entire life spent communing with the triune God. Now, Hill provides both the theology and practical guidance to usher others into a rich life of prayer among fellow Christians and in corporate worship. This book will remind you of how good and pleasant it is when God’s people dwell―and pray―together in unity.

Katelyn Beaty, Managing Editor

Another book on prayer? Yes, and no. Yes, the focus of this book is about urgent, corporate, sustained prayer of the kind that Scripture urges and Jesus extols as necessary if we are to endure in the battle that faces the Christian church. And no, for this is not just a book about prayer. Megan Hill is an accomplished author and godly pastor’s wife and mother. What she has to say comes from a sharp and discerning mind but also from the treasury of rich pastoral experience. Could it be that this book is God’s instrument in reviving among us a healthy, vigorous, infectious prayer life―prayer partnerships―that will redirect the course of this world? I think it possible. I pray that it is.

Derek W. H. Thomas, Chancellor’s Professor of Systematic and Practical Theology

Praying Together wasn’t written as a guide to improving your prayer life, but it’s impossible to read without feeling compelled to pray more often, more sincerely, and with more people. Megan Hill’s reverence for prayer and her personal stories of devotion made me grateful for the gift of prayer and for a God who uses prayer to bring us to him and to each other. Praying Together offers vital encouragement.

Kate Shellnutt, Associate Editor

Come let us pray! A covenant child of God, who learned to pray in Word and deed, calls Christ’s church to devoted, fervent prayer. Megan has given us a standard for kingdom praying that will bring growth and grace personally and corporately. Come, fill and disciple your hearts in remembering together who God is and what he has done. Brothers and sisters, are you ready?

Jane Patete, Former Coordinator of Women’s Ministry

Reading this beautiful book on prayer is like enjoying a meal with a friend. Our hostess, Megan Hill, serves the wisdom of the Word, well-baked with centuries of godly Reformed and Puritan writers and seasoned with many personal experiences. Her reflections on prayer are gentle and practical, and by God’s grace I would expect you to be eager to take her recipe and use it often in your home and church.

Joel R. Beeke, President and Professor of Systematic Theology and Homiletics

Praying Together made me want to grab a friend and pray. Megan Hill reminds us of the privilege, duty, and delight that await us as we join one another in communion with God. Weaving together the Bible’s testimony about prayer and the blessing it has been to the church through the ages, this book will drive you to your knees in the anticipation of the great things God will do.

Melissa Kruger, Director of Women’s Content

Megan Hill helps us to see, with admirable clarity and practical insight, how the triune God invites believers to gather together in prayer―in the church, in our families, and in a host of other settings. She points us to the rich promises and the remarkable blessings attending corporate prayer in Scripture. Her examples and illustrations stir us to pray with others. Read this book and join the chorus of saints lifting their voices to heaven.

Guy Prentiss Waters, James M. Baird Jr. Professor of New Testament

Megan Hill offers a biblical foundation as well as practical instruction for joining together to pursue an ever-deeper relationship with the Father, through the work of the Son, by the power of the Spirit. We will always find reasons not to pray together. But if we hope to live as conduits of the power of God―if we hope to feed the hungry, unbind the prisoner, comfort the grieving, and shine light in the world’s dark corners―Hill encourages us to begin, together, on our knees.

Martha Manikas-Foster, Producer and Host

Megan Hill learned to pray as a small child in the company of her parents and members of her local church. Now she’s written a rich resource on corporate prayer, helpful for families, small groups, and churches. I look forward to gathering friends and reading Praying Together. Better yet, I look forward to praying with them.

Jen Pollock Michel, Author

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