A quiet workbook of prompts, space to write, and prayers for personal reflection.
For Individual readers seeking guided reflection
Overview
What's Inside
A quiet, spacious workbook designed for solitary reflection — chapter-by-chapter prompts, guided prayer pages, and a lament index for readers processing grief, chronic illness, ministry burnout, or long-standing loss.
Sections
Included in this guide
Six Chapter Reflections
Guided Prayer Pages
Lament Index
Naming My Great Multitude
A Letter to Myself Next Year
Section
Six Chapter Reflections
Move through the chapters at your pace — one a week, one a month, one a season.
Chapter I — The Problem: Name the multitude. Name the Engedi. Name what has been rationed.
Chapter II — The Petition: Draft the five-movement prayer. Speak the Verse-12 sentence aloud.
Chapter III — The Proposal: Identify the Jahaziel voice in your history. Practice standing still.
Chapter IV — The Praise: Choose one posture and one sentence of praise for the outcome not yet seen.
Chapter V — The Power: Climb the watch tower. Write what you can see now that you could not see then.
Chapter VI — The Provision: Name your Valley of Berachah. Draft your fourth-day discipline.
Section
Guided Prayer Pages
A morning prayer of consecration — 'Father, I set myself . . .'
A midday prayer of confidence — 'Father, I remember Your track record . . .'
An evening prayer of admission — 'Father, we have no might, neither know we what to do . . .'
A prayer for the once-mentioned messenger — 'Father, give me ears for Jahaziel . . .'
A prayer of anticipatory praise — 'Father, I bless You before I see . . .'
A prayer at Berachah — 'Father, Jehovah-Jireh, You have provided . . .'
Section
Lament Index
Not every trouble is ready for celebration. Some seasons require unhurried lament.
Wilderness of vocation — Psalm 63, Isaiah 43, Matthew 4
Section
Naming My Great Multitude
Use this section as a private inventory. Write the names of what is arrayed against you today — one column for God-caused, one for God-permitted, one marked Occupant. Do not soften the count. Do not rush the categorization.
Section
A Letter to Myself Next Year
Date this letter twelve months from today. Write to your future self what you most need to remember from Jehoshaphat's story. Include one sentence about God's character, one about your current fear, and one act of posterity you will complete before you open the letter.