The book, The Valley of Vision is a collection of puritan prayers. This book was my first introduction to the writings of the puritans, and it completely blew me away! I honestly had never heard (read) anyone pray with so much devotion, so much awareness of their personal sin and the holiness of God.
I am very thankful to the puritans for writing down their prayers, without which this book would not have been possible. In my opinion, no Christian home should be without this book. The puritans were mostly known for their deep prayer life and meditation on scripture.
The prayers in this book caught my attention like no other. My prayers can be sometimes selfish and self-centered, all about me and what I want: my protection, my provision, my success, my family’s protection, etc. While there is nothing inherently wrong with asking God for those things, our personal needs can become idols when we don’t put them in their properly place. When Jesus taught his disciples to pray, He started the prayer asking for God’s name to hallowed, for His kingdom to come and for His will to be done on earth as in heaven. Jesus taught us to pray with the glory of God in mind. At the heart of the prayers of the puritans is the glory of God. This should be at the heart of our prayers as well.
I would love to share one of the prayers from “The Valley of Vision” titled “The Family”. This prayer can be found on page 208. The prayer seemed to have been written by a woman (I think). What caught my eye about this prayer is the way she dedicates her home & family to God. She prays for her domestic duties and the raising of her children to be blessed and used for the glory of God, asking in her prayers for her home to be a nursery for heaven!
Ladies, your duties as a wife and mother at home are sacred duties meant to bring glory to God. I pray this prayer will encourage you to see your duties in raising your kids and being a keeper at home as a sacred service to God.
The Family
O Sovereign Lord,
You are the Creator-Father of all men,
for you have made and support them;
You are the special Father of those who know, love, and honour you,
who find your yoke easy, and your burden light,
your work honourable,
your commandments glorious.
But how little your undeserved goodness has affected me!
How imperfectly have I improved my religious privileges!
How negligent have I been in doing good to others!
I am before you in my trespass and sins,
have mercy on me,
and my your goodness bring me to repentance.
Help me hate and forsake every false way,
to be attentive to my condition and character,
to bridle my tongue,
to keep my heart with all diligence,
to watch and pray against temptation,
to kill sin,
to be concerned for the salvation of others.
O God, I cannot endure to see the destruction of my kindred.
Let those who are united to me in tender ties
be precious in your sight and devoted to your glory.
Sanctify and prosper my domestic devotion,
instruction, discipline, example,
that my house may be a nursery for heaven,
my church the garden of the Lord,
enriched with the trees of righteousness of your planting,
for your glory;
Let not those of my family who are amiable, moral, attractive,
fall short of heaven at last;
Grant that the promising appearances of a tender conscience,
soft heart, the alarms and delights of your Word,
be not finally blotted out, but bring forth judgement to victory
in all whom I love.
Amen…. (emphasis mine)
Ladies: I would love to hear your thoughts on this prayer in the comments. Thanks.
Thank you Elizabeth for discussing that prayers should always be to the glory of God and not always about what we want/need. We pray that the alarms and delights of his word will guide us to victory at the end
Thank you for the reminder that prayer is devotion to and proper acknowledgment of who God is. Prayer should never really be about us and what we need, because God already knows all that, even before we pray. Although the Bible tells us to pray and bring our needs to God with thanksgiving, but we always understand that to mean our physical needs. I believe our need of Him and his glory should be our greatest needs when we pray.
God bless
My tendency is to think, “well, these Puritan women HAD to be more dependent upon Christ of course, because of the severely primitive times in which they lived.” But that is deception – we are called to the same dependence upon Christ as women from every time in history. Our modern life is simply one (of many) temptations lulling us into a false thought pattern that being in Christ in somehow compatible with being what the world would call an “independent woman.” Thank you for the reminder.