Ken Hemphill
Author of The Prayer of Jesus : The Promise and Power of Living in the Lord's Prayer
About the Author
Ken Hemphill has pastured churches throughout the Southeast and has served as a denominational leader within the Southern Baptist Convention for twenty years as president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and National Strategist for Empowering Kingdom Growth. He is presently the special show more assistant to the president for denominational relations at North Greenville University. show less
Image credit: via Amazon.com
Works by Ken Hemphill
The Prayer of Jesus : The Promise and Power of Living in the Lord's Prayer (2001) 204 copies, 1 review
Revitalizing the Sunday Morning Dinosaur: A Sunday School Growth Strategy for the 21st Century (1996) 196 copies
Connected Community: Becoming a Family Through Church (Nondisposable Curriculum) (Volume 2) (2011) 22 copies
Southwestern Journal of Theology - Selected Papers - Summer 2002 - Volume 44 - Number 3 (2002) 3 copies
Change Your Church or Die 2 copies
Southwestern Journal of Theology, Spring 1999, Critical Questions in Baptist Heritage (1999) 2 copies
Serving God: Discovering and Using Your Spiritual Gifts - Complete Program (2 VHS Tapes, 1 53-Page Workbook, 1 39-Page… (1995) 1 copy
Southwestern Journal of Theology, Summer 2000, Proclamation and Worship in the 21st Century (2000) 1 copy
Gifted to Serve Kit 1 copy
God Is...The Names of God 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Hemphill, Kenneth S.
- Birthdate
- 1948-04-17
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Morganton, North Carolina, USA
- Places of residence
- Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA
- Education
- Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (MDiv|1972, DMin|1973)
Cambridge University (PhD|1977)
Members
Reviews
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Statistics
- Works
- 97
- Members
- 2,259
- Popularity
- #11,354
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 87
- Languages
- 1
- Favorited
- 1
Excellent and pragmatic commentary on the Lord's Prayer. Here are a few takeaways:
One of the main problems with our prayer is we don’t pray.
… my job in prayer is not to inform God; it is to enjoy God.
When I wake up in the morning, I consider that whatever I will do for the kingdom is the most important business in front of me today.
… I know that the details of my situation haven’t startled Him.