Calling on the Name of the Lord

Mid-levelBusy pastors, General readers, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation

Evaluation

Overall Score: 8.3/10

A sturdy thematic study that equips preachers to teach prayer and faith as covenantal dependence, not religious technique.

Publication Date(s): 2016
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780830826391
Faithfulness to Scripture: 8.5/10
The book traces the theme through Scripture with respect for context. It keeps the focus on the biblical storyline rather than speculation.
Doctrinal Clarity: 8/10
The theme naturally reaches the gospel call to faith, and it supports Christ centred preaching. Some sections leave the preacher to make the final link.
Depth of Theological Insight: 8.1/10
It offers a coherent framework that strengthens biblical theological instincts. It is not exhaustive, but it is deep enough to shape teaching.
Clarity of Writing: 8.4/10
Well paced and pastor friendly, with clear chapter movement. The argument is easy to track and summarise.
Usefulness for Preaching & Teaching: 8.2/10
Helpful for preaching, discipleship, and counselling around prayer and assurance. It gives you categories that translate well into application.
Accessibility for the Intended Audience: 8.3/10
Accessible for most pastors and students, with minimal technical barrier. It works well for group reading and discussion.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
240 pages
Type
Theological
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical
Overall score
8.3 / 10

This book explores a central expression of faith, calling on the name of the Lord. It treats that phrase as more than a religious slogan. Instead, it is presented as a thread running through Scripture that reveals what true worship is, what saving faith looks like, and how the people of God live as those who depend on divine mercy. The approach is biblical theological. It aims to show the shape of the theme across the canon rather than offering a narrow study of one passage.

The writing is direct and pastor friendly. It invites the reader to see calling on the Lord as a covenantal reality, tied to promise, prayer, confession, and public allegiance. This makes it useful for preachers, because the theme naturally sits at the intersection of doctrine and devotion. It can shape sermons on prayer, assurance, mission, and the nature of the church.

Strengths

First, the theme is handled with a strong instinct for Scripture. The author shows how the phrase functions in key moments of the biblical story, not as a decorative line, but as a marker of true worship and saving dependence. That helps readers avoid sentimentalising prayer. Calling on the Lord is presented as an act of faith in a speaking God, grounded in promise and expressed in worship. For pastors, this gives a helpful way to speak about prayer as covenant communion rather than a technique for getting results.

Second, the book brings together a cluster of pastoral concerns. It connects calling on the Lord with repentance, assurance, and mission. The result is a theme that can be applied in many directions without being forced. For example, it helps clarify the difference between casual religious talk and genuine faith. It also helps a church see that to call on the Lord is to take refuge in him, which has implications for how we handle suffering, temptation, and anxiety.

Third, it strengthens preaching by offering a framework for tracing a theme with integrity. Many preachers want to preach biblical theology but fear losing the text. This volume models a way to do it, by attending to the words, their contexts, and their function in the storyline. It gives you confidence to show congregations that the Bible is not a loose anthology, but a unified witness to the Lord who saves.

Limitations

As with other thematic studies, the book must be paired with close exegesis when preparing sermons on specific passages. It will not do the line by line work for you, and it does not aim to handle every debated detail. Some readers may wish for more sustained engagement with alternative scholarly readings of key texts.

In addition, the theme can be so broad that the reader might want sharper guidance on application in particular pastoral scenarios. The author provides strong principles, but the pastor still needs to make the pastoral turn, taking those principles into the concrete situations of a congregation.

Finally, readers who are new to biblical theology may need to learn the rhythm of moving from text to theme and back again. The book is accessible, yet it still expects an attentive reader who wants to follow an argument across Scripture.

How We Would Use It

We would use this book as a sermon preparation companion when preaching texts that speak of prayer, confession, or public allegiance to the Lord. It would also serve well in training settings, especially for helping future leaders connect prayer and theology. For church wide discipleship, it could support a short course on prayer that is rooted in Scripture rather than in technique.

It is also useful for evangelism and assurance. The theme helps clarify what it means to respond to the gospel, and it offers language for inviting people to come to the Lord in faith.

Closing Recommendation

This is a clear, biblically grounded study of a theme that sits near the heart of Christian faith. It will help Bible teachers speak about prayer and faith as covenantal dependence on the saving Lord.

Where to buy
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Classification

  • Level: Mid-level
  • Best For: Busy pastors, General readers, Pastors-in-training
  • Priority: Strong recommendation

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Commentary

Puritans

Bible Atlas

Reviewed by

An Expositor

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