About the Book
"Whence Came a Prince" follows the journey of a young prince, Harry, as he navigates the challenges of ruling his kingdom. Through betrayal, intrigue, and forbidden love, Harry must learn to trust his own instincts and find his true destiny as he fights to protect his people and reclaim his rightful place as ruler.
Steven Curtis Chapman
Steven Curtis Chapman is an American Christian musician, singer, song writer, record producer, actor, author and social activist. He is the only artist in the history of music to have won 56 Gospel Music Association Dove Awards and is also a proud receiver of 5 Grammy Awards. His music is known for being a unique cross between country music, soft rock and orchestrated pop, which made him a prominent artist in the contemporary Christian music circuit of the 1980s. Chapman grew up in a humble environment where he found his calling for music, owing to his fatherâs inclination towards country music. He learnt to play instruments like guitar and piano just by hanging around in his fatherâs music store, listening to him play along with his friends. He took up music seriously when he moved to Nashville and got recognized by Sparrow Records, a company he stayed with for a long period in his career. He has released 19 studio albums and has sold over 10 million albums until now. Chapman is a family oriented person just like his father and has a big family comprising of his wife Mary Beth and 3 biological and 2 adopted children. He is a vocal advocate for adoption and has worked socially to eradicate the problem of youth violence.
Childhood & Early Life
Steven Curtis Chapman was born on November 21, 1962 in Paducah, Kentucky, to Herb and Judy Chapman. His father was a country singer and songwriter, who turned down opportunities to become a successful singer to concentrate on his family. His mother was a stay-at-home mom.
His father owned a music store, a business he managed from his basement and used to play music with his friends. Such creative environment at home influenced Chapmanâs life from very early on and he bought his first guitar at 6.
Chapman joined as a pre-med student at Georgetown College in Kentucky but after few semesters he moved to Anderson College, Indiana. But he ultimately dropped the idea of studying and went to Nashville to pursue his first love, music.
During 1980s, he wrote a song âBuilt to Lastâ, which gained huge popularity after getting recorded by a gospel group âThe Imperialsâ. The success of the song fetched Chapman a songwriting deal with Sparrow Records.
Career
Chapmanâs first official album âFirst Handâ was released in 1987. The album was an instant hit with singles like âWeak Daysâ and topped at number 2 on the Contemporary Christian Music chart. The album had a mix of country music with soft rock and pop.
In 1988, following the success of his first album, Chapman released âReal Life Conversationsâ. Its hit single âHis Eyesâ received the âContemporary Recorded Song of the Yearâ award from the âGospel Music Associationâ. He co-wrote it with James Isaac Elliot.
After a few years, he made a swift turn to mainstream music with his album âThe Great Adventureâ in 1992. It earned him two Grammy awards for the album and for the title song of the album.
After gaining consistent success with albums like âHeaven in the Real World (1994), âSigns of Life (1996) and âSpeechless (1999), Chapmanâs next great album âDeclarationâ came out in 2001, for which he toured 70 cities.
In 2003, âAll About Loveâ was released and it ranked at Top 15 on the Christian Music charts. It was released under Sparrow Records and Chapman very humbly credited his wife Mary Beth for being the inspiration for his album.
âAll Things Newâ was released in 2004 and the album added another Grammy to Chapmanâs proud award collection. This time he received it in the category of Best Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album. It was also nominated for the Dove Award.
In 2005, âAll I Really Want for Christmasâ was released, which was Chapmanâs another successful Christmas album after âThe Music of Christmasâ. It had traditional holiday tunes and favorites like âGo Tell It on the Mountainâ and Silver Bellsâ.
Chapman took his music to greater levels by taking his concert to South Korea for the U.S. troops who were serving there in 2006. It was the first Christian concert that ever performed for the American army in that country.
In 2007, he released âThis Momentâ which included hit singles like âCinderellaâ, for which he was chosen for WOW Hits 2009. He also went on his âWinter Jamâ tour and took his sonsâ, Caleb and Willâs band along.
âBeauty Will Riseâ, Chapmanâs seventeenth album, was released in 2009. It is said that he wrote the songs of the album after getting inspired by his daughter Maria Sueâs sad and untimely demise. It included songs like âMeant to Beâ and âRe:creationâ.
In 2012, Chapman finally parted ways with Sparrow Records, the record company that he remained loyal to for so many years. He was signed on by Sonyâs Provident Label Group and came out with a Christmas album called âJOYâ.
âThe Glorious Unfoldingâ was released in 2013 under Reunion Records and it peaked on number 27 on the Billboard 200 and was number 1 Top Christian Album. The album was produced by Chapman himself and Brent Milligan.
Major Works
Chapmanâs âThe Great Adventureâ in 1992 was a turning point in his musical career because until now he was making soft and contemporary country music but with âThe Great Adventureâ he targeted the mainstream audience and tasted huge commercial success for the first time.
Awards & Achievements
Chapman is the winner of five Grammy awards for albums like âFor the Sake of the Callâ âThe Great Adventureâ âThe Live Adventureâ, âSpeechlessâ and âAll Things Newâ. He has also received 56 Gospel Music Association Dove Awards, more than any other artist.
Personal Life & Legacy
Chapman got married to Mary Beth in 1984 after they first met at Anderson University in Indiana. They have three biological children: Emily, Caleb and Will and three adopted children: Shaohannah, Stevey and Maria, together.
In 2008, Chapmanâs youngest son Will ran over his car by accident on his adopted daughter Maria Sue Chunxi Chapman. She was running towards him to meet him but he did not see her and she was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital.
Trivia
Chapmanâs wife Mary Beth Chapman has written and released a book about losing her youngest daughter called âChoosing to SEE: A Journey of Struggle and Hopeâ.
Chapman and his wife have written three children's books with adoption themes: âShaoey And Dot: Bug Meets Bundleâ (2004), âShaoey and Dot: The Christmas Miracleâ (2005), and âShaoey and Dot: A Thunder and Lightning Bug Storyâ (2006).
He has received an Honorary Doctorate of Music from Anderson University.
How to Pray Like Jabez
Jabez was more honorable than his brothers; and his mother called his name Jabez, saying, âBecause I bore him in pain.â Jabez called upon the God of Israel, saying, âOh that you would bless me and enlarge my border, and that your hand might be with me, and that you would keep me from harm so that it might not bring me pain!â And God granted what he asked. (1 Chronicles 4:9â10) Perhaps youâve heard of Jabez. If not, maybe itâs time for his story. Just over twenty years ago, few other than careful readers of Old Testament genealogies would have known his name. Then that changed almost overnight. Still today, the mere mention of Jabez among older Christians may elicit quite a range of responses. The full story is longer than I know well or wish to tell, but author Bruce Wilkinson â who cofounded, with his mentor Howard Hendricks, the ministry Walk Thru the Bible in 1976 â published the 90-page The Prayer of Jabez in 2000. In it, he tells of hearing a moving message in the early 1970s, while a seminary student, from pastor Richard Seume (1915â1986). (Interestingly enough, John Piper sat under Seumeâs preaching at Wheaton Bible Church in the late 1960s when Piper was a college student. He says, âI recall how Pastor Seume would take the most obscure texts and find in them diamonds to preach on.â) That one sermon on Jabez, from 1 Chronicles 4:9â10 â the only two verses in the Bible that mention Jabez â left such an impression on Wilkinson that he began to pray Jabezâs own words for himself on a daily basis. When he published the book in 2000, he had been doing so every day for thirty years. Rehearsing the Jabez prayer daily seemed to Wilkinson to release (a word repeated in the book) the floodgates of Godâs blessings on his life and ministry. The book quickly became a runaway bestseller, and is one of only a few Christian books of all time to have sold more than ten million copies. I read Wilkinsonâs short book as a college student when it came out in 2000 (about the same time I was first exposed to Piper and Desiring God). I donât remember in detail how reading Jabez landed on me then. I do recall some enthusiasm, and remember echoing the prayer at times as my own. For whatever reasons, though, I didnât form the habit of praying it daily. The flash soon faded. So, I have not prayed Jabezâs prayer every day for the last twenty years, though I expect the book (and that brief season) did have some lasting positive impact. Gospel of Jabez? Looking back now (and admitting that hindsight is far clearer), I would summarize the Jabez phenomenon like this: imbalances in the book led to greater imbalances in many readers, especially those less anchored in Scripture. Many readers assumed they had found some long-overlooked prayer to unlock Godâs blessings. As I reread the book recently, I found that the book did leave this door open, and even subtly tipped in this direction, at times. (As an editor myself, I wonder what role the coauthor played in making Wilkinsonâs message punchy, jettisoning nuance, and stretching it for a broad-as-possible audience. The coauthorâs name did not appear on the original cover, or in the book at all, but now appears in tiny letters on the new cover.) From the first lines of the preface, seeds are sown with words like âalwaysâ and âthe keyâ â words we would be wise to use sparingly in a generation of language inflation like ours: I want to teach you how to pray a daring prayer that God always answers. It is brief â only one sentence with four parts â and tucked away in the Bible, but I believe it contains the key to a life of extraordinary favor with God. This petition has radically changed what I expect from God and what I experience every day by His power. (7, emphases added) I could pick at similar overstatements and imbalances throughout the short book. I also could point to some gold (which would have been easier to celebrate in 2000 before seeing the widespread effects on readers). For one, Wilkinson qualifies the word bless as âgoodness that only God has the power to know about or give usâ (23). In Wilkinsonâs own words, he is not teaching name-it-and-claim-it theology, and he clearly disclaims what we now call âthe prosperity gospelâ (24). He also admirably mentions living by Godâs will and for Godâs glory (32, 48, 57) and raises this question about âthe American Dreamâ: Do we really understand how far the American Dream is from Godâs dream for us? Weâre steeped in a culture that worships freedom, independence, personal rights, and the pursuit of pleasure. (70) Such a challenge emerges on occasion, yet itâs clearly not the emphasis. And many readers seemed to capture the drift and skip the disclaimers. They followed the âalwaysâ and âthe keyâ and the many examples of temporal blessings, and did not find in Jabez a call to new desires, a new heart, and new birth â to become a new person and so offer new prayers in new ways that turn many natural expectations upside down. Pray on Repeat? While I could say more about both the good and the bad, let me boil it down to what may have been the chief imbalance in the book: the final chapter and charge. Perhaps the biggest problem practically is taking a potentially good sermon on Jabez that might otherwise inform a dynamic, authentic, engaging life of prayer and ending with the charge âto make the Jabez prayer for blessing part of the daily fabric of your lifeâ (87). This may be all too predictable in the genre of self-help, but itâs hard not to see an obvious imbalance when it comes to Scripture. Should we raise any passage to the level of âpray this daily,â not to mention two verses âtucked awayâ in a genealogy? Wilkinson continues, âI encourage you to follow unwaveringly the plan outlined here for the next thirty days. By the end of that time, youâll be noticing significant changes in your life, and the prayer will be on its way to becoming a treasured, lifelong habitâ (87). Here, at least, is a serious problem of proportion â first to this prayer (and what of Scriptureâs far more prominent prayers?) and then to doing so daily, and then following this plan unwaveringly. And with it, the promise that âyouâll be noticing significant changes in your lifeâ in just thirty days. In the end, we might say a serious flaw in this Christian book is how easily it accommodates unregenerate palates, appealing to mainly natural desires, even among the born again. Also sorely and startingly lacking is a scriptural vision of lifeâs pains and suffering in this age. (For those interested, Tim Challies tells the story of Wilkinsonâs Jabez-fueled âDream for Africaâ and its âabject failureâ a few years after the bookâs âsuccess.â) Can We Pray with Jabez? What are we to do today, some twenty years later? The antidote to vain repetition of Scripture would not be to throw out Scripture! Rather, we want to have all the Bible, and all its prayers â not just one or two â inform and shape our lives of prayer for a lifetime. With regards to Jabezâs prayer, we might ask what we, as Christians, indeed can glean from an inspired genealogy not by way of a mantra to repeat but through timeless principles to guide and energize a dynamic life of prayer. Jabezâs story does jump out at us from its surroundings. Itâs easy for me to imagine taking these two verses as a sermon text, as Seume did, to celebrate biblical principles found here and elsewhere in Scripture and seek to inform the whole of a Christianâs prayer life. One important reality that Wilkinson does not draw attention to â but makes Jabezâs story, and his prayer, perhaps even more inspiring â is its context in Judahâs line. This is the line of the kings. Jabez is surrounded by regal ancestry and contemporaries, and yet he was born in pain, as the name Jabez (similar to the Hebrew for pain) commemorates. Noting this context might go a long way in helping us see the effect on the original readers; read the story in light of redemptive history, culminating in the Lion of Judah; and receive today and learn from the prayer in balance. Consider, then, what lessons we might take from Jabez, alongside the full testimony of Scripture, for our own prayer lives. 1. God Rescues from Pain (in His Timing) His mother called his name Jabez, saying, âBecause I bore him in pain.â We are not told what the particular pain was. Thereâs beauty in that. Such unspecified pain invites us to identify with Jabez, and imitate him, whatever our pain might be. We all, after all, are born in pain (Genesis 3:16), born into a sin-sick, pain-wracked world, being sinners ourselves and âby nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankindâ (Ephesians 2:3). Whatever the source, Jabezâs life started hard. But apparently he didnât wallow in it, or resign himself to victim status. Nor did he seek to make up for it with his own muscle and determination. Rather, he turned to God. âJabez called upon the God of Israel,â and in doing so, he directed his focus, and faith, in the right direction. âMany of the most admirable saints have endured great pains the whole of their earthly lives.â Our God is indeed a rescuer. He does not promise to keep his people pain-free, but he does delight to rescue us from pain once weâre in it. And that, importantly, not according to our timetable, but his. Some divine rescues come quickly; many do not. Many of the most admirable saints have endured great pains the whole of their earthly lives. 2. God (Often) Grows Faithful Influence Oh that you would bless me and enlarge my border . . . It is good to seek Godâs blessing, and, in particular, to do so on Godâs terms. And seeking to enlarge oneâs border, or expand space and influence, is deeply human by Godâs design from the beginning: âBe fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominionâ (Genesis 1:28). Christ himself commissioned his disciples to enlarge the borders of his kingdom, making disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19). Even one so exemplary, and humble, as the apostle Paul would testify to his holy ambition, under Christ, to enlarge the borders of his influence, going through Rome to Spain (Romans 15:23â24). Paul also writes candidly to the Corinthians about his teamâs âarea of influence among youâ being âgreatly enlarged, so that we may preach the gospel in lands beyond youâ (2 Corinthians 10:15â16). God does mean for his people to pray for the enlarging of their influence, not for personal comforts, but for gospel advance, for the strengthening of churches, for the serving of Christâs great mission and purposes in the world. And these are prayers God often answers â but not always. Oh, what difference lies in such little words! And once we have prayed for the figurative enlarging of our borders, for Christâs sake, we are wise to be ready for God to do very different reckoning and measuring than we might expect. 3. God (Often) Provides Strength When Asked . . . and that your hand might be with me . . . Yes and amen to asking God for his hand to be with us â his hand, meaning his power and strength and help. It is significant that Jabez didnât just want a big, upfront donation from God to then turn and cultivate in his own strength. Rather, Jabez acknowledges that his own strength will not be sufficient. He needs Godâs help every step along the way. Perhaps his humbling and painful beginnings taught him this lesson earlier in life than most. Jabez was âhonoredâ (more so than his brothers) not because of his noble birth, great wealth, and manifest ability, but because he owned his own weaknesses and limitations and asked for God to be his strength. That Jabez surpassed his brothers displays Godâs strength. Jabez pleads that Godâs hand be with him, and in doing so, Jabez admits (as every human should) that his own power and skill are not adequate. 4. God Keeps Us from (Some) Harm . . . and that you would keep me from harm so that it might not bring me pain! Finally, Jabez asked for Godâs protection. It is good to pray to our God that he keep us from harm and pain â even as we know that he at times leads us, as he did his own Son, into the wilderness, and into the valley of the shadow of death. âWho can fathom what temptations and harm countless saints have been spared because they humbly asked their Father?â Jesus too taught us to pray, âLead us not into temptationâ (Luke 11:4), and in the garden, the night before he died, he instructed his men twice, âPray that you may not enter into temptationâ (Luke 22:40, 46). God really does keep us from some temptations in response to our prayers. Prayer matters. The sovereign God chooses to rule the universe in such a way that, under his hand, some events transpire (or not) because his people prayed. Who can fathom what temptations, and what harm, countless saints have been spared because they humbly asked their Father? And our God does not promise to keep us from all harm, or from all temptations. In fact, we are promised that âthrough many tribulations we must enter the kingdom of Godâ (Acts 14:22). So, we do not presume such protection, nor is it wasted breath to ask. God Gave What He Asked That God granted what Jabez asked doesnât mean God did it in the way Jabez envisioned or in the timing Jabez hoped. So too for us. God does delight to answer the prayers of his children, but we do not presume that he does so when and how we prefer. He is âis able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or thinkâ (Ephesians 3:20). And he answers and exalts his faithful âat the proper timeâ (1 Peter 5:6) â and on his terms, not ours. When his children ask for bread or fish or an egg, our God does not give them a stone or a serpent or scorpion (Matthew 7:9â11; Luke 11:11â13). He does not give them, in the end, worse than what they asked. But better. He knows how to give good gifts to his children, and far more than we typically ask â and climactically, he gives us himself. But not on our cue. And not in response to parroting biblical words. Jabezâs prayer is no promise that God will do what we ask and when. However, 1 Chronicles 4:9â10 is a rousing call to the prayerless, and to the pained, to draw near to Judahâs greatest descendant. Our God does redeem his people. He brings joy to the bitter. He brings honor to the pained. He exalts the humble. He gives the crown of glory to the shamed. He raises his crucified Son. In Christ, God turns us and our world upside down, including our prayers. Article by David Mathis