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THE KNEELING CHRISTIAN
By
An Unknown Christian
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AUTHOR'S PREFACE
A traveler in China visited a heathen temple on a
great feast-day. Many were the worshippers of the hideous idol enclosed
in a sacred shrine. The visitor noticed that most of the devotees brought
with them small pieces of paper on which prayers had been written or
printed. These they would wrap up in little balls of stiff mud and fling
at the idol. He enquired the reason for this strange proceeding, and was
told that if the mud ball stuck fast to the idol, then the prayer would
assuredly be answered; but if the mud fell off, the prayer was rejected
by the god.
We may smile at this peculiar way of testing the
acceptability of a prayer. But is it not a fact that the majority of
Christian men and women who pray to a Living God know very little about
real prevailing prayer? Yet prayer is the key which unlocks the door of
God's treasure-house.
It is not too much to say that all real growth in the
spiritual life-all victory over temptation, all confidence and peace in
the presence of difficulties and dangers, all repose of spirit in times
of great disappointment or loss, all habitual communion with God-depend
upon the practice of secret prayer.
This book was written by request, and with much
hesitancy. It goes forth with much prayer. May He Who said, "Men
ought always to pray, and not to faint," "teach us to
pray."
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CHAPTER 1:
GOD'S GREAT NEED
"GOD Wondered." This is a very striking
thought! The very boldness of the idea ought surely to arrest the
attention of every earnest Christian man, woman and child. A wondering
God! Why, how staggered we might well be if we knew the cause of God's
"wonder"! Yet we find it to be, apparently, a very little
thing. But if we are willing to consider the matter carefully, we shall
discover it to be one of the greatest possible importance to every
believer on the Lord Jesus Christ. Nothing else is so momentous -- so
vital -- to our spiritual welfare.
God "wondered that there was no intercessor"
(Isaiah lix. 16) -- 'none to interpose" (R.V., margin). But this was
in the days of long ago, before the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ
"full of grace and truth" -- before the outpouring of the Holy
Spirit, full of grace and power, "helping our infirmity,"
"Himself making intercession for us" and in us (Romans viii.
26). Yes, and before the truly amazing promises of our Savior regarding
prayer; before men knew very much about prayer; in the days when
sacrifices for their sins loomed larger in their eyes than supplication
for other sinners.
Oh, how great must be God's wonder today! For how few
there are among us who know what prevailing prayer really is! Every one
of us would confess that we believe in prayer, yet how many of us truly
believe in the power of, prayer? Now, before we go a step farther, may
the writer most earnestly implore you not to read hurriedly what is
contained in these chapters. Much -- very much -- depends upon the way in
which every reader receives what is here recorded. For everything depends
upon prayer.
Why are many Christians so often defeated? Because
they pray so little. Why are many church-workers so often discouraged and
disheartened? Because they pray so little.
Why do most men see so few brought "out of
darkness to light" by their ministry? Because they pray so little.
Why are not our churches simply on fire for God?
Because there is so little real prayer.
The Lord Jesus is as powerful today as ever before.
The Lord Jesus is as anxious for men to be saved as ever before. His arm
is not shortened that it cannot save: but He cannot stretch forth His arm
unless we pray more -- and more really.
We may be assured of this -- the secret of all failure
is our failure in secret prayer.
If God "wondered" in the days of Isaiah, we
need not be surprised to find that in the days of His flesh our Lord
"marveled." He marveled at the unbelief of some -- unbelief
which actually prevented Him from doing any mighty work in their cities
(Mark vi. 6).
But we must remember that those who were guilty of
this unbelief saw no beauty in Him that they should desire Him, or
believe on Him. What then must His "marvel" be today, when He
sees amongst us who do truly love and adore Him, so few who really
"stir themselves up to take hold of God" (Isaiah Ixiv. 7).
Surely there is nothing so absolutely astonishing as a practically
prayerless Christian? These are eventful and ominous days. In fact, there
are many evidences that these are "the last days" in which God
promised to pour out His Spirit -- the Spirit of supplication -- upon all
flesh (Joel ii. 28). Yet the vast majority of professing Christians
scarcely know what "supplication" means; and very many of our
churches not only have no prayer-meeting, but sometimes unblushingly
condemn such meetings, and even ridicule them.
The Church of England, recognizing the importance of
worship and prayer, expects her clergy to read prayers in Church every
morning and evening.
But when this is done, is it not often in an empty
church? And are not the prayers frequently raced through at a pace which
precludes real worship? "Common prayer," too, often must
necessarily be rather vague and indefinite.
And what of those churches where the old-fashioned
weekly prayer-meeting is retained? Would not "weakly" be the
more appropriate word? C. H. Spurgeon had the joy of being able to say
that he conducted a prayer-meeting every Monday night "which
scarcely ever numbers less than from a thousand to twelve hundred
attendants."
My brothers, have we ceased to believe in prayer? If
you still hold your weekly gathering for prayer, is it not a fact that
the very great majority of your church members never come near it? Yes,
and never even think of coming near it. Why is this? Whose fault is it?
"Only a prayer-meeting" -- how often we have
heard the utterance! How many of those reading these words really enjoy a
prayer-meeting? Is it a joy or just a duty? Please forgive me for asking
so many questions and for pointing out what appears to be a perilous
weakness and a lamentable shortcoming in our churches. We are not out to
criticize -- far less to condemn. Anybody can do that. Our yearning
desire is to stir up Christians "to take hold of" God, as never
before.
We wish to encourage, to enhearten, to uplift.
We are never so high as when we are on our knees.
Criticize? Who dare criticize another? When we look
back upon the past and remember how much prayerlessness there has been in
one's own life, words of criticism of others wither away on the lips.
But we believe the time has come when a clarion call
to the individual and to the Church is needed -- a call to prayer.
Now, dare we face this question of prayer? It seems a
foolish query, for is not prayer a part and parcel of all religions? Yet
we venture to ask our readers to look at this matter fairly and squarely.
Do I really believe that prayer is a power? Is prayer the greatest power
on earth, or is it not? Does prayer indeed "move the Hand that moves
the world"?
Do God's prayer-commands really concern Me? Do the
promises of God concerning prayer still hold good? We have all been
muttering "Yes -- Yes -- Yes" as we read these questions. We
dare not say "No" to any one of them. And yet -- !
Has it ever occurred to you that our Lord never gave
an unnecessary or an optional command? Do we really believe that our Lord
never made a promise which He could not, or would not, fulfill? Our
Savior's three great commands for definite action were: --
Pray ye
Do this
Go ye!
Are we obeying Him? How often His command, "Do
this," is reiterated by our preachers today! One might almost think
it was His only command! How seldom we are reminded of His bidding to
"Pray" and to "Go." Yet, without obedience to the
"Pray ye," it is of little or no use at all either to "Do
this" or to "Go."
In fact, it can easily be shown that all want of
success, and all failure in the spiritual life and in Christian work, is
due to defective or insufficient prayer. Unless we pray aright we cannot
live aright or serve aright. This may appear, at first sight, to be gross
exaggeration, but the more we think it over in the light Scripture throws
upon it, the more convinced shall we be of the truth of this statement.
Now, as we begin once more to see what the Bible has
to say about this mysterious and wonderful subject, shall we endeavor to
read some of our Lord's promises, as though we had never heard them
before. What will the effect be?
Some twenty years ago the writer was studying in a Theological
College. One morning, early, a fellow-student -- who is today one of
England's foremost missionaries -- burst into the room holding an open
Bible in his hands. Although he was preparing for Holy Orders, he was at
that time only a young convert to Christ.
He had gone up to the University "caring for none
of these things." Popular, clever, athletic -- he had already won a
place amongst the smart set of his college, when Christ claimed him. He
accepted the Lord Jesus as a personal Savior, and became a very keen
follower of his Master. The Bible was, comparatively, a new book to him,
and as a result he was constantly making "discoveries." On that
memorable day on which he invaded my quietude he cried excitedly -- his
face all aglow with mingled joy and surprise -- "Do you believe
this? Is it really true?" "Believe what?" I asked,
glancing at the open Bible with some astonishment.
"Why, this -- " and he read in eager tones
St. Matthew xxi. 21, 22: "'If ye have faith and doubt not . . . all
things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'
Do you believe it? Is it true?" "Yes," I replied, with
much surprise at his excitement, "of course it's true -- of course I
believe it."
Yet, through my mind there flashed all manner of
thoughts! "Well, that's a very wonderful promise," said he.
"It seems to me to be absolutely limitless! Why don't we pray
more?" And he went away, leaving me thinking hard. I had never
looked at those verses quite in that way. As the door closed upon that
eager young follower of the Master, I had a vision of my Savior and His
love and His power such as I never had before. I had a vision of a life
of prayer -- yes, and "limitless" power, which I saw depended
upon two things only -- faith and prayer. For the moment I was thrilled.
I fell on my knees, and as I bowed before my Lord what thoughts surged
through my mind -- what hopes and aspirations flooded my soul! God was
speaking to me in an extraordinary way. This was a great call to prayer.
But -- to my shame be it said -- I heeded not that call.
Where did I fail? True, I prayed a little more than
before, but nothing much seemed to happen. Why? Was it because I did not
see what a high standard the Savior requires in the inner life of those
who would pray successfully?
Was it because I had failed to measure up my life to
the "perfect love" standard so beautifully described in the
thirteenth chapter of the first Epistle to the Corinthians?
For, after all, prayer is not just putting into action
good resolutions "to pray." Like David, we need to cry,
"Create in me a clean heart, O God" (Psalms li.) before we can
pray aright. And the inspired words of the Apostle of Love need to be
heeded today as much as ever before: "Beloved, if our heart condemn
us not, we have boldness toward God; and [then] whatsoever we ask, we
receive of Him" (1st John iii. 21).
"True -- and I believe it." Yes, indeed, it
is a limitless promise, and yet how little we realize it, how little we
claim from Christ. And our Lord "marvels" at our unbelief. But
if we could only read the Gospels for the first time, what an amazing
book it would seem! Should not we "marvel" and
"wonder"? And today I pass on that great call to you. Will you
give heed to it? Will you profit by it? Or shall it fall on deaf ears and
leave you prayerless?
Fellow-Christians, let us awake! The devil is blinding
our eyes. He is endeavoring to prevent us from facing this question of
prayer. These pages are written by special request. But it is many months
since that request came.
Every attempt to begin to write has been frustrated,
and even now one is conscious of a strange reluctance to do so. There
seems to be some mysterious power restraining the hand. Do we realize
that there is nothing the devil dreads so much as prayer? His great
concern is to keep us from praying. He loves to see us "up to our
eyes" in work -- provided we do not pray. He does not fear because
we are eager and earnest Bible students -- provided we are little in
prayer. Someone has wisely said, "Satan laughs at our toiling, mocks
at our wisdom, but trembles when we pray." All this is so familiar
to us -- but do we really pray? If not, then failure must dog our
footsteps, whatever signs of apparent success there may be.
Let us never forget that the greatest thing we can do
for God or for man is to pray. For we can accomplish far more by our
prayers than by our work. Prayer is omnipotent; it can do anything that
God can do! When we pray God works. All fruitfulness in service is the
outcome of prayer -- of the worker's prayers, or of those who are holding
up holy hands on his behalf. We all know how to pray, but perhaps many of
us need to cry as the disciples did of old, "Lord, teach us to
pray."
O Lord, by Whom ye come to
God,
The Life, the Truth, the Way,
The path of prayer Thyself
hast trod;
Lord, teach us now to pray.
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CHAPTER 2:
ALMOST INCREDIBLE PROMISES
"WHEN we stand with Christ in glory, looking o'er
life's finished story," the most amazing feature of that life as it
is looked back upon will be its prayerlessness.
We shall be almost beside ourselves with astonishment
that we spent so little time in real intercession. It will be our turn to
"wonder."
In our Lord's last discourse to His loved ones, just
before the most wonderful of all prayers, the Master again and again held
out His kingly golden sceptre and said, as it were, "What is your
request? It shall be granted unto you, even unto the whole of My
kingdom!"
Do we believe this? We must do so if we believe our
Bibles. Shall we just read over very quietly and thoughtfully one of our
Lord's promises, reiterated so many times? If we had never read them
before, we should open our eyes in bewilderment, for these promises are
almost incredible. From the lips of any mere man they would be quite
unbelievable. But it is the Lord of heaven and earth Who speaks; and He
is speaking at the most solemn moment of His life. It is the eve of His
death and passion. It is a farewell message. Now listen!
"Verily, verily I say unto you, he that believeth
on Me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than these
shall he do: because I go unto the Father. And whatsoever ye shall ask in
My name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If
ye shall ask anything in My name, that will I do" (John xiv. 13,
14). Now, could any words be plainer or clearer than these? Could any
promise be greater or grander? Has anyone else, anywhere, at any time,
ever offered so much?
How staggered those disciples must have been! Surely
they could scarcely believe their own ears. But that promise is made also
to you and to me.
And, lest there should be any mistake on their part,
or on ours, our Lord repeats Himself a few moments afterwards. Yes, and
the Holy Spirit bids St. John record those words again. "If ye abide
in Me, and My words abide in you, ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be
done unto you. Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bare much fruit; and
so shall ye be My disciples" (John xv. 7, 8).
These words are of such grave importance, and so
momentous, that the Savior of the world is not content even with a
threefold utterance of them. He urges His disciples to obey His command
"to ask." In fact, He tells them that one sign of their being
His "friends" will be the obedience to His commands in all
things (verse 14). Then He once more repeats His wishes: "Ye did not
choose Me, but I chose you, and appointed you, that ye should go and bear
fruit, and that your fruit should abide: that whatsoever ye shall ask the
Father, in My name, He may give it you" (John xv. 16).
One would think that our Lord had now made it plain
enough that He wanted them to pray; that He needed their prayers, and
that without prayer they could accomplish nothing. But to our intense
surprise He returns again to the same subject, saying very much the same
words.
"In that day ye shall ask Me nothing" --
i.e., "ask Me no question" (R.V., margin) -- "Verily,
verily I say unto you, if ye ask anything of the Father, He will give it
you in My name. Hitherto have ye asked nothing in My name: ask, and ye
shall receive, that your joy may be fulfilled" (John xvi. 23, 24).
Never before had our Lord laid such stress on any
promise or command -- never! This truly marvelous promise is given us six
times over. Six times, almost in the same breath, our Savior commands us
to ask whatsoever we will. This is the greatest -- the most wonderful --
promise ever made to man. Yet most men -- Christian men -- practically
ignore it! Is it not so?
The exceeding greatness of the promise seems to
over-whelm us. Yet we know that He is "able to do exceeding
abundantly above all that we ask or think" (Ephesians iii. 20).
So our blessed Master gives the final exhortation,
before He is seized, and bound, and scourged, before His gracious lips
are silenced on the cross, "Ye shall ask in My name . . . for the
Father Himself loveth you" (verse 26). We have often spent much time
in reflecting upon our Lord's seven words from the cross. And it is well
we should do so. Have we ever spent one hour in meditating upon this, our
Savior's sevenfold invitation to pray?
Today He sits on the throne of His Majesty on high,
and He holds out to us the sceptre of His power. Shall we touch it and
tell Him our desires? He bids us take of His treasures. He yearns to
grant us "according to the riches of His glory," that we may
"be strengthened with power through His Spirit in the inner
man."
He tells us that our strength and our fruitfulness
depend upon our prayers. He reminds us that our very joy depends upon
answered prayer (John xvi. 24).
And yet we allow the devil to persuade us to neglect
prayer! He makes us believe that we can do more by our own efforts than
by our prayers -- by our intercourse with men than by our intercession
with God. It passes one's comprehension that so little heed should be
given to our Lord's sevenfold invitation -- command -- promise! How dare
we work for Christ without being much on our knees? Quite recently an
earnest Christian "worker" -- a Sunday-school teacher and
communicant -- wrote me, saying, "I have never had an answer to
prayer in all my life." But why? Is God a liar? Is not God
trustworthy? Do His promises count for nought. Does He not mean what He
says? And doubtless there are many reading these words who in their
hearts are saying the same thing as that Christian worker. Payson is
right -- is Scriptural -- when he says: "If we would do much for
God, we must ask much of God: we must be men of prayer." If our
prayers are not answered -- always answered, but not necessarily granted
-- the fault must be entirely in ourselves, and not in God. God delights
to answer prayer; and He has given us His word that He will answer.
Fellow-laborers in His vineyard, it is quite evident
that our Master desires us to ask, and to ask much. He tells us we
glorify God by doing so! Nothing is beyond the scope of prayer which is
not beyond the will of God -- and we do not desire to go beyond His will.
We dare not say that our Lord's words are not true.
Yet somehow or other few Christians really seem to believe them. What
holds us back? What seals our lips? What keeps us from making much of
prayer? Do we doubt His love? Never! He gave His life for us and to us.
Do we doubt the Father's love? Nay. "The Father Himself loveth
you," said Christ when urging His disciples to pray.
Do we doubt His power? Not for a moment. Hath He not
said, "All power hath been given unto Me in heaven and on earth. Go
ye . . . and lo, I am with you alway . . ."? (Matthew xxviii.
18-20). Do we doubt His wisdom? Do we mistrust His choice for us? Not for
a moment. And yet so very few of His followers consider prayer really
worth while. Of course, they would deny this -- but actions speak louder
than words. Are we afraid to put God to the test? He has said we may do
so. "Bring Me the whole tithe into the storehouse . . . and prove Me
now herewith, saith the Lord of Hosts, if I will not open you the windows
of heaven, and pour you out a blessing that there shall not be room
enough to receive it" (Malachi iii. 10). Whenever God makes us a
promise, let us boldly say, as did St. Paul, I believe God (Acts xxvii.
25), and trust Him to keep His word.
Shall we begin today to be men of prayer, if we have
never done so before? Let us not put it off till a more convenient
season. God wants me to pray. The dear Savior wants me to pray. He needs
my prayers. So much -- in fact, everything -- depends upon prayer. How
dare we hold back? Let every one of us ask on our knees this question:
"If no one on earth prayed for the salvation of sinners more
fervently or more frequently than I do, how many of them would be
converted to God through prayer?
Do we spend ten minutes a day in prayer? Do we
consider it important enough for that?
Ten minutes a day on our knees in prayer -- when the
Kingdom of Heaven can be had for the asking!
Ten minutes? It seems a very inadequate portion of our
time to spend in taking hold of God (Isaiah lxiv. 7) !
And is it prayer when we do "say" our
prayers, or are we just repeating daily a few phrases which have become
practically meaningless, whilst our thoughts are wandering hither and
thither?
If God were to answer the words we repeated on our
knees this morning should we know it? Should we recognize the answer? Do
we even remember what we asked for? He does answer. He has given us His
word for it. He always answers every real prayer of faith.
But we shall see what the Bible has to say on this
point in a later chapter. We are now thinking of the amount of time we
spend in prayer.
"How often do you pray?" was the question
put to a Christian woman. "Three times a day, and all the day
beside," was the quick reply. But how many are there like that? Is
prayer to me just a duty, or is it a privilege -- a pleasure -- a real
joy -- a necessity?
Let us get a fresh vision of Christ in all His glory,
and a fresh glimpse of all the "riches of His glory" which He
places at our disposal, and of all the mighty power given unto Him. Then
let us get a fresh vision of the world and all its needs. (And the world
was never so needy as it is today.)
Why, the wonder is not that we pray so little, but
that we can ever get up from our knees if we realize our own need; the
needs of our home and our loved ones; the needs of our pastor and the
Church; the needs of our city -- of our country -- of the heathen and
Mohammedan world! All these needs, can be met by the riches of God in
Christ Jesus. St. Paul had no doubt about this -- nor have we. Yes! "My
God shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory, in
Christ Jesus" (Philippians iv. 19). But to share His riches we must
pray, for the same Lord is rich unto all that call upon Him (Romans x.
12).
So great is the importance of prayer that God has
taken care to anticipate all the excuses or objections we may be likely
to make.
Men plead their weakness or infirmity -- or they
declare they do not know how to pray.
God foresaw this inability long ages ago. Did He not
inspire St. Paul to say: "The Spirit also helpeth our infirmity, for
we know not how to pray as we ought; but the Spirit Himself maketh
intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered; and He that
searcheth the hearts knoweth what is in the mind of the Spirit, because He
maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God"
(Romans viii. 26, 27).
Yes. Every provision is made for us. But only the Holy
Spirit can "stir us up" to "take hold of God." And if
we will but yield ourselves to the Spirit's promptings we shall most
assuredly follow the example of the apostles of old, who "gave
themselves to prayer," and "continued steadfastly in
prayer" (R.V., Acts vi. 4).
We may rest fully assured of this -- a man's influence
in the world can be gauged not by his eloquence, or his zeal, or his
orthodox, or his energy, but by his prayers. Yes, and we will go farther
and maintain that no man can live aright who does not pray aright.
We may work for Christ from morn till night; we may
spend much time in Bible study; we may be most earnest and faithful and
"acceptable" in our preaching and in our individual dealing,
but none of these things can be truly effective unless we are much in
prayer. We shall only be full of good works; and not "bearing fruit
in every good work" (Colossians i. 10). To be little with God in
prayer is to be little for God in service. Much secret prayer means much
public power. Yet is it not a fact that whilst our organizing is well
nigh perfect, our agonizing in prayer is well nigh lost?
Men are wondering why the Revival delays its coming.
There is only one thing that can delay it, and that is lack of prayer.
All Revivals have been the outcome of prayer. One sometimes longs for the
voice of an archangel, but what would that avail if the voice of Christ
Himself does not stir us up to pray? It seems almost impertinence for any
man to take up the cry when our Savior has put forth His
"limitless" promises. Yet we feel that something should be
done, and we believe that the Holy Spirit is prompting men to remind
themselves and others of Christ's words and power. No words of mine can
impress men with the value of prayer, the need of prayer, and the
omnipotence of prayer.
But these utterances go forth steeped in prayer that
God the Holy Spirit will Himself convict Christian men and women of the
sin of prayerlessness, and drive them to their knees, to call upon God
day and night in burning, believing, prevailing intercession! The Lord
Jesus, now in the heavenlies, beckons to us to fall upon our knees and
claim the riches of His grace.
No man dare prescribe for another how long a time he
ought to spend in prayer, nor do we suggest that men should make a vow to
pray so many minutes or hours a day. Of course, the Bible command is to
"Pray without ceasing." This is evidently the "attitude of
prayer" -- the attitude of one's life.
Here we are speaking of definite acts of prayer. Have
you ever timed your prayers? We believe that most of our readers would be
amazed and confounded if they did time themselves!
Some years ago the writer faced this prayer question.
He felt that for himself at least one hour a day was the minimum time
that he should spend in prayer. He carefully noted down every day a
record of his prayer-life. As time went on he met a working-man who was being
much used of God.
When asked to what he chiefly attributed his success,
this man quietly replied, "Well, I could not get on without two
hours a day of private prayer."
Then there came across my path a Spirit-filled
missionary from overseas, who told very humbly of the wonderful things
God was doing through his ministry. (One could see all along that God was
given all the praise and all the glory.) "I find it necessary,
oftentimes, to spend four hours a day in prayer," said this
missionary.
And we remember how the Greatest Missionary of all
used sometimes to spend whole nights in prayer. Why? Our blessed Lord did
not pray simply as an example to us: He never did things merely as an
example. He prayed because He needed to pray. As perfect Man, prayer to
Him was a necessity. Then how much more is it necessary to you and me?
"Four hours a day in prayer!" exclaimed a
man who is giving his whole life to Christian work as a medical
missionary. "Four hours? Give me ten minutes and I'm done!"
That was an honest and a brave confession -- even if a sad one. Yet, if
some of us were to speak out as honestly --?
Now, it was not by accident that these men crossed my
path. God was speaking through them. It was just another "call to
prayer" from the "God of patience," who is also a
"God of comfort" (Romans xv. 5). and when their quiet message
had sunk into my soul a book came into my hands, "by chance,"
as people say. It told briefly and simply the story of John Hyde --
"Praying Hyde," as he came to be called. Just as God sent St.
John the Baptist to prepare the way of our Lord at His first coming, so
He sent in these last days St. John the Pray-er, to make straight paths
for His coming again. "Praying Hyde" -- what a name! As one
read of this marvelous life of prayer, one began to ask, "Have I
ever prayed?"
I found others were asking the same question. One
lady, who is noted for her wonderful intercession, wrote me, saying,
"When I laid down this book, I began to think I had never in all my
life really prayed!"
But here we must leave the matter. Shall we get on our
knees before God and allow His Holy Spirit to search us through and
through? Are we sincere? Do we really desire to do God's will? Do we
really believe His promises? If so, will it not lead us to spend more
time on our knees before God? Do not vow to pray "so much" a
day. Resolve to pray much, but prayer, to be of value, must be
spontaneous, and not from constraint.
But we must bear in mind that mere resolutions to take
more time for prayer, and to conquer reluctance to pray, will not prove
lastingly effective unless there is a wholehearted and absolute surrender
to the Lord Jesus Christ. If we have never taken this step, we must take
it now if we desire to be men of prayer.
I am quite certain of this fact: God wants me to pray:
wants you to pray. The question is, are we willing to pray ?
Gracious Savior, pour out upon us the fullness of the
Holy Spirit, that we may indeed become Kneeling Christians.
To God your every want
In instant prayer display.
Pray always; pray and never
faint:
Pray! Without ceasing, pray.
|
CHAPTER 3:
"ASK OF ME AND I WILL
GIVE"
GOD wants me to pray, to be much in prayer -- because
all success in spiritual work is dependent on prayer.
A preacher who prays little may see some results of
his labors, but if he does it will be because someone, somewhere is
praying for him. The "fruit" is the pray-er's -- not the
preacher's. How surprised some of us preachers will be one day, when the
Lord shall "reward every man according to his works."
"Lord! Those were my converts! It was I who conducted that mission
at which so many were brought into the fold." Ah, yes -- I did the
preaching, the pleading, the persuading; but was it "I" who did
the praying?
Every convert is the result of the Holy Spirit's
pleading in answer to the prayers of some believer.
O God, grant that such surprise may not be ours. O
Lord, teach us to pray!
We have had a vision of a God pleadingly calling for
prayer from His children. How am I treating that call? Can I say, with
St. Paul, ."I am 'not disobedient to the heavenly vision'"?
Again we repeat, if there are any regrets in heaven, the greatest will be
that we spent so little time in real intercession whilst we were on earth.
Think of the wide sweep of prayer! "Ask of Me,
and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost
parts of the earth for thy possession" (Psalm ii. 8). Yet many
people do not trouble to bring even the little details of their own lives
to God in prayer, and nine out of ten Christian people never think of
praying for the heathen!
One is staggered at the unwillingness of Christians to
pray. Perhaps it is because they have never experienced, or even heard
of, convincing answers to prayer.
In this chapter we are setting out to do the
"impossible." What is that? We long to bring home to the heart
and conscience of every reader the power of prayer. We venture to
describe this as "impossible." For if men will not believe, and
act upon, our Lord's promises and commands, how can we expect them to be
persuaded by any mere human exhortations?
But do you remember that our Lord, when speaking to
His disciples, asked them to believe that He was in the Father and the
Father in Him? Then he added: "If you cannot believe My bare word
about this, believe Me for the very works' sake" (John xiv. 11). It
was as if He said, "If My Person, My sanctified life, and My
wonderful words do not elicit belief in Me, then look at My works: surely
they are sufficient to compel belief? Believe Me because of what I
do."
Then He went on to promise that if they would believe,
they should do greater works than these. It was after this utterance that
He gave the first of those six wonderful promises in regard to prayer.
The inference surely is that those "greater works" are to be
done only as the outcome of prayer.
May the disciple therefore follow the Master's method?
Fellow-worker, if you fail to grasp, fail to trust our Lord's astounding
promises regarding prayer, will you not believe them "for the very
works' sake"? That is, because of those "greater works"
which men and women are performing today -- or, rather, the works which
the Lord Jesus is doing, through their prayerful co-operation?
What are we "out for"? What is our real aim
in life? Surely we desire most of all to be abundantly fruitful in the
Master's service. We seek not position, or prominence, or power. But we
do long to be fruitful servants. Then we must be much in prayer. God can
do more through our prayers than through our preaching. A. J. Gordon once
said, "You can do more than pray, after you have prayed, but you can
never do more than pray until you have prayed." If only we would
believe this!
A lady in India was cast down through the failure of her
life and work. She was a devoted missionary, but somehow or other
conversions never resulted from her ministry.
The Holy Spirit seemed to say to her, "Pray
more." But she resisted the promptings of the Spirit for some time.
"At length," said she, "I set apart much of my time for
prayer. I did it in fear and trembling lest my fellow-workers should
complain that I was shirking my work. After a few weeks I began to see
men and women accepting Christ as their Savior. Moreover, the whole
district was soon awakened, and the work of all the other missionaries
was blessed as never before. God did more in six months than I had
succeeded in doing in six years. And," she added, "no one ever
accused me of shirking my duty." Another lady missionary in India
felt the same call to pray. She began to give much time to prayer. No
opposition came from without, but it did come from within. But she
persisted, and in two years the baptized converts increased sixfold!
God promised that He would "pour out the Spirit
of grace and supplication upon all flesh" (Joel ii. 28). How much of
that Spirit of "supplication" is ours? Surely we must get that
Spirit at all costs? Yet if we are not willing to spend time in
"supplication," God must perforce withhold His Spirit, and we
become numbered amongst those who are "resisting the Spirit,"
and possibly "quenching" the Spirit. Has not our Lord promised
the Holy Spirit to them that ask? (Luke xi. 13).
Are not the very converts from heathendom putting some
of us to shame?
A few years ago, when in India, I had the great joy of
seeing something of Pandita Ramabai's work. She had a boarding-school of
1,500 Hindu girls. One day some of these girls came with their Bibles and
asked a lady missionary what St. Luke xii. 49 meant -- "I came to
cast fire upon the earth; and what will I, if it is already
kindled?" The missionary tried to put them off with an evasive
answer, not being very sure herself what those words meant. But they were
not satisfied, so they determined to pray for this fire. And as they
prayed -- and because they prayed -- the very fire of heaven came into
their souls. A very Pentecost from above was granted them. No wonder they
continued to pray!
A party of these girls upon whom God had poured the
"Spirit of supplication" came to a mission house where I spent
some weeks. "May we stay here in your town and pray for your
work?" they asked. The missionary did not entertain the idea with
any great enthusiasm. He felt that they ought to be at school, and not
"gadding about" the country. But they only asked for a hall or
barn where they could pray; and we all value prayers on our behalf. So
their request was granted, and the good man sat down to his evening meal,
thinking. As the evening wore on, a native pastor came round. He broke
down completely. He explained, with tears running down his face, that
God's Holy Spirit had convicted him of sin, and that he felt compelled to
come and openly confess his wrongdoing. He was quickly followed by one
Christian after another, all under deep conviction of sin.
There was a remarkable time of blessing. Back-sliders
were restored, believers were sanctified, and heathen brought into the
fold -- all because a few mere children were praying.
God is no respecter of persons. If anyone is willing
to conform to His conditions, He for His part will assuredly fulfill His
promises. Does not our heart burn within us, as we hear of God's
wonderful power? And that power is ours for the asking. I know there are
"conditions." But you and I can fulfill them all through
Christ. And those of us who cannot have the privilege of serving God in
India or any other overseas mission, may yet take our part in bringing
down a like blessing. When the Revival in Wales was at its height, a
Welsh missionary wrote home begging the people to pray that India might
be moved in like manner. So the coal-miners met daily at the pit-mouth
half an hour before dawn to pray for their comrade overseas. In a few
weeks' time the welcome message was sent home: "The blessing has
come."
Isn't it just splendid to know that by our prayers we
can bring down showers of blessing upon India, or Africa, or China, just
as readily as we can get the few drops needed for our own little plot?
Many of us will recall the wonderful things which God
did for Korea a few years ago, entirely in answer to prayer. A few
missionaries decided to meet together to pray daily at noon. At the end
of the month one brother proposed that, "as nothing had happened,"
the prayer-meeting should be discontinued. "Let us each pray at home
as we find it convenient," said he. The others, however, protested
that they ought rather to spend even more time in prayer each day. So
they continued the daily prayer-meeting for four months. Then suddenly
the blessing began to be poured out. Church services here and there were
broken up by weeping and confessing of sins. At length a mighty revival
broke out. At one place during a Sunday evening service the leading man
in the church stood up and confessed that he had stolen one hundred
dollars in administering a widow's legacy. Immediately conviction of sin
swept the audience. That service did not end till 2 o'clock on Monday
morning. God's wondrous power was felt as never before. And when the
Church was purified, many sinners found salvation.
Multitudes flocked to the churches out of curiosity.
Some came to mock, but fear laid hold of them, and they stayed to pray.
Amongst the "curious" was a brigand chief, the leader of a
robber band. He was convicted and converted. He went straight off to the
magistrate and gave himself up. "You have no accuser," said the
astonished official, "yet you accuse yourself! We have no law in
Korea to meet your case." So he dismissed him.
One of the missionaries declared, "It paid well
to have spent several months in prayer, for when God gave the Holy
Spirit, He accomplished more in half a day than all the missionaries
together could have accomplished in half a year." In less than two
months, more than 2,000 heathen were converted. The burning zeal of those
converts has become a byword. Some of them gave all they had to build a
church, and wept because they could not give more. Needless to say, they
realized the power of prayer. Those converts were themselves baptized
with the "Spirit of supplication." In one church it was
announced that a daily prayer-meeting would be held at 4:30 every
morning. The very first day 400 people arrived long before the stated
hour -- eager to pray! The number rapidly increased to 600 as days went
on. At Seoul, 1,100 is the average attendance at the weekly
prayer-meeting.
Heathen people came -- to see what was happening. They
exclaimed in astonishment, "The living God is among you." Those
poor heathen saw what many Christians fail to see. Did not Christ say,
"Where two or three are gathered together in My name, there am I in
the midst of them"? (Matthew xviii. 20). What is possible in Korea
is possible here. God is "no respecter" of nations. He is
longing to bless us, longing to pour His Spirit upon us.
Now, if we -- here in this so-called Christian country
-- really believed in prayer, i.e., in our Lord's own gracious promises,
should we avoid prayer-meetings? If we had any genuine concern for the
lost condition of thousands in our own land and tens of thousands in
heathen lands, should we withhold our prayers? Surely we do not think, or
we should pray more. "Ask of Me -- I will give," says an
almighty, all-loving God, and we scarcely heed His words!
Verily, converts from heathendom put us to shame. In
my journeyings I came to Rawal Pindi, in North West India. What do you
think happened there? Some of Pandita Ramabai's girls went there to camp.
But a little while before this, Pandita Ramabai had said to her girls,
"If there is any blessing in India, we may have it. Let us ask God
to tell us what we must do in order to have the blessing."
As she read her Bible she paused over the verse,
"Wait for the promise of the Father . . . ye shall receive power
after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you" (Acts i. 4-8).
"'Wait'! Why, we have never done this," she cried. "We
have prayed, but we have never expected any greater blessing today than
we had yesterday!" Oh, how they prayed! One prayer-meeting lasted
six hours. And what a marvelous blessing God poured out in answer to
their prayers.
Whilst some of these girls were at Rawal Pindi, a lady
missionary, looking out of her tent towards midnight, was surprised to
see a light burning in one of the girls' tents -- a thing quite contrary
to rules. She went to expostulate, but found the youngest of those ten
girls -- a child of fifteen -- kneeling in the farthest corner of the
tent, holding a little tallow candle in one hand and a list of names for
intercession in the other. She had 500 names on her list -- 500 out of
the 1,500 girls in Pandita Ramabai's school. Hour after hour she was
naming them before God. No wonder God's blessing fell wherever those
girls went, and upon whomsoever those girls prayed for.
Pastor Ding Li Mei, of China, has the names of 1,100
students on his prayer-list. Many hundreds have been won to Christ
through his prayers. And so out-and-out are his converts that many scores
of them have entered the Christian ministry.
It would be an easy matter to add to these amazing and
inspiring stories of blessing through prayer. But there is no need to do
so. I know that God wants me to pray. I know that God wants you to pray.
"If there is any blessing in England we may have
it." Nay, more -- if there is any blessing in Christ we may have it.
"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath
blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in
Christ" (Ephesians i. 3). God's great storehouse is full of
blessings. Only prayer can unlock that storehouse. Prayer is the key, and
faith both turns the key and opens the door, and claims the blessing.
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. And to see Him is
to pray aright.
Listen! We have come -- you and I -- once more to the
parting of the ways. All our past failure, all our past inefficiency and
insufficiency, all our past unfruitfulness in service, can be banished
now, once and for all, if we will only give prayer its proper place. Do
it today. Do not wait for a more convenient time.
Everything worth having depends upon the decision we
make. Truly God is a wonderful God! And one of the most wonderful things
about Him is that He puts His all at the disposal of the prayer of faith.
Believing prayer from a wholly-cleansed heart never fails. God has given
us His word for it. Yet vastly more wonderful is the amazing fact that
Christian men and women should either not believe God's word, or should
fail to put it to the test.
When Christ is "all in all" -- when He is
Savior and Lord and King of our whole being, then it is really He Who
prays our prayers. We can then truthfully alter one word of a well-known
verse and say that the Lord Jesus ever liveth to make intercession in us.
Oh, that we might make the Lord Jesus "marvel" not at our
unbelief but at our faith! When our Lord shall again "marvel,"
and say of us, "Verily . . . I have not found so great faith, no,
not in Israel" (Matthew viii. 10), then indeed shall
"palsy" -- paralysis -- be transformed into power.
Has not our Lord come to "cast fire" upon us?
Are we "already kindled"? Can He not use us as much as he used
those mere children of Khedgaon? God is no respecter of persons. If we
can humbly and truthfully say, "To me to live is Christ"
(Philippians i. 21), will He not manifest forth His mighty power in us?
Some of us have been reading about Praying Hyde.
Truly, his intercession changed things. Men tell us that they were
thrilled when John Hyde prayed. They were stirred to their inmost being
when he just pleaded the name "Jesus! -- Jesus! -- Jesus!" and
a baptism of love and power came upon them.
But it was not John Hyde, it was the Holy Spirit of
God whom one consecrated man, filled with that Spirit, brought down upon
all around him. May we not all become "Praying Hydes"? Do you
say "No! He had a special gift of prayer"? Very well -- how did
he get it? He was once just an ordinary Christian man -- just like any of
us.
Have you noticed that, humanly speaking, he owed his
prayer-life to the prayers of his father's friend? Now get hold of this
point. It is one of greatest importance, and one which may profoundly
affect your whole life. Perhaps I may be allowed to tell the story fully,
for so much depends upon it. Shall we quote John Hyde himself? He was on
board a ship sailing for India, whither he was going as a missionary. He
says, "My father had a friend who greatly desired to be a foreign
missionary, but was not permitted to go. This friend wrote me a letter
directed in care of the ship. I received it a few hours out of New York
harbor. The words were not many, but the purport of them was this: 'I
shall not cease praying for you, dear John, until you are filled with the
Holy Spirit.' When I had read the letter I crumpled it up in anger and
threw it on the deck. Did this friend think I had not received the
baptism of the Spirit, or that I would think of going to India without
this equipment? I was angry. But by and by better judgment prevailed, and
I picked up the letter, and read it again. Possibly I did need something
which I had not yet received. I paced up and down the deck, a battle
raging within. I felt uncomfortable: I loved the writer; I knew the holy
life he lived, and down in my heart there was a conviction that he was
right, and that I was not fit to be a missionary. . . . This went on for two,
or three days, until I felt perfectly miserable. . . . At last, in a kind
of despair, I asked the Lord to fill me with the Holy Spirit; and the
moment I did this . . . I began to see myself, and what a selfish
ambition I had."
But he did not yet receive the blessing sought. He
landed in India and went with a fellow-missionary to an open-air service.
"The missionary spoke," said John Hyde, "and I was told
that he was speaking about Jesus Christ as the real Savior from sin. When
he had finished his address, a respectable-looking man, speaking good
English, asked the missionary whether he himself had been thus saved? The
question went home to my heart; for if it had been asked me, I would have
had to confess that Christ had not fully saved me, because I knew there
was a sin in my life which had not been taken away. I realized what a
dishonor it would be on the name of Christ to have to confess that I was
preaching a Christ that had not delivered me from sin, though I was
proclaiming to others that He was a perfect Savior. I went back to my
room and shut myself in, and told the Lord that it must be one of two
things: either He must give me victory over all my sins, and especially
over the sin that so easily beset me, or I must return to America and
seek there for some other work. I said I could not stand up to preach the
Gospel until I could testify of its power in my own life. I . . .
realized how reasonable this was, and the Lord assured me that He was
able and willing to deliver me from all sin. He did deliver me, and I
have not had a doubt of this since."
It was then, and then only, that John Hyde became
Praying Hyde. And it is only by such a full surrender and such a definite
claiming to be delivered from the power of sin in our lives that you and
I can be men of prevailing prayer. The point we wish to emphasize,
however, is the one already mentioned. A comparatively unknown man prays
for John Hyde, who was then unknown to the world, and by his prayers
brings down such a blessing upon him that everyone knows of him now as
"Praying Hyde." Did you say in your heart, dear reader, a
little while ago, that you could not hope to be a Praying Hyde? Of course
we cannot all give so much time to prayer. For physical or other reasons
we may be hindered from long-continued praying. But we may all have his
spirit of prayer. And may we not all do for others what the unnamed
friend did for John Hyde?
Can we not pray the blessing down upon others -- upon
your vicar or pastor? Upon your friend? Upon your family? What a ministry
is ours, if we will but enter it! But to do so, we must make the full
surrender which John Hyde made. Have we done it? Failure in prayer is due
to fault in the heart. Only the "pure in heart" can see God.
And only those who "call on the Lord out of a pure heart" (2nd
Timothy ii. 22) can confidently claim answers to their prayers.
What a revival would break out, what a mighty blessing
would come down if only everyone who read these words would claim the
fullness of the Holy Spirit now!
Do you not see why it is that God wants us to pray? Do
you now see why everything worth having depends upon prayer? There are
several reasons, but one stands out very clearly and vividly before us
after reading this chapter. It is just this: if we ask and God does not give,
then the fault is with us. Every unanswered prayer is a clarion call to
search the heart to see what is wrong there; for the promise is
unmistakable in its clearness: "If ye shall ask anything in My name,
that will I do" (John xiv. 14).
Truly he who prays puts, not God, but his own
spiritual life to the test!
Let me come closer to Thee,
Jesus,
Oh, closer every day;
Let me lean harder on Thee,
Jesus,
Yes, harder all the way.
|
CHAPTER 4:
ASKING FOR SIGNS
"DOES God indeed answer prayer?" is a question
often on the lips of people, and oftener still in their inmost hearts.
"Is prayer of any real use?" Somehow or other we cannot help
praying; but then even pagan savages cry out to someone or something to
aid them in times of danger and disaster and distress.
And those of us who really do believe in prayer are
soon faced with another question: "Is it right to put God to the
test?" Moreover, a further thought flashes into our minds:
"Dare we put God to the test?" For there is little doubt failure
in the prayer-life is often -- always? -- due to failure in the spiritual
life. So many people harbor much unbelief in the heart regarding the
value and effectiveness of prayer; and without faith, prayer is vain.
Asking for signs? Putting God to the test? Would to
God we could persuade Christian men and women to do so. Why, what a test
this would be of our own faith in God, and of our own holiness of life.
Prayer is the touchstone of true godliness. God asks our prayers, values
our prayers, needs our prayers. And if those prayers fail, we have only
ourselves to blame. We do not mean by this that effective prayer always
gets just what it asks for. Now, the Bible teaches us that we are allowed
to put God to the test. The example of Gideon in Old Testament days is
sufficient to show us that God honors our faith even when that faith is
faltering. He allows us to "prove Him" even after a definite
promise from Himself. This is a very great comfort to us.
Gideon said unto God, "If Thou wilt save Israel
by mine hand, as Thou hast said, behold, I will put a fleece of wool on
the floor; and if the dew be on the fleece only . . . then shall I know
that Thou wilt save Israel by mine hand, as Thou has said." Yet,
although there was a "bowl full of water" in the fleece the
next morning, this did not satisfy Gideon! He dares to put God to the
test the second time, and to ask that the fleece should be dry instead of
wet the following night. "And God did so that night" (Judges
vi. 40).
It is all very wonderful, the Almighty God just doing
what a hesitating man asks Him to do! We catch our breath and stand
amazed, scarcely knowing which startles us the more -- the daring of the
man, or the condescension of God! Of course, there is more in the story
than meets the eye. No doubt Gideon thought that the "fleece"
represented himself, Gideon.
If God would indeed fill him with His Spirit, why,
salvation was assured. But as he wrung the fleece out, he began to
compare himself with the saturated wool. "How unlike this fleece am
I! God promises deliverance, but I do not feel full of the Spirit of God.
No inflow of the mighty power of God seems to have come into me. Am I
indeed fit for this great feat?" No! But then, it is "Not I,
but God." "O God, let the fleece be dry -- canst Thou still
work? Even if I do not feel any superhuman power, any fullness of
spiritual blessing within me: even if I feel as dry as this fleece, canst
Thou still deliver Israel by my arm?" (Little wonder that he
prefaced his prayer with the words, "Let not Thine anger be hot
against me"!) "And God did so that night: for it was dry upon
the fleece only, and there was dew on all the ground" (verse 40).
Yes, there is more in the story than can be seen at a
glance. And is it not so in our own case? The devil so often assures us
that our prayers cannot claim an answer because of the
"dryness" of our souls. Answers to prayer, however, do not
depend upon our feelings, but upon the trustworthiness of the Promiser.
Now, we are not urging that Gideon's way of procedure
is for us, or for anyone, the normal course of action. It seems to reveal
much hesitation to believe God's Word. In fact, it looks gravely like
doubting God. And surely it grieves God when we show a faith in Him which
is but partial.
The higher and better and safer way is to "ask,
nothing doubting." But it is very comforting and assuring to us to
know that God allowed Gideon to put Him to the test. Nor is this the only
such case mentioned in Scripture. The most surprising instance of
"proving God" happened on the Sea of Galilee. St. Peter put our
Lord Himself to the test. "If it be Thou --" yet our Savior had
already said, "It is I." "If it be Thou, bid me come unto
Thee on the water." And our Lord said, "Come," and Peter
"walked on the water" (Matthew xiv. 28, 29). But this
"testing-faith" of Peter's soon failed him. "Little
faith" (verse 31) so often and so quickly becomes "doubt."
Remember that Christ did not reprove him for coming. Our Lord did not
say, "Wherefore didst thou come?" but "Wherefore didst
thou doubt?"
To put God to the test is, after all, not the best
method. He has given us so many promises contingent on believing prayer,
and has so often proved His power and His willingness to answer prayer,
that we ought, as a rule, to hesitate very much before we ask Him for
signs as well as for wonders!
But, someone may be thinking, does not the Lord God
Almighty Himself bid us to put Him to the test? Did He not say,
"Bring ye the whole tithe into the storehouse . . . and prove Me now
herewith, saith the Lord of Hosts, if I will not open unto you the
windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be
room enough to receive it"? (Malachi iii. 10).
Yes that is true: God does say, "Prove Me: test
Me." But it is really we ourselves who are thus tested. If the
windows of heaven are not opened when we pray, and this blessing of
fullness-to-overflowing is not bestowed upon us, it can only be because
we are not whole-tithers. When we are in very deed wholly yielded to God
-- when we have brought the whole tithe into the storehouse for God -- we
shall find such a blessing that we shall not need to put God to any test!
This is a thing we shall have to speak about when we come to the question
of unanswered prayer.
Meanwhile we want every Christian to ask, "Have I
ever fairly tested prayer?" How long is it since you last offered up
a definite prayer? People pray for "a blessing" upon an
address, or a meeting, or a mission; and some blessing is certain to
come, for others are also pleading with God about the matter. You ask for
relief from pain or healing of sickness: but Godless people, for whom no
one appears to be praying, often recover, and sometimes in a seemingly
miraculous way. And we may feel that we might have got better even if no
prayer had been offered on our behalf. It seems to me that so many people
cannot put their finger upon any really definite and conclusive answer to
prayer in their own experience. Most Christians do not give God a chance
to show His delight in granting His children's petitions; for their
requests are so vague and indefinite. If this is so, it is not surprising
that prayer is so often a mere form -- an almost mechanical repetition,
day by day, of certain phrases; a few minutes' "exercise"
morning and evening.
Then there is another point. Have you, when in prayer,
ever had the witness borne in upon you that your request was granted?
Those who know something of the private life of men of prayer are often
amazed at the complete assurance which comes over them at times that
their prayers are answered, long before the boon they seek is actually in
their possession. One prayer-warrior would say, "A peace came over
my soul. I was confident my request was granted me." He then just
thanked God for what he was quite sure God had done for him. And his
assurance would prove to be absolutely well founded.
Our Lord Himself always had this assurance, and we
should ever bear in mind that, although He was God, He lived His earthly
life as a perfect Man, depending upon the Holy Spirit of God.
When He stood before the opened tomb of Lazarus,
before He had actually called upon the dead to come forth, He said,
"Father, I thank Thee that Thou hast heard Me. And I know that Thou
hearest Me always" (John xi. 41, 42). Why, then, did He utter His
thanks? "Because of the people which stand by I said it, that they
may believe that Thou hast sent Me." If Christ is dwelling in our
hearts by faith: if the Holy Spirit is breathing into us our petitions,
and we are "praying in the Holy Ghost," ought we not to know
that the Father "hears" us? (Jude 20). And will not those who
stand by begin to recognize that we, too, are God-sent?
Men of prayer and women of prayer will agonize before
God for something which they know is according to His will, because of
some definite promise on the page of Scripture. They may pray for hours,
or even for days, when suddenly the Holy Spirit reveals to them in no
uncertain way that God has granted their request; and they are confident
that they need no longer send up any more petitions to God about the
matter. It is as if God said in clear tones: "Thy prayer is heard
and I have granted thee the desire of thy heart." This is not the
experience of only one man, but most men to whom prayer is the basis of
their life will bear witness to the same fact. Nor is it a solitary
experience in their lives: it occurs again and again.
Then prayer must give place to action. God taught
Moses this: "Wherefore criest thou unto Me? Speak unto the children
of Israel that they go forward" (Exodus xiv. 15).
We are not surprised to find that Dr. Goforth, a
much-used missionary in China, often has this assurance given him that
his petitions are granted. "I knew that God had answered. I received
definite assurance that He would open the way." For why should
anyone be surprised at this? The Lord Jesus said, "Ye are My
friends, if ye do the things I command you. No longer do I call you
servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth: but I have
called you friends" (John xv. 14, 15). Do you think it surprising,
then, if the Lord lets us, His "friends," know something of His
plans and purposes?
The question at once arises, does God mean this to be
the experience of only a few chosen saints, or does He wish all believers
to exercise a like faith, and to have a like assurance that their prayers
are answered?
We know that God is no respecter of persons, and
therefore we know that any true believer in Him may share His mind and
will. We are His friends if we do the things He commands us. One of those
things is "prayer." Our Savior begged His disciples to
"have faith in God" (the literal translation is "Have the
faith of God"). Then, He declares, you can say to a mountain,
"Be thou taken up and cast into the sea," and if you believe
and doubt not, it shall come to pass. Then He gives this promise:
"All things whatsoever ye pray and ask for, believe that ye have
received them [that is, in heaven], and ye shall have them [on
earth]" (Mark xi. 24). Now, this is exactly the experience we have
been talking about. This is just what real men of prayer do. Such things
naturally pass the comprehension of unbelievers. Such things are
perplexing to the half-believers. Our Lord, however, desires that men
should know that we are His disciples, sent as He was sent (John xvii. 18
and xx. 21). They will know this if we love one another (John xiii. 35).
But another proof is provided, and it is this: if we know and they see
that "God heareth us always" (John xi. 42).
Some of us at once recall to mind George Muller's
wonderful prayer-life. On one occasion, when crossing from Quebec to
Liverpool, he had prayed very definitely that a chair he had written to
New York for should arrive in time to catch the steamer, and he was quite
confident that God had granted his petition. About half an hour before
the tender was timed to take the passengers to the ship, the agents
informed him that no chair had arrived, and that it could not possibly
come in time for the steamer. Now, Mrs. Muller suffered much from
sea-sickness, and it was absolutely essential that she should have the
chair. Yet nothing would induce Mr. Muller to buy another one from a shop
near by. "We have made special prayer that our Heavenly Father would
be pleased to provide it for us, and we will trust Him to do so,"
was his reply; and he went on board absolutely sure that his trust was
not misplaced, and would not miscarry. Just before the tender left, a van
drove up, and on the top of the load it carried was Mr. Muller's chair.
It was hurried on board and placed into the hands of the very man who had
urged George Muller to buy another one! When he handed it to Mr. Muller,
the latter expressed no surprise, but quietly removed his hat and thanked
his Heavenly Father. To this man of God such an answer to prayer was not
wonderful, but natural. And do you not think that God allowed the chair
to be held back till the very last minute as a lesson to Mr. Muller's
friends-and to us? We should never have heard of that incident but for
that delay.
God does all He can to induce us to pray and to trust,
and yet how slow we are to do so! Oh, what we miss through lack of faith
and want of prayer! No one can have very real and deep communion with God
who does not know how to pray so as to get answers to prayer.
If one has any doubt as to God's willingness to be put
to the test, let him read a little book called Nor Scrip (Marshall,
Morgan and Scott, Ltd.). Miss Amy Wilson Carmichael tells us in its pages
how again and again she "proved God." One gets the impression
from the book that it was no accident that led her to do so. Surely God's
hand was in it? For instance, in order to rescue a Hindu child from a
life of "religious" shame, it was necessary to spend a hundred
rupees. Was she justified in doing so? She could help many girls for such
a sum: ought she to spend it on one? Miss Wilson Carmichael felt led to
pray that God would send her the round sum of a hundred rupees -- no
more, no less -- if it was His will that the money should be spent in
this way. The money came -- the exact amount -- and the sender of it
explained that she had sat down to write a check for a broken sum, but
had been impelled to make it just a hundred rupees.
That happened over fifteen years ago, and since that
time this same missionary has put God to the test over and over again,
and He has never failed her. This is what she says: "Never once in
fifteen years has a bill been left unpaid; never once has a man or woman
been told when we were in need of help; but never once have we lacked any
good thing. Once, as if to show what could be done if it were required,
25 pounds came by telegram! Sometimes a man would emerge from the
clamoring crowd at a railway station, and slip some indispensable gift of
money into the hand, and be lost in the crowd again before the giver could
be identified."
Is it wonderful? Wonderful! Why, what does St. John
say, speaking by the Spirit of God? "And this is the boldness which
we have towards Him, that if we ask anything, according to His will, He
heareth us; and if we know that He heareth us, whatsoever we ask, we know
that we have the petitions which we have asked of Him" (1 John v.14,
15). Have you and I such "boldness"? If not, why not?
To call it wonderful is to show our want of faith. It
is natural to God to answer prayer: normal, not extraordinary.
The fact is -- let us be quite honest and
straightforward about it -- the fact is so many of us do not believe God.
We may just as well be quite candid about it. If we love God we ought to
pray, because He wants us to pray, and commands us to pray. If we believe
God we shall pray because we cannot help doing so: we cannot get on
without it. Fellow-Christian, you believe in God, and you believe on Him
(John iii. 16), but have you advanced far enough in the Christian life to
believe Him; that is, to believe what He says and all He says? Does it
not sound blasphemous to ask such a thing of a Christian man? Yet how few
believers really believe God! -- God forgive us! Has it ever struck you
that we trust the word of our fellow-man more easily than we trust God's
word? And yet, when a man does "believe God," what miracles of
grace God works in and through him! No man ever lived who has been
revered and respected by so many peoples and tongues as that man of whom
we are told three times over in the New Testament that "He believed
God" (Romans iv. 3; Galatians iii. 6; James ii. 23). Yes,
"Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned unto him for
righteousness." And today, Christian and Jew and Moslem vie with
each other in honoring his name. We implore every believer on Christ
Jesus never to rest till he can say, "I believe God, and will act on
that belief" (Acts xxvii. 25).
But before we leave the question of testing God, we
should like to point out that sometimes God leads us on "to prove
Him." Sometimes God has put it into the heart of Miss Wilson
Carmichael to ask for things she saw no need for. Yet she felt impelled
by the Holy Spirit to ask. Not only were they granted her, but they also
proved an inestimable boon. Yes, God knows what things we have need of,
whether we want them or not, before we ask (Matthew vi. 8). Has not God
said, "I will in no wise fail thee"?
Oftentimes the temptation would come to Miss Wilson
Carmichael to let others know of some special need. But always the inner
assurance would come, as in the very voice of God, "I know, and that
is enough." And, of course, God was glorified. During the trying
days of the war, even the heathen used to say, "Their God feeds
them." "Is it not known all the country round," said a
worldly heathen, "that your God hears prayer?"
Oh, what glory to God was brought about by their
simple faith! Why do not we believe God? Why do we not take God at His
word? Do believers or unbelievers ever say of us, "We know your
prayers are answered"? Ye missionaries the wide world over, listen!
(Oh, that these words might reach every ear, and stir every heart!) It is
the yearning desire of God -- of our loving Savior Jesus Christ -- that
every one of us should have the same strong faith as that devoted lady
missionary we are speaking about.
Our loving Father does not wish any child of His to
have one moment's anxiety or one unsatisfied need. No matter how great
our need may be; no matter how numerous our requirements, if we only
"prove Him" in the manner He bids us, we shall never have room
enough to receive all the blessing He will give (Malachi iii. 10).
Oh, what peace we often
forfeit !
Oh, what needless pain we
bear!
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer;
or all because, when we do "carry it," we do
not believe God's word. Why is it we find it so hard to trust Him? Has He
ever failed us? Has He not said over and over and over again that He will
grant all petitions offered out of a pure heart, "in His name"?
"Ask of Me"; "Pray ye"; "Prove Me"; "Try
Me." The Bible is full of answers to prayer -- wonderful answers,
miraculous answers; and yet somehow our faith fails us, and we dishonor
God by distrusting Him!
If our faith were but more
simple
We should take Him at His
word,
And our lives would be all
sunshine
In the bounties of our Lord.
But our eye must be "single" if our faith is
to be simple and our "whole body full of light" (Matthew vi.
22). Christ must be the sole Master. We cannot expect to be free from
anxiety if we are trying to serve God and Mammon (Matthew vi. 24, 25).
Again we are led back to the Victorious Life! When we indeed present our
bodies "a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God" (Romans
xii. 1); when we present our members "as servants to righteousness
and sanctification" (Romans vi. 19); then He presents Himself to us
and fills us with all the fullness of God (Ephesians iii. 19).
Let us ever bear in mind that real faith not only
believes that God can, but that He does answer prayer. We may be slothful
in prayer, but "the Lord is not slack concerning His promise"
(2nd Peter iii. 9). Is not that a striking expression?
Perhaps the most extraordinary testing of God which
that Dohnavur missionary tells us of is the following. The question arose
of purchasing a rest-house in the hills near by. Was it the right thing
to do? Only God could decide. Much prayer was made. Eventually the
petition was offered up that if it was God's will that the house should
be purchased, the exact sum of 100 pounds should be received. That amount
came at once. Yet they still hesitated. Two months later they asked God
to give them again the same sign of His approval of the purchase. That
same day another check for 100 pounds came. Even now they scarcely liked
to proceed in the matter. In a few days' time, how-ever, another round
sum of 100 pounds was received, earmarked for the purchase of such a
house. Does it not flood our hearts with joy to remember that our
gracious Savior is so kind? It is St. Luke the physician who tells us
that God is kind (Luke vi. 35). Love is always "kind" (1st
Corinthians xiii. 4); and God is Love. Think over it when you pray. Our
Lord is "kind." It will help us in our intercessions. He bears
so patiently with us when our faith would falter. "How precious is
Thy loving kindness, O God" (Psalm xxxvi. 7); "Thy loving
kindness is better than life" (Psalm lxiii. 3).
The danger is that we read of such simple faith in
prayer, and say, "How wonderful!" and forget that God desires
every one of us to have such faith and such prayer. God has no favorites!
He wants me to pray; He wants you to pray. He allows such things to
happen as we have described above, and suffers them to come to our
knowledge, not to surprise us, but to stimulate us. One sometimes wishes
that Christian people would forget all the man-made rules with which we
have hedged prayer about! Let us be simple. Let us be natural. Take God
at His word. Let us remember that "the kindness of God our Savior,
and His love toward man," has appeared (Titus iii. 4). God sometimes
leads men into the prayer-life. Sometimes, however, God has to drive us
into such a life.
As some of us look back over our comparatively
prayerless life, what a thrill of wonder and of joy comes over us as we
think of the kindness and "patience of Christ" (2nd
Thessalonians iii. 5). Where should we have been without that? We fail
Him, but, blessed be His name, He has never failed us, and He never will
do so. We doubt Him, we mistrust His love and His providence and His
guidance; we "faint because of the way"; we murmur because of
the way; yet all the time He is there blessing us, and waiting to pour
out upon us a blessing so great that there shall not be room to receive
it.
The promise of Christ still holds good:
"Whatsoever ye shall ask in My name, that will I do, that the Father
may be glorified in the Son" (John xiv. 14).
Prayer changes things -- and yet how blind
And slow we are to taste and
see
The blessedness that comes to
those
Who trust in Thee.
But henceforth we will just
believe God.
|
CHAPTER 5:
WHAT IS PRAYER?
Mister MOODY was once addressing a crowded meeting of
children in Edinburgh. In order to get their attention he began with a
question: "What is prayer?" -- looking for no reply, and
expecting to give the answer himself.
To his amazement scores of little hands shot up all
over the hall. He asked one lad to reply; and the answer came at once,
clear and correct, "Prayer is an offering up of our desires unto God
for things agreeable to His will, in the name of Christ, with confession
of our sins and thankful, acknowledgment of His mercies." Mr.
Moody's delighted comment was, "Thank God, my boy, that you were
born in Scotland." But that was half a century ago. What sort of
answer would he get today? How many English children could give a definition
of prayer? Think for a moment and decide what answer you yourself would
give.
What do we mean by prayer? I believe the vast majority
of Christians would say, "Prayer is asking things from God."
But surely prayer is much more than merely "getting God to run our
errands for us," as someone puts it. It is a higher thing than the
beggar knocking at the rich man's door.
The word "prayer" really means "a wish
directed towards," that is, towards God. All that true prayer seeks
is God Himself, for with Him we get all we need. Prayer is simply
"the turning of the soul to God." David describes it as the
lifting up of the living soul to the living God. "Unto Thee, O Lord,
do I lift up my soul" (Psalms xxv. 1). What a beautiful description
of prayer that is! When we desire the Lord Jesus to behold our souls, we
also desire that the beauty of holiness may be upon us.
When we lift up our souls to God in prayer it gives
God an opportunity to do what He will in us and with us. It is putting
ourselves at God's disposal. God is always on our side. When man prays,
it is God's opportunity. The poet says:
Prayer is the soul's sincere
desire,
Uttered or unexpressed,
The motion of a hidden fire
That trembles in the breast.
"Prayer," says an old Jewish mystic,
"is the moment when heaven and earth kiss each other."
Prayer, then, is certainly not persuading God to do
what we want God to do. It is not bending the will of a reluctant God to
our will. It does not change His purpose, although it may release His
power. "We must not conceive of prayer as overcoming God's
reluctance," says Archbishop Trench, "but as laying hold of His
highest willingness."
For God always purposes our greatest good. Even the
prayer offered in ignorance and blindness cannot swerve Him from that, although,
when we persistently pray for some harmful thing, our willfulness may
bring it about, and we suffer accordingly. "He gave them their
request," says the Psalmist, "but sent leanness into their
soul" (Psalms cvi. 15). They brought this "leanness" upon
themselves. They were "cursed with the burden of a granted
prayer."
Prayer, in the minds of some people, is only for
emergencies! Danger threatens, sickness comes, things are lacking,
difficulties arise -- then they pray. Like the infidel down a coal mine:
when the roof began to fall he began to pray. An old Christian standing
by quietly remarked, "Aye, there's nowt like cobs of coal to make a
man pray."
Prayer is, however, much more than merely asking God
for something, although that is a very valuable part of prayer if only
because it reminds us of our utter dependence upon God. It is also
communion with God -- intercourse with God -- talking with (not only to)
God. We get to know people by talking with them. We get to know God in
like manner. The highest result of prayer is not deliverance from evil,
or the securing of some coveted thing, but knowledge of God. "And
this is life eternal, that they should know Thee, the only true God"
(John xvii. 3). Yes, prayer discovers more of God, and that is the soul's
greatest discovery. Men still cry out, "O, that I knew where I might
find Him, that I might come even to His seat" (Job xxiii. 3).
The kneeling Christian always "finds" Him,
and is found of Him. The heavenly vision of the Lord Jesus blinded the
eyes of Saul of Tarsus on his downward course, but he tells us, later on,
that when he was praying in the temple at Jerusalem he fell into a trance
and saw Jesus. "I . . . saw him" (Acts xxii. 18). Then it was
that Christ gave him his great commission to go to the Gentiles. Vision
is always a precursor of vocation and venture. It was so with Isaiah.
"I saw the Lord high and lifted up, and his train filled the
temple" (Isaiah vi. 1). The prophet was evidently in the sanctuary
praying when this happened. This vision also was a prelude to a call to
service, "Go. . . ." Now, we cannot get a vision of God unless
we pray. And where there is no vision the soul perishes.
A vision of God! Brother Lawrence once said,
"Prayer is nothing else than a sense of God's presence" -- and
that is just the practice of the presence of God.
A friend of Horace Bushnell was present when that man
of God prayed. There came over him a wonderful sense of God's nearness.
He says: "When Horace Bushnell buried his face in his hands and
prayed, I was afraid to stretch out my hand in the darkness, lest I
should touch God." Was the Psalmist of old conscious of such a
thought when he cried, "My soul, wait thou only upon God"?
(Psalms lxii. 5.) I believe that much of our failure in prayer is due to
the fact that we have not looked into this question, "What is
prayer?" It is good to be conscious that we are always in the
presence of God. It is better to gaze upon Him in adoration. But it is
best of all to commune with Him as a Friend -- and that is prayer.
Real prayer at its highest and best reveals a soul
athirst for God -- just for God alone. Real prayer comes from the lips of
those whose affection is set on things above. What a man of prayer
Zinzendorf was. Why? He sought the Giver rather than His gifts. He said:
"I have one passion: it is He, He alone." Even the Mohammedan
seems to have got hold of this thought. He says that there are three
degrees in prayer. The lowest is that spoken only by the lips. The next
is when, by a resolute effort, we succeed in fixing our thoughts on
Divine things. The third is when the soul finds it hard to turn away from
God. Of course, we know that God bids us "ask" of Him. We all
obey Him so far; and we may rest well assured that prayer both pleases
God and supplies all our need. But he would be a strange child who only
sought his father's presence when he desired some gift from him! And do
we not all yearn to rise to a higher level of prayer than mere petition?
How is it to be done?
It seems to me that only two steps are necessary -- or
shall we say two thoughts? There must be, first of all, a realization of
God's glory, and then of God's grace.
We sometimes sing:
Grace and glory flow from
Thee;
Shower, O shower them, Lord,
on me.
Nor is such a desire fanciful, although some may ask
what God's glory has to do with prayer.
But ought we not to remind ourselves Who He is to Whom
we pray? There is logic in the couplet:
Thou art coming to a King;
Large petitions with thee
bring.
Do you think that any one of us spends enough time in
pondering over, yes, and marveling over, God's exceeding great glory? And
do you suppose that any one of us has grasped the full meaning of the
word "grace"? Are not our prayers so often ineffective and
powerless -- and sometimes even prayerless -- because we rush
unthinkingly and unpreparedly into God's presence, without realizing the
majesty and glory of the God Whom we are approaching, and without
reflecting upon the exceeding great riches of His glory in Christ Jesus,
which we hope to draw upon? We must "think magnificently of
God."
May we then suggest that before we lay our petitions
before God we first dwell in meditation upon His glory and then upon His
grace -- for He offers us both. We must lift up the soul to God. Let us
place ourselves, as it were, in the presence of God and direct our prayer
to the King of kings, and Lord of lords, Who only hath immortality,
dwelling in light unapproachable . . . to Whom be honor and power eternal
(1st Timothy vi. 16). Let us then give Him adoration and praise because
of His exceeding great glory. Consecration is not enough. There must be
adoration.
"Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of Hosts,"
cry the seraphim; "the whole earth is full of his glory"
(Isaiah vi. 3). "Glory to God in the highest," cries the
"whole multitude of the heavenly host" (Luke ii. 14). Yet some
of us try to commune with God without stopping to "put off our shoes
from off our feet" (Exodus iii. 5).
Lips cry "God be
merciful"
That ne'er cry "God be
praised."
O come let us adore Him!
And we may approach His glory with boldness. Did not
our Lord pray that His disciples might behold His glory? (John xvii. 24).
Why? And why is "the whole earth full of His glory"? The
telescope reveals His infinite glory. The microscope reveals His
uttermost glory. Even the unaided eye sees surpassing glory in landscape,
sunshine, sea and sky. What does it all mean? These things are but a
partial revelation of God's glory. It was not a desire for self-display
that led our Lord to pray, "Father, glorify Thy Son" . . .
"O Father, glorify Thou Me" (John xvii. 1, 3). Our dear Lord
wants us to realize His infinite trustworthiness and unlimited power, so
that we can approach Him in simple faith and trust.
In heralding the coming of Christ the prophet declared
that "glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see
it together" (Isaiah xl. 5). Now we must get a glimpse of that glory
before we can pray aright. So our Lord said, "When ye pray, say Our
Father, Who art in heaven [the realm of glory], hallowed be Thy
name." There is nothing like a glimpse of glory to banish fear and
doubt. Before we offer up our petitions may it not help us to offer up
our adoration in the words of praise used by some of the saints of old?
Some devout souls may not need such help. We are told that Francis of
Assisi would frequently spend an hour or two in prayer on the top of
Mount Averno, whilst the only word which escaped his lips would be
"God" repeated at intervals. He began with adoration -- and
often stopped there!
But most of us need some help to realize the glory of
the invisible God before we can adequately praise and adore Him. Old
William Law said, "When you begin to pray, use such expressions of
the attributes of God as will make you sensible of His greatness and
power."
This point is of such tremendous importance that we venture
to remind our readers of helpful words. Some of us begin every day with a
glance heavenwards whilst saying, "Glory be to the Father, and to
the Son, and to the Holy Ghost." The prayer, "O Lord God most
holy, O Lord most mighty, O holy and merciful Savior!" is often
enough to bring a solemn awe and a spirit of holy adoration upon the
soul. The Gloria in Excelsis of the Communion Service is most uplifting:
"Glory be to God on high and in earth peace. . . . We praise Thee;
we bless Thee; we worship Thee; we glorify Thee; we give thanks to Thee
for Thy great glory, O Lord God, heavenly King, God the Father
Almighty." Which of us can from the heart utter praise like that and
remain unmoved, unconscious of the very presence and wondrous majesty of
the Lord God Almighty? A verse of a hymn may serve the same purpose.
My God, how wonderful Thou
art!
Thy majesty how bright.
How beautiful Thy mercy-seat
In depths of burning light!
How wonderful, how beautiful
The sight of Thee must be;
Thine endless wisdom, boundless
power
And awful purity.
This carries us into the very heavenlies, as also do
the words:
Holy, holy, holy, Lord God
Almighty,
All Thy works shall praise Thy
name
In earth, and sky, and sea.
We need to cry out, and to cry often, "My soul
doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Savior"
(Luke i. 46, 47). Can we catch the spirit of the Psalmist and sing,
"Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His
holy name"? (Psalms ciii. 1.) "Bless the Lord, O my soul. O Lord
my God, Thou art very great; Thou are clothed with honor and
majesty" (Psalms civ. 1). When shall we learn that "in His
temple everything saith Glory!" (Psalms xxix. 9, R.V.) Let us, too,
cry, Glory!
Such worship of God, such adoration and praise and thanksgiving,
not only put us into the spirit of prayer, but in some mysterious way
they help God to work on our behalf. Do you remember those wonderful
words, "Whoso, offereth the sacrifice of thanksgiving, glorifyeth Me
and prepareth a way that I may show him the salvation of God"?,
(Psalms l. 23, R.V., margin) Praise and thanksgiving not only open the
gates of heaven for me to approach God, but also "prepare a
way" for God to bless me. St. Paul cries, "Rejoice
evermore!" before he says, "Pray without ceasing." So then
our praise, as well as our prayers, is to be without ceasing.
At the raising of Lazarus our Lord's prayer had as its
first utterance a note of thanksgiving. "Father, I thank Thee that
Thou heardest Me" (John xi. 41). He said it for those around to
hear. Yes, and for us to hear.
You may perhaps be wondering why it is that we should
specially give thanks to God for His great glory when we kneel in prayer;
and why we should spend any time in thinking of and gazing upon that
glory. But is He not the King of Glory? All He is and all He does is
glory. His holiness is "glorious" (Exodus xv. 11). His name is
glorious (Deuteronomy xxviii. 58). His work is "glorious"
(Psalms cxi. 3). His power is glorious (Colossians i. 11). His voice is
glorious (Isaiah xxx. 30).
All things bright and
beautiful
All creatures great and small.
All things wise and wonderful,
The Lord God made them all.
for His glory.
"For of him and through him and unto him are all
things; to whom be glory for ever" (Romans xi. 36). And this is the
God who bids us come to Him in prayer. This God is our God, and He has
"gifts for men" (Psalms lxviii. 18). God says that everyone
that is called by His name has been created for His glory (Isaiah xliii. 7).
His Church is to be a "glorious" Church -- holy and without
blemish (Ephesians v. 27). Have you ever fully realized that the Lord
Jesus desires to share with us the glory we see in Him? This is His great
gift to you and me, His redeemed ones. Believe me, the more we have of
God's glory, the less shall we seek His gifts. Not only in that day
"when he shall come to be glorified in his saints" (2nd
Thessalonians i. 10) is there glory for us, but here and now -- today. He
wishes us to be partakers of His glory. Did not our Lord Himself say so?
"The glory which thou has given me, I have given unto them," He
declares (John xvii. 22). What is God's command? "Arise, shine, for
thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee."
Nay, more than this: "His glory shall be seen upon thee," says
the inspired prophet (Isaiah Ix. 1, 2).
God would have people say of us as St. Peter said of
the disciples of old: "The Spirit of Glory and the Spirit of God
resteth upon you" (1st Peter iv. 14). Would not that be an answer to
most of our prayers? Could we ask for anything better? How can we get
this glory? How are we to reflect it? Only as the result of prayer. It is
when we pray, that the Holy Spirit takes of the things of Christ and
reveals them unto us (John xvi. 15).
It was when Moses prayed, "Show me, I pray thee,
thy glory," that he not only saw somewhat of it, but shared
something of that glory, and his own face shone with the light of it
(Exodus xxxiii. 18, xxxiv. 29). And when we, too, gaze upon the "glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ" (2nd Corinthians iv. 6), we
shall see not only a glimpse of that glory, but we shall gain something
of it ourselves.
Now, that is prayer, and the highest result of prayer.
Nor is there any other way of securing that glory, that God may be
glorified in us (Isaiah Ix. 21).
Let us often meditate upon Christ's glory -- gaze upon
it and so reflect it and receive it. This is what happened to our Lord's
first disciples. They said in awed tones, "We beheld his
glory!" Yes, but what followed? A few plain, unlettered, obscure
fishermen companied with Christ a little while, seeing His glory; and lo!
they themselves caught something of that glory. And then others marveled
and "took knowledge of them that they had been with Jesus" (Acts
iv. 13). And when we can declare, with St. John, "Yea, and our
fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ" (1st
John i. 3), people will say the same of us: "They have been with
Jesus!"
As we lift up our soul in prayer to the living God, we
gain the beauty of holiness as surely as a flower becomes beautiful by
living in the sunlight. Was not our Lord Himself transfigured when He
prayed? And the "very fashion" of our countenance will change,
and we shall have our Mount of Transfiguration when prayer has its
rightful place in our lives. And men will see in our faces "the
outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace." Our
value to God and to man is in exact proportion to the extent in which we
reveal the glory of God to others.
We have dwelt so much upon the glory of Him to Whom we
pray, that we must not now speak of His grace.
What is prayer? It is a sign of spiritual life. I
should as soon expect life in a dead man as spiritual life in a
prayerless soul! Our spirituality and our fruitfulness are always in
proportion to the reality of our prayers. If, then, we have at all
wandered away from home in the matter of prayer, let us today resolve,
"I will arise and go unto my Father, and say unto Him, Father
--."
At this point I laid down my pen, and on the page of
the first paper I picked up were these words: "The secret of failure
is that we see men rather than God. Romanism trembled when Martin Luther
saw God. The 'great awakening' sprang into being when Jonathan Edwards
saw God. The world became the parish of one man when John Wesley saw God.
Multitudes were saved when Whitfield saw God. Thousands of orphans were
fed when George Muller saw God. And He is 'the same yesterday, today, and
forever.' "
Is it not time that we got a new vision of God -- of
God in all His glory? Who can say what will happen when the Church sees
God? But let us not wait for others. Let us, each one for himself, with
unveiled face and unsullied heart, get this vision of the glory of the
Lord.
"Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall
see God" (Matthew v. 8). No missioner whom it has been my joy to
meet ever impressed me quite as much as Dr. Wilbur Chapman. He wrote to a
friend: "I have learned some great lessons concerning prayer. At one
of our missions in England the audiences were exceedingly small. But I
received a note saying that an American missionary . . . was going to
pray God's blessing down upon our work. He was known as 'Praying Hyde.'
Almost instantly the tide turned. The hall became packed, and at my first
invitation fifty men accepted Christ as their Savior. As we were leaving
I said, 'Mr. Hyde, I want you to pray for me.' He came to my room, turned
the key in the door, and dropped on his knees, and waited five minutes
without a single syllable coming from his lips. I could hear my own heart
thumping and his beating. I felt the hot tears running down my face. I
knew I was with God. Then, with upturned face, down which the tears were
streaming, he said 'O God!' Then for five minutes at least he was still
again; and then, when he knew that he was talking with God . . . there
came up from the depth of his heart such petitions for men as I had never
heard before. I rose from my knees to know what real prayer was. We
believe that prayer is mighty, and we believe it as we never did
before."
Dr. Chapman used to say, "It was a season of
prayer with John Hyde that made me realize what real prayer was. I owe to
him more than I owe to any man for showing me what a prayer-life is, and
what a real consecrated life is. . . . Jesus Christ became a new Ideal to
me, and I had a glimpse of His prayer-life; and I had a longing which has
remained to this day to be a real praying man." And God the Holy
Spirit can so teach us.
Oh, ye who sigh and languish
And mourn your lack of power,
Hear ye this gentle whisper:
"Could ye not watch one
hour?"
For fruitfulness and blessing
There is no royal road;
The power for holy service
Is intercourse with God.
|
CHAPTER 6:
HOW SHALL I PRAY?
How shall I pray? Could there be a more important
question for a Christian man to ask? How shall I approach the King of
Glory?
When we read Christ's promises regarding prayer we are
apt to think that He puts far too great a power into our hands -- unless,
indeed, we hastily conclude that it is impossible for Him to act as He
promises. He says, ask "anything,"
"whatsoever," "what ye will," and
it shall be done.
But then He puts in a qualifying phrase. He says that
we are to ask in His name. That is the condition, and the only one, although,
as we shall remind ourselves later on, it is sometimes couched in
different words.
If, therefore, we ask and do not receive, it can only
be that we are not fulfilling this condition. If then, we are true
disciples of His -- if we are sincere -- we shall take pains (infinite
pains, if need be) to discover just what it means to ask in His name; and
we shall not rest content until we have fulfilled that condition. Let us
read the promise again to be quite sure about it. "Whatsoever ye
shall ask in my name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in
the Son. If ye shall ask anything in my name, I will do it" (John
xiv. 13, 14).
This was something quite new, for our Lord said so.
"Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my name," but now, "ask
and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full" (John xvi. 24).
Five times over our Lord repeats this simple
condition, "In my name" (John xiv. 13, 14; xv. 16; xvi. 23, 24,
26). Evidently something very important is here implied. It is more than
a condition -- it is also a promise, an encouragement, for our Lord's
biddings are always His enablings. What, then, does it mean to ask in His
name? We must know this at all costs, for it is the secret of all power
in prayer. And it is possible to make a wrong use of those words. Our
Lord said, "Many shall come in my name, saying, 'I am Christ,' and
shall deceive many" (Matthew xxiv. 5). He might well have said,
"And many shall think they are praying to the Father in my name,
whilst deceiving themselves."
Does it mean just adding the words, "and all this
we ask in the name of Jesus Christ," at the end of our prayers?
Many people apparently think that it does. But have
you never heard -- or offered -- prayers full of self-will and
selfishness which ended up in that way, "for Christ's sake.
Amen"?
God could not answer the prayers St. James refers to
in his epistle just because those who offered them added, "we ask
these things in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ." Those Christians
were asking "amiss" (James iv. 3). A wrong prayer cannot be
made right by the addition of some mystic phrase!
And a right prayer does not fail if some such words
are omitted. No! It is more than a question of words. Our Lord is
thinking about faith and facts more than about some formula. The chief
object of prayer is to glorify the Lord Jesus. We are to ask in Christ's
name "that the Father may be glorified in the Son" (John xiv.
13). Listen! We are not to seek wealth or health, prosperity or success,
ease or comfort, spirituality or fruitfulness in service simply for our
own enjoyment or advancement or popularity, but only for Christ's sake --
for His glory. Let us take three steps to a right understanding of those
important words, "in my name."
(1) There is a sense in which some things are done
only "for Christ's sake" -- because of His atoning death. Those
who do not believe in the atoning death of Christ cannot pray "in
His name." They may use the words, but without effect. For we are
"justified by His blood" (Romans v. 9), and "we have redemption
through His blood, even the forgiveness of sins" (Ephesians i. 7;
Colossians i. 14). In these days when Unitarianism under its guileful
name of Modernism has invaded all sects, it is most important to remember
the place and work of the shed blood of Christ, or "prayer" --
so-called -- becomes a delusion and a snare.
Let us illustrate this point by an experience which
happened quite early in Mr. Moody's ministry. The wife of an infidel
judge -- a man of great intellectual gifts -- begged Mr. Moody to speak
to her husband. Moody, however, hesitated at arguing with such a man, and
told him so quite frankly. "But," he added, "if ever you
are converted will you promise to let me know?" The judge laughed
cynically, and replied, "Oh, yes, I'll let you know quick enough if
I am ever converted!" Moody went his way, relying upon prayer. That
judge was converted, and within a year. He kept his promise and told
Moody just how it came about. "I began to grow very uneasy and
miserable one night when my wife was at a prayer-meeting. I went to bed
before she came home. I could not sleep all that night. Getting up early
the next morning, I told my wife I should not need any breakfast, and
went off to my office. Telling the clerks they could take a holiday, I
shut myself up in my private room. But I became more and more wretched.
Finally, I fell on my knees and asked God to forgive me my sins, but I
would not say 'for Jesus' sake,' for I was Unitarian, and I did not
believe in the atonement. In an agony of mind I kept praying, 'O God,
forgive me my sins,' but no answer came. At last, in desperation, I
cried, 'O God, for Christ's sake forgive my sins.' Then I found peace at
once."
That judge had no access to the presence of God until
he sought it in the name of Jesus Christ. When he came in Christ's name
he was at once heard and forgiven. Yes, to pray "in the name"
of the Lord Jesus is to ask for things which the blood of Christ has
secured -- "purchased" -- for us. We have "boldness to
enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus" (Hebrews x. 19). There
is entrance by no other way.
But this is not all that those words "In my
Name" mean.
(2) The most familiar illustration of coming "in
the name" of Christ is that of drawing money from a bank by means of
a check. I can draw from my bank account only up to the amount of my
deposit there. In my own name, I can go no farther. In the Bank of
England I have no money whatsoever, and can therefore draw nothing
therefrom. But suppose a very wealthy man who has a big account there
gives me a blank check bearing his signature, and bids me fill it in to
any amount I choose. He is my friend. What shall I do? Shall I just
satisfy my present need, or shall I draw as much as I dare? I shall
certainly do nothing to offend my friend, or to lower myself in his
esteem.
Well, we are told by some that heaven is our bank. God
is the Great Banker, for "every good gift and every perfect gift is
from above, and cometh down from the Father" (James i. 17). We need
a "check" wherewith to "draw" upon this boundless
store. The Lord Jesus gives us a blank check in prayer. "Fill it
in," says He, "to any amount; ask 'anything,' 'what ye will,'
and you shall have it. Present your check in My name, and your request
will be honored." Let me put this in the words of a well-known
evangelist of today. "That is what happens when I go to the bank of
heaven-when I go to God in prayer. I have nothing deposited there; I have
no credit there; and if I go in my own name I will get absolutely
nothing. But Jesus Christ has unlimited credit in heaven, and He has
granted me the privilege of going with His name on my checks; and when I
thus go my prayers will be honored to any extent. To pray, then, in the
name of Christ is to pray, not on the ground of my credit, but His."
This is all very delightful, and, in a sense, very
true.
If the check were drawn on a Government account, or
upon some wealthy corporation, one might be tempted to get all one could.
But remember we are coming to a loving Father to Whom we owe all, and Whom
we love with all our heart, and to Whom we may come repeatedly. In
cashing our checks at the bank of heaven we desire chiefly His honor and
His glory. We wish to do only that which is pleasing in His sight. To
cash some of our "checks" -- to answer some of our prayers --
would only bring dishonor to His name, and discredit and discomfort to
us. True, His resources are unlimited; but His honor is assailable.
But experience makes argument unnecessary! Dear
reader, have we not -- all of us -- often tried this method only to fail?
How many of us dare say we have never come away from
the bank of heaven without getting what we asked for, although we have
apparently asked "in Christ's name"? Wherein do we fail? Is it
because we do not seek to learn God's will for us? We must not try to
exceed His will.
May I give a personal experience of my own which has
never been told in public, and which is probably quite unique? It
happened over thirty years ago, and now I see why. It makes such a
splendid illustration of what we are now trying to learn about prayer.
A well-to-do friend, and an exceedingly busy one,
wished to give me one pound towards a certain object. He invited me to
his office, and hastily wrote out a check for the amount. He folded the
check and handed it to me, saying, "I will not cross it. Will you
kindly cash it at the bank?" On arriving at the bank I glanced at my
name on the check without troubling to verify the amount, endorsed it,
and handed it to a clerk. "This is rather a big sum to cash over the
counter," he said, eyeing me narrowly. "Yes, I replied
laughingly, "one pound!" "No," said the clerk:
"this is made out for 'one thousand pounds!' "
And so it was! My friend was, no doubt, accustomed to
writing big checks; and he had actually written "one thousand"
instead of "one" pound. Now, what was my position legally? The
check was truly in his name. The signature was all right. My endorsement
was all right. Could I not demand the 1,000 pounds, provided there was
sufficient in the account? The check was written deliberately, if
hurriedly, and freely to me -- why should I not take the gift? Why not?
But I was dealing with a friend -- a generous friend
to whom I owed many deeds of loving kindness. He had revealed his mind to
me. I knew his wishes and desires.
He meant to give me one pound, and no more. I knew his
intention, his "mind," and at once took back the
all-too-generous check, and in due time I received just one pound,
according to his will. Had that donor given me a blank check the result would
have been exactly the same. He would have expected me to write in one
pound, and my honor would have been at stake in my doing so. Need we draw
the lesson? God has His will for each one of us, and unless we seek to
know that will we are likely to ask for "a thousand," when He
knows that "one" will be best for us. In our prayers we are
coming to a Friend -- a loving Father. We owe everything to Him. He bids
us come to Him whenever we like for all we need. His resources are
infinite.
But He bids us to remember that we should ask only for
those things that are according to His will -- only for that which will
bring glory to His name. John says, "If we ask anything according to
His will, He heareth us" (1st John v. 14). So then our Friend gives
us a blank check, and leaves us to fill in "anything"; but He
knows that if we truly love Him we shall never put down -- never ask for
-- things He is not willing to give us, because they would be harmful to
us.
Perhaps with most of us the fault lies in the other direction.
God gives us a blank check and says, Ask for a pound -- and we ask for a
shilling! Would not my friend have been insulted had I treated him thus?
Do we ask enough? Do we dare to ask "according to His riches in
glory"?
The point we are dwelling upon, however, is this -- we
cannot be sure that we are praying "in His name" unless we
learn His will for us.
(3) But even now we have not exhausted the meaning of
those words, "In my Name." We all know what it is to ask for a
thing "in the name" of another. But we are very careful not to
allow anyone to use our name who is not to be trusted, or he might abuse
our trust and discredit our name. Gehazi, the trusted servant,
dishonestly used Elisha's name when he ran after Naaman. In Elisha's name
he secured riches, but also inherited a curse for his wickedness.
A trusted clerk often uses his employer's name and
handles great sums of money as if they were his own. But this he does
only so long as he is thought to be worthy of such confidence in him. And
he uses the money for his master, and not for himself. All our money
belongs to our Master, Christ Jesus. We can go to God for supplies in His
name if we use all we get for His glory.
When I go to cash a check payable to me, the banker is
quite satisfied if the signature of his client is genuine and that I am
the person authorized to receive the money. He does not ask for
references to my character. He has no right whatever to enquire whether I
am worthy to receive the money or to be trusted to use it aright. It is
not so with the Bank of Heaven. Now, this is a point of greatest
importance. Do not hurry over what is now to be said.
When I go to heaven's bank in the name of the Lord
Jesus, with a check drawn upon the unsearchable riches of Christ, God
demands that I shall be a worthy recipient. Not "worthy" in the
sense that I can merit or deserve anything from a holy God -- but worthy
in the sense that I am seeking the gift not for my own glory or
self-interest, but only for the glory of God.
Otherwise I may pray and not get. "Ye ask and
receive not, because ye ask amiss that ye may spend it in your
pleasures" (James iv. 3, R.V.).
The great Heavenly Banker will not cash checks for us
if our motives are not right. Is not this why so many fail in prayer?
Christ's name is the revelation of His character.
To pray "in His name" is to pray in His
character, as His representative sent by Him: it is to pray by His Spirit
and according to His will; to have His approval in our asking, to seek
what He seeks, to ask help to do what He Himself would wish to be done,
and to desire to do it not for our own glorification, but for His glory
alone. To pray "in His name" we must have identity of interests
and purpose. Self and its aims and desires must be entirely controlled by
God's Holy Spirit, so that our wills are in complete harmony with
Christ's will.
We must reach the attitude of St. Augustine when he,
cried, "O Lord, grant that I may do Thy will as if it were my will,
so that Thou mayest do my will as if it were Thy will."
Child of God, does this seem to make prayer "in
His name" quite beyond us? That was not our Lord's intention. He is
not mocking us! Speaking of the Holy Spirit our Lord used these words:
"The Comforter . . . Whom the Father will send in my name"
(John xiv. 26). Now, our Savior wants us to be so controlled by the Holy
Spirit that we may act in Christ's name. "As many as are led by the
Spirit of God, they are the sons of God" (Romans viii. 14). And only
sons can say, "Our Father."
Our Lord said of Saul of Tarsus: "He is a chosen
vessel unto Me to bear My name before the Gentiles and kings, and the
children of Israel" (Acts ix. 15). Not to them, but before them. So
St. Paul says: "It pleased God to reveal his Son in me." We
cannot pray in Christ's name unless we bear that name before people. And
this is only possible so long as we "abide in" Him and His
words abide in us. So we come to this -- unless the heart is right the
prayer must be wrong.
Christ said, "If ye abide in Me, and My words
abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto
you" (John xv. 7).
Those three promises are really identical -- they
express the same thought in different words. Look at them --
Ask anything in my name, I will do it (John xiv. 13,
14).
Ask what ye will (if ye abide in me and my words abide
in you), and it shall be done (John xv. 7).
Ask anything, according to his will, we have the
petitions (1st John v. 14).
And we could sum them all up in the words of St. John,
"'Whatsoever we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his
commandments and do the things which are pleasing in his sight" (1st
John iii. 22). When we do what He bids, He does what we ask! Listen to
God and God will listen to you. Thus our Lord gives us "power of
attorney" over His kingdom, the kingdom of heaven, if only we
fulfill the condition of abiding in Him.
Oh, what a wonder is this! How eagerly and earnestly
we should seek to know His "mind," His wish, His will! -- How
amazing it is that any one of us should by our own self-seeking miss such
unsearchable riches! We know that God's will is the best for us. We know
that He longs to bless us and make us a blessing. We know that to follow
our own inclination is absolutely certain to harm us and to hurt us and
those whom we love. We know that to turn away from His will for us is to
court disaster. O child of God, why do we not trust Him fully and wholly?
Here we are, then, once again brought face to face with a life of
holiness. We see with the utmost clearness that our Savior's call to prayer
is simply a clarion call to holiness. "Be ye holy!" for without
holiness no man can see God, and prayer cannot be efficacious.
When we confess that we "never get answers to our
prayers," we are condemning not God, or His promises, or the power
of prayer, but ourselves. There is no greater test of spirituality than
prayer. The man who tries to pray quickly discovers just where he stands
in God's sight.
Unless we are living the Victorious Life we cannot
truly pray "in the name" of Christ, and our prayer-life must of
necessity be feeble, fitful and oft-times unfruitful.
And "in His name" must be "according to
His will." But can we know His will? Assuredly we can. St. Paul not
only says, "Let this mind be in you which was in Christ Jesus . .
." (Philippians ii. 5); he also boldly declares, "We have the
mind of Christ" (1st Corinthians ii. 16). How, then, can we get to
know God's will?
We shall remember that "the secret of the Lord is
with them that fear him" (Psalms xxv. 14).
In the first place, we must not expect God to reveal
His will to us unless we desire to know that will and intend to do that
will. Knowledge of God's will and the performance of that will go
together. We are apt to desire to know God's will so that we may decide
whether we will obey or not. Such an attitude is disastrous. "If any
man willeth to do His will, he shall know of the teaching" (John
vii. 17).
God's will is revealed in His Word in Holy Scriptures.
What He promises in His Word I may know to be according to His will.
For example, I may confidently ask for wisdom, because
His Word says, "If any . . . lack wisdom, let him ask of God . . .
and it shall be given him" (James i. 5). We cannot be men of
prevailing prayer unless we study God's Word to find out His will for us.
But it is the Holy Spirit of God Who is prayer's great
Helper. Read again those wonderful words of St. Paul: "In the same
way the Spirit also helps us in our weakness; for we do not know what
prayers to offer nor in what way to offer them, but the Spirit Himself
pleads for us in yearnings that can find no words, and the Searcher of
hearts knows what the Spirit's meaning is, because His intercessions for
God's people are in harmony with God's will" (Romans viii. 26, 27;
Weymouth).
What comforting words! Ignorance and helplessness in
prayer are indeed blessed things if they cast us upon the Holy Spirit.
Blessed be the name of the Lord Jesus! We are left without excuse. Pray
we must: pray we can.
Remember our Heavenly Father is pledged to give the
Holy Spirit to them that ask Him (Luke xi. 13) -- and any other
"good thing" too (Matthew vii. 11).
Child of God, you have often prayed. You have, no
doubt, often bewailed your feebleness and slackness in prayer. But have
you really prayed in His name?
It is when we have failed and know not "what
prayers to offer" or "in what way," that the Holy Spirit
is promised as our Helper.
Is it not worth while to be wholly and whole-heartedly
yielded to Christ? The half-and-half Christian is of very little use
either to God or man. God cannot use him, and man has no use for him, but
considers him a hypocrite. One sin allowed in the life wrecks at once our
usefulness and our joy, and robs prayer of its power.
Beloved, we have caught a fresh glimpse of the grace
and the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. He is willing and waiting to
share with us both His glory and His grace. He is willing to make us
channels of blessing. Shall we not worship God in sincerity and truth,
and cry eagerly and earnestly, "Lord, what shall I do?" (Acts
xxii. 10, R.V.) and then, in the power of His might, do it?
St. Paul once shot up that prayer to heaven;
"What shall I do?" What answer did he get? Listen! He tells us
in his counsel to believers everywhere just what it meant to him, and
should mean to us: "Beloved, put on . . . a heart of compassion,
kindness, humility, longsuffering; . . .above all things put on love and
let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts. . . . Let the word of Christ
dwell in you richly in all wisdom. . . . And whatsoever ye do, in word or
deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the
Father through him" (Colossians iii. 12-17).
It is only when whatsoever we do is done in His name
that He will do whatsoever we ask in His name.
|
CHAPTER 7:
MUST I AGONIZE?
PRAYER is measured, not by time, but by intensity.
Earnest souls who read of men like Praying Hyde are today anxiously
asking, "Am I expected to pray like that?"
They hear of others who sometimes remain on their
knees before God all day or all night, refusing food and scorning sleep,
whilst they pray and pray and pray. They naturally wonder, "Are we
to do the same? Must all of us follow their examples?" We must remember
that those men of prayer did not pray by time. They continued so long in
prayer because they could not stop praying.
Some have ventured to think that in what has been said
in earlier chapters I have hinted that we must all follow in their train.
Child of God, do not let any such thought -- such fear? -- distress you.
Just be willing to do what He will have you do -- what He leads you to
do. Think about it; pray about it. We are bidden by the Lord Jesus to
pray to our loving Heavenly Father. We sometimes sing, "Oh, how He
loves!" And nothing can fathom that love.
Prayer is not given us as a burden to be borne, or an
irksome duty to fulfill, but to be a joy and power to which there is no
limit. It is given us that we "may find grace to help us in time of
need" (Hebrews iv. 16, R.V.). And every time is a "time of
need." "Pray ye" is an invitation to be accepted rather
than a command to be obeyed. Is it a burden for a child to come to his
father to ask for some boon? How a father loves his child, and seeks its
highest good! How he shields that little one from any sorrow or pain or
suffering! Our heavenly Father loves us infinitely more than any earthly
father. The Lord Jesus loves us infinitely more than any earthly friend.
God forgive me if any words of mine, on such a precious theme as prayer,
have wounded the hearts or consciences of those who are yearning to know
more about prayer. "Your heavenly Father knoweth," said our
Lord: and if He knows, we can but trust and not be afraid.
A schoolmaster may blame a boy for neglected homework,
or unpunctual attendance, or frequent absence; but the loving father in
the home knows all about it. He knows all about the devoted service of
the little laddie in the home circle, where sickness or poverty throws so
many loving tasks in his way. Our dear, loving Father knows all about us.
He sees. He knows how little leisure some of us have for prolonged
periods of prayer.
For some of us God makes leisure. He makes us lie down
(Psalms xxiii. 2) that He may make us look up. Even then, weakness of
body often prevents prolonged prayer. Yet I question if any of us,
however great and reasonable our excuses, spend enough thought over our
prayers. Some of us are bound to be much in prayer. Our very work demands
it. We may be looked upon as spiritual leaders; we may have the spiritual
welfare or training of others. God forbid that we should sin against the
Lord in ceasing to pray enough for them (1st Samuel xii. 23). Yes, with
some it is our very business -- almost our life's work-to pray, Others --
Have friends who give them pain,
Yet have not sought a friend in Him.
For them they cannot help praying. If we have the
burden of souls upon us we shall never ask, "How long need I
pray?"
But how well we know the difficulties which surround
the prayer-life of many! A little pile of letters lies before me as I
write. They are full of excuses, and kindly protests, and reasonings it
is true. But is that why they are written? No! No! Far from it. In every
one of them there is an undercurrent of deep yearning to know God's will,
and how to obey the call to prayer amid all the countless claims of life.
Those letters tell of many who cannot get away from
others for times of secret prayer; of those who share even bedrooms; of
busy mothers, and maids, and mistresses who scarcely know how to get
through the endless washing and cooking, mending and cleaning, shopping
and visiting; of tired workers who are too weary to pray when the day's
work is done.
Child of God, our heavenly Father knows all about it.
He is not a taskmaster. He is our Father. If you have no time for prayer,
or no chance of secret prayer, why, just tell Him all about it -- and you
will discover that you are praying!
To those who seem unable to get any solitude at all,
or even the opportunity of stealing into a quiet church for a few
moments, may we point to the wonderful prayer-life of St. Paul? Did it
ever occur to you that he was in prison when he wrote most of those
marvelous prayers of his which we possess? Picture him. He was chained to
a Roman soldier day and night, and was never alone for a moment. Epaphias
was there part of the time, and caught something of his master's passion
for prayer. St. Luke may have been there. What prayer-meetings! No
opportunity for secret prayer. No! but how much we owe to the uplifting
of those chained hands! You and I may be never, or rarely ever, alone,
but at least our hands are not fettered with chains, and our hearts are
not fettered, nor our lips.
Can we make time for prayer? I may be wrong, but my own
belief is that it is not God's will for most of us -- and perhaps not for
any of us -- to spend so much time in prayer as to injure our physical
health through getting insufficient food or sleep. With very many it is a
physical impossibility, because of bodily weakness, to remain long in the
spirit of intense prayer.
The posture in which we pray is immaterial. God will
listen whether we kneel, or stand, or sit, or walk, or work.
I am quite aware that many have testified to the fact
that God sometimes gives special strength to those who curtail their
hours of rest in order to pray more. At one time the writer tried getting
up very early in the morning -- and every morning -- for prayer and
communion with God. After a time he found that his daily work was
suffering in intensity and effectiveness, and that it was difficult to
keep awake during the early evening hours! But do we pray as much as we
might do? It is a lasting regret to me that I allowed the days of youth
and vigor to pass by without laying more stress upon those early hours of
prayer.
Now, the inspired command is clear enough: "Pray
without ceasing" (1st Thessalonians v. 17). Our dear Lord said,
"Men ought always to pray, and not to faint" -- "and never
lose heart" (Weymouth) (Luke xviii. 1).
This, of course, cannot mean that we are to be always
on our knees. I am convinced that God does not wish us to neglect
rightful work in order to pray. But it is equally certain that we might
work better and do more work if we gave less time to work and more to
prayer.
Let us work well. We are to be "not slothful in
business" (Romans xii. 11). St. Paul says, "We exhort you,
brethren, that ye abound more and more; and that ye. . . do your own
business, and to work with your hands. . . that ye may walk honestly . .
. and have need of nothing" (1st Thessalonians iv. 11, 12). "If
any will not work, neither let him eat" (1st Thessalonians iii. 10).
But are there not endless opportunities during every
day of "lifting, up holy hands" -- or at least holy hearts --
in prayer to our Father? Do we seize the opportunity, as we open our eyes
upon each new day, of praising and blessing our Redeemer? Every day is an
Easter day to the Christian. We can pray as we dress. Without a reminder
we shall often forget. Stick a piece of stamp-paper in the corner of your
looking-glass, bearing the words, -- "Pray without ceasing."
Try it. We can pray as we go from one duty to another. We can often pray
at our work. The washing and the writing, the mending and the minding,
the cooking and the cleaning will be done all the better for it.
Do not children, both young and old, work better and
play better when some loved one is watching? Will it not help us ever to
remember that the Lord Jesus is always with us, watching? Aye, and
helping. The very consciousness of His eye upon us will be the
consciousness of His power within us.
Do you not think that St. Paul had in his mind this
habitual praying rather than fixed seasons of prayer when he said,
"The Lord is at hand" -- i.e., is near (Weymouth). "In
nothing be anxious, but in everything, by prayer and supplication, with
thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God" (Philippians
iv. 5, 6)? Does not "in everything" suggest that, as thing
after thing befalls us, moment by moment, we should then and there make
it a "thing" of prayer and praise to the Lord Who is near? (Why
should we limit this "nearness" to the Second Advent?)
What a blessed thought: prayer is to a near-God. When
our Lord sent His disciples forth to work, He said, "Lo, I am with
you alway."
Sir Thomas Browne, the celebrated physician, had
caught this spirit. He made a vow "to pray in all places where
quietness inviteth; in any house, highway or street; and to know no
street in this city that may not witness that I have not forgotten God
and my Savior in it; and that no town or parish where I have been may not
say the like. To take occasion of praying upon the sight of any church
which I see as I ride about. To pray daily and particularly for my sick
patients, and for all sick people, under whose care soever. And at the
entrance into the house of the sick to say, 'The peace and the mercy of
God be upon this house.' After a sermon to make a prayer and desire a
blessing, and to pray for the minister."
But we question if this habitual communion with our
blessed Lord is possible unless we have times -- whether long or brief --
of definite prayer. And what of these prayer seasons? We have said
earlier that prayer is as simple as a little child asking something of
its father. Nor would such a remark need any further comment were it not
for the existence of the evil one.
There is no doubt whatever that the devil opposes our
approach to God in prayer, and does all he can to prevent the prayer of
faith. His chief way of hindering us is to try to fill our minds with the
thought of our needs, so that they shall not be occupied with thoughts of
God, our loving Father, to Whom we pray. He wants us to think more of the
gift than of the Giver. The Holy Spirit leads us to pray for a brother.
We get as far as "O God, bless my brother" -- and away go our
thoughts to the brother, and his affairs, and his difficulties, his hopes
and his fears, and away goes prayer!
How hard the devil makes it for us to concentrate our
thoughts upon God! This is why we urge people to get a realization of the
glory of God, and the power of God, and the presence of God, before
offering up any petition. If there were no devil there would be no
difficulty in prayer, but it is the evil one's chief aim to make prayer
impossible. That is why most of us find it hard to sympathize with those
who profess to condemn what they call "vain repetitions" and
"much speaking" in prayer -- quoting our Lord's words in His
sermon on the mount.
A prominent London vicar said quite recently,
"God does not wish us to waste either His time or ours with long
prayers. We must be business-like in our dealings with God, and just tell
Him plainly and briefly what we want, and leave the matter there."
But does our friend think that prayer is merely making God acquainted
with our needs? If that is all there is in it, why, there is no need of
prayer! "For your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before
ye ask him," said our Lord when urging the disciples to pray.
We are aware that Christ Himself condemned some
"long prayers" (Matthew xxiii. 14). But they were long prayers
made "for a pretense," "for a show" (Luke xx. 47).
Dear praying people, believe me, the Lord would equally condemn many of
the "long prayers" made every week in some of our
prayer-meetings -- prayers which kill the prayer-meeting, and which
finish up with a plea that God would hear these "feeble
breathings," or "unworthy utterings."
But he never condemns long prayers that are sincere.
Let us not forget that our Lord sometimes spent long nights in prayer. We
are told of one of these -- we do not know how frequently they were (Luke
vi. 12). He would sometimes rise a "great while before day" and
depart to a solitary place for prayer (Mark i. 35). The perfect Man spent
more time in prayer than we do. It would seem an undoubted fact that with
God's saints in all ages nights of prayer with God have been followed by
days of power with men.
Nor did our Lord excuse Himself from prayer -- as we,
in our ignorance, might think He could have done -- because of the
pressing calls to service and boundless opportunities of usefulness.
After one of His busiest days, at a time when His popularity was at its
highest, just when everyone sought His company and His counsel, He turned
His back upon them all and retired to a mountain to pray (Matthew xiv.
23).
We are told that once "great multitudes came
together to hear Him, and to be healed of their infirmities." Then
comes the remark, "But Jesus himself constantly withdrew into the
desert, and there prayed" (Luke v. 15, 16, Weymouth). Why? Because
He knew that prayer was then far more potent than "service."
We say we are too busy to pray. But the busier our
Lord was, the more He prayed. Sometimes He had no leisure so much as to
eat (Mark iii. 20); and sometimes He had no leisure for needed rest and
sleep (Mark vi. 31). Yet He always took time to pray. If frequent prayer,
and, at times, long hours of prayer, were necessary for our Savior, are
they less necessary for us?
I do not write to persuade people to agree with me:
that is a very small matter. We only want to know the truth. Spurgeon
once said: "There is no need for us to go beating about the bush,
and not telling the Lord distinctly what it is that we crave at His
hands. Nor will it be seemly for us to make any attempt to use fine
language; but let us ask God in the simplest and most direct manner for
just the things we want. . . . I believe in business prayers. I mean
prayers in which you take to God one of the many promises which He has
given us in His Word, and expect it to be fulfilled as certainly as we
look for the money to be given us when we go to the bank to cash a check.
We should not think of going there, lolling over the counter chattering
with the clerks on every conceivable subject except the one thing for
which we had gone to the bank, and then coming away without the coin we
needed; but we should lay before the clerk the promise to pay the bearer
a certain sum, tell him in what form we wished to take the amount, count
the cash after him, and then go on our way to attend to other business.
That is just an illustration of the method in which we should draw
supplies from the Bank of Heaven." Splendid!
But -- ? By all means let us be definite in prayer; by
all means let us put eloquence aside -- if we have any! By all means let
us avoid needless "chatter," and come in faith, expecting to
receive.
But would the bank clerk pass me the money over the
counter so readily if there stood by my side a powerful,
evil-countenanced, well-armed ruffian whom he recognized to be a
desperate criminal waiting to snatch the money before my weak hands could
grasp it? Would he not wait till the ruffian had gone? This is no
fanciful picture. The Bible teaches us that, in some way or other, Satan
can hinder our prayers and delay the answer. Does not St. Peter urge
certain things upon Christians, that their "prayers be not
hindered"? (1st Peter iii. 7.) Our prayers can be hindered.
"Then cometh the evil one and snatcheth away that which hath been
sown in the heart" (Matthew xiii. 19, R.V.).
Scripture gives us one instance -- probably only one
out of many -- where the evil one actually kept back -- delayed -- for
three weeks an answer to prayer. We only mention this to show the need of
repeated prayer, persistence in prayer, and also to call attention to the
extraordinary power which Satan possesses. We refer to Daniel x. 12, 13:
"Fear not, Daniel, for from the first day that thou didst set thine
heart to understand, and to humble thyself before God, thy words were
heard: and I am come for thy word's sake. But the prince of the kingdom
of Persia withstood me one and twenty days. But lo, Michael, one of the
chief princes, came to help me."
We must not overlook this Satanic opposition and
hindrance to our prayers. If we were to be content to ask God only once
for some promised thing or one we deemed necessary, these chapters would
never have been written. Are we never to ask again? For instance, I know
that God willeth not the death of a sinner. So I come boldly in prayer:
"O God, save my friend." Am I never to ask for his conversion
again? George Muller prayed daily -- and oftener -- for sixty years for
the conversion of a friend. But what light does the Bible throw upon
"business-like" prayers? Our Lord gave two parables to teach
persistence and continuance in prayer. The man who asked three loaves
from his friend at midnight received as many as he needed "because
of his importunity" -- or persistency (Weymouth), i.e., his
"shamelessness," as the word literally means (Luke xi. 8). The
widow who "troubled" the unjust judge with her "continual
coming" at last secured redress. Our Lord adds "And shall not
God avenge his elect which cry unto him day and night, and he is
longsuffering over them?" (Luke xviii. 7, R.V.)
How delighted our Lord was with the poor
Syro-Phoenician woman who would not take refusals or rebuffs for an
answer! Because of her continual request He said: "O woman, great is
thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt" (Matthew xv. 28). Our
dear Lord, in His agony in Gethsemane, found it necessary to repeat even
His prayer. "And he left them and went away and prayed a third time,
saying again the same words" (Matthew xxvi. 44). And we find St.
Paul, the apostle of prayer, asking God time after time to remove his
thorn in the flesh.
"Concerning this thing," says he, "I
besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me" (2nd
Corinthians xii. 8).
God cannot always grant our petitions immediately.
Sometimes we are not fitted to receive the gift. Sometimes He says
"No" in order to give us something far better. Think, too, of
the days when St. Peter was in prison. If your boy was unjustly imprisoned,
expecting death at any moment, would you -- could you -- be content to
pray just once, a "business-like" prayer: "O God, deliver
my boy from the hands of these men"? Would you not be very much in
prayer and very much in earnest?
This is how the Church prayed for St. Peter.
"Long and fervent prayer was offered to God by the Church on his
behalf" (Acts xii. 5, Weymouth). Bible students will have noticed
that the A.V. rendering, "without ceasing," reads
"earnestly" in the R.V. Dr. Torrey points out that neither
translation gives the full force of the Greek. The word means literally
"stretched-out-ed-ly." It represents the soul on the stretch of
earnest and intense desire. Intense prayer was made for St. Peter. The
very same word is used of our Lord in Gethsemane: "And being in an
agony he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat became as it were great
drops of blood falling down upon the ground" (Luke xxii. 44).
Ah! there was earnestness, even agony in prayer. Now,
what about our prayers? Are we called upon to agonize in prayer? Many of
God's dear saints say "No!" They think such agonizing in us
would reveal great want of faith. Yet most of the experiences which
befell our Lord are to be ours. We have been crucified with Christ, and
we are risen with Him. Shall there be, with us, no travailing for souls?
Come back to human experience. Can we refrain from
agonizing in prayer over dearly beloved children who are living in sin? I
question if any believer can have the burden of souls upon him -- a
passion for souls -- and not agonize in prayer.
Can we help crying out, like John Knox, "O God,
give me Scotland or I die"?
Here again the Bible helps us. Was there no travail of
soul and agonizing in prayer when Moses cried out to God, "O, this
people have sinned a great sin, and have made gods of gold. Yet now, if
thou wilt forgive their sin --; and if not, blot, me, I pray thee, out of
thy book"? (Exodus xxxii. 32.)
Was there no agonizing in prayer when St. Paul said,
"I could wish" -- ("pray," R.V. margin) -- "that
I myself were anathema from Christ for my brethren's sake"? (Romans
ix. 3.)
We may, at all events, be quite sure that our Lord,
Who wept over Jerusalem, and Who "offered up prayers and
supplications with strong crying and tears" (Hebrews v. 7), will not
be grieved if He sees us weeping over erring ones. Nay, will it not
rather gladden His heart to see us agonizing over the sin which grieves
Him? In fact, may not the paucity of conversions in so many a ministry be
due to lack of agonizing in prayer?
We are told that "As soon as Zion travailed she
brought forth her children" (Isaiah lxvi. 8). Was St. Paul thinking
of this passage when he wrote to the Galatians, "My little children,
of whom I am again in travail until Christ be formed in you"?
(Galatians iv. 19.) And will not this be true of spiritual children? Oh,
how cold our hearts often are! How little we grieve over the lost! And
shall we dare to criticize those who agonize over the perishing? God
forbid! No; there is such a thing as wrestling in prayer. Not because God
is unwilling to answer, but because of the opposition of the
"world-rulers of this darkness" (Ephesians vi. 12, R.V.).
The very word used for "striving" in prayer
means "a contest." The contest is not between God and
ourselves. He is at one with us in our desires. The contest is with the
evil one, although he is a conquered foe (1st John iii. 8). He desires to
thwart our prayers.
"We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but
against principalities, against the world-rulers of this darkness,
against the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places"
(Ephesians vi. 12). We, too, are in these "heavenly places in
Christ" (Ephesians i. 3); and it is only in Christ that we can be
victorious. Our wrestling may be a wrestling of our thoughts from thinking
Satan's suggestions, and keeping them fixed on Christ our Savior -- that
is, watching as well as praying (Ephesians vi. 18); "watching unto
prayer."
We are comforted by the fact that "the Spirit
helpeth our infirmities: for we know not how to pray as we ought"
(Romans viii. 26) How does the Spirit "help" us, teach us, if
not by example as well as by precept? How does the Spirit
"pray"? "The Spirit Himself maketh intercession for us
with groanings which cannot be uttered (Romans viii. 26). Does the Spirit
"agonize" in prayer as the Son did in Gethsemane?
If the Spirit prays in us, shall we not share His
"groanings" in prayer? And if our agonizing in prayer weakens
our body at the time, will angels come to strengthen us, as they did our
Lord? (Luke xxii. 43.) We may, perhaps, like Nehemiah, weep, and mourn,
and fast when we pray before God (Nehemiah i. 4). "But," one
asks, "may not a godly sorrow for sin and a yearning desire for the
salvation of others induce in us an agonizing which is unnecessary, and
dishonoring to God?"
May it not reveal a lack of faith in God's promises?
Perhaps it may do so. But there is little doubt that St. Paul regarded
prayer -- at least sometimes -- as a conflict (see Romans xv. 30). In
writing to the Colossian Christians he says: "I would have you know
how greatly I strive for you . . . and for as many as have not seen my
face in the flesh; that their hearts may be comforted" (Colossians
ii. 1, 2). Undoubtedly he refers to his prayers for them.
Again, he speaks of Epaphras as one who is
"always striving for you in his prayers, that ye may stand perfect,
and fully assured in all the will of God" (Colossians iv. 12).
The word for "strive" is our word
"agonize," the very word used of our Lord being "in an
agony" when praying Himself (Luke xxii. 44).
The apostle says again, Epaphras "hath much labor
for you," that is, in his prayers. St. Paul saw him praying there in
prison, and witnessed his intense striving as he engaged in a long,
indefatigable effort on behalf of the Colossians. How the Praetorian
guard to whom St. Paul was chained must have wondered -- yes, and have
been deeply touched -- to see these men at their prayers. Their
agitation, their tears, their earnest supplications as they lifted up
chained hands in prayer must have been a revelation to him! What would
they think of our prayers?
No doubt St. Paul was speaking of his own custom when
he urged the Ephesian Christians and others "to stand,"
"with all prayer and supplication, praying at all seasons in the
Spirit, and watching thereunto in all perseverance and supplication for
all saints, and on my behalf . . . an ambassador in chains."
(Ephesians vi. 18-20). That is a picture of his own prayer-life, we may
be sure.
So then prayer meets with obstacles, which must be
prayed away. That is what men mean when they talk about praying through.
We must wrestle with the machinations of Satan. It may be bodily
weariness or pain, or the insistent claims of other thoughts, or doubt,
or the direct assaults of spiritual hosts of wickedness. With us, as with
St. Paul, prayer is something of a "conflict," a
"wrestle," at least sometimes, which compels us to
"stir" ourselves up "to lay hold on God" (Isaiah
Ixiv. 7). Should we be wrong if we ventured to suggest that very few
people ever wrestle in prayer? Do we? But let us never doubt our Lord's
power and the riches of His grace.
The author of The Christian's Secret of a Happy Life
told a little circle of friends, just before her death, of an incident in
her own life. Perhaps I may be allowed to tell it abroad. A lady friend
who occasionally paid her a visit for two or three days was always a
great trial, a veritable tax upon her temper and her patience. Every such
visit demanded much prayer-preparation. The time came when this
"critical Christian" planned a visit for a whole week! She felt
that nothing but a whole night of prayer could fortify her for this great
testing. So, providing herself with a little plate of biscuits, she
retired in good time to her bedroom, to spend the night on her knees
before God, to beseech Him to give her grace to keep sweet and loving
during the impending visit. No sooner had she knelt beside her bed than
there flashed into her mind the words of Philippians iv. 19: "God
shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory by Christ
Jesus." Her fears vanished. She said, "When I realized that, I
gave Him thanks and praised Him for His goodness. Then I jumped into bed
and slept the night through. My guest arrived the next day, and I quite
enjoyed her visit.
No one can lay down hard and fast rules of prayer,
even for himself. God's gracious Holy Spirit alone can direct us moment
by moment. There, however, we must leave the matter. God is our judge and
our Guide. But let us remember that prayer is a many-sided thing. As
Bishop Moule says, "True prayer can be uttered under innumerable
circumstances." Very often
Prayer is the burden of a sigh
The falling of a tear,
The upward glancing of an eye
When none but God is near.
It may be just letting your request be made known unto
God (Philippians iv. 6). We cannot think that prayer need always be a
conflict and a wrestle. For if it were, many of us would soon become
physical wrecks, suffering from nervous breakdown, and coming to an early
grave.
And with many it is a physical impossibility to stay
any length of time in a posture of prayer. Dr. Moule says: "Prayer,
genuine and victorious, is continually offered without the least physical
effort or disturbance. It is often in the deepest stillness of soul and
body that it wins its longest way. But there is another side of the
matter. Prayer is never meant to be indolently easy, however simple and
reliant it may be. It is meant to be an infinitely important transaction
between man and God. And therefore, very often . . . it has to be viewed
as a work involving labor, persistence, conflict, if it would be prayer
indeed."
No one can prescribe for another. Let each be
persuaded in his own mind how to pray, and the Holy Spirit will inspire
us and guide us how long to pray. And let us all be so full of the love
of God our Savior that prayer, at all times and in all places, may be a
joy as well as a means of grace.
Shepherd Divine, our wants
relieve
In this and every day;
To all Thy tempted followers
give
The power, to watch and pray.
The spirit of interceding
grace
Give us the faith to claim;
To wrestle till we see Thy
face
And know Thy hidden Name.
|
CHAPTER 8:
DOES GOD ALWAYS ANSWER PRAYER?
WE now come to one of the most important questions
that any man can ask. Very much depends upon the answer we are led to
give. Let us not shrink from facing the question fairly and honestly.
Does God always answer prayer? Of course, we all grant that He does
answer prayer -- some prayers, and sometimes. But does He always answer
true prayer. Some so-called prayers He does not answer, because He does
not hear them. When His people were rebellious, He said, "When ye
make many prayers, I will not hear" (Isaiah i. 15).
But a child of God ought to expect answers to prayer.
God means every prayer to have an answer; and not a single real prayer
can fail of its effect in heaven.
And yet that wonderful declaration of St. Paul:
"All things are yours, for ye are Christ's" (1st Corinthians
iii. 21), seems so plainly and so tragically untrue for most Christians.
Yet it is not so. They are ours, but so many of us do not possess our
possessions. The owners of Mount Morgan, in Queensland, toiled arduously
for years on its barren slopes, eking out a miserable existence, never
knowing that under their feet was one of the richest sources of gold the
world has ever known. There was wealth, vast, undreamt of, yet unimagined
and unrealized. It was "theirs," yet not theirs.
The Christian, however, knows of the riches of God in
glory in Christ Jesus, but he does not seem to know how to get them.
Now, our Lord tells us that they are to be had for the
asking. May He indeed give us all a right judgment in
"prayer-things." When we say that no true prayer goes
unanswered we are not claiming that God always gives just what we ask
for. Have you ever met a parent so foolish as to treat his child like
that? We do not give our child a red-hot poker because he clamors for it!
Wealthy people are the most careful not to allow their children much
pocket-money.
Why, if God gave us all we prayed for, we should rule
the world, and not He! And surely we would all confess that we are not
capable of doing that. Moreover, more than one ruler of the world is an
absolute impossibility!
God's answer to prayer may be "Yes," or it
may be "No." It may be "Wait," for it may be that He
plans a much larger blessing than we imagined, and one which involves
other lives as well as our own.
God's answer is sometimes "No." But this is
not necessarily a proof of known and willful sin in the life of the
suppliant, although there may be sins of ignorance. He said
"No" to St. Paul sometimes (2nd Corinthians xii. 8, 9). More
often than not the refusal is due to our ignorance or selfishness in
asking. "For we know not how to pray as we ought" (Romans viii.
26). That was what was wrong with the mother of Zebedee's children. She
came and worshipped our Lord and prayed to Him. He quickly replied,
"Ye know not what ye ask" (Matthew xx. 22). Elijah, a great man
of prayer, sometimes had "No" for an answer. But when he was
swept up to glory in a chariot of fire, did he regret that God said
"No" when he cried out "O Lord, take away my life"?
God's answer is sometimes "Wait." He may
delay the answer because we are not yet fit to receive the gift we crave
-- as with wrestling Jacob. Do you remember the famous prayer of
Augustine -- "O God, make me pure, but not now"? Are not our
prayers sometimes like that? Are we always really willing to "drink
the cup" -- to pay the price of answered prayer? Sometimes He delays
so that greater glory may be brought to Himself.
God's delays are not denials. We do not know why He
sometimes delays the answer and at other times answers "before we
call" (Isaiah lxv. 24). George Muller, one of the greatest men of
prayer of all time, had to pray over a period of more than sixty-three
years for the conversion of a friend! Who can tell why? "The great
point is never to give up until the answer comes," said Muller.
"I have been praying for sixty-three years and eight months for one
man's conversion. He is not converted yet, but he will be! How can it be
otherwise? There is the unchanging promise of Jehovah, and on that I
rest." Was this delay due to some persistent hindrance from the
devil? (Daniel x. 13). Was it a mighty and prolonged effort on the part
of Satan to shake or break Muller's faith? For no sooner was Muller dead
than his friend was converted -- even before the funeral.
Yes, his prayer was granted, though the answer tarried
long in coming. So many of George Muller's petitions were granted him
that it is no wonder that he once exclaimed, "Oh, how good, kind,
gracious and condescending is the One with Whom we have to do! I am only
a poor, frail, sinful man, but He has heard my prayers ten thousands of
times."
Perhaps some are asking, How can I discover whether
God's answer is "No" or "Wait"? We may rest assured
that He will not let us pray sixty-three years to get a "No"!
Muller's prayer, so long repeated, was based upon the knowledge that God
"willeth not the death of a sinner"; "He would have all
men to be saved" (1st Timothy ii. 4).
Even as I write, the postman brings me an illustration
of this. A letter comes from one who very rarely writes me, and did not
even know my address -- one whose name is known to every Christian worker
in England. A loved one was stricken down with illness. Is he to continue
to pray for her recovery? Is God's answer "No," or is it,
"Go on praying -- wait"? My friend writes: "I had distinct
guidance from God regarding my beloved . . . that it was the will of God
she should be taken . . . I retired into the rest of surrender and
submission to His will. I have much to praise God for." A few hours
later God took that loved one to be with Him in glory.
Again may we urge our readers to hold on to this
truth: true prayer never goes unanswered.
If we only gave more thought to our prayers we should
pray more intelligently. That sounds like a truism. But we say it because
some dear Christian people seem to lay their common sense and reason
aside before they pray. A little reflection would show that God cannot
grant some prayers. During the war every nation prayed for victory. Yet
it is perfectly obvious that all countries could not be victorious. Two
men living together might pray, the one for rain and the other for fine
weather. God cannot give both these things at the same time in the same
place!
But the truthfulness of God is at stake in this matter
of prayer. We have all been reading again those marvelous prayer-promises
of our Lord, and have almost staggered at those promises -- the wideness
of their scope, the fullness of their intent, the largeness of the one
word "Whatsoever." Very well! "Let God be found true"
(Romans iii. 4). He certainly will always be "found true."
Do not stop to ask the writer if God has granted all
his prayers. He has not. To have said "Yes" to some of them
would have spelt curse instead of blessing. To have answered others was,
alas! a spiritual impossibility -- he was not worthy of the gifts he
sought. The granting, of some of them would but have fostered spiritual
pride and self-satisfaction. How plain all these things seem now, in the
fuller light of God's Holy Spirit!
As one looks back and compares one's eager, earnest
prayers with one's poor, unworthy service and lack of true spirituality,
one sees how impossible it was for God to grant the very things He longed
to impart! It was often like asking God to put the ocean of His love into
a thimble-heart! And yet, how God just yearns to bless us with every
spiritual blessing! How the dear Savior cries again and again, "How
often would I . . . but ye would not"! (Matthew xxiii. 37.) The
sadness of it all is that we often ask and do not receive because of our
unworthiness -- and then we complain because God does not answer our
prayers! The Lord Jesus declares that God gives the Holy Spirit -- who
teaches us how to pray -- just as readily as a father gives good gifts to
his children. But no gift is a "good gift" if the child is not
fit to use that gift. God never gives us something that we cannot, or
will not, use for His glory (I am not referring to talents, for we may
abuse or "bury" those, but to spiritual gifts).
Did you ever see a father give his baby boy a razor
when he asked for it, because he hoped the boy would grow into a man and
then find the razor useful? Does a father never say to his child,
"Wait till you are older, or bigger, or wiser, or better, or
stronger"? May not our loving heavenly Father also say to us,
"Wait"? In our ignorance and blindness we must surely sometimes
say,
In very love refuse
Whate'er Thou seest
Our weakness would abuse.
Rest assured that God never bestows tomorrow's gift
today. It is not unwillingness on His part to give. It is not that God is
ever straitened in Himself. His resources are infinite, and His ways are
past finding out. It was after bidding His disciples to ask that our Lord
goes on to hint not only at His providence, but at His resources.
"Look at the wild birds" (Matthew vi. 26, Moffatt); "your
heavenly Father feedeth them." How simple it sounds. Yet have you
ever reflected that not a single millionaire, the wide world over, is
wealthy enough to feed all "the birds of the air," even for one
day? Your heavenly Father feedeth them every day, and is none the poorer
for it. Shall He not much more feed you, clothe you, take care of you?
Oh, let us rely more upon prayer! Do we not know that
"He is a Rewarder of them that diligently seek Him"? (Hebrews
xi. 6.) The "oil" of the Holy Spirit will never cease to flow
so long as there are empty vessels to receive it (1st Kings iv. 6). It is
always we who are to blame when the Spirit's work ceases. God cannot
trust some Christians with the fullness of the Holy Spirit. God cannot
trust some workers with definite spiritual results in their labors. They
would suffer from pride and vainglory. No! we do not claim that God
grants every Christian everything he prays for.
As we saw in an earlier chapter, there must be purity
of heart, purity of motive, purity of desire, if our prayers are to be in
His name. God is greater than His promises, and often gives more than
either we desire or deserve -- but He does not always do so. So, then, if
any specific petition is not granted, we may feel sure that God is
calling us to examine our hearts. For He has undertaken to grant every
prayer that is truly offered in His name. Let us repeat His blessed words
once more -- we cannot repeat them too often -- "Whatsoever ye shall
ask in My name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the
Son. If ye shall ask anything in My name, that will I do" (John xiv.
13, 14).
Remember that it was impossible for Christ to offer up
any prayer which was not granted. He was God -- He knew the mind of God
-- He had the mind of the Holy Spirit.
Does He once say, "Father, if it be possible,
let. . ." as He kneels in agony in Gethsemane's garden, pouring out
strong crying and tears? Yes, and "He was heard for His reverential
awe" (Hebrews v. 7, Dr. Moule). Surely not the "agony,"
but the son-like fear, gained the answer? Our prayers are heard not so
much because they are importunate but because they are filial.
Brother Christian, we cannot fully understand that
hallowed scene of dreadful awe and wonder. But this we know -- that our
Lord never yet made a promise which He cannot keep, or does not mean to
fulfill. The Holy Spirit maketh intercession for us (Romans viii. 26),
and God cannot say Him "Nay." The Lord Jesus makes intercession
for us (Hebrews vii. 25), and God cannot say Him "Nay." His
prayers are worth a thousand of ours, but it is He who bids us pray!
"But was not St. Paul filled with the Holy
Spirit?" you ask, "and did he not say, 'We have the mind of
Christ?' Yet he asked thrice over that God would remove the 'thorn' in
his flesh -- and yet God distinctly tells him He would not do so."
It is a very singular thing, too, that the only
petition recorded of St. Paul seeking something for his own individual
need was refused! The difficulty, however, is this: Why did St. Paul, who
had the "mind" of Christ, ask for something which he soon
discovered was contrary to God's wishes? There are doubtless many fully-consecrated
Christians reading these words who have been perplexed because God has
not given some things they prayed for.
We must remember that we may be filled with the Spirit
and yet err in judgment or desire. We must remember, too, that we are
never filled with God's Holy Spirit once for all. The evil one is always
on the watch to put his mind into us, so as to strike at God through us.
At any moment we may become disobedient or unbelieving, or may be
betrayed into some thought or act contrary to the Spirit of love.
We have an astonishing example of this in the life of
St. Peter. At one moment, under the compelling influence of God's Holy
Spirit, he cries, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living
God!" Our Lord turns, and with words of high commendation says,
"Blessed art thou, Simon, for flesh and blood hath not revealed it
unto thee, but My Father, which is in heaven." Yet, a very little
while after, the devil gets his mind into St. Peter, and our Lord turns
and says unto him, "Get thee behind me, Satan!" (Matthew xvi.
17, 23.) St. Peter was now speaking in the name of Satan! Satan still
"desires to have" us.
St. Paul was tempted to think that he could do far
better work for his beloved Master if only that "thorn" could
be removed. But God knew that Paul would be a better man with the
"thorn" than without it.
Is it not a comfort to us to know that we may bring
more glory to God under something which we are apt to regard as a
hindrance or handicap, than if that undesired thing was removed? "My
grace is sufficient for thee: for My power is made perfect in
weakness" (2nd Corinthians xii. 9). Remember that
God nothing does, nor suffers
to be done,
But what thou would'st thyself
Did'st thou but see
The end of all He does as well
as He.
St. Paul was not infallible -- nor was St. Peter, or
St. John; nor is the Pope or any other man. We may -- and do -- offer up
mistaken prayers. The highest form of prayer is not, "Thy way, O
God, not mine," but "My way, O God, is Thine!" We are
taught to pray, not "Thy will be changed," but "Thy will
be done."
May we, in conclusion, give the testimony of two who
have proved that God can be trusted?
Sir H. M. Stanley, the great explorer, wrote: "I
for one must not dare to say that prayers are inefficacious. Where I have
been in earnest, I have been answered. When I prayed for light to guide
my followers wisely through the perils that beset them, a ray of light
has come upon the perplexed mind, and a clear road to deliverance has
been pointed out. You may know when prayer is answered, by the glow of
content which fills one who has flung his cause before God, as he rises
to his feet. I have evidence, satisfactory to myself, that prayers are
granted."
Mary Slessor, the story of whose life in West Africa
has surely thrilled us all, was once asked what prayer meant to her. She
replied, "My life is one long, daily, hourly record of answered
prayer for physical health, for mental overstrain, for guidance given
marvelously, for errors and dangers averted, for enmity to the Gospel subdued,
for food provided at the exact hour needed, for everything that goes to
make up life and my poor service. I can testify with a full and often
wonder-stricken awe that I believe God answers prayer. I know God answers
prayer!"
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CHAPTER 9:
ANSWERS TO PRAYER
MERE human nature would choose a more startling title
to this chapter. Remarkable answers -- wonderful answers -- amazing
answers. But we must allow God to teach us that it is as natural to Him
to answer prayer as it is for us to ask. How He delights to hear our
petitions, and how He loves to answer them! When we hear of some wealthy
person giving a treat to poverty-stricken people, or wiping out some
crushing deficit in a missionary society, we exclaim, "How nice to
be able to do a thing like that!" Well, if it is true that God loves
us -- and we know it is true -- do you not think it gives Him great joy
to give us what we ask? We should like, therefore, to recount one or two
answers to prayer out of very many which have come to our notice, so that
we may have greater boldness in coming to the Throne of Grace. God saves
men for whom we pray. Try it.
In talking over this question with a man of prayer a
few days ago, he suddenly asked me, "Do you know St. M-'s Church,
L-?"
"Quite well -- have been there several
times."
"Let me tell you what happened when I lived
there. We had a prayer-meeting each Sunday before the 8 o'clock communion
service. As we rose from our knees one Sunday a sidesman said, 'Vicar, I
wish you would pray for my boy. He is twenty-two years old now, and has
not been to church for years.' 'We can spare five minutes now,' replied
the vicar. They knelt down again and offered up earnest supplication on
behalf of that man. Although nothing was said to him about this, that
youth came to church that same evening. Something in the sermon convicted
him of sin. He came into the vestry broken-hearted, and accepted Jesus
Christ as his Savior."
On Monday morning my friend, who was working as a
Church Army captain in the parish, was present at the weekly meeting of
the staff. He said to the vicar, "That conversion last night is a
challenge to prayer -- a challenge from God. Shall we accept it?"
"What do you mean?" asked the vicar. "Well," said he,
"shall we single out the worst man in the parish and pray for
him?" By unanimous consent they fixed upon K- as the worst man they
knew. So they "agreed" in prayer for his conversion. At the end
of that week, as they were conducting a Saturday night prayer-meeting in
the mission hall, and whilst his very name was on their lips, the door
swung open and in staggered K-, much the worse for liquor. He had never
been in that mission hall before. Without thinking of removing his cap he
sank on a chair near the door and buried his face in his hands. The
prayer-meeting suddenly became an enquiry-room. Even as he was -- in
drink -- he sought the Lord Who was seeking him. Nor did he ever go back.
Today he is one of the finest dockyard missioners in the land.
Oh, why do we not pray for our unconverted friends?
They may not listen to us when we plead with them, but they cannot hold
out if we pray for them. Let two or three agree in prayer over the
salvation of the worst, and then see what God will do! Tell God and then
trust God. God works in a wonderful way, as well as in a
"mysterious" way, His wonders to perform.
Dan Crawford told us recently that when returning to
his mission field after a furlough, it was necessary to make all possible
haste. But a deep stream, which had to be crossed, was in flood, and no
boats were available, or usable, for that matter. So he and his party
camped and prayed. An infidel might well have laughed aloud. How could
God get them across that river! But, as they prayed, a tall tree which
had battled with that river for scores of years began to totter and fall.
It fell clear across the stream! As Mr. Crawford says, "The Royal
Engineers of heaven had laid a pontoon bridge for God's servants."
Many young people will be reading these
prayer-stories. May we remind them that God still hears the voice of the
lad -- yes, and the lass? (Genesis xxi. 17.) For them may we be allowed
to add the following story, with the earnest desire that prayer may be
their heritage, their very life; and that answered prayer may be their
daily experience.
Some little time ago, a Chinese boy of twelve years
old, named Ma-Na-Si, a boarder in the mission school at Chefoo, went home
for the holidays. He is the son of a native pastor.
Whilst standing on the doorstep of his father's house
he espied a horseman galloping towards him. The man -- a heathen -- was
in a great state of perturbation. He eagerly enquired for the
"Jesus-man" -- the pastor. The boy told him that his father was
away from home. The poor man was much distressed, and hurriedly explained
the cause of his visit. He had been sent from a heathen village some
miles away to fetch the "holy man" to cast a devil out of the
daughter-in-law of a heathen friend. He poured out his sad story of this
young woman, torn by devils, raving and reviling, pulling out her hair,
clawing her face, tearing her clothes, smashing up furniture, and dashing
away dishes of food. He told of her spirit of sacrilege, and outrageous
impiety, and brazen blasphemy and how these outbursts were followed by
foaming at the mouth, and great exhaustion, both physical and mental
"But my father is not at home," the boy kept reiterating. At
length the frenzied man seemed to understand. Suddenly he fell on his
knees, and, stretching out his hands in desperation, cried, "You,
too, are a Jesus-man; will you come ?"
Think of it -- a boy of twelve! Yes, but even a lad,
when fully yielded to his Savior, is not fearful of being used by that
Savior. There was but one moment of surprise, and a moment of hesitation,
and then the laddie put himself wholly at his Master's disposal. Like
little Samuel of old he was willing to obey God in all things. He
accepted the earnest entreaty as a call from God. The heathen stranger
sprang into the saddle, and, swinging the Christian boy up behind him, he
galloped away.
Ma-Na-Si began to think over things. He had accepted
an invitation to cast out a devil in the name of Christ Jesus. But was he
worthy to be used of God in this way? Was his heart pure and his faith
strong? As they galloped along he carefully searched his own heart for
sin to be confessed and repented of. Then he prayed for guidance what to
say and how to act, and tried to recall Bible instances of demoniacal
possession and how they were dealt with. Then he simply and humbly cast
himself upon the God of power and of mercy, asking His help for the glory
of the Lord Jesus. On arrival at the house they found that some of the
members of the family were by main force holding down the tortured woman
upon the bed. Although she had not been told that a messenger had gone
for the native pastor, yet as soon as she heard footsteps in the court
outside she cried, "All of you get out of my way quickly, so that I
can escape. I must flee! A 'Jesus-man' is coming. I cannot endure him.
His name is Ma-Na-Si."
Ma-Na-Si entered the room, and after a ceremonial bow
knelt down and began to pray. Then he sang a Christian hymn to the praise
of the Lord Jesus. Then, in the name of the Risen Lord, glorified and
omnipotent, he commanded the demon to come out of the woman. At once she
was calm, though prostrate with weakness. From that day she was perfectly
whole. She was amazed when they told her that she had uttered the name of
the Christian boy, for she had never heard of it or read of it before,
for the whole of that village was heathen. But that day was veritably a
"beginning of days" to those people, for from it the Word of
the Lord had free course and was glorified.
Beloved reader, I do not know how this little
narrative affects you. It is one that moves me to the very depths of my
being. It seems to me that most of us know so little of the power of God
-- so little of His overwhelming, irresistible love. Oh, what love is
His! Now, every time we pray, that wonderful love envelops us in a
special way.
If we really loved our blessed Savior, should we not
oftener seek communion with Him in prayer? Fellow Christian, is it
because we pray so little that we criticize so much? Oh, let us remember
that we, like our dear Savior, are not sent into the world to condemn, to
judge, the world, "but that the world should be saved through
Him" (John iii. 17).
Will any thoughtless word of criticism of anyone move
anyone nearer to Christ? Will it even help the utterer of that
fault-finding to be more like the Master? Oh, let us lay aside the spirit
of criticism, of blaming, of fault-finding, of disparaging others or
their work. Would not St. Paul say to us all, "And such were some of
you, but ye are washed"? (2nd Corinthians vi. 11.)
Do you see what we are aiming at? All the evil
dispositions and failings we detect in others are due to the devil. It is
the evil one in the heart who causes those words and deeds which we are
so ready to condemn and to exaggerate. Demon-possession is not unknown in
England, but it takes a different form, perhaps. Our very friends and
acquaintances, so kindly and lovable, are often tied and bound by some
besetting sin -- "whom Satan hath bound, lo, these many years."
We may plead with them in vain. We may warn them in
vain. Courtesy and charity -- and our own failings and shortcomings --
forbid us standing over them like Ma-Na-Si and exercising the evil
spirit! But have we tried prayer -- prayer always backed up by love which
cannot be "provoked"? (1st Corinthians xiii. 5.)
God answers prayer from old and young, when there is a
clean heart, a holy life, and a simple faith. God answers prayer. We are
but frail and faulty servants at the best. Sincere as we may be, we shall
sometimes ask amiss. But God is faithful that promised, and He will guard
us from all harm and supply every need.
Can I have the things I pray
for?
God knows best;
He is wiser than His children.
I can rest.
"Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, we have
boldness toward God; and whatsoever we ask we receive of him, because we
keep his commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in his
sight" (1st John iii. 21.)
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CHAPTER 10:
HOW GOD ANSWERS PRAYER
FOR man fully to understand God and all His dealings
with us is an utter impossibility. "O the depth of the riches both
of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his
judgments, and his ways past tracing out!" (Romans xi. 33.) True,
but we need not make difficulties where none exists. If God has all power
and all knowledge, surely prayer has no difficulties, though occasionally
there may be perplexities. We cannot discover God's method, but we know
something of His manner of answering prayer.
But at the very outset may we remind ourselves how
little we know about ordinary things? Mr. Edison, whose knowledge is
pretty profound, wrote in August, 1921, "We don't know the millionth
part of one per cent about anything. We don't know what water is. We
don't know what light is. We don't know what gravitation is. We don't
know what enables us to keep on our feet to stand up. We don't know what
electricity is. We don't know what heat is. We don't know anything about
magnetism. We have a lot of hypotheses, but that is all." But we do
not allow our ignorance about all these things to deprive us of their
use! We do not know much about prayer, but surely this need not prevent
us from praying! We do know what our Lord has taught us about prayer. And
we do know that He has sent the Holy Spirit to teach us all things (John
xiv. 26). How, then, does God answer prayer? One way is just this: --
He reveals His mind to those who pray. His Holy Spirit
puts fresh ideas into the minds of praying people. We are quite aware
that the devil and his angels are busy enough putting bad thoughts into
our minds. Surely, then, God and His holy angels can give us good
thoughts? Even poor, weak, sinful men and women can put good thoughts
into the minds of others. That is what we try to do in writing! We do not
stop to think what a wonderful thing it is that a few peculiar-shaped
black marks on this white paper can uplift and inspire, or depress and
cast down, or even convict of sin! But, to an untutored savage, it is a
stupendous miracle. Moreover, you and I can often read people's thoughts
or wishes from an expression on the face or a glance of the eye. Even
thought transference between man and man is a commonplace today. And God
can in many ways convey His thoughts to us. A remarkable instance of this
was related by a speaker last year at Northfield. Three or four years
ago, he met an old whaling captain who told him this story.
"A good many years ago, I was sailing in the
desolate seas off Cape Horn, hunting whales. One day we were beating
directly south in the face of a hard wind. We had been tacking this way
and that all the morning, and were making very little headway. About 11
o'clock, as I stood at the wheel, the idea suddenly came into my mind,
'Why batter the ship against these waves? There are probably as many
whales to the north as to the south. Suppose we run with the wind instead
of against it? In response to that sudden idea I changed the course of
the ship, and began to sail north instead of south. One hour later, at
noon, the look-out at the masthead shouted 'Boats ahead!' Presently we overtook
four lifeboats, in which were fourteen sailors, the only survivors of the
crew of a ship which had burned to the water's edge ten days before.
Those men had been adrift in their boats ever since, praying God
frantically for rescue; and we arrived just in time to save them. They
could not have survived another day."
Then the old whaler added, "I don't know whether
you believe in religion or not, but I happen to be a Christian. I have
begun every day of my life with prayer that God would use me to help
someone else, and I am convinced that God, that day, put the idea into my
mind to change the course of my ship. That idea was the means of saving
fourteen lives."
God has many things to say to us. He has many thoughts
to put into our minds. We are apt to be so busy doing His work that we do
not stop to listen to His Word. Prayer gives God the opportunity of
speaking to us and revealing His will to us. May our attitude often be:
"Speak, Lord, Thy servant heareth."
God answers other prayers by putting new thoughts into
the minds of those we pray for. At a series of services dealing with the
Victorious Life, the writer one afternoon urged the congregation to
"makeup" their quarrels if they really desired a holy life. One
lady went straight home, and after very earnest prayer wrote to her
sister, with whom, owing to some disagreement, she had had nothing to do
for twenty years! Her sister was living thirty miles away. The very next
morning the writer of that note received a letter from that very sister
asking forgiveness and seeking reconciliation. The two letters had
crossed in the post. While the one sister was praying to God for the
other, God was speaking to that other sister, putting into her mind the
desire for reconciliation.
You may say, Why did not God put that desire there
before? It may be that He foresaw that it would be useless for the
distant sister to write asking forgiveness until the other sister was
also willing to forgive. The fact remains that, when we pray for others,
somehow or other it opens the way for God to influence those we pray for.
God needs our prayers, or He would not beg us to pray.
A little time back, at the end of a weekly
prayer-meeting, a godly woman begged those present to pray for her
husband, who would never go near a place of worship. The leader suggested
that they should continue in prayer then and there. Most earnest prayers
were offered up. Now, the husband was devoted to his wife, and frequently
came to meet her. He did so that night, and arrived at the hall while the
prayer-meeting was still in progress. God put it into his mind to open
the door and wait inside -- a thing he had never done before. As he sat
on a chair near the door, leaning his head upon his hand, he overheard
those earnest petitions. During the homeward walk he said, "Wife,
who was the man they were praying for tonight?" "Oh," she
replied, "it is the husband of one of our workers." "Well,
I am quite sure he will be saved," said he; "God must answer
prayers like that." A little later in the evening he again asked,
"Who was the man they were praying for?" She replied in similar
terms as before. On retiring to rest he could not sleep. He was under
deep conviction of sin. Awaking his wife, he begged her to pray for him.
How clearly this shows us that when we pray, God can
work! God could have prompted that man to enter that prayer-meeting any
week. But had he done so it is a question whether any good at all would
have come from it. When once those earnest, heartfelt petitions were
being offered up on his behalf God saw that they would have a mighty
influence upon that poor man.
It is when we pray that God can help us in our work
and strengthen our resolves. For we can answer many of our own prayers.
One bitter winter a prosperous farmer was praying that God would keep a
neighbor from starving. When the family prayers were over, his little boy
said, "Father, I don't think I should have troubled God about that.
Why not?" he asked. "Because it would be easy enough for you to
see that they don't starve!" There is not the slightest doubt that
if we pray for others we shall also try to help them.
A young convert asked his vicar to give him some
Christian work. "Have you a chum?" "Yes," replied the
boy. "Is he a Christian?" "No, he is as careless as I
was." "Then go and ask him to accept Christ as his
Savior." "Oh, no!" said the lad, "I could never do
that. Give me anything but that." "Well," said the vicar,
"promise me two things: that you will not speak to him about his
soul, and that you will pray to God twice daily for his conversion."
"Why, yes, I'll gladly do that," answered the boy. Before a
fortnight was up he rushed round to the vicarage. "Will you let me
off my promise? I must speak to my chum!" he cried. When he began to
pray God could give him strength to witness. Communion with God is
essential before we can have real communion with our fellow-man. My
belief is that men so seldom speak to others about their spiritual
condition because they pray so little for them.
The writer has never forgotten how his faith in prayer
was confirmed when, as a lad of thirteen, he earnestly asked God to
enable him on a certain day to secure twenty new subscribers for missions
overseas. Exactly twenty new names were secured before night closed in.
The consciousness that God would grant that prayer was an incentive to
eager effort, and gave an unwonted courage in approaching others.
A cleric in England suggested to his people that they
should each day pray for the worst man or woman and then go to them and
tell them about Jesus. Only six agreed to do so. On arrival home he began
to pray. Then he said, "I must not leave this to my people. I must
take it up myself. I don't know the bad people. I'll have to go out and
enquire." Approaching a rough-looking man at a street corner, he
asked, "Are you the worst man in this district?" "No, I'm
not." "Would you mind telling me who is?" "I don't
mind. You'll find him at No. 7, down that street."
He knocked at No. 7 and entered. "I'm looking for
the worst man in my parish. They tell me it might be you?"
"Whoever told you that? Fetch him here, and I'll show him who's the
worst man! No, there are lots worse than me." "Well, who is the
worst man you know?" "Everybody knows him. He lives at the end
house in that court. He's the worst man." So down the court he went
and knocked at the door. A surly voice cried, "Come in!"
There were a man and his wife. "I hope you'll
excuse me, but I'm the minister of the chapel along the round. I'm
looking for the worst man in my district, because I have something to
tell him. Are you the worst man?" The man turned to his wife and
said, "Lass, tell him what I said to you five minutes ago."
"No, tell him yourself." "What were you saying?"
enquired the visitor. "Well, I've been drinking for twelve weeks. I've
had the D.T's and have pawned all in the house worth pawning. And I said
to my wife a few minutes ago, 'Lass, this thing has to stop, and if it
doesn't, I'll stop it myself -- I'll go and drown myself.' Then you
knocked at the door! Yes, sir, I'm the very worst man. What have you got
to say to me?" "I'm here to tell you that Jesus Christ is the
greatest Savior, and that He can make out of the worst man one of the
best. He did it for me, and He will do it for you." "D'you
think He can do it even for me?" "I'm sure He can. Kneel down
and ask Him."
Not only was the poor drunkard saved from his sins,
but he is today a radiant Christian man, bringing other drunken people to
the Lord Jesus Christ.
Surely none of us finds it difficult to believe that
God can, in answer to prayer, heal the body, send rain or fair weather,
dispel fogs, or avert calamities?
We have to do with a God whose knowledge is infinite.
He can put it into the mind of a doctor to prescribe a certain medicine,
or diet, or method of cure. All the doctor's skill is from God. "He
knoweth our frame" -- for He made it. He knows it far better than
the cleverest doctor or surgeon. He made, and He can restore. We believe
that God desires us to use medical skill, but we also believe that God,
by His wonderful knowledge, can heal, and sometimes does heal, without
human co-operation. And God must be allowed to work in His own way. We
are so apt to tie God down to the way we approve of. God's aim is to
glorify His name in answering our prayers. Sometimes He sees that our
desire is right, but our petition wrong. St. Paul thought he could bring
more glory to God if only the thorn in the flesh could be removed. God
knew that he would be a better man and do better work with the thorn than
without it. So God said No-No-No to his prayer, and then explained why!
So it was with Monica, who prayed so many years for
the conversion of Augustine, her licentious son. When he was determined
to leave home and cross the seas to Rome she prayed earnestly, even
passionately, that God would keep him by her side, and under her
influence. She went down to a little chapel on the seashore to spend the
night in prayer close by where the ship lay at anchor. But, when morning
came, she found that the ship had sailed even while she prayed! Her
petition was refused, but her real desire was granted. For it was in Rome
that Augustine met the sainted Ambrose, who led him to Christ. How
comforting it is to know that God knows what is best!
But we should never think it unreasonable that God
should make some things dependent upon our prayers. Some people say that
if God really loves us He would give us what is best for us whether we
ask Him or not. Dr. Fosdick has so beautifully pointed out that God has
left man many things to do for himself. He promises seedtime and harvest.
Yet man must prepare the soil, sow, and till, and reap in order to allow
God to do His share. God provides us with food and drink. But He leaves
us to take, and eat, and drink. There are some things God cannot, or at least
will not, do without our help. God cannot do some things unless we think.
He never emblazons His truth upon the sky. The laws of science have
always been there. But we must think, and experiment, and think again if
we would use those laws for our own good and God's glory.
God cannot do some things unless we work. He stores
the hills with marble, but He has never built a cathedral. He fills the
mountains with iron ore, but He never makes a needle or a locomotive. He
leaves that to us. We must work.
If, then, God has left many things dependent upon
man's thinking and working, why should He not leave some things dependent
upon man's praying? He has done so. "Ask and ye shall receive."
And there are some things God will not give us unless we ask. Prayer is one
of the three ways in which man can co-operate with God; and the greatest
of these is prayer.
Men of power are without exception men of prayer. God
bestows His Holy Spirit in His fullness only on men of prayer. And it is
through the operation of the Spirit that answers to prayer come. Every
believer has the Spirit of Christ dwelling in him. For "if any have
not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his." But a man of
prevailing prayer must be filled with the Spirit of God.
A lady missionary wrote recently that it used to be
said of Praying Hyde that he never spoke to an unconverted man but that
he was soundly converted. But if he ever did fail at first to touch a
heart for God, he went back to his room and wrestled in prayer till he
was shown what it was in himself that had hindered his being used by God.
Yes, when we are filled with the Spirit of God, we cannot help
influencing others God-ward. But, to have power with men, we must have
power with God.
The momentous question for you and me is not, however,
"How does God answer prayer?" The question is, "Do I
really pray?" What a marvelous power God places at our disposal! Do
we for a moment think that anything displeasing to God is worth our while
holding on to? Fellow-Christian, trust Christ wholly, and you will find
Him wholly true.
Let us give God the chance of putting His mind into
us, and we shall never doubt the power of prayer again.
|
CHAPTER 11:
HINDRANCES TO PRAYER
THE, poet said, and we often
sing --
What various hindrances we
meet
In coming to the mercy-seat.
Yes, indeed, they are various. But here again, most of
those hindrances are our own making.
God wants me to pray. The devil does not want me to
pray, and does all he can to hinder me. He knows that we can accomplish
more through our prayers than through our work. He would rather have us
do anything else than pray.
We have already referred to Satan's opposition to
prayer:
Angels our march oppose
Who still in strength excel
Our secret, sworn, relentless
foes,
Countless, invisible.
But we need not fear them, nor heed them, if our eyes
are ever unto the Lord. The holy angels are stronger than angels, and we
can leave the celestial hosts to guard us. We believe that to them -- the
hosts of evil -- we owe those wandering thoughts which so often wreck
prayer. We no sooner kneel than we "recollect" something that
should have been done, or something which had better be seen to at once.
These thoughts come from without, and are surely due
to the promptings of evil spirits. The only cure for wandering thoughts
is to get our minds fixed upon God. Undoubtedly a man's worst foe is
himself. Prayer is for a child of God -- and one who is living as a child
of God should pray.
The great question is: Am I harboring any foes in my
heart? Are there traitors within? God cannot give us His best spiritual
blessings unless we fulfill conditions of trust, obedience and service.
Do we not often ask earnestly for the highest spiritual gifts, without
even any thought of fulfilling the necessary requirements? Do we not
often ask for blessings we are not fitted to receive? Dare we be honest
with ourselves, alone in the presence of God? Dare we say sincerely,
"Search me, O God, and see --"? Is there anything in me which
is hindering God's blessing for me and through me? We discuss the
"problem of prayer"; we are the problem that needs discussing
or dissecting! Prayer is all right! There is no problem in prayer to the
heart which is absolutely stayed on Christ.
Now, we shall not quote the usual Bible texts which
show how prayer may be frustrated. We merely desire that everyone should
get a glimpse of his own heart. No sin is too small to hinder prayer, and
perhaps to turn the very prayer itself into sin, if we are not willing to
renounce that sin. The Moslems in West Africa have a saying, "If
there is no purity, there is no prayer; if there is no prayer, there is
no drinking of the water of heaven." This truth is so clearly taught
in Scripture that it is amazing that any should try to retain both sin and
prayer. Yet very many do this. Even David cried, long ages ago, "If
I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear" (Psalms lxvi.
18).
And Isaiah says, "Your iniquities have separated
between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you"
(Isaiah lix. 2). Surely we must all agree that it is sin in us, and not
the unwillingness of Christ to hear, that hinders prayer. As a rule, it
is some little sin, so-called, that mars and spoils the prayer-life.
There may be:
(1) Doubt. Now, unbelief is possibly the greatest
hindrance to prayer. Our Lord said that the Holy Spirit would convict the
world of sin -- "of sin because they believe not on Me" (St.
John xvi. 9). We are not "of the world," yet is there not much
practical unbelief in many of us? St. James, writing to believers, says:
"Ask in faith, nothing doubting; for he that doubteth . . . let not
that man think he shall receive anything of the Lord" (St. James i.
6-8). Some have not because they ask not. Others "have not"
because they believe not. Did you think it a little strange that we spent
so much time over adoration and thanksgiving before we came to the "asking"?
But surely, if we get a glimpse of the glorious majesty of our Lord, and
the wonders of His love and grace, unbelief and doubt will vanish away as
mists before the rising sun? Was this not the reason that Abraham
"staggered not," "wavered not through unbelief," in
that he gave God the glory due unto His name, and was therefore
"fully assured that what He had promised He was able also to
perform"? (Romans iv. 20, 21). Knowing what we do of God's
stupendous love, is it not amazing that we should ever doubt?
(2) Then there is Self -- the root of all sin. How
selfish we are prone to be even in our "good works"! How we
hesitate to give up anything which "self" craves for. Yet we
know that a full hand cannot take Christ's gifts. Was this why the Savior,
in the prayer He first taught, coupled us with everything else?
"Our" is the first word. "Our Father . . . give us . . .
forgive us . . . deliver us . . ."
Pride prevents prayer, for prayer is a very humbling
thing. How hateful pride must be in the sight of God! It is God who gives
us all things "richly to enjoy." "What hast thou that thou
didst not receive?" asks St. Paul (1st Corinthians iv. 7). Surely,
surely we are not going to let pride, with its hateful, ugly sister,
jealousy, ruin our prayer-life? God cannot do great things for us whereby
we may be glad if they are going to "turn our heads." Oh, how
foolish we can be! Sometimes, when we are insistent, God does give us
what we ask, at the expense of our holiness. "He gave them their
request, but sent leanness into their soul" (Psalms cvi. 15). O God,
save us from that -- save us from self! Again, self asserts itself in
criticizing others. Let this thought burn itself into your memory -- the
more like Jesus Christ a man becomes, the less he judges other people. It
is an infallible test. Those who are always criticizing others have
drifted away from Christ. They may still be His, but have lost His Spirit
of love. Beloved reader, if you have a criticizing nature, allow it to
dissect yourself and never your neighbor. You will be able to give it
full scope, and it will never be unemployed! Is this a harsh remark? Does
it betray a tendency to commit the very sin -- for it is sin -- it
condemns? It would do so were it spoken to any one individual. But its
object is to pierce armor which is seemingly invulnerable. And no one
who, for one month, has kept his tongue "from picking and
stealing" the reputation of other people will ever desire to go back
again to back-biting. "Love suffereth long and is kind" (1st Corinthians
xiii. 4). Do we? Are we?
We are ourselves no better because we have managed to
paint other people in worse colors than ourselves. But, singularly
enough, we enhance our own spiritual joy and our own living witness for
Christ when we refuse to pass on disparaging information about others, or
when we refrain from "judging" the work or lives of other
people. It may be hard at first, but it soon brings untold joy, and is
rewarded by the love of all around. It is most hard to keep silent in the
face of "modern" heresies. Are we not told to "contend
earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered unto the
saints"? (Jude 3.) Sometimes we must speak out -- but let it always
be in the spirit of love. "Rather let error live than love
die."
Even in our private prayers fault-finding of others
must be resolutely avoided. Read once more the story of John Hyde praying
for the "cold brother." Believe me, a criticizing spirit
destroys holiness of life more easily than anything else, because it is
such an eminently respectable sin, and makes such easy victims of us. We
need scarcely add that when a believer is filled with the Spirit of
Christ.-- who is Love -- he will never tell others of the unchristian
behavior he may discern in his friends. "He was most rude to me";
"He is too conceited"; "I can't stand that man"; and
such-like remarks are surely unkind, unnecessary, and often untrue.
Our dear Lord suffered the contradiction of sinners
against Himself, but He never complained or published abroad the news to
others. Why should we do so? Self must be dethroned if Christ is to reign
supreme. There must be no idols in the heart. Do you remember what God
said of some leaders of religion? "These men have taken their idols
into their heart . . . ; should I be inquired of at all by them?"
(Ezekiel xiv. 3.)
When our aim is solely the glory of God, then God can
answer our prayers. Christ Himself rather than His gifts should be our
desire. "Delight thyself in the Lord and He shall give thee the
petitions of thine heart" (Psalms xxxvii. 4, R.V., margin).
"Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, we have
boldness toward God; and whatsoever we ask we receive of him, because we
keep his commandments and do the things that are pleasing in his
sight" (1st John iii. 21, 22).
It is as true today as in the early days of
Christianity that men ask, and receive not, because they ask amiss that
they may spend it on their pleasures --.i.e., self (James iv. 3).
(3) Unlove in the heart is possibly the greatest
hindrance to prayer. A loving spirit is a condition of believing prayer.
We cannot be wrong with man and right with God. The spirit of prayer is
essentially the spirit of love. Intercession is simply love at prayer.
He prayeth best who loveth
best
All things both great and
small;
For the great God Who loveth
us,
He made and loveth all.
Dare we hate or dislike those whom God loves? If we
do, can we really possess the Spirit of Christ? We really must face these
elementary facts in our faith if prayer is to be anything more than a mere
form. Our Lord not only says, "And pray for those that persecute
you; that ye may be sons of your Father who is in heaven" (Matthew
v. 44, 45).
We venture to think that large numbers of so-called
Christians have never faced this question. To hear how many Christian
workers -- and prominent ones, too -- speak of others from whom they
disagree, one must charitably suppose they have never heard that command
of our Lord!
Our daily life in the world is the best indication of
our power in prayer. God deals with my prayers not according to the
spirit and tone which I exhibit when I am praying in public or private,
but according to the spirit I show in my daily life.
Hot-tempered people can make only frigid prayers. If
we do not obey our Lord's command and love one another, our prayers are
well-nigh worthless. If we harbor an unforgiving spirit it is almost
wasted time to pray. Yet a prominent Dean of one of our cathedrals was
recently reported to have said that there are some people we can never
forgive! If so, we trust that he uses an abridged form of the Lord's
prayer. Christ taught us to say "Forgive us . . . as we
forgive."
And He goes farther than this. He declares, "If
ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your heavenly Father
forgive your trespasses" (Matthew vi. 15). May we ever exhibit the
Spirit of Christ, and not forfeit our own much-needed forgiveness. How
many of our readers who have not the slightest intention of forgiving
their enemies, or even their offending friends, repeated the Lord's
prayer today?
Many Christians have never given prayer a fair chance.
It is not through conscious insincerity, but from want of thought. The
blame for it really rests upon those of us who preach and teach. We are
prone to teach doctrines rather than doings. Most men desire to do what
is right, but they regard the big things rather than the little failings
in the life of love.
Our Lord goes so far as to say that even our gifts are
not to be presented to God if we remember that our brother "hath
ought against us" (Matthew v. 23). If He will not accept our gifts,
is it likely He will answer our prayers? It was when Job ceased
contending with his enemies (whom the Bible calls his
"friends") that the Lord "turned his captivity" and
gave him twice as much as he had before (Job xlii. 10).
How slow we are -- how unwilling we are -- to see that
our lives hinder our prayers! And how unwilling we are to act on
love-lines. Yes, we desire to "win" men. Our Lord shows us one
way. Don't publish abroad his wrongdoings. Speak to him alone, and
"thou hast gained thy brother" (Matthew xviii. 15). Most of us
have rather pained our brothers!
Even the home-life may hinder the prayer-life. See
what Peter says about how we should so live in the home that our
"prayers be not hindered" (1st Peter iii. 1-10). We would
venture to urge every reader to ask God to search his heart once again
and to show him if there is "any root of bitterness" towards
anyone. We all desire to do what is pleasing to God. It would be an
immense gain to our spiritual life if we would resolve not to attempt to
pray until we had done all in our power to make peace and harmony between
ourselves and any with whom we have quarreled. Until we do this as far as
lies in our power, our prayers are just wasted breath. Unkindly feelings
towards another hinder God from helping us in the way He desires.
A loving life is an essential condition of believing
prayer. God challenges us again, today, to become fit persons to receive
His superabundant blessings. Many of us have to decide whether we will
choose a bitter, unforgiving spirit, or the tender mercies and
loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ. Is it not amazing that any man
can halt between two opinions with such a choice in the balance? For
bitterness harms the bitter more than anyone else.
"Whensoever ye stand praying, forgive if ye have
ought against anyone; that your Father also, who is in heaven, may
forgive you" (Mark xi. 25). So said the blessed Master. Must we not
then either forgive, or cease trying to pray? What shall it profit a man
if he gain all his time to pretend to pray, if he harbors unlove in his heart
to prevent real prayer? How the devil laughs at us because we do not see
this truth!
We have God's word for it that eloquence, knowledge,
faith, liberality, and even martyrdom profit a man nothing -- get hold of
it -- nothing, unless his heart is filled with love (1st Corinthians
xiii.). "Therefore give us love."
(4) Refusal to do our part may hinder God answering
our prayers. Love calls forth compassion and service at the sight of sin
and suffering, both here and overseas. Just as St. Paul's heart was
"stirred" -- "provoked" -- within him as he beheld
the city full of idols (Acts xvii. 16). We cannot be sincere when we pray
"Thy kingdom come" unless we are doing what we can to hasten
the coming of that kingdom -- by our gifts, our prayers and our service.
We cannot be quite sincere in praying for the
conversion of the ungodly unless we are willing to speak a word, or write
a letter, or make some attempt to bring him under the influence of the
Gospel. Before one of Moody's great missions he was present at a meeting
for prayer asking for God's blessing. Several wealthy men were there. One
began to pray that God would send sufficient funds to defray the
expenses. Moody at once stopped him. "We need not trouble God about
that," he said quietly, "we are able to answer that
prayer!"
(5) Praying only in secret may be a hindrance.
Children of a family should not always meet their father separately. It
is remarkable how often our Lord refers to united prayer --
"agreed" prayer. "When ye pray, say, Our Father"; "If
two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything they shall ask, it
shall be done for them. . . . For where two or three are gathered
together in my name, there am I in the midst of them" (Matthew
xviii. 19, 20).
We feel sure that the weakness in the spiritual life
of many churches is to be traced to an inefficient prayer-meeting, or the
absence of meetings for prayer. Daily matins and evensong, even when
reverent and without the unseemly haste which is so often associated with
them, cannot take the place of less formal gatherings for prayer, in
which everyone may take part. Can we not make the weekly prayer-meeting a
live thing and a living force?
(6) raise is as important as prayer. We must enter
into His gates with thanksgiving, and into His courts with praise, and
give thanks unto Him and bless His name (Ps. c. 4). At one time in his
life Praying Hyde was led to ask for four souls a day to be brought into
the fold by his ministry. If on any day the number fell short of this,
there would be such a weight on his heart that it was positively painful,
and he could neither eat nor sleep. Then, in prayer he would ask the Lord
to show him what was the obstacle in himself. He invariably found that it
was the want of praise in his life. He would confess his sinfulness and
pray for a spirit of praise. He said that as he praised God seeking souls
would come to him. We do not imply that we, too, should limit God to
definite numbers or ways of working; but we do cry: "Rejoice! Praise
God with heart and mind and soul."
It is not by accident that we are so often bidden to
"rejoice in the Lord." God does not want miserable children;
and none of His children has cause for misery. St. Paul, the most
persecuted of men, was a man of song. Hymns of praise came from his lips
in prison and out of prison: day and night he praised His Savior.
The very order of his exhortations is significant.
"Rejoice evermore; pray without ceasing; in everything give thanks:
for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus to you" (1st Thessalonians
v. 16-18).
The will of God. Get that thought into your mind. It
is not an optional thing.
REJOICE: PRAY: GIVE THANKS
That is the order, according to the will of God -- for
you, and for me. Nothing so pleases God as our praises -- and nothing so
blesses the man who prays as the praises he offers! "Delight thyself
also in the Lord; and he shall give thee the petitions of thine
heart" (Palms xxxvii. 4, R.V., margin).
A missionary who had received very bad news from home,
was utterly cast down. Prayer availed nothing to relieve the darkness of
his soul. He went to see another missionary, no doubt seeking comfort.
There on the wall was a motto-card: "Try Thanksgiving!" He did;
and in a moment every shadow was gone, never to return.
Do we praise enough to get our prayers answered? If we
truly trust Him, we shall always praise Him. For
God nothing does nor suffers
to be done
But thou would'st do thyself
Could'st thou but see
The end of all events as well
as He.
One who once overheard Luther praying said,
"Gracious God! What spirit and what faith is there in his
expressions! He petitions God with as much reverence as if he were in the
Divine presence, and yet with as firm a hope and confidence as he would
address a father or a friend." That child of God seemed quite
unconscious that "hindrances to prayer" existed!
After all that has been said, we see that everything
can be summed up under one head. All hindrance to prayer arises from ignorance
of the teaching of God's Holy Word on the life of holiness He has planned
for all His children, or from an unwillingness to consecrate ourselves
fully to Him.
When we can truthfully say to our Father, "All
that I am and have is thine," then He can say to us, "All that
is mine is thine."
|
CHAPTER 12:
WHO MAY PRAY?
IT is only two centuries ago that six undergraduates
were expelled from the University of Oxford solely because they met
together in each other's rooms for extempore prayer! Whereupon George
Whitefield wrote to the Vice-Chancellor, "It is to be hoped that, as
some have been expelled for extempore praying, we shall hear of some few
others of a contrary stamp being expelled for extempore swearing."
Today, thank God, no man in our land is hindered by his fellow-men from
praying. Any man may pray -- but has every man a right to pray? Does God
listen to anyone ?
Who may pray? Is it the privilege -- the right -- of
all men? Not everyone can claim the right to approach the King of our
realm. But there are certain persons and bodies of people who have the
privilege of immediate access to our sovereign. The Prime Minister has
that privilege. The ancient Corporation of the City of London can at
anytime lay its petition at the feet of the King. The ambassador of a
foreign power may do the same. He has only to present himself at the gate
of the palace of the King, and no power can stand between him and the
monarch. He can go at once into the royal presence and present his
request. But none of these has such ease of access and such loving
welcome as the Kings own son.
But there is the King of kings -- the God and Father
of us all. Who may go to Him? Who may exercise this privilege -- yes,
this power -- with God? We are told -- and there is much truth in the
remark -- that in the most skeptical man or generation prayer is always
underneath the surface, waiting. Has it the right to come forth at
anytime? In some religions it has to wait. Of all the millions in India
living in the bondage of Hinduism, none may pray except the Brahmins! A
millionaire merchant of any other caste must perforce get a Brahmin --
often a mere boy at school! -- to say his prayers for him.
The Mohammedan cannot pray unless he has learned a few
phrases in Arabic, for his "god" only hears prayers offered in
what they believe to be the holy language. Praise be to God, no such
restrictions of caste or language stand between us and our God. Can any
man, therefore, pray?
Yes, you reply, anyone. But the Bible does not say so.
Only a child of God can truly pray to God. Only a son can enter His
presence. It is gloriously true that anyone can cry to Him for help --
for pardon and mercy. But that is scarcely prayer. Prayer is much more
than that. Prayer is going into "the secret place of the Most
High," and abiding under the shadow of the Almighty (Psalms xci. 1).
Prayer is a making known to God our wants and desires,
and holding out the hand of faith to take His gifts. Prayer is the result
of the Holy Spirit dwelling within us. It is communion with God. Now,
there can scarcely be communion between a king and a rebel. What
communion hath light with darkness? (2nd Corinthians vi. 14.) In
ourselves we have no right to pray. We have access to God only through
the Lord Jesus Christ (Ephesians iii. 18, ii. 12).
Prayer is much more than the cry of a drowning man --
of a man sinking in the whirlpool of sin: "Lord, save me! I am lost!
I am undone! Redeem me! Save me!" Anyone can do this, and that is a
petition which is never unanswered, and one, if sincere, to which the
answer is never delayed. For "man cannot be God's outlaw if he
would." But that is not prayer in the Bible sense. Even the lions,
roaring after their prey, seek their meat from God; but that is not
prayer.
We know that our Lord said, "Everyone that asketh
receiveth" (Matthew vii. 8). He did say so, but to whom? He was
speaking to His disciples (Matthew v. 1, 2). Yes, prayer is communion
with God: the "home-life" of the soul, as one describes it. And
I much question whether there can be any communion with Him unless the
Holy Spirit dwells in the heart, and we have "received" the
Son, and so have the right to be called "children of God" (John
i. 12).
Prayer is the privilege of a child. Children of God
alone can claim from the heavenly Father the things which He hath
prepared for them that love Him. Our Lord told us that in prayer we
should call God "our Father." Surely only children can use that
word? St. Paul says that it is "because ye are sons God sent forth
the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying, 'Abba, Father'"
(Galatians iv. 6). Is this what was in God's mind when, in dealing with
Job's "comforters," He said, "My servant Job shall pray
for you; for him will I accept"? (Job xlii. 8.) It looked as if they
would not have been "accepted" in the matter of prayer. But as
soon as one becomes a "son of God" he must enter the school of
prayer. "Behold, he prayeth," said our Lord of a man as soon as
he was converted. Yet that man had "said" prayers all his life
(Acts ix. 11). Converted men not only may pray, but must pray -- each man
for himself, and, of course, for others. But, unless and until we can
truthfully call God "Father," we have no claim to be treated as
children -- as "sons," "heirs of God and joint heirs with
Christ" -- no claim at all. Do you say this is hard? Nay, surely it
is natural. Has a "child" no privileges?
But do not misunderstand me. This does not shut any
man out of the kingdom of heaven. Anyone, anywhere, can cry, "God be
merciful to me, a sinner!" Any man who is outside the fold of
Christ, outside the family of God, however bad he may be, or however good
he thinks he is, can this very moment become a child of God, even as he
reads these words. One look to Christ in faith is sufficient "Look
and live." God did not even say "see" -- He says just
look! Turn your face to God.
How did those Galatian Christians become "sons of
God"? By faith in Christ. "For ye are all sons of God through
faith in Christ Jesus" (Galatians iii. 26). Christ will make any man
a son of God by adoption and grace the moment he turns to Him in true
repentance and faith. But we have no rightful claim even upon God's
providence unless we are His children. We cannot say with any confidence
or certainty, "I shall not want," unless we can say, with
confidence and certainty, "The Lord is my Shepherd."
A child, however, has a right to his father's care,
and love, and protection, and provision. Now, a child can only enter a
family by being born into it. We become children of God by being
"born again," "born from above" (John iii. 3, 5).
That is, by believing on the Lord Jesus Christ (John iii. 16).
Having said all this as a warning, and perhaps as an
explanation why some people find prayer an utter failure, we hasten to
add that God often hears and answers prayer even from those who have no
legal right to pray -- from those who are not His "children,"
and may even deny that He exists! The Gospels tell us of not a few
unbelievers who came to Christ for healing; and He never sent one away
without the coveted blessing -- never. They came as "beggars,"
not as "children." And even if "the children must first be
fed," these others received the crumbs -- yea, and more than crumbs
-- that were freely given.
So today God often hears the cry of unbelievers for
temporal mercies. One case well known to the writer may be given as an illustration.
My friend told me that he had been an atheist many years. Whilst an
infidel, he had been singing for forty years in a church choir because he
was fond of music. His aged father became seriously ill two or three
years ago, and lay in great pain. The doctors were helpless to relieve
the sufferer. In his distress for his father, the infidel choirman fell
on his knees and cried, "O God, if there is a God, show Thy power by
taking away, my father's pain!" God heard the man's piteous cry, and
removed the pain immediately. The "atheist" praised God, and
hurried off to his vicar to find out the way of salvation! Today he is
out-and-out for Christ, giving his whole time to work for his newly-found
Savior. Yes, God is greater than His promises, and is more willing to
hear than we are to pray.
Perhaps the most striking of all "prayers"
from the lips of unbelievers is that recorded of Caroline Fry, the author
of Christ Our Example. Although possessed of beauty, wealth, position and
friends, she found that none of them satisfied, and at length, in her
utter misery, she sought God. Yet her first utterance to Him was an
expression of open rebellion to and hatred of Him! Listen to it -- it is
not the prayer of a "child": --
"O God, if Thou art a God: I do not love Thee; I
do not want Thee; I do not believe there is any happiness in Thee: but I
am miserable as I am. Give me what I do not seek; give me what I do not
want. If Thou canst, make me happy. I am miserable as I am. I am tired of
this world; if there is anything better, give it me."
What a "prayer"! Yet God heard and answered.
He forgave the wanderer and made her radiantly happy and gloriously
fruitful in His service.
In even savage bosoms
There are longings, servings,
yearnings
For the good they comprehend
not.
And their feeble hands and
helpless.
Groping blindly in the
darkness,
Touch God's right hand in the
darkness,
And are lifted up and
strengthened.
Shall we, then, alter our question a little, and ask,
who has a right to pray?" Only children of God in whom the Holy
Spirit dwells. But, even so, we must remember that no man can come
unashamed and with confidence to his Father in heaven unless he is living
as a son of God should live. We cannot expect a father to lavish his
favors upon erring children. Only a faithful and sanctified son can pray
with the Spirit and pray with the understanding also (1st Corinthians
xiv. 15).
But if we are sons of God, nothing but sin can hinder
our prayers. We, His children, have the right of access to God at any
time, in any place. And He understands any form of prayer. We may have a
wonderful gift of speech pouring itself out in a torrent of thanksgiving,
petition, and praise like St. Paul; or we may have the quiet, deep, lover-like
communion of a St. John. The brilliant scholar like John Wesley and the
humble cobbler like William Carey are alike welcome at the throne of
grace. Influence at the court of heaven depends not upon birth, or
brilliancy, or achievement, but upon humble and utter independence upon
the Son of the King.
Moody attributed his marvelous success to the prayers
of an obscure and almost unknown invalid woman! And truly the invalid
saints of England could bring about a speedy revival by their prayers.
Oh, that all the shut-ins" would speak out!
Do we not make a mistake in supposing that some people
have a "gift" of prayer? A brilliant Cambridge undergraduate
asked me if the life of prayer was not a gift, and one which very few
possessed? He suggested that, just as not everyone was musical, so not
everyone is expected to be prayerful! George Muller was exceptional not
because he had a gift of prayer, but because he prayed. Those who cannot
"speak well," as God declared Aaron could, may labor in secret
by intercession with those that speak the word. We must have great faith
if we are to have great power with God in prayer, although God is very
gracious and oftentimes goes beyond our faith.
Henry Martyn was a man of prayer, yet his faith was
not equal to his prayers. He once declared that he "would as soon
expect to see a man rise from the dead as to see a Brahmin converted to
Christ." Would St. James say, "Let not that man think he shall
receive anything of the Lord"? (James i. 7.) Now, Henry Martyn died
without seeing one Brahmin accepting Christ as his Savior. He used to
retire, day by day, to a deserted pagoda for prayer. Yet he had not faith
for the conversion of a Brahmin. A few months back there knelt in that
very pagoda Brahmins and Mohammedans from all parts of India, Burma and
Ceylon, now fellow-Christians. Others had prayed with greater faith than
Henry Martyn.
Who may pray? We may; but do we? Does our Lord look at
us with even more pathos and tenderness than when He first uttered the
words, and say, "Hitherto ye have asked nothing in My name? Ask, and
ye shall receive, that your joy may be full" (John xvi. 24). If the
dear Master was dependent on prayer to make His work a power, how much
more are we? He sometimes prayed with "strong crying and tears"
(Hebrews v. 7). Do we? Have we ever shed a prayerful tear? Well might we
cry, "Quicken us, and we will call upon Thy name" (Psalms Ixxx.
18).
St. Paul's exhortation to Timothy may well be made to
us all: "Stir up the gift of God which is in thee" (2nd Timothy
i. 6). For the Holy Spirit is prayer's great Helper. We are incapable of
ourselves to translate our real needs into prayer. The Holy Spirit does
this for us. We cannot ask as we ought. The Holy Spirit does this for us.
It is possible for unaided man to ask what is for our ill. The Holy
Spirit can check this. No weak or trembling hand dare put in motion any
mighty force. Can I -- dare I -- move the Hand that moves the universe?
No! Unless the Holy Spirit has control of me.
Yes, we need Divine help for prayer -- and we have it!
How the whole Trinity delights in prayer! God the Father listens: the
Holy Spirit dictates: the eternal Son presents the petition -- and
Himself intercedes; and so the answer comes down.
Believe me, prayer is our highest privilege, our
gravest responsibility, and the greatest power God has put into our
hands. Prayer, real prayer, is the noblest, the sublimest, the most
stupendous act that any creature of God can perform.
It is, as Coleridge declared, the very highest energy
of which human nature is capable. To pray with all your heart and
strength -- that is the last, the greatest achievement of the Christian's
warfare on earth.
"LORD,
TEACH US TO PRAY!"
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