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"Oh that I knew where I might find
Him! that I might come even to His seat! I would order my cause before Him, and fill my mouth with
arguments." Job 23:3-4
IN Job's uttermost extremity he cried after the Lord. The longing
desire of an afflicted child of God is once more to see his Father's
face. His first prayer is not, "Oh that I might be healed of the disease
which now festers in every part of my body!" nor even, "Oh that I might
see my children restored from the jaws of the grave, and my property
once more brought from the hand of the spoiler!" but the first and
uppermost cry is, "Oh that I knew where I might find HIM—who is my God!
that I might come even to His seat!" God's children run home when the
storm comes on. It is the heaven-born instinct of a gracious soul to
seek shelter from all ills beneath the wings of Jehovah. "He that has
made his refuge God," might serve as the title of a true believer. A
hypocrite, when he feels that he has been afflicted by God, resents the
infliction, and, like a slave, would run from the master who has
scourged him; but not so the true heir of heaven, he kisses the hand
which smote him, and seeks shelter from the rod in the bosom of that
very God who frowned upon him. You will observe that the desire to
commune with God is intensified by the failure of all other sources of
consolation.
When Job first saw his friends at a distance, he may have
entertained a hope that their kindly counsel and compassionate
tenderness would blunt the edge of his grief; but they had not long
spoken before he cried out in bitterness, "Miserable comforters are ye
all." They put salt into his wounds, they heaped fuel upon the flame of
his sorrow, they added the gall of their upbraidings to the wormwood of
his griefs. In the sunshine of his smile they once had longed to sun
themselves, and now they dare to cast shadows upon his reputation, most
ungenerous and undeserved. Alas for a man when his wine-cup mocks him
with vinegar, and his pillow pricks him with thorns! The patriarch
turned away from his sorry friends and looked up to the celestial
throne, just as a traveler turns from his empty skin bottle and betakes
himself with all speed to the well. He bids farewell to earthborn
hopes, and cries, "Oh that I knew where I might find my God!" My
brethren, nothing teaches us so much the preciousness of the Creator as
when we learn the emptiness of all besides. When you have been pierced
through and through with the sentence, "Cursed is he that trusts in
man, and makes flesh his arm," then will you suck unutterable sweetness
from the divine assurance, "Blessed is he that trusts in the Lord, and
whose hope the Lord is." Turning away with bitter scorn from earth's
hives, where you found no honey, but many sharp stings, you will rejoice
in Him whose faithful word is sweeter than honey or the honeycomb.
It is further observable that though a good man hastens to God in
his trouble, and runs with all the more speed because of the unkindness
of his fellow men, yet sometimes the gracious soul is left without the
comfortable presence of God. This is the worst of all griefs; the text
is one of Job's deep groans, far deeper than any which came from him on
account of the loss of his children and his property:
"Oh that I knew
where I might find Him!" The worst of all losses is to lose the smile of
my God. He now had a foretaste of the bitterness of his Redeemer's cry,
"My God, my God, why have You forsaken Me?" God's presence is always
with His people in one sense, so far as secretly sustaining them is
concerned, but His manifest presence they do not always enjoy. Like the
spouse in the song, they seek their beloved by night upon their bed,
they seek Him but they find Him not; and though they wake and roam
through the city they may not discover Him, and the question may be
sadly asked again and again, "Saw ye Him whom my soul loves?"
You may be beloved of God, and yet have no consciousness of that
love in your soul. You may be as dear to His heart as Jesus Christ
Himself, and yet for a small moment He may forsake you, and in a little
wrath He may hide Himself from you. But, dear friends, at such times the
desire of the believing soul gathers yet greater intensity from the fact
of God's light being withheld. Instead of saying with proud lip, "Well,
if He leaves me I must do without Him; if I cannot have His comfortable
presence I must fight on as best may be," the soul said, "No, it is my
very life; I must have my God. I perish, I sink in deep mire where there
is no standing, and nothing but the arm of God can deliver me."
The gracious soul addresses itself with a double zeal to find out
God, and sends up its groans, its entreaties, its sobs and sighs to
heaven more frequently and fervently.
"Oh that I knew where I might find
Him!"
Distance or labor are as nothing; if the soul only knew where to
go she would soon overleap the distance. She makes no stipulation about
mountains or rivers, but vows that if she knew where, she would come
even to his seat. My soul in her hunger would break through stone walls,
or scale the battlements of heaven to reach her God, and though there
were seven hells between me and Him, yet would I face the flame if I
might reach Him, nothing daunted if I had but the prospect of at last
standing in His presence and feeling the delight of His love. That seems
to me to be the state of mind in which Job pronounced the words before
us.
But we cannot stop upon this point, for the object of this
morning's discourse beckons us onward. It appears that Job's end, in
desiring the presence of God, was that he might pray to Him. He had
prayed, but he wanted to pray as in God's presence. He desired to plead
as before one whom he knew would hear and help him. He longed to state
his own case before the seat of the impartial judge, before the very
face of the all-wise God; he would appeal from the lower courts, where
his friends judged unrighteous judgment, to the Court of King's
Bench—the High Court of heaven—here, says he,
"I would order my cause
before Him, and fill my mouth with arguments."
In this latter verse Job teaches us how he meant to plead and
intercede with God. He does, as it were, reveal the secrets of his
closet, and unveils the art of prayer. We are here admitted into the
guild of supplants; we are shown the art and mystery of pleading; we
have here taught to us the blessed handicraft and science of prayer, and
if we can be bound apprentice to Job this morning, for the next hour,
and can have a lesson from Job's Master, we may acquire no little skill
in interceding with God. There are two things here set forth as
necessary in prayer—ordering of our cause, and filling our mouth
with arguments. We shall speak of those two things, and then if we
have rightly learned the lesson, a blessed result will follow.
I. First, IT IS NEEDFUL THAT OUR SUIT BE ORDERED BEFORE GOD.
There is a vulgar notion that prayer is a very easy thing, a kind
of common business that may be done anyhow, without care or effort. Some
think that you have only to reach a book down and get through a certain
number of very excellent words, and you have prayed and may put the book
up again; others suppose that to use a book is superstitious, and that
you ought rather to repeat extemporaneous sentences, sentences which
come to your mind with a rush, like a herd of swine or a pack of hounds,
and that when you have uttered them with some little attention to what
you have said, you have prayed. Now neither of these modes of prayer
were adopted by ancient saints. They appear to have thought a great deal
more seriously of prayer than many do now days. It seems to have been
a mighty business with them, a long-practiced exercise, in which some of
them attained great eminence, and were thereby singularly blest. They
reaped great harvests in the field of prayer, and found the mercy seat
to be a mine of untold treasures.
The ancient saints were want, with Job, to order their cause
before God; that is to say, as a petitioner coming into Court does not
come there without thought to state his case on the spur of the moment,
but enters into the audience chamber with his suit well prepared, having
moreover learned how he ought to behave himself in the presence of the
great One to whom he is appealing. It is well to approach the seat of
the King of kings as much as possible with pre-meditation and
preparation, knowing what we are about, where we are standing, and what
it is which we desire to obtain. In times of peril and distress we may
fly to God just as we are, as the dove enters the cleft of the rock,
even though her plumes are ruffled; but in ordinary times we should not
come with an unprepared spirit, even as a child comes not to his father
in the morning till he has washed his face.
See yonder priest; he has a sacrifice to offer, but he does not
rush into the court of the priests and hack at the bullock with the
first pole-axe upon which he can lay his hand, but when he rises he
washes his feet at the brazen laver, he puts on his garments, and adorns
himself with his priestly vestments; then he comes to the altar with his
victim properly divided according to the law, and is careful to do
according to the command, even to such a simple matter as the placing of
the fat, and the liver, and the kidneys, and he takes the blood in a
bowl and pours it in an appropriate place at the foot of the altar,
not throwing it just as may occur to him, and kindles the fire not with
common flame, but with the sacred fire from off the altar. Now this
ritual is all superseded, but the truth which it taught remains the
same; our spiritual sacrifices should be offered with holy carefulness.
God forbid that our prayer should be a mere leaping out of one's bed and
kneeling down, and saying anything that comes first to hand; on the
contrary, may we wait upon the Lord with holy fear and sacred awe. See
how David prayed when God had blessed him—he went in before the Lord.
Understand that; he did not stand outside at a distance, but he went in
before the Lord and he sat down—for sitting is not a bad posture for
prayer, let who will speak against it—and sitting down quietly and
calmly before the Lord he then began to pray, but not until first he had
thought over the divine goodness, and so attained to the spirit of
prayer. Then by the assistance of the Holy Ghost did he open his mouth.
Oh that we should seek the Lord in this style!
Abraham may serve us as a pattern; he rose up early—here was his
willingness; he went three days journey—here was his zeal; he left his
servants at the foot of the hill—here was his privacy; he carried the
wood and the fire with him—here was his preparation; and lastly, he
built the altar and laid the wood in order, and then took the knife—here
was the devout carefulness of his worship. David puts it,
"In the
morning will I direct my prayer unto You, and will look up"; which I
have frequently explained to you to mean that he marshalled his thoughts
like men of war, or that he aimed his prayers like arrows. He did not
take the arrow and put it on the bowstring and shoot, and shoot, and
shoot anywhere; but after he had taken out the chosen shaft, and fitted
it to the string, he took deliberate aim. He looked—looked well—at the
white of the target; kept his eye fixed on it, directing his prayer, and
then drew his bow with all his strength and let the arrow fly; and then,
when the shaft had left his hand, what does he say? "I will look up." He
looked up to see where the arrow went, to see what effect it had; for he
expected an answer to his prayers, and was not as many who scarcely
think of their prayers after they have uttered them. David knew that he
had an engagement before him which required all his mental powers; he
marshalled up his faculties and went about the work in a workmanlike
manner, as one who believed in it and meant to succeed.
We should plough
carefully and pray carefully. The better the work the more attention it
deserves. To be anxious in the shop and thoughtless in the closet is
little less than blasphemy, for it is an insinuation that anything will
do for God, but the world must have our best.
If any ask what order should be observed in prayer, I am not about
to give you a scheme such as many have drawn out, in which
adoration,
confession, petition, intercession, and ascription
are arranged in succession. I am not persuaded that any such order is of
divine authority. It is to no mere mechanical order I have been
referring, for our prayers will be equally acceptable, and possibly
equally proper, in any form; for there are specimens of prayers, in all
shapes, in the Old and New Testament. The true spiritual order of prayer
seems to me to consist in something more than mere arrangement. It is
most fitting for us first to feel that we are now doing something that
is real; that we are about to address ourselves to God, whom we cannot
see, but who is really present; whom we can neither touch nor hear, nor
by our senses can apprehend, but who, nevertheless, is as truly with us
as though we were speaking to a friend of flesh and blood like
ourselves. Feeling the reality of God's presence, our mind will be led
by divine grace into an humble state; we shall feel like Abraham, when
he said,
"I have taken upon myself to speak unto God, I that am but dust and
ashes."
Consequently we shall not deliver ourselves of our prayer as boys
repeating their lessons, as a mere matter of rote, much less shall we
speak as if we were rabbis instructing our pupils, or as I have heard
some do, with the coarseness of a highway-man stopping a person on the
road and demanding his purse of him; but we shall be humble yet bold
petitioners, humbly importuning mercy through the Savior's blood. We
shall not have the reserve of a slave but the loving reverence of a
child, yet not an impudent, impertinent child, but a teachable obedient
child, honoring his Father, and therefore asking earnestly, but with
deferential submission to his Father's will. When I feel that I am in
the presence of God, and take my rightful position in that presence, the
next thing I shall want to recognize will be that I have no right to
what I am seeking, and cannot expect to obtain it except as a gift of
grace, and I must recollect that God limits the channel through which He
will give me mercy—He will give it to me through
His dear Son. Let me
put myself then under the patronage of the great Redeemer. Let me feel
that now it is no longer I that speak but Christ that speaks with me,
and that while I plead, I plead His wounds, His life, His death, His
blood, Himself. This is truly getting into order.
The next thing is to consider what I am to ask for? It is most
proper in prayer, to aim at great distinctness of supplication. There is
much reason to complain of some public prayers, that those who offer
them do not really ask God for anything. I must acknowledge I fear to
having so prayed myself, and certainly to having heard many prayers of
the kind in which I did not feel that anything was sought for from God—a
great deal of very excellent doctrinal and experimental matter uttered,
but little real petitioning, and that little in a nebulous kind of
state, chaotic and unformed. But it seems to me that prayer should be
distinct, the asking for something definitely and distinctly because the
mind has realized its distinct need of such a thing, and therefore must
plead for it. It is well not to beat round the bush in prayer, but to
come directly to the point. I like that prayer of Abraham's, "Oh that
Ishmael might live before You!" There is the name and the person prayed
for, and the blessing desired, all put in a few words,—"Ishmael might
live before thee!" Many persons would have used a roundabout expression
of this kind, "Oh that our beloved offspring might be regarded with the favor which
You bear to those who," etc. Say "Ishmael," if
you mean "Ishmael"; put it in plain words before the Lord.
Some people cannot even pray for the minister without using such
circular descriptions that you might think it were the parish beadle, or
somebody whom it did not do to mention to particularly. Why not be
distinct, and say what we mean as well as mean what we say? Ordering our
cause would bring us to greater distinctness of mind. It is not
necessary, my dear brethren, in the closet to ask for every supposable
good thing, it is not necessary to rehearse the catalogue of every want
that you may have had, can have, or shall have. Ask for what you now
need, and, as a rule, keep to present need; ask for your daily
bread—what you want now—ask for that. Ask for it plainly, as before God,
who does not regard your fine expressions, and to whom your eloquence
and oratory will be less than nothing and vanity you are before the
Lord; let your words be few, but let your heart be fervent.
You have not quite completed the ordering when you have asked for
what you want through Jesus Christ. There should be a looking round the
blessing in which you desire, to see whether it is assuredly a fitting
thing to ask; for some prayers would never be offered if men did but
think. A little reflection would show to us that some things which we
desire were better let alone. We may, moreover, have a motive at the
bottom of our desire which is not Christ-like, a selfish motive, which
forgets God's glory and caters only for our own case and comfort. Now
although we may ask for things which are for our profit, yet still we
must never let our profit interfere in any way with the glory of God.
There must be mingled with acceptable prayer the holy salt of submission
to the divine will. I like Luther's saying, "Lord, I will have
my will of You at this time." "What!" say you, "Like such an expression
as that?" I do, because of the next clause, which was, "I will have my
will, for I know that my will is Your will." That is well
spoken, Luther; but without the last words it would have been wicked
presumption. When we are sure that what we ask for is for God's glory,
then, if we have power in prayer, we may say, "I will not let You go
except You bless me": we may come to close dealings with God, and like
Jacob with the angel we may even put it to the wrestle and seek to give
the angel the fall sooner than be sent away without the benediction. But
we must be quite clear, before we come to such terms as those, that what
we are seeking is really for the Master's honor.
Put these three things together, the deep spirituality which
recognizes prayer as being real conversation with the invisible God—much
distinctness which is the reality of prayer, asking for what we know we
want—and with all much fervency, believing the thing to be necessary, and
therefore resolving to obtain it if it can be had by prayer, and above
all these complete submission, leaving it still with the Master's
will;—commingle all these, and you have a clear idea of what it is to
order your cause before the Lord.
Still prayer itself is an art which only the Holy Ghost can teach
us. He is the giver of all prayer. Pray for prayer—pray till you can
pray; pray to be helped to pray, and give not up praying because you
can not pray, for it is when you think you can not pray that
you are most praying; and sometimes when you have no sort of comfort
in your supplications, it is then that your heart all broken and cast down
is really wrestling and truly prevailing with the Most High.
II. The second part of prayer is FILLING THE MOUTH WITH
ARGUMENTS—not filling the mouth with words nor good phrases, nor pretty
expressions, but filling the mouth with arguments are the knocks of the
rapper by which the gate is opened.
Why are arguments to be used at all? is the first inquiry; the
reply being, Certainly not because God is slow to give, not because we
can change the divine purpose, not because God needs to be informed of
any circumstance with regard to ourselves or of anything in connection
with the mercy asked:
the arguments to be used are for our own benefit,
not for His. He requires for us to plead with Him,
and to bring forth our strong reasons, as Isaiah said, because this will
show that we feel the value of the mercy. When a man searches for
arguments for a thing it is because he attaches importance to that which
he is seeking.
Again, our use of arguments
teaches us the ground upon which we obtain the blessing. If a man should
come with the argument of his own merit, he would never succeed; the
successful argument is always founded upon grace, and therefore the soul
so pleading is made to understand intensely that it is by grace and by
grace alone that a sinner obtains anything from the Lord.
Besides, the use of arguments is intended to stir up our fervency.
The man who uses one argument with God will get more force in using the
next, and will use the next with still greater power, and the next with
more force still. The best prayers I have ever heard in our prayer
meetings have been those which have been fullest of argument. Sometimes
my soul has been fairly melted down when I have listened to brethren who
have come before God feeling the mercy to be really needed, and that
they must have it, for they first pleaded with God to give it for this
reason, and then for a second, and then for a third, and then for a
fourth and a fifth, until they have awakened the fervency of the entire
assembly. My brethren, there is no need for prayer at all as far as God
is concerned, but what a need there is for it on our own account! If we
were not constrained to pray, I question whether we could even live as
Christians.
If God's mercies came to us unasked, they would not be half
so useful as they now are, when they have to be sought for; for now we
get a double blessing, a blessing in the obtaining, and a blessing in
the seeking.
The very act of prayer is a blessing. To pray is as it were to
bathe one's-self in a cool purling stream, and so to escape from the
heats of earth's summer sun. To pray is to mount on eagle's wings above
the clouds and get into the clear heaven where God dwells. To pray is
to enter the treasure-house of God and to enrich one's-self out of an
inexhaustible storehouse. To pray is to grasp heaven in one's arms, to
embrace the Deity within one's soul, and to feel one's body made a
temple of the Holy Ghost. Apart from the answer prayer is in itself a
benediction. To pray, my brethren, is to cast off your burdens, it is to
tear away your rags, it is to shake off your diseases, it is to be
filled with spiritual vigor, it is to reach the highest point of
Christian health. God give us to be much in the holy art of arguing with
God in prayer.
The most interesting part of our subject remains; it is a very
rapid summary and catalogue of a few of the arguments which have been
used with great success with God. I cannot give you a full list; that
would require a treatise such as Master John Owen might produce. It is
well in prayer to plead with Jehovah His attributes. Abraham
did so when he laid hold upon God's justice. Sodom was to be pleaded
for, and Abraham begins, "Peradventure there be fifty righteous within
the city: wilt thou also destroy and not spare the place for the fifty
righteous that are therein? that be far from thee to do after this
manner, to slay the righteous with the wicked: and that the righteous
should be as the wicked, that be far from thee: Shall not the Judge of
all the earth do right?" Here the wrestling begins. It was a powerful
argument by which the patriarch grasped the Lord's left hand, and
arrested it just when the thunderbolt was about to fall. But there came
a reply to it. It was intimated to him that this would not spare the
city, and you notice how the good man, when sorely pressed, retreated by
inches; and at last, when he could no longer lay hold upon justice,
grasped God's right hand of mercy, and that gave him a wondrous hold
when he asked that if there were but ten righteous there the city might
be spared.
So you and I may take hold at any time upon the justice, the
mercy, the faithfulness, the wisdom, the long-suffering, the tenderness
of God, and we shall find every attribute of the Most High to be, as it
were, a great battering-ram, with which we may open the gates of heaven.
Another mighty piece of ordinance in the battle of prayer is God's
promise. When Jacob was on the other side of the brook Jabbok,
and his brother Esau was coming with armed men, he pleaded with God not
to suffer Esau to destroy the mother and the children, and as a master
reason he pleaded,
"And You said, surely I will do you good."
Oh the
force of that plea! He was holding God to His word:
"You said."
The
attribute is a splendid horn of the altar to lay hold upon; but the
promise, which has in it the attribute and something more, is yet a
mightier holdfast.
"You said."
Remember how David put it. After
Nathan had spoken the promise, David said at the close of his prayer,
"Do as You have said."
That is a legitimate argument with every honest
man, and has he said, and shall he not do it? "Let God be true, and
every man a liar." Shall not he be true?
Shall He not keep His
word?
Shall not every word that cometh out of his lips stand fast and be
fulfilled?
Solomon, at the opening of the temple, used this same mighty plea.
He pleads with God to remember the word which He had spoken to his
father David, and to bless that place. When a man gives a promissory
note, his honor is engaged. He signs his hand, and he must discharge it
when the due time comes, or else he loses credit.
It shall never be said
that God dishonors His bills.
The credit of the Most High never was
impeached, and never shall be. He is punctual to the moment; He never is
before His time, but He never is behind it. You shall search this Book
through, and you shall compare it with the experience of God's people,
and the two tally from the first to the last, and many a hoary patriarch
has said with Joshua in his old age, "Not one good thing hath failed of
all that the Lord God hath promised: all hath come to pass." My brother,
if you have a divine promise, you need not plead it with an "if" in it;
you may plead with a certainty. If for the mercy which you are now
asking, you have God's solemnly pledged word, there will scarce be any
room for the caution about submission to His will. You know His will:
that will is in the promise; plead it. Do not give Him rest until He fulfill it. He meant to fulfill it, or else
He would not have given it.
God does not give His words merely to quiet our noise, and to keep us
hopeful for awhile, with the intention of putting us off at last; but
when He speaks, He speaks because he means to act.
A third argument to be used is that employed by Moses, the
great name of God. How mightily did he argue with God on one
occasion upon this ground! "What will
You do for Your great name?
The
Egyptians will say, "Because the Lord could not bring them into the
land, therefore He slew them in the wilderness." There are some
occasions when the Name of God is very closely tied up with the history
of His people. Sometimes in reliance upon a divine promise, a believer
will be led to take a certain course of action. Now, if the Lord should
not be as good as His promise, not only is the believer deceived, but
the wicked world looking on would say, "Aha! aha! Where is your God?"
Take the case of our respected brother, Mr. Mueller, of Bristol. These
many years he has declared that God hears prayer, and firm in that
conviction, he has gone on to build house after house for the
maintenance of orphans. Now, I can very well conceive that, if he were
driven to a point of want of means for the maintenance of those thousand
or two thousand children, he might very well use the plea, "What will
You do for Your great name?" And you, in some severe trouble, when you
have fairly received the promise, may say, "Lord, You have said, 'In
six troubles I will be with you, and in seven I will not forsake you.'
I have told my friends and neighbors that I put my trust in You, and
if You do not deliver me now, where is Your name? Arise, O God, and do
this thing, lest Your honor be cast into the dust."
Coupled with this, we may employ the further argument of
the
hard things said by the revilers. It was well done of Hezekiah,
when he took Rabshakeh's letter and spread it before the Lord. Will that
help him?
It is full of blasphemy, will that help him? "Where are the
gods of Arphad and Sepharvaim? Where are the gods of the cities which I
have overthrown? Let not Hezekiah deceive you, saying that Jehovah will
deliver you." Does that have any effect? Oh! yes, it was a blessed thing
that Rabshakeh wrote that letter, for it provoked the Lord to help His
people. Sometimes the child of God can rejoice when he sees his enemies
get thoroughly out of temper and take to reviling. "Now," he says, "they
have reviled the Lord Himself; not me alone have they assailed, but the
Most High Himself. Now it is no longer the poor insignificant Hezekiah
with his little band of soldiers, but it is Jehovah, the King of angels,
who has come to fight against Rabshakeh. Now what will you do, O
boastful soldier of proud Sennacherib? Will you not be utterly
destroyed, since Jehovah Himself has come into the fray?"
All the progress that is made by Popery, all the wrong things said
by speculative atheists and so on, should be by Christians used as an
argument with God,
why He should help the gospel. Lord; see how they
reproach the gospel of Jesus! Pluck Your right hand out of your bosom! O
God, they defy You! Anti-Christ thrusts itself into the place where Your
Son once was honored, and from the very pulpits where the gospel was
once preached Popery is now declared. Arise, O God, wake up Your zeal,
let Your sacred passions burn! Your ancient foe again prevails. Behold
the harlot of Babylon once more upon her scarlet-colored beast rides
forth in triumph! Come, Jehovah, come, Jehovah, and once again show what
Your bare arm can do! This is a legitimate mode of pleading with God, for
His great Name's Sake.
So also may we plead the sorrows of His people. This is
frequently done.
Jeremiah is the great master of this art. He says, "Her Nazarites were purer than snow, they were whiter than milk, they were
more ruddy in body than rubies, their polishing was of sapphire: their
visage is blacker than a coal." "The precious sons of Zion, comparable
to fine gold, how are they esteemed as earthen pitchers, the work of the
hands of the potter!" He talks of all their griefs and straitnesses in
the siege. He calls upon the Lord to look upon His suffering Zion; and
ere long his plaintive cries are heard. Nothing so eloquent with the
father as His child's cry; yes, there is one thing more mighty still,
and that is a moan,—when the child is so sick that it is past crying,
and lies moaning with that kind of moan which indicates extreme
suffering and intense weakness. Who can resist that moan? Ah! and when
God's Israel shall be brought very low so that they can scarcely cry but
only their moans are heard, then comes the Lord's time of deliverance,
and He is sure to show that he loves His people. Dear friends, whenever
you also are brought into the same condition you may plead your moanings,
and when you see a church brought very low you may use her griefs as an
argument why God should return and save the remnant of His people.
Brethren, it is good to plead with God the past. Ah, you
experienced people of God, you know how to do this. Here is David's
specimen of it: "You have been my help. Leave me not, neither
forsake me." He pleads God's mercy to him from his youth up. He speaks
of being cast upon his God from his very birth, and then he pleads, "Now
also, when I am old and grayheaded, O God, forsake me not." Moses also,
speaking with God, says, "You brought this people up out
of Egypt." As if he would say, "Do not leave Your work unfinished;
You
have begun to build, complete it. You hast fought the first battle;
Lord, end the campaign! Go on till You get a complete victory." How
often have we cried in our trouble, "Lord, You did deliver me in such
and such a sharp trial, when it seemed as if no help were near; You
have never forsaken me yet. I have set up my Ebenezer in Your name. If
You had intended to leave me why have You showed me such things?
Have You brought Your servant to this place to put him to shame?"
Brethren, we have to deal with an unchanging God, who will do in the
future what He has done in the past, because He never turns from His
purpose, and cannot be thwarted in His design; the past thus becomes a
very mighty means of winning blessings from Him.
We may even use our own unworthiness as an argument with
God. "Out of the eater comes forth meat, and out of the strong comes
forth sweetness." David in one place pleads thus: "Lord, have mercy upon
my iniquity, for it is great." That is a very singular mode of
reasoning; but being interpreted it means,
"Lord, why should You go
about doing little things? You are a great God, and here is a great
sinner. Here is a fitness in me for the display of Your grace. The
greatness of my sin makes me a platform for the greatness of Your mercy.
Let the greatness of Your love be seen in me."
Moses seems to have the
same on his mind when he asks God to show His great power in sparing His
sinful people. The power with which God restrains Himself is great
indeed. O brothers and sisters, there is such a thing as creeping down
at the foot of the throne, crouching low and crying, "O God, break me
not—I am a bruised reed. Oh! tread not on my little life, it is now but
as the smoking flax. Will You hunt me? Will You come out, as David
said, 'after a dead dog, after a flea?' Wilt You pursue me as a leaf
that is blown in the tempest? Will You watch me, as Job said, 'as
though I were a vast sea, or a great whale?' No, but because I am so
little, and because the greatness of Your mercy can be shown in one so
insignificant and yet so vile as me, therefore, O God, have mercy upon me."
There was once an occasion when the very Godhead of Jehovah made a
triumphant plea for the prophet Elijah. On that august occasion, when he
had bidden his adversaries see whether their god could answer them by
fire, you can little guess the excitement there must have been that day
in the prophet's mind. With what stern sarcasm did he say, "Cry aloud:
for he is a god; either he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a
journey, or peradventure he sleepeth, and must be awakened." And as they
cut themselves with knives, and leaped upon the altar, oh the scorn with
which that man of God must have looked down upon their impotent
exertions, and their earnest but useless cries! But think of how his
heart must have palpitated, if it had not been for the strength of his
faith, when he repaired the altar of God that was broken down, and laid
the wood in order, and killed the bullock. Hear him cry, "Pour water on
it. You shall not suspect me of concealing fire; pour water on the
victim." When they had done so, he bids them, "Do it a second time"; and
they did it a second time; and then he says, "Do it a third time." And
when it was all covered with water, soaked and saturated through, then
he stands up and cries to God, "O God, let it be known that You only
are God." Here everything was put to the test. Jehovah's own existence
was now put, as it were, at stake, before the eyes of men by this bold
prophet. But how well the prophet was heard! Down came the fire and
devoured not only the sacrifice, but even the wood, and the stones, and
even the very water that was in the trenches, for Jehovah God had
answered His servant's prayer.
We sometimes may do the same, and say
unto Him, "Oh, by Your Deity, by Your existence, if indeed you are God,
now show Yourself for the help of Your people!"
Lastly, the grand Christian argument is the sufferings, the
death, the merit, the intercession of Christ Jesus. Brethren, I am
afraid we do not understand what it is that we have at our command when
we are allowed to plead with God for Christ's sake. I met with this
thought the other day: it was somewhat new to me, but I believe it ought
not to have been. When we ask God to hear us, pleading Christ's name, we
usually mean, "O Lord, Your dear Son deserves this from You; do this unto
me because of what He merits." But if we knew it we might go in the
city, "Sir, call at my office, and use my name, and say that they are to
give you such a thing." I should go in and use your name, and I should
obtain my request as a matter of right and a matter of necessity. This
is virtually what Jesus Christ says to us. "If you need anything of God,
all that the Father has belongs to Me; go and use My Name." Suppose you
should give a man your check-book signed with your own name and left
blank, to be filled up as he chose; that would be very nearly what Jesus
has done in these words, "If you ask anything in My name, I will give it
you." If I had a good name at the bottom of the check, I should be sure
that I should get it cashed when I went to the banker with it; so when
you have got Christ's name, to whom the very justice of God hath become
a debtor, and whose merits have claims with the Most High, when you have
Christ's name there is no need to speak with fear and trembling and
bated breath. Oh, waver not and let not faith stagger! When you plead the
Name of Christ you plead that which shakes the gates of
hell, and which the hosts of heaven obey, and God Himself feels the
sacred power of that divine plea.
Brethren, you would do better if you sometimes thought more in
your prayers of Christ's griefs and groans. Bring before the Lord His
wounds, tell the Lord of His cries, make the groans of Jesus cry again
from Gethsemane, and His blood speak again from that frozen Calvary.
Speak out and tell the Lord that with such griefs, and cries, and groans
to plead, you can not take a denial: such arguments as these will
speed you.
III. If the Holy Ghost shall teach us how to order our cause, and
how to fill our mouth with arguments, the result shall be that WE SHALL
HAVE OUR MOUTH FILLED WITH PRAISES.
The man who has his mouth full of arguments in prayer shall soon
have his mouth full of benedictions in answer to prayer. Dear friend,
you have your mouth full this morning, have you? What of? Full of
complaining? Pray the Lord to rinse your mouth out of that black stuff,
for it will little avail you, and it will be bitter in your bowels one
of these days. Oh, have your mouth full of prayer, full of it, full of
arguments so that there is room for nothing else. Then come with this
blessed mouthful, and you shall soon go away with whatsoever you have
asked of God. Only delight yourself in Him, and He will give you the
desire of your heart!
It is said—I know not how truly—that the explanation of the text,
"Open your mouth wide and I will fill it," may be found in a very
singular Oriental custom. It is said that not many years ago—I remember
the circumstance being reported—the King of Persia ordered the chief of
his nobility, who had done something or other which greatly gratified
him, to open his mouth, and when he had done so he began to put into his
mouth pearls, diamonds, rubies, and emeralds, till he had filled it as
full as it could hold, and then he bade him go his way. This is said to
have been occasionally done in Oriental Courts towards great favorites.
Now certainly whether that be an explanation of the text or not it is an
illustration of it.
God says, "Open your mouth with arguments," and then
He will fill it with mercies priceless, gems unspeakably valuable.
Would
not a man open his mouth wide when he had to have it filled in such a
style? Surely the most simple-minded among you would be wise enough for
that. Oh! let us then open wide our mouth when we have to plead with
God. Our needs are great, let our petitions be great, and the supply shall
be great too. You are not straitened in Him; you are straitened in your
own bowels. The Lord give you large mouths in prayer, great potency, not
in the use of language, but in employing arguments!
What I have been speaking to the Christian is applicable in great
measure to the unconverted man. God give you to see the force of it,
and to fly in humble prayer to the Lord Jesus Christ and to find eternal
life in Him. |