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Chapter 10 |
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Prayer and Obedience (Continued) IT is worthy of note that the praying to which such transcendent position is given and from which great results are attributable, is not simply the saying of prayers, but holy praying. It is the "prayers of the saints," the prayers of the holy men of God. Behind such praying, giving to it energy and flame are the men and women who are wholly devoted to God, who are entirely separated from sin, and fully separated unto God. These are they who always give energy, force, and strength to praying. Our
Lord Jesus Christ was preeminent in praying, because he was preeminent in
saintliness. An entire dedication to God, a full surrender, which carries
with it the whole being, in a flame of holy consecration-all this gives
wings to faith and energy to prayer. It opens the door to the throne of
grace, and brings strong influence to bear on Almighty God. The "lifting up
of holy hands" is essential to Christlike praying. It is not, however, a
holiness which only dedicates a closet to God, which sets apart merely an
hour to him, but a consecration which takes hold of the entire man, which
dedicates the whole life to God. Our Lord Jesus
Christ, "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners," had full liberty
of approach and ready access to God in prayer. And he had this free and full
access because of his unquestioning obedience to his Father. Right through
his earthly life his supreme care and desire was to do the will of his
Father. And this fact, coupled with another-the consciousness of having so
ordered his life-gave him confidence and assurance, which enabled him to
draw near to the throne of grace with unbounded confidence, born of
obedience, and promising acceptance, audience, and answer. Loving obedience
puts us where we can "ask anything in his name," with the assurance, that
"He will do it." Loving obedience brings us into the prayer realm, and makes
us beneficiaries of the wealth of Christ, and of the riches of his grace,
through the coming of the Holy Spirit who will abide with us, and be in us.
Cheerful obedience to God, qualifies us to pray effectually. This obedience
which not only qualifies but foreruns prayer, must be loving, constant,
always doing the Father's will, and cheerfully following the path of God's
commands. In the instance
of King Hezekiah, it was a potent plea which changed God's decree that he
should die and not live. The stricken ruler called upon God to remember how
he had walked before him in truth, and with a perfect heart. With God, this
counted. He hearkened to the petition and as a result death found his
approach to Hezekiah barred for fifteen years. Jesus learned
obedience in the school of suffering, and, at the same time, he learned
prayer in the school of obedience. Just as it is the prayer of a righteous
man which availeth much, so it is righteousness which is obedience to God. A
righteous man is an obedient man, and he it is, who can pray effectually,
who can accomplish great things when he betakes himself to his knees. True praying, be
it remembered, is not mere sentiment, nor poetry, nor eloquent utterance.
Nor does it consist of saying in honeyed cadences, "Lord, Lord." Prayer is
not a mere form of words; it is not just calling upon a name. Prayer is
obedience. It is founded on the adamantine rock of obedience to God. Only
those who obey have the right to pray. Behind the praying must be the doing;
and it is the constant doing of God's will in daily life which gives prayer
its potency, as our Lord plainly taught: Not every one
which saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but
he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven. Many will say unto
me in that day, "Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name, and in thy name
have cast out devils? And in thy name done many wonderful works?" And then
will I profess unto them, "I never knew you; depart from me, ye that worketh
iniquity" How great and
manifold are the misconceptions of the true elements and functionings of
prayer! There are many who earnestly desire to obtain an answer to their
prayers but who go unrewarded and unblessed. They fix their minds on some
promise of God and then endeavor by dint of dogged perseverance, to summon
faith sufficient to lay hold upon, and claim it. This fixing of the mind on
some great promise may avail in strengthening faith, but, to this holding on
to the promise must be added the persistent and importunate prayer that
expects and waits till faith grows exceedingly. And who is there that is
able and competent to do such praying save the man who readily, cheerfully,
and continually obeys God? Faith, in its
highest form, is the attitude as well as the act of a soul surrendered to
God, in whom his Word and his Spirit dwells. It is true that faith must
exist in some form, or another, in order to prompt praying; but in its
strongest form, and in its largest results, faith is the fruit of prayer.
That faith increases the ability and the efficiency of prayer is true; but
it is likewise true that prayer increases the ability and efficiency of
faith. Prayer and faith, work, act and react, one upon the other. Obedience to God
helps faith as no other attribute possibly can. When obedience
exists,-implicit recognition of the validity, the paramountcy of the divine
commands-faith ceases to be an almost superhuman task. It requires no
straining to exercise it. Obedience to God makes it easy to believe and
trust God. Where the spirit of obedience fully impregnates the soul; where
the will is perfectly surrendered to God; where there is a fixed,
unalterable purpose to obey God, faith almost believes itself. Faith then
becomes almost involuntary After obedience it is, naturally, the next step,
and it is easily and readily taken. The difficulty in prayer is not with
faith, but with obedience, which is faith's foundation. We must look
well to our obedience, to the secret springs of action, to the loyalty of
our heart to God, if we would pray well, and desire to get the most out of
our praying. Obedience is the groundwork of effectual praying; this it is,
which brings us nigh to God. The lack of
obedience in our lives breaks down our praying. Quite often, the life is in
revolt and this places us where praying is almost impossible, except it be
for pardoning mercy Disobedient living produces mighty poor praying.
Disobedience shuts the door of the inner chamber, and bars the way to the
Holy of Holies. No man can pray-really pray-who does not obey. The will must be
surrendered to God as a primary condition of all successful praying.
Everything about us gets its coloring from our inmost character. The secret
will makes character and controls conduct. The will, therefore, plays an
important part in all successful praying. There can be no praying in its
richest implication and truest sense, where the will is not wholly and fully
surrendered to God. This unswerving loyalty to God is an utterly
indispensable condition of the best, the truest, the most effectual praying.
We have "simply got to trust and obey; there's no other way, to be happy in
Jesus-but to trust, and obey!" |