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Chapter 2 |
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Prayer and Faith II Genuine, authentic faith must be definite and free of doubt. Not simply general in character; not a mere belief in the being, goodness, and power of God, but a faith which believes that the things which "he says, shall come to pass." As the faith is specific, so the answer likewise will be definite: "He shall have whatsoever he says." Faith and prayer select the things, and God commits Himself to do the very things which faith and persevering prayer nominate, and petition Him to accomplish. The
American Revised Version renders the twenty-fourth verse of the eleventh
chapter of Mark, thus: "Therefore I say unto you, All things whatsoever you
pray and ask for, believe that you will receive them, and you shall have them."
Perfect faith has always in its keeping what perfect prayer asks for. How
large and unqualified is the area of operation-the "All things whatsoever! "
How definite and specific the promise-"You shall have them!" Our chief
concern is with our faith-the problems of its growth, and the activities of
its vigorous maturity. A faith which grasps and holds in its keeping the
very things it asks for, without wavering, doubt or fear-that is the faith
we need-faith, such as is a pearl of great price, in the process and
practice of prayer. The statement of
our Lord about faith and prayer quoted above is of supreme importance. Faith
must be definite, specific; an unqualified, unmistakable request for the
things asked for. It is not to be a vague, indefinite, shadowy thing; it
must be something more than an abstract belief in God's willingness and
ability to do for us. It is to be a definite, specific, asking for, and
expecting the things for which we ask. Note the reading of
Mark 11:22-25(NIV) Just so far as
the faith and the asking is definite, so also will the answer be. The giving
is not to be something other than the things prayed for, but the actual
things sought and named. "He shall have whatsoever he says." It is all
imperative, "He shall have." The granting is to be unlimited, both in
quality and in quantity. Faith is not an
abstract belief in the Word of God, nor a mere mental credence, nor a simple
assent of the understanding and will; nor is it a passive acceptance of
facts, however sacred or thorough. Faith is an operation of God, a divine
illumination, a holy energy implanted by the Word of God and the Spirit in
the human soul---a spiritual, divine principle which takes of the
supernatural and makes it a thing apprehendable by the faculties of time and
sense. Faith deals with
God, and is conscious of God. It deals with the Lord Jesus Christ and sees
in Him a Savior; it deals with God's Word, and lays hold of the truth; it
deals with the Spirit of God, and is energized and inspired by its holy
fire. God is the great objective of faith; for faith rests its whole weight
on His Word. Faith is not an aimless act of the soul, but a looking to God
and a resting upon His promises. Just as love and hope have always an
objective so, also, has faith. Faith is not believing just anything; it is
believing God, resting in Him, trusting- His Word. Faith gives
birth to prayer and grows stronger, strikes deeper, rises higher, in the
struggles and wrestlings of mighty petitioning. Faith is the substance of
things hoped for, the assurance and realization of the inheritance of the
saints. Faith, too, is humble and persevering. It can wait and pray; it can
stay on its knees, or lie in the dust. It is the one great condition of
prayer; the lack of it lies at the root of all poor praying, feeble praying,
little praying, unanswered praying. The nature and
meaning of faith is more demonstrable in what it does, than it is by reason
of any definition given it. Thus, if we turn to the record of faith given us
in that great honor roll, which constitutes the eleventh chapter of Hebrews,
we see something of the wonderful results of faith. What a glorious list it
is-that of these men and women of faith! What marvelous achievements are
there recorded, and set to the credit of faith! The inspired writer,
exhausting his resources in cataloguing the Old Testament saints, who were
such notable examples of wonderful faith, finally exclaims: And what more
shall I say? For the time would fail me to tell of Gideon and Barak, and of
Samson, and of Jephthah; of David also, and Samuel, and of the prophets. Many men, of
this day, obtain a good report because of their money-giving, their great
mental gifts and talents, but few there be who obtain a "good report"
because of their great faith in God, or because of the wonderful things
which are being wrought through their great praying. Today, as much as at
any time, we need men of great faith and men who are great in prayer. These
are the two cardinal virtues which make men great in the eyes of God, the
two things which create conditions of real spiritual success in the life and
work of the church. It is our chief concern to see that we maintain a faith
of such quality and texture, as counts before God; which grasps, and holds
in its keeping, the things for which it asks, without doubt and without
fear. Doubt and fear
are the twin foes of faith. Sometimes, they actually usurp the place of
faith, and although we pray, it is a restless, disquieted prayer that we
offer, uneasy and often complaining. Peter failed to walk on Gennesaret
because he permitted the waves to break over him and swamp the power of his
faith. Taking his eyes from the Lord and regarding the water all about him,
he began to sink and had to cry for succor-"Lord, save me, or I perish!" Doubts should
never be cherished, nor fears harbored. Let none cherish the delusion that
he is a martyr to to fear and doubt. no-credit to any man's mental capacity
to cherish doubt of God, and no comfort can possibly derive from such a
thought. Our eves should be taken -off -self, removed from our own weakness
and allowed to rest implicitly upon God's strength. "Cast not away therefore
your confidence, which has great recompense of reward." A simple, confiding
faith, living day by day, and casting its burden on the Lord, each hour of
the day, will dissipate fear, drive away misgiving and deliver from doubt: That is the
divine cure all fear, anxiety, and undue concern of soul, all of which are
closely akin to doubt and unbelief. This is the divine prescription for
securing the peace which passeth all understanding, and keeps the heart and
mind in quietness and peace. All of us need
to mark well and heed the caution given in Hebrews: "Take heed, brethren,
lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the
living God." We need, also,
to guard against unbelief as we would against an enemy Faith needs to be
cultivated. We need to keep on praying, "Lord, increase our faith," for
faith is susceptible of increase. Paul's tribute to the Thessalonians was,
that their faith grew exceedingly Faith is increased by exercise, by being
put into use. it is nourished by sore trials. That the trial
of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perishes, though
it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honor and glory at the
appearing of Jesus Christ. Faith grows by
reading and meditating upon the Word of God. Most, and best of all, faith
thrives in an atmosphere of prayer. It would be
well, if all of us were to stop, and inquire personally of ourselves: "Do
I have
faith in God? Have I real faith-faith which keeps me in perfect peace,
about the things of earth and the things of heaven?" This is the most
important question a man can propound and expect to be answered. And there
is another question, closely akin to it in significance and importance-"Do I
really pray to God so that He hears me and answers my prayers? And do I
truly pray unto God so that I get direct from God the things I ask of Him? " It was claimed
for Augustus Caesar that he found Rome a city of wood, and left it a city of
marble. The pastor who succeeds in changing his people from a prayerless to
a prayerful people, has done a greater work than did Augustus in changing a
city from wood to marble. And after all, this is the prime work of the
preacher. Primarily, he is dealing with prayerless people-with people of
whom it is said, "God is not in all their thoughts." Such people he meets
everywhere, and all the time. His main business is to turn them from being
forgetful of God, from being devoid of faith, from being prayerless, so that
they become people who habitually pray, who believe in God, remember Him,
and do His will. The preacher is not sent to merely induce men to join the
church, nor merely to _get them to do better. It is to get them to pray, to
trust God, and to keep God ever before their eyes, that they may not sin
against Him. The work of the
ministry is to change unbelieving sinners into praying and believing saints.
The call goes forth by divine authority, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
and You shall be saved." We catch a glimpse of the tremendous importance of
faith and of the great value God has set upon it, when we remember that He
has made it the one indispensable condition of being saved. By grace are you
saved, through faith." Thus, when we contemplate the great importance of
prayer, we find faith standing immediately by its side. By faith are we
saved, and by faith we stay saved. Prayer introduces us to a life of faith.
Paul declared that the life he lived, he lived by faith in the Son of God,
who loved him and gave Himself for him-that he walked by faith and not by
sight. Prayer is
absolutely dependent upon faith. Virtually, it has no existence apart from
it, and accomplishes nothing unless it is its inseparable companion. Faith
makes prayer effectual, and in a certain important sense, must precede it. Before prayer
ever starts toward God; before its petition is preferred, before its
requests are made known-faith must have gone on ahead; must have asserted
its belief in the existence of God; must have given its assent to the
gracious truth that "God is a rewarder of those that diligently seek His
face." This is the primary step in praying. In this regard, while faith does
not bring the blessing, yet it puts prayer in a position to ask for it, and
leads to another step toward realization, by aiding the petitioner to
believe that God is able and willing to bless. Faith starts
prayer to work-clears the way to the mercy seat. It gives assurance, first
of all, that there is a mercy seat, and that there the high priest awaits
the prayers and the prayers. Faith opens the way for prayer to approach God.
But it does more. It accompanies prayer at every step she takes. It is her
inseparable companion and when requests are made unto God, it is faith which
turns the asking into obtaining. And faith follows prayer, since the
spiritual life into which a believer is led by prayer, is a life of faith.
The one prominent characteristic of the experience into which believers are
brought through prayer, is not a life of works, but of faith. Faith makes
prayer strong, and gives it patience to wait on God. Faith believes that God
is a rewarder. No truth is more clearly revealed in the Scriptures than
this, while none is more encouraging. Even the closet has its promised
reward, "He that sees in secret, shall reward you openly," while the most
insignificant service rendered to a disciple in the name of the Lord, surely
receives its reward. And to this precious truth faith gives its hearty
assent. Yet faith is
narrowed down to one particular thing-it does not believe that God will
reward everybody, nor that he is a rewarder of all who pray, but that he is
a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him. Faith rests its case on
diligence in prayer, and gives assurance and encouragement to diligent
seekers after God, for it is they, alone, who are richly rewarded when they
pray. We need
constantly to be reminded that faith is the one inseparable condition of
successful praying. There are other considerations entering into the
exercise, but faith is the final, the one indispensable condition of true
praying. As it is written in a familiar, primary declaration: "Without
faith, it is impossible to please Him." Doubting is
always put under the ban, because it stands as a foe to faith and hinders
effectual praying. In the First Epistle to Timothy Paul gives us an
invaluable truth relative to the conditions of successful praying, which he
thus lays down: "I will therefore that men pray everywhere, lifting up holy
hands, without wrath and doubting." All questioning
must be watched against and eschewed. Fear and peradventure have no place in
true praying. Faith must assert itself and bid these foes to prayer depart. Too much
authority cannot be attributed to faith; but prayer is the scepter by which
it signalizes its power. How much of spiritual wisdom there is in the
following advice written by an eminent old divine. Would you be
freed from the bondage to corruption? Would you grow in grace in general and
grow in grace in particular? If you would, your way is plain. Ask of God
more faith. Beg of Him morning, and noon and night, while you walk by the
way, while you sit in the house, when you lie down and when you rise up; beg
of Him simply to impress divine things more deeply on your heart, to give
you more and more of the substance of things hoped for and of the evidence
of things not seen. Great incentives to pray are furnished in Holy Scriptures, and our Lord closes His teaching about prayer, with the assurance and promise of heaven. The presence of Jesus Christ in heaven, the preparation for His saints which He is making there, and the assurance that He will come again to receive them-how all this helps the weariness of praying, strengthens its conflicts, sweetens its arduous toil! These things are the star of hope to prayer, the wiping away of its tears, the putting of the odor of heaven into the bitterness of its cry The spirit of a pilgrim greatly facilitates praying. An earthbound,
earth-satisfied spirit cannot pray In such a heart, the flame of spiritual
desire is either gone out or smoldering in faintest glow. The wings of its
faith are dipped, its eyes are filmed, its tongue silenced. But they, who in
unswerving faith and unceasing prayer, wait continually upon the Lord, do
renew their strength, do mount up with wings as eagles, do run, and are not
weary, do walk, and not faint. |