|
||||
Chapter 3 |
||||
|
Prayer and Trust PRAYER does not stand alone. It is not an isolated duty and independent principle. It lives in association with other Christian duties, is wedded to other principles, is a partner with other graces. But to faith, prayer is indissolubly joined. Faith gives it color and tone, shapes its character, and secures its results. Trust is faith become absolute, ratified, consummated. There is, when all is said and done, a sort of venture in faith and its exercise. But trust is firm belief, it is faith in full flower. Trust is a conscious act, a fact of which we are sensible. According to the Scriptural concept it is the eye of the newborn soul, and the ear of the renewed soul. It is the feeling of the soul, the spiritual eye, the ear, the taste, the feeling-these one and all have to do with trust. How luminous, how distinct, how conscious, how powerful, and more than all, how Scriptural is such a trust!
How different from many forms of modern belief, so feeble, dry, and cold!
These new phases of belief bring no consciousness of their presence, no "joy
unspeakable and full of glory" results from their exercise. They are, for
the most part, adventures in the peradventures of the soul, There is no
safe, sure trust in anything. The whole transaction takes place in the realm
of maybe and perhaps. Trust like life,
is feeling, though much more than feeling. An unfelt life is a
contradiction; an unfelt trust is a misnomer, a delusion, a contradiction.
Trust is the most felt of all attributes. It is all feeling, and it works
only by love. An unfelt love is as impossible as an unfelt trust. The trust
of which we are now speaking is a conviction. An unfelt conviction? How
absurd! Trust sees God
doing things here and now. Yea, more. It rises to a lofty eminence, and
looking into the invisible and the eternal, realizes that God has done
things, and regards them as being already done. Trust brings eternity into
the annals and happenings of time, transmutes the substance of hope into the
reality of fruition, and changes promise into present possession. We know
when we trust just as we know when we see, just as we are conscious of our
sense of touch. Trust sees, receives, holds. Trust is its own witness. Yet, quite
often, faith is too weak to obtain God's greatest good, immediately; so it
has to wait in loving, strong, prayerful, pressing obedience, until it grows
in strength, and is able to bring down the eternal, into the realms of
experience and time. To this point,
trust masses all its forces. Here it holds. And in the struggle, trust's
grasp becomes mightier, and grasps, for itself, all that God has done for it
in his in his eternal wisdom and plentitude of grace In the matter of
waiting in prayer, mightiest prayer, faith rises to its highest plane and
becomes indeed the gift of God. It becomes the blessed disposition and
expression of the soul which is secured by a constant communicating with,
and unwearied application to God. Jesus Christ
clearly taught that faith was the condition on which prayer was answered.
When our Lord had cursed the fig tree, the disciples were much surprised
that its withering had actually taken place, and their remarks indicated
their incredulity. It was then that Jesus said to them, "Have faith in God." For verily I say
unto you, that whosoever shall say unto this mountain, "Be thou removed and
be thou cast into the sea", and shall not doubt in his heart, but shall
believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass, he shall have
whatsoever he saith. Therefore, I say unto you, what things soever ye
desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them. Trust grows
nowhere so readily and richly as in the prayer chamber. Its unfolding and
development are rapid and wholesome when they are regularly and well kept.
When these engagements are hearty and full and free, trust flourishes
exceedingly. The eye and presence of God give vigorous life to trust, just
as the eye and the presence of the sun make fruit and flower to grow, and
all things glad and bright with fuller life. "Have faith in
God," "Trust in the Lord" form the keynote and foundation of prayer.
Primarily, it is not trust in the Word of God, but rather trust in the
person of God. For trust in the person of God must precede trust in the Word
of God. "Ye believe in God, believe also in me," is the demand our Lord
-makes on the personal trust of his disciples. The person of Jesus Christ
must be central, to the eye of trust. This great truth Jesus sought to
impress upon Martha, when her brother lay dead, in the tomb at Bethany
Martha asserted her belief in the fact of the resurrection of her brother: Jesus lifts her
trust clear above the mere fact of the resurrection, to his own person, by
saying: Trust, in an
historical fact or in a mere record may be a very passive thing, but trust
in a person vitalizes the quality, fructifies it, informs it with love. The
trust which informs prayer centers in a person. Trust goes even
further than this. The trust which inspires our prayer must be not only
trust in the person of God, and of Christ, but in their ability and
willingness to grant the thing prayed for. It is not only, "Trust, ye, in
the Lord," but, also, "for in the Lord Jehovah, is everlasting strength." The trust which
our Lord taught as a condition of effectual prayer, is not of the head but
of the heart. It is trust which "doubteth not in his heart." Such trust has
the divine assurance that it shall be honored with large and satisfying
answers. The strong promise of our Lord brings faith down to the present,
and counts on a present answer. Do we believe,
without a doubt? When we pray, do we believe, not that we shall receive the
things for which we ask on a future day, but that we receive them, then and
there? Such is the teaching of this inspiring Scripture. How we need to
pray, "Lord, increase our faith," until doubt be gone, and implicit trust
claims the promised blessings, as its very own. This is no easy
condition. It is reached only after many a failure, after much praying,
after many waitings, after much trial of faith. May our faith so increase
until we realize and receive all the fulness there is in that name which
guarantees to do so much. Our Lord puts
trust as the very foundation of praying. The background of prayer is trust.
The whole issuance of Christ's ministry and work was dependent on implicit
trust in his Father. The center of trust is God. Mountains of difficulties,
and all other hindrances to prayer are moved out of the way by trust and his
virile henchman, faith. When trust is perfect and without doubt, prayer is
simply the outstretched hand, ready to receive. Trust perfected, is prayer
perfected. Trust looks to receive the thing asked for-and gets it. Trust is
not a belief that God can bless, that he will bless. but that he does bless,
here and now. Trust always operates in the present tense. Hope looks toward
the future. Trust looks to the present. Hope expects. Trust possesses. Trust
receives what prayer acquires. So that what prayer needs, at all times, is
abiding and abundant trust. Their lamentable
lack of trust and resultant failure of the disciples to do what they were
sent out to do, is seen in the case of the lunatic son, who was brought by
his father to nine of them while their master was on the Mount of
Transfiguration. A boy, sadly afflicted, was brought to these men to be
cured of his malady. They had been commissioned to do this very kind of
work. This was a part of their mission. They attempted to cast out the devil
from the boy, but had signally failed. The devil was too much for them. They
were humiliated at their failure, and filled with shame, while their enemies
were in triumph. Amid the confusion incident to failure Jesus draws near. He
is informed of the circumstances, and told of the conditions connected
therewith. Here is the succeeding account: Wherein lay the difficulty with these men? They had been lax in cultivating their faith by prayer and, as a consequence, their trust utterly failed. They trusted not God, nor Christ, nor the authenticity of his mission, or their own. So has it been many a time since, in many a crisis in the church of God. Failure has resulted from a lack of trust, or from a weakness of faith, and this, in turn, from a lack of prayerfulness. Many a failure in revival efforts has been traceable to the same cause. Faith had not been nurtured and made powerful prayer. Neglect of the
inner chamber is the solution of most spiritual failure. And this is as true
of our personal struggles with the devil as was the case when we went forth
to attempt to cast out devils. To be much on our knees in private communion
with God is the only surety that we shall have him with us either in our
personal struggles, or in our efforts to convert sinners. Everywhere, in the approaches of the people to him, our Lord put trust in him, and the divinity of his mission, in the forefront. He gave no definition of trust, and he furnishes no theological discussion of, or analysis of it; for he knew that men would see what faith was by what faith did; and from its free exercise trust grew up, spontaneously, in his presence. It was the product of his work, his power, and his person. These furnished and created an atmosphere most favorable for its exercise and development. Trust is
altogether too splendidly simple for verbal definition; too hearty and
spontaneous for theological terminology. The very simplicity of trust is
that which staggers many people. They look away for some great thing to come
to pass while all the time "the word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in
thy heart." Daughter, thy
faith hath made thee whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy plague. When Jesus
dismissed the centurion whose servant was seriously ill, and who had come to
Jesus with the prayer that he speak the healing word, without even going to
his house, he did it in the manner following: When the poor
leper fell at the feet of Jesus and cried out for relief, "Lord, if thou
wilt, thou canst make me clean," Jesus immediately granted his request, and
the man glorified him with a loud voice. Then Jesus said unto him, "Arise,
go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole." The
Syrophoenician woman came to Jesus with the case of her afflicted daughter,
making the case her own, with the prayer, "Lord, help me," making a fearful
and heroic struggle. Jesus honors her faith and prayer, saying: After the
disciples had utterly failed to cast the devil out of the epileptic boy, the
father of the stricken lad came to Jesus with the plaintive and almost
despairing cry, "If thou canst do anything, have compassion on us and help
us." But Jesus replied, "If thou canst believe, all things are possible to
him that believeth." Blind Bartimaeus
sitting by the wayside, hears our Lord as he passes by, and cries out
pitifully and almost despairingly, "Jesus, thou son of David, have mercy on
me." The keen ears of our Lord immediately catch the sound of prayer, and he
says to the beggar: To the weeping,
penitent woman, washing his feet with her tears and wiping them with the
hair of her head, Jesus speaks cheering, soul-comforting words: "Thy faith
hath saved thee; go in peace." One day Jesus healed ten lepers at one time, in answer to their united prayer, Jesus, master, have mercy on us," and he told them to go and show themselves to the priests. "And it came to pass as they went, they were cleansed. " |