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Chapter 7 |
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Prayer and Importunity (Continued) The tenor of Christ's teachings, is to declare that men are to pray earnestly to pray with an earnestness that cannot be denied. Heaven has harkening ears only for the wholehearted, and the deeply earnest. Energy, courage, and persistent perseverance must back the prayers which heaven respects, and God hears. All these qualities of soul, so essential to effectual praying, are brought out in the parable of the man -who went to his friend for bread, at midnight. This man entered on his errand with confidence. Friendship promised him success. His plea was pressing: of a truth, he could not go back empty-handed. The flat refusal
chagrined and surprised him. Here even friendship failed! But there was
something to be tried yet-stern resolution, set, fixed determination. He
would stay and press his demand until the door was opened, and the request
granted. This he proceeded to do, and by dint of importunity secured what
ordinary solicitation had failed to obtain. The success of
this man, achieved in the face of a flat denial, was used by the Savior to
illustrate the necessity for insistence in supplicating the throne of
heavenly grace. When the answer is not immediately given, the praying
Christian must gather courage at each delay, and advance in urgency till the
answer comes which is assured, if he have but the faith to press his
petition with vigorous faith. Awaiting the
onset of our importunity and insistence, is the Father's heart, the Father's
hand, the Father's infinite power, the Father's infinite willingness to hear
and give to his children. Importunate
praying is the earnest, inward movement of the heart toward God. It is the
throwing of the entire force of the spiritual man into the exercise of
prayer. Isaiah lamented that no one stirred himself, to take hold of God.
Much praying was done in Isaiah's time, but it was too easy, indifferent and
complacent. There were no mighty movements of souls toward God. There was no
array of sanctified energies bent on reaching and grappling with God, to
draw from him the treasures of his grace. Forceless prayers have no power to
overcome difficulties, no power to win marked results, or to gain complete
victories. We must win God, ere we can win our plea. Isaiah looked
forward with hopeful eyes to the day when religion would flourish, when
there would be times of real praying. When those times came, the watchmen
would not abate their vigilance, but cry day and night, and those, who were
the Lord's remembrancers, would give him no rest. Their urgent, persistent
efforts would keep all spiritual interests engaged, and make increasing
demands on God's exhaustless treasures. Importunate
praying never faints nor grows weary; it is never discouraged; it never
yields to cowardice, but is buoyed up and sustained by a hope that knows no
despair, and a faith which will not let go. Importunate praying has patience
to wait and strength to continue. It never prepares itself to quit praying,
and declines to rise from its knees until an answer is received. The familiar,
yet heartening words of that great missionary, Adoniram Judson, are the
testimony of a man who was importunate at prayer. He says: "Ask, and ye
shall receive. Seek, and ye shall find. Knock, and it shall be opened unto
you." These are the ringing challenges of our Lord in regard to prayer, and
his intimation that true praying must stay, and advance in effort and
urgency, till the prayer is answered, and the blessing sought, received. In the three
words ask, seek, knock, in the order in which he places them, Jesus urges
the necessity of importunity in prayer. Asking, seeking, knocking, are
ascending rounds in the ladder of successful prayer. No principle is more
definitely enforced by Christ than that prevailing prayer must have in it
the quality which waits and perseveres, the courage that never surrenders,
the patience which never grows tired, the resolution that never wavers. In the parable
preceding the one of the friend at midnight, a most significant and
instructive lesson in this respect is outlined. Indomitable courage,
ceaseless pertinacity, fixity of purpose, are chief among the qualities
included in Christ's estimate of the highest and most successful form of
praying. Importunity is made up of intensity, perseverance, patience, and persistence. The seeming delay in answering prayer is the ground and the demand of importunity. In the first recorded instance of a miracle being wrought upon one who was blind, as given by Matthew, we have an illustration of the way in which our Lord appeared not to hearken at once to those who sought him. But the two blind men continue their crying, and follow him with their continual petition, saying, "Thou Son of David, have mercy on us." But he answered them not, and passed into the house. Yet the needy
ones followed him, and, finally, gained their eyesight and their plea. Mark puts the
whole incident graphically before us. At first, Jesus seems not to hear. The
crowd rebukes the noisy clamor of Bartimaeus. Despite the seeming unconcern
of our Lord, however, and despite the rebuke of an impatient and
quick-tempered crowd, the blind beggar still cries, and increases the
loudness of his cry, until Jesus is impressed and moved. Finally, the crowd,
as well as Jesus, hearkens to the beggar's plea and declare in favor of his
cause. He gains his case. His importunity avails even in the face of
apparent neglect on the part of Jesus, and despite opposition and rebuke
from the surrounding populace. His persistence won where half-hearted
indifference would surely have failed. Faith has its
province, in connection with prayer, and, of course, has its inseparable
association with importunity. But the latter quality drives the prayer to
the believing point. A persistent spirit brings a man to the place where
faith takes bold, claims and appropriates the blessing. The imperative
necessity of importunate prayer is plainly set forth in the Word of God, and
needs to be stated and restated today. We are apt to overlook this vital
truth. Love of ease, spiritual indolence, religious slothfulness, all
operate against this type of petitioning. Our praying, however, needs to be
pressed and pursued with an energy that never tires, a persistency which
will not be denied, and a courage which never fails. We have need, too, to give thought to that mysterious fact of prayer-- certainty that there will be delays, denials, and seeming failures, in connection with its exercise. We are to prepare for these, to brook them, and cease not in our urgent praying. Like a brave soldier, who, as the conflict grows more stern, exhibits a superior courage than in the earlier stages of the battle; so does the praying Christian, when delay and denial face him, increase his earnest asking, and ceases not until prayer prevail. Moses furnishes an illustrious example of importunity in prayer. Instead of allowing his nearness to God and his intimacy with him to dispense with the necessity for importunity, he regards them as the better fitting him for its exercise. When Israel set
up the golden calf, the wrath of God waxed fierce against them, and Jehovah,
-bent on executing justice, said to Moses when divulging what he purposed
doing, "Let me alone!" But Moses would not let him alone. He threw himself
down before the Lord in an agony of intercession in behalf of the sinning
Israelites, and for forty days and nights, fasted and prayed. What a season
of importunate prayer was that! Jehovah was
wroth with Aaron, also, who had acted as leader in this idolatrous business
of the golden calf. But Moses prayed for Aaron as well as for the
Israelites; had he not, both Israel and Aaron had perished, under the coming
fire of God's wrath. That long season
of pleading before God, left its mighty impress on Moses. He had been in
close relation with God aforetime, but never did his character attain the
greatness that marked it in the days and years following this long season of
importunate intercession. There can be no
question but that importunate prayer moves God, and heightens human
character! If we were more with God in this great ordinance of intercession,
more brightly would our faces shine, more richly endowed would life and
service be, with the qualities which earn the goodwill of humanity, and
bring glory to the name of God. |