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Chapter 9 |
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Prayer and Obedience UNDER the Mosaic law, obedience was looked upon as being "better than sacrifice, and to harken, than the fat of lambs." In Deuteronomy 5:29, Moses represents Almighty God declaring himself as to this very quality in a manner which left no doubt as to the importance he laid upon its exercise. Referring to the waywardness of his people he cries: O that there were such a heart in them, that they would fear me, and keep all my commandments always, that it might be well with them, and with their children after them.
Unquestionably obedience is a high virtue, a soldier quality. To obey
belongs, preeminently, to the soldier. It is his first and last lesson, and
he must learn how to practice it all the time, without question,
uncomplainingly. Obedience, moreover, is faith in action, and is the outflow
as it is the very test of love. "He that hath my commandments and keepeth
them, he it is that loveth me." What a marvelous
statement of the relationship created and maintained by obedience! The Son
of God is held in the bosom of the Father's love, by virtue of his
obedience! And the factor which enables the Son of God to ever abide in his
Father's love is revealed in his own statement, "For I do, always, those
things that please him." The gift of the
Holy Spirit in full measure and in richer experience, depends upon loving
obedience: Obedience to God
is a condition of spiritual thrift, inward satisfaction, stability of heart.
"If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the fruit of the land."
Obedience opens the gates of the holy city, and gives access to the tree of
life. What is
obedience? It is doing God's will: it is keeping his commandments. How many
of the commandments constitute obedience? To keep half of them, and to break
the other half-is that real obedience? To keep all the commandments but
one-is that obedience? On this point, James the apostle is most explicit:
"Whosoever shall keep the whole law," he declares, "and yet offend in one
point, he is guilty of all." The spirit which
prompts a man to break one commandment is the spirit which may move him to
break them all. God's commandments are a unit, and to break one strikes at
the principle which underlies and runs through the whole. He who hesitates
not to break a single commandment, would-it is more than probable-under the
same stress, and surrounded by the same circumstances, break them all. Universal
obedience of the race is demanded. Nothing short of implicit obedience will
satisfy God, and the keeping of all his commandments is the demonstration of
it that God requires. But can we keep all of God's commandments? Can a man
receive moral ability such as enables him to obey every one of them?
Certainly he can. By every token, man can, through prayer, obtain ability to
do this very thing. Does God give
commandments which men cannot obey? Is he so arbitrary, so severe, so
unloving, as to issue commandments which cannot be obeyed? The answer is
that in all the annals of Holy Scripture, not a single instance is recorded
of God having commanded any man to do a thing, which was beyond his power.
Is God so unjust and so inconsiderate as to require of man that which he is
unable to render? Surely not. To infer it is to slander the character of
God. Let us ponder
this thought, a moment: Do earthly parents require of their children duties
which they cannot perform? Where is the father who would think, even, of
being so unjust, and so tyrannical? Is God less kind and just than faulty,
earthly parents? Are they better and more just than a perfect God? How
utterly foolish and untenable a thought! In principle, obedience to God is the same quality as obedience to earthly parents. It implies, in general effect, the giving up of one's own way, and following that of another; the surrendering of the will to the will of another; the submission of oneself to the authority and requirements of a parent. Commands, either from our heavenly Father or from our earthly father, are love-directing, and all such commands are in the best interests of those who are commanded. God's commands
are issued neither in severity nor tyranny. They are always issued in love
and in our interests, and so it behooves us to heed and obey them. In other
words, and appraised at its lowest value-God having issued his commands to
us, in order to promote our good, it pays, therefore, to be obedient.
Obedience brings its own reward. God has ordained it so, and since he has,
even human reason can realize that he would never demand that which is out
of our power to render. Obedience is
love, fulfilling every command, love expressing itself. Obedience,
therefore, is not a hard demand made upon us, any more than is the service a
husband renders his wife, or a wife renders her husband. Love delights to
obey, and please whom it loves. There are no hardships in love. There may be
exactions, but no irk. There are no impossible tasks for love. With what
simplicity and in what a matter-of-fact way does the apostle John say: "And
whatsoever we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his commandments, and
do those things which are pleasing in his sight." Far be it from
our heavenly Father, to demand impossibilities of his children. It is
possible to please him in all things, for he is not hard to please. He is
neither a hard master, nor an austere lord, "taking up that which he lays
not down, and reaping that which he did not sow." Thank God, it is possible
for every child of God to please his heavenly Father! It is really much
easier to please him than to please men. Moreover, we may know when we
please him. This is the witness of the Spirit-the inward divine assurance,
given to all the children of God that they are doing their Father's will,
and that their ways are well-pleasing in his sight. God's
commandments are righteous and founded in justice and wisdom. "Wherefore the
law is holy, and the commandment holy and just and good." "Just and true are
thy ways, thou king of saints." God's commandments, then, can be obeyed by
all who seek supplies of grace which enable them to obey. These commandments
must be obeyed. God's government is at stake. God's children are under
obligation to obey him; disobedience cannot be permitted. The spirit of
rebellion is the very essence of sin. It is repudiation of God's authority,
which God cannot tolerate. He never has done so, and a declaration of his
attitude was part of the reason the Son of the highest was made manifest
among men: If any should
complain that humanity, under the fall, is too weak and helpless to obey
these high commands of God, the reply is in order that, through the
atonement of Christ, man is enabled to obey. The atonement is God's enabling
act. That which God works in us, in regeneration and through the agency of
the Holy Spirit, bestows enabling grace sufficient for all that is required
of us, under the atonement. This grace is furnished without measure, in
answer to prayer. So that, while God commands, he at the same time stands
pledged to give us all necessary strength of will and grace of soul to meet
his demands. This being true, man is without excuse for his disobedience and
eminently censurable for refusing or failing to secure requisite grace,
whereby he may serve the Lord with reverence, and with godly fear. There is one
important consideration those who declare it to be impossible to keep God's
commandments strangely overlook, and that is the vital truth, which declares
that through prayer and faith, man's nature is changed, and made partaker of
the divine nature; that there is taken out of him all reluctance to obey
God, and that his natural inability to keep God's commandments, growing out
of his fallen and helpless state, is gloriously removed. By this radical
change which is wrought in his moral nature, a man receives power to obey
God in every way, and to yield full and glad allegiance. Then he can say, "I
delight to do thy will, 0 my God." Not only is the rebellion incident to the
natural man removed, but a heart which gladly obeys God's Word, blessedly
received. If it be claimed
that the unrenewed man, with all the disabilities of the fall upon him,
cannot obey God, there will be no denial. But to declare that, after one is
renewed by the Holy Spirit, has received a new nature, and become a child of
the king, he cannot obey God, is to assume a ridiculous attitude, and to
display, moreover, a lamentable ignorance of the work and implications of
the atonement. John gives the
reason for answered prayer in the passage previously quoted: "And whatsoever
we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandments and do those
things which are pleasing in his sight." Obedience can
ask with boldness at the throne of grace, and those who exercise it are the
only ones who can ask, after that fashion. The disobedient folk are timid in
their approach and hesitant in their supplication. They are halted by reason
of their wrong-doing. The requesting yet obedient child comes into the
presence of his father with confidence and boldness. His very consciousness
of obedience gives him courage and frees him from the dread born of
disobedience. To do God's will
without demur, is the joy as it is the privilege of the successful praying
man. It is he who has clean hands and a pure heart, that can pray with
confidence. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said: "The Christian's
trade," says Luther, "is prayer." But the Christian has another trade to
learn, before he proceeds to learn the secrets of the trade of prayer. He
must learn well the trade of perfect obedience to the Father's will.
Obedience follows love, and prayer follows obedience. The business of real
observance of God's commandments inseparably accompanies the business of
real praying. An obedient life
helps prayer. It speeds prayer to the throne. God cannot help hearing the
prayer of an obedient child. He always has heard his obedient children when
they have prayed. Unquestioning obedience counts much in the sight of God,
at the throne of heavenly grace. It acts like the confluent tides of many
rivers, and gives volume and fulness of flow as well as power to the prayer
chamber. An obedient life is not simply a reformed life. It is not the old
life primed and painted anew nor a churchgoing life, nor a good veneering of
activities. Neither is it an external conformation to the dictates of public
morality. Far more than all this is combined in a truly obedient Christian,
God-fearing life. A life of full obedience; a life settled on the most intimate terms with God; where the will is in full conformity to God's will; where the outward life shows the fruit of righteousness-such a life offers no bar to the inner chamber but rather, like Aaron and Hur, it lifts up and sustains the hands of prayer. If you have an earnest desire to pray well, you must learn how to obey well. If you have a desire to learn to pray, then you must have an earnest desire to learn how to do God's will. If you desire to pray to God, you must first have a consuming desire to obey him. If you would have free access to God in prayer, then every obstacle in the nature of sin or disobedience must be removed. God delights in the prayers of obedient children. Requests coming
from the lips of those who delight to do his will reach his ears with great
rapidity, and incline him to answer them with promptitude and abundance. In
themselves, tears are not meritorious. Yet they have their uses in prayer.
Tears should baptize our place of supplication. He who has never wept
concerning his sins, has never really prayed over his sins. Tears,
sometimes, is a penitent's only plea. But tears are for the past, for the
sin and the wrongdoing. There is another step and stage, waiting to be
taken. It is that of unquestioning obedience, and until it is taken, prayer
for blessing and continued sustenance, will be of no avail. Everywhere in
Holy Scripture God is represented as disapproving of disobedience and
condemning sin, and this is as true in the lives of his elect as it is in
the lives of sinners. Nowhere does he countenance sin, or excuse
disobedience. Always, God puts the emphasis upon obedience to his commands.
Obedience to them brings blessing, disobedience meets with disaster. This is
true, in the Word of God, from its beginning to its close. It is because of
this, that the men of prayer, in Scripture, had such influence with God.
Obedient men always have been the closest to God. These are they who have
prayed well and have received great things from God, who have brought great
things to pass. Obedience to God
counts tremendously in the realm of prayer. This fact cannot be emphasized
too much or too often. To plead for a religious faith which tolerates
sinning is to cut the ground from under the feet of effectual praying. To
excuse sinning by the plea that obedience to God is not possible to
unregenerate men is to discount the character of the new birth, and to place
men where effective praying is not possible. At one time Jesus broke out
with a very pertinent and personal question, striking right to the core of
disobedience, when he said: "Why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do not the
things I say?" He who would
pray, must obey. He who would get anything out of his prayers, must be in
perfect harmony with God. Prayer puts into those who sincerely pray a spirit
of obedience, for the spirit of disobedience is not of God and belongs not
to God's praying hosts. An obedient life
is a great help to prayer. In fact, an obedient life is a necessity to
prayer, to the sort which accomplishes things. The absence of an obedient
life makes prayer an empty performance, a mere misnomer. A penitent sinner
seeks pardon and salvation and has an answer to his prayers even with a life
stained and debauched with sin. But God's royal intercessors come before him
with royal lives. Holy living promotes holy praying. God's intercessors
"lift up holy hands," the symbols of righteous, obedient lives. |