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WE put it to
the front. We unfold it on a banner never to be lowered or folded, that
God does hear and answer prayer. God has always heard and answered
prayer. God will forever hear and answer prayer. He is the same
yesterday, today and forever, ever blessed, ever to be adored. Amen. He
changes not. As He has always answered prayer, so will He ever continue
to do so.
To
answer prayer is God's universal rule. It is his unchangeable and
irrepealable law to answer prayer. It is his invariable, specific and
inviolate promise to answer prayer. The few denials to prayer in the
Scriptures are the exceptions to the general rule, suggestive and
startling by their fewness, exception and emphasis.
The
possibilities of prayer, then, lie in the great truth, illimitable in
its broadness, fathomless in its depths, exhaustless in its fullness,
that God answers every prayer from every true soul who truly prays.
God's Word
does not say, "Call unto me, and you will thereby be trained into the
happy art of knowing how to be denied. Ask, and you will learn sweet
patience by getting nothing." Far from it. But it is definite, clear and
positive: "Ask, and it shall be given unto you."
We have this
case among many in the Old Testament:
Jabez called on the God of Israel, saying, 0 that thou wouldst bless me
indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that Thy hand might be with me, and
that Thou wouldst keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me. And God
readily granted him the things which he had requested.
Hannah,
distressed in soul because she was childless, and desiring a man child,
repaired to the house of prayer, and prayed, and this is the record she
makes of the direct answer she received: "For this child I prayed, and
the Lord hath given me the petition which I asked of Him."
God's
promises and purposes go direct to the fact of giving for the asking.
The answer to our prayers is the motive constantly presented in the
Scriptures to encourage us to pray and to quicken us in this spiritual
exercise. Take such strong, clear passages as these:
Call unto me, and I will answer thee. He shall call unto me, and I will
answer. Ask, and it shall be given you. Seek, and ye shall find. Knock,
and it shall be opened unto you.
This is Jesus Christ's law of prayer. He does not say, "Ask, and
something shall be given you." Nor does he say, "Ask, and you will be
trained into piety."
But it is
that when you ask, the very thing asked for will be given. Jesus does
not say, "Knock, and some door will be opened." But the very door at
which you are knocking will be opened. To make this doubly sure, Jesus
Christ duplicates and reiterates the promise of the answer: "For every
one that asketh, receiveth; and he that seeketh, findeth; and to him
that knocketh, it shall be opened."
Answered
prayer is the spring of love, and is the direct encouragement to pray.
"I love the Lord because he hath heard my voice and my supplications.
Because he hath inclined His ear unto me, therefore will I call upon Him
as long as I live."
The certainty of the father's giving is assured by the father's
relation, and by the ability and goodness of the father. Earthly
parents, frail, infirm, and limited in goodness and ability, give when
the child asks and seeks.
The parental
heart responds most readily to the cry for bread. The hunger of the
child touches and wins the father heart. So God, our heavenly Father, is
as easily and strongly moved by our prayers as the earthly parent. "If
ye being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much
more shall your Father in heaven give good gifts unto them that ask
him?" "Much more," just as much more does God's goodness, tenderness and
ability exceed that of man's.
Just as the
asking is specific, so also is the answer specific. The child does not
ask for one thing and get another. He does not cry for bread, and get a
stone. He does not ask for an egg, and receive a scorpion. He does not
ask for a fish, and get a serpent. Christ demands specific asking. He
responds to specific praying by specific giving.
To give the very thing prayed for, and not something else, is
fundamental to Christ's law of praying. No prayer for the cure of blind
eyes did he ever answer by curing deaf ears. The very thing prayed for
is the very thing which He gives.
The
exceptions to this are confirmatory of this great law of prayer. He who
asks for bread gets bread, and not a stone. If he asks for a fish, he
receives a fish, and not a serpent. No cry is so pleading and so
powerful as the child's cry for bread. The cravings of hunger, the
appetite felt, and the need realized, all create and propel the crying
of the child. Our prayers must be as earnest, as needy, and as hungry as
the hungry child's cry for bread. Simple, artless, direct, and specific
must be our praying, according to Christ's law of prayer and his
teaching of God's fatherhood.
The
illustration and enforcement of the law of prayer are found in the
specific answers given to prayer. Gethsemane is the only seeming
exception. The prayer of Jesus Christ in that awful hour of darkness and
hell was conditioned on these words, "If it be possible, let this cup
pass from me." But beyond these utterances of our Lord was the soul and
life prayer of the willing, suffering divine victim, "Nevertheless not
as I will, but as thou wilt." The prayer was answered, the angel came,
strength was imparted, and the meek sufferer in silence drank the bitter
cup.
Two cases of
unanswered prayer are recorded in the Scriptures in addition to the
Gethsemane prayer of our Lord. The first was that of David for the life
of his baby child, but for good reasons to Almighty God the request was
not granted. The
second
was that of
Paul for the removal of the thorn in the flesh, which was denied.
But we are
constrained to believe these must have been notable as exceptions to
God's rule, as illustrated in the history of prophet, priest, apostle
and saint, as recorded in the divine Word. There must have been
unrevealed reasons which moved God to veer from His settled and fixed
rule to answer prayer by giving the specific thing prayed for.
Our Lord did
not hold the Syrophoenician woman in the school of unanswered prayer to
test and mature her faith, neither did he answer her prayer by healing
or saving her husband. She asks for the healing of her daughter, and
Christ healed the daughter. She received the very thing for which she
asked the Lord Jesus Christ. It was in the school of answered prayer our
Lord disciplined and perfected her faith, and it was by giving her a
specific answer to her prayer. Her prayer centered on her daughter. She
prayed for the one thing, the healing of her child. And the answer of
our Lord centered likewise on the daughter.
We tread
altogether too gingerly upon the great and precious promises of God, and
too often we ignore them wholly. The promise is the ground on which
faith stands in asking of God. This is the one basis of prayer. We limit
God's ability. We measure God's ability and willingness to answer prayer
by the standard of men. We limit the Holy One of Israel. How full of
benefaction and remedy to suffering mankind are the promises as given us
by James in his Epistle, fifth chapter! How personal and mediate do they
make God in prayer!
They are a
direct challenge to our faith. They are encouraging to large
expectations in all the requests we make of God. Prayer affects God in a
direct manner, and has its aim and end inaffecting him. Prayer takes
hold of God, and induces Him to do large things for us, whether personal
or relative, temporal or spiritual, earthly or heavenly.
The great gap between Bible promises to prayer and the income from
praying is almost unspeakably great, so much so that it is a prolific
source of infidelity.
It breeds
unbelief in prayer as a great moral force, and begets doubt really as to
the power of prayer. Christianity needs today, above all things else,
men and women who can in prayer put God to the test and who can prove
his promises. When this happy day for the world begins, it will be
earth's brightest day, and will be heaven's dawning day on earth. These
are the sort of men and women needed in this modern day in the church.
It is not educated men who are needed for the times. It is not more
money that is required. It is not more machinery, more organization,
more ecclesiastical laws, but it is men and women who know how to pray,
who can in prayer lay hold upon God and bring Him down to earth, and
move Him to take hold of earth's affairs mightily and put life and power
into the church and into all of its machinery.
The church
and the world greatly need saints who can bridge this wide gap between
the praying done and the small number of answers received. Saints are
needed whose faith is bold enough and sufficiently far-reaching to put
God to the test. The cry comes even now out of heaven to the people of
the present-day church, as it sounded forth in the days of Malachi:
"
Prove Me now herewith, saith the Lord of hosts." God is waiting to be
put to the test by His people in prayer. He delights in being put to the
test on his promises. It is His highest pleasure to answer prayer to
prove the reliability of His promises. Nothing worthy of God nor of
great value to men will be accomplished till this is done.
Commentary on Proving God at His Word
Our gospel
belongs to the miraculous. It was projected on the miraculous plane. It
cannot be maintained but by the supernatural. Take the supernatural out
of our holy religion, and its life and power are gone, and it
degenerates into a mere mode of morals. The miraculous is divine power.
Prayer has in it this same power. Prayer brings this divine power into
the ranks of men and puts it to work. Prayer brings into the affairs of
earth a supernatural element.
Our gospel
when truly presented is the power of God. Never was the church more in
need of those who can and will test Almighty God. Never did the church
need more than now those who can raise up everywhere memorials of God's
supernatural power, memorials of answers to prayer, memorials of
promises fulfilled. These would do more to silence the enemy of souls,
the foe of God and the adversary of the church than any modern scheme or
present day plan for the success of the gospel. Such memorials reared by
praying people would dumbfound God's foes, strengthen weak saints, and
would fill strong saints with triumphant rapture.
The most
prolific source of infidelity, and that which maligns and hinders
praying, and that which obscures the being and glory of God most
effectually, is unanswered prayer. Better not to pray at all than to go
through a dead form, which secures no answer, brings no glory to God,
and supplies no good to man. Nothing so hardens the heart and nothing so
blinds us to the unseen and the eternal, as this kind of prayerless
praying. |