I urge
upon your communion with Christ a growing communion. There are
curtains to be drawn aside in Christ that we never saw, and new foldings of love in
Him. I despair that I shall ever win to the
far end of that love, there are so many plies in it. Therefore
dig deep, and sweat and labor and take pains for Him, and set by
as much time in the day for Him as you can. We will be won in
the labor. --
Samuel Rutherford
God has now, and has had, many of these devoted, prayerful
preachers -- men in whose lives prayer has been a mighty,
controlling, conspicuous force. The world has felt their power,
God has felt and honored their power, God's cause has moved
mightily and swiftly by their prayers, holiness has shone out in
their characters with a divine effulgence.
God found one of the men he was looking for in
David Brainerd,
whose work and name have gone into history. He was no ordinary
man, but was capable of shining in any company, the peer of the
wise and gifted ones, eminently suited to fill the most
attractive pulpits and to labor among the most refined and the
cultured, who were so anxious to secure him for their pastor.
President Edwards
(John Edwards became
President of Princeton University in 1758) bears testimony that he was "a young man of distingushed talents, had extraordinary knowledge of men and
things, had rare conversational powers, excelled in his
knowledge of theology, and was truly, for one so young, an
extraordinary divine, and especially in all matters relating to
experimental religion.
I never knew his equal of his age and
standing for clear and accurate notions of the nature and
essence of true religion. His manner in prayer was almost
inimitable, such as I have very rarely known equaled. His
learning was very considerable, and he had extraordinary gifts
for the pulpit."
No sublimer story has been recorded in earthly annals than that
of
David Brainerd
; no miracle attests with diviner force the
truth of Christianity than the life and work of such a man.
Alone in the savage wilds of America, struggling day and night
with a mortal disease, unschooled in the care of souls, having
access to the Indians for a large portion of time only through
the bungling medium of a pagan interpreter, with the Word of God
in his heart and in his hand, his soul fired with the divine
flame, a place and time to pour out his soul to God in prayer,
he fully established the worship of God and secured all its
gracious results.
The Indians were changed with a great change
from the lowest besotments of an ignorant and debased heathenism
to pure, devout, intelligent Christians; all vice reformed, the
external duties of Christianity at once embraced and acted on;
family prayer set up; the Sabbath instituted and religiously
observed; the internal graces of religion exhibited with growing
sweetness and strength.
The solution of these results is found
in David Brainerd himself, not in the conditions or accidents
but in the man Brainerd. He was God's man, for God first and
last and all the time. God could flow unhindered through him.
The omnipotence of grace was neither arrested nor straightened
by the conditions of his heart; the whole channel was broadened
and cleaned out for God's fullest and most powerful passage, so
that God with all his mighty forces could come down on the
hopeless, savage wilderness, and transform it into His blooming
and fruitful garden; for nothing is too hard for God to do if He
can get the right kind of a man to do it with.
Brainerd lived the life of holiness and prayer. His diary is
full and monotonous with the record of his seasons of fasting,
meditation, and retirement. The time he spent in private prayer
amounted to many hours daily. "When I return home," he said,
"and give myself to meditation, prayer, and fasting, my soul
longs for mortification, self-denial, humility, and divorcement
from all things of the world." "I have nothing to do," he said,
"with earth but only to labor in it honestly for God. I do not
desire to live one minute for anything which earth can afford."
After this high order did he pray: "Feeling somewhat of the
sweetness of communion with God and the constraining force of
His love, and how admirably it captivates the soul and makes all
the desires and affections to center in God, I set apart this
day for secret fasting and prayer, to entreat God to direct and
bless me with regard to the great work which I have in view of
preaching the gospel, and that the Lord would return to me and
show me the light of his countenance.
I had little life and
power in the forenoon. Near the middle of the afternoon God
enabled me to wrestle ardently in intercession for my absent
friends, but just at night the Lord visited me marvelously in
prayer. I think my soul was never in such agony before. I felt
no restraint, for the treasures of divine grace were opened to
me. I wrestled for absent friends, for the ingathering of souls,
for multitudes of poor souls, and for many that I thought were
the children of God, personally, in many distant places. I was
in such agony from sun half an hour high till near dark that I
was all over wet with sweat, but yet it seemed to me I had done
nothing.
O, my dear Saviour did sweat blood for poor souls! I
longed for more compassion toward them. I felt still in a sweet
frame, under a sense of divine love and grace, and went to bed
in such a frame, with my heart set on God." It was prayer which
gave to his life and ministry their marvelous power.
The men of mighty prayer are men of spiritual might. Prayers
never die. Brainerd's whole life was a life of prayer. By day
and by night he prayed. Before preaching and after preaching he
prayed. Riding through the interminable solitudes of the forests
he prayed. On his bed of straw he prayed. Retiring to the dense
and lonely forests, he prayed. Hour by hour, day after day,
early morn and late at night, he was praying and fasting,
pouring out his soul, interceding, communing with God. He was
with God mightily in prayer, and God was with him mightily, and
by it he being dead yet speaketh and worketh, and will speak and
work till the end comes, and among the to glorious ones of that
glorious day he will be with the first.
Jonathan Edwards says of him: "His life shows the right way to
success in the works of the ministry. He sought it as the
soldier seeks victory in a siege or battle; or as a man that
runs a race for a great prize. Animated with love to Christ and
souls, how did he labor? Always fervently. Not only in word and
doctrine, in public and in private, but in prayers by day and
night, wrestling with God in secret and travailing in birth with
unutterable groans and agonies, until Christ was formed in the
hearts of the people to whom he was sent. Like a true son of
Jacob, he persevered in wrestling through all the darkness of
the night, until the breaking of the day!" |
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