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Chapter 11 |
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XI The deepest need of the Church today is not for any material or external thing, but the deepest need is spiritual. Prayerless work will never bring in the kingdom. We neglect to pray in the prescribed way. We seldom enter the closet and shut the door for a season of prayer. Kingdom interests are pressing on us thick and fast and we must pray. Prayerless giving will never evangelize the world. ——Dr. A. J. Gordon The
great subject of prayer, that comprehensive need of the Christian’s life, is
intimately bound up in the personal fulness of the Holy Spirit. It is “by
the One Spirit we have access unto the Father” (Eph. 2:18), and by the same
Spirit, having entered the audience chamber through the “new and living
way,” we are enabled to pray in the will of God (Rom. 8:15, 26-27; Gal. 4:6;
Eph. 6:18; Jude 20-21). Here is the
secret of prevailing prayer, to pray under a direct inspiration of the Holy
Spirit, whose petitions for us and through us are always according to the
Divine purpose, and hence certain of answer. “Praying in the Holy Ghost” is
but co-operating with the will of God, and such prayer is always victorious.
How many Christians there are who cannot pray, and who seek by effort,
resolve, joining prayer circles, etc., to cultivate in themselves the “holy
art of intercession,” and all to no purpose. Here for them and for all is
the only secret of a real prayer life——“Be filled with the Spirit,” who is
“the Spirit of grace and supplication.”——Rev. J. Stuart Holden, M.A. The preceding
chapter closed with the statement that prayer can do anything that God can
do. It is a tremendous statement to make, but it is a statement borne out by
history and experience. If we are abiding in Christ——and if we abide in Him
we are living in obedience to His holy will——and approach God in His name,
then there lie open before us the infinite resources of the Divine treasure
house. The man who
truly prays gets from God many things denied to the prayerless man. The aim
of all real praying is to get the thing prayed for, as the child’s cry for
bread has for its end the getting of bread. This view removes prayer clean
out of the sphere of religious performances. Prayer is not acting a part or
going through religious motions. Prayer is neither official nor formal nor
ceremonial, but direct, hearty, intense. Prayer is not religious work which
must be gone through, and avails because well done. Prayer is the helpless
and needy child crying to the compassion of the Father’s heart and the
bounty and power of a Father’s hand. The answer is as sure to come as the
Father’s heart can be touched and the Father’s hand moved. The object of
asking is to receive. The aim of seeking is to find. The purpose of knocking
is to arouse attention and get in, and this is Christ’s iterated and
reiterated asseveration that the prayer without doubt will be answered, its
end without doubt secured. Not by some round-about way, but by getting the
very thing asked for. The value of prayer does not lie in the number of prayers, or the length of prayers, but its value is found in the great truth that we are privileged by our relations to God to unburden our desires and make our requests known to God, and He will relieve by granting our petitions. The child asks because the parent is in the habit of granting the child’s requests. As the children of God we need something and we need it badly, and we go to God for it. Neither the Bible nor the child of God knows anything of that half-infidel declaration, that we are to answer our own prayers. God answers prayer. The true Christian does not pray to stir himself up, but his prayer is the stirring up of himself to take hold of God. The heart of faith knows nothing of that specious scepticism which stays the steps of prayer and chills its ardor by whispering that prayer does not affect God. Consider Spurgeon's prevailing view:
There are heights in
experimental knowledge of the things of God which the eagle's eye of
acumen and philosophic thought hath never seen: God alone can bear us
there; but the chariot in which He takes us up, and
the fiery steeds with which that chariot is dragged, are prevailing
prayers. Prevailing prayer is victorious over the God of mercy, "By his
strength he had power with God: yea, he had power over the angel, and
prevailed: he wept, and made supplication unto Him: he found Him in
Beth-el, and there He spake with us." Prevailing prayer takes the
Christian to Carmel, and enables him to cover heaven with clouds of
blessing, and earth with floods of mercy. Prevailing prayer bears the
Christian aloft to Pisgah, and shows him the inheritance reserved; it
elevates us to Tabor and transfigures us, till in the likeness of his
Lord, as He is, so are we also in this world. If you would reach to
something higher than ordinary grovelling experience, look to the Rock
that is higher than you, and gaze with the eye of faith through the window
of importunate prayer. When you open the window on your side, it will not
be bolted on the other.
D. L. Moody used
to tell a story of a little child whose father and mother had died, and who
was taken into another family. The first night she asked whether she could
pray as she used to do. They said: “Oh, yes!” So she knelt down and prayed
as her mother had taught her; and when that was ended, she added a little
prayer of her own: “O God, make these people as kind to me as father and
mother were.” Then she paused and looked up, as if expecting the answer, and
then added: “Of course you will.” How sweetly simple was that little one’s
faith! She expected God to answer and “do,” and “of course” she got her
request, and that is the spirit in which God invites us to approach Him. In contrast to
that incident is the story told of the quaint Yorkshire class leader, Daniel
Quorm, who was visiting a friend. One forenoon he came to the friend and
said, “I am sorry you have met with such a great disappointment.” Prayer is mighty
in its operations, and God never disappoints those who put their trust and
confidence in Him. They may have to wait long for the answer, and they may
not live to see it, but the prayer of faith never misses its object. “A friend of
mine in Cincinnati had preached his sermon and sank back in his chair, when
he felt impelled to make another. appeal,” says Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman. “A
boy at the back of the church lifted his hand. My friend left the pulpit and
went down to him, and said, ‘Tell me about yourself.’ The boy said, ‘I live
in New York. I am a prodigal. I have disgraced my father’s name and broken
my mother’s heart. I ran away and told them I would never come back until I
became a Christian or they brought me home dead.’ That night there went from
Cincinnati a letter telling his father and mother that their boy had turned
to God. “Seven days
later, in a black-bordered envelope, a reply came which read: ‘My dear boy,
when I got the news that you had received Jesus Christ the sky was overcast;
your father was dead.’ Then the letter went on to tell how the father had
prayed for his prodigal boy with his last breath, and concluded, ‘You are a
Christian tonight because your old father would not let you go.’” A
fourteen-year-old boy was given a task by his father. It so happened that a
group of boys came along just then and wiled the boy away with them, and so
the work went undone. But the father came home that evening and said,
“Frank, did you do the work that I gave you?” “Yes, sir,” said Frank. He
told an untruth, and his father knew it, but said nothing. It troubled the
boy, but he went to bed as usual. Next morning his mother said to him, “Your
father did not sleep all last night.” This sent the
arrow into his heart. He was deeply convicted of his sin, and knew no rest
until he had got right with God. Long afterward, when the boy became Bishop
Warne, he said that his decision for Christ came from his father’s prayer
that night. He saw his father keeping his lonely and sorrowful vigil praying
for his boy, and it broke his heart. Said he, “I can never be sufficiently
grateful to him for that prayer.” An evangelist,
much used of God, has put on record that he commenced a series of meetings
in a little church of about twenty members who were very cold and dead, and
much divided. A little prayer-meeting was kept up by two or three women. “I
preached, and closed at eight o’clock,” he says. “There was no one to speak
or pray. The next evening one man spoke. A mother asked the late John B. Gough to visit her son to win him to Christ. Gough found the young man’s mind full of skeptical notions, and impervious to argument. Finally, the young man was asked to pray, just once, for light. He replied: “I do not know anything perfect to whom or to which I could pray.” “How about your mother’s love?” said the orator. “Isn’t that perfect? Hasn’t she always stood by you, and been ready to take you in, and care for you, when even your father had really kicked you out?” The young man choked with emotion, and said, “Y-e-s, sir; that is so.” “Then pray to Love——it will help you. Will you promise?” He promised. That night the
young man prayed in the privacy of his room. He kneeled down, closed his
eyes, and struggling a moment uttered the words: “O Love.” Instantly as by a
flash of lightning, the old Bible text came to him: “God is love,” and he
said, brokenly, “O God!” Then another flash of Divine truth, and a voice
said, “God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son,”——and
there, instantly, he exclaimed, “O Christ, Thou incarnation of Divinest
love, show me light and truth.” It was all over. He was in the light of the
most perfect peace. He ran downstairs, adds the narrator of this incident,
and told his mother that he was saved. That young man is today an eloquent
minister of Jesus Christ. A water famine was threatened in Hakodate, Japan. Miss Dickerson, of the Methodist Episcopal Girls’ School, saw the water supply growing less daily, and in one of the fall months appealed to the Board in New York for help. There was no money on hand, and nothing was done. Miss Dickerson inquired the cost of putting down an artesian well, but found the expense too great to be undertaken. On the evening of December 31st, when the water was almost exhausted, the teachers and the older pupils met to pray for water, though they had no idea how their prayer was to be answered. A couple of days later a letter was received in the New York office which ran something like this: “Philadelphia, January 1st. It is six o’clock in the morning of New Year’s Day. All the other members of the family are asleep, but I was awakened with a strange impression that some one, somewhere, is in need of money which the Lord wants me to supply.” Enclosed was a
check for an amount which just covered the cost of the artesian well and the
piping of the water into the school buildings. “Ramabai
believes the Bible with an implicit and obedient faith. There were three of
us missionaries there. She said: ‘We will do just what the Bible says, I
want you to minister for their healing according to James 1:14-18.’ She led
the way into the dormitory where her girls were lying in spasms, and we laid
our hands upon their heads and prayed, and anointed them with oil in the
name of the Lord. Each of them was healed as soon as anointed and sat up and
sang with faces shining. That miracle and marvel among the heathen mightily
confirmed the word of the Lord, and was a profound and overpowering
proclamation of God.” Some years ago,
the record of a wonderful work of grace in connection with one of the
stations of the China Inland Mission attracted a good deal of attention.
Both the number and spiritual character of the converts had been far greater
than at other stations where the consecration of the missionaries had been
just as great at the more fruitful place. This rich
harvest of souls remained a mystery until Hudson Taylor on a visit to
England discovered the secret. At the close of one of his addresses a
gentleman came forward to make his acquaintance. In the conversation which
followed, Mr. Taylor was surprised at the accurate knowledge the man
possessed concerning this inland China station. “But how is it,” Mr. Taylor
asked, “that you are so conversant with the conditions of that work?” “Oh!”
he replied, “the missionary there and I are old college-mates; for years we
have regularly corresponded; he has sent me names of enquirers and converts,
and these I have daily taken to God in prayer.” At last the
secret was found! A praying man at home, praying definitely, praying daily,
for specific cases among the heathen. That is the real intercessory
missionary. “This happened
notably on one occasion when we were in dangerous proximity to the north of
New Guinea. Saturday night had brought us to a point some thirty miles off
the land, and during the Sunday morning service, which was held on deck, I
could not fail to see that the Captain looked troubled and frequently went
over to the side of the ship. When the service was ended I learnt from him
the cause. A four-knot current was carrying us toward some sunken reefs, and
we were already so near that it seemed improbable that we should get through
the afternoon in safety. After dinner, the long boat was put out and all
hands endeavored, without success, to turn the ship’s head from the shore. “The Captain
complied with this proposal. I went and spoke to the other two men, and
after prayer with the carpenter, we all four retired to wait upon God. I had
a good but very brief season in prayer, and then felt so satisfied that our
request was granted that I could not continue asking, and very soon went up
again on deck. The first officer, a godless man, was in charge. I went over
and asked him to let down the clews or corners of the mainsail, which had
been drawn up in order to lessen the useless flapping of the sail against
the rigging. “This he was not
slow to do. In another minute the heavy tread of the men on deck brought up
the Captain from his cabin to see what was the matter. The breeze had indeed
come! In a few minutes we were ploughing our way at six or seven knots an
hour through the water ... and though the wind was sometimes unsteady, we
did not altogether lose it until after passing the Pelew Islands. “Thus God
encouraged me,” adds this praying saint, “ere landing on China’s shores to
bring every variety of need to Him in prayer, and to expect that He would
honor the name of the Lord Jesus and give the help each emergency required.” “This man,” said
Mr. Gordon, “came of an old New England family, a bit farther back an
English family. He was a giant in size, and a keen man mentally, and a
university-trained man. He had gone out West to live, and represented a
prominent district in our House of Congress, answering to your House of
Commons. He was a prominent leader there. He was reared in a Christian
family, but he was a sceptic, and used to lecture against Christianity. He
told me he was fond, in his lectures, of proving, as he thought,
conclusively, that there was no God. That was the type of his infidelity. “One day he told me he was sitting in the Lower House of Congress. It was at the time of a Presidential Election, and when party feeling ran high. One would have thought that was the last place where a man would be likely to think about spiritual things. He said: ‘I was sitting in my seat in that crowded House and that heated atmosphere, when a feeling came to me that the God, whose existence I thought I could successfully disprove, was just there above me, looking down on me, and that He was displeased with me, and with the way I was doing. I said to myself, “This is ridiculous, I guess I’ve been working too hard. I’ll go and get a good meal and take a long walk and shake myself, and see if that will take this feeling away.”’ He got his extra meal, took a walk, and came back to his seat, but the impression would not be shaken off that God was there and was displeased with him. He went for a walk, day after day, but could never shake the feeling off. Then he went back to his constituency in his State, he said, to arrange matters there. He had the ambition to be the Governor of his State, and his party was the dominant party in the State, and, as far as such things could be judged, he was in the line to become Governor there, in one of the most dominant States our Central West. He said: ‘I went home to fix that thing up as far as I could, and to get ready for it. But I had hardly reached home and exchanged greetings, when my wife, who was an earnest Christian woman, said to me that a few of them had made a little covenant of prayer that I might become a Christian.’ He did not want her to know the experience that he had just been going through, and so he said as carelessly as he could, ‘When did this
thing begin, this praying of yours?’ She named the date. Then he did some
very quick thinking, and he knew, as he thought back, that it was the day on
the calendar when that strange impression came to him for the first time. “He said to me: ‘I was tremendously shaken. I wanted to be honest. I was perfectly honest in not believing in God, and I thought I was right. But if what she said was true, then merely as a lawyer sifting his evidence in a case, it would be good evidence that there was really something in their prayer. I was terrifically shaken, and wanted to be honest, and did not know what to do. That same night I went to a little Methodist chapel, and if somebody had known how to talk with me, I think I should have accepted Christ that night.’ Then he said that the next night he went back again to that chapel, where meetings were being held each night, and there he kneeled at the altar, and yielded his great strong will to the will of God. Then he said,’ ‘I knew I was to preach,’ and he is preaching still in a Western State. That is half of the story. I also talked with his wife——I wanted to put the two halves together, so as to get the bit of teaching in it all——and she told me this. She had been a Christian——what you call a nominal Christian——a strange confusion of terms. Then there came a time when she was led into a full surrender of her life to the Lord Jesus Christ. Then she said, ‘At once there came a great intensifying of desire that my husband might be a Christian, and we made that little compact to pray for him——each day until he became a Christian. That night I was kneeling at my bedside before going to rest, praying for my husband, praying very earnestly and then a voice said to me, “Are you willing for the results that will come if your husband is converted?”’ The little message was so very distinct that she said she was frightened; she had never had such an experience. But she went on praying still more earnestly, and again there came the quiet voice, ‘Are you willing for the consequences?’ And again there was a sense of being startled, frightened. But she still went on praying, and wondering what this meant, and a third time the quiet voice came more quietly than ever as she described it, ‘Are you willing
for the consequences?’ She was the wife
of a man in a very prominent political position; she was the wife of a man
who was in the line of becoming the first official of his State, and she
officially the first lady socially of that State, with all the honor that
that social standing would imply. Now she is the wife of a Methodist
preacher, with her home changed every two or three years, she going from
this place to that, a very different social position, and having a very
different income that she would otherwise have had. Yet I never met a woman
who had more of the wonderful peace of God in her heart and of the light of
God in her face, than that woman.” And Mr. Gordon’s comment on that incident is this: “Now, you can see at once that there was no change in the purpose of God through that prayer. The prayer worked out His purpose; it did not change it. But the woman’s surrender gave the opportunity of working out the will that God wanted to work out. If we might give ourselves to Him and learn His will, and use all our strength in learning His will and bending to His will, then we would begin to pray, and there is simply nothing that could resist the tremendous power of the prayer. Oh for more men
who will be simple enough to get in touch with God, and give Him the mastery
of the whole life, and learn His will, and then give themselves, as Jesus
gave Himself, to the sacred service of intercession!” To the man or woman who is acquainted with God and who knows how to pray, there is nothing remarkable in the answers that come. They are sure of being heard, since they ask in accordance with what they know to be the mind and the will of God. Dr. William Burr, Bishop of Europe in the Methodist Episcopal Church, tells that a few years ago, when he visited their Boys’ School in Vienna, he found that although the year was not up, all available funds had been spent. He hesitated to make a special appeal to his friends in America. He counseled with the teachers. They took the matter to God in earnest and continued prayer, believing that He would grant
their request. Ten days later Bishop Burt was in Rome, and there came to him
a letter from a friend in New York, which read substantially thus: “As I
went to my office on Broadway one morning (and the date was the very one on
which the teachers were praying), a voice seemed to tell me that you were in
need of funds for the Boys’ School in Vienna. I very gladly enclose a check
for the work.” The cheque was for the amount needed. There had been no human
communication between Vienna and New York. But while they were yet speaking
God answered them. Some time ago
there appeared in an English religious weekly the report of an incident
narrated by a well-known preacher in the course of an address to children.
For the truth of the story he was able to vouch. A child lay sick in a
country cottage, and her younger sister heard the doctor say, as he left the
house, “Nothing but a miracle can save her.” The little girl went to her
money-box, took out the few coins it contained, and in perfect simplicity of
heart went to shop after shop in the village street, asking, “Please, I want
to buy a miracle.” But outside his
door two men were talking, and had overheard the child’s request. One was a
great doctor from a London hospital, and he asked her to explain what she
wanted. When he understood the need, he hurried with her to the cottage,
examined the sick girl and said to the mother: “It is true——only a miracle
can save her, and it must be performed at once.” He got his instruments,
performed the operation, and the patient’s life was saved. D. L. Moody
gives this illustration of the power of prayer: “While in Edinburgh, a man
was pointed out to me by a friend, who said: ‘That man is chairman of the
Edinburgh Infidel Club.’ I went and sat beside him and said, ‘My friend, I
am glad to see you in our meeting. Are you concerned about your welfare?’ “‘Well, a great
many are now praying for you, and God’s time will. come, and I believe you
will be saved yet.’ Robert Louis
Stevenson tells a vivid story of a storm at sea. The passengers below were
greatly alarmed, as the waves dashed over the vessel. At last one of them,
against orders, crept to the deck, and came to the pilot, who was lashed to
the wheel which he was turning without flinching. The pilot caught sight of
the terror-stricken man, and gave him a reassuring smile. Below went the
passenger, and comforted the others by saying, “I have seen the face of the
pilot, and he smiled. All is well.” That is how we
feel when through the gateway of prayer we find our way into the Father’s
presence. We see His face, and we know that all is well, since His hand is
on the helm of events, and “even the winds and the waves obey Him.” When we
live in fellowship with Him, we come with confidence into His presence,
asking in the full confidence of receiving and meeting with the
justification of our faith. |