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Chapter 3 |
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III When thou feelest thyself most indisposed to prayer yield not to it, but strive and endeavor to pray even when thou thinkest thou canst not pray.——Hildersam It was among
the Parthians the custom that none was to give their children any meat in
the morning before they saw the sweat on their faces, and you shall find
this to be God’s usual course not to give His children the taste of His
delights till they begin to sweat in seeking after them.——Richard Baxter Of all the duties enjoined
by Christianity none is more essential and yet more neglected than prayer.
Most people consider the exercise a fatiguing ceremony, which they are
justified in abridging as much as possible. Even those whose profession or
fears lead them to pray, pray with such languor and wanderings of mind that
their prayers, far from drawing down blessings, only increase their
condemnation.——Fenelon More praying and better is
the secret of the whole matter. More time for prayer, more relish and
preparation to meet God, to commune with God through Christ——this has in it
the whole of the matter. Our manner and matter of praying ill become us. The
attitude and relationship of God and the Son are the eternal relationship of
Father and Son, of asking and giving——the Son always asking, the Father
always giving: Ask of Me, and I will give
Thee the nations for Thine inheritance, Man’s access in prayer to
God opens everything, and makes his impoverishment his wealth. All things
are his through prayer. The wealth and the glory——all things are Christ’s.
As the light grows brighter and prophets take in the nature of the
restoration, the Divine record seems to be enlarged. “Thus saith the Lord,
the Holy One of Israel and His Maker, ask Me of things that are to come,
concerning My sons, and concerning the work of My hands command ye Me. I
have made the earth, and created man upon it: I, even My hands, have
stretched out the heavens and all their host have I commanded.” To man is given to command
God with all this authority and power in the demands of God’s earthly
Kingdom. Heaven, with all it has, is under tribute to carry out the
ultimate, final and glorious purposes of God. Why then is the time so long
in carrying out these wise benedictions for man? Why then does sin so long
reign? Why are the oath-bound covenant promises so long in coming to their
gracious end? Sin reigns, Satan reigns, sighing marks the lives of many; all
tears are fresh and full. Why is all this so? We
have not prayed to bring the evil to an end; we have not prayed as we must
pray. We have not met the conditions of prayer. Ask of Me. Ask of God. We
have not rested on prayer. We have not made prayer the sole condition. There
has been violation of the primary condition of prayer. We have not prayed
aright. We have not prayed at all. God is willing to give, but we are slow
to ask. The Son, through His saints, is ever praying and God the Father is
ever answering. Ask of Me. In the
invitation is conveyed the assurance of answer; the shout of victory is
there and may be heard by the listening ear. The Father holds the authority
and power in His hands. How easy is the condition, and yet how long are we
in fulfilling the conditions! Nations are in bondage; the uttermost parts of
the earth are still unpossessed. The earth groans; the world is still in
bondage; Satan and evil hold sway. The Father holds Himself
in the attitude of Giver, Ask of Me, and that petition to God the Father
empowers all agencies, inspires all movements. The Gospel is Divinely
inspired. Back of all its inspirations is prayer. Ask of Me lies back of all
movements. Standing as the endowment of the enthroned Christ is the
oath-bound covenant of the Father, “Ask of Me, and I will give thee the
nations for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession.” “And men shall pray to Him continually.” Ever are the prayers of
holy men streaming up to God as fragrant as the richest incense. And God in
many ways is speaking to us, declaring his wealth and our impoverishment. “I
am the Maker of all things; the wealth and glory are Mine. Command ye Me.” We can do all things by
God’s aid, and can have the whole of His aid by asking. The Gospel, in its
success and power, depends on our ability to pray. The dispensations of God
depend on man’s ability to pray. We can have all that God has. Command ye
Me. This is no figment of the imagination, no idle dream, no vain fancy. The
life of the Church is the highest life. Its office is to pray. Its prayer
life is the highest life, the most odorous, the most conspicuous. The Book of Revelation
says nothing about prayer as a great duty, a hallowed service, but much
about prayer in its aggregated force and energies. It is the prayer force
ever living and ever praying; it is all saints’ prayers going out as a
mighty, living energy while the lips that uttered the words are stilled and
sealed in death, while the living church has an energy of faith to inherit
the forces of all the past praying and make it deathless. The statement by the
Baptist philosopher, John Foster, contains the purest philosophy and the
simple truth of God, for God has no force and demands no conditions but
prayer. “More and better praying will bring the surest and readiest triumph
to God’s cause; feeble, formal, listless praying brings decay and death. The
Church has its sheet-anchor in the closet; its magazine stores are there.” “I am convinced,” Foster
continues, “that every man who amidst his serious projects is apprized of
his dependence upon God as completely as that dependence is a fact, will be
impelled to pray and anxious to induce his serious friends to pray almost
every hour. He will not without it promise himself any noble success any
more than a mariner would expect to reach a distant coast by having his
sails spread in a stagnation of air. “I have intimated my fear
that it is visionary to expect an unusual success in the human
administration of religion unless there are unusual omens: now a most
emphatical spirit of prayer would be such an omen; and the individual who
should determine to try its last possible efficacy might probably find
himself becoming a much more prevailing agent in his little sphere. And if
the whole, or the greater number of the disciples of Christianity were with
an earnest and unalterable resolution of each to combine that heaven should
not withhold one single influence which the very utmost effort of conspiring
and persevering supplication would obtain, it would be a sign that a
revolution of the world was at hand.” Edward Payson, one of
God’s own, says of this statement of Foster, “Very few missionaries since
the apostles, probably have tried the experiment. He who shall make the
first trial will, I believe, effect wonders. Nothing that I could write,
nothing that an angel could write, would be necessary to him who should make
this trial. “One of the principal results of the little experience which I have had as a Christian minister is a conviction that religion consists very much in giving God that place in our views and feelings which He actually fills in the universe. We know that in the universe He is all in all. So far as He is constantly all in all to us, so far as we comply with the Psalmist’s charge to his soul, ‘My soul, wait thou only upon God;’ so far, I apprehend, have we advanced towards perfection. It is comparatively easy to wait upon God; but to wait upon Him
only——to feel, so far as our strength, happiness, and usefulness are
concerned, as if all creatures and second causes were annihilated, and we
were alone in the universe with God, is, I suspect, a difficult and rare
attainment. At least, I am sure it is one which I am very far from having
made. In proportion as we make this attainment we shall find everything
easy; for we shall become, emphatically, men of prayer; and we may say of
prayer as Solomon says of money, that it answereth all things.” This same John Foster
said, when approaching death: “I never prayed more earnestly nor probably
with such faithful frequency. ‘Pray without ceasing’ has been the sentence
repeating itself in the silent thought, and I am sure it must be my practice
till the last conscious hour of life. Oh, why not throughout that long,
indolent, inanimate half-century past?” And yet this is the way in
which we all act about prayer. Conscious as we are of its importance, of its
vital importance, we yet let the hours pass away as a blank and can only
lament in death the irremediable loss. When we calmly reflect
upon the fact that the progress of our Lord’s Kingdom is dependent upon
prayer, it is sad to think that we give so little time to the holy exercise.
Everything depends upon prayer, and yet we neglect it not only to our own
spiritual hurt but also to the delay and injury of our Lord’s cause upon the
earth. The forces of good and evil are contending for the world. If we
would, we could add to the conquering power of the army of righteousness,
and yet our lips are sealed, our hands hang listlessly by our side, and we
jeopardize the very cause in which we profess to be deeply interested by
holding back from the prayer chamber. Prayer is the one prime,
eternal condition by which the Father is pledged to put the Son in
possession of the world. Christ prays through His people. Had there been
importunate, universal and continuous prayer by God’s people, long ere this
the earth had been possessed for Christ. The delay is not to be accounted
for by the inveterate obstacles, but by the lack of the right asking. We do
more of everything else than of praying. As poor as our giving is, our
contributions of money exceed our offerings of prayer. Perhaps in the
average congregation fifty aid in paying, where one saintly, ardent soul
shuts itself up with God and wrestles for the deliverance of the heathen
world. Official praying on set or state occasions counts for nothing in this
estimate. We emphasise other things more than we do the necessity of prayer. We are saying prayers
after an orderly way, but we have not the world in the grasp of our faith.
We are not praying after the order that moves God and brings all Divine
influences to help us. The world needs more true praying to save it from the
reign and ruin of Satan. We do not pray as Elijah
prayed. John Foster puts the whole matter to a practical point. “When the
Church of God,” he says, “is aroused to its obligation and duties and right
faith to claim what Christ has promised——‘all things whatsoever’——a
revolution will take place.” But not all praying is praying. The driving power, the conquering force in God’s cause is God Himself. “Call upon Me and I will answer thee and show thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not,” is God’s challenge to prayer. Prayer puts God in full force into God’s work. “Ask of Me things to come, concerning My sons, and concerning the work of My hands command ye Me”——God’s carte blanche to prayer. Faith is only omnipotent when on its knees, and its outstretched hands take hold of God, then it draws to the utmost of God’s capacity; for only a praying faith can get God’s “all things whatsoever.” Wonderful lessons are the Syrophenician woman, the importunate widow, and
the friend at midnight, of what dauntless prayer can do in mastering or
defying conditions, in changing defeat into victory and triumphing in the
regions of despair. Oneness with Christ, the acme of spiritual attainment,
is glorious in all things; most glorious in that we can then “ask what we
will and it shall be done unto us.” Prayer in Jesus’ name puts the crowning
crown on God, because it glorifies Him through the Son and pledges the Son
to give to men “whatsoever and anything” they shall ask. In the New Testament the
marvelous prayer of the Old Testament is put to the front that it may
provoke and stimulate our praying, and it is preceded with a declaration,
the dynamic energy of which we can scarcely translate. “The supplication of
a righteous man availeth much. Elijah was a man of like passions with us,
and he prayed earnestly that it might not rain, and it rained not on the
earth by the space of three years and six months. And he prayed again, and
the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her fruit.” Our paucity in results,
the cause of all leanness, is solved by the Apostle James——“Ye have not,
because ye ask not. Ye ask and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye
may spend it on your pleasures.” That is the whole truth in a nutshell. |