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Chapter 4 |
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IV The potency of prayer hath subdued the strength of fire; it had bridled the rage of lions, hushed the anarchy to rest, extinguished wars, appeased the elements, expelled demons, burst the chains of death, expanded the gates of heaven, assuaged diseases, repelled frauds, rescued cities from destruction, stayed the sun in its course, and arrested the progress of the thunderbolt. Prayer is an all-efficient panoply, a treasure undiminished, a mine which is never exhausted, a sky unobscured by clouds, a heaven unruffled by the storm. It is the root, the fountain, the mother of a thousand blessings.—— Chrysostom The
prayers of holy men appease God’s wrath, drive away temptations, resist and
overcome the devil, procure the ministry and service of angels, rescind the
decrees of God. Prayer cures sickness and obtains pardon; it arrests the sun
in its course and stays the wheels of the chariot of the moon; it rules over
all gods and opens and shuts the storehouses of rain, it unlocks the cabinet
of the womb and quenches the violence of fire; it stops the mouths of lions
and reconciles our suffering and weak faculties with the violence of torment
and violence of persecution; it pleases God and supplies all our
need.——Jeremy Taylor More things are
wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of. wherefore, It was said of
the late C. H. Spurgeon, that he glided from laughter to prayer with the
naturalness of one who lived in both elements. With him the habit of prayer
was free and unfettered. His life was not divided into compartments, the one
shut off from the other with a rigid exclusiveness that barred all
intercommunication. He lived in constant fellowship with his Father in
Heaven. He was ever in touch with God, and thus it was as natural for him to
pray as it was for him to breathe. “What a fine time we have had; let us thank God for it,” he said to a friend on one occasion, when, out under the blue sky and wrapped in glorious sunshine, they had enjoyed a holiday with the unfettered enthusiasm of schoolboys. Prayer sprang as spontaneously to his lips as did ordinary speech, and never was there the slightest incongruity in his approach to the Divine throne straight from any scene in which he might be taking part. Consider Spurgeon's thoughts on how God blesses and sends prosperity even when we do not ask for them: His heavens shall drop down dew. (Deuteronomy 33:28)What the dew in the East is to the world of nature, that is the influence of the Spirit in the realm of grace. How greatly do I need it! Without the Spirit of God I am a dry and withered thing. I droop, I fade, I die. How sweetly does this dew refresh me! When once favored with it I feel happy, lively, vigorous, elevated. I want nothing more. The Holy Spirit brings me life and all that life requires. All else without the dew of the Spirit is less than nothing to me: I hear, I read, I pray, I sing, I go to the table of Communion, and I find no blessing there until the Holy Ghost visits me. But when He bedews me, every means of grace is sweet and profitable. What a promise is this for me! "His heavens shall drop down dew." I shall be visited with grace. I shall not be left to my natural drought, or to the world's burning heat, or to the sirocco of satanic temptation. Oh, that I may at this very hour feel the gentle, silent, saturating dew of the Lord! Why should I not! He who has made me to live as the grass lives in the meadow will treat me as He treats the grass; He will refresh me from above. Grass cannot call for dew as I do. Surely, the Lord who visits the unpraying plant will answer to His pleading child. That is the
attitude with regard to prayer that ought to mark every child of God. There
are, and there ought to be, stated seasons of communication with God when,
everything else shut out, we come into His presence to talk to Him and to
let Him speak to us; and out of such seasons springs that beautiful habit of
prayer that weaves a golden bond between earth and heaven. Without such
stated seasons the habit of prayer can never be formed; without them there
is no nourishment for the spiritual life. By means of them the soul is
lifted into a new atmosphere——the atmosphere of the heavenly city, in which
it is easy to open the heart to God and to speak with Him as friend speaks
with friend. Thus, in every
circumstance of life, prayer is the most natural out-pouring of the soul,
the unhindered turning to God for communion and direction. Whether in sorrow
or in joy, in defeat or in victory, in health or in weakness, in calamity or
in success, the heart leaps to meet with God just as a child runs to his
mother’s arms, ever sure that with her is the sympathy that meets every
need. After Dr. Clarke
had prayed, Wesley broke out into fervent supplication which seemed to be
more the offering of faith than of mere desire. “Almighty and everlasting
God,” he prayed. “Thou hast sway everywhere, and all things serve the
purpose of Thy will, Thou holdest the winds in Thy fists and sittest upon
the water floods, and reignest a King for ever. Command these winds and
these waves that they obey Thee, and take us speedily and safely to the
haven whither we would go.” The power of
this petition was felt by all. Wesley rose from his knees, made no remark,
but took up his book and continued reading. Dr. Clarke went on deck, and to
his surprise found the vessel under sail, standing on her right course. Nor
did she change till she was safely at anchor. On the sudden and favorable
change of wind, Wesley made no remark; so fully did he expect to be heard
that he took it for granted that he was heard. Major D. W. Whittle, in an introduction to the wonders of prayer, says of George Muller, of Bristol: “I met Mr. Muller in the express, the morning of our sailing from Quebec to Liverpool. About half-an-hour before the tender was to take the passengers to the ship, he asked of the agent if a deck chair had arrived for him from New York. He was answered, ‘No,’ and told that it could not possibly come in time for the steamer. I had with me a chair I had just purchased, and told Mr. Muller of the place nearby, and suggested, as but a few moments remained, that he had better buy one at once. His reply was, ‘No, my brother. Our Heavenly Father will send the chair from New York. It is one used by Mrs. Muller. I wrote ten days ago to a brother, who promised to see it forwarded here last week. He has not been prompt, as I would have desired, but I am sure our Heavenly Father will send the chair. Mrs. Muller is very sick on the sea, and has particularly desired to have this same chair, and not finding it here yesterday, we have made special prayer that our Heavenly Father would be pleased to provide it for us, and we will trust Him to do so.’ As this dear man of God went peacefully on board, running the risk of Mrs. Muller making the trip without a chair, when, for a couple of dollars, she could have been provided for, I confess I feared Mr. Muller was carrying his faith principles too far and not acting wisely. I was kept at
the express office ten minutes after Mr. Muller left. Just as I started to
hurry to the wharf, a team drove up the street, and on top of a load just
arrived front New York was Mr. Muller’s chair. It was sent at once to the
tender and placed in my hands to take to Mr. Muller, just as the boat was
leaving the dock (the Lord having a lesson for me). Mr. Muller took it with
the happy, pleased expression of a child who has just received a kindness
deeply appreciated, and reverently removing his hat and folding his hands
over it, he thanked the Heavenly Father for sending the chair.” One of
Melancthon’s correspondents writes of Luther’s praying: “I cannot enough
admire the extraordinary, cheerfulness, constancy, faith and hope of the man
in these trying and vexatious times. He constantly feeds these gracious
affections by a very diligent study of the Word of God. Then not a day
passes in which he does not employ in prayer at least three of his very best
hours. Once I happened to hear him at prayer. Gracious God! What spirit and
what faith is there in his expressions! He petitions God with as much
reverence as if he was in the divine presence, and yet with as firm a hope
and confidence as he would address a father or a friend. ‘I know,’ said he,
‘Thou art our Father and our God; and therefore I am sure Thou wilt bring to
naught the persecutors of Thy children. For shouldest Thou fail to do this
Thine own cause, being connected with ours, would be endangered. It is
entirely thine own concern. We, by Thy providence, have been compelled to
take a part. Thou therefore wilt be our defense.’ Whilst I was listening to
Luther praying in this manner, at a distance, my soul seemed on fire within
me, to hear the man address God so like a friend, yet with so much gravity
and reverence; and also to hear him, in the course of his prayer, insisting
on the promises contained in the Psalms, as if he were sure his petitions
would be granted.” Of William
Bramwell, a noted Methodist preacher in England, wonderful for his zeal and
prayer, the following is related by a sergeant major. “In July, 1811, our
regiment was ordered for Spain, then the seat of a protracted and sanguinary
war. My mind was painfully exercised with the thoughts of leaving my dear
wife and four helpless children in a strange country, unprotected and
unprovided for. Mr. Bramwell felt a lively interest in our situation, and
his sympathizing spirit seemed to drink in all the agonized feelings of my
tender wife. He supplicated the throne of grace day and night in our behalf.
My wife and I spent the evening previous to our march at a friend’s house,
in company with Mr. Bramwell, who sat in a very pensive mood, and appeared
to be in a spiritual struggle all the time. After supper, he suddenly pulled
his hand out of his bosom, laid it on my knee, and said: ‘Brother Riley,
mark what I am about to say! You are not to go to Spain. Remember what I
tell you, you are not; for I have been wrestling with God on your behalf,
and when my Heavenly Father condescends in mercy to bless me with power to
lay hold on Himself, I do not easily let Him go; no, not until I am favored
with an answer. Therefore you may depend upon it that the next time I hear
from you, you will be settled in quarters.’ This came to pass exactly as he
said. The next day the order for going to Spain was countermanded.” These men prayed
with a purpose. To them God was not far away, in some inaccessible region,
but near at hand, ever ready to listen to the call of His children. There
was no barrier between. They were on terms of perfect intimacy, if one may
use such a phrase in relation to man and his Maker. No cloud obscured the
face of the Father from His trusting child, who could look up into the
Divine countenance and pour out the longings of his heart. And that is the
type of prayer which God never fails to hear. He knows that it comes from a
heart at one with His own; from one who is entirely yielded to the heavenly
plan, and so He bends His ear and gives to the pleading child the assurance
that his petition has been heard and answered. Have we not all
had some such experience when with set and undeviating purpose we have
approached the face of our Father? In an agony of soul we have sought refuge
from the oppression of the world in the anteroom of heaven; the waves of
despair seemed to threaten destruction, and as no way of escape was visible
anywhere, we fell back, like the disciples of old, upon the power of our
Lord, crying to Him to save us lest we perish. And then in the twinkling of
an eye, the thing was done. The billows sank into a calm; the howling wind
died down at the Divine command; the agony of the soul passed into a restful
peace as over the whole being there crept the consciousness of the Divine
presence, bringing with it the assurance of answered prayer and sweet
deliverance. “I tell the Lord
my troubles and difficulties, and wait for Him to give me the answers to
them,” says one man of God. “And it is wonderful how a matter that looked
very dark will in prayer become clear as crystal by the help of God’s
Spirit. I think Christians fail so often to get answers to their prayers
because they do not wait long enough on God. They just drop down and say a
few words, and then jump up and forget it and expect God to answer them.
Such praying always reminds me of the small boy ringing his neighbor’s
door-bell, and then running away as fast as he can go.” When we acquire
the habit of prayer we enter into a new atmosphere. “Do you expect to go to
heaven?” asked someone of a devout Scotsman. “Why, man, I live there,” was
the quaint and unexpected reply. It was a pithy statement of a great truth,
for all the way to heaven is heaven begun to the Christian who walks near
enough to God to hear the secrets He has to impart. This attitude is
beautifully illustrated in a story of Horace Bushnell, told by Dr. Parkes
Cadman. Bushnell was found to be suffering from an incurable disease. One
evening the Rev. Joseph Twichell visited him, and, as they sat together
under the starry sky, Bushnell said: “One of us ought to pray.” Twichell
asked Bushnell to do so, and Bushnell began his prayer; burying his face in
the earth, he poured out his heart until, said Twichell, in recalling the
incident, “I was afraid to stretch out my hand in the darkness lest I should
touch God.” To have God thus
near is to enter the holy of holies——to breathe the fragrance of the
heavenly air, to walk in Eden’s delightful gardens. Nothing but prayer can
bring God and man into this happy communion. That was the experience of
Samuel Rutherford, just as it is the experience of every one who passes
through the same gateway. When this saint of God was confined in jail at one
time for conscience sake, he enjoyed in a rare degree the Divine
companionship, recording in his diary that Jesus entered his cell, and that
at His coming “every stone flashed like a ruby.” Many others have
borne witness to the same sweet fellowship, when prayer had become the one
habit of life that meant more than anything else to them. David Livingstone
lived in the realm of prayer and knew its gracious influence. It was his
habit every birthday to write a prayer, and on the next to the last birthday
of all, this was his prayer: “O Divine one, I have not loved Thee earnestly,
deeply, sincerely enough. Grant, I pray Thee, that before this year is ended
I may have finished my task.” It was just on the threshold of the year that
followed that his faithful men, as they looked into the hut of Ilala, while
the rain dripped from the eaves, saw their master on his knees beside his
bed in an attitude of prayer. He had died on his knees in prayer. Stonewall
Jackson was a man of prayer. Said he: “I have so fixed the habit in my mind
that I never raise a glass of water to my lips without asking God’s
blessing, never seal a letter without putting a word of prayer under the
seal, never take a letter from the post without a brief sending of my
thoughts heavenward, never change my classes in the lecture-room without
a——minute’s petition for the cadets who go out and for those who come in.” James Gilmour,
the pioneer missionary to Mongolia, was a man of prayer. He had a habit in
his writing of never using a blotter. He made a rule when he got to the
bottom of any page to wait until the ink dried and spend the time in prayer. In this way
their whole being was saturated with the Divine, and they became the
reflection of the heavenly fragrance and glory. Walking with God down the
avenues of prayer we acquire something of His likeness, and unconsciously we
become witnesses to others of His beauty and His grace. Professor James, in
his famous work, “Varieties of Religious Experience,” tells of a man of
forty-nine who said: “God is more real to me than any thought or thing or
person. I feel His presence positively, and the more as I live in closer
harmony with His laws as written in my body and mind. I feel Him in the
sunshine or rain; and all mingled with a delicious restfulness most nearly
describes my feelings. I talk to Him as to a companion in prayer and praise,
and our communion is delightful. He answers me again and again, often in
words so clearly spoken that it seems my outer ear must have carried the
tone, but generally in strong mental impressions. Usually a text of
Scripture, unfolding some new view of Him and His love for me, and care for
my safety ... That He is mine and I am His never leaves me; it is an abiding
joy. Without it life would be a blank, a desert, a shoreless, trackless
waste.” Equally notable
is the testimony of Sir Thomas Browne, the beloved physician who lived at
Norwich in 1605, and was the author of a very remarkable book of wide
circulation, “Religio Medici.” In spite of the fact that England was passing
through a period of national convulsion and political excitement, he found
comfort and strength in prayer. “I have resolved,” he wrote in a journal
found among his private papers after his death, “to pray more and pray
always, to pray in all places where quietness inviteth, in the house, on the
highway and on the street; and to know no street or passage in this city
that may not witness that I have not forgotten God.” And he adds: “I purpose
to take occasion of praying upon the sight of any church which I may pass,
that God may be worshiped there in spirit, and that souls may be saved
there; to pray daily for my sick patients and for the patients of other
physicians; at my entrance into any home to say, ‘May the peace of God abide
here’; after hearing a sermon, to pray for a blessing on God’s truth, and
upon the messenger; upon the sight of a beautiful person to bless God for
His creatures, to pray for the beauty of such an one’s soul, that God may
enrich her with inward graces, and that the outward and inward may
correspond; upon the sight of a deformed person, to pray God to give them
wholeness of soul, and by and by to give them the beauty of the
resurrection.” What an
illustration of the praying spirit! Such an attitude represents prayer
without ceasing, reveals the habit of prayer in its unceasing supplication,
in its uninterrupted communion, in its constant intercession. What an
illustration, too, of purpose in prayer! Of how many of us can it be said
that as we pass people in the street we pray for them, or that as we enter a
home or a church we remember the inmates or the congregation in prayer to
God? The explanation
of our thoughtlessness or forgetfulness lies in the fact that prayer with so
many of us is simply a form of selfishness; it means asking for something
for ourselves that and nothing more. |