|
||||
Chapter 6 |
||||
VI “Nothing is impossible to industry, “said one of the seven sages of Greece. Let us change the word industry for persevering prayer, and the motto will be more Christian and more worthy of universal adoption. I am persuaded that we are all more deficient in a spirit of prayer than in any other grace. God loves importunate prayer so much that He will not give us much blessing without it. And the reason that He loves such prayer is that He loves us and knows that it is a necessary preparation for our receiving the richest blessings which He is waiting and longing to bestow. I
never prayed sincerely and earnestly for anything but it came at some
time——no matter at how distant a day, somehow, in some shape, probably the
last I would have devised, it came.——Adoniram Judson It is good, I
find, to persevere in attempts to pray. If I cannot pray with perseverance
or continue long in my address to the Divine Being, I have found that the
more I do in secret prayer the more I have delight to do, and have enjoyed
more of the spirit of prayer; and frequently I have found the contrary, when
by journeying or otherwise, I have been deprived of retirement.——David
Brainerd Christ puts
importunity as a distinguishing characteristic of true praying. We must not
only pray, but we must pray with great urgency, with intentness and with
repetition. We must not only pray, but we must pray again and again. We must
not get tired of praying. We must be thoroughly in earnest, deeply concerned
about the things for which we ask, for Jesus Christ made it very plain that
the secret of prayer and its success lie in its urgency. We must press our
prayers upon God. In a parable of
exquisite pathos and simplicity, our Lord taught not simply that men ought
to pray, but that men ought to pray with full heartiness, and press the
matter with vigorous energy and brave hearts. This poor
woman’s case was a most hopeless one, but importunity brings hope from the
realms of despair and creates success where neither success nor its
conditions existed. There could be no stronger case, to show how unwearied
and dauntless importunity gains its ends where everything else fails. The
preface to this parable says: “He spake a parable to this end, that men
ought always to pray and not to faint.” He knew that men would soon get
faint-hearted in praying, so to hearten us He gives this picture of the
marvelous power of importunity. The widow, weak
and helpless, is helplessness personified; bereft of every hope and
influence which could move an unjust judge, she yet wins her case solely by
her tireless and offensive importunity. Could the necessity of importunity,
its power and tremendous importance in prayer, be pictured in deeper or more
impressive coloring? It surmounts or removes all obstacles, overcomes every
resisting force and gains its ends in the face of invincible hindrances. We
can do nothing without prayer. All things can be done by importunate prayer. That is the
teaching of Jesus Christ. The case of the
Syrophenician woman is a parable in action. She is arrested in her
approaches to Christ by the information that He will not see anyone. She is
denied His presence, and then in His presence is treated with seeming
indifference, with the chill of silence and unconcern: she presses and
approaches, the pressure and approach are repulsed by the stern and crushing
statement that He is not sent to her kith or kind, that she is reprobated
from His mission and power. She is humiliated by being called a dog. Yet she
accepts all, overcomes all, wins all by her humble, dauntless, invincible
importunity. The Son of God, pleased, surprised, overpowered by her
unconquerable importunity, says to her: “O, woman, great is thy faith; be it
unto thee even as thou wilt.” Jesus Christ surrenders Himself to the
importunity of a great faith. “And shall not God avenge His own elect which
cry day and night unto Him, though He bear long with them?” Jesus Christ
puts ability to importune as one of the elements of prayer, one of the main
conditions of prayer. The prayer of the Syrophenician woman is an exhibition
of the matchless power of importunity, of a conflict more real and involving
more of vital energy, endurance, and all the higher elements than was ever
illustrated in the conflicts of Isthmia or Olympia. The first
lessons of importunity are taught in the Sermon on the Mount——“Ask, and it
shall be given; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened.”
These are steps of advance——“For every one that asketh, receiveth; and he
that seeketh, findeth; and to him that knocketh, it shall be opened.” Without
continuance the prayer may go unanswered. Importunity is made up of the
ability to hold on, to press on, to wait with unrelaxed and unrelaxable
grasp, restless desire and restful patience. Importunate prayer is not an
incident, but the main thing, not a performance but a passion, not a need
but a necessity. Prayer in its
highest form and grandest success assumes the attitude of a wrestler with
God. It is the contest, trial and victory of faith; a victory not secured
from an enemy, but from Him who tries our faith that He may enlarge it: that
tests our strength to make us stronger. Few things give such quickened and
permanent vigor to the soul as a long exhaustive season of importunate
prayer. It makes an experience, an epoch, a new calendar for the spirit, a
new life to religion, a soldierly training. The Bible never wearies in its
pressure and illustration of the fact that the highest spiritual good is
secured as the return of the outgoing of the highest form of spiritual
effort. There is neither encouragement nor room in Bible religion for feeble
desires, listless efforts, lazy attitudes; all must be strenuous, urgent,
ardent. Inflamed desires, impassioned, unwearied insistence delight heaven.
God would have His children incorrigibly in earnest and persistently bold in
their efforts. Heaven is too busy to listen to half-hearted prayers or to
respond to pop-calls. Our whole being
must be in our praying; like John Knox, we must say and feel, “Give me
Scotland, or I die.” Our experience and revelations of God are born of our
costly sacrifice, our costly conflicts, our costly praying. The wrestling,
all night praying, of Jacob made an era never to be forgotten in Jacob’s
life, brought God to the rescue, changed Esau’s attitude and conduct,
changed Jacob’s character, saved and affected his life and entered into the
habits of a nation. Our seasons of
importunate prayer cut themselves like the print of a diamond, into our
hardest places, and mark with ineffaceable traces our characters. They are
the salient periods of our lives! The memorial stones which endure and to
which we turn. Importunity, it
may be repeated, is a condition of prayer. We are to press the matter, not
with vain repetitions, but with urgent repetitions. We repeat, not to count
the times, but to gain the prayer. We cannot quit praying because heart and
soul are in it. We pray “with all perseverance.” We hang to our prayers
because by them we live. We press our pleas because we must have them or
die. Christ gives us two most expressive parables to emphasize the necessity
of importunity in praying. Perhaps Abraham lost Sodom by failing to press to
the utmost his privilege of praying. Joash, we know, lost because he stayed
his smiting. Perseverance
counts much with Cod as well as with man. If Elijah had ceased at his first
petition the heavens would have scarcely yielded their rain to his feeble
praying. If Jacob had quit praying at decent bedtime he would scarcely have
survived the next day’s meeting with Esau. If the Syrophenician woman had
allowed her faith to faint by silence, humiliation, repulse, or stop mid-way
its struggles, her grief-stricken home would never have been brightened by
the healing of her daughter. Pray and never
faint, is the motto Christ gives us for praying. It is the test of our
faith, and the severer the trial and the longer the waiting, the more
glorious the results. “Abraham left
off asking before Cod left off granting.” Moses taught the power of
importunity when he interceded for Israel forty days and forty nights, by
fasting and prayer. And he succeeded in his importunity. Jesus, in His
teaching and example, illustrated and perfected this principle of Old
Testament pleading and waiting. How strange that the only Son of God, who
came on a mission direct from His Father, whose only heaven on earth, whose
only life and law were to do His Father’s will in that mission——what a
mystery that He should be under the law of prayer, that the blessings which
came to Him were impregnated and purchased by prayer; stranger still that
importunity in prayer was the process by which His wealthiest supplies from
Cod were gained. Had He not prayed with importunity, no transfiguration
would have been in His history, no mighty works had rendered Divine His
career. His all-night praying was that which filled with compassion and
power His all-day work. The importunate praying of His life crowned His
death with its triumph. He learned the high lesson of submission to God’s
will in the struggles of importunate prayer before He illustrated that
submission so sublimely on the cross. “Whether we like
it or not,” said Mr. Spurgeon, “asking is the rule of the kingdom.” ‘Ask,
and ye shall receive.’ It is a rule that never will be altered in anybody’s
case. Our Lord Jesus Christ is the. elder brother of the family, but God has
not relaxed the rule for Him. Remember this text: Jehovah says to His own
Son, ‘Ask of Me, and I will give Thee the heaven for Thine inheritance, and
the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession.’ If the Royal and
Divine Son of God cannot be exempted from the rule of asking that He may
have, you and I cannot expect the rule to be relaxed in our favor. Why
should it be? What reason can be pleaded why we should be exempted from
prayer? What argument can there be why we should be deprived of the
privilege and delivered from the necessity of supplication? I can see none:
can you? God will bless Elijah and send rain on Israel, but Elijah must pray
for it. If the chosen nation is to prosper, Samuel must plead for it. If the
Jews are to be delivered, Daniel must intercede. God will bless Paul, and
the nations shall be converted through him, but Paul must pray. Pray he did
without ceasing; his epistles show that he expected nothing except by asking
for it. If you may have everything by asking, and nothing without asking, I
beg you to see how absolutely vital prayer is, and I beseech you to abound
in it.” There is not the
least doubt that much of our praying fails for lack of persistency. It is
without the fire and strength of perseverance. Persistence is of the essence
of true praying. It may not be always called into exercise, but it must be
there as the reserve force. Jesus taught that perseverance is the essential
element of prayer. Men must be in earnest when they kneel at God’s
footstool. Too often we get
faint-hearted and quit praying at the point where we ought to begin. We let
go at the very point where we should hold on strongest. Our prayers are weak
because they are not impassioned by an unfailing and resistless will. |