|
||||
Chapter 8 |
||||
|
PRAYER-EQUIPMENT FOR PREACHERS "Go
back! Back to that upper room; back to your knees; back to searching of
heart and habit, thought and life; back to pleading, praying, waiting, till
the Spirit of the Lord floods the soul with light, and you are endued with
power from on high. Then go forth in the power of Pentecost, and the
Christ-life shall be lived, and the works of Christ shall be done. You shall
open blind eyes, cleanse foul hearts, break men's fetters, and save men's
souls. In the power of the indwelling Spirit, miracles become the
commonplace of daily living." -- Samuel Chadwick Almost the last words uttered by our Lord before His ascension to heaven, were those addressed to the eleven disciples, words which, really, were spoken to, and having directly to do with, preachers, words which indicate very clearly the needed fitness which these men must have to preach the Gospel, beginning at Jerusalem: "But tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem," says Jesus, "till ye be endued with power from on high." Two things are very clearly set forth in these urgent directions. First, the power of the Holy Ghost for which they must tarry. This was to be received after their conversion, an indispensable requisite, equipping them for the great task set before them. Secondly, the
"promise of the Father," this "power from on high," would come to them after
they had waited in earnest, continuous prayer. A reference to Acts 1:14 will
reveal that these same men, with the women, "continued with one accord in
prayer and supplication," and so continued until the Day of Pentecost, when
the power from on high descended upon them. The effect and
energy of all human forces are essentially different in source and
character, and do not at all result from this "power from on high." The
transmission of such power is directly from God, a bestowal, in rich
measure, of the force and energy which pertains only to God, and which is
transmitted to His messengers only in answer to a longing, wrestling
attitude of his soul before his Master, conscious of his own impotency and
seeking the omnipotency of the Lord he serves, in order more fully to
understand the given Word and to preach the same to his fellow-men. Even when
lacking the other equipment but having this "power from on high," a preacher
cannot but succeed. It is the one essential, all-important vital force which
a messenger of God must possess to give wings to his message, to put life
into his preaching, and to enable him to speak the Word with acceptance and
power. A word is necessary here. Distinctions need to be kept in mind. We must think clearly upon this question. "Power from on high " means "the unction of the Holy One" resting on and abiding in the preacher. This is not so much a power which bears witness to a man being the child of God as it is a preparation for delivering the Word to others. Unction must be distinguished from pathos. Pathos may exist in a sermon while unction is entirely absent. So also, may unction be present and pathos absent. Both may exist together; but they are not to be confused, nor be made to appear to be the same thing. Pathos promotes emotion, tender feeling, sometimes tears. Quite often it results from the relation of an affecting incident, or when the tender side is peculiarly appealed to. But pathos is neither the direct nor indirect result of the Holy Spirit resting upon the preacher as he preaches. But unction is. Here we are given the evidence of the workings of an undefinable agency in the preacher, which results directly from the presence of this "power from on high," deep, conscious, life-giving and carrying, giving power and point to the preached Word. It is the
element in a sermon which arouses, stirs, convicts and moves the souls of
sinners and saints. This is what the preacher requires, the great equipment
for which he should wait and pray. This "unction of the Holy One" delivers
from dryness, saves from superficiality, and gives authority to preaching.
It is the one quality which distinguishes the preacher of the Gospel from
other men who speak in public; it is that which makes a sermon unique,
unlike the deliverance of any other public speaker. Prayer is the language of those who need something - something which they, themselves, cannot supply but which God has promised them, and for which they ask. In the end, "poor praying and prayerlessness amount to the same thing, for poor praying proceeds from a lack of the sense of need, while prayerlessness has its origin in the same soil. Not to pray is
not only to declare there is nothing needed, but to admit to a
nonrealization of that need. This is what aggravates the sin of
prayerlessness. It represents an attempt at instituting an independence of
God, a self-sufficient ruling of God out of the life. It is a declaration
made to God that we do not need Him, and hence do not pray to Him. The entire condemnation of this Church is summed up in one expression: "Because thou sayest, I have need of nothing," the most alarming state into which a person, or church or preacher can come. Trusting in its riches, in its social position, in things outward and material, the Church at Laodicea omitted God, leaving Him out of their church plans and church work, and declared, by their acts and by their omission of prayer, "I have need of nothing." No wonder the self-satisfied declaration brought forth its sentence of punishment - " Because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew thee out of My mouth." The idea conveyed is that such a backslidden state of heart is as repulsive to God as an emetic is to the human stomach, and as the stomach expels that which is objectionable, so Almighty God threatens to "spew out of His mouth" these people who were in such a religious condition so repulsive to Him. All of it was traceable to a prayerless state of heart, for no one can read this word of the Spirit to this Laodicean Church and not see that the very core of their sin was prayerlessness. How could a Church, given to prayer, openly and vauntingly declare, "I have need of nothing" in the face of the Spirit's assertion that it needed everything, "Thou knowest not that thou art wretched, and poor, and miserable, and blind, and naked"? In addition to
their sin of self-sufficiency and of independence of God, the Laodiceans
were spiritually blind. Oh, what dullness of sight, what blindness of soul!
These people were prayerless, and knew not the import of such
prayerlessness. They lacked everything which goes to make up spiritual life,
and force, and self-denying piety, and vainly supposed themselves to need
nothing but material wealth, thus making temporal possessions a substitute
for spiritual wealth, leaving God entirely out of their activities, relying
upon human and material resources to do the work only possible to the divine
and supernatural, and secured alone by prayer. May not this
sort of a church be found in modern times? Is it not likely that we could
discover some preachers of modern times who fall under a similar
condemnation to that passed upon the "angel of the church of" Laodicea? The presence of these earthly talents even in the most commanding and impressive form, and richest measure do not in the least abate the necessity for the added endowment of the Holy Spirit. Herein lies the great danger menacing the pulpit of to-day. All around us we see a tendency to substitute human gifts and worldly attainments for that supernatural, inward power which comes from on high in answer to earnest prayer. In many instances modern preaching seems to fail in the very thing which should create and distinguish true preaching, which is essential to its being, and which alone can make of it a divine and powerfully aggressive agency. It lacks in
short, "the power from on high" which alone can make it a living thing. It
fails to become the channel through which God's saving power can be made to
appeal to men's consciences and hearts. There is need of a message which searches into the secret places of man's being, dividing, as it were, the joints and the marrow, and laying bare the mysterious depths before himself and his God. Much of our present day preaching is lacking in that quality which infuses new blood into the heart and veins of faith, that arms it with courage and skill for the battle with the powers of darkness, and secures it a victory over the forces of the world. Such high and
noble ends can never be accomplished by human qualifications, nor can these
great results be secured by a pulpit clothed only with the human elements of
power, however gracious, comfortable, and helpful they may be. The Holy
Spirit is needed. He alone can equip the ministry for its difficult and
responsible work in and out of the pulpit. Oh, that the present-day ministry
may come to see that its one great need is an enduement of "power from on
high," and that this one need can be secured only by the use of God's
appointed means of grace - the ministry of prayer. Thus prayer is
of vast importance to the preacher in order that he may possess a growing
religious experience, and be enabled to live such a life that his character
and conduct will back up his preaching and give force to his message. A man
must have prayer in his pulpit work, for no minister can preach effectively
without prayer. He also has use for prayer in praying for others. Paul was a
notable example of a preacher who constantly prayed for those to whom he
ministered. Such a cry
voices the felt need of a preacher's heart who feels the need there is for
sympathies of a people to be in harmony with its minister: It is but the
expression of the inner soul of a preacher who feels his insufficiency for
the tremendous responsibilities of the pulpit, who realizes his weakness and
his need of the divine unction, and who throws himself upon the prayers of
his congregation, and calls out to them, "Praying always with all prayer and
supplication, in the Spirit, and for me, that utterance may be given me." It
is the cry of deep felt want in the heart of the preacher who feels he must
have this prayer made specifically for him that he may do his work in God's
own way. It can open
doors for apostolic labours, and apostolic lips to utter bravely and truly
the Gospel message. Apostolic movements wait their ordering from prayer, and
avenues long closed are opened to apostolic entrance by and through the
power of prayer. The messenger receives his message and is schooled as to
how to carry and deliver the message by prayer. The forerunner of the
Gospel, and that which prepares the way, is prayer; not only by the praying
of the messenger himself, but by the praying of the Church of God. Thus the prayer
for the spread of the Gospel gives the same energy to the Word of the Lord,
as the greatest outlay of strength gives success to the racer. Prayer in the
pew gives the preached Word energy, facility, and success. Preaching without
the backing of mighty praying is as limp and worthless an effort as can be
imagined. Prayerlessness in the pew is a serious hindrance to the running of
the Word of the Lord. Otherwise, a man is an obstacle to the success of his own message. Again, the Word of the Lord may fail to run, may be seriously encumbered and crippled by the inconsistent lives of those who are the hearers thereof. Bad living in the pew will seriously cripple the Word of the Lord, as attempts to run on its appointed course. Unrighteous lives among the laity heavily weights down the Word of the Lord and hampers the work of the ministry. Yet prayer will remove this burden which seriously handicaps the preached Word. It will tend to do this in a direct way, or in an indirect manner. For just as you set laymen to praying, for the preacher or even for themselves, it awakens conscience, stirs the heart , and tends to correct evil ways and to promote good living. No man will pray long and continue in sin. Praying breaks up bad living while bad living breaks down prayer. Praying goes
into bankruptcy when a man goes to sinning. To obey the cry of the preacher,
"Brethren, pray for us," sets men to doing that which will induce right
living in them, and will tend to break them away from sin. So it comes about
that it is worth no little to get the laity to pray for the ministry. Prayer
helps the preacher, is an aid to the sermon, assists the hearer and promotes
right living in the pew. It opens the
way, clears the track, furnishes a free course. The failure of many a
preacher may be found just here. He was hampered, hindered, crippled by a
prayerless church. Non-praying officials stood in the way of the Word
preached, and became veritable stumbling blocks in the way of the Word,
definitely preventing its reaching the hearts of the unsaved. And if that be true, it requires no undue straining of the Scriptures when we say that the unbelief and prayerlessness of a church can tie the hands of its preacher, and prevent him from doing many great works in the salvation of souls and in edifying saints. Prayerlessness, therefore, as it concerns the preacher is a very serious matter. If it exists in the preacher himself, then he ties his own hands and makes the Word as preached by him ineffective and void. If prayerless men be found in the pew, then it hurts the preacher, robs him of an invaluable help, and interferes seriously with the success of his work. How great the need of a praying church to help on the preaching of the Word of the Lord! Both pew and pulpit are jointly concerned in this preaching business. It is a copartnership. The two go hand in hand. One must help the other, one can hinder the other. Both must work in perfect accord or serious damage will result, and God's plan concerning the preacher and the preached Word be defeated. |