THE MINISTRY OF INTERCESSION
By Andrew Murray
"I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem,
which shall never hold their peace day nor night:
ye that are the Lord's remembrancers, keep not
silence, and give Him no rest, till He establish,
and till He make Jerusalem a praise in the earth." - Isa. lxii. 6,7.
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CONTENTS
There is no holy service
But hath its secret bliss:
Yet, of all blessed ministries,
Is one so dear as this?
The ministry that cannot be
A wondering seraph's dower,
Enduing mortal weakness
With more than angel-power;
The ministry of purest love
Uncrossed by any fear,
That bids us meet; At the Master's feet
And keeps us very near.
God's ministers are many,
For this His gracious will,
Remembrancers that day and night
This holy office fill.
While some are hushed in slumber,
Some to fresh service wake,
And thus the saintly number
No change or chance can break.
And thus the sacred courses
Are evermore fulfilled,
The tide of grace; By time or place
Is never stayed or stilled.
Oh, if our ears were opened
To hear as angels do
The Intercession-chorus
Arising full and true,
We should hear it soft up-welling
In morning's pearly light;
Through evening's shadows swelling
In grandly gathering might;
The sultry silence filling
Of noontide's thunderous glow,
And the solemn starlight thrilling
With ever-deepening flow.
We should hear it through the rushing
Of the city's restless roar,
And trace its gentle gushing
O'er ocean's crystal floor:
We should hear it far up-floating
Beneath the Orient moon,
And catch the golden noting
From the busy Western noon;
And pine-robed heights would echo
As the mystic chant up-floats,
And the sunny plain; Resound again
With the myriad-mingling notes.
Who are the blessed ministers
Of this world-gathering band?
All who have learnt one language,
Through each far-parted land;
All who have learnt the story
Of Jesu's love and grace,
And are longing for His glory
To shine in every face.
All who have known the Father
In Jesus Christ our Lord,
And know the might; And love the light
Of the Spirit in the Word.
Yet there are some who see not
Their calling high and grand,
Who seldom pass the portals,
And never boldly stand
Before the golden altar
On the crimson-stained floor,
Who wait afar and falter,
And dare not hope for more.
Will ye not join the blessed ranks
In their beautiful array?
Let intercession blend with thanks
As ye minister to-day!
There are little ones among them
Child-ministers of prayer,
White robes of intercession
Those tiny servants wear.
First for the near and dear ones
Is that fair ministry,
Then for the poor black children,
So far beyond the sea.
The busy hands are folded,
As the little heart uplifts
In simple love,; To God above,
Its prayer for all good gifts.
There are hands too often weary
With the business of the day,
With God-entrusted duties,
Who are toiling while they pray.
They bear the golden vials,
And the golden harps of praise
Through all the daily trials,
Through all the dusty ways,
These hands, so tired, so faithful,
With odours sweet are filled,
And in the ministry of prayer
Are wonderfully skilled.
There are ministers unlettered,
Not of Earth's great and wise,
Yet mighty and unfettered
Their eagle-prayers arise.
Free of the heavenly storehouse!
For they hold the master-key
That opens all the fulness
Of God's great treasury.
They bring the needs of others,
And all things are their own,
For their one grand claim; Is Jesu's name
Before their Father's throne.
There are noble Christian workers,
The men of faith and power,
The overcoming wrestlers
Of many a midnight hour;
Prevailing princes with their God,
Who will not be denied,
Who bring down showers of blessing
To swell the rising tide.
The Prince of Darkness quaileth
At their triumphant way,
Their fervent prayer availeth
To sap his subtle sway.
But in this temple service
Are sealed and set apart
Arch-priests of intercession,
Of undivided heart.
The fulness of anointing
On these is doubly shed,
The consecration of their God
Is on each low-bowed head.
They bear the golden vials
With white and trembling hand;
In quiet room; Or wakeful gloom
These ministers must stand, -
To the Intercession-Priesthood
Mysteriously ordained,
When the strange dark gift of suffering
This added gift hath gained.
For the holy hands uplifted
In suffering's longest hour
Are truly Spirit-gifted
With intercession-power.
The Lord of Blessing fills them
With His uncounted gold,
An unseen store,; Still more and more,
Those trembling hands shall hold.
Not always with rejoicing
This ministry is wrought,
For many a sigh is mingled
With the sweet odours brought.
Yet every tear bedewing
The faith-fed altar fire
May be its bright renewing
To purer flame, and higher.
But when the oil of gladness
God graciously outpours,
The heavenward blaze,; With blended praise,
More mightily upsoars.
So the incense-cloud ascendeth
As through calm, crystal air,
A pillar reaching unto heaven
Of wreathed faith and prayer.
For evermore the Angel
Of Intercession stands
In His Divine High Priesthood
With fragrance-filled hands,
To wave the golden censer
Before His Father's throne,
With Spirit-fire intenser,
And incense all His own.
And evermore the Father
Sends radiantly down
All-marvellous responses,
His ministers to crown;
The incense-cloud returning
As golden blessing-showers,
We in each drop discerning
Some feeble prayer of ours,
Transmuted into wealth unpriced,
By Him who giveth thus
The glory all to Jesus Christ,
The gladness all to us!
F. R. Havergal.
September 1877.
INTRODUCTION
I have been asked by a friend, who heard of this
book being published, what the difference
would be between it and the previous one on the
same subject, With Christ in the School of
Prayer. An answer to that question may be the
best introduction I can give to the present volume.
Any acceptance the former work has had must
be attributed, as far as the contents go, to the
prominence given to two great truths. The one
was, the certainty that prayer will be answered.
There is with some an idea that to ask and expect
an answer is not the highest form of prayer.
Fellowship with God, apart from any request, is
more than supplication. About the petition there
is something of selfishness and bargaining - to
worship is more than to beg. With others the
thought that prayer is so often unanswered is so
prominent, that they think more of the spiritual
benefit derived from the exercise of prayer than the actual gifts to be obtained by it. While
admitting the measure of truth in these views,
when kept in their true place, The School of
Prayer points out how our Lord continually spoke
of prayer as a means of obtaining what we desire,
and how He seeks in every possible way to waken
in us the confident expectation of an answer. I
was led to show how prayer, in which a man could
enter into the mind of God, could assert the royal
power of a renewed will, and bring down to earth
what without prayer would not have been given, is
the highest proof of his having been made in the
likeness of God's Son. He is found worthy of
entering into fellowship with Him, not only in
adoration and worship, but in having his will actually
taken up into the rule of the world, and becoming
the intelligent channel through which God can
fulfil his eternal purpose. The book sought to
reiterate and enforce the precious truths Christ
preaches so continually: the blessing of prayer is
that you can ask and receive what you will: the
highest exercise and the glory of prayer is that
persevering importunity can prevail and obtain
what God at first could not and would not give.
With this truth there was a second one that
came out very strongly as we studied the Master's
words. In answer to the question, But why, if the
answer to prayer is so positively promised, why are there such numberless unanswered prayers? We
found that Christ taught us that the answer
depended upon certain conditions. He spoke of
faith, of perseverance, of praying in His Name, of
praying in the will of God. But all these conditions
were summed up in the one central one: "If ye abide
in Me, ask whatsoever ye will and it shall be done
unto you." It became clear that the power to pray
the effectual prayer of faith depended upon the life.
It is only to a man given up to live as entirely in
Christ and for Christ as the branch in the vine and
for the vine, that these promises can come true.
"In that day," Christ said, the day of Pentecost, "ye
shall ask in My Name." It is only in a life full of
the Holy Spirit that the true power to ask in Christ's
Name can be known. This led to the emphasising
the truth that the ordinary Christian life cannot
appropriate these promises. It needs a spiritual life,
altogether sound and vigorous, to pray in power. The
teaching naturally led to press the need of a life of
entire consecration. More than one has told me how
it was in the reading of the book that he first saw
what the better life was that could be lived, and
must be lived, if Christ's wonderful promises are to
come true to us.
In regard to these two truths there is no change
in the present volume. One only wishes that one
could put them with such clearness and force as to help every beloved fellow-Christian to some right
impression of the reality and the glory of our
privilege as God's children: "Ask whatsoever ye
will, and it shall be done unto you." The present
volume owes its existence to the desire to enforce
two truths, of which formerly I had no such impression
as now.
The one is - that Christ actually meant prayer
to be the great power by which His Church should
do its work, and that the neglect of prayer is the
great reason the Church has not greater power over
the masses in Christian and in heathen countries.
In the first chapter I have stated how my convictions
in regard to this have been strengthened, and
what gave occasion to the writing of the book. It
is meant to be, on behalf of myself and my brethren
in the ministry and all God's people, a confession
of shortcoming and of sin, and, at the same time, a
call to believe that things can be different, and that
Christ waits to fit us by His Spirit to pray as He
would have us. This call, of course, brings me
back to what I spoke of in connection with the
former volume: that there is a life in the Spirit, a
life of abiding in Christ, within our reach, in which
the power of prayer - both the power to pray and
the power to obtain the answer - can be realised in
a measure which we could not have thought possible
before. Any failure in the prayer-life, any desire or hope really to take the place Christ has prepared
for us, brings us to the very root of the doctrine of
grace as manifested in the Christian life. It is only
by a full surrender to the life of abiding, by the
yielding to the fulness of the Spirit's leading and
quickening, that the prayer-life can be restored to a
truly healthy state. I feel deeply how little I have
been able to put this in the volume as I could wish.
I have prayed and am trusting that God, who
chooses the weak things, will use it for His own glory.
The second truth which I have sought to enforce
is that we have far too little conception of the place
that intercession, as distinguished from prayer for
ourselves, ought to have in the Church and the
Christian life. In intercession our King upon the
throne finds His highest glory; in it we shall find
our highest glory too. Through it He continues
His saving work, and can do nothing without it;
through it alone we can do our work, and nothing
avails without it. In it He ever receives from the
Father the Holy Spirit and all spiritual blessings to
impart; in it we too are called to receive in ourselves
the fulness of God's Spirit, with the power to
impart spiritual blessing to others. The power of
the Church truly to bless rests on intercession - asking
and receiving heavenly gifts to carry to men.
Because this is so, it is no wonder that where,
owing to lack of teaching or spiritual insight, wetrust in our own diligence and effort, to the
influence of the world and the flesh, and work more
than we pray, the presence and power of God are
not seen in our work as we would wish.
Such thoughts have led me to wonder what could
be done to rouse believers to a sense of their high
calling in this, and to help and train them to take
part in it. And so this book differs from the former
one in the attempt to open a practising school, and
to invite all who have never taken systematic part
in the great work of intercession to begin and give
themselves to it. There are tens of thousands of
workers who have known and are proving wonderfully
what prayer can do. But there are tens of
thousands who work with but little prayer, and as
many more who do not work because they do not
know how or where, who might all be won to swell
the host of intercessors who are to bring down the
blessings of heaven to earth. For their sakes, and
the sake of all who feel the need of help, I have prepared
helps and hints for a school of intercession
for a month (see the Appendix). I have asked
those who would join, to begin by giving at least
ten minutes a day definitely to this work. It is in
doing that we learn to do; it is as we take hold
and begin that the help of God's Spirit will come.
It is as we daily hear God's call, and at once put it
into practice, that the consciousness will begin to live in us, I too am an intercessor; and that we
shall feel the need of living in Christ and being
full of the Spirit if we are to do this work aright.
Nothing will so test and stimulate the Christian
life as the honest attempt to be an intercessor. It
is difficult to conceive how much we ourselves and
the Church will be the gainers, if with our whole
heart we accept the post of honour God is offering
us. With regard to the school of intercession, I am
confident that the result of the first month's course
will be to awake the feeling of how little we know how
to intercede. And a second and a third month may
only deepen the sense of ignorance and unfitness.
This will be an unspeakable blessing. The confession,
"We know not how to pray as we ought," is the
introduction to the experience, "The Spirit maketh
intercession for us" - our sense of ignorance will
lead us to depend upon the Spirit praying in us,
to feel the need of living in the Spirit.
We have heard a great deal of systematic Bible
study, and we praise God for thousands on thousands
of Bible classes and Bible readings. Let all the
leaders of such classes see whether they could not
open prayer classes - helping their students to pray
in secret, and training them to be, above everything,
men of prayer. Let ministers ask what they can
do in this. The faith in God's word can nowhere
be so exercised and perfected as in the intercession that asks and expects and looks out for the answer.
Throughout Scripture, in the life of every saint, of
God's own Son, throughout the history of God's
Church, God is, first of all, a prayer-hearing God.
Let us try and help God's children to know their
God, and encourage all God's servants to labour with
the assurance: the chief and most blessed part of
my work is to ask and receive from my Father
what I can bring to others.
It will now easily be understood how what this
book contains will be nothing but the confirmation
and the call to put into practice the two great
lessons of the former one. "Ask whatsoever ye will,
and it shall be done to you"; "Whatever ye ask,
believe that ye have received": these great prayer-promises,
as part of the Church's enduement of
power for her work, are to be taken as literally and
actually true. "If ye abide in Me, and My words
abide in you"; "In that day ye shall ask in My
Name": these great prayer-conditions are universal
and unchangeable. A life abiding in Christ and
filled with the Spirit, a life entirely given up as a
branch for the work of the vine, has the power to
claim these promises and to pray the effectual prayer
that availeth much. Lord, teach us to pray.
ANDREW MURRAY.
Wellington, 1st September 1897.
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER I
THE LACK OF PRAYER
"Ye have not, because ye ask not." - Jas. iv.2.
"And He saw that there was no man, and wondered that
there was no intercessor." - Isa. lix. 16.
"There is none that calleth upon Thy name, that stirreth
up himself to take hold of Thee." - Isa. lxiv. 7.
At our last Wellington Convention for the
Deepening of the Spiritual Life, in April,
the forenoon meetings were devoted to prayer and
intercession. Great blessing was found, both in
listening to what the Word teaches of their need
and power, and in joining in continued united
supplication. Many felt that we know too little
of persevering importunate prayer, and that it is
indeed one of the greatest needs of the Church.
During the past two months I have been attending
a number of Conventions. At the first, a Dutch Missionary Conference at Langlaagte,
Prayer had been chosen as the subject of the
addresses. At the next, at Johannesburg, a
brother in business gave expression to his deep
conviction that the great want of the Church of our
day was, more of the spirit and practice of intercession.
A week later we had a Dutch Ministerial
Conference in the Free State, where three days
were spent, after two days' services in the congregation
on the work of the Holy Spirit, in
considering the relation of the Spirit to prayer.
At the ministerial meetings held at most of the
succeeding conventions, we were led to take up the
subject, and everywhere there was the confession:
We pray too little! And with this there appeared
to be a fear that, with the pressure of duty and
the force of habit, it was almost impossible to hope
for any great change.
I cannot say what a deep impression was made
upon me by these conversations. Most of all, by
the thought that there should be anything like
hopelessness on the part of God's servants as to the
prospect of an entire change being effected, and
real deliverance found from a failure which cannot
but hinder our own joy in God, and our power in His service. And I prayed God to give me words
that might not only help to direct attention to the
evil, but, specially, that might stir up faith, and
waken the assurance that God by His Spirit will
enable us to pray as we ought.
Let me begin, for the sake of those who have
never had their attention directed to the matter,
by stating some of the facts that prove how
universal is the sense of shortcoming in this
respect.
Last year there appeared a report of an address
to ministers by Dr. Whyte, of Free St. George's,
Edinburgh. In that he said that, as a young
minister, he had thought that, of the time he had
over from pastoral visitation, he ought to spend as
much as possible with his books in his study. He
wanted to feed his people with the very best he
could prepare for them. But he had now learned
that prayer was of more importance than study.
He reminded his brethren of the election of deacons
to take charge of the collections, that the twelve
might "give themselves to prayer and the ministry
of the word," and said that at times, when the
deacons brought him his salary, he had to ask
himself whether he had been as faithful in his engagement as the deacons had been to theirs. He
felt as if it were almost too late to regain what he
had lost, and urged his brethren to pray more.
What a solemn confession and warning from one of
the high places: We pray too little!
During the Regent Square Convention two years
ago the subject came up in conversation with a
well-known London minister. He urged that if
so much time must be given to prayer, it would
involve the neglect of the imperative calls of duty
"There is the morning post, before breakfast, with
ten or twelve letters which must be answered.
Then there are committee meetings waiting, with
numberless other engagements, more than enough to
fill up the day. It is difficult to see how it can be
done."
My answer was, in substance, that it was simply
a question of whether the call of God for our time
and attention was of more importance than that of
man. If God was waiting to meet us, and to give
us blessing and power from heaven for His work, it
was a short-sighted policy to put other work in the
place which God and waiting on Him should have.
At one of our ministerial meetings, the superintendent
of a large district put the case thus: "I rise in the morning and have half an hour with God, in
the Word and prayer, in my room before breakfast.
I go out, and am occupied all day with a multiplicity
of engagements. I do not think many minutes
elapse without my breathing a prayer for guidance
or help. After my day's work, I return in my
evening devotions and speak to God of the day's
work. But of the intense, definite, importunate
prayer of which Scripture speaks one knows little."
What, he asked, must I think of such a life?
We all know the difference between a man whose
profits are just enough to maintain his family and
keep up his business, and another whose income enables
him to extend the business and to help others.
There may be an earnest Christian life in which
there is prayer enough to keep us from going back,
and just maintain the position we have attained to,
without much of growth in spirituality or Christlikeness.
The attitude is more defensive, seeking
to ward off temptation, than aggressive, reaching
out after higher attainment. If there is indeed to
be a going from strength to strength, with some
large experience of God's power to sanctify ourselves
and to bring down real blessing on others,
there must be more definite and persevering prayer. The Scripture teaching about crying day
and night, continuing steadfastly in prayer, watching
unto prayer, being heard for his importunity,
must in some degree become our experience if we
are really to be intercessors.
At the very next Convention the same question
was put in somewhat different form. "I am at
the head of a station, with a large outlying district
to care for. I see the importance of much prayer,
and yet my life hardly leaves room for it. Are we
to submit? Or tell us how we can attain to what
we desire?" I admitted that the difficulty was
universal. I recalled the words of one of our most
honoured South African missionaries, now gone to
his rest: he had the same complaint. "In the
morning at five the sick people are at the door
waiting for medicine. At six the printers come,
and I have to set them to work and teach them.
At nine the school calls me, and till late at night
I am kept busy with a large correspondence." In
my answer I quoted a Dutch proverb: 'What is heaviest must weigh heaviest,' - must have the first
place. The law of God is unchangeable: as on
earth, so in our traffic with heaven, we only get as
we give. Unless we are willing to pay the price, and sacrifice time and attention and what appear
legitimate or necessary duties, for the sake of the
heavenly gifts, we need not look for a large experience
of the power of the heavenly world in our
work. The whole company present joined in the
sad confession; it had been thought over, and
mourned over, times without number; and yet, somehow,
there they were, all these pressing claims, and
all the ineffectual resolves to pray more, barring
the way. I need not now say to what further
thoughts our conversation led; the substance of
them will be found in some of the later chapters
in this volume.
Let me call just one more witness. In the
course of my journey I met with one of the Cowley
Fathers, who had just been holding Retreats for
clergy of the English Church. I was interested to
hear from him the line of teaching he follows. In
the course of conversation he used the expression - "the
distraction of business," and it came out that
he found it one of the great difficulties he had to
deal with in himself and others. Of himself, he
said that by the vows of his Order he was bound
to give himself specially to prayer. But he found
it exceedingly difficult. Every day he had to be at four different points of the town he lived in; his
predecessor had left him the charge of a number
of committees where he was expected to do all the
work; it was as if everything conspired to keep
him from prayer.
All this testimony surely suffices to make clear
that prayer has not the place it ought to have in
our ministerial and Christian life; that the shortcoming
is one of which all are willing to make
confession; and that the difficulties in the way of
deliverance are such as to make a return to a true
and full prayer-life almost impossible. Blessed be
God - "The things that are impossible with men
are possible with God"! "God is able to make all
grace abound toward you, that ye, always having
all sufficiency in all things, may abound to all good
work." Do let us believe that God's call to
much prayer need not be a burden and cause of
continual self-condemnation. He means it to be a
joy. He can make it an inspiration, giving us
strength for all our work, and bringing down His
power to work through us in our fellowmen. Let
us not fear to admit to the full the sin that shames
us, and then to face it in the name of our Mighty
Redeemer. The light that shows us our sin and condemns us for it, will show us the way out of it,
into the life of liberty that is well-pleasing to God. If we allow this one matter, unfaithfulness in
prayer, to convict us of the lack in our Christian
life which lies at the root of it, God will use the
discovery to bring us not only the power to pray
that we long for, but the joy of a new and healthy
life, of which prayer is the spontaneous expression.
And what is now the way by which our sense of
the lack of prayer can be made the means of blessing,
the entrance on a path in which the evil may
be conquered? How can our intercourse with the
Father, in continual prayer and intercession, become
what it ought to be, if we and the world around us
are to be blessed? As it appears to me, we must
begin by going back to God's Word, to study what the place is God means prayer to have in the life
of His child and His Church. A fresh sight of
what prayer is according to the will of God, of what
our prayers can be, through the grace of God, will
free us from those feeble defective views, in regard
to the absolute necessity of continual prayer, which
lie at the root of our failure. As we get an insight
into the reasonableness and rightness of this divine
appointment, and come under the full conviction of how wonderfully it fits in with God's love and our
own happiness, we shall be freed from the false
impression of its being an arbitrary demand. We
shall with our whole heart and soul consent to it
and rejoice in it, as the one only possible way for
the blessing of heaven to come to earth. All
thought of task and burden, of self-effort and strain,
will pass away in the blessed faith that as simple
as breathing is in the healthy natural life, will
praying be in the Christian life that is led and
filled by the Spirit of God.
As we occupy ourselves with and accept this
teaching of God's Word on prayer, we shall be led
to see how our failure in the prayer-life was owing
to failure in the Spirit-life. Prayer is one of the
most heavenly and spiritual of the functions of the
Spirit-life. How could we try or expect to fulfil it
so as to please God, except as our soul is in
perfect health, and our life truly possessed and
moved by God's Spirit? The insight into the place
God means prayer to take, and which it only can
take, in a full Christian life, will show us that
we have not been living the true, the abundant
life, and that any thought of praying more and
effectually will be vain, except as we are brought into a closer relation to our Blessed Lord Jesus.
Christ is our life, Christ liveth in us, in such reality
that His life of prayer on earth, and of intercession
in heaven, is breathed into us in just such measure
as our surrender and our faith allow and accept it.
Jesus Christ is the Healer of all diseases, the Conqueror
of all enemies, the Deliverer from all sin; if
our failure teaches us to turn afresh to Him,
and find in Him the grace He gives to pray as we
ought, this humiliation may become our greatest
blessing. Let us all unite in praying God that He
would visit our souls and fit us for that work of
intercession, which is at this moment the greatest
need of the Church and the world. It is only by intercession
that that power can be brought down from
Heaven which will enable the Church to conquer
the world. Let us stir up the slumbering gift that
is lying unused, and seek to gather and train and
band together as many as we can, to be God's
remembrancers, and to give Him no rest till He
makes His Church a joy in the earth. Nothing
but intense believing prayer can meet the intense
spirit of worldliness, of which complaint is everywhere
made.
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER II
THE MINISTRATION OF THE SPIRIT AND PRAYER
"If ye, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your
children; how much more shall your Heavenly Father give the
Holy Spirit to them that ask Him?" - Luke xi. 13.
Christ had just said (v. 9), "Ask, and it shall be
given": God's giving is inseparably connected
with our asking. He applies this especially to the
Holy Spirit. As surely as a father on earth gives
bread to his child, so God gives the Holy Spirit to
them that ask Him. The whole ministration of the
Spirit is ruled by the one great law: God must
give, we must ask. When the Holy Spirit was
poured out at Pentecost with a flow that never ceases,
it was in answer to prayer. The inflow into the
believer's heart, and His outflow in the rivers of
living water, ever still depend upon the law: "Ask,
and it shall be given." In connection with our confession of the lack of prayer, we have said that
what we need is some due apprehension of the
place it occupies in God's plan of redemption; we
shall perhaps nowhere see this more clearly than in
the first half of the Acts of the Apostles. The
story of the birth of the Church in the outpouring
of the Holy Spirit, and of the first freshness of its
heavenly life in the power of that Spirit, will teach
us how prayer on earth, whether as cause or effect, is the true measure of the presence of the Spirit of
heaven.
We begin with the well-known words (i. 13),
"These all continued with one accord in prayer and
supplication." And then there follows: "And
when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they
were all with one accord in one place. And they
were all filled with the Holy Ghost. And the
same day there were added to them about three
thousand souls." The great work of redemption
had been accomplished. The Holy Spirit had been
promised by Christ "not many days hence." He
had sat down on His throne and received the Spirit
from the Father. But all this was not enough.
One thing more was needed: the ten days' united
continued supplication of the disciples. It was intense, continued prayer that prepared the disciples'
hearts, that opened the windows of heaven, that
brought down the promised gift. As little as
the power of the Spirit could be given without
Christ sitting on the throne, could it descend without
the disciples on the footstool of the throne. For all the
ages the law is laid down here, at the birth of the
Church, that whatever else may be found on earth,
the power of the Spirit must be prayed down from
heaven. The measure of believing, continued prayer
will be the measure of the Spirit's working in
the Church. Direct, definite, determined prayer is
what we need.
See how this is confirmed in chapter iv. Peter
and John had been brought before the Council and
threatened with punishment. When they returned
to their brethren, and reported what had been said
to them, "all lifted up their voice to God with one
accord," and prayed for boldness to speak the word.
"And when they had prayed, the place was shaken,
and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and
they spake the word of God with boldness. And
the multitude of them that believed were one heart
and one soul. And with great power gave the
apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus; and great grace was upon them all." It is
as if the story of Pentecost is repeated a second
time over, with the prayer, the shaking of the house,
the filling with the Spirit, the speaking God's word
with boldness and power, the great grace upon
all, the manifestation of unity and love - to imprint
it ineffaceably on the heart of the Church: it is
prayer that lies at the root of the spiritual life and
power of the Church. The measure of God's giving
the Spirit is our asking. He gives as a father to
him who asks as a child.
Go on to the sixth chapter. There we find that,
when murmurings arose as to the neglect of the
Grecian Jews in the distribution of alms, the
apostles proposed the appointment of deacons to
serve the tables. "We," they said, "will give ourselves
to prayer and the ministry of the word."
It is often said, and rightly said, that there is
nothing in honest business, when it is kept in its
place as entirely subordinate to the kingdom, which
must ever be first, that need prevent fellowship
with God. Least of all ought a work like ministering
to the poor hinder the spiritual life. And yet
the apostles felt it would hinder them in their giving
themselves to the ministry of prayer and the word. What does this teach? That the maintenance of
the spirit of prayer, such as is consistent with the
claims of much work, is not enough for those who
are the leaders of the Church. To keep up the communication
with the King on the throne and the
heavenly world clear and fresh; to draw down the
power and blessing of that world, not only for the
maintenance of our own spiritual life, but for those
around us; continually to receive instruction and
empowerment for the great work to be done - the
apostles, as the ministers of the word, felt the need
of being free from other duties, that they might
give themselves to much prayer. James writes:
"Pure religion and undefiled before God and the
Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows
in their affliction." If ever any work were a sacred
one, it was that of caring for these Grecian widows.
And yet, even such duties might interfere with the
special calling to give themselves to prayer and the
ministry of the word. As on earth, so in the
kingdom of heaven, there is power in the division
of labour; and while some, like the deacons, had
specially to care for serving the tables and ministering
the alms of the Church here on earth, others
had to be set free for that steadfast continuance in prayer which would uninterruptedly secure the
downflow of the powers of the heavenly world. The
minister of Christ is set apart to give himself as
much to prayer as to the ministry of the word.
In faithful obedience to this law is the secret of
the Church's power and success. As before, so after Pentecost, the apostles were men given up to
prayer.
In chapter viii. we have the intimate connection
between the Pentecostal gift and prayer, from
another point of view. At Samaria, Philip had
preached with great blessing, and many had believed.
But the Holy Ghost was, as yet, fallen on
none of them. The apostles sent down Peter and
John to pray for them, that they might receive the
Holy Ghost. The power for such prayer was a
higher gift than preaching - the work of the men
who had been in closest contact with the Lord
in glory, the work that was essential to the perfection
of the life that preaching and baptism,
faith and conversion had only begun. Surely of
all the gifts of the early Church for which we
should long there is none more needed than the
gift of prayer - prayer that brings down the Holy
Ghost on believers. This power is given to the men who say: "We will give ourselves to
prayer."
In the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, in the
house of Cornelius at Cæsarea, we have another
testimony to the wondrous interdependence of the
action of prayer and the Spirit, and another proof of
what will come to a man who has given himself to
prayer. Peter went up at midday to pray on the
housetop. And what happened? He saw heaven
opened, and there came the vision that revealed to
him the cleansing of the Gentiles; with that came
the message of the three men from Cornelius, a man
who "prayed alway," and had heard from an angel,
"Thy prayers are come up before God"; and then
the voice of the Spirit was heard saying, "Go with
them." It is Peter praying, to whom the will of
God is revealed, to whom guidance is given as to
going to Cæsarea, and who is brought into contact
with a praying and prepared company of hearers.
No wonder that in answer to all this prayer a
blessing comes beyond all expectation, and the Holy
Ghost is poured out upon the Gentiles. A much-praying
minister will receive an entrance into God's
will he would otherwise know nothing of; will be
brought to praying people where he does not expect them; will receive blessing above all he asks or
thinks. The teaching and the power of the Holy
Ghost are alike unalterably linked to prayer.
Our next reference will show us faith in the power
that the Church's prayer has with its glorified
King, as it is found, not only in the apostles, but
in the Christian community. In chapter xii.
we have the story of Peter in prison on the eve of
execution. The death of James had aroused the
Church to a sense of real danger, and the thought
of losing Peter too, wakened up all its energies. It
betook itself to prayer. "Prayer was made of the
Church without ceasing to God for him." That
prayer availed much; Peter was delivered. When
he came to the house of Mary, he found "many
gathered together praying." Stone walls and
double chains, soldiers and keepers, and the iron
gate, all gave way before the power from heaven
that prayer brought down to his rescue. The
whole power of the Roman Empire, as represented
by Herod, was impotent in presence of the power
the Church of the Holy Spirit wielded in prayer.
They stood in such close and living communication
with their Lord in heaven; they knew so well that
the words, "all power is given unto Me," and "Lo I am with you alway," were absolutely true; they had
such faith in His promise to hear them whatever
they asked - that they prayed in the assurance that
the powers of heaven could work on earth, and
would work at their request and on their behalf.
The Pentecostal Church believed in prayer, and
practised it.
Just one more illustration of the place and the
blessing of prayer among men filled with the Holy
Spirit. In chapter xiii. we have the names of five
men at Antioch who had given themselves specially
to ministering to the Lord with prayer and fasting.
Their giving themselves to prayer was not in vain:
as they ministered to the Lord, the Holy Spirit met
them, and gave them new insight into God's plans.
He called them to be fellow-workers with Himself;
there was a work to which He had called Barnabas
and Saul; their part and privilege would be to
separate these men with renewed fasting and prayer,
and to let them go, "sent forth of the Holy Ghost."
God in heaven would not send forth His chosen servants
without the co-operation of His Church; men on
earth were to have a real partnership in the work of
God. It was prayer that fitted and prepared them
for this; it was to praying men the Holy Ghost gave authority to do His work and use His name. It was
to prayer the Holy Ghost was given. It is still
prayer that is the only secret of true Church
extension, that is guided from heaven to find and
send forth God-called and God-empowered men.
To prayer the Holy Spirit will show the men He
has selected; to prayer that sets them apart under
His guidance He will give the honour of knowing
that they are men, "sent forth by the Holy Ghost."
It is prayer which is the link between the King on
the throne and the Church at His footstool - the
human link that has its divine strength in the
power of the Holy Ghost, who comes in answer to it.
As one looks back upon these chapters in the
history of the Pentecostal Church, how clear the two
great truths stand out: where there is much prayer
there will be much of the Spirit; where there is
much of the Spirit there will be ever-increasing
prayer. So clear is the living connection between
the two, that when the Spirit is given in answer
to prayer it ever wakens more prayer to prepare
for the fuller revelation and communication of His
Divine power and grace. If prayer was thus the
power by which the Primitive Church flourished
and triumphed, is it not the one need of the Church of our days? Let us learn what ought to
be counted axioms in our Church work: -
Heaven is still as full of stores of spiritual
blessing as it was then. God still delights to
give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him. Our life and work are still as dependent on the
direct impartation of Divine power as they were
in Pentecostal times. Prayer is still the appointed
means for drawing down these heavenly
blessings in power on ourselves and those around
us. God still seeks for men and women who
will, with all their other work of ministering,
specially give themselves to persevering prayer.
And we - you, my reader, and I - may have the
privilege of offering ourselves to God to labour in
prayer, and bring down these blessings to this earth.
Shall we not beseech God to make all this truth
so living in us that we may not rest till it has
mastered us, and our whole heart be so filled with
it, that the practice of intercession shall be counted
by us our highest privilege, and we find in it the
sure and only measure for blessing on ourselves, on
the Church, and on the world?
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER III
A MODEL OF INTERCESSION
"And he said unto them, Which of you shall have a friend,
and shall go unto him at midnight, and shall say unto him,
Friend, lend me three loaves; for a friend of mine is come unto
me from a journey, and I have nothing to set before him; and
he from within shall answer and say, Trouble me not: I cannot
rise and give thee? I say unto you, Though he will not rise
and give him, because he is his friend, yet, because of his
importunity, he will arise and give him as many as he
needeth." - Luke xi. 5–8.
"I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, which
shall never hold their peace day nor night: ye that are the
Lord's remembrancers, keep not silence, and give Him no
rest." - Isa. lxii. 6,7.
We have seen in our previous chapter what
power prayer has. It is the one power
on earth that commands the power of heaven.
The story of the early days of the Church is
God's great object-lesson, to teach His Church what prayer can do, how it alone, but it most
surely, can draw down the treasures and powers
of heaven into the life of earth.
Just remember the lessons we learnt of how
prayer is at once indispensable and irresistible.
Did we not see how unknown and untold power
and blessing is stored up for us in heaven? - how
that power will make us a blessing to men, and
fit us to do any work or face any danger? how
it is to be sought in prayer continually and
persistently? how they who have the heavenly
power can pray it down upon others? how in all
the intercourse of ministers and people, in all the
ministrations of Christ's Church, it is the one
secret of success? how it can defy all the power
of the world, and fit men to conquer that world
for Christ? It is the power of the heavenly life,
the power of God's own Spirit, the power of
Omnipotence, that waits for prayer to bring it
down.
In all this prayer there was little thought of
personal need or happiness. It was the desire to
witness for Christ and bring Him and His salvation
to others, it was the thought of God's kingdom
and glory, that possessed these disciples. If we would be delivered from the sin of restraining
prayer, we must enlarge our hearts for the work
of intercession. The attempt to pray constantly
for ourselves must be a failure; it is in intercession
for others that our faith and love and perseverance
will be aroused, and that power of the
Spirit be found which can fit us for saving men.
We are asking how we may become more faithful
and successful in prayer; let us see how the
Master teaches us, in the parable of the Friend
at Midnight, that intercession for the needy calls
forth the highest exercise of our power of
believing and prevailing prayer. Intercession is
the most perfect form of prayer: it is the prayer
Christ ever liveth to pray on His throne. Let
us learn what the elements of true intercession
are.
1. Notice the urgent need: here intercession
has its origin. The friend came at midnight - an
untimely hour. He was hungry, and could
not buy bread. If we are to learn to pray
aright we must open eye and heart to the need
around us.
We hear continually of the thousand millions
of heathen and Mohammedans living in midnight darkness, perishing for lack of the bread of life.
We hear of five hundred millions of nominal
Christians, the great majority of them almost
as ignorant and indifferent as the heathen. We
see millions in the Christian Church, not ignorant
or indifferent, and yet knowing little of a walk in
the light of God or in the power of a life fed by
bread from heaven. We have each of us our own
circles - congregations, schools, friends, missions - in
which the great complaint is that the light and
life of God are too little known. Surely, if we
believe what we profess, that God alone is able to
help, that God certainly will help in answer to
prayer, - all this need ought to make intercessors
of us, people who give their lives to prayer for
those around them.
Let us take time to consider and realise the
need. Each Christless soul going down into outer
darkness, perishing of hunger, with bread enough
and to spare! Thirty millions a year dying without
the knowledge of Christ! Our own neighbours and
friends, souls intrusted to us, dying without hope!
Christians around us living a sickly, feeble, fruitless
life! Surely there is need for prayer. Nothing,
nothing but prayer to God for help, will avail.
2. Note the willing love. - The friend took his
weary, hungry friend into his house, and into his
heart too. He did not excuse himself by saying
he had no bread: he gave himself at midnight to
seek it for him. He sacrificed his night's rest, his
comfort, to find the needed bread. "Love seeketh
not its own." It is the very nature of love to give
up and forget itself for the sake of others. It
takes their needs and makes them its own, it finds
its real joy in living and dying for others as
Christ did.
It is the love of a mother to her prodigal son
that makes her pray for him. True love to souls
will become in us the spirit of intercession. It is
possible to do a great deal of faithful, earnest work
for our fellowmen without true love to them.
Just as a lawyer or a physician, from a love of
his profession and a high sense of faithfulness to
duty, may interest himself most thoroughly in
clients or patients without any special love to each,
so servants of Christ may give themselves to their
work with devotion and even self-sacrificing enthusiasm
without the Christlike love to souls being
strong. It is this lack of love that causes so
much shortcoming in prayer. It is as love of our profession and work, delight in thoroughness and
diligence, sink away in the tender compassion of
Christ, that love will compel us to prayer, because
we cannot rest in our work if souls are not
saved. True love must pray.
3. Note the sense of impotence. - We often
speak of the power of love. In one sense this is
true; and yet the truth has its limitations, which
must not be forgotten. The strongest love may be
utterly impotent. A mother might be willing to
give her life for her dying child, and yet not be
able to save it. The friend at midnight was most
willing to give his friend bread, but he had none.
It was this sense of impotence, of his inability to
help, that sent him a-begging: "My friend is come
to me, and I have nothing to set before him." It
is this sense of impotence with God's servants that
is the very strength of the life of intercession.
"I have nothing to set before them": as this
consciousness takes possession of the minister or
missionary, the teacher or worker, intercession will
become their only hope and refuge. I may have
knowledge and truth, a loving heart, and the
readiness to give myself for those under my charge;
but the bread of heaven I cannot give them. With all my love and zeal, "I have nothing to set before
them." Blessed the man who has made that "I
have nothing," the motto of his ministry. As he
thinks of the judgment day and the danger of
souls, as he sees what a supernatural power and life
is needed to save men from sin, as he feels how
utterly insufficient all he can ever do is to give
them life, that "I have nothing" urges him to pray.
Intercession appears to him, as he thinks of the
midnight darkness and the hungry souls, as his
only hope, the one thing in which his love can take
refuge.
Let us take the lesson to heart, for a warning
to all who are strong and wise to work, for the
encouragement of all who are feeble. The sense
of our impotence is the soul of intercession. The
simplest, feeblest Christian can pray down blessing
from an Almighty God.
4. Note the faith in prayer. - What he has not
himself, another can supply. He has a rich friend
near, who will be both able and willing to give the
bread. He is sure that if he only asks, he will
receive. This faith makes him leave his home at
midnight: if he has not the bread himself to give,
he can ask another.
It is this simple, confident faith that God will
give, that we need: where it really exists, there
will surely be no mistake about our not praying.
And in God's word we have everything that can
stir and strengthen such faith in us. Just as
the heaven our natural eye can see is one great
ocean of sunshine, with its light and heat, giving
beauty and fruitfulness to earth, Scripture shows
us God's true heaven, filled with all spiritual blessings, - divine
light and love and life, heavenly joy
and peace and power, all shining down upon us.
It reveals to us God waiting, delighting to bestow
these blessings in answer to prayer. By a thousand
promises and testimonies it calls and urges us to
believe that prayer will be heard, that what we
cannot possibly do ourselves for those whom
we want to help, can be got by prayer. Surely
there can be no question as to our believing that
prayer will be heard, that through prayer the
poorest and feeblest can dispense blessings to
the needy, and each of us, though poor, may yet
be making many rich.
5. Note the importunity that prevails. - The
faith of the friend met a sudden and unexpected
check: the rich friend refuses to hear - "I cannot rise and give thee." How little the loving heart
had counted on this disappointment; it cannot
consent to accept it. The supplicant presses his
threefold plea: here is my needy friend, you have
abundance, I am your friend; and refuses to accept
a denial. The love that opened his house at midnight,
and then left it to seek help, must win.
This is the central lesson of the parable. In our
intercession we may find that there is difficulty
and delay with the answer. It may be as if God
says, "I cannot give thee." It is not easy, against
all appearances, to hold fast our confidence that He
will hear, and to persevere in full assurance that we
shall have what we ask. And yet this is what
God looks for from us. He so highly prizes our
confidence in Him, it is so essentially the highest
honour the creature can render the Creator, that
He will do anything to train us in the exercise
of this trust in Him. Blessed the man who
is not staggered by God's delay, or silence, or
apparent refusal, but is strong in faith, giving
glory to God. Such faith perseveres, importunately,
if need be, and cannot fail to inherit the
blessing.
6. Note, last, the certainty of a rich reward. - say unto you, because of his importunity, he will
give him as many as he needeth." Oh that we
might learn to believe in the certainty of an
abundant answer. A prophet said of old: "Let
not your hands be weak; your work shall be
rewarded." Would that all who feel it difficult to
pray much, would fix their eye on the recompense
of the reward, and in faith learn to count upon
the Divine assurance that their prayer cannot be
vain. If we will but believe in God and His
faithfulness, intercession will become to us the
very first thing we take refuge in when we seek
blessing for others, and the very last thing for
which we cannot find time. And it will become
a thing of joy and hope, because, all the time we
pray, we know that we are sowing seed that will
bring forth fruit an hundredfold. Disappointment
is impossible: "I say unto you, He will rise and
give him as many as he needeth."
Let all lovers of souls, and all workers in the
service of the gospel, take courage. Time spent
in prayer will yield more than that given to work.
Prayer alone gives work its worth and its success.
Prayer opens the way for God Himself to do His
work in us and through us. Let our chief work, as God's messengers, be intercession: in it we
secure the presence and power of God to go
with us.
"Which of you shall have a friend at midnight,
and shall say to him, Friend, lend me three loaves?"
This friend is none other but our God. Do let us
learn that in the darkness of midnight, at the
most unlikely time, and in the greatest need, when
we have to say of those we love and care for, "I
have nothing to set before them," we have a rich
Friend in heaven, the Everlasting God and Father,
who only waits to be asked aright. Let us confess
before Him our lack of prayer. Let us admit
that the lack of faith, of which it is the proof, is
the symptom of a life that is not spiritual, that
is yet all too much under the power of self and
the flesh and the world. Let us in the faith of
the Lord Jesus, who spake this parable, and Himself
waits to make every trait of it true in us,
give ourselves to be intercessors. Let every sight
of souls needing help, let every stirring of the
spirit of compassion, let every sense of our own
impotence to bless, let every difficulty in the way
of our getting an answer, just combine to urge
us to do this one thing: with importunity to cry to the God who alone can help, who, in
answer to our prayer, will help. And let us, if
we indeed feel that we have failed, do our utmost
to train a young generation of Christians, who
profit by our mistake and avoid it. Moses could
not enter the land of Canaan, but there was one
thing he could do: he could at God's bidding
"charge Joshua, and encourage him, and strengthen
him" (Deut. iii. 28). If it is too late for us to
make good our failure, let us at least encourage
those who come after us to enter into the good
land, the blessed life of unceasing prayer.
The Model Intercessor is the Model Christian
Worker. First to get from God, and then to give
to men what we ourselves secure from day to day,
is the secret of successful work. Between our
Impotence and God's Omnipotence intercession is
the blessed link.
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER IV
BECAUSE OF HIS IMPORTUNITY
"I say unto you, Though he will not rise and give him,
because he is his friend, yet because of his importunity he
will arise and give him as many as he needeth." - Luke xi. 8.
"And He spake a parable unto them, to the end, they ought
always to pray and not to faint.... Hear what the unrighteous
judge saith. And shall not God avenge His own elect, which cry to Him day and night, and He is long-suffering with them?
I tell you that He will avenge them speedily." - Luke xviii. 1–8.
Our Lord Jesus thought it of such importance
that we should know the need of perseverance
and importunity in prayer, that He spake two
parables to teach us this. This is proof sufficient
that in this aspect of prayer we have at once its
greatest difficulty and its highest power. He would
have us know that in prayer all will not be easy
and smooth; we must expect difficulties, which can only be conquered by persistent, determined
perseverance.
In the parables our Lord represents the difficulty
as existing on the side of the persons to whom
the petition was addressed, and the importunity
as needed to overcome their reluctance to hear.
In our intercourse with God the difficulty is not
on His side, but on ours. In connection with the
first parable He tells us that our Father is more
willing to give good things to those who ask Him
than any earthly father to give his child bread. In
the second, He assures us that God longs to avenge
His elect speedily. The need of urgent prayer
cannot be because God must be made willing
or disposed to bless: the need lies altogether in
ourselves. But because it was not possible to find
any earthly illustration of a loving father or a
willing friend from whom the needed lesson of
importunity could be taught, He takes the unwilling
friend and the unjust judge to encourage
in us the faith, that perseverance can overcome
every obstacle.
The difficulty is not in God's love or power, but
in ourselves and our own incapacity to receive the
blessing. And yet, because there is this difficulty with us, this lack of spiritual preparedness, there is
a difficulty with God too. His wisdom, His righteousness,
yea His love, dare not give us what
would do us harm, if we received it too soon or
too easily. The sin, or the consequence of sin, that
makes it impossible for God to give at once, is a
barrier on God's side as well as ours; to break
through this power of sin in ourselves, or those
for whom we pray, is what makes the striving and
the conflict of prayer such a reality. And so in
all ages men have prayed, and that rightly too,
under a sense that there were difficulties in the
heavenly world to overcome. As they pleaded
with God for the removal of the unknown obstacles,
and in that persevering supplication were brought
into a state of utter brokenness and helplessness,
of entire resignation to Him, of union with His will,
and of faith that could take hold of Him, the
hindrances in themselves and in heaven were
together overcome. As God conquered them, they
conquered God. As God prevails over us, we
prevail with God.
God has so constituted us that the clearer our
insight is into the reasonableness of a demand, the
more hearty will be our surrender to it. One great cause of our remissness in prayer is that there
appears to be something arbitrary, or at least something
incomprehensible, in the call to such
continued prayer. If we could be brought to see
that this apparent difficulty is a Divine necessity,
and in the very nature of things the source of
unspeakable blessing, we should be more ready
with gladness of heart to give ourselves to continue
in prayer. Let us see if we cannot understand
how the difficulty that the call to importunity
throws in our way is one of our greatest privileges.
I do not know whether you have ever noticed
what a part difficulties play in our natural life.
They call out man's powers as nothing else can.
They strengthen and ennoble character. We are
told that one reason of the superiority of the
Northern nations, like Holland and Scotland, in
strength of will and purpose, over those of the
sunny South, as Italy and Spain, is that the
climate of the latter has been too beautiful, and
the life it encourages too easy and relaxing - the
difficulties the former had to contend with have
been their greatest boon; how all nature has been
so arranged by God that in sowing and reaping,
as in seeking coal or gold, nothing is found without labour and effort. What is education but a daily
developing and disciplining of the mind by new
difficulties presented to the pupil to overcome?
The moment a lesson has become easy, the pupil
is moved on to one that is higher and more
difficult. With the race and the individual, it is
in the meeting and the mastering of difficulties
that our highest attainments are found.
It is even so in our intercourse with God. Just
imagine what the result would be if the child of
God had only to kneel down and ask, and get, and
go away. What unspeakable loss to the spiritual
life would ensue. It is in the difficulty and delay
that calls for persevering prayer, that the true
blessing and blessedness of the heavenly life will
be found. We there learn how little we delight in
fellowship with God, and how little we have of
living faith in Him. We discover how earthly
and unspiritual our heart still is, how little we
have of God's Holy Spirit. We there are brought
to know our own weakness and unworthiness, and
to yield to God's Spirit to pray in us, to take our
place in Christ Jesus, and abide in Him as our
only plea with the Father. There our own will
and strength and goodness are crucified. There we rise in Christ to newness of life, with our whole
will dependent on God and set upon His glory.
Do let us begin to praise God for the need and the
difficulty of importunate prayer, as one of His
choicest means of grace.
Just think what our Lord Jesus owed to the
difficulties in His path. In Gethsemane it was as
if the Father would not hear: He prayed yet
more earnestly, until "He was heard." In the
way He opened up for us, He learned obedience
by the things He suffered, and so was made perfect;
His will was given up to God; His faith in God
was proved and strengthened; the prince of this
world, with all his temptation, was overcome.
This is the new and living way He consecrated for
us; it is in persevering prayer we walk with and
are made partakers of His very Spirit. Prayer is
one form of crucifixion, of our fellowship with
Christ's Cross, of our giving up our flesh to the
death. O Christians! shall we not be ashamed
of our reluctance to sacrifice the flesh and our own
will and the world, as it is seen in our reluctance
to pray much? Shall we not learn the lesson
which nature and Christ alike teach? The difficulty
of importunate prayer is our highest privilege; the difficulties to be overcome in it bring us
our richest blessings.
In importunity there are various elements. Of
these the chief are perseverance, determination,
intensity. It begins with the refusal to at once
accept a denial. It grows to the determination
to persevere, to spare no time or trouble, till an
answer comes. It rises to the intensity in which
the whole being is given to God in supplication,
and the boldness comes to lay hold of God's
strength. At one time it is quiet and restful; at
another passionate and bold. Now it takes time
and is patient; then again it claims at once what it
desires. In whatever different shape, it always means
and knows - God hears prayer: I must be heard.
Remember the wonderful instances we have
of it in the Old Testament saints. Think of
Abraham, as he pleads for Sodom. Time after
time he renews his prayer until the sixth time he
has to say, "Let not my Lord be angry." He does
not cease until he has learnt to know God's condescension
in each time consenting to his petition,
until he has learnt how far he can go, has entered
into God's mind, and now rests in God's will. And
for his sake Lot was saved. "God remembered Abraham, and delivered Lot out of the midst of the
overthrow." And shall not we, who have a
redemption and promises for the heathen which
Abraham never knew, begin to plead more with
God on their behalf.
Think of Jacob, when he feared to meet Esau.
The angel of the Lord met him in the dark, and
wrestled with him. And when the angel saw that
he prevailed not, he said, "Let me go." And
Jacob said, "I will not let thee go." And he
blessed him there. And that boldness that said,
"I will not," and forced from the reluctant angel
the blessing, was so pleasing in God's sight, that a
new name was there given to him: "Israel, he
who striveth with God, for thou hast striven with
God and with men, and hast prevailed." And
through all the ages God's children have understood,
what Christ's two parables teach, that God holds
Himself back, and seeks to get away from us, until
what is of flesh and self and sloth in us is overcome,
and we so prevail with Him that He can and must
bless us. Oh! why is it that so many of God's
children have no desire for this honour - being
princes of God, strivers with God, and prevailing?
What our Lord taught us, "What things soever ye desire, believe that ye have received," is nothing but
His putting of Jacob's words, "I will not let Thee
go except thou bless me." This is the importunity
He teaches, and we must learn: to claim and take
the blessing.
Think of Moses when Israel had made the
golden calf. Moses returned to the Lord and
said, "Oh, this people have sinned a great sin. Yet
now, if Thou wilt forgive their sin - ; and if not, blot
me, I pray Thee, out of Thy book which Thou hast
written." That was importunity, that would
rather die than not have his people given him.
Then, when God had heard him, and said He
would send His angel with the people, Moses came
again, and would not be content until, in answer to
his prayer that God Himself should go with them
(xxxiii. 12, 17, 18), He had said, "I will do this
thing also that thou hast spoken." After that,
when in answer to his prayer, "Show me Thy
glory," God made His goodness pass before him, he
at once again began pleading, "Let my Lord, I pray
Thee, go among us." And he was there with the
Lord forty days and forty nights (Ex. xxxiv. 28).
Of these days he says, "I fell down before the Lord,
as at the first, forty days and forty nights, I did neither eat bread, nor drink water, because
of all your sin which ye sinned." As an intercessor
Moses used importunity with God, and
prevailed. He proves that the man who truly
lives near to God, and with whom God speaks
face to face, becomes partaker of that same power of
intercession which there is in Him who is at God's
right hand and ever lives to pray.
Think of Elijah in his prayer, first for fire, and
then for rain. In the former you have the importunity
that claims and receives an immediate answer.
In the latter, bowing himself down to the earth, his
face between his knees, his answer to the servant
who had gone to look toward the sea, and come
with the message, "There is nothing," was "Go
again seven times." Here was the importunity of
perseverance. He had told Ahab there would be
rain; he knew it was coming; and yet he prayed
till the seven times were fulfilled. And it is of
this Elijah and this prayer we are taught, "Pray
for one another. Elijah was a man of like passions
with ourselves. The effectual fervent prayer of a
righteous man availeth much." Will there not be
some who feel constrained to cry out, "Where is
the Lord God of Elijah?" - this God who draws forth such effectual prayer, and hears it so wonderfully.
His name be praised: He is still the same.
Let His people but believe that He still waits to
be inquired of! Faith in a prayer-hearing God
will make a prayer-loving Christian.
We remember the marks of the true intercessor as
the parable taught us them. A sense of the need of
souls; a Christlike love in the heart; a consciousness
of personal impotence; faith in the power of prayer;
courage to persevere in spite of refusal; and the
assurance of an abundant reward; - these are the
dispositions that constitute a Christian an intercessor,
and call forth the power of prevailing prayer.
These are the dispositions that constitute the
beauty and the health of the Christian life, that fit
a man for being a blessing in the world, that make
him a true Christian worker, who does indeed get
from God the bread of heaven to dispense to the
hungry. These are the dispositions that call forth
the highest, the heroic virtues of the life of faith.
There is nothing to which the nobility of natural
character owes so much as the spirit of enterprise
and daring which in travel or war, in politics or
science, battles with difficulties and conquers. No
labour or expense is grudged for the sake of victory. And shall we who are Christians not
be able to face the difficulties that we meet in
prayer? It is as we "labour" and "strive" in
prayer that the renewed will asserts its royal right
to claim in the name of Christ what it will, and
wields its God-given power to influence the destinies
of men. Shall men of the world sacrifice
ease and pleasure in their pursuits, and shall we
be such cowards and sluggards as not to fight our
way through to the place where we can find liberty
for the captive and salvation for the perishing?
Let each servant of Christ learn to know his
calling. His King ever lives to pray. The Spirit
of the King ever lives in us to pray. It is from
heaven the blessings, which the world needs,
must be called down in persevering, importunate,
believing prayer. It is from heaven, in answer
to prayer, the Holy Spirit will take complete
possession of us to do His work through us. Let
us acknowledge how vain our much work has been
owing to our little prayer. Let us change our
method, and let henceforth more prayer, much prayer,
unceasing prayer, be the proof that we look for all
to God, and that we believe that He heareth us.
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER V
THE LIFE THAT CAN PRAY
"If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ask
whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto you." - John xv. 7.
"The supplication of a righteous man availeth much in its
working." - James v. 16.
"Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, we have boldness
toward God; and whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do the things
that are pleasing in His sight." - 1 John iii. 21, 22.
Here on earth the influence of one who
asks a favour for others depends entirely
on his character, and the relationship he bears
to him with whom he is interceding. It is
what he is that gives weight to what he asks.
It is no otherwise with God. Our power in
prayer depends upon our life. Where our life is right we shall know how to pray so as to
please God, and prayer will secure the answer.
The texts quoted above all point in this direction.
"If ye abide in Me," our Lord says, ye
shall ask, and it shall be done unto you. It
is the prayer of a righteous man, according to
James, that availeth much. We receive whatsoever
we ask, John says, because we obey and
please God. All lack of power to pray aright
and perseveringly, all lack of power in prayer
with God, points to some lack in the Christian
life. It is as we learn to live the life that
pleases God, that God will give what we ask.
Let us learn from our Lord Jesus, in the parable
of the vine, what the healthy, vigorous life is
that may ask and receive what it will. Hear
His voice, "If ye abide in Me, and My words
abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it
shall be done unto you." And again at the close
of the parable: "Ye did not choose Me, but I
chose you, and appointed you, that you should go
and bear fruit, and that your fruit should abide:
that whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in My
name, He may give it you."
And what is now, according to the parable, the life that one must lead to bear fruit, and
then ask and receive what we will? What is it
we are to be or do, that will enable us to pray
as we should, and to receive what we ask? The
answer is in one word: it is the branch-life that
gives power for prayer. We are branches of
Christ, the Living Vine. We must simply live
like branches, and abide in Christ, then we shall
ask what we will, and it shall be done unto us.
We all know what a branch is, and what its
essential characteristic. It is simply a growth
of the vine, produced by it and appointed to bear
fruit. It has only one reason of existence; it
is there at the bidding of the vine, that through
it the vine may bear and ripen its precious fruit.
Just as the vine only and solely and wholly
lives to produce the sap that makes the grape,
so the branch has no other aim and object but
this alone, to receive that sap and bear the grape.
Its only work is to serve the vine, that through
it the vine may do its work.
And the believer, the branch of Christ the
Heavenly Vine, is it to be understood that he is as
literally, as exclusively, to live only that Christ
may bear fruit through him? Is it meant that a true Christian as a branch is to be just as
absorbed in and devoted to the work of bearing
fruit to the glory of God as Christ the Vine
was on earth, and is now in heaven? This, and
nothing less, is indeed what is meant. It is to
such that the unlimited prayer promises of the
parable are given. It is the branch-life, existing
solely for the Vine, that will have the power to
pray aright. With our life abiding in Him, and
His words abiding, kept and obeyed, in our heart
and life, transmuted into our very being, there
will be the grace to pray aright, and the faith
to receive the whatsoever we will.
Do let us connect the two things, and take
them both in their simple, literal truth, and their
infinite, divine grandeur. The promises of our
Lord's farewell discourse, with their wonderful six-fold
repetition of the unlimited, anything, whatsoever (John xiv. 13, 14; xv. 7, 16; xvi. 23, 24),
appear to us altogether too large to be taken
literally, and they are qualified down to meet
our human ideas of what appears seemly. It is
because we separate them from that life of
absolute and unlimited devotion to Christ's service
to which they were given. God's covenant is ever: Give all and take all. He that is willing
to be wholly branch, and nothing but branch,
who is ready to place himself absolutely at the
disposal of Jesus the Vine of God, to bear His
fruit through him, and to live every moment
only for Him, will receive a Divine liberty to
claim Christ's whatsoever in all its fulness, and
a Divine wisdom and humility to use it aright.
He will live and pray, and claim the Father's
promises, even as Christ did, only for God's glory
in the salvation of men. He will use his boldness
in prayer only with a view to power in
intercession, and getting men blessed. The unlimited
devotion of the branch-life to fruitbearing,
and the unlimited access to the treasures of the
Vine life, are inseparable. It is the life abiding
wholly in Christ that can pray the effectual prayer
in the name of Christ.
Just think for a moment of the men of prayer
in Scripture, and see in them what the life was
that could pray in such power. We spoke of
Abraham as intercessor. What gave Him such
boldness? He knew that God had chosen and
called him away from his home and people to walk
before Him, that all nations might be blessed in him. He knew that he had obeyed, and forsaken
all for God. Implicit obedience, to the very sacrifice
of his son, was the law of his life. He did what
God asked: he dared trust God to do what he
asked. We spoke of Moses as intercessor. He
too had forsaken all for God, "counting the
reproach of Christ greater riches than all the
treasures of Egypt." He lived at God's disposal:
"as a servant he was faithful in all His house."
How often it is written of him, "According to all
that the Lord commanded Moses, so did he." No
wonder that he was very bold: his heart was right
with God: he knew God would hear him. No less
true is this of Elijah, the man who stood up to
plead for the Lord God of Israel. The man who
is ready to risk all for God can count upon God to
do all for him.
It is as men live that they pray. It is the
life that prays. It is the life that, with whole-hearted
devotion, gives up all for God and to God,
that can claim all from God. Our God longs
exceedingly to prove Himself the Faithful God and
Mighty Helper of His people. He only waits for
hearts wholly turned from the world to Himself,
and open to receive His gifts. The man who loses all will find all; he dare ask and take it. The
branch that only and truly lives abiding in Christ,
the Heavenly Vine, entirely given up, like Christ, to
bear fruit in the salvation of men, and has His
words taken up into and abiding in its life, may
and dare ask what it will - it shall be done. And
where we have not yet attained to that full
devotion to which our Lord had trained His
disciples, and cannot equal them in their power
of prayer, we may, nevertheless, take courage in
remembering that, even in the lower stages of
the Christian life, every new onward step in the
striving after the perfect branch-life, and every
surrender to live for others in intercession, will be
met from above by a corresponding liberty to
draw nigh with greater boldness, and expect larger
answers. The more we pray, and the more conscious
we become of our unfitness to pray in power,
the more we shall be urged and helped to press
on towards the secret of power in prayer - a life
abiding in Christ entirely at His disposal.
And if any are asking, with somewhat of a
despair of attainment, what the reason may be of
the failure in this blessed branch-life, so simple
and yet so mighty, and how they can come to it, let me point them to one of the most precious lessons
of the parable of the Vine. It is one that is all
too little noticed. Jesus spake, "I am the true
Vine, and my Father is the Husbandman." We
have not only Himself, the glorified Son of God,
in His divine fulness, out of whose fulness of life
and grace we can draw, - this is very wonderful, - but
there is something more blessed still. We
have the Father, as the Husbandman, watching
over our abiding in the Vine, over our growth and
fruitbearing. It is not left to our faith or our
faithfulness to maintain our union with Christ:
the God, who is the Father of Christ, and who
united us with Him, - God Himself will see to it
that the branch is what it should be, will enable
us to bring forth just the fruit we were appointed
to bear. Hear what Christ said of this, "Every
branch that beareth fruit, He cleanseth it, that it
may bear more fruit." More fruit is what the
Father seeks; more fruit is what the Father will
Himself provide. It is for this that He, as the
Vinedresser, cleanses the branches.
Just think a moment what this means. It is
said that of all fruitbearing plants on earth there
is none that produces fruit so full of spirit, from which spirit can be so abundantly distilled, as the
vine. And of all fruitbearing plants there is none
that is so ready to run into wild wood, and for
which pruning and cleansing are so indispensable.
The one great work that a vinedresser has to do
for the branch every year is to prune it. Other
plants can for a time dispense with it, and yet
bear fruit: the vine must have it. And so the
one thing the branch that desires to abide in
Christ and bring forth much fruit, and to be able
to ask whatsoever it will, must do, is to trust in and
yield itself to this Divine cleansing. What is it that
the vinedresser cuts away with his pruning-knife?
Nothing but the wood that the branch has produced - true,
honest wood, with the true vine nature in it.
This must be cut away. And why? Because
it draws away the strength and life of the vine,
and hinders the flow of the juice to the grape.
The more it is cut down, the less wood there is in
the branch, the more all the sap can go to the
grape. The wood of the branch must decrease,
that the fruit for the vine may increase; in
obedience to the law of all nature, that death is
the way to life, that gain comes through sacrifice,
the rich and luxuriant growth of wood must be cut off and cast away, that the life more abundant may
be seen in the cluster.
Even so, child of God, branch of the Heavenly
Vine, there is in thee that which appears perfectly
innocent and legitimate, and which yet so draws
out thy interest and thy strength, that it must be
pruned and cleansed away. We saw what power
in prayer men like Abraham and Moses and Elijah
had, and we know what fruit they bore. But we
also know what it cost them; how God had to
separate them from their surroundings, and ever
again to draw them from any trust in themselves,
to seek their life in Him alone. It is only as our
own will, and strength and effort and pleasure, even
where these appear perfectly natural and sinless, are
cut down, so that the whole energies of our being
are free and open to receive the sap of the
Heavenly Vine, the Holy Spirit, that we shall bear
much fruit. It is in the surrender of what nature
holds fast, it is in the full and willing submission
to God's holy pruning-knife, that we shall come to
what Christ chose and appointed us for - to bear
fruit, that whatsoever we ask the Father in Christ's
name, He may give to us.
What the pruning-knife is, Christ tells us in the next verse. "Ye are clean through the word which
I have spoken to you." As He says later,
"Sanctify them through Thy truth; Thy word is
truth." "The word of God is sharper than any
two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing of
soul and spirit." What heart-searching words
Christ had spoken to His disciples on love and
humility, on being the least, and, like Himself, the
servant of all, on denying self, and taking the
cross, and losing the life. Through His word
the Father had cleansed them, cut away all
confidence in themselves or the world, and prepared
them for the inflowing and filling of the Spirit of
the Heavenly Vine. It is not we who can cleanse
ourselves: God is the Vinedresser: we may confidently
intrust ourselves to His care.
Beloved brethren, - ministers, missionaries,
teachers, workers, believers old and young, - are
you mourning your lack of prayer, and, as a consequence,
your lack of power in prayer? Oh! come and
listen to your beloved Lord as He tells you, "only be
a branch, united to, identified with, the Heavenly
Vine, and your prayers will be effectual and much
availing." Are you mourning that just this is your
trouble - you do not, cannot, live this branch-life, abiding in Him? Oh! come and listen again.
"More fruit" is not only your desire, but the Father's
too. He is the Husbandman who cleanseth the
fruitful branch, that it may bear more fruit. Cast
yourself upon God, to do in you what is impossible
to man. Count upon a Divine cleansing, to cut
down and take away all that self-confidence and
self-effort, that has been the cause of your failure.
The God who gave you His beloved Son to be
your Vine, who made you His branch, will He not
do His work of cleansing to make you fruitful in
every good work, in the work of prayer and intercession
too?
Here is the life that can pray. A branch
entirely given up to the Vine and its aims, with all
responsibility for its cleansing cast on the Vinedresser;
a branch abiding in Christ, trusting and
yielding to God for His cleansing, can bear much
fruit. In the power of such a life we shall love
prayer, we shall know how to pray, we shall
pray, and receive whatsoever we ask.
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER VI
RESTRAINING PRAYER - IS IT SIN?
"Thou restrainest prayer before God." - Job xv. 4.
"What profit should we have, if we pray unto Him?" - Job xxi. 15.
"God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to
pray for you." - 1 Sam. xii. 23.
"Neither will I be with you any more, except ye destroy the
accursed from among you." - Josh. vii. 12.
Any deep quickening of the spiritual life of the
Church will always be accompanied by a
deeper sense of sin. This will not begin with
theology; that can only give expression to what
God works in the life of His people. Nor does it
mean that that deeper sense of sin will only be
seen in stronger expressions of self-reproach or
penitence: that is sometimes found to consist with
a harbouring of sin, and unbelief as to deliverance. But the true sense of the hatefulness of sin, the hatred
of it, will be proved by the intensity of desire for
deliverance, and the struggle to know to the very
utmost what God can do in saving from it - a holy
jealousy, in nothing to sin against God.
If we are to deal effectually with the lack of
prayer we must look at it from this point of view
and ask, Restraining prayer, is it sin? And if it
be, how is it to be dealt with, to be discovered, and
confessed, and cast out by man, and cleansed away
by God? Jesus is a Saviour from sin. It is only
as we know sin truly that we can truly know the
power that saves from sin. The life that can pray
effectually is the life of the cleansed branch - the
life that knows deliverance from the power of self.
To see that our prayer-sins are indeed sins, is the
first step to a true and Divine deliverance from them.
In the story of Achan we have one of the
strongest proofs in Scripture that it is sin that robs
God's people of His blessing, and that God will not
tolerate it; and at the same time the clearest
indication of the principles under which God deals
with it, and removes it. Let us see in the light of
the story if we can learn how to look at the sin of
prayerlessness, and at the sinfulness that lies at the root of it. The words I have quoted above,
"Neither will I be with you any more, except ye
put away the accursed thing from among you,"
take us into the very heart of the story, and
suggest a series of the most precious lessons
around the truth they express, that the presence of
sin makes the presence of God impossible.
1. The presence of God is the great privilege of
God's people, and their only power against the enemy. - God
had promised to Moses, I will bring you in unto the land. Moses proved that he understood
this when God, after the sin of the golden calf,
spoke of withdrawing His presence and sending an
angel. He refused to accept anything less than
God's presence. "For whereby shall it be known
that I and Thy people have found grace in Thy
sight? Is it not that Thou goest with us?" It was
this gave Caleb and Joshua their confidence: The
Lord is with us. It was this gave Israel their victory
over Jericho: the presence of God. This is
throughout Scripture the great central promise: I
am with thee. This marks off the whole-hearted
believer from the worldling and worldly Christians
around him: he lives consciously hidden in the
secret of God's presence.
2. Defeat and failure are always owing to the loss
of God's presence. - It was thus at Ai. God had
brought His people into Canaan with the promise
to give them the land. When the defeat at Ai
took place Joshua felt at once that the cause must
be in the withdrawal of God's power. He had
not fought for them. His presence had been withheld.
In the Christian life and the work of the Church,
defeat is ever a sign of the loss of God's presence.
If we apply this to our failure in the prayer-life,
and as a result of that to our failure in work for God,
we are led to see that all is simply owing to our
not standing in clear and full fellowship with God.
His nearness, His immediate presence, has not been
the chief thing sought after and trusted in. He
could not work in us as He would. Loss of blessing
and power is ever caused by the loss of God's
presence.
3. The loss of God's presence is always owing to
some hidden sin. - Just as pain is ordered in nature
to warn of some hidden evil in the system, defeat
is God's voice telling us there is something wrong.
He has given Himself so wholly to His people, He
delights so in being with them, and would so fain reveal in them His love and power, that He never
withdraws Himself unless they compel Him by sin.
Throughout the Church there is a complaint of
defeat. The Church has so little power over the
masses, or the educated classes. Powerful conversions
are comparatively rare. The fewness of holy,
consecrated, spiritual Christians, devoted to the
service of God and their fellowmen, is felt everywhere.
The power of the Church for the preaching
of the gospel to the heathen is paralysed by the
scarcity of money and men; and all owing to the
lack of the effectual prayer which brings the Holy
Spirit in power, first on ministers and believers,
then on missionaries and the heathen. Can we
deny it that the lack of prayer is the sin on
account of which God's presence and power are not
more manifestly seen among us?
4. God Himself will discover the hidden sin. - We
may think we know what the sin is: it is only God
who can discover its real deep meaning. When
He spoke to Joshua, before naming the sin of
Achan, God first said, "They have transgressed My
covenant which I commanded them." God had
commanded (vi. 19) that all the booty of Jericho,
gold and silver and all that was in it, was to be a devoted thing, consecrated unto the Lord, and to
come into His treasury. And Israel had broken
this consecration vow: it had not given God His
due; it had robbed God.
It is this we need: God must discover to us how
the lack of prayer is the indication of unfaithfulness
to our consecration vow, that God should have all
our heart and life. We must see that this restraining
prayer, with the excuses we make for it, is
greater sin than we have thought; for what does it
mean? That we have little taste or relish for
fellowship with God; that our faith rests more on
our own work and efforts than on the power of
God; that we have little sense of the heavenly
blessing God waits to shower down; that we are
not ready to sacrifice the ease and confidence of the
flesh for persevering waiting on God; that the
spirituality of our life, and our abiding in Christ, is
altogether too feeble to make us prevail in prayer.
When the pressure of work for Christ is allowed
to be the excuse for our not finding time to seek
and secure His own presence and power in it, as
our chief need, it surely proves that there is no
right sense of our absolute dependence upon God;
no deep apprehension of the Divine and supernatural work of God in which we are only His
instruments, no true entrance into the heavenly,
altogether other-worldly, character of our mission
and aims, no full surrender to and delight in Christ
Jesus Himself.
If we were to yield to God's Spirit to show us
that all this is in very deed the meaning of remissness
in prayer, and of our allowing other things
to crowd it out, all our excuses would fall away,
and we should fall down and cry, "We have sinned!
we have sinned!" Samuel once said, "As for me,
God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in
ceasing to pray for you." Ceasing from prayer is
sin against God. May God discover this to us.
(NOTE: Just this day I have been meeting a very earnest lady missionary
from India. She confesses and mourns the lack of
prayer. But - in India at least - it can hardly be otherwise. You
have only the morning hours, from six to eleven, for your work.
Some have attempted to rise at four, and get the time they think
they need, and have suffered, and had to give it up. Some have
tried to take time after lunch, and been found asleep on their
knees. You are not your own master, and must act with others.
No one who has not been in India can understand the difficulty;
sufficient time for much intercession cannot be secured.
Were it only in the heat of India the difficulty existed, one
might be silent. But, alas! in the coldest winter in London, and
in the moderate climate of South Africa, there is the same trouble
everywhere. If once we really felt - intercession is the most important
part of our work, the securing of God's presence and power in
full measure is the essential thing, this is our first duty - our
hours of work would all be made subordinate to this one thing.
May God show us all whether there indeed be an insuperable
difficulty for which we are not responsible, whether it be only a
mistake we are making, or a sin by which we are grieving Him and
hindering His Spirit!
If we ask the question George Muller once asked of a Christian,
who complained that he could not find time sufficient for the study
of the Word and prayer, whether an hour less work, say four hours,
with the soul dwelling in the full light of God, would not be more prosperous and effective than five hours with the depressing consciousness
of unfaithfulness, and the loss of the power that could
be obtained in prayer, the answer will not be difficult. The
more we think of it the more we feel that when earnest, godly
workers allow, against their better will, the spiritual to be crowded
out by incessant occupation and the fatigue it brings, it must be
because the spiritual life is not sufficiently strong in them to bid
the lever stand aside till the presence of God in Christ and the
power of the Spirit have been fully secured.
Let us listen to Christ saying, "Render unto Cæsar the things
that are Cæsar's" - let duty and work have their place - "and unto
God the things that are God's." Let the worship in the Spirit,
the entire dependence and continued waiting upon God for the full
experience of His presence and power every day, and the strength
of Christ working in us, ever have the first place. The whole
question is simply this, Is God to have the place, the love, the
trust, the time for personal fellowship He claims, so that all our
working shall be God working in us?)
5. When God discovers sin, it must be confessed
and cast out. - When the defeat at Ai came, Joshua
and Israel were ignorant of the cause. God dealt
with Israel as a nation, as one body, and the sin of
one member was visited on all. Israel as a whole
was ignorant of the sin, and yet suffered for
it. The Church may be ignorant of the greatness of
this sin of restraining prayer, individual ministers
or believers may never have looked upon it as
actual transgression, none the less does it bring its punishment. But when the sin is no more hidden,
when the Holy Spirit begins to convince of it, then
comes the time of heart-searching. In our story
the combination of individual and united responsibility
is very solemn. The individual: as we find
it in the expression, "man for man"; each man felt
himself under the eye of God, to be dealt with. And
when Achan had been taken, he had to make confession.
The united: as we see it in all Israel first
suffering and dealt with by God, then taking Achan,
and his family, and the accursed thing, and destroying
them out of their midst.
If we have reason to think this is the sin that
is in the camp, let us begin with personal and
united confession. And then let us come before
God to put away and destroy the sin. Here stands
at the very threshold of Israel's history in Canaan
the heap of stones in the valley of Achor, to tell us
that God cannot bear sin, that God will not dwell
with sin, and that if we really want God's presence in
power, sin must be put away. Let us look the solemn
fact in the face. There may be other sins, but here
is certainly one that causes the loss of God's presence - we
do not pray as Christ and Scripture teach
us. Let us bring it out before God, and give up this sin to the death. Let us yield ourselves to God to
obey His voice. Let no fear of past failure, let no
threatening array of temptations, or duties, or
excuses, keep us back. It is a simple question of
obedience. Are we going to give up ourselves to
God and His Spirit to live a life in prayer, well-pleasing
to Him? Surely, if it is God who has been
withholding His presence, who has been discovering
the sin, who is calling for its destruction, and a
return to obedience, surely we can count upon His
grace to accept and strengthen for the life He asks
of us. It is not a question of what you can do;
it is the question of whether you now, with your
whole heart, turn to give God His due, and give
yourself to let His will and grace have their way
with you.
6. With sin cast out God's presence is restored. - From
this day onwards there is not a word in
Joshua of defeat in battle. The story shows them
going on from victory to victory. God's presence
secured gives power to overcome every enemy.
This truth is so simple that the very ease with
which we acquiesce in it robs it of its power. Let
us pause and think what it implies. God's presence
restored means victory secured. Then, we are responsible for defeat. Then, there must be sin
somewhere causing it. Then, we ought at once
to find out and put away the sin. We may confidently
expect God's presence the moment the sin
is put away. Surely each one is under the solemn
obligation to search his life and see what part he
may have in this evil.
God never speaks to His people of sin except
with a view to saving them from it. The same light
that shows the sin will show the way out of it. The
same power that breaks down and condemns will, if
humbly yielded to and waited on in confession and
faith, give the power to rise up and conquer. It
is God who is speaking to His Church and to us
about this sin: "He wondered that there was no
intercessor." "I wondered that there was none
to uphold." "I sought for a man that should
stand in the gap before Me, and found none." The
God who speaks thus is He who will work the
change for His children who seek His face. He
will make the valley of Achor, of trouble and shame,
of sin confessed and cast out, a door of hope. Let
us not fear, let us not cling to the excuses and
explanations which circumstances suggest, but
simply confess, "We have sinned; we are sinning; we dare not sin longer." In this matter of prayer
we are sure God does not demand of us impossibilities.
He does not weary us with an impracticable
ideal. He asks us to pray no more than He gives
grace to enable us to. He will give the grace to
do what He asks, and so to pray that our intercessions
shall, day by day, be a pleasure to Him
and to us, a source of strength to our conscience and
our work, and a channel of blessing to those for
whom we labour.
God dealt personally with Joshua, with Israel, with
Achan. Let each of us allow Him to deal personally
with us concerning this sin, of restraining prayer, and
its consequences in our life and work; concerning the
deliverance from sin, its certainty and blessedness.
Just bow in stillness and wait before God, until, as
God, He overshadow you with His presence, lead
you out of that region of argument as to human
possibilities, where conviction of sin can never be
deep, and full deliverance can never come. Take
quiet time, and be still before God, that He may
take this matter in hand. "Sit still, for He will
not be in rest until He have finished this thing
this day." Leave yourself in God's hands.
A PLEA FOR MORE PRAYER
CHAPTER VII
WHO SHALL DELIVER?
"Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there?
why then is not the health of the daughter of my people
recovered?" - Jer. viii. 22.
"Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings.
Behold, we come unto Thee; for Thou art the Lord
our God." - Jer. iii. 22.
"Heal me, O Lord, and I shall be healed." - Jer. xii. 14.
"O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me out of the
body of this death? I thank God through Jesus Christ our
Lord. The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus made me
free from the law of sin and death." - Rom. vii. 24, viii. 2.
During one of our conventions a gentleman
called upon me to ask advice and help. He
was evidently an earnest and well-instructed
Christian man. He had for some years been in most
difficult surroundings, trying to witness for Christ.
The result was a sense of failure and unhappiness. His complaint was that he had no relish for the
Word, and that though he prayed, it was as if his
heart was not in it. If he spoke to others, or
gave a tract, it was under a sense of duty: the love
and the joy were not present. He longed to be
filled with God's Spirit, but the more he sought it,
the farther off it appeared to be. What was he
to think of his state, and was there any way out
of it?
My answer was, that the whole matter appeared
to me very simple; he was living under the law
and not under grace. As long as he did so, there
could be no change. He listened attentively,
but could not exactly see what I meant.
I reminded him of the difference, the utter contrariety,
between law and grace. Law demands;
grace bestows. Law commands, but gives no stre