Prayer
A prayerless Christian is a contradiction in terms. Just as a still-born child is a
dead one, so a professing believer who does not pray is devoid of spiritual life.
Prayer is the breath of the new nature in the saint, as the Word of God is its food.
When the Lord would assure the Damascus disciple that Saul of Tarsus had been
truly converted, He told him, "Behold, he prayeth" (Acts 9:11). On many
occasions had that self-righteous Pharisee bowed his knees before God and gone
through his "devotions," but this was the first time he had ever really prayed.
This important distinction needs emphasizing in this day of powerless forms (2
Tim. 3:5). They who content themselves with formal addresses to God know
Him not; for "the spirit of grace and supplications" (Zech. 12:10) are never
separated. God has no dumb children in His regenerated family: "Shall not God
avenge his own elect, which cry day and night unto Him?" (Luke 18:7). Yes,
"cry" unto Him, not merely "say" their prayers.
But will the reader be surprised when the writer declares it is his deepening
conviction that, probably, the Lord’s own people sin more in their efforts to pray
than in connection with any other thing they engage in? What hypocrisy there is,
where there should be reality! What presumptuous demandings, where there
should be submissiveness! What formality, where there should be brokenness of
heart! How little we really feel the sins we confess, and what little sense of deep
need for the mercies we seek! And even where God grants a measure of
deliverance from these awful sins, how much coldness of heart, how much
unbelief, how much self-will and self-pleasing have we to bewail! Those who
have no conscience upon these things are strangers to the spirit of holiness.
Now the Word of God should be our directory in prayer. Alas, how often we
have made our own fleshly inclinations the rule of our asking. The Holy
Scriptures have been given to us "that the man of God may be perfect, throughly
furnished unto all good works" (2 Tim. 3:17). Since we are required to "pray in
the Spirit" (Jude 20), it follows that our prayers ought to be according to the
Scriptures, seeing that He is their Author throughout. It equally follows that
according to the measure in which the Word of Christ dwells in us "richly" (Col.
3:16) or sparsely, the more or the less will our petitions be in harmony with the
mind of the Spirit, for "out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh"
(Matt. 12:34). In proportion as we hide the Word in our hearts, and it cleanses,
moulds and regulates our inner man, will our prayers be acceptable in God’s
sight. Then shall we be able to say, as David did in another connection, "Of thine
own have we given thee" (1 Chron. 29:14).
Thus the purity and power of our prayer-life are another index by which we
may determine the extent to which we are profiting from our reading and
searching of the Scriptures. If our Bible study is not, under the blessing of the
Spirit, convicting us of the sin of prayerlessness, revealing to us the place which
prayer ought to have in our daily lives, and is actually bringing us to spend more
time in the secret place of the Most High; unless it is teaching us how to pray
more acceptably to God, how to appropriate His promises and plead them before
Him, how to appropriate His precepts and turn them into petitions, then not only
has the time we spend over the Word been to little or no soul enrichment, but the
very knowledge that we have acquired of its letter will only add to our
condemnation in the day to come. "Be ye doers of the word, and not hearers
only, deceiving your own selves" (James 1 :22) applies to its prayer-admonitions
as to everything else in it. Let us now point out seven criteria.
1. We are profited from the Scriptures when we are brought to realize the
deep importance of prayer. It is really to be feared that many present-day readers
(and even students) of the Bible have no deep convictions that a definite prayerlife is absolutely essential to a daily walking and communing with God, as it is
for deliverance from the power of indwelling sin, the seductions of the world,
and the assaults of Satan. If such a conviction really gripped their hearts, would
they not spend far more time on their faces before God? It is worse than idle to
reply, "A multitude of duties which have to be performed crowd out prayer,
though much against my wishes." But the fact remains that each of us takes time
for anything we deem to be imperative. Who ever lived a busier life than our
Saviour? Yet who found more time for prayer? If we truly yearn to be suppliants
and intercessors before God and use all the available time we now have, He will
so order things for us that we shall have more time.
The lack of positive conviction of the deep importance of prayer is plainly
evidenced in the corporate life of professing Christians. God has plainly said,
"My house shall be called the house of prayer" (Matt. 21:13). Note, not "the
house of preaching and singing," but of prayer. Yet, in the great majority of even
so-called orthodox churches, the ministry of prayer has become a negligible
quantity. There are still evangelistic campaigns, and Bible-teaching conferences,
but how rarely one hears of two weeks set apart for special prayer! And how
much good do these "Bible conferences" accomplish if the prayer-life of the
churches is not strengthened? But when the Spirit of God applies in power to our
hearts such words as, "Watch ye and pray, lest ye enter into temptation" (Mark
14:38), "In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
requests be made known to God" (Phil. 4:6), "Continue in prayer, and watch in
the same with thanksgiving" (Col. 4:2), then are we being profited from the
Scriptures.
2. We are profited from the Scriptures when we are made to feel that we
know not how to pray. "We know not what we should pray for as we ought"
(Rom. 8:26). How very few professing Christians really believe this! The idea
most generally entertained is that people know well enough what they should
pray for, only they are careless and wicked, and so fail to pray for what they are
fully assured is their duty. But such a conception is at direct variance with this
inspired declaration in Romans 8:26. It is to be observed that that flesh-humbling
affirmation is made not simply of men in general, but of the saints of God in
particular, among which the apostle did not hesitate to include himself: "We
know not what we should pray for as we ought." If this be the condition of the
regenerate, how much more so of the unregenerate! Yet it is one thing to read
and mentally assent to what this verse says, but it is quite another to have an
experimental realization of it, for the heart to be made to feel that what God
requires from us He must Himself work in and through us.
"I often say my prayers, But do I ever pray?
And do the wishes of my heart Go with the words I say?
I may as well kneel down
And worship gods of stone,
As offer to the living God
A prayer of words alone"
It is many years since the writer was taught these lines by his mother—now
"present with the Lord"—but their searching message still comes home with
force to him. The Christian can no more pray without the direct enabling of the
Holy Spirit than he can create a world. This must be so, for real prayer is a felt
need awakened within us by the Spirit, so that we ask God, in the name of
Christ, for that which is in accord with His holy will. "If we ask any thing
according to his will, he heareth us" (1 John 5:14). But to ask something which
is not according to God’s will is not praying, but presuming. True, God’s
revealed will is made known in His Word, yet not in such a way as a cookery
book contains recipes and directions for preparing various dishes. The Scriptures
frequently enumerate principles which call for continuous exercise of heart and
Divine help to show us their application to different cases and circumstances.
Thus we are being profited from the Scriptures when we are taught our deep
need of crying "Lord, teach us to pray" (Luke 11:1), and are actually constrained
to beg Him for the spirit of prayer.
3. We are profited from the Scriptures when we are made conscious of our
need of the Spirit’s help. First, that He may make known to us our real wants.
Take, for example, our temporal needs. How often we are in some external strait;
things from without press hard upon us, and we long to be delivered from these
trials and difficulties. Surely here we "know" of ourselves what to pray for. No,
indeed; far from it! The truth is that, despite our natural desire for relief, so
ignorant are we, so dull is our discernment, that (even where there is an
exercised conscience) we know not what submission unto His pleasure God may
require, or how He may sanctify these afflictions to our inward good. Therefore,
God calls the petitions of most who seek for relief from external trials
"howlings," and not a crying unto Him with the heart (see Hos. 7:14). "For who
knoweth what is good for man in this life?" (Eccles. 6:12). Ah, heavenly wisdom
is needed to teach us our temporal "needs" so as to make them a matter of prayer
according to the mind of God.
Perhaps a few words need to be added to what has just been said. Temporal
things may be scripturally prayed for (Matt. 6:11, etc.), but with this threefold
limitation. First, incidentally and not primarily, for they are not the things which
Christians are principally concerned in (Matt. 6:33). It is heavenly and eternal
things (Col. 3:1) which are to be sought first and foremost, as being of far
greater importance and value than temporal things. Second, subordinately, as a
means to an end. In seeking material things from God it should not be in order
that we may be gratified, but as an aid to our pleasing Him better. Third,
submissively, not dictatorially, for that would be the sin of presumption.
Moreover, we know not whether any temporal mercy would really contribute to
our highest good (Ps. 106:18), and therefore we must leave it with God to
decide.
We have inward wants as well as outward. Some of these may be discerned
in the light of conscience, such as the guilt and defilement of sin, of sins against
light and nature and the plain letter of the law. Nevertheless, the knowledge
which we have of ourselves by means of the conscience is so dark and confused
that, apart from the Spirit, we are in no way able to discover the true fountain of
cleansing. The things about which believers do and ought to treat primarily with
God in their supplications are the inward frames and spiritual dispositions of
their souls. Thus, David was not satisfied with confessing all known
transgressions and his original sin (Ps. 51:1-5), nor yet with an acknowledgment
that none could understand his errors, whence he desired to be cleansed from
"secret faults" (Ps. 19:12); but he also begged God to undertake the inward
searching of his heart to find out what was amiss in him (Ps. 139:23, 24),
knowing that God principally requires "truth in the inward parts" (Ps. 51:6).
Thus, in view of I Corinthians 2: 10-12, we should definitely seek the Spirit’s aid
that we may pray acceptably to God.
4. We are profited from the Scriptures when the Spirit teaches us the right
end in praying. God has appointed the ordinance of prayer with at least a
threefold design. First, that the great triune God might be honored, for prayer is
an act of worship, a paying homage; to the Father as the Giver, in the Son’s
name, by whom alone we may approach Him, by the moving and directing
power of the Holy Spirit. Second, to humble our hearts, for prayer is ordained to
bring us into the place of dependence, to develop within us a sense of our
helplessness, by owning that without the Lord we can do nothing, and that we
are beggars upon His charity for everything we are and have. But how feebly is
this realized (if at all) by any of us until the Spirit takes us in hand, removes
pride from us, and gives God His true place in our hearts and thoughts. Third, as
a means or way of obtaining for ourselves the good things for which we ask.
It is greatly to be feared that one of the principal reasons why so many of
our prayers remain unanswered is because we have a wrong, an unworthy end in
view. Our Saviour said, "Ask, and it shall be given you" (Matt. 7:7): but James
affirms of some, "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may
consume it upon your lusts" (James 4:3). To pray for anything, and not expressly
unto the end which God has designed, is to "ask amiss," and therefore to no
purpose. Whatever confidence we may have in our own wisdom and integrity, if
we are left to ourselves our aims will never be suited to the will of God. Unless
the Spirit restrains the flesh within us, our own natural and distempered
affections intermix themselves in our supplications, and thus are rendered vain.
"Whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God" (1 Cor. 10:31), (yet none but the
Spirit can enable us to subordinate all our desires unto God’s glory.
5. We are profited from the Scriptures when we are taught how to plead
God’s promises. Prayer must be in faith (Rom. 10:14), or God will not hear it.
Now faith has respect to God’s promises (Heb. 4:1; Rom. 4:21); if, therefore, we
do not understand what God stands pledged to give, we cannot pray at all. The
promises of God contain the matter of prayer and define the measure of it. What
God has promised, all that He has promised, and nothing else, we are to pray for.
"Secret things belong unto the Lord our God" (Deut. 29:29), but the declaration
of His will and the revelation of His grace belong unto us, and are our rule.
There is nothing that we really stand in need of but God has promised to supply
it, yet in such a way and under such limitations as will make it good and useful
to us. So too there is nothing God has promised but we stand in need of it, or are
some way or other concerned in it as members of the mystical body of Christ.
Hence, the better we are acquainted with the Divine promises, and the more we
are enabled to understand the goodness, grace and mercy prepared and proposed
in them, the better equipped are we for acceptable prayer.
Some of God’s promises are general rather than specific; some are
conditional, others unconditional; some are fulfilled in this life, others in the
world to come. Nor are we able of ourselves to discern which promise is most
suited to our particular case and present emergency and need, or to appropriate
by faith and rightly plead it before God. Wherefore we are expressly told, "For
what man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him?
Even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God. Now we have
received, not the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God; that we might
know the things that are freely given to us of God" (1 Cor. 2: 11, 12). Should
someone reply, If so much be required unto acceptable praying, if we cannot
supplicate God aright without much less trouble than you indicate, few will
continue long in this duty, then we answer that such an objector knows not what
it is to pray, nor does he seem willing to learn.
6. We are profited from the Scriptures when we are brought to complete
submission unto God. As stated above, one of the Divine designs in appointing
prayer as an ordinance is that we might be humbled. This is outwardly denoted
when we bow the knee before the Lord. Prayer is an acknowledgment of our
helplessness, and a looking to Him from whom all our help comes. It is an
owning of His sufficiency to supply our every need. It is a making known our
requests" (Phil. 4:6) unto God; but requests are very different from demands.
"The throne of grace is not set up that we may come and there vent our passions
before God" (Wm. Gurnall). We are to spread our case before God, but leave it
to His superior wisdom to prescribe how it shall be dealt with. There must be no
dictating, nor can we "claim" anything from God, for we are beggars dependent
upon His mere mercy. In all our praying we must add, "Nevertheless, not as I
will, but as thou wilt."
But may not faith plead God’s promises and expect an answer? Certainly;
but it must be God’s answer. Paul besought the Lord thrice to remove his thorn
in the flesh; instead of doing so, the Lord gave him grace to endure it (2 Cor. 12).
Many of God’s promises are promiscuous rather than personal. He has promised
His Church pastors, teachers and evangelists, yet many a local company of His
saints has languished long without them. Some of God’s promises are indefinite
and general rather than absolute and universal; as, for example Ephesians 6:2, 3.
God has not bound Himself to give in kind or specie, to grant the particular thing
we ask for, even though we ask in faith. Moreover, He reserves to Himself the
right to determine the fit time and season for bestowing His mercies. "Seek ye
the Lord, all ye meek of the earth . . . it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the
Lord’s anger" (Zeph. 2:3). Just because it "may be" God’s will to grant a certain
temporal mercy unto me, it is my duty to cast myself upon Him and plead for it,
yet with entire submission to His good pleasure for the performance of it.
7. We are profited from the Scriptures when prayer becomes a real and deep
joy. Merely to "say our prayers each morning and evening is an irksome task, a
duty to be performed which brings a sigh of relief when it is done. But really to
come into the conscious presence of God, to behold the glorious light of His
countenance, to commune with Him at the mercy seat, is a foretaste of the
eternal bliss awaiting us in heaven. The one who is blessed with this experience
says with the Psalmist, "It is good for me to draw near to God" (Ps. 73:28). Yes,
good for the heart, for it is quietened; good for faith, for it is strengthened; good
for the soul, for it is blessed. It is lack of this soul communion with God which is
the root cause of our unanswered prayers: "Delight thyself also in the Lord; and
he shall give thee the desires of thine heart" (Ps. 37:4).
What is it which, under the blessing of the Spirit, produces and promotes
this joy in prayer? First, it is the heart’s delight in God as the Object of prayer,
and particularly the recognition and realization of God as our Father. Thus, when
the disciples asked the Lord Jesus to teach them to pray, He said, "After this
manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven." And again, "God
hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba [the Hebrew
for "Father"], Father" (Gal. 4:6), which includes a filial, holy delight in God,
such as children have in their parents in their most affectionate addresses to
them. So again, in Ephesians 2:18, we are told, for the strengthening of faith and
the comfort of our hearts, "For through him [Christ] we both have access by one
Spirit unto the Father." What peace, what assurance, what freedom this gives to
the soul: to know we are approaching our Father!
Second, joy in prayer is furthered by the heart’s apprehension and the soul’s
sight of God as on the throne of grace — a sight or prospect, not by carnal
imagination, but by spiritual illumination, for it is by faith that we "see him who
is invisible" (Heb. 11:27); faith being the "evidence of things not seen" (Heb.
11:1), making its proper object evident and present unto them that believe. Such
a sight of God upon such a "throne" cannot but thrill the soul. Therefore are we
exhorted, "Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may
obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need" (Heb. 4:16).
Thirdly, and drawn from the last quoted scripture, freedom and delight in
prayer are stimulated by the consciousness that God is, through Jesus Christ,
willing and ready to dispense grace and mercy to suppliant sinners. There is no
reluctance in Him which we have to overcome. He is more ready to give than we
are to receive. So He is represented in Isaiah 30:18, "And therefore will the Lord
wait, that He may be gracious unto you." Yes, He waits to be sought unto; waits
for faith to lay hold of His readiness to bless. His ear is ever open to the cries of
the righteous. Then "let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith"
(Heb. 10:22); "in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let
your requests be made known unto God," and we shall find that peace which
passes all understanding guarding our hearts and minds through Christ Jesus
(Phil. 4:6, 7)
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