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      <description>
        Taking its title from James 5:16, <i>Prayer Availeth Much</i> is a
        challenge to Christians; it is a challenge to explore "the boundless
        possibility of prayer," as the forward puts it. T. M. Anderson hopes--and
        prays--that with this book, Christians <i>will</i> explore the possibilities
        of prayer, and once again see the true power and profundity of prayer.
        Basing each chapter on a verse, this intensive study of prayer connects
        prayer to other important elements of the Christian life, including the
        experience of joy, peace, doubt, and the glorification of God. Anderson
        does not simply relate prayer to other elements of the Christian life, but
        teaches the reader about the three essentials of prayer--"Ask, Seek,
        Knock"--and how each one of them plays an important role in the believer's
        daily life. Ideal for personal study or devotions, T. M. Anderson's book,
        <i>Prayer Availeth Much</i>, will encourage and challenge each person to
        more actively seek and worship God through prayer.
        <br /><br />Tim Perrine<br />CCEL Staff Writer
      </description>
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  <DC.Title>Prayer Availeth Much</DC.Title>
  <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">T.M. Anderson</DC.Creator>
  <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Anderson, T. M.</DC.Creator>
  <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
  <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">BV210.2 </DC.Subject>
  <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Practical theology</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh2">Worship (Public and Private) Including the church year, Christian symbols, liturgy, prayer, hymnology</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh3">Prayer</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All; Christian Life </DC.Subject>
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  <DC.Date sub="Created">2000-1-23</DC.Date>
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<div1 title="Title Page" progress="0.47%" prev="toc" next="ii" id="i">
<h1 id="i-p0.1">Prayer Availeth Much</h1>


<h1 id="i-p0.2">PRAYER AVAILETH MUCH</h1>

<p style="text-indent:0; text-align:center; margin-top:24pt; margin-bottom:24" id="i-p1"><i>“. . . The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.” 
— <scripRef passage="James 5:16" id="i-p1.1" parsed="|Jas|5|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.5.16">James 5:16</scripRef> </i></p>


<h4 id="i-p1.2">by</h4>
<h3 id="i-p1.3">Tony Marshall (T.M.) Anderson</h3>
<h3 id="i-p1.4"><i>Published by</i></h3>

<div style="text-indent:0; text-align:center; margin-top:24pt; margin-bottom:24; line-height:200%" id="i-p1.5">
<p id="i-p2">The Advocate Publishing House</p>
<p id="i-p3">Circleville, Ohio</p>
<p id="i-p4">(<i>No copyright or date of publication</i>)</p>

</div>



</div1>

<div1 title="Original Table of Contents" progress="0.66%" prev="i" next="iii" id="ii">

<h2 id="ii-p0.1">TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
<div style="line-height:200%" id="ii-p0.2">
<p id="ii-p1"><b><i>Chapter 1</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p2">The Fellowship of Prayer (<scripRef passage="Philippians 4:6" id="ii-p2.1" parsed="|Phil|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.6">Philippians 4:6</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p3"><b><i>Chapter 2</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p4">Our Requests Made Known unto God (<scripRef passage="Philippians 4:6" id="ii-p4.1" parsed="|Phil|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.6">Philippians 4:6</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p5"><b><i>Chapter 3</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p6">God’s Peace Obtained in Answer to Prayer (<scripRef passage="Philippians 4:6, 7" id="ii-p6.1" parsed="|Phil|4|6|0|0;|Phil|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.6 Bible:Phil.4.7">Philippians 4:6, 7</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p7"><b><i>Chapter 4</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p8">The Praying that Glorifies God (<scripRef passage="John 14:13" id="ii-p8.1" parsed="|John|14|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.13">John 14:13</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p9"><b><i>Chapter 5</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p10">Praying without Doubting (<scripRef passage="Mark 11:23" id="ii-p10.1" parsed="|Mark|11|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Mark.11.23">Mark 11:23</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p11"><b><i>Chapter 6</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p12">Praying with Desire (<scripRef passage="Mark 11:24" id="ii-p12.1" parsed="|Mark|11|24|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Mark.11.24">Mark 11:24</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p13"><b><i>Chapter 7</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p14">A Manifestation of God in Answer to Prayer (<scripRef passage="Acts 4:31" id="ii-p14.1" parsed="|Acts|4|31|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.31">Acts 4:31</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p15"><b><i>Chapter 8</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p16">The Intercessory Prayers of Christians (<scripRef passage="Luke 11:5, 6" id="ii-p16.1" parsed="|Luke|11|5|0|0;|Luke|11|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.5 Bible:Luke.11.6">Luke 11:5, 6</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p17"><b><i>Chapter 9</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p18">The Three Essentials of Prayer (<scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="ii-p18.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p19"><b><i>Chapter 10</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p20">Asking and Receiving (<scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="ii-p20.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p21"><b><i>Chapter 11</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p22">Seeking and Finding (<scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="ii-p22.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p23"><b><i>Chapter 12</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p24">The Knocking that Obtains an Opening (<scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="ii-p24.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p25"><b><i>Chapter 13</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p26">The Immortal Prayers of the Saints (<scripRef passage="Revelation 5:8" id="ii-p26.1" parsed="|Rev|5|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.5.8">Revelation 5:8</scripRef>.)</p>
<p id="ii-p27"><b><i>Chapter 14</i></b></p>
<p id="ii-p28">Christ Pleads His Will (<scripRef passage="John 17:24" id="ii-p28.1" parsed="|John|17|24|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.17.24">John 17:24</scripRef>.)</p>
</div>
</div1>

<div1 title="The Forward" progress="1.22%" prev="ii" next="iv" id="iii">

<h2 id="iii-p0.1">THE FOREWORD</h2>
<p class="intro" id="iii-p1">The brief messages on prayer contained in 
this little book have been written for the purpose of stimulating a greater interest 
in the importance of praying without ceasing.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iii-p2">I am convinced that the people of God have not explored 
the boundless possibilities of prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iii-p3">We evidently believe that the effectual fervent prayer 
of a righteous man availeth much, but we are often aware of the fact that very little 
has been accomplished by our own prayers.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iii-p4">It has not been possible to present a complete study of 
the subject of prayer revealed in the Holy Scriptures. For one to undertake such 
a task would be like an attempt to measure eternity by a span.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iii-p5">It is my sincere desire to encourage God’s people to pray 
without ceasing. When once they understand the fundamental principles of prayer, 
they will not find it difficult to accomplish some amazing results through effectual 
fervent intercession.</p>
<p style="margin-top:9pt" id="iii-p6">Your Servant in Christ Jesus,</p>
<p id="iii-p7"><i><b>T. M. ANDERSON</b></i></p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 1. The Fellowship of Prayer" progress="1.89%" prev="iii" next="v" id="iv">
<h2 id="iv-p0.1">CHAPTER 1</h2>
<h3 id="iv-p0.2">THE FELLOWSHIP OF PRAYER</h3>

<p class="intro" id="iv-p1">“<i>Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication 
with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Phil. 4:6" id="iv-p1.1" parsed="|Phil|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.6">Phil. 4:6</scripRef></p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p2">This timely exhortation stresses the fact that God’s people 
should consult with Him in every matter pertaining to life. Unless they see the 
imperative necessity of prayer, and give it an important place in daily life, they 
cannot expect to be maintained by the ample resources of a generous Saviour. It 
is apparent that we cannot obtain the things essential to life unless we make everything 
pertaining to life a matter of earnest prayer. It is impossible to live a consistent 
Christian life in the sight of God by praying occasionally. Praying intermittently 
is certainly not praying incessantly and importunately. Such careless praying is 
not consistent with the exhortation to pray without ceasing.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p3">Persons praying spasmodically are like men that gorge themselves 
with food and drink on special occasions and starve themselves between the feasts. 
We do not live from feast to famine when we enter into a partnership with Christ 
in prayer. We are not disturbed by doubts and defeats when we make everything a 
matter of earnest prayer. We enjoy an unbroken fellowship with Christ when we make 
our requests known unto Him in daily prayer. He imparts to us the necessary strength 
to cope with the temptations and trials incident to life in this benighted world 
when everything relating to life is made known unto Him in prayer. When the inspired 
Apostle said, “. . . Let your requests be made known unto God,” he was obviously emphasizing 
the importance of revealing to the Lord everything required to sustain us in life. 
We find it necessary to reveal both our spiritual and our temporal needs unto Him 
in prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p4">Nothing pertaining to our life in this world is unimportant 
in the sight of God. He is interested in everything that concerns us in life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p5">The Lord would have us understand that we obtain rest of 
soul when we enter into the fellowship of prayer with Him. When Paul said, “Be careful 
for nothing . . . ,” he revealed the true rest of soul to be found in the covenant of 
prayer. He is urging us to lay aside our troublesome cares and anxieties lest they 
hinder us in making our requests known unto the Lord. Paul was saying in substance, 
“Be not anxiously solicitous; do not give place to trouble, no matter what occurs; 
for anxiety cannot change the condition of things from bad to good, but will certainly 
injure your soul if you give place to it.” It is certainly true that we must cast 
our burdens and earthly concerns upon the Lord before we can make our requests known 
unto Him by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p6">Perhaps my personal testimony will enable others to perceive 
the value of entering into the fellowship of prayer with Christ, for I found true 
rest of soul and quietness of heart when I entered into the partnership of prayer 
with Him. “Ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p7">I was teaching in the department of religious education 
in Asbury College when I entered into the covenant of prayer with Christ. It had 
been my purpose for several months to prepare some written messages on the Epistle 
to the Hebrews. In order to have time to devote to this work it was necessary for 
me to arise early in the morning and do the writing before the hour I was scheduled 
to meet my classes. I began this work during the first week of 1950.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p8">I was suddenly awakened about midnight on January sixth. 
Knowing that I had a full day of work before me, I felt it necessary to sleep a 
few hours lest I be too weary in mind and body to do the writing and teaching. At 
that moment the Saviour spoke to me. He asked me if I were willing to sacrifice 
some sleep in order to give Him an opportunity to speak with me in the quiet hours 
of the morning. He told me that it was necessary to deny myself of sleep in order 
to prevail in prayer. I realized for the first time that denying myself of sleep 
was a form of fasting. For five hours I waited before the Lord in sacred worship 
and holy communion. My soul was greatly revived, and I felt refreshed in mind and 
rested in body.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p9">After this remarkable manifestation of the Saviour I was 
constrained to examine my prayer life. I was impressed to consider the time spent 
in prayer during the average day. I was humbled before the Lord when I discovered 
how little time had been given to Him in prayer and meditation. It had been my daily 
practice from the day I was saved to spend some time in prayer morning and evening. 
I had established the family altar in my home. I had spent time in secret prayer 
during the years of my ministry. I had never knowingly overlooked the importance 
of prayer. I am now aware that I had never discovered the possibilities in prayer 
like they were revealed to me when I waited five delightful hours before the Saviour 
that memorable morning.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p10">When I entered into the fellowship of prayer with Christ, 
I solemnly promised Him that I would not allow my plans and pursuits of daily life 
to infringe on my time to pray. I vowed to take sufficient time to commune with 
Him in prayer no matter what duties of the day demanded my attention. When I made 
this covenant with Christ I emptied myself of earthly possessions and concerns. 
I placed my ministry, my teaching, my writings, my vocation, my travels, and my 
home in a heap before the Lord. I separated myself from these interests as completely 
as I ever expect to be separated from them in death. I deliberately put these earthly 
concerns in a place of secondary importance in my life. I counted all things loss 
for the excellency of the knowledge of the fellowship with Christ in prayer. I fully 
realized that Christ was speaking to me when He said, “If any man will come after 
me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. For whosoever will 
save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall 
find it.” I was reminded of how much I had lost through the years because I had 
not known the value of fellowship with Christ in prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p11">When I entered the fellowship of prayer with the Lord my 
soul was immediately relieved of the burdens and cares of life. I found the place 
of His rest in the covenant of prayer. My duties are many, and my body is often 
weary from my labors in the ministry, but my spirit knows no weariness for my soul 
dwells at ease in the haven of perfect peace. There were times in the past when 
the responsibilities of the ministry were almost more than my mind and body could 
endure. The many concerns of preaching made me restless in the night and disturbed 
during the day. It is clear to me now that I had not discovered the secret of resting 
in the Lord. I was pushing and pulling in my own strength. I was not trusting the 
Spirit to bring things to pass.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p12">I have the same burdens and cares of the ministry today, 
but I have discovered how to cast my cares upon the Lord in the fellowship of prayer. 
The yoke of the Meek and Lowly Christ is easy, and His burden is light. He has given 
me rest of soul and quietness of spirit in the covenant of daily prayer. It is now 
my daily practice to keep the morning watch with the Saviour.</p>

<verse id="iv-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="iv-p12.2">“<i>My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O Lord; in the morning will I direct 
my prayer unto thee, and look up.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 5:3" id="iv-p12.3" parsed="|Ps|5|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.5.3">Psa. 5:3</scripRef>. </l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="iv-p13">The hours between midnight and six o’clock in the morning are the most peaceful. 
The duties and distractions of the preceding day have ended, and the activities 
of the new day have not begun.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p14">It is apparent that Jesus made it a practice of His life 
to pray in the quiet hours of the morning. It is written,</p>

<verse id="iv-p14.1">
<l class="t1" id="iv-p14.2">“<i>In the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out, and departed 
into a solitary place, and there prayed.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Mark 1:35" id="iv-p14.3" parsed="|Mark|1|35|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Mark.1.35">Mark 1:35</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p15">The duties of the coming day demanded much from the Saviour. 
The virtue that went out of Him to heal the hearts and hurts of the people was replenished 
in the place of prayer. His physical strength was constantly renewed through His 
ceaseless prayers. Before the dawn of the busy day our Lord went out, and departed 
into a solitary place, and there prayed. We are not told where He found this peaceful 
place to pray. He may have found a place of sacred seclusion to pray beneath the 
overshadowing boughs of a towering tree where nature remained speechless with reverence 
and the morning star looked down in solemn contemplation. The Lord may have longed 
to pour out His sinless soul with strong crying and tears in some voiceless valley 
filled with holy hush. It could be that He sought a solitary place among the friendly 
hills where the silent shadows of the departing night lingered until hastened into 
hiding by the light of the approaching dawn. Perhaps He found rest for His burdened 
heart in a sequestered place in a lonely desert carpeted with shifting sands where 
the sighing winds ceased to whisper while He prayed.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p16">The example of our Lord enables us to perceive the value 
of unburdening our hearts in the quiet hours of the morning. It is difficult to 
pray when the mind is filled with the confusion and rush of the day. We can pray 
in the quietness of the home while the day is young if we are willing to sacrifice 
some sleep. The Saviour admonished us to enter into the closet and shut the door. 
We must shut the door of our mind and exclude the cares and burdens of the day in 
order to prevail with God in the secret place of prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p17">One will be astonished at the results obtained in the quiet 
place of prayer. I have seen the Lord work wonders in answer to prayer offered before 
Him in the early hours of the morning. I have known Him to heal people in homes 
and hospitals hundreds of miles from the place where I was praying.</p>


</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 2. Our Requests Made Known Unto God" progress="8.71%" prev="iv" next="vi" id="v">
<h2 id="v-p0.1">CHAPTER 2</h2>
<h3 id="v-p0.2">OUR REQUESTS MADE KNOWN UNTO GOD</h3>

<p class="intro" id="v-p1">“. . . <i>Let your requests be made known unto God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Phil. 4:6" id="v-p1.1" parsed="|Phil|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.6">Phil. 4:6</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p2">Paul, the pattern saint, would have us see the value of 
revealing our needs to God in prayer. We must not presume that the things required 
to sustain life will be granted without making our requests known unto God. Our 
requirements on earth and God’s resources in heaven are meant for each other. If 
we ask, we shall receive. When we fail to ask, we fail to receive. The Word declares, 
“Ye have not, because ye ask not.” There would be no point in exhorting Christians 
to make their requests known unto God unless He had made a sufficient provision 
to supply all their need. The apostle revealed the abundant riches of God when he 
said . . .</p>
<verse id="v-p2.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p2.2">“<i>My God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ 
Jesus.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Phil. 4:19" id="v-p2.3" parsed="|Phil|4|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.19">Phil. 4:19</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="v-p3">This assuring promise discloses the resources God made available to His people in 
answer to prayer. In the clear light of this certified promise they have no justifiable 
excuse for spiritual poverty.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p4">We can think of God’s promise to be a certified check 
made payable to us the moment we present it for payment. No matter what gracious 
spiritual and temporal blessings the promise contains, we cannot receive them until 
we make our requests known unto God in prayer. It is possible to have an all sufficiency 
in all things by claiming the riches of God made available to us by prayer and supplication 
with thanksgiving. When Paul said, “My God shall supply all your need,” he is saying, 
“Christ is all you need.” We are enriched in all things pertaining to life in time 
and in eternity when we possess Him. Christ is all we ever need to cope with the 
difficulties and dangers confronting us in the path leading to the Father’s house 
of many mansions.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p5">The temporal blessings received from the Lord are not sufficient 
to supply all our need in this world. Jesus stated this fact when He said,</p>
<verse id="v-p5.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p5.2">“. . . <i>A man’s life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth.</i>” 
— <scripRef passage="Luke 12:14" id="v-p5.3" parsed="|Luke|12|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.12.14">Luke 12:14</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="v-p6">The fertile fields cannot produce true riches. A man is truly rich toward God when 
he possesses the resources of Christ contained in His certified promise to supply 
all our need. When Paul said, “My God . . .” he disclosed the amazing fact that a man 
can possess God. It is written in the covenant of grace,</p>
<verse id="v-p6.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p6.2">“<i>. . . I will be their God, and they shall be my people.</i>” — <scripRef passage="2 Cor. 6:16" id="v-p6.3" parsed="|2Cor|6|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.6.16">2 Cor. 6:16</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="v-p7">The paramount purpose of Christ is achieved the 
moment He gives Himself to us in the covenant of God. The Scriptures reveal that 
the Saviour has given everything to redeem us, and provided everything to supply 
us, and wills to give all that He is in His divine nature to satisfy us. If a man 
has not received the indwelling Christ in answer to prayer, he has failed to obtain 
the grand objective of all praying.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p8">We do not find it difficult to make our requests known 
unto God when we are fully aware of His presence. Paul stated this fact when he 
said,</p>
<verse id="v-p8.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p8.2">“. . . <i>The Lord is at hand.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Philippians 4:5" id="v-p8.3" parsed="|Phil|4|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.5">Phil. 4:5</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="v-p9">This amazing revelation is evidently an essential part of the admonition to make 
our requests known unto God. The inspired apostle focused attention on a great truth 
when he said, “. . . The Lord is at hand.” He is saying in substance, “The Lord is 
handy. The Lord stands ready to give aid and comfort to His praying people.” No 
matter how we interpret the statement, “. . . The Lord is at hand,” we are fully aware 
of His nearness when we make our requests known unto Him. Jesus confirmed this truth 
when He said, “Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.” He evidently 
knew that we had the mental and moral capacity to sense His presence at all times 
and in all places on earth. If we cannot know that He is at hand when we pray, then 
His promise has no place of value in our profession of faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p10">To offer a prayer without realizing the nearness of 
the Lord would be like speaking meaningless words into empty space. How could we 
know that our requests had been made known unto God unless He responded by assuring 
us that our petitions had been heard? I am persuaded that it is not possible to 
pray with confidence toward the Lord without being aware of His presence. The inspired 
apostle said,</p>

<verse id="v-p10.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p10.2">“. . . <i>This is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according 
to his will, he heareth us: and if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we 
know that we have the petitions that we desired of Him.</i>” — <scripRef passage="1 John 5:14, 15" id="v-p10.3" parsed="|1John|5|14|0|0;|1John|5|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1John.5.14 Bible:1John.5.15">1 John 5:14, 15</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="v-p11">John is saying in substance, “If you know that God hears you, then you know you 
have the answer.” It is apparent that we must first know that He hears us before 
we know that we have the answer. Knowing that God hears us when we pray is something 
vastly more than a beautiful theory about prayer. Spiritual perception in prayer 
is the norm of spiritual life. We rejoice in prayer when we perceive that the Lord 
is at hand. Paul said, “Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, rejoice.” The 
realization that the Lord is near is the cause of constant praise.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p12">If His abiding presence with us in this troubled world 
is not the only source of lasting joys, then let us hope that someone will come 
to guide our footsteps toward the place of endless happiness. God’s Word reveals 
that the Lord will direct our weary feet into the path of praise.</p>

<verse id="v-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p12.2">“<i>Thou wilt show me the path of life: in thy presence is fullness of joy; at thy 
right hand are pleasures for evermore.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 16:11" id="v-p12.3" parsed="|Ps|16|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.16.11">Psa. 16:11</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="v-p13">It is apparently true that the measure of our joy is always 
in proportion to the measure of our praying. One must pray without ceasing in order 
to have joy unspeakable and full of glory. God’s praying people discover that the 
joy of the Lord is their strength, and His abiding presence is their shield. Perhaps 
Paul was in prison when he uttered the immortal words of praise. The dark and dingy 
prison was not so carefully guarded, and its rigid bars so firmly fixed that the 
Lord was prevented from entering its dismal confines to give comfort and courage 
to His suffering servant.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p14">If Paul had been asked what he had found in the dank cell 
to cause him to sound such a note of praise, he would have said, “. . . The Lord is 
at hand.” His consoling nearness caused the prisoner to praise, and His assuring 
presence inspired the suffering saint to sing. The dreary confines of a prison cannot 
stifle the songs of the soul girded with the gladness of God. The righteous may 
be incarcerated in dungeons, and the redeemed fastened in the stocks, but their 
achieving faith is not fettered, and their supplications are not shackled. From 
the inner cell of the common jail the singing servants of God shook the foundations 
of the earth, and caused hardened sinners to seek salvation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p15">The infirmities of the body may imprison a saint like the 
formidable walls of a federal prison; but the afflictions of the flesh and the trials 
of life cannot prevent the saints from singing in the shadows like those that sing 
in the shining. It is written,</p>

<verse id="v-p15.1">
<l class="t1" id="v-p15.2">“. . . <i>He that trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about. Be glad in the 
Lord, and rejoice, ye righteous: and shout for joy, all ye that are upright in heart.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 32:11" id="v-p15.3" parsed="|Ps|32|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.32.11">Psa. 32:11</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 3. God’s Peace Obtained in Answer to Prayer" progress="13.72%" prev="v" next="vii" id="vi">
<h2 id="vi-p0.1">CHAPTER 3</h2>
<h3 id="vi-p0.2">GOD’S PEACE OBTAINED IN ANSWER TO PRAYER</h3>

<p class="intro" id="vi-p1">“. . . <i>Let your requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God which 
passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Phil. 4:6, 7" id="vi-p1.1" parsed="|Phil|4|6|0|0;|Phil|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.6 Bible:Phil.4.7">Phil. 4:6, 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p2">When we make our requests known unto God by prayer and 
supplication with thanksgiving we are assured of receiving His peace through Christ 
Jesus. When we enter into the sacred Presence of the Prince of Peace, we enter into 
the place of perfect peace. The house of prayer is the sanctuary of peace.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p3">Paul would have us understand that Christ imparts a measure 
of His own peace to our worshipping hearts when we make everything pertaining to 
life a matter of prayer. We can readily comprehend the possibilities of prayer when 
we perceive that mortal man can obtain a measure of the peace which the God of Peace 
possesses in His divine nature. It is not necessary for the children of God to enter 
heaven in order to enjoy the priceless possession of peace. Christ wills to give 
the heavenly heritage of His Peace to all the sons of God. He revealed this truth 
when He said,</p>
<verse id="vi-p3.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p3.2"><i>“Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give 
I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 14: 27" id="vi-p3.3" parsed="|John|14|27|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.27">John 14: 27</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p4">It is obviously true that Jesus has purposed that His own 
peace shall give His praying and believing people untroubled hearts in this world 
of trouble. He would have us understand that His own perfect peace shall confirm 
us in hope, and comfort us in heart. It is apparent that this heavenly heritage 
of the heart can be obtained in answer to prayer. God’s peace is an essential quality 
of His divine nature. We saw His peace manifested in Jesus Christ, The Prince of 
Peace. Jesus was never excited and perturbed by the trickery and hypocrisy of the 
religious leaders of His day. He never lost His spiritual poise when persecuted 
and slandered by His enemies.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p5">Jesus was always calm and composed in the time of trial. 
He was never intimidated by the threats of violence. He had an indomitable courage 
that confounded His critics. He never compromised truth to gain favor with men. 
His sublime silence in the hour of His trial caused the multitude to marvel. A faithful 
witness of the Saviour’s sufferings said:</p>

<verse id="vi-p5.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p5.2">“. . . <i>Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that we should follow 
in his steps: who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth: who, when he 
was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened not; but committed 
himself to him that judgeth righteously.</i>” — <scripRef passage="1 Peter 2:21-23" id="vi-p5.3" parsed="|1Pet|2|21|2|23" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.21-1Pet.2.23">1 Peter 2:21-23</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vi-p6">Peter’s testimony enables us to see how the peace of God behaves in this world of 
turmoil and strife. The quality of God’s peace was exemplified in the sinless character 
and conduct of the Saviour. His life revealed the inherent nature of God’s peace 
which passeth all understanding. God has designed that His peace shall keep our 
hearts and minds. He would have us understand that His peace shall be our guard 
when we make our requests known unto Him in prayer. When once we grasp the truth 
about this, and give it an important place in daily life, we will know what it means 
to possess the peace of God which passeth all understanding.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p7">The heart is the center of man’s spiritual being. It is 
the citadel of his immortal soul. The ambitions, the aspirations, and the affections 
reside in the heart. The will, the conscience, and the desires dwell in the heart 
of man. The Word says,</p>

<verse id="vi-p7.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p7.2">“<i>Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Prov. 4:23" id="vi-p7.3" parsed="|Prov|4|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.4.23">Prov. 
4:23</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vi-p8">It is God’s purpose to expel the indwelling sin of the soul by the power of the 
indwelling Spirit, and impart peace to man’s heart.</p>

<verse id="vi-p8.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p8.2">“. . . <i>The work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness 
quietness and assurance for ever</i>.” — <scripRef passage="Isa. 32:17" id="vi-p8.3" parsed="|Isa|32|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.32.17">Isa. 32:17</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p9">When Jesus said. “. . . Let not your heart be troubled, neither 
let it be afraid,” He implied that it was possible to be delivered from the perplexing 
troubles and agitating fears incident to life in this world. The peace of God can 
banish all our burdensome bewilderments and fill our yearning hearts with comfort 
and contentment. God is willing to make the citadel of our souls the stronghold 
of His garrison of peace. He wills to make our hearts an impregnable fortress of 
spiritual power. His peace will mount guard over our hearts and minds like a sentinel 
appointed to keep watch over a city. Paul added to our comfort when he said,</p>

<verse id="vi-p9.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p9.2">“. . . <i>The God of peace shall be with you.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Philippians 4:9" id="vi-p9.3" parsed="|Phil|4|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.9">v. 9</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>
<p class="noindent" id="vi-p10">He is saying that we can have the peace of God within, and God of peace without.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p11">When Paul speaks of the mind he is evidently speaking of 
the intellect, the feelings, and the understanding. We have the capacity to think 
and to reason about the things of God. We are capable of having the truth of God 
revealed to us by the Holy Spirit. It is not possible to comprehend the peace of 
God without the help of the Spirit. We cannot analyze the peace of God in the laboratory 
of the human mind to ascertain its true nature; neither can we discover the component 
parts of God’s peace by the methods of modern science and philosophy. His peace 
passeth all human understanding. There are times when our minds are sorely perplexed 
by the problems confronting us in this uncertain world. There are times when we 
cannot depend on our reasoning to find the answer to life’s trials and tribulations. 
Jesus said,</p>

<verse id="vi-p11.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p11.2">“. . . <i>In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome 
the world.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 16:33" id="vi-p11.3" parsed="|John|16|33|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.16.33">John 16:33</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p12">Life has no fears and death holds no terrors for the soul 
fortified by the eternal peace of Christ. He is our peace and our protection. The 
peace received in answer to prayer does not prevent the problems of life from perplexing 
us; but His peace does prevent these trials from triumphing over us.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p13">There will be times when our feelings will contradict our 
faith. Sickness can depress our emotions to such an extent that we are disposed 
to doubt our relationship to Christ. When we are sick, when our nerves are tense, 
when we are constantly on the verge of tears, our faith will be submerged by our 
feelings. In such times of trial it seems that the joy of the Lord has departed, 
and we are tempted to think that for some unknown reason we are suffering the displeasure 
of the Lord. Our confused state of mind is caused by our illness. The loving Lord 
has not been grieved by our infirmities of body and mind.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p14">There will be times in life when we seem to stand on the 
brink of an impassable gulf which the human understanding cannot cross. When we 
come to the place where reasoning ends and despair begins, we will discover that 
Christ’s protective peace is like a bridge that spans the gulf which our own limited 
understanding cannot cross. The infirmities of the body can cause the imagination 
to run wild. Sickness can cause many fantastic ideas and strange impressions to 
disturb and confuse our minds. Some unhappy people imagine they are being tormented 
by evil spirits. Some think their nervous disorders are caused by some strange power 
of Satan. These distressing nervous disorders and groundless fears are caused by 
their physical condition. A just and holy God will not allow His praying and trusting 
people to become the unwilling victims of satanic power. He has provided a peace 
to garrison their hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p15">A few devout individuals have been tormented by the fear 
that they have committed the unpardonable sin. Some have been so completely engulfed 
by this terrifying thought that they have abandoned all hope. These misguided persons 
have allowed themselves to become victims of their own confused state of mind. The 
terrifying thought that they have forfeited all hope of salvation exists only in 
their overwrought imaginations. If these troubled souls will exercise faith in a 
merciful and faithful Christ, and humbly ask Him for help and hope, their groundless 
fears will immediately pass away, and the peace of God will comfort their troubled 
hearts.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p16">The Saviour has paid a great price to redeem us from all 
iniquity. He will not withhold His saving mercy and grace from any seeking soul 
longing with all the heart to please Him in all things. The peace of God will prevent 
us from becoming the hapless prey of our distraught minds if we will pray without 
ceasing, and continue to believe on the name of the Son of God. When Jesus said, 
“. . . Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid,” He intended to impress 
us with the fact that we can prevent the fears and troubles from entering our hearts 
and minds. He expects us to keep our minds stayed on Him. The inspired prophet saw 
this fact when he said,</p>

<verse id="vi-p16.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p16.2">“<i>Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee; because he 
trusteth in thee.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Isa. 26:3" id="vi-p16.3" parsed="|Isa|26|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.26.3">Isa. 26:3</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vi-p17">The Psalmist said,</p>
<verse id="vi-p17.1">
<l class="t1" id="vi-p17.2">“<i>Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer 
the righteous to be moved.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 55:22" id="vi-p17.3" parsed="|Ps|55|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.55.22">Psa. 55:22</scripRef>. . .</l>
</verse>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p18">If we continue to make our requests known unto God by prayer 
and supplication with thanksgiving, He will not suffer us to be moved by the forces 
of evil in this disquieted earth.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 4. The Praying That Glorifies God" progress="20.10%" prev="vi" next="viii" id="vii">
<h2 id="vii-p0.1">CHAPTER 4</h2>
<h3 id="vii-p0.2">THE PRAYING THAT GLORIFIES GOD</h3>

<p class="intro" id="vii-p1">“. . . <i>Whatsoever ye shall ask in my name, that will I do, that the Father 
may be glorified in the Son.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 14:13" id="vii-p1.1" parsed="|John|14|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.13">John 14:13</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p2">Jesus revealed His purpose in answering prayer when He 
said, “. . . That the Father may be glorified in the Son.” In order to achieve His 
exalted purpose to glorify the Father, the Son has bestowed on His redeemed people 
the inalienable right to ask anything in His Name. In the clear light of this remarkable 
truth it is not difficult to perceive that the possibilities in prayer are as great 
as the purpose of the Son of God. It is likewise apparent that every prayer offered 
in the Name of the Son must be offered for the specific purpose of obtaining the 
things which glorify the heavenly Father.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p3">The Saviour was near the close of His public ministry with 
His disciples when He delivered His parting address preserved for us by John. In 
His closing address He speaks to the men whose training time has about ended. He 
instructed His messengers in the “Sermon on the Mount” to pray, believing and trusting 
the Father to give them all good gifts; but in His closing discourse He points to 
something higher to be accomplished through prayer and faith. These faithful men 
were to go and perform His works, even greater works than He had achieved during 
His ministry in the world. The Master disclosed to them that praying in His Name 
was to be the channel through which the enabling power was obtained to perform the 
works which glorify the Father in the Son.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p4">When Jesus said, “. . . I go to my Father,” He was obviously 
speaking of His ascension to the right hand of God. His exaltation to the right 
hand of the Majesty on high began a new epoch in the praying and working of the 
disciples. The Saviour had imparted power to His chosen disciples while with them 
in the world, and He now purposes to enable them to do greater things for Him. He 
has promised to impart the power from heaven to accomplish greater works for Him 
in the world. He ordained His chosen apostles to go and bring forth fruit, saying,</p>

<verse id="vii-p4.1">
<l class="t1" id="vii-p4.2">“<i>Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be my disciples</i>.” 
— <scripRef passage="John 15:8" id="vii-p4.3" parsed="|John|15|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.15.8">John 15:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vii-p5">The indomitable courage they had to witness for Him, the miracles performed in His 
Name, and the sufferings endured for His sake, were living testimonies of the power 
received through the fervent prayers offered in His Name.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p6">What is true regarding the Saviour’s works achieved by 
His faithful disciples is likewise true regarding His works to be accomplished by 
His faithful people in this present age. The same Christ who worked in them and 
through them in that day, is the same changeless Christ who wills to work in and 
through His people in these last days. If the people of God expect to perform the 
works of Christ which shall glorify the Father, they must believe on Him for the 
very work’s sake, and pray in His Name.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p7">We can perceive our responsibilities to Christ when we 
consider His words regarding the greater works to be accomplished for Him in the 
world. Apparently the greater works to be performed are not works more excellent 
in quality, but works greater in quantity. Perhaps the ministry of Jesus did not 
extend beyond the borders of the land where He lived and died. But it is obvious 
that He fully intended that the whole world should feel the spiritual impact of 
His invincible power through the preaching and praying of His ransomed people. Therefore 
He filled His faithful witnesses with the Holy Ghost and power and sent them unto 
the uttermost part of the earth to perform the works which glorify the Father in 
the Son. Let us ever be mindful of the fact that power to achieve the greater works 
for Christ is obtained through prayer and faith. A man cannot achieve the works 
of Christ through his eloquence and education; he must fervently pray in the Name 
of Jesus, and receive power from Him in order to accomplish the works of God in 
this pleasure loving age.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p8">As long as Jesus was in the world, He performed the works 
of the Father; devils fled at His word of command, the sick were healed, and the 
poor had the Gospel preached unto them. When He returned to the Father, His works 
from the throne of grace must be performed through His praying and trusting people. 
The oneness between the Lord on His mediatorial throne in heaven and His people 
on earth is so divinely perfect, that He meant it as the literal truth when He said, 
“. . . Greater works than these shall he do; because I go unto my Father.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p9">It is for the express purpose of accomplishing the works 
of Jesus in this present world that such great promises regarding prayer have been 
given to His people. But His people are not at liberty to claim the Saviour’s promise, 
“If ye shall ask any thing in my name, I will do it,” in order to obtain something 
very special for themselves. His certified promise does not authorize us to make 
him a servant of our own comforts in life. The Master has assured us that the Father 
is mindful of our personal needs, and wills to give good things to His children, 
but our creature comforts are not the things which matter most in this life. Our 
chief concern should always be to obtain power through prayer to achieve the greater 
works for Christ.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p10">A careful study of the Saviour’s words reveal that it is 
His purpose to glorify the Father through the life and love and labors of His redeemed 
people. When once we fully comprehend this amazing truth it will not be difficult 
to understand the meaning of the praying that glorifies the Father in the Son. When 
Jesus said, “. . . He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also. . . ,” 
He revealed the obvious fact that a man has both the mental and moral capacity to 
perform the works of God in this world. It is apparently true that all men do not 
have the same natural abilities to serve God in this world. The Master disclosed 
this truth in His parable relating to the Kingdom of heaven.</p>

<verse id="vii-p10.1">
<l class="t1" id="vii-p10.2">“<i>Unto one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one; to every 
man according to his several ability</i> . . .” — <scripRef passage="Matt. 25:15" id="vii-p10.3" parsed="|Matt|25|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.25.15">Matt. 25:15</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vii-p11">Jesus would have us understand that each man shall be rewarded according to his 
faithfulness in performing his assigned task. The Master will not require more than 
any man is capable of doing for Him. It is impossible for any man to accomplish 
the works of Christ unless he first possesses the works of Christ in his own heart. 
We must not overlook the fact that moral character and moral conduct are so intimately 
related that one does not exist apart from the other. A man’s character is always 
exemplified in his conduct. The Saviour said,</p>

<verse id="vii-p11.1">
<l class="t1" id="vii-p11.2">“<i>A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which 
is good</i> . . .” — <scripRef passage="Luke 6:45" id="vii-p11.3" parsed="|Luke|6|45|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.6.45">Luke 6:45</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p12">Jesus revealed the effective cause for achieving His works when He said,</p>

<verse id="vii-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="vii-p12.2">“. . . <i>The Father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the works.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 14:10" id="vii-p12.3" parsed="|John|14|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.10">John 14:10</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vii-p13">Paul stated this sublime truth when he said,</p>

<verse id="vii-p13.1">
<l class="t1" id="vii-p13.2">“<i>For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.</i>” 
— <scripRef passage="Phil. 2:13" id="vii-p13.3" parsed="|Phil|2|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.2.13">Phil. 2:13</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="vii-p14">It certainly is possible for Almighty God to impart the inherent qualities of His 
divine nature to a redeemed soul, seeing that He did impart His image and likeness 
to the first man in the original creation. When Jesus said, “. . . I go to my Father,” 
He was speaking of His death on the cross and His ascension to the throne in heaven. 
If we sincerely believe in the provisional sacrifice of Christ on the cross, we 
must believe that the inherent graces of mercy, truth, and holiness together with 
the fruit of the Spirit can be produced in the heart of mortal man.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p15">When we request Christ to perform His works in our hearts 
we are devoutly praying that the Father may be glorified in the Son. We must open 
the doors of our hearts and extend to the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit the 
right to rule us for ever, when we truly pray that the Father may be glorified in 
His Son. Jesus assured us that the heavenly Father would make His abode with us 
in answer to prayer. Surely a people so signally blessed would be able to exemplify 
the greater works of Christ in their diligent labors. It is apparent that our Lord 
has not limited the power made available to His people through prayer in His Name. 
When He said, “. . . I will do it,” He placed His unlimited power at our disposal. 
He reveals himself to be an Almighty Servant standing ready and willing to do anything 
and everything pertaining to His works in answer to prayer. While meditating on 
these amazing promises it is necessary to keep in mind that the primary purpose 
of Christ in answering prayer is, “That the Father may be glorified in the Son.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p16">The measure of our faith and the fervency of our prayers 
determine the effectiveness of our labors for Christ. If our faith is weak and our 
praying passionless we cannot expect to achieve much for Him. A man can ease his 
accusing conscience by explaining that he failed to accomplish the works of Christ 
because of adverse conditions where he lives and labors. When a man is willing to 
face the facts, he may discover that he failed because he had not believed in Christ 
for the very work’s sake, and prayed fervently in His Name. We cannot justify our 
failures by pleading our lack of natural ability. I am persuaded that God does not 
impart a greater measure of natural ability to us when we are saved by grace, but 
I do firmly believe that He releases the powers of our souls when we give ourselves 
to Him. Only the Creator knows the latent forces and inherent potentialities in 
an immortal soul. When these spiritual powers are released by the indwelling Spirit 
of God the whole world can feel the dynamic force of a living Christ.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p17">When Jesus said, “. . . Believe me for the very works’ sake,” 
He was pleading for a faith that would not fail to give the message of redeeming 
love to the whole world. He was thinking of the generations yet unborn when He gave 
us the right to ask anything in His Name. While Jesus was in the world, mankind 
could see His miracles, hear His messages, and be blessed by His ministry. The astonishing 
fact is that the people of yesterday saw Him crucified, dead and buried, but cared 
very little about Jesus of Nazareth, the penniless preacher of Palestine. They were 
too engrossed in their own affairs of life to be impressed by a suffering Saviour. 
The world of today is too busy to be bothered with thoughts of life eternal. It 
is God’s will to reveal the Son’s works to a perishing world. He has willed that 
the works of His Son shall be accomplished in this present world through the labors 
and consistent living of His people.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p18">Let us heed the pleadings of the Christ, and believe His 
promise to answer our prayers that the Father may be glorified in His Son. Let us 
continue to believe on Him for the very work’s sake and pray in His Name for power 
to achieve the victory for Him on earth. No matter how sorely we are tried, nor 
how dark the hours may seem in times of sufferings, we must continue to pray that 
the Father may be glorified in the Son through our services and sacrifices in His 
work. Let us ever keep in mind that the countless years which have fled into the 
dateless past have not outmoded the works of Christ, neither shall the oncoming 
ages overthrow them. His glorious works of grace performed in our hearts and exemplified 
in our living and labors shall glorify the Father in the Son throughout all ages, 
world without end.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 5. Praying Without Doubting" progress="28.08%" prev="vii" next="ix" id="viii">
<h2 id="viii-p0.1">CHAPTER 5</h2>
<h3 id="viii-p0.2">PRAYING WITHOUT DOUBTING</h3>

<p class="intro" id="viii-p1">“. . . <i>And shall not doubt in his heart, but shall believe that those things 
which he saith shall come to pass; he shall have whatsoever he saith.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Mark 11:23" id="viii-p1.1" parsed="|Mark|11|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Mark.11.23">Mark 11:23</scripRef></p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p2">These interesting words are a part of the Saviour’s discourse 
on the power of faith. The disciples were greatly astonished by the power manifested 
in the Master’s words which dried up the fruitless tree from the roots. When Jesus 
arrested the attention of His disciples by this unusual miracle, He obviously intended 
to reveal the power of God made available to His people through the prayer of faith. 
When Peter called the Lord’s attention to the withered tree He said, “. . . Have faith 
in God. For verily I say unto you, That whosoever shall say unto this mountain, 
Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; and shall not doubt in his heart, 
but shall believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass; he shall 
have whatsoever he saith.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p3">In order to understand truth about praying without doubt 
in our hearts it is necessary to consider the Saviour’s opening statement, “. . . Have 
faith in God.” The remarkable discourse following His opening words reveals the 
fundamental fact relating to the prayer of faith. Our Lord would have us see that 
we can possess the faith of God. He revealed this fact when He said, “Have faith 
in God.” It would be utterly impossible to believe that those things which we say 
in prayer shall come to pass unless we had an implicit faith in God. When Jesus 
said, “. . . Have faith in God,” He revealed the Source of the priceless possession 
of the faith which enables us to pray without a doubt in our hearts. His admonition 
to have faith in God implies that all men have an inherent faith derived from God 
when He created the first man in His own image. The quality of inherited faith was 
not destroyed in the fall although it was greatly impaired as a result of disobedience. 
Jesus disclosed the amazing fact that we can possess a measure of the faith which 
Almighty God possesses in His own Divine Nature. This fact should not seem incredible 
since it is true that God did impart a measure of His own faith to man at the beginning 
of creation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p4">We do not hesitate to accept the fact that God imparts 
a measure of His life and love to His redeemed people. Surely it is not impossible 
for Him to impart a sufficient measure of His faith to His people to sustain them 
in life in this world of doubt and disbelief. If His people are not able to accomplish 
His works in the world because of the littleness of their faith, there is no valid 
reason to doubt that He can and will increase their measure of achieving faith. 
When the disciples said, “. . . Lord, Increase our faith,” we have reasons to believe 
that He granted their request. (See <scripRef passage="Luke 17:5" id="viii-p4.1" parsed="|Luke|17|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.17.5">Luke 17:5</scripRef>.)</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p5">The Saviour did not imply that we could possess the same 
measureless degree of faith which the infinite God possesses in His Divine Person. 
But He did encourage us to believe that we can receive a measure of God’s faith 
to enable us to accomplish His purpose in redemption. The Saviour would have us 
see that we can enter into the faith of God and become workers together with Him 
in achieving His eternal purpose in His beloved Son. It is obviously true that God 
works in His people and through them according to the degree of their faith. He 
cannot do great things unless His people can believe Him for great things. Christ 
is made invincible in this world through the unwavering faith of His praying people.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p6">The Scriptures reveal that Christ works according to His 
own faith, and His people enter into His faith and work with Him in accomplishing 
His purpose in redemption. The fact that He works according to His own faith is 
as understandable as the fact that a man works according to his own faith. A man 
can plan to build his house long before he lays the first stone in the foundation. 
He can plan for the happiness of a family before a child is born to gladden his 
heart. It is also true that a man’s family can enter into his faith and assist him 
to achieve his purpose in life. Surely it is possible for the redeemed family of 
Christ to enter into His faith and participate in His eternal purpose to achieve 
the final victory over sin and death. The Son of God is not limited by circumstances, 
neither is He lacking in adequate resources to supply the need of His family on 
earth. Nothing shall prevent Him from bringing many sons unto glory according to 
the will of the heavenly Father.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p7">We can pray without a doubt regarding the power of God. 
We can perceive the truth about Christ’s eternal verities when we consider His statement 
about removing the mountain at the word of command. We are aware that the mountain 
has no power within itself to obey the word of command, “. . . Be thou removed, and 
be thou cast into the sea. . . ” It is also obvious that the mountain is not removed 
by the efforts of man. Therefore we must conclude that the person speaking the words 
that remove the mountain has access to a power sufficient to remove the mountain 
and have it cast into the sea. The words of Jesus warrant us in saying that this 
power is made available to His praying people through faith. If this is not the 
truth then we must conclude that the words of Christ have no meaningful application 
to the perplexing problems of daily life. We are aware that the Master’s words are 
figurative yet they are factual. The mountain evidently represents something that 
God will remove in answer to the prayer of faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p8">Let us assume that the mountain represents the mass of 
human misery caused by sin in this troubled earth. It is certainly true that no 
man has power within himself to remove the mass of physical and mental sufferings 
caused by sin in this world. It is likewise true that no man has the strength of 
will to remove the mountain of iniquity which stands between himself and a holy 
God. Sin rests on his guilty soul like the weight of the hills. A man’s load of 
depravity gives him a heavy heart and a burdened spirit. When we look at the mass 
of human suffering resulting from sin, we can visualize the insurmountable difficulties 
confronting humanity in this distressed earth. The bewildering sufferings caused 
by the sins of men constitute a mountain of misery and woe more formidable and forbidding 
than all the precipitous heights and impregnable rocks of earth’s tallest peaks.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p9">Christ is our only hope for deliverance in this disconsolate 
world. If faith in Him cannot bring the power necessary to surmount these difficulties, 
then faith has failed utterly to achieve the victory we have a right to expect in 
the light of God’s unfailing promises. The imperishable Word declares, “. . . The just 
shall live by faith.” How can we obey this fundamental law of life unless we can 
avail ourselves of a power sufficient to overcome every opposing force? We cannot 
doubt God’s willingness to impart to His praying saints a sufficiency of spiritual 
strength to cope with the trials incident to life. The Scriptures record the victories 
achieved by the saints of God who were made immortal in sacred history by their 
dauntless courage and unwavering faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p10">Let us pray the prayer of faith, not doubting in our hearts, 
but believing that strength shall be given day by day to surmount our difficulties 
in life. Let us not falter in the way as we journey toward fadeless dawn of the 
eternal day.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p11">We can pray without a doubt regarding the purpose of God. 
The Scriptures reveal that it is God’s eternal purpose in Christ to save all men 
from all sin on the condition of repentance and faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p12">Christ has faith in His own ability to accomplish the Father’s 
purpose by restoring a fallen man to the moral image of God. Nothing shall prevent 
Him from fulfilling His eternal purpose as revealed in the divine plan of salvation. 
There is not the remotest possibility that His perfect plan of redemption shall 
fail. We are assured that the gates of hell shall not prevail against Christ’s invincible 
church, purchased by His blood, endowed, and endued by His Spirit.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p13">We do well to ponder Paul’s immortal challenge,</p>

<verse id="viii-p13.1">
<l class="t1" id="viii-p13.2">“<i>What shall we then say to these things? If God be for us, who can be against 
us?</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rom. 8:31" id="viii-p13.3" parsed="|Rom|8|31|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.31">Rom. 8:31</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p14">When once we have a proper concept of God’s immutable 
purpose as revealed in His Word, it will not be difficult to pray without a doubt. 
Let us look again at the Saviour’s words, “. . . And shall not doubt in his heart, 
but shall believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass. . .” For the 
sake of clarity, let us underscore the words, “. . . Shall come to pass . . .” When shall 
those things which we say in prayer come to pass? When may we reasonably expect 
every prayer to be answered? The things we have said in prayer shall come to pass 
when everything spoken by the Lord shall come to pass. When God’s plan of salvation 
has been consummated, then all things spoken by the Son of God, and all things spoken 
by the mouth of His holy prophets, and all the things spoken in the prayers of His 
faithful people shall come to pass.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p15">The Scriptures affirm that it is God’s purpose to save 
them to the uttermost that come unto Him through Christ. God’s utmost ability was 
required to save us from the utmost extent of our sin. To be saved to the uttermost 
according to the purpose of Christ, means to be delivered from all sin in this present 
life, and delivered from the effects of sin in the body and mind in the life to 
come.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p16">We can pray without a doubt in our hearts regarding a complete 
deliverance from sin in this present life, and it shall come to pass. But we must 
patiently wait until Christ’s final triumph over sin and death before we can be 
delivered from the results of sin in our bodies and minds. We can pray without a 
doubt in our hearts regarding our final deliverance, and it shall come to pass according 
to the purpose of God. When Christ has fulfilled His eternal purpose in redemption, 
then the mountain of human misery and woe shall be removed from the earth. When 
we perceive this truth as revealed in the Scriptures, we can understand that every 
prayer offered without a doubt in our hearts shall surely be answered in full.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p17">The things we say in prayer are powerless and meaningless 
unless we have Christ’s authority to say them. But if the things we say in our prayers 
are the things which He has said, then we can pray without a doubt in our hearts.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p18">We find this truth revealed in the Master’s words concerning 
the mountain being removed at the word of command. Take note of the fact that Jesus 
first spoke the words, “. . . Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea . . .” Assuming 
that the mountain symbolizes the mass of human woe and suffering caused by sin, 
we perceive that it is possible to have this mass of human misery removed by speaking 
the living words of Jesus in our prayer. It is apparent that we can enter in to 
His faith and engage His omnipotent power to achieve victory over sin and death. 
When we pray without a doubt in our hearts, we share Christ’s faith to achieve the 
purpose of the Father. When we speak His words, we have a valid reason to expect
the things we say to come to pass.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p19">Our prayers can embrace every word of promise and every 
word of purpose spoken by our Lord. Our faith and prayers can join His faith and 
prayers and assist Him in the final fulfillment of His Father’s will and work. When 
applying this gracious truth to the things which Christ has spoken in explicit terms 
of eternal truth, it is not difficult to see that our prayer of faith becomes an 
integral part of the whole plan of redemption. We are assured that every word spoken 
in prayer shall be answered in the final restitution of all things. It is written,</p>

<verse id="viii-p19.1">
<l class="t1" id="viii-p19.2">“<i>And He shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: Whom the 
heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath 
spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began.</i>” <scripRef passage="Acts 3:20, 21" id="viii-p19.3" parsed="|Acts|3|20|0|0;|Acts|3|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.3.20 Bible:Acts.3.21">Acts 3:20, 21</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="viii-p20">Paul vividly revealed the final triumph of Christ when he said,</p>

<verse id="viii-p20.1">
<l class="t1" id="viii-p20.2">“<i>Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even 
the Father; when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power. For 
he must reign, till he hath put all enemies under his feet. The last enemy that 
shall be destroyed is death.</i>” — <scripRef passage="1 Cor. 15:24-26" id="viii-p20.3" parsed="|1Cor|15|24|15|26" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.15.24-1Cor.15.26">1 Cor. 15:24-26</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="viii-p21">Our hope and expectation for final deliverance from all effects of evil in our bodies 
and minds shall be realized when He shall come to be glorified in His saints, and 
to be admired in all them that believe in that day. When He shall appear we shall 
be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. We shall share in His final victory 
over disease and death. We shall hear Him say to the mountain of sufferings, “. . . Be 
thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea. . . ,” and it shall come to pass.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p22">In view of this consoling hope let us continue to pray 
without a doubt in our hearts. Let us rest our faith on the enduring love of Christ, 
asking nothing more than to be counted worthy of His pleasure throughout all ages, 
world without end.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 6. Praying With Desire" progress="37.21%" prev="viii" next="x" id="ix">
<h2 id="ix-p0.1">CHAPTER 6</h2>
<h3 id="ix-p0.2">PRAYING WITH DESIRE</h3>

<p class="intro" id="ix-p1">“. . . <i>What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive 
them, and ye shall have them.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Mark 11:24" id="ix-p1.1" parsed="|Mark|11|24|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Mark.11.24">Mark 11:24</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p2">These inspiring words of Jesus disclose that He has obligated 
Himself to satisfy the incessant and insistent desires of His praying people. His 
words leave no doubt in our minds regarding His willingness to answer our requests. 
He makes it plain that whatsoever things are required to satisfy our spiritual and 
temporal needs shall be granted according to the measure of our faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p3">We must obey the fundamental law of faith by sincerely 
believing that we receive the things desired when we pray, otherwise they shall 
not be granted. It is necessary to do some clear thinking regarding our Lord’s promise 
to give us the things desired when we pray in faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p4">Some unwise persons have interpreted Jesus as saying, “When 
ye pray, believe that you have the things desired, and you have them.” It is difficult 
to accept this concept of the Master’s teaching about the prayer of faith. No intelligent 
man can believe that he has received the things desired unless he has received them. 
It would be absurd to make such a claim in the light of truth.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p5">It is misleading to tell a sincere seeker after a pure 
heart to believe that the blessing has been received when that person knows in his 
own heart that it is not true. This absurd teaching leaves a man confused and disappointed. 
A man must receive the witness of the Holy Spirit to confirm the work of grace performed 
in the heart. An honest man cannot affirm that he has obtained the things desired 
unless he knows that he has received them from God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p6">We must not assume that we have the things desired. Our 
faith does not rest on an assumption; our faith rests on an assurance imparted to 
us by the spirit of truth. When Jesus revealed His provision to satisfy our desires, 
He disclosed the incentive to pray. He is saying, “Whatsoever things you desire, 
when you pray, believe that God has provided them, and you shall have them.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p7">We must first believe that the resources of God are made 
available to us through prayer. If we entertain the slightest doubt in our hearts 
regarding this fact, we cannot obtain the things desired to satisfy us in life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p8">While seriously meditating on the remarkable words of Jesus 
concerning the things desired in prayer, let us not overlook the fact that He is 
speaking about the mountain being removed at the word of command. If it is God’s 
purpose to remove all sin and sufferings from the earth at His word of command, 
then it is likewise true that everything required to accomplish His purpose on behalf 
of His people is made available to them in the provision of redeeming grace. When 
we see this truth we can understand God’s purpose in establishing the throne of 
grace. Is it any wonder that we are told to come boldly unto the throne of grace? 
We can readily understand the real incentive to pray when we know that our legitimate 
desires will be granted when we pray for things pertaining to the plan of redemption 
as revealed in Christ. There is no provision made to gratify our desires unless 
the things desired are directly related to Christ’s plan of salvation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p9">The primary purpose of the Saviour’s sacrifice on the cross 
was to save us from sin and sufferings. It is His purpose to present us faultless 
before the presence of the Father with exceeding joy. It is our Lord’s purpose to 
dry our tears for ever, open the gates of pearl, and give us an abundant entrance 
into the City of God. It is permissible to interpret Jesus as saying, “Whatsoever 
things are required to satisfy you and sustain you in this holy way of life, when 
you pray, believe that you can obtain them, and you shall have them.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p10">It has not required one tear of sorrow, nor exacted one 
drop of our blood, nor cost us one night of sleep to provide the things required 
to save us from sin and sufferings in this world. The unsparing God gave His only 
Son to provide the things we need for time and eternity.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p11">There are no unholy and selfish desires in the heart of 
a Christian. A true Christian is motivated to pray by the normal desires of spiritual 
life like a hungry son is moved to ask bread of his father. The child’s desire for 
food does not spring from force of habit, it is a desire springing from the natural 
requirements of daily life. The incentive to pray is as normal as the desire for 
food and drink. The very fact that the desire exists is positive proof that it can 
be satisfied in a natural and legitimate manner.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p12">There is an intense longing after Christ like the hunger 
and thirst of a person requiring food and drink. Such a desire cannot be satisfied 
with anything less than a manifestation of the living Lord. There is a desire to 
know more about His enduring love. There is a desire to linger long in sacred worship 
and holy communion with Him in the quiet place of prayer. A Christian says,</p>

<verse id="ix-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="ix-p12.2">“My soul followeth hard after thee . . .” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 63:8" id="ix-p12.3" parsed="|Ps|63|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.63.8">Psa. 63:8</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="ix-p13">The inspired writer voiced his desire when he said,</p>

<verse id="ix-p13.1">
<l class="t1" id="ix-p13.2">“<i>As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, 
O God. My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I come and appear 
before God?</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 42:1, 2" id="ix-p13.3" parsed="|Ps|42|1|0|0;|Ps|42|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.42.1 Bible:Ps.42.2">Psa. 42:1, 2</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="ix-p14">A man can earn his daily bread by the sweat of his brow, and allay his thirst at 
the springs flowing out of the earth, but a man that hungers and thirsts after Christ 
must have the bread from heaven to satisfy his hunger, and drink the living water 
from the fountain of life to slake his thirst.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p15">We desire a freedom which cannot be obtained while we 
live in this body. We long to be delivered from our earthly bondage into the glorious 
liberty of the first resurrection. In this human body we yearn, earnestly desiring 
to be clothed upon with our house which is from heaven.</p>

<verse id="ix-p15.1">
<l class="t1" id="ix-p15.2">“<i>For we that are in this tabernacle do groan, being burdened: not for that we 
would be unclothed, but clothed upon, that mortality might be swallowed up of life.</i>” — <scripRef passage="2 Cor. 5:4" id="ix-p15.3" parsed="|2Cor|5|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.4">2 Cor. 5:4</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p16">When the eternal purpose of Christ has been completed, 
the saints shall be delivered from the presence of sin and sorrows which have troubled 
them in this unhappy earth. In that glad hour they shall experience the glorious 
liberty of the sons of God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p17">God’s redeemed children have no continuing city in this 
world. They look for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God. 
Their citizenship is in heaven; from whence they also look for the Saviour, the 
Lord Jesus Christ: who shall change their infirm bodies, that they may be fashioned 
like unto His glorious body, according to the working wherewith He is able even 
to subdue all things unto Himself. When these things shall come to pass, then shall 
we obtain the end of our faith, even the salvation of our souls.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 7. A Manifestation of God in Answer to Prayer" progress="41.93%" prev="ix" next="xi" id="x">
<h2 id="x-p0.1">CHAPTER 7</h2>
<h3 id="x-p0.2">A MANIFESTATION OF GOD IN ANSWER TO PRAYER</h3>

<p class="intro" id="x-p1">“. . . <i>When they had prayed, the place was shaken where they were assembled together; 
and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and they spake the word of God with 
boldness.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Acts 4:31" id="x-p1.1" parsed="|Acts|4|31|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.31">Acts 4:31</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p2">This remarkable manifestation of God reveals the effectiveness 
of prevailing prayer. It vividly discloses the fact that prayer can accomplish much. 
It is apparent that neither the apostles, nor the assembled company of devout believers 
were astonished at the marvelous visitation of God. They had assembled together 
in one place for the express purpose of achieving victory over the opposition of 
wicked men, and they fully expected the Lord to answer their united prayers in His 
own way.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p3">Perhaps the shaking of the place where they were assembled 
together was an extraordinary occurrence, but receiving a direct answer to their 
importunate praying was neither unusual nor unexpected. The believers had assembled 
for the specific purpose of producing a miracle in the spiritual world, and not 
for the purpose of producing a phenomenon in the natural world. We do not need a 
manifestation of the supernatural to arrest the attention of a pleasure seeking 
world. God does not often shake the shackles off His imprisoned saints, and open 
the doors of the jail with an earthquake. He can do the unusual and the unexpected 
when necessary. We do not need the Lord to do something to astonish us, but we do 
need Him to do something to alert us to our dangers.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p4">We cannot ignore the fact that we desperately need a startling 
manifestation of God to shake us out of our spiritual lethargy and selfish complacency. 
We cannot substitute a program for power and have the least semblance of hope that 
the unsaved will be attracted by it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p5">The believers were praying in a desperate crisis when they 
said, “. . . Lord, behold their threatenings . . .” We are aware that some of the most 
enduring results recorded in sacred history were obtained when some devout person 
prayed in an hour of crisis. Abraham prevailed with God in prayer when the angelic 
messengers told him about the destruction of Sodom. The holy Scriptures reveal that 
Moses prayed importunately for the people when they incurred the fierce anger of 
God by worshipping the golden calf. It was a critical time in Israel when Elijah 
prayed earnestly on Mount Carmel. Jesus was praying in an hour of crisis when He 
said, “. . . Father, the hour is come . . .” The believers were confronted by a desperate 
situation when they said, “. . . Lord, behold their threatenings . . .” With them, it 
was a case of life or death, victory or defeat. The odds against them were tremendous, 
but the God that was for them was Almighty.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p6">There is nothing in the sacred records to show that they 
had the slightest intention of compromising the truth in order to have favor with 
men. They did not call a meeting of the official board to discuss ways and means 
of evading the fundamental issues involved. They did not take refuge in a stupefying 
pessimism saying that nothing could be done to remedy the situation confronting 
them. Neither did they deceive themselves by saying that things would work out satisfactorily 
to all parties concerned. They were willing to accept the conflict that challenged 
their faith and hope in God. They did the most natural thing in the sight of the 
Lord when they assembled together with one accord in prayer, and lifted up their 
voice in one concerted petition to Him for help.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p7">The believers in this day of grace should be impressed 
by the victory achieved by this praying company of saints. There are many things 
which threaten us today. We are confronted with serious situations that cannot be 
overcome unless we keep our strength renewed through prevailing prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p8">It is written, “. . . They were all filled with the Holy Ghost, 
and they spake the word of God with boldness.” A gracious infilling with the Spirit 
of God is the only solution for our spiritual difficulties in this age of the world. 
The Lord’s holy prophet said,</p>

<verse id="x-p8.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p8.2">“. . . <i>When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall lift 
up a standard against him.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Isa. 59:19" id="x-p8.3" parsed="|Isa|59|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.59.19">Isa. 59:19</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="x-p9">We cannot hope to escape the flood of evil which threatens to overwhelm the believers 
today unless we are constantly refilled and re-invigorated by the Holy Spirit. When 
Paul said, “. . . Be filled with the Spirit,” he was stressing the necessity of continuing 
in the fullness of the Spirit in order to achieve the victory for Christ in this 
world. This remarkable filling with the Spirit was evidently different in some respects 
from the epochal filling received on the day of Pentecost. This gracious enablement 
of the Spirit was obviously one of the times of refreshing to be expected from the 
presence of the Lord. (<scripRef passage="Acts 3:19" id="x-p9.1" parsed="|Acts|3|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.3.19">Acts 3:19</scripRef>.)</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p10">Unless the believers in the church today have their 
spiritual strength replenished repeatedly by the Spirit they will not be able to 
overcome the increasing power of spiritual wickedness threatening them today. The 
church cannot cope with the menacing threat of worldliness except the company of 
believers pray for power to meet the insidious threat. The company of believers 
cannot withstand the subversive teachings of modern Liberalism unless they pray 
for strength to contend for the faith once delivered to the saints.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p11">It will require much prayer to prevail against the creeping 
paralysis resulting from meaningless programs and pointless plays promoted by the 
worldly-minded leaders in the church. Unless the company of believers today are 
girded with the power of the Holy Spirit they will not be able to cope with the 
crisis confronting them in this day of formality and unbelief. God did not answer 
their impassioned prayer in the hour of crisis by miraculously changing the attitude 
of the determined opposition. He did not remove the threat which endangered them, 
neither did He destroy the ring-leaders responsible for the persecution of the church. 
It is interesting to note that the company of believers did not ask the Lord to 
change the attitude of their enemies. They accepted the fact that such persecution 
had been foreseen and foretold.</p>

<verse id="x-p11.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p11.2">“. . . <i>Thy servant David hast said, Why did the heathen rage, and the people imagine 
vain things? The kings of the earth stood up, and the rulers were gathered together 
against the Lord, and against his Christ.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Acts 4:25" id="x-p11.3" parsed="|Acts|4|25|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.25">Acts 4:25</scripRef>. (<scripRef passage="Psalm 2:1-3" id="x-p11.4" parsed="|Ps|2|1|2|3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.2.1-Ps.2.3">Psalm 2:1-3</scripRef>)</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="x-p12">The Lord would have us understand that suffering 
persecution for His sake is the price to be paid in blood and tears for the unspeakable 
pleasure of serving Him in the holy way of life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p13">Our young people should be impressed with the fact that 
they cannot expect the Lord to change the attitude of their unsaved friends and 
associates. When once the young converts discover this truth they will not find 
it difficult to overcome the hardships of life. Pastors find it difficult to get 
the young people established in the faith because they apparently believe that God 
should change their environment in answer to prayer. It is apparently difficult 
for them to understand that a change in their surroundings is not the solution of 
their spiritual problem. It is likewise true that a change in the moral conditions 
which environ the church today is not the solution of its spiritual problem.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p14">The company of believers found the solution of their problem 
when they lifted up their voice with one accord in prayer to God. The answer they 
received enabled them to cope with the rising tide of spiritual wickedness in high 
places. The Lord fortified them with a spiritual power that no combination of evil 
forces could withstand successfully.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p15">The embattled believers were praying with an unwavering 
faith when they said, “Lord, thou art God.” The indisputable fact of God was the 
basis of the unshakable confidence which inspired them to pray. It is remarkable 
how impotent and insignificant the feeble efforts of wicked men appear when we realize 
that God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. (<scripRef passage="Psalm 46:1" id="x-p15.1" parsed="|Ps|46|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.46.1">Psalm 46:1</scripRef>.)</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p16">The imperishable Word declares,</p>

<verse id="x-p16.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p16.2">“<i>The Lord is on my side; I will not fear: what can man do unto me?</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 118:6" id="x-p16.3" parsed="|Ps|118|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.118.6">Psa. 118:6</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="x-p17">God gave us a certified promise when He said, “I will never leave thee, nor forsake 
thee.” The Lord has never deserted His faithful people in the time of conflict. 
We need to have this blessed truth imbedded in our consciousness, impressed on our 
minds, and indelibly inscribed in our hearts by the hand of God. When once we grasp 
the fact of God it is not difficult to pray.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p18">God’s everlasting kingdom will never be destroyed by the 
combined forces of the ungodly. Almighty God is never in jeopardy. He has no fear 
of mortal man. He shall remain immutable in purpose and invincible in power for 
evermore.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p19">Consider what the praying company said about God’s enemies,</p>

<verse id="x-p19.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p19.2">“<i>For of a truth against thy holy child Jesus, whom thou hast anointed, both Herod, 
and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles, and the people of Israel, were gathered together, 
For to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Acts 4:27, 28" id="x-p19.3" parsed="|Acts|4|27|0|0;|Acts|4|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.27 Bible:Acts.4.28">Acts 4:27, 28</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="x-p20">The conscienceless Herod, and the cowardly Pontius Pilate are dead, and their vicious 
opposition to Christ is dead and buried in the sepulcher of the ages. The aggressive 
agnosticism and sneering atheism that ran rampant less than a century ago has ceased 
to occupy a prominent place in the world today. The vicious Liberalism which afflicts 
the church today will soon be dead, buried together with modern infidels who have 
advocated its pernicious views.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p21">Perhaps the sands have been washed in the footprints 
of the Stranger of Galilee, but the world has not forgotten that He lived, loved, 
and labored to save lost humanity from eternal death. The countless centuries which 
have hurried into the dateless past have not impaired His strength to save us to 
the uttermost. The marching millenniums will not erase His matchless Name from the 
annals of sacred history. The last desolate day of time will not find Him buried 
in the sepulcher of the ages. The fleeing ghost of eternity will never discover 
the grave of God. Of Him it is written,</p>

<verse id="x-p21.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p21.2">“<i>And, Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and 
the heavens are the works of thine hands: They shall perish; but thou remainest; 
and they all shall wax old as doth a garment; And as a vesture shalt thou fold them 
up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail.</i>” 
— <scripRef passage="Heb. 1:10-12" id="x-p21.3" parsed="|Heb|1|10|1|12" osisRef="Bible:Heb.1.10-Heb.1.12">Heb. 1:10-12</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="x-p22">When we fortify our faith and underscore our thinking with 
the words, “Lord, thou art God,” we can prevail in prayer and overcome the combined 
forces of evil which threaten us in these trying times. Almighty God will not abandon 
His eternal purpose because a few wicked men have lifted up their voices against 
Him. Our God has assured us that all things work together for good to them that 
love Him, to them who are the called according to His purpose. His imperishable 
promises give a strong consolation to lay hold of the hope set before us. Let us 
hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering; for He is faithful that 
promised.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p23">The assembled company prayed that the messengers of the 
Word might have courage. They said,</p>

<verse id="x-p23.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p23.2">“. . . <i>Grant unto thy servants, that with all boldness they may speak thy word.</i>” 
— <scripRef passage="Acts 4:29" id="x-p23.3" parsed="|Acts|4|29|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.29">Acts 4:29</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="x-p24">The voice of prayer was heard in heaven and the answer granted when the assembled 
company of devout saints prayed this importunate prayer in the time of crisis. God’s 
people were not praying for boldness because they were moral cowards. They were 
fearfully aware of the danger which threatened them; but they were not too cowardly 
to face it with God’s help.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p25">The rulers of the people, and the elders in Israel had 
called Peter and John before the council, and commanded them not to speak at all 
nor teach in the name of Jesus. (<scripRef passage="Acts 4:18" id="x-p25.1" parsed="|Acts|4|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.18">Acts 4:18</scripRef>.) God’s called servants could not heed 
this diabolical command and be faithful to the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. 
To comply with such an unjust demand, not to speak at all nor teach in the Name 
of Jesus, one must compromise the truth of Christ, and cease to emphasize the central 
theme of the Gospel message. The very essence of the Gospel is contained in the 
Name of Jesus.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p26">It is interesting to notice that the believers were praying 
for the message of divine truth. They said, “With all boldness they may speak thy 
word.” The emphasis is placed on “Thy word.” The Christians wanted to hear God’s 
Word declared with firm conviction and unwavering confidence. They evidently wanted 
to be edified and enlightened by the message of saving truth. They obviously believed 
that the Gospel was the power of God unto salvation to every one that believed it. 
It is indeed blessed to discover a people who desire to hear the message of redeeming 
grace, a people who do not want to be entertained with cheap programs and silly 
plays in the church, a people hungry for the bread of life which Christ only can 
give.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p27">The assembled believers prayed for the messengers of the 
Gospel, saying, “Grant unto thy servants.” It is well to notice that the Christians 
said, “Thy servants.” They evidently recognized that the apostles were the servants 
of God. They were not considered to be servants of an institution, or an organization. 
They considered the apostles to be the called servants of God, who had commissioned 
them to serve His redeemed family. These godly men were not hired promoters; they 
were Christ’s holy messengers.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p28">It does not require moral courage to promote a program 
to entertain a group of nominal Christians. Neither does it require courage to give 
a book review, or speak on current events; but it does require boldness to press 
the claims of Christ on men, and demand that they repent of their sins and yield 
themselves to Him.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p29">It does not require spiritual fortitude to organize a campaign 
to raise money for the general interests of the church; but it does take much prayer 
and faithful preaching to precipitate a genuine revival of full salvation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p30">To raise these issues does not mean that one is indulging 
in hurtful criticism of God’s faithful people and preachers. It does mean that one 
is gravely concerned about the praying of God’s people, who are members of the body 
of Christ. It is apparent that a devout minister can perform his work for Christ 
more efficiently when he knows that the Christians want to hear the Word and are 
supporting him with their prayers and faith. The record shows that Peter and John 
had joined the company of saints in the fellowship of prayer. This fact discloses 
that the messengers of Christ realized the necessity of prevailing prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p31">It is not unusual to hear some ministers say they are so 
burdened with the work of the church that they have very little time to spend in 
earnest prayer. This is a startling admission for any man to make, especially a 
minister of the Gospel. It is a serious matter in the life of a preacher when he 
allows himself to be cumbered with much serving. The results of his neglect of prayer 
will be revealed by the poverty of his preaching. It is possible for a minister 
to become so preoccupied with his duties that he will give prayer a place of secondary 
importance in his life. God’s servants should consider that nothing pertaining to 
the church of Christ is more important than waiting before the Lord in the secret 
place of prayer. The man of God loses his passion for souls when he willfully neglects 
to pray. He must wait until his soul is aflame with holy zeal, and his mind stimulated 
with fresh news from heaven. When he takes proper time to pray, his preaching will 
edify and enlighten the Christians, and the fruitfulness of his ministry will be 
increased.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p32">The writer disclosed some remarkable results from this 
ministry of prayer when he said,</p>

<verse id="x-p32.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p32.2">“<i>And with great power gave the Apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord 
Jesus: and great grace was upon them all.</i>” <scripRef passage="Acts 4:33" id="x-p32.3" parsed="|Acts|4|33|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.33">Acts 4 v. 33</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="x-p33">The assembled company prayed for miracles to be performed 
in the name of Jesus.</p>

<verse id="x-p33.1">
<l class="t1" id="x-p33.2">“<i>By stretching forth thine hand to heal; and that signs and wonders may be done 
by the name of thy holy child Jesus.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Acts 4:30" id="x-p33.3" parsed="|Acts|4|30|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.4.30">Acts 4 v. 30</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="x-p34">It is obvious that the Christians expected miracles to accompany the preaching of 
the Word. It is interesting to note that the prayer for boldness to speak the Word 
included the petition for healing, and signs and wonders. The order of the prayer 
places preaching the Word first before the performing of miracles in the name of 
Jesus.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p35">Our Lord placed more emphasis on preaching and teaching 
than He did on His gracious ministry of healing the sick, and showing signs and 
wonders. However, we are not to conclude that such miracles cannot be performed 
through the power of prayer in this age and generation. The healing of the sick, 
and the signs and wonders performed in the name of Jesus accompany the preaching 
of the Word.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p36">This fact is clearly observed when we give thoughtful attention 
to the import of the prayer. The prayer for miracles reveals the true concept regarding 
the power of Jesus to heal. They said, “By stretching forth thine hand to heal . . .” 
The presence of Jesus was so real to praying saints that they asked Him to stretch 
forth His nail-scarred hand and heal the people.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p37">Jesus did stretch forth His hand and touched the diseased 
bodies of men, and they were instantly healed. The fact that Christ has ascended 
to heaven has not changed our concept of His Divine Person. He is willing and able 
to stretch forth His hand and heal our broken bodies today like He did in the days 
of His flesh.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p38">I am persuaded to believe that the professing Christians 
would see more miracles of healings performed by the hand of Jesus if they would 
spend more time in earnest prayer for the messengers of the Gospel.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p39">I am convinced that the Lord will work wonders in this 
age of indifference if we will cease to limit Him by unbelief, and accept the fact 
that miracles can be performed today by the outstretched hand of the Holy Child 
Jesus.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 8. The Intercessory Prayers of Christians" progress="54.48%" prev="x" next="xii" id="xi">
<h2 id="xi-p0.1">CHAPTER 8</h2>
<h3 id="xi-p0.2">THE INTERCESSORY PRAYERS OF CHRISTIANS</h3>

<p class="intro" id="xi-p1">“. . . <i>Friend, lend me three loaves; for a friend of mine in his journey is come 
to me</i> . . .” — <scripRef passage="Luke 11:5, 6" id="xi-p1.1" parsed="|Luke|11|5|0|0;|Luke|11|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.5 Bible:Luke.11.6">Luke 11:5, 6</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p2">There is evidently a ministry of prayer even 
as there is a ministry of preaching. The teachings of Jesus contained in the parable 
show us that praying and preaching are integral parts of the plan of salvation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p3">Preaching is God’s way of speaking to man, and praying 
is man’s way of speaking to God. Preaching is God’s way of appealing to the will 
of man, and praying is man’s way of appealing to the will of God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p4">Our Lord’s teachings relating to intercessory prayer are 
clearly revealed in the Epistles. John’s Epistles reveal the amazing power made 
available to God’s people through intercessory prayer. Peter assures us that the 
eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and His ears are open unto their prayers. 
James said, “. . . The prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise 
him up . . .” The inspired writings of Paul disclose the astonishing possibilities 
in the ministry of intercessory prayer. In one of Paul’s Epistles the ministry of 
prayer is connected so closely with the ministry of preaching that it is difficult 
to tell where the prayer ends and the preaching begins. (<scripRef passage="Colossians 1:9-17" id="xi-p4.1" parsed="|Col|1|9|1|17" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.9-Col.1.17">Colossians 1:9-17</scripRef>.)</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p5">Note the boundless possibilities revealed in the prayers 
of a faithful minister of Christ.</p>

<verse id="xi-p5.1">
<l class="t1" id="xi-p5.2">“<i>Epaphras, who is one of you, a servant of Christ, saluteth you, always labouring 
fervently for you in prayers, that ye may stand perfect and complete in all the 
will of God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Col. 4:12" id="xi-p5.3" parsed="|Col|4|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.4.12">Col. 4:12</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p6">It is obvious that the fervent prayers of a servant of 
Christ can enable the believers to stand perfect and complete in all the will of 
God. Perhaps it is difficult for us to understand how our praying for the children 
of God can establish them in the faith, nevertheless it is true according to this 
Scripture. We are convinced that our fervent prayers can obtain power from the throne 
of grace to preserve some struggling saint in an hour of severe trial.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p7">The man said, “. . . A friend of mine in his journey is come 
to me . . .” Our Lord focused attention on the responsibility to pray for others when 
He uttered the stirring words in this parable. It obviously was not the man’s own 
personal need that compelled him to request the three loaves; it was the imperative 
need of the tired traveler that moved him to ask for bread at midnight.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p8">No man can be a faithful follower of Christ and not recognize 
his responsibility to pray for others. The spiritual life received from Christ motivates 
a Christian to present the needs of others at the throne of grace, where mercy is 
obtained, and the promised grace is found to help others in a time of urgent need.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p9">Our personal responsibility to intercede for others is 
made more apparent when we emphasize the words, “. . . Is come to me . . .” What strange 
combination of circumstances caused the man to seek help from his friend?</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p10">Perhaps he had taken the wrong road in the confusing darkness 
of the night. We are aware that the parable does teach the disturbing truth that 
men are lost in the darkness of sin, and that it is our duty to lead them to Christ. 
But the pitiful plight of the pilgrim is not the only startling truth contained 
in our Lord’s teachings.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p11">The statement, “. . . A friend of mine in his journey. . . ,” 
persuades one to think that the traveler knew before he started on his journey that 
he could find rest and comfort in the home of his friend. It was his faith in his 
friend’s reputation for hospitality that encouraged him to continue on his journey 
through the enveloping darkness of the night.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p12">The parable reveals that men will come to us when they 
are convinced of our ability to obtain help for them through intercessory prayer. 
The news that a certain man can prevail with God in prayer will soon reach a multitude 
of hopeless and helpless people. Some distressed soul will soon be knocking at the 
man’s door seeking help and comfort.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p13">It was the good news that Christ was giving help and comfort 
to all men that caused the multitudes to seek Him day and night. The disciples had 
a boldness in their preaching and a power in their praying that drew broken and 
burdened humanity to seek the Saviour.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p14">Paul expressed his thanks to God for the church when he 
said,</p>

<verse id="xi-p14.1">
<l class="t1" id="xi-p14.2">“. . . <i>From you sounded out the word of the Lord not only in Macedonia and Achaia, 
but also in every place your faith to God-ward is spread abroad; so that we need 
not to speak any thing.</i>” — <scripRef passage="1 Thess. 1:8" id="xi-p14.3" parsed="|1Thess|1|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Thess.1.8">1 Thess. 1:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p15">Lost men do not seek Christ by mere chance; He 
draws them unto Himself through the convicting and convincing power of the Holy 
Ghost. The Spirit performs His office work in the world through Christ’s witnesses. 
Jesus said,</p>

<verse id="xi-p15.1">
<l id="xi-p15.2">“. . . <i>The Spirit of truth, which proceedeth from the Father, he shall testify of 
me: And ye also shall bear witness, because ye have been with me from the beginning.</i>” 
— <scripRef passage="John 15:26, 27" id="xi-p15.3" parsed="|John|15|26|0|0;|John|15|27|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.15.26 Bible:John.15.27">John 15:26, 27</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xi-p16">It is obvious that the Spirit enables the Christians to attract lost men by faithfully 
witnessing to the Saviour. Our Lord has not commissioned all of His people to preach, 
but He called all of them to pray.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p17">The great revivals born in the hours of agonizing prayer 
attracted the attention of the civilized world. People came for the express purpose 
of obtaining spiritual help through the preaching and praying of God’s servants. 
The great revival that began at Asbury College in 1950 was born in seasons of importunate 
praying. Some of the students prayed all night for a great spiritual awakening. 
Many of the teachers prayed earnestly for a gracious visitation of God. My own soul 
was in great agony of prayer. The burden was so great that I confessed the sins 
of the world to God. In some peculiar manner I had been made aware of the condemnation 
that rested on the souls of lost men.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p18">During the Chapel service I exhorted the students to seek 
the Lord. I realized that it was God’s appointed hour to answer prayer. At that 
moment the Holy Ghost moved mightily on the entire student body. Wave after wave 
of deep conviction swept over the audience. Many were moved to seek the Lord with 
diligence. It was an hour of triumph for the faithful few who had tarried through 
long seasons of intercessory prayer before the Lord during the quiet hours of the 
morning. The news of this marvelous visitation of God spread all over the nation. 
It was broadcast by radio to several foreign countries. People came hundreds of 
miles to receive spiritual help. Perhaps more than five thousand people were directly 
influence by this glorious spiritual awakening born in the hours of intercessory 
prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p19">I am thoroughly convinced that a great spiritual awakening 
will come to this benighted world if the people of God will deny themselves of sleep 
and seek God in the peaceful hours of the morning. It is my firm conviction that 
the great Asbury revival set the pattern to be followed in order to have a great 
revival in this day and age of the world. God will hear His people when they see 
the importance of praying for others. Our Lord revealed this fact when He said, 
“Because of his importunity he will rise and give him as many as he needeth.” The 
man’s plea for bread was so insistent that he did not heed the protest of his sleepy 
friend. The need of the traveler who had come to him out of the night was more important 
than the rest needed by his friend’s entire family.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p20">Is it possible that we are too indolent and indifferent 
to pray? Is there no passion for souls? Is there no sincere concern for the lost? 
Can it be that we are too sleepy to watch with Christ in the Gethsemane of prevailing 
prayer? Are our physical comforts more important than our praying for others?</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p21">Perhaps our Lord will draw some weary wayfarers to our 
door asking for help through our intercessory prayers. If He is pleased to trust 
us with such a responsibility, let us not fail to feed the famishing soul.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p22">The man made an amazing confession when he said to his 
friend, “. . . I have nothing to set before him.” It is evident that Jesus is not calling 
attention to the man’s embarrassing poverty. He is showing us that our sufficiency 
is not of ourselves. Paul stated this fact when he said.</p>

<verse id="xi-p22.1">
<l class="t1" id="xi-p22.2">“<i>Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think any thing as of ourselves; 
but our sufficiency is of God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="2 Cor. 3:5" id="xi-p22.3" parsed="|2Cor|3|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.3.5">2 Cor. 3:5</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p23">We are woefully wanting in natural ability to help others 
spiritually; we have nothing to set before them. Unless we avail ourselves of the 
abundant resources of Christ through prayer, we will never have anything of spiritual 
worth to set before a starving world.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p24">It is not difficult to imagine that the man had an easy 
chair and a comfortable bed to offer the tired traveler. But furniture is not a 
substitute for food. The welcome at the door, the furnishing of the house, and the 
entertaining conversation, cannot satisfy the hunger of the human heart. It requires 
the bread of life obtained from God to save a famishing soul from death.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p25">Jesus encouraged us to avail ourselves of His resources 
when He said, “. . . He will rise and give him as many as he needeth.” We have nothing 
of ourselves to save a lost soul, but we have a faithful Friend, who will give us 
as much as we request in intercessory prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p26">Jesus would have us understand that our importunate praying 
can overcome our discouragements and difficulties. He disclosed this fact when 
He said, “. . . He from within shall answer and say, Trouble me not: the door is now 
shut, and my children are with me in bed; I cannot rise and give thee.” He is not 
saying that our heavenly Father is unwilling to grant our requests for others. The 
Master is teaching us not to cease praying when we encounter some opposing forces 
in life. There are times when it seems that our earnest requests have been denied. 
Let us keep in mind that our heavenly Father is willing to give the bread of life 
in answer to our intercessory petitions for others.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 9. The Three Essentials of Prayer" progress="61.41%" prev="xi" next="xiii" id="xii">
<h2 id="xii-p0.1">CHAPTER 9</h2>
<h3 id="xii-p0.2">THE THREE ESSENTIALS OF PRAYER</h3>

<p class="intro" id="xii-p1">“. . . <i>Every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him 
that knocketh it shall be opened.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="xii-p1.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p2">The plain teachings of Jesus accord us a valid reason to 
believe that every sincere prayer offered by His people shall be answered.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p3">Jesus stated the three essentials of prayer when He said, 
“Ask, seek, knock.” He disclosed these three essentials of prayer in His parable 
about the man asking his friend for three loaves. It is quite obvious that he was 
asking, seeking and knocking when he made his request for bread in the middle of 
the night.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p4">The Master’s words revealing the inherent principles of 
effectual praying confirm our faith, enlarge our understanding, and enable us to 
appropriate His certified promises. It is apparent that His promises relating to 
prayer are as vast in scope as the extent of His promises pertaining to salvation. 
It is written,</p>

<verse id="xii-p4.1">
<l class="t1" id="xii-p4.2">“<i>He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he 
not with him also freely give us all things.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rom. 8:32" id="xii-p4.3" parsed="|Rom|8|32|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.32">Rom. 8:32</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p5">This Scripture reveals the possibilities of prayer to be 
as great as the boundless measure of redemptive grace. The unsparing God places 
no limit on our praying because there is no limit placed on His giving. If we believe 
that Christ was sacrificed to save us to the uttermost, we must likewise believe 
that He is able to supply our needs to the uttermost.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p6">The lamentable fact is we have been exceedingly slow to 
comprehend the unlimited possibilities of prayer revealed in Christ’s plain words. 
When we fully understand His instructions about praying, and grasp the promises 
by faith, we will not find it difficult to pray the effectual fervent prayer of 
achieving faith. We certainly owe it to ourselves and to all men, to consider seriously 
the fundamental principles of prayer disclosed to His disciples in answer to their 
request, “. . . Lord teach us to pray . . .” The very essence of this request is in itself 
a prayer to know how to pray.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p7">It is necessary to consider Christ’s teachings regarding 
our daily bread in order to understand the three essentials of prayer. He has focused 
our attention on the requests for bread in His entire discourse on prayer. Our daily 
bread is contained in the first direct request revealed in the Lord’s prayer, “Give 
us day by day our daily bread.” The request for bread follows the prayer of worship. 
“. . . Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done . . .” The request for 
bread also precedes the prayer for pardon and preservation. Bread is obviously the 
central theme of the Lord’s prayer, according to the teachings of Jesus.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p8">Our Lord emphasizes the need of bread in the parable of 
the man seeking the three loaves at midnight, and concludes His discourse by arresting 
our attention to the son asking bread of his father.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p9">It is apparent that Christ’s teachings about asking for 
bread contain something much more important than our temporal needs in this life. 
He evidently intended to stress the fact that we needed spiritual food in order 
to live in time and in eternity. We recall that Jesus astonished His disciples when 
He said, “I am the bread of life.” When He uttered these words He made it clear 
that we cannot live without Him, for He is as essential to spiritual life as bread 
is essential to physical life. (See <scripRef passage="John 6:48-58" id="xii-p9.1" parsed="|John|6|48|6|58" osisRef="Bible:John.6.48-John.6.58">John 6:48-58</scripRef>.)</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p10">The three essentials of prayer are readily understood when 
applied to the Saviour, who is the living bread from heaven. When we sincerely ask 
for the Lord Jesus, we shall receive Him; when we earnestly seek Him, we shall find 
Him; and when we knock at His door, it shall be opened unto us.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p11">The three fundamental principles of prayer apply to the 
entire scope of life in this world, and in the world to come. I am thoroughly convinced 
that the redeemed family of God will ask, seek, and knock in prayer throughout all 
eternity. Their request will not be hindered by their infirmities of body and mind 
as they are in this world. We are daily aware of the fact that we know not what 
we should pray for as we ought. We will be able to make our requests known unto 
God in that holy place with a clear mind and a glorified body.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p12">It is quite evident that our Lord would have us understand 
this startling fact seeing that He made the request for bread the central theme 
of family life. It is certainly true that as long as we live in the Father’s house 
we must depend on Him to sustain us. There is no valid reason to believe that this 
relationship shall end when we enter heaven. There is nothing in the Master’s teachings 
to show us that we ever become self-sustaining in life, either in this world or 
in the world to come.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p13">I am fully persuaded that the fundamental principle of 
asking and giving will continue to all eternity. God stated this fundamental rule 
of His household when He said to the Son,</p>

<verse id="xii-p13.1">
<l class="t1" id="xii-p13.2">“<i>Ask of me, and I shall give thee</i> . . .” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 2:8" id="xii-p13.3" parsed="|Ps|2|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.2.8">Psa. 2:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xii-p14">This astonishing principle of asking and giving was clearly an integral part of 
the Saviour’s ministry on earth. We find the same basic principle revealed in the 
amazing fact that He ever lives to make intercession for us.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p15">The three essential principles of prayer are revealed in 
nature. Every living thing in creation must be fed. Every plant, insect, and living 
creature on earth must ask, seek, and knock in order to obtain food from nature. 
We accept this obvious fact without question.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p16">We have no reason to believe that eternal life in heaven 
will be sustained independent of our relationship to Christ. He supplies our needs 
in this world in answer to prayer, and He shall continue to supply our eternal requirements 
in answer to prayer. If this is the rule of the Father’s household on earth, it 
will continue to be the rule for ever.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 10. Asking and Receiving" progress="65.44%" prev="xii" next="xiv" id="xiii">
<h2 id="xiii-p0.1">CHAPTER 10</h2>
<h3 id="xiii-p0.2">ASKING AND RECEIVING</h3>
<p class="info" id="xiii-p1">“. . . Every one that asketh receiveth . . .” — <scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="xiii-p1.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p2">When our Lord uttered these immortal words He gave to every 
child of God the inalienable right to pray. He impressed His disciples with this 
fact by asking them some pertinent questions:</p>

<verse id="xiii-p2.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiii-p2.2">“<i>If a son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a 
stone? or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent? Or if he shall 
ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? If ye then, being evil, know how to give 
good gifts unto your children: how much more shall your heavenly Father give the 
Holy Spirit to them that ask him?</i>” — <scripRef passage="Luke 11:11-13" id="xiii-p2.3" parsed="|Luke|11|11|11|13" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.11-Luke.11.13">v. 11-13</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p3">If the father loves his son it would be utterly inconsistent 
with his nature to give his child a stone, or a snake, or a stinging scorpion instead 
of bread. The father’s answer to his son’s request will be granted according to 
the measure of his love for his child. It is the most natural thing in all the world 
for a father to listen to the requests of his family. When Jesus said, “. . . Any of 
you that is a father,” he compares a man’s love for his children to God’s love 
for His children. He asks us to look up from our earthly fathers, and calculate 
how much more the heavenly Father will be moved to give good gifts to His children. 
Jesus is teaching us to understand that as much as God’s goodness exceeds the goodness 
of mortal man, so much greater is our assurance that He will grant our childlike 
petitions.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p4">Every child of God from the youngest to the oldest has 
a right to ask the Father for the bread of life. Every child, irrespective of age, 
sex, or race, can come boldly to the throne of grace, and find grace to help in 
time of need. There are no underprivileged children in God’s family. The crippled, 
the weak, and the sick children have a right to ask the heavenly Father for the 
living bread from heaven.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p5">The Saviour would have us perceive the imperishable truth 
that, “. . . Every one that asketh receiveth . . .” It is utterly unthinkable that our 
loving Father would ignore our earnest petitions. He will not remain silent and 
unmoved when His own children are weeping before Him in earnest petitions.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p6">A missionary was telling about the sufferings endured while 
a prisoner during the war. He said that the crying of his starving family caused 
him to suffer more than all the cruel and barbarous treatment received at the hands 
of the savage and inhuman guards. When we understand how this godly man was moved 
by the constant crying of his famishing family, we can comprehend how our heavenly 
Father can be moved to answer the unceasing prayers of His family. It was not possible 
for the faithful missionary to grant the urgent requests of his children, but it 
is possible for our heavenly Father to grant the requests of His children.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p7">Jesus teaches us that prayer has a human side and a divine 
side. The human side is the asking, and the divine side is the giving. The two halves 
which make up the whole of prayer are the asking and the receiving. Our asking and 
the Father’s answering belong to each other. Our requests on earth and the Father’s 
answer in heaven are meant for each other. If we believe that the Father has made 
an ample provision for the needs of His children, then we must also believe that 
He will surely give them all good gifts according to the promise.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p8">Jesus teaches us to come to Him day by day to receive the 
bread of life to sustain us in this world. He wills day by day to do for us what 
we ask in simple faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p9">When the Master said, “. . . Every one that asketh receiveth. . . ,” 
He stressed the fact that we are not to rest without an answer to our petitions. 
He is saying that it is the Father’s will, and the rule of His house to grant the 
requests of His believing children.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p10">When no answer is received we are often disposed to say 
that it is not the will of God to give us the answer. We will find it much easier 
to yield to our own false reasoning about the answer to prayer than it is to shake 
off our lethargy and seek God until the answer is obtained. There are so many persons 
who rest content without the distinct experience of answered prayer. This distressing 
fact reveals the serious deterioration of Christian life in these last days. These 
unhappy souls pray daily, they ask many things, and devoutly hope that some of their 
prayers will be answered. They apparently do not know that it is the norm of spiritual 
life to receive definite answers to prayer. They obviously do not know that the 
heavenly Father wills day by day to do for us what we ask in faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p11">We must take the words of Jesus just as they were spoken. 
We must not allow human reasoning to weaken the force of His teachings about our 
asking and receiving. We owe it to ourselves to take sufficient time while praying, 
to listen to His voice, and believe the truth that “Every one that asketh receiveth.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p12">We should not make our many failures of the past the measure 
of our faith for the present. We must hold fast the assuring fact that the effectual 
fervent prayer of God’s obedient child availeth much.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p13">The son’s request for bread is based on his relationship 
to the father. It is by virtue of this relationship that the son has the inalienable 
right to expect his father to answer his requests. When Jesus speaks of the son 
asking bread of his father, He is speaking of an obedient son. The son that finds 
no pleasure in obedience to his father and presumes that he can still ask and receive 
what he desires will certainly be disappointed. A son who loves and honors his father 
will find it is the father’s good pleasure to answer his daily requests.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p14">Consistent living on the part of God’s people is the condition 
for obtaining the answer to prayer. God’s precepts requiring obedience in our living, 
and His promises relating to our praying are inseparable.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p15">We can certainly count on God’s fulfilling His promise 
to answer prayer when we obey His sovereign will in all things. We should take time 
to meditate on the tenderness and love the heavenly Father has for His obedient 
children.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p16">Much of our difficulty in praying is removed when we think 
on the happy relationship existing between an obedient child and a loving heavenly 
Father. When He sees His child with sincere purpose and steady will seeking diligently 
in everything to be and live as a child, then our prayers will prevail with Him 
as the prayer of an obedient child.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p17">It requires considerable time to comprehend fully the teachings 
of Jesus regarding the inherent principles of effectual praying. If God’s people 
will take sufficient time to meditate on the essentials of prevailing prayer, they 
will be rewarded richly for the hours spent in the school of Christ. When once we 
grasp the gracious truth contained in the words of Jesus, and take a firm hold on 
the promises relating to prayer, we will then realize the meaning of His words, 
“. . . Every one that asketh receiveth.” We firmly believe that the Master stated the 
truth when He said, “. . . Every one that asketh receiveth . . .” Nevertheless we are 
confronted frequently with the startling and disconcerting fact that we do not always 
receive definite answer to our prayers. We find it exceedingly difficult to reconcile 
these disturbing facts with the explicit statement of Jesus regarding the answer 
to our prayers.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p18">When we consider the Master’s teachings about prayer, we 
must not strive to make them conform to our wishful thinking regarding the answer 
to our prayers. It is possible for us to set our heart on obtaining something we 
greatly desire for our own personal gratification, and then express our keen disappointment 
because the request was not granted.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p19">The answer to our perplexing questions about prayer will 
be found when we study the Master’s words about the son asking for bread. We are 
fully aware that the son cannot live without bread; he must have it or perish. However, 
there are many things the son may ask which are not as important to life as food. 
He may ask his father for money, or fine clothing, or toys. The father may consider 
it wise to give his son these good gifts; and again he might deem it best for the 
son’s own good to withhold these things requested; but when the child asks for food 
it is a different matter of life, because food is a necessity.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p20">There are many good gifts which our heavenly Father may 
deem it wise to bestow upon us, such as good health, prosperity, and financial security. 
If He wills to withhold these things we must submit to His sovereign will without 
complaint. Perfect health, prosperity, and earthly goods are not essential to life 
in this world. Our relationship to God does not depend on these creature comforts. 
These things cannot impart to us the moral strength we need to cope with the trials 
incident to life in this evil world. It requires the “Bread of life” to give the 
spiritual strength to sustain us in these last days. We are fully assured that our 
Father will give us the living bread from heaven to keep us strong in faith, undaunted 
in courage, and invincible in hope.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p21">The grand climax of our Lord’s discourse on prayer was 
reached when He disclosed the Father’s promise to give the Holy Spirit to His praying 
children. He would have us understand that our urgent requests for the bread from 
heaven are answered by the Father’s gift of the Spirit.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p22">He is teaching us that the Spirit is given to the children 
of God for the express purpose of sustaining and satisfying life. Our incessant 
demands for spiritual food are supplied by the indwelling Spirit. Our daily prayer 
should be, “Lord, evermore give us this bread.” The answer from heaven is, “. . . Every 
one that asketh receiveth . . .”</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 11. Seeking and Finding" progress="72.22%" prev="xiii" next="xv" id="xiv">
<h2 id="xiv-p0.1">CHAPTER 11</h2>
<h3 id="xiv-p0.2">SEEKING AND FINDING</h3>

<p class="intro" id="xiv-p1">“. . . <i>He that seeketh findeth</i>.” — <scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="xiv-p1.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef></p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p2">When Jesus said, “He that seeketh findeth . . . ,” 
He disclosed the second fundamental principle of prevailing prayer. His immortal 
words assure us that we can make some important discoveries through prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p3">His brief statement presents the greatest challenge known 
to mortal man. His teachings about prayer are a direct challenge to our profession 
of faith. If we believe that Christ is the way, the truth, and the life, we must 
believe that some very important discoveries can be made regarding these essential 
facts about Him.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p4">It is astonishing what men will do when inspired and motivated 
by the hope of finding the things of earth they so ardently desire. They sail uncharted 
seas, endure the scorching heat of the desert, scale the ice-covered mountains, 
and brave the dangers of a trackless wilderness in hope of discovering the things 
they diligently seek.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p5">It does not require a chart, or compass, or costly equipment 
to find the things of God. We have no stormy seas to sail, no blistering sands to 
cross, no snow-clad mountains to scale, and no pathless wastes to encounter in our 
efforts to find the things we seek from God. We are not haunted day and night by 
the tormenting fears that we will not obtain the answer to our sincere petitions. 
We have not the slightest reason to doubt the validity of Christ’s statement, “. . . He 
that seeketh findeth . . .” Our faith to seek the things of Christ is based on His 
integrity and veracity.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p6">When Jesus said, “Seek, and ye shall find . . . ,” He was evidently 
speaking about finding the possessions of our heavenly Father. We are assured that 
His provision is as great as the manifold needs of His children. The weary can seek 
and find rest. The weak can seek and find strength. The sick can seek and find health. 
The Father wills to grant the various requests of His praying and trusting children.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p7">When Jesus revealed the Father’s promise to give the Holy 
Spirit in answer to prayer, He obviously intended to impress His trusting children 
with the fact that the Spirit would enable them to seek and find the treasures of 
truth. He later confirmed this remarkable fact regarding the ministry of the Spirit, 
saying,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p7.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p7.2">“. . . When he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth . . .” 
— <scripRef passage="John 16:13" id="xiv-p7.3" parsed="|John|16|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.16.13">John 16:13</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p8">We do not discover the things of God by mere chance; neither 
can we find them by a process of human reasoning. The things of God are revealed 
unto us by His Spirit. The Word declares,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p8.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p8.2">“. . . <i>Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of 
man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. But God hath revealed 
them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things 
of God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="1 Cor. 2:9, 10" id="xiv-p8.3" parsed="|1Cor|2|9|0|0;|1Cor|2|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.2.9 Bible:1Cor.2.10">1 Cor. 2:9, 10</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p9">Prayer is like the telescope that enables a man to discover 
remote stars, blazing suns and whirling worlds in outer space. We may think of prayer 
as a microscope which enables a man to look into the realm of small things.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p10">The Holy Spirit makes visible the invisible things of God. 
He enables us to pray so persistently that we can focus the light of Christ on the 
resources of God, and discover worlds, wealth, and wisdom unknown and unseen by 
the natural man. The inspired Apostle said,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p10.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p10.2">“. . .<i>We look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not 
seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen 
are eternal.</i>” — <scripRef passage="2 Cor. 4:18" id="xiv-p10.3" parsed="|2Cor|4|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.4.18">2 Cor. 4:18</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p11">We discover the eternal things of God in direct proportion 
to the measure of our seeking in prayer. The man who seeks diligently to know the 
things which God has prepared for them that love Him, will be rewarded by a greater 
measure of knowledge than the man who is casual and indifferent in his seeking.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p12">It is necessary to deny ourselves of many things in order 
to seek and find the possessions of the Father revealed in His Son. The Apostle 
disclosed this truth when he said,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p12.2">“. . .<i>What things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ. Yea doubtless, 
and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus 
my Lord</i> . . .” — <scripRef passage="Phil. 3: 7, 8" id="xiv-p12.3" parsed="|Phil|3|7|0|0;|Phil|3|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.7 Bible:Phil.3.8">Phil. 3: 7, 8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xiv-p13">It is impossible to obtain a more perfect knowledge of Christ until we count all 
things loss for Him. We must lay aside the things we count gain. To be aware of 
Christ in daily life is of greater value than all earthly knowledge to be obtained 
in this world. It is written,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p13.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p13.2">“. . . <i>Ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your 
heart.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Jer. 29:13" id="xiv-p13.3" parsed="|Jer|29|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jer.29.13">Jer. 29:13</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xiv-p14">We cannot comply with the conditions stated in this promise unless we divest ourselves 
of all cumbersome cares.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p15">When Jesus gave us the parable about the son asking daily 
bread of his father, He fully intended to impress us with several salient facts 
about prayer. The fact that the son seeks and obtains the things provided by his 
father is not the only truth contained in the parable. A son worthy of such a loving 
father would consider him to be more than a generous provider; he would rejoice 
because of his father’s presence with his family. The presence of the father means 
much to an innocent child in this passing world.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p16">Jesus would have us understand that our heavenly Father 
is present with His family in this world. We know that our Father has provided good 
things for us, but He means more to us than a generous Provider. The fact that He 
is present with us at all times, and in all places fills our hearts with joy unspeakable 
and full of glory.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p17">Philip expressed much in his brief prayer when he said 
to Jesus, “. . . Shew us the Father, and it sufficeth us.” When this faithful disciple 
made this request, he voiced the deepest longings of the human heart. We cannot 
be satisfied in this distressed earth without a clear revelation of our heavenly 
Father. Philip did not ask for the impossible when he made his importunate plea 
to Jesus. Perhaps he had heard Jesus say, “. . . He that seeketh findeth . . .” The Saviour 
answered Philip’s request when He said, “. . . He that hath seen me hath seen the Father . . .”</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p18">If the Father revealed Himself in His Beloved Son in that 
distant day, we can expect Him to reveal Himself in His Son in this day. Our need 
is as great as the need of the pleading disciple. When Jesus said, “. . . He that seeketh 
findeth . . .,” He had no intention of leaving us confused and in doubt concerning 
the things to be discovered through prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p19">The Master’s word affords us a valid reason to expect the 
Father to reveal Himself to us in His Son. This is obviously the truth He would 
have us see in the parable of the son asking bread. It is absolutely unthinkable 
that an intelligent child would not be aware that his father was present when he 
asked him for daily bread. It is likewise contrary to truth to suppose that the 
child’s father would be pleased to remain unknown and unseen by his family.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p20">God’s infallible Word reveals that He did manifest Himself 
to His people in the ages past. If the dateless past is the only time God has revealed 
Himself, then we in this dispensation of grace have no truth to substantiate our 
claims that Christ was raised from the dead, and showed Himself alive by many infallible 
proofs.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p21">We cannot persuade ourselves to believe that Christ has 
clothed Himself with perpetual silence, and cannot and will not reveal Himself to 
His people. If a seeking soul cannot be as fully aware of Christ’s presence as a 
child is aware of his father’s presence, then the Master’s words are utterly meaningless. 
When Jesus said, “. . . He that seeketh findeth . . . ,” He banished for ever our bewildering 
doubt and confusion of mind concerning the reality of the heavenly Father’s abiding 
presence with His happy family.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p22">If our minds fail to grasp the import of the Saviour’s 
teachings about prayer, we should wait patiently before Him in humble submission 
and quiet meditation until our minds are clear and our faith strong. The prayer 
of faith can obtain the substance of things hoped for, and make real to us the evidence 
of things not seen by the natural eye.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p23">It is not unusual to find reliable witnesses who will testify 
that Jesus has revealed Himself to them while they were devoutly seeking Him in 
prayer. These godly people are neither fanatics nor mystics. They consider the recurrent 
visitations of Jesus to be the norm of spiritual life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p24">During the peaceful hours of the early morning I was praying 
and waiting before the Saviour when He suddenly revealed Himself to me. I saw Him 
as clearly as anyone ever saw Him in the days of His flesh. I ceased to pray, and 
remained quiet and speechless in His Presence. The moments seemed too sacred for 
me to break the sweet silence by prayer. What could I have said to Him? Was He not 
the answer to all prayer?</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p25">I do not know how long He lingered with me on that memorable 
morning. I was not aware of the passing of time. To me, all time had ceased, and 
eternity had begun. No language can express my boundless joy and happy surprise 
when He stood before me. I shall never forget the beauty of His face and the glory 
of His garment. The glory radiating from His Person filled the room with a soft 
silent light. He spoke not a word to me. His attitude was as One who listens attentively 
when you speak. I realized as never before in my life that He wanted me to pray. 
My heart was immediately burdened to pray for a visitation of God. I humbled myself 
in His Presence and put my head between His feet and poured out my soul in the agony 
of intercessory prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p26">The vision of Jesus satisfied my heart and gave me perfect 
contentment of mind regarding His willingness to answer prayer. I realized that 
He was the end of all seeking and the answer to all problems of life. I bowed low 
before Him, and opened my inmost being to welcome Him as my Lord and Master. I devoutly 
worshipped Him in spirit and in truth. To this gladsome hour He is as real as the 
flesh of my body and the earth beneath my feet. I have never had one doubt regarding 
His presence.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p27">Perhaps some will ask if there is a scriptural basis for 
believing that the Saviour will reveal Himself to His seeking people. I was confronted 
with this question after the Lord manifested Himself to me. Could it be that the 
vision was nothing more than the result of my wishful thinking? Was I a hopeless 
victim of an overwrought imagination? Was I suffering from a serious mental disorder? 
Was it a fanciful dream? These were some of the questions confronting me after the 
Lord had appeared in answer to my prayer of faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p28">In my diligent search for truth, I recalled that the Saviour 
had said,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p28.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p28.2">“. . . <i>He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will 
manifest myself to him.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 14:21" id="xiv-p28.3" parsed="|John|14|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.21">John 14:21</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xiv-p29">The gracious words glowed with a new light, and disclosed a new meaning to my rejoicing 
soul. His assuring words were all I needed to confirm my faith and answer my perplexing 
questions. I found many promises in the Scriptures, but this one promise was sufficient 
to satisfy my heart and mind.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p30">Some of my friends firmly believe that I am sick. Certain 
others are greatly concerned about my mental condition. Perhaps some have devoutly 
prayed for my immediate healing. I am thankful for their earnest prayers.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p31">I have often wondered how some persons interpret the Saviour’s 
own promise to manifest Himself to them that love Him. I wonder if they believe 
that such an experience is possible in this present age. I am convinced that many 
do not believe that the Saviour’s promise extends to anyone except the chosen disciples. 
They evidently consider all reliable testimony as being fantastic and fanatical.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p32">If we allow ourselves to be hindered by the unbelief of 
this modern age we will surely fail to grasp the fact that frequent visitations 
of the Lord are to be expected in a normal Christian life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p33">When Jesus said, “. . . He that seeketh findeth . . . ,” He intended 
to impress us with the fact that an obedient child of God would seek to please Him 
in all things pertaining to life. This truth is obviously revealed in the parable 
of the son asking bread. Surely the son would seek to please his father. A son worthy 
of the heavenly Father would seek to please Him in matters of life. The obedient 
son would also realize that the father was pleased with him. The perfect example 
of this is revealed in the Son of God. The Father witnessed to His pleasure in His 
Son when He said,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p33.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p33.2">“. . .<i>This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Matt. 3:17" id="xiv-p33.3" parsed="|Matt|3|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3.17">Matt. 3:17</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xiv-p34">The Beloved Son witnessed to this truth when He said,</p>
<verse id="xiv-p34.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p34.2">“. . . <i>The Father hath not left me alone; for I do always those things that please 
him.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 8:29" id="xiv-p34.3" parsed="|John|8|29|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.8.29">John 8:29</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p35">We make the greatest discovery in life when we discover 
the secret of pleasing God. An obedient child of the Father that lives day by day 
with an awareness of His pleasure has found the pearl of great price.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p36">Our human frailties and infirmities of body and mind will 
often hinder us in performing always those things which please our heavenly Father, 
but there is nothing in the world that prevents us from being a pleasure to Him 
if we are willing to obey Him in all things relating to life. We can be a pleasure 
to our Father long before we are able to understand how to do the things which are 
well-pleasing in His sight. The favor of God rests constantly on the people who 
believe Him and diligently seek Him. It is written,</p>

<verse id="xiv-p36.1">
<l class="t1" id="xiv-p36.2">“. . . <i>Without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must 
believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Heb. 11:6" id="xiv-p36.3" parsed="|Heb|11|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.6">Heb. 11:6</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p37">When we obtain His approbation we have received the greatest 
reward known to mortal man. The earthly pleasures we leave behind when we come to 
the end of life’s journey are not important, but the eternal pleasures received 
at the end of the way are worth all it costs to obtain them.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 12. The Knocking That Obtains an Opening" progress="81.90%" prev="xiv" next="xvi" id="xv">
<h2 id="xv-p0.1">CHAPTER 12</h2>
<h3 id="xv-p0.2">THE KNOCKING THAT OBTAINS AN OPENING</h3>
<p class="intro" id="xv-p1">“. . . <i>To him that knocketh it shall be opened.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Luke 11:10" id="xv-p1.1" parsed="|Luke|11|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11.10">Luke 11:10</scripRef></p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p2">These words of the Master reveal 
the third fundamental principle of the effectual fervent prayer that availeth much.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p3">The Master disclosed the value of praying persistently 
in His discourse about the man asking three loaves at midnight. There is something 
much more encouraging in His teachings about prayer than we find in the words of 
the reluctant neighbor, who said, “. . . Trouble me not: the door is now shut . . .” Our 
Lord would have us understand that the goodness of our heavenly Father far exceeds 
the goodness of the sleepy man. The Master is teaching us that we can prevail in 
prayer in spite of the discouragements and difficulties confronting us in life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p4">The bread so desperately needed to satisfy the hunger of 
the weary wayfarer was on the other side of the closed door. Much depended on the 
importunate pleading and insistent knocking on the part of the man seeking bread. 
If he had been discouraged by his friend’s gruff words, “. . . Trouble me not . . . ,” 
he would have gone away defeated and empty handed. If he had believed that his drowsy 
friend had spoken his final word when he said, “. . . The door is now shut . . . ,” he 
would have departed with a deep sense of frustration and failure.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p5">Our heavenly Father will never rebuff his praying children, 
saying, “. . . The door is now shut . . .” Jesus is teaching us to pray with unwavering 
faith and firm confidence. He inspired us with dauntless courage to pray persistently 
when He said, “. . . To him that knocketh it shall be opened.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p6">The Saviour’s heartening words imply that a vast realm 
of truth will be opened unto us when we knock at the door of the Father’s house. 
It will enhance our understanding concerning the possibilities of prayer if we will 
devote some time to study what the Saviour has said about the open door set before 
His people.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p7">Jesus identified Himself as being the door when He said,</p>

<verse id="xv-p7.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p7.2">“<i>I am the door: by me if any man will enter in, he shall be saved, and shall 
go in and out, and find pasture.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 10:9" id="xv-p7.3" parsed="|John|10|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.10.9">John 10:9</scripRef></l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p8">His astonishing words enable us to comprehend more completely 
the truth about prevailing prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p9">Christ is the door. He is the only entrance to God, and 
the only entrance to salvation. When we put Him in the promise regarding our persistent 
knocking in prayer we can perceive the truth. We can interpret the assuring promise 
as saying, “To him that knocketh, Christ, the Door, shall be opened.” In other words, 
Christ will open Himself to us in answer to prayer. This is a blessed truth to contemplate. 
Christ opens His loving heart to His praying people. He opens His eternal hope to 
His praying people. He opens His enduring holiness to His praying people. He opens 
His invincible strength to His praying people. In the light of this Divine revelation, 
one is constrained to say,</p>

<verse id="xv-p9.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p9.2">"<i>O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable 
are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rom. 11:33" id="xv-p9.3" parsed="|Rom|11|33|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.33">Rom. 11:33</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p10">It has pleased the Lord to open His immutable purpose to 
His faithful saints and enable them to see His ultimate triumph over sin and death. 
He opens the gates of eternal life, the greatness of enduring love, and the glory 
of His likeness to His praying family. Through prayer we can enter into the joys 
of an uttermost salvation and delight ourselves in the abundance of peace. Through 
prayer we can escape the snares of Satan, and elude the evil purposes of the foe.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p11">Christ is both an entrance and an exit. We can pray our 
way into the blessed realities of spiritual life, and pray our way out of the bewildering 
problems of life. Our Lord revealed these gracious facts to us when He said, “. . . To 
him that knocketh it shall be opened.”</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p12">When Jesus opens Himself to His praying people He opens 
eternity to them, for He fills eternity with Himself and contains eternity in Himself. 
He is the First Cause and the Final Conclusion of everything in time and in eternity. 
Our concept of Christ is enlarged when He opens to us. The Psalmist was fully aware 
of this marvelous truth when he said,</p>

<verse id="xv-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p12.2">“. . . <i>Thou hast set my feet in a large room.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 31:8" id="xv-p12.3" parsed="|Ps|31|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.31.8">Psa. 31:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xv-p13">Christ wills to open His Word to us in answer to prayer. He stated this fact when 
He said,</p>
<verse id="xv-p13.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p13.2">“<i>I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me; and they have received 
them, and have known surely that I came out from thee, and they have believed that 
thou didst send me.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 17:8" id="xv-p13.3" parsed="|John|17|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.17.8">John 17:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p14">Perhaps my personal testimony will encourage others to 
pray that Christ will reveal His words to them. During the quiet hour of the morning 
I was asking the Saviour to enable me to understand His Word. For many years I had 
made it my practice to study the Scriptures, but I was aware that the Scriptures 
contained a depth of meaning that I had not perceived. I sincerely desired to understand 
the Word of God. I realized my need of an enlarged concept of the plan of salvation. 
It was the one prayer of my heart to know more about God’s invincible Word in order 
to preach the message of life to a perishing world. I was convinced that the Lord 
had heard my sincere prayer. Not many days after the season of prayer, He began 
to unfold His Word of truth to my heart and mind with a depth of meaning I had never 
known.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p15">I was teaching in Asbury College when the Lord began to 
reveal His Word to me. I listened to my own lecture with great interest. I said 
things about the Saviour that had not been prepared in my notes for the class. The 
light of Divine revelation flooding my soul was not the result of my reasoning. 
The truth about redemption did not come from my own mind; it was coming from the 
mind of Christ. My soul was enjoying great peace, and His living words were like 
fire in my spirit. I was constrained to tell others of the Saviour’s love for lost 
humanity. To this happy hour His truth abides within my heart and mind. His Spirit 
continues to reveal the Words of Christ to me day by day. I can say with the Psalmist,</p>

<verse id="xv-p15.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p15.2">“<i>As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O 
God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 42:1" id="xv-p15.3" parsed="|Ps|42|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.42.1">Psa. 42:1</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p16">God’s imperishable truth will glow with a new light when 
we knock at His door in prayer. If we have failed to grasp the significance of Christ’s 
plain teachings about prayer when He said, “. . . To him that knocketh it shall be 
opened,” we should ask Him to open Himself to us. There is nothing more simple and 
understandable in life than knocking at a door. Even a little child can knock at 
a door.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p17">Christ is the Door between the spiritual realm and the 
physical realm. When we are born of the Spirit we enter a spiritual kingdom, which 
is a spiritual realm. We live, move, and have our being in a spiritual realm with 
Christ. We are in the world physically, but we are not of the world spiritually. 
God’s Word declares that a righteous person is like a tree. A tree lives in two 
realms of nature; it lives in the earth, and it lives above the earth. Paul recognized 
this amazing fact when he said,</p>

<verse id="xv-p17.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p17.2">“<i>Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Col. 3:2" id="xv-p17.3" parsed="|Col|3|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.3.2">Col. 3:2</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p18">Jesus revealed an amazing truth when He said, “I am the 
door . . .” We can enter into His presence and pray before Him in the same simple manner 
that we can go into another room through an open door. When we discover this amazing 
truth, we find it possible to take others into</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p19">His presence and talk with Him about their needs. It has 
been my pleasure to take others into the presence of Jesus many times. I saw the 
truth of these things when I entered into a covenant of prayer with Christ. I do 
not find it difficult to enter into His presence at anytime.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p20">When Jesus said, “. . . To him that knocketh it shall be opened,” 
He meant to show us that it is possible for His praying people to enter the heavenly 
place where He is seated on the mediatorial throne, and present their petitions 
to Him. This fact is substantiated by Paul, who said,</p>

<verse id="xv-p20.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p20.2">“. . .<i>Seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand 
of God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Col. 3:1" id="xv-p20.3" parsed="|Col|3|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.3.1">Col. 3:1</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>
<p class="normal" id="xv-p21">The inspired prophet evidently perceived this wonderful 
truth concerning Christ when he said,</p>

<verse id="xv-p21.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p21.2">“. . . <i>He shall be for a glorious throne to his Father’s house.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Isa. 22:23" id="xv-p21.3" parsed="|Isa|22|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.22.23">Isa. 22:23</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p22">God’s children have a glorious throne in the Father’s house. 
They have a perfect right to come boldly to the glorious throne of grace and make 
their requests known unto their heavenly Father.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p23">Our Lord likewise disclosed a marvelous truth about the 
door when He said, “. . . And shall go in and out, and find pasture.” It is apparent 
that a saved man can go from one realm to another and find spiritual food. Jesus 
has made an ample provision to sustain His people in both the physical realm and 
the spiritual realm. He cares for His people in the natural world and in the spiritual 
world. The Saviour would have us understand that the Good Shepherd will care for 
His flock while they are out in the field, even as He cares for them when they are 
in the fold. In other words, the Saviour will preserve us while we work and witness 
for Him in the world, like He preserves us when we are resting safely in the fold 
of His love. It is written,</p>

<verse id="xv-p23.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p23.2">“<i>The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in from this time forth, 
and even for evermore.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 121:8" id="xv-p23.3" parsed="|Ps|121|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.121.8">Psa. 121:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>
<p class="normal" id="xv-p24">The changeless Christ has spoken with absolute authority 
concerning the open door.</p>

<verse id="xv-p24.1">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p24.2">“. . . <i>Behold, I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it: for 
thou hast a little strength, and hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rev. 3:8" id="xv-p24.3" parsed="|Rev|3|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.8">Rev. 3:8</scripRef></l>
</verse>
<verse id="xv-p24.4">
<l class="t1" id="xv-p24.5">“. . . <i>To him that knocketh it shall be opened.</i>” </l>
</verse>
<p class="normal" id="xv-p25">It shall remain open to all eternity.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 13. The Immortal Prayers of the Saints" progress="88.63%" prev="xv" next="xvii" id="xvi">
<h2 id="xvi-p0.1">CHAPTER 13</h2>
<h3 id="xvi-p0.2">THE IMMORTAL PRAYERS OF THE SAINTS</h3>


<p class="intro" id="xvi-p1">“. . . <i>Golden vials full of odours, which are the prayers of saints.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rev. 5:8" id="xvi-p1.1" parsed="|Rev|5|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.5.8">Rev. 5:8</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p2">Christ frequently chooses some unusual place on earth to 
reveal Himself to mankind. It is obviously consistent with His Divine Nature and 
eternal purpose in redemption to disclose Himself in some unusual place and in some 
unexpected manner.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p3">He revealed Himself to Moses in a burning bush in a desert. 
He revealed Himself to be the long expected Messiah to a woman of unsavory reputation 
at Jacob’s well. He revealed a measure of His effulgent glory to three chosen disciples 
on a high mountain. He revealed Himself and His purpose to give the Gentiles the 
Gospel to Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p4">Perhaps the most amazing revelation ever given to mortal 
man was given to John when the Saviour revealed Himself clothed in His majesty and 
might standing in the midst of the seven churches. John said,</p>

<verse id="xvi-p4.1">
<l class="t1" id="xvi-p4.2">“. . . <i>When I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead</i>. . . .” — <scripRef passage="Rev. 1: 17" id="xvi-p4.3" parsed="|Rev|1|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.17">Rev. 1: 17</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="noindent" id="xvi-p5">Christ chose to reveal Himself to John while in exile on the lonely isle of Patmos. 
This holy disciple was banished to this wave-washed and wind-swept pile of shattered 
stones and shifting sands,</p>

<verse id="xvi-p5.1">
<l id="xvi-p5.2">“. . . <i>For the word of God, and for the testimony of Jesus Christ.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rev. 1:9" id="xvi-p5.3" parsed="|Rev|1|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.9">Rev. 1:9</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p6">The Saviour selected this faithful man to be the human channel through which His 
sublime truth could be given to His trusting saints. It pleased the blessed Lord 
to reveal the sublime truth about prayer in John’s picturesque language, “. . . Golden 
vials full of odours . . .”</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p7">Our Lord would evidently have us understand that prayer 
is a part of worship. It is like the odours of sweet incense ascending upward to 
God. The heavenly Father is pleased with our fervent prayers when we fill them with 
the fragrance of our sincere worship.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p8">The Saviour would have us understand that our prayers are 
kept in golden vials in His Holy Place in heaven like the golden censer, and the 
ark of the covenant overlaid round about with gold, were kept in the most Holy Place 
in the temple.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p9">Perhaps God’s praying people have not fully grasped the 
fact that all sincere prayers are immortal, and the Lord preserves these prayers 
like a sweet incense kept in golden vials.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p10">We surely are aware that Christ’s prayers are living petitions 
preserved for us in His plan of eternal salvation. He breathed the power of His 
endless life into His prayers. His prayers are immortal because He is immortal. 
His prayers will be answered because He is the answer to all prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p11">The prayers recorded in the Holy Scriptures are an immortal 
part of the Divine plan of salvation. These petitions were made immortal by the 
power of the indwelling Holy Spirit. The Spirit enables God’s people to pray with 
yearnings which cannot be uttered.</p>

<verse id="xvi-p11.1">
<l class="t1" id="xvi-p11.2">“<i>And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because 
he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Rom. 8:27" id="xvi-p11.3" parsed="|Rom|8|27|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.27">Rom. 8:27</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p12">It is clearly disclosed in this remarkable Scripture that 
every prayer empowered by the indwelling Spirit becomes an integral and immortal 
part of the entire economy of God as disclosed in the plan of redemption.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p13">I am thoroughly convinced that every prayer offered according 
to the will of God shall be answered either in our lifetime on earth, or after we 
have entered our heavenly home. However, I cannot discover anything revealed in 
the Word of God to warrant anyone in believing that the translated saints can pray 
for persons living on the earth. Praying to the translated saints, and asking them 
to pray for us, is a modified form of idolatry. Jesus Christ is the only mediator 
between God and man. All prayers must be offered to Him, and in His Name only.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p14">When I affirm that every prayer offered in the Name of 
Jesus shall be answered, I am not saying that God will overrule the human will in 
order to answer our prayers. He cannot and will not save any man against his will, 
but He will convict a man of sin against his will.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p15">Perhaps an incident will disclose what I mean when I speak 
of an immortal prayer. One night during a camp meeting, a man came to the altar 
weeping with deep conviction for sin. After a season of earnest prayer, he was converted 
and gave a glowing testimony. His faithful father had preached for many years and 
had prayed often during those years for his unsaved son. He never lived to see his 
son saved, but on this particular night in the camp meeting, the loving Lord answered 
prayer and saved this erring son of the preacher.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p16">It helps me to imagine that the Saviour called His sainted 
servant and said, “My child, I have many of your prayers in golden vials. They are 
like sweet odours poured out before Me. I have the prayers you offered for your 
erring son during your lifetime on earth. I am now ready to answer your prayers 
during the camp meeting where you preached My Gospel many years ago. My child, I 
have just now granted your son a pardon in answer to your prayers and prayers of 
My people.” It encourages my heart to believe that God will answer every prayer.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p17">While praying during the quiet hours of the morning in 
a hotel room some years ago, I was burdened to pray for a woman slowly dying with 
a cancer of the throat. She had been a successful missionary for many years and 
had returned home from the field broken in health, bitter and resentful in spirit. 
I knew her saintly mother during her lifetime, and I knew how she had prayed for 
her daughter.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p18">While praying for this dying missionary, the Lord said 
to me, “I am ready and willing to answer a mother’s prayer, and give her suffering 
daughter peace of heart and mind.” I was so sure that the Lord had spoken to me 
about this dying woman, and about His willingness to answer her mother’s prayers, 
that I wrote a letter urging certain women to go and pray with this suffering missionary. 
She found peace and comfort of heart and mind, and went home within a few weeks 
to be with her faithful Saviour and her rejoicing mother.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p19">Many of the Lord’s redeemed children will live and die 
without receiving the answers to many of their sincere prayers. When we live by 
faith and die in the faith, we can be assured that a Just and Holy God will not 
forget His certified promises regarding His willingness to answer the prayers offered 
in the Name of Jesus.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p20">The “. . . golden vials full of odours, which are the prayers 
of the saints,” shall be poured out before the mediatorial throne of Jesus some 
glorious day. When that gladsome hour shall arrive on the wings of time, we shall 
see the triumph of the tears we have shed in the hours of agonizing prayer. We shall 
see the Father glorified in the Son.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p21">We are living in a passing world filled with fears and 
doubts; but we can live in this transient world and not be filled with 
its fears and doubts regarding the answer to our prayers. The inspired Psalmist 
said,</p>

<verse id="xvi-p21.1">
<l id="xvi-p21.2">“<i>Trust in him at all times; ye people, pour out your heart before him: God is 
a refuge for us.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 62:8" id="xvi-p21.3" parsed="|Ps|62|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.62.8">Psa. 62:8</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p22">God’s certified promises relating to prayer give us the 
inalienable right to say,</p>

<verse id="xvi-p22.1">
<l class="t1" id="xvi-p22.2">“<i>Hear my cry, O God; attend unto my prayer. From the end of the earth will I 
cry unto thee, when my heart is overwhelmed: lead me to the rock that is higher 
than I.</i>” — <scripRef passage="Psa. 61:1, 2" id="xvi-p22.3" parsed="|Ps|61|1|0|0;|Ps|61|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.61.1 Bible:Ps.61.2">Psa. 61:1, 2</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p23">The Scriptures encourage us to pray incessantly and importunately 
knowing within ourselves that God will answer our petitions in His own time, and 
according to His own will. Let us offer up prayers with strong crying and tears 
unto Him that is able to save to the uttermost. Let us pray without ceasing until 
the hour comes for our immortal prayer to be poured out like sweet incense poured 
out of golden vials.</p>

</div1>

<div1 title="Chapter 14. Christ Pleads His Will" progress="93.99%" prev="xvi" next="xviii" id="xvii">
<h2 id="xvii-p0.1">CHAPTER 14</h2>
<h3 id="xvii-p0.2">CHRIST PLEADS HIS WILL</h3>
<p class="intro" id="xvii-p1">“<i>Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with 
me where I am</i> . . .” — <scripRef passage="John 17:24" id="xvii-p1.1" parsed="|John|17|24|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.17.24">John 17:24</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p2">Jesus presented the precious legacy 
of His prayer when He offered His intercessory prayer preserved for us by John. 
The Lord let His disciples have the pleasure of knowing what His intercession for 
them in heaven as their High Priest was like. The disciples had heard the Saviour 
pray for them many times, but they had never heard Him pray as He did at this particular 
time. They must have been deeply impressed by the simplicity of His approach to 
the Father. They heard Him pray with the implicit confidence of the Beloved Son, 
Who is co-equal and eternal with the Father. They must have realized that Christ 
breathed into His intercessory prayer the efficacy and power of His endless life.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p3">Jesus presented the priceless legacy of His prayer to the 
Father when He said, “Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be 
with me where I am; that they may behold my glory, which thou gavest me: for thou 
lovedst me before the foundation of the world.” These gracious words of Jesus reveal 
His final will regarding the blessed estate of the redeemed. His inalienable right 
to plead His will before the Father is based on His finished work in the world. 
He said,</p>

<verse id="xvii-p3.1">
<l class="t1" id="xvii-p3.2">“<i>I have glorified thee on the earth: I have finished the work which thou gavest 
me to do.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 17:4" id="xvii-p3.3" parsed="|John|17|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.17.4">v. 4</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p4">Jesus made it clear that His intercessory prayer is an 
integral part of His redemptive work on the cross. His finished work and His final 
will are one in the Divine plan of salvation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p5">It has pleased the Saviour to disclose the final fulfillment 
of all He has willed and devised for His purchased people. The pleasing prospect 
of being with Him where He is shall be fulfilled to the glory of the Father and 
to the everlasting admiration and joyful acclamation of His adoring saints.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p6">It was difficult for the disciples to understand the Saviour’s 
avowed purpose to go away. Their minds were sorely perplexed and their hearts troubled 
by the disturbing fact of His sufferings and death. They thought that He was leaving 
them alone to serve and suffer in a world hostile toward all they believed and preached. 
Perhaps they had almost reached the point of accepting final defeat when Jesus revived 
their faltering courage, saying,</p>

<verse id="xvii-p6.1">
<l class="t1" id="xvii-p6.2">“<i>Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my 
Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go 
to prepare a place for you.</i>” — <scripRef passage="John 14:1, 2" id="xvii-p6.3" parsed="|John|14|1|0|0;|John|14|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.1 Bible:John.14.2">John 14:1, 2</scripRef>.</l>
</verse>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p7">Let us emphasize His gracious words, “. . . a place for you.” 
Our Lord revealed the purpose of His departure when He uttered these immortal words. 
He lifted the veil between time and eternity to establish the faith of His troubled 
people. He enabled His ransomed saints to see the heavenly home of the soul with 
the eyes of their hearts. He would have His people rest their faith on His comforting 
words, “In my Father’s house are many mansions . . .”</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p8">There will be no homeless children in the family of God. 
All shall dwell in stately mansions throughout the endless day. This unfriendly 
world has no permanent abiding place for the children of God. They were born in 
this world, and many shall be buried in this world, but this passing world is not 
their home. They have no continuing city on the earth. God’s people are citizens 
of the celestial City, the heavenly Jerusalem, which John saw coming down from heaven, 
prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p9">Perhaps we are disposed to think of the eternal pleasure 
and ineffable joys to be obtained in the place prepared for His people. We try to 
visualize the beauty of the City whose Builder and Maker is God. We are inclined 
to wonder about the skill of the Infinite Artist who has blended the seven prismatic 
colors of white light to enhance the resplendent glory of the holy habitation of 
the redeemed.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p10">While meditating on the blessed hope of heaven let us not 
overlook the fact that our expectations are based on the finished work of Christ. 
Jesus said to the Father, “I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do.” 
He made no mention of the price paid in blood and tears to prepare the place where 
we could be with Him to all eternity. He prays like One returning home after having 
completed an assigned task.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p11">His vicarious sufferings on the middle cross provided the 
necessary fitness of moral character for us to share eternal bliss with Him in the 
Father’s house. His intercessory prayer assures us that we can be sanctified through 
the truth. It is His will to cleanse us by His blood and present us holy and unblamable 
and unreproved in His sight. (<scripRef passage="Colossians 1:22" id="xvii-p11.1" parsed="|Col|1|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.22">Colossians 1:22</scripRef>.)</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p12">We have every reason to believe that we can avail ourselves 
of the blessed benefits of His finished work, and come to the end of life’s journey 
and receive a grand welcome into the City of God. His finished work and final will 
are the sure foundation on which we rest our hope to be with Him where He is, and 
to behold His glory.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p13">Jesus possessed a peculiar joy in achieving His Father’s 
purpose in redemption. He had a peculiar pleasure in providing a place in the Father’s 
house for His trusting people. His joy in bringing many sons unto glory enabled 
Him to triumph over His physical sufferings and anguish of soul.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p14">The merciless mockery of the multitude, the scorning sneers 
of the scribes, and the reproaches of the riotous rabble could not turn Him from 
His fixed purpose to finish His work according to the will of the Father. The stripes, 
spittle, blood, and bruises could not defeat Him. The insults and indignities heaped 
upon Him could not overwhelm His fervent love for His homeless saints. Being numbered 
with the transgressors, He was crucified on a lonely hill called Calvary. He suffered, 
the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p15">He was despised by foes, derided by fanatics, and deserted 
by friends, but He triumphed over sin and death, and returned to the right hand 
of the majesty on High, and ever lives to make intercession for His saints.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p16">It would be utterly impossible to imagine the overwhelming 
despair and dreadful disappointment that would sweep over the souls of the redeemed 
if Christ’s prayer should not be answered. The black raven of despair would croak 
the dirge of eternal death on the graves of the godly. The living sons of God would 
lift up their voices in unutterable lament and bewail the day they heard the hope 
of the Gospel.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p17">We have no fears and doubts regarding the final triumph 
of Christ’s intercessory prayer. He has presented His petition as a legacy to be 
shared by His trusting people. His last will and testament has been signed by His 
nail-scarred hand and sealed by the Holy Spirit. Every word uttered in His immortal 
intercession shall be answered in full.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p18">The voice of His supplication has been heard in high heaven, 
and the language of His weeping has been interpreted before the mercy seat of pure 
gold. His tears shall triumph and His petition shall be granted.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p19">It is almost unbelievable that our Lord can find pleasure 
in holy fellowship with His ransomed people to all eternity. His prayer shows us 
that it is His will to dwell with His people in the sacred bond of love throughout 
all ages, world without end.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p20">The greatest pleasure to be enjoyed in heaven will be the 
unspeakable pleasure of being with the Saviour for evermore. The glory of His presence 
shall make glad the City of God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p21">We would find no pleasure in beholding the beauty of the 
Father’s house of many mansions if Christ were not present to fill it with the light 
of His countenance. The brightness of His glory, and beauty of His Person shall 
enhance the happiness of the redeemed. The river of life, the fruitful trees, and 
the anthems of angels enhance the joys of the habitation of the holy people, but 
these blessed realities would fail to satisfy the citizens of the land of endless 
day unless the glorified Son were present to receive their eternal praise.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p22">Let us continue to pray that our Lord will count us worthy 
to receive the legacy of His intercessory prayer presented to the Father. Let us 
not fail to obtain the spiritual fitness provided for us in His finished work. We 
must ever be mindful of the fact that without holiness no man shall see the Lord.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvii-p23">Let us take comfort in the Saviour’s immortal prayer, “Father, 
I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am; that they 
may behold my glory, which thou gavest me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation 
of the world.”</p>

</div1>


<div1 title="Indexes" progress="99.96%" prev="xvii" next="xviii.i" id="xviii">
<h1 id="xviii-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

<div2 title="Index of Scripture References" progress="99.97%" prev="xviii" next="toc" id="xviii.i">
  <h2 id="xviii.i-p0.1">Index of Scripture References</h2>
  <insertIndex type="scripRef" id="xviii.i-p0.2" />



<div class="Index">
<p class="bbook">Psalms</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p11.4">2:1-3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xii-p13.3">2:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#iv-p12.3">5:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p12.3">16:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p12.3">31:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p15.3">32:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ix-p13.3">42:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p15.3">42:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ix-p13.3">42:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p15.1">46:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p17.3">55:22</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p22.3">61:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p22.3">61:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p21.3">62:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ix-p12.3">63:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p16.3">118:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p23.3">121:8</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Proverbs</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p7.3">4:23</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Isaiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p21.3">22:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p16.3">26:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p8.3">32:17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p8.3">59:19</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Jeremiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p13.3">29:13</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Matthew</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p33.3">3:17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vii-p10.3">25:15</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Mark</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#iv-p14.3">1:35</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p10.1">11:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#viii-p1.1">11:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p12.1">11:24</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ix-p1.1">11:24</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Luke</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#vii-p11.3">6:45</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p16.1">11:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p1.1">11:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p16.1">11:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p1.1">11:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p18.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p20.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p22.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p24.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xii-p1.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiii-p1.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p1.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p1.1">11:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiii-p2.3">11:11-13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p5.3">12:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#viii-p4.1">17:5</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">John</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xii-p9.1">6:48-58</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p34.3">8:29</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p7.3">10:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvii-p6.3">14:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvii-p6.3">14:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vii-p12.3">14:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p8.1">14:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vii-p1.1">14:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p28.3">14:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p3.3">14:27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vii-p4.3">15:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p15.3">15:26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p15.3">15:27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p7.3">16:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p11.3">16:33</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvii-p3.3">17:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p13.3">17:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p28.1">17:24</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvii-p1.1">17:24</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Acts</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p9.1">3:19</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#viii-p19.3">3:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#viii-p19.3">3:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p25.1">4:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p11.3">4:25</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p19.3">4:27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p19.3">4:28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p23.3">4:29</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p33.3">4:30</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p14.1">4:31</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p1.1">4:31</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p32.3">4:33</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Romans</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p11.3">8:27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#viii-p13.3">8:31</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xii-p4.3">8:32</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p9.3">11:33</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Corinthians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p8.3">2:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p8.3">2:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#viii-p20.3">15:24-26</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Corinthians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p22.3">3:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p10.3">4:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ix-p15.3">5:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p6.3">6:16</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Philippians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#vii-p13.3">2:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p12.3">3:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p12.3">3:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p8.3">4:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p2.1">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p4.1">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p6.1">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#iv-p1.1">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p1.1">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p1.1">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p6.1">4:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p1.1">4:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p9.3">4:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p2.3">4:19</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Colossians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p4.1">1:9-17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvii-p11.1">1:22</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p20.3">3:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p17.3">3:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p5.3">4:12</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Thessalonians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xi-p14.3">1:8</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Hebrews</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#x-p21.3">1:10-12</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xiv-p36.3">11:6</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">James</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#i-p1.1">5:16</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Peter</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#vi-p5.3">2:21-23</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 John</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p10.3">5:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#v-p10.3">5:15</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Revelation</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p5.3">1:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p4.3">1:17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xv-p24.3">3:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#ii-p26.1">5:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="#xvi-p1.1">5:8</a> </p>
</div>




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