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  <description>Why Pray? In his book, <i>The Weapon of 
Prayer</i>, Edward Bounds states: "The life of the individual 
believer, his personal salvation, and personal Christian 
graces have their being, bloom, and fruitage in prayer." 
As a chaplain in the Confederate States Army during the 
Civil War, Bounds initiated weekly prayer sessions to 
strengthen the spiritual state of his local area. His 
wisdom has impacted Christ-seekers for decades, and his 
words are as powerful now as they were in the 1800's. 
Bounds reminds us that throughout Biblical history, many 
of God's greatest movements were incited by the prayers of God's people. 
According to Bounds, prayer must be a priority. Other Christian duties, 
such as sacred works, communion, and church activities, cannot and 
should not take the place of prayer. To eliminate prayer from our daily 
lives is to abandon communication with God. It is through prayer that we 
have the opportunity to share our deepest sorrows, joys, and desires 
with the only one who can truly comfort us. To remind readers that God's 
presence steadfastly endures, Bounds concludes his piece by providing 
modern examples of the power of prayer.<br /><br />Emmalon Davis<br />CCEL 
Staff 
Writer 
</description>
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  <DC>
    <DC.Title>The Weapon of Prayer</DC.Title>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">E. M. Bounds</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Bounds, Edward M. (1835-1913)</DC.Creator>
     
    <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
    <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">BV210.B64 1991</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>
    <DC.Contributor sub="Digitizer" />
    <DC.Date sub="Created">2004-00-15</DC.Date>
    <DC.Type>Text.Monograph</DC.Type>
    <DC.Format scheme="IMT">text/html</DC.Format>
    <DC.Identifier scheme="URL">/ccel/bounds/weapon.html</DC.Identifier>
    <DC.Identifier scheme="ISBN" />
    <DC.Source />
    <DC.Source scheme="URL">www.wordsearchbible.com</DC.Source>
    <DC.Language scheme="ISO639-3">eng</DC.Language>
    <DC.Rights>Public Domain</DC.Rights>
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<div1 title="I. PRAYER ESSENTIAL TO GOD" progress="0.31%" prev="toc" next="ii" id="i">
<h1 id="i-p0.1">THE WEAPON OF PRAYER</h1>
<h2 id="i-p0.2">I. PRAYER ESSENTIAL TO GOD</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="i-p1"><i>“Then
shalt thou call, and the Lord shall answer; thou shalt cry, and he shall say,
Here I am. <span style="font-style:normal" id="i-p1.1">14th verse:</span> Then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will
cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the
heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i-p1.2"><scripRef passage="Isaiah 58:9" id="i-p1.3" parsed="|Isa|58|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.58.9">Isaiah 58:9</scripRef>.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="i-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i-p2.1">It</span> must never be forgotten that Almighty
God rules this world. He is not an absentee God. His hand is ever on the
throttle of human affairs. He is everywhere present in the concerns of time.
“His eyes behold, his eyelids try the children of men.” He rules the world just
as He rules the Church by prayer. This lesson needs to be emphasized, iterated
and reiterated in the ears of men of modern times and brought to bear with
cumulative force on the consciences of this generation whose eyes have no
vision for the eternal things, whose ears are deaf toward God.</p>
<p id="i-p3">Nothing
is more important to God than prayer in dealing with mankind. But it is
likewise all-important to man to pray. Failure to pray is failure along the
whole line of life. It is failure of duty, service, and spiritual progress. God
must help man by prayer. He who does not pray, therefore, robs himself of God’s
help and places God where He cannot help man. Man must pray to God if love for
God is to exist. Faith and hope, and patience and all the strong, beautiful,
vital forces of piety are withered and dead in a prayerless life. The life of
the individual believer, his personal salvation, and personal Christian graces
have their being, bloom and fruitage in prayer.</p>
<p id="i-p4">All
this and much more can be said as to the necessity of prayer to the being, and
culture of piety in the individual. But prayer has a larger sphere, a more
obligated duty, a loftier inspiration. Prayer concerns God, whose purposes and
plans are conditioned on prayer. His will and His glory are bound up in
praying. The days of God’s splendour and renown have always been the great days
of prayer. God’s great movements in this world have been conditioned on,
continued and fashioned by prayer. God has put Himself in these great movements
just as men have prayed. Present, prevailing, conspicuous and mastering prayer
has always brought God to be present. The real and obvious test of a genuine
work of God is the prevalence of the spirit of prayer. God’s mightiest forces
surcharge and impregnate a movement when prayer’s mightiest forces are there.</p>
<p id="i-p5">God’s
movement to bring Israel
from Egyptian bondage had its inception in prayer. Thus early did God and the
human race put the fact of prayer as one of the granite forces upon which His
world movements were to be based.</p>
<p id="i-p6">Hannah’s
petition for a son began a great prayer movement for God in Israel.
Praying women, whose prayers like those of Hannah, can give to the cause of God
men like Samuel, do more for the Church and the world than all the politicians
on earth. Men born of prayer are the saviours of the state, and men saturated
with prayer give life and impetus to the Church. Under God they are saviours
and helpers of both Church and state.</p>
<p id="i-p7">We
must believe that the divine record of the facts about prayer and God are given
in order that we might be constantly reminded of Him, and be ever refreshed by
the faith that God holds His Church for the entire world, and that God’s
purpose will be fulfilled. His plans concerning the Church will most assuredly
and inevitably be carried out. That record of God has been given without doubt
that we may be deeply impressed that the prayers of God’s saints are a great
factor, a supreme factor, in carrying forward God’s work, with facility and in
time. When the Church is in the condition of prayer God’s cause always
flourishes and His kingdom on earth always triumphs. When the Church fails to
pray, God’s cause decays and evil of every kind prevails. In other words, God
works through the prayers of His people, and when they fail Him at this point,
decline and deadness ensue. It is according to the divine plans that spiritual
prosperity comes through the prayer-channel. Praying saints are God’s agents
for carrying on His saving and providential work on earth. If His agents fail
Him, neglecting to pray, then His work fails. Praying agents of the Most High
are always forerunners of spiritual prosperity.</p>
<p id="i-p8">The
men of the Church of all ages who have held the Church for God have had in
affluent fullness and richness the ministry of prayer. The rulers of the Church
which the Scriptures reveal have had preeminence in prayer. Eminent, they may
have been, in culture, in intellect and in all the natural or human forces; or
they may have been lowly in physical attainments and native gifts; yet in each
case prayer was the all potent force in the rulership of the Church. And this
was so because God was with and in what they did, for prayer always carries us
back to God. It recognizes God and brings God into the world to work and save
and bless. The most efficient agents in disseminating the knowledge of God, in
prosecuting His work upon the earth, and in standing as breakwater against the billows
of evil, have been praying Church leaders. God depends upon them, employs them
and blesses them.</p>
<p id="i-p9">Prayer
cannot be retired as a secondary force in this world. To do so is to retire God
from the movement. It is to make God secondary. The prayer ministry is an
all-engaging force. It must be so, to be a force at all. Prayer is the sense of
God’s need and the call for God’s help to supply that need. The estimate and
place of prayer is the estimate and place of God. To give prayer the secondary
place is to make God secondary in life’s affairs. To substitute other forces
for prayer, retires God and materializes the whole movement.</p>
<p id="i-p10">Prayer
is an absolute necessity to the proper carrying on of God’s work. God has made
it so. This must have been the principal reason why in the early Church, when
the complaint that the widows of certain believers had been neglected in the
daily administration of the Church’s benefactions, that the twelve called the
disciples together, and told them to look out for seven men, “full of the Holy
Ghost, and wisdom,” who they would appoint over that benevolent work, adding
this important statement, “But we will give ourselves continually to prayer and
to the ministry of the Word.” They surely realized that the success of the Word
and the progress of the Church were dependent in a preeminent sense upon their
“giving themselves to prayer.” God could effectively work through them in
proportion as they gave themselves fully to prayer.</p>
<p id="i-p11">The
Apostles were as dependent upon prayer as other folks. Sacred work,—Church
activities—may so engage and absorb us as to hinder praying, and when this is
the case, evil results always follow. It is better to let the work go by
default than to let the praying go by neglect. Whatever affects the intensity
of our praying affects the value of our work. “Too busy to pray” is not only
the keynote to backsliding, but it mars even the work done. Nothing is well
done without prayer for the simple reason that it leaves God out of the
account. It is so easy to be seduced by the good to the neglect of the best,
until both the good and the best perish. How easily may men, even leaders in Zion,
be led by the insidious wiles of Satan to cut short our praying in the
interests of the work! How easy to neglect prayer or abbreviate our praying
simply by the plea that we have Church work on our hands. Satan has effectively
disarmed us when he can keep us too busy doing things to stop and pray.</p>
<p id="i-p12">“Give
ourselves continually to prayer and the ministry of the word.” The Revised
Version has it, “We will continue steadfastly in prayer.” The implication of
the word used here means to be strong, steadfast, to be devoted to, to keep at
it with constant care, to make a business out of it. We find the same word in
<scripRef passage="Col. 4:12" id="i-p12.1" parsed="|Col|4|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.4.12">Col. 4:12</scripRef>, and in <scripRef passage="Romans 12:12" id="i-p12.2" parsed="|Rom|12|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.12.12">Romans 12:12</scripRef>, which is translated, “Continuing instant in
prayer.”</p>
<p id="i-p13">The
Apostles were under the law of prayer, which law recognizes God as God, and
depends upon Him to do for them what He would not do without prayer. They were
under the necessity of prayer, just as all believers are, in every age and in
every clime. They had to be devoted to prayer in order to make their ministry
of the Word efficient. The business of preaching is worth very little without
it be in direct partnership with the business of praying. Apostolic preaching
cannot be carried on unless there be apostolic praying. Alas, that this plain
truth has been so easily forgotten by those who minister in holy things!
Without in any way passing a criticism on the ministry, we feel it to be high
time that somebody or other declared to its members that effective preaching is
conditioned on effective praying. The preaching which is most successful is
that ministry which has much of prayer in it. Perhaps one might go so far as to
say that it is the only kind that <i>is </i>successful. God can mightily use
the preacher who prays. He is God’s chosen messenger for good, whom the Holy
Spirit delights to honour, God’s efficient agent in saving men and in edifying
the saints.</p>
<p id="i-p14">In
<scripRef passage="Acts 6:1-8" id="i-p14.1" parsed="|Acts|6|1|6|8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.6.1-Acts.6.8">Acts 6:1-8</scripRef> we have the record of how, long ago, the Apostles felt that they
were losing—had lost—in apostolic power because they did not have relief from
certain duties in order that they might give themselves more to prayer. So they
called a halt because they discovered to their regret that they were too
deficient in praying. Doubtless they kept up the form of praying, but it was
seriously defective in intensity and in point of the amount of time given to
it. Their minds were too much preoccupied with the finances of the Church. Just
as in this day we find in many places both laymen and ministers are so busily
engaged in “serving tables,” that they are glaringly deficient in praying. In
fact in present-day Church affairs men are looked upon as religious because
they give largely of their money to the Church, and men are chosen for official
positions not because they are men of prayer, but because they have the
financial ability to run Church finances and to get money for the Church.</p>
<p id="i-p15">Now
these Apostles, when they looked into this matter, determined to put aside
these hindrances growing out of Church finances, and resolved to “give
themselves to prayer.” Not that these finances were to be ignored or set aside,
but ordinary laymen, “full of faith and the Holy Ghost” could be found, really
religious men, who could easily attend to this money business without in the
least affecting their piety or their praying, thus giving them something to do
in the Church, and at the same time taking the burden from the Apostles who
would be able now to pray more, and praying more, to be blessed themselves in
soul, and at the same time to more effectually do the work to which they had
been called.</p>
<p id="i-p16">They
realized, too, as they had not realized before, that they were being so pressed
by attention to material things, things right in themselves, that they could
not give to prayer that strength, ardour, and time which its nature and
importance demanded. And so we will discover, under close scrutiny of ourselves
sometimes, that things legitimate, things right in themselves, things commendable,
may so engross our attention, so preoccupy our minds and so draw on our
feelings, that prayer may be omitted, or at least very little time may be given
to prayer. How easy to slip away from the closet! Even the Apostles had to
guard themselves at that point. How much do we need to watch ourselves at the
same place! Things legitimate and right may become wrong when they take the
place of prayer. Things right in themselves may become wrong things when they
are allowed to fasten themselves inordinately upon our hearts. It is not only
the sinful things which hurt prayer. It is not alone questionable things which
are to be guarded against. But it is things which are right in their places,
but which are allowed to sidetrack prayer and shut the closet door, often with
the self-comforting plea that “we are too busy to pray.”</p>
<p id="i-p17">Possibly
this has had as much to do with the breaking down of family prayer in this age
as any other one cause. It is at this point that family religion has decayed,
and just here is one cause of the decline of the prayer meeting. Men and women
are too busy with legitimate things to “give themselves to prayer.” Other
things are given the right of way. Prayer is set aside or made secondary.
Business comes first. And this means not always that prayer is second, but that
prayer is put entirely out. The Apostles drove directly at this point, and
determined that even Church business should not affect their praying habits.
Prayer must come first. Then would they be in deed and truth God’s real agents
in His world, through whom He could effectually work, because they were praying
men, and thereby put themselves directly in line with His plans and purposes,
which was that He works through praying men.</p>
<p id="i-p18">When
the complaint came to their ears the Apostles discovered that that which they
had been doing did not fully serve the divine ends of peace, gratitude, and
unity, but discontent, complainings, and division were the result of their
work, which had far too little prayer in it. And so prayer was put prominently
to the front.</p>
<p id="i-p19">Praying
men are a necessity in carrying out the divine plan for the salvation of men.
God has made it so. He it is who established prayer as a divine ordinance, and
this implies men are to do the praying. So that praying men are a necessity in
the world. The fact that so often God has employed men of prayer to accomplish
His ends clearly proves the proposition. It is altogether unnecessary to name
all the instances where God used the prayers of righteous men to carry out His
gracious designs. Time and space are too limited for the list. Yet one or two
cases might be named. In the case of the golden calf, when God purposed to
destroy the Israelites because of their great sin of idolatry, at the time when
Moses was receiving the law at God’s hands, the very being of Israel
was imperilled, for Aaron had been swept away by the strong popular tide of
unbelief and sin. All seemed lost but Moses and prayer, and prayer became more
efficient and wonder-working in behalf of Israel
than Aaron’s magic rod. God was determined on the destruction of Israel
and Aaron. His anger waxed hot. It was a fearful and a critical hour. But
prayer was the levee which held back heaven’s desolating fury. God’s hand was
held fast by the interceding of Moses, the mighty intercessor.</p>
<p id="i-p20">Moses
was set on delivering Israel.
It was with him a long and exhaustive struggle of praying for forty days and
forty nights. Not for one moment did he relax his hold on God. Not for one
moment did he quit his place at the feet of God, even for food. Not for one
moment did he moderate his demand or ease his cry. Israel’s
existence was in the balance. Almighty God’s wrath must be stayed. Israel
must be saved at all hazards. And Israel
was saved. Moses would not let God alone. And so, today, we can look back and
give the credit of the present race of the Jews to the praying of Moses
centuries ago.</p>
<p id="i-p21">Persevering
prayer always wins; God yields to importunity and fidelity. He has no heart to
say No to such praying as Moses did. Actually God’s purpose to destroy Israel
is changed by the praying of this man of God. It is but an illustration of how
much just one praying is worth in this world, and how much depends upon him.</p>
<p id="i-p22">When
Daniel, in Babylon, refused to obey
the decree of the king not to ask any petition of any god or man for thirty
days, he shut his eyes to the decree which would shut him off from his praying
room, and refused to be deterred from calling upon God from fear of the
consequences. So he “kneeled upon his knees three times a day”, and prayed as
he had before done, leaving it all with God as to the consequences of thus
disobeying the king.</p>
<p id="i-p23">There
was nothing impersonal about Daniel’s praying. It always had an objective, and
was an appeal to a great God, who could do all things. There was no coddling of
self, nor looking after subjective or reflex influences. In the face of the
dreadful decree which is to precipitate him from place and power, into the
lion’s den, “he kneeled upon his knees three times a day, and gave thanks to
God as aforetime.” The gracious result was that prayer laid its hands upon an
Almighty arm, which interposed in that den of vicious, cruel lions and closed
their mouths and preserved His servant Daniel, who had been true to Him and who
had called upon Him for protection. Daniel’s praying was an essential factor in
defeating the king’s decree and in discomfiting the wicked, envious rulers, who
had set the trap for Daniel in order to destroy him and remove him from place
and power in the kingdom.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="II. PUTTING GOD TO WORK" progress="8.24%" prev="i" next="iii" id="ii">
<h2 id="ii-p0.1">II. PUTTING GOD TO WORK</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="ii-p1"><i>“For
from of old men have not heard, nor perceived by the ear, neither hath the eye
seen a God beside thee who worketh for him that waiteth for him.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="ii-p1.1"><scripRef passage="Isaiah 64:4" id="ii-p1.2" parsed="|Isa|64|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.64.4">Isaiah 64:4</scripRef>.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="ii-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="ii-p2.1">The</span> assertion voiced in the title given
this chapter is but another way of declaring that God has of His own
motion placed Himself under the law of prayer, and has obligated Himself to
answer the prayers of men. He has ordained prayer as a means whereby He will do
things through men as they pray, which He would not otherwise do. Prayer is a specific
divine appointment, an ordinance of heaven, whereby God purposes to carry out
His gracious designs on earth and to execute and make efficient the plan of
salvation.</p>
<p id="ii-p3">When
we say that prayer puts God to work, it is simply to say that man has it in his
power by prayer to move God to work in His own way among men, in which way He
would not work if prayer was not made. Thus while prayer moves God to work, at
the same time God puts prayer to work. As God has ordained prayer, and as
prayer has no existence separate from men, but involves men, then logically
prayer is the one force which puts God to work in earth’s affairs through men
and their prayers.</p>
<p id="ii-p4">Let
these fundamental truths concerning God and prayer be kept in mind in all
allusions to prayer, and in all our reading of the incidents of prayer in the
Scriptures.</p>
<p id="ii-p5">If
prayer puts God to work on earth, then, by the same token, prayerlessness rules
God out of the world’s affairs, and prevents Him from working. And if prayer
moves God to work in this world’s affairs, then prayerlessness excludes God
from everything concerning men, and leaves man on earth the mere creature of
circumstances, at the mercy of blind fate or without help of any kind from God.
It leaves man in this world with its tremendous responsibilities and its
difficult problems, and with all of its sorrows, burdens and afflictions,
without any God at all. In reality the denial of prayer is a denial of God
Himself, for God and prayer are so inseparable that they can never be divorced.</p>
<p id="ii-p6">Prayer
affects three different spheres of existence—the divine, the angelic and the
human. It puts God to work, it puts angels to work, and it puts man to work. It
lays its hands upon God, angels and men. What a wonderful reach there is in
prayer! It brings into play the forces of heaven and earth. God, angels and men
are subjects of this wonderful law of prayer, and all these have to do with the
possibilities and the results of prayer. God has so far placed Himself subject
to prayer that by reason of His own appointment, He is induced to work among
men in a way in which He does not work if men do not pray. Prayer lays hold
upon God and influences Him to work. This is the meaning of prayer as it
concerns God. This is the doctrine of prayer, or else there is nothing whatever
in prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p7">Prayer
puts God to work in all things prayed for. While man in his weakness and
poverty waits, trusts and prays, God undertakes the work. “For from old men
have not heard, nor perceived by the ear, neither hath the eye seen a God
beside thee, which worketh for him that waiteth for thee.”</p>
<p id="ii-p8">Jesus
Christ commits Himself to the force of prayer. “Whatsoever ye ask in My Name,”
He says, “that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If ye
shall ask anything in My Name, I will do it.” And again: “If ye abide in Me,
and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what he will and it shall be done unto
you.”</p>
<p id="ii-p9">To no
other energy is the promise of God committed as to that of prayer. Upon no
other force are the purposes of God so dependent as this one of prayer. The
Word of God dilates on the results and necessity of prayer. The work of God
stays or advances as prayer puts forth its strength. Prophets and apostles have
urged the utility, force and necessity of prayer. “I have set watchmen upon thy
walls, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace day nor night. Ye that
make mention of the Lord, keep not silence, and give him no rest, till he
establish, and till he make Jerusalem
a praise in the earth.”</p>
<p id="ii-p10">Prayer,
with its antecedents and attendants, is the one and only condition of the final
triumph of the Gospel. It is the one and only condition which honours the
Father and glorifies the Son. Little and poor praying has weakened Christ’s
power on earth, postponed the glorious results of His reign, and retired God
from His sovereignty.</p>
<p id="ii-p11">Prayer
puts God’s work in His hands, and keeps it there. It looks to Him constantly
and depends on Him implicitly to further His own cause. Prayer is but faith
resting in, acting with, and leaning on and obeying God. This is why God loves
it so well, why He puts all power into its hands, and why He so highly esteems
men of prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p12">Every
movement for the advancement of the Gospel must be created by and inspired by
prayer. In all these movements of God, prayer precedes and attends as an
invariable and necessary condition.</p>
<p id="ii-p13">In
this relation, God makes prayer identical in force and power with Himself and
says to those on earth who pray: “You are on the earth to carry on My cause. I
am in heaven, the Lord of all, the Maker of all, the Holy One of all. Now
whatever you need for My cause, ask Me and I will do it. Shape the future by
your prayers, and all that you need for present supplies, command Me. I made
heaven and earth, and all things in them. Ask largely. Open thy mouth wide, and
I will fill it. It is My work which you are doing. It concerns My cause. Be
prompt and full in praying. Do not abate your asking, and I will not wince nor
abate in My giving.”</p>
<p id="ii-p14">Everywhere
in His Word God conditions His actions on prayer. Everywhere in His Word His
actions and attitude are shaped by prayer. To quote all the Scriptural passages
which prove the immediate, direct and personal relation of prayer to God, would
be to transfer whole pages of the Scripture to this study. Man has personal
relations with God. Prayer is the divinely appointed means by which man comes
into direct connection with God. By His own ordinance God holds Himself bound
to hear prayer. God bestows His great good on His children when they seek it
along the avenue of prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p15">When
Solomon closed his great prayer which he offered at the dedication of the Temple,
God appeared to him, approved him, and laid down the universal principles of
His action. In <scripRef passage="2 Chron. 7:12-15" id="ii-p15.1" parsed="|2Chr|7|12|7|15" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.7.12-2Chr.7.15">2 Chron. 7:12-15</scripRef> we read as follows:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="ii-p15.2">
<p id="ii-p16">“And
the Lord appeared to Solomon by night and said unto him, I have heard thy
prayer, and have chosen this place to myself, for a house of sacrifice.</p>
<p id="ii-p17">“If I
shut up heaven that there be no rain, or if I command the locusts to devour the
land, or if I send pestilence among the people; if my people which are called
by my name, shall humble themselves and pray, and seek my face, and turn from
their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin,
and will heal their land. Now my eyes shall be open, and my ears attentive to
the prayer that is made in this place.”</p></div>
<p id="ii-p18">In
His purposes concerning the Jews in the Babylonish captivity (<scripRef passage="Jeremiah 29:10-13" id="ii-p18.1" parsed="|Jer|29|10|29|13" osisRef="Bible:Jer.29.10-Jer.29.13">Jeremiah
29:10-13</scripRef>) God asserts His unfailing principles:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="ii-p18.2">
<p id="ii-p19">“For
thus saith the Lord, that after seventy years be accomplished, at Babylon,
I will visit you, and perform my good word toward you, in causing you to return
to this place. For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord,
thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end. Then shall ye
call upon me, and ye shall go and pray unto me, and I will hearken unto you.
And ye shall seek me and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your
heart.”</p></div>
<p id="ii-p20">In
Bible terminology prayer means calling upon God for things we desire, asking
things of God. Thus we read: “Call upon me and I will answer thee, and will
show thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not” (<scripRef passage="Jeremiah 33:3" id="ii-p20.1" parsed="|Jer|33|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jer.33.3">Jeremiah 33:3</scripRef>).
“Call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will deliver thee” (<scripRef passage="Psalm 50:15" id="ii-p20.2" parsed="|Ps|50|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.50.15">Psalm 50:15</scripRef>).
“Then shalt thou call, and the Lord shall answer; thou shalt cry, and he shall say,
Here I am” (<scripRef passage="Isaiah 58:9" id="ii-p20.3" parsed="|Isa|58|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.58.9">Isaiah 58:9</scripRef>).</p>
<p id="ii-p21">Prayer
is revealed as a direct application to God for some temporal or spiritual good.
It is an appeal to God to intervene in life’s affairs for the good of those for
whom we pray. God is recognised as the source and fountain of all good, and
prayer implies that all His good is held in His keeping for those who call upon
Him in truth.</p>
<p id="ii-p22">That
prayer is an application to God, intercourse with God, and communion with God,
comes out strongly and simply in the praying of Old Testament saints. Abraham’s
intercession for Sodom is a
striking illustration of the nature of prayer, intercourse with God, and
showing the intercessory side of prayer. The declared purpose of God to destroy
Sodom confronted Abraham, and his
soul within him was greatly moved because of his great interest in that fated
city. His nephew and family resided there. That purpose of God must be changed.
God’s decree for the destruction of this evil city’s inhabitants must be
revoked.</p>
<p id="ii-p23">It
was no small undertaking which faced Abraham when he conceived the idea of
beseeching God to spare Sodom.
Abraham sets himself to change God’s purpose and to save Sodom
with the other cities of the plain. It was certainly a most difficult and
delicate work for him to undertake to throw his influence with God in favour of
those doomed cities so as to save them.</p>
<p id="ii-p24">He
bases his plea on the simple fact of the number of righteous men who could be
found in Sodom, and appeals to the
infinite rectitude of God not to destroy the righteous with the wicked. “That
be far from thee to slay the righteous with the wicked. Shall not the Judge of
all the earth do right?” With what deep self-abasement and reverence does
Abraham enter upon his high and divine work! He stood before God in solemn awe,
and meditation, and then drew near to God and spake. He advanced step by step
in faith, in demand and urgency, and God granted every request which he made.
It has been well said that “Abraham left off asking before God left off
granting.” It seems that Abraham had a kind of optimistic view of the piety of Sodom.
He scarcely expected when he undertook this matter to have it end in failure.
He was greatly in earnest, and had every encouragement to press his case. In
his final request he surely thought that with Lot, his wife,
his daughters, his sons, and his sons-in-law, he had his ten righteous persons
for whose sake God would spare the city. But alas! The count failed when the
final test came. There were not ten righteous people in that large population.</p>
<p id="ii-p25">But
this was true. If he did not save Sodom
by his importunate praying, the purposes of God were stayed for a season, and
possibly had not Abraham’s goodness of heart over-estimated the number of pious
people in that devoted city, God might have saved it had he reduced his figures
still further.</p>
<p id="ii-p26">This
is a representative case illustrative of Old Testament praying, and disclosing
God’s mode of working through prayer. It shows further how God is moved to work
in answer to prayer in this world even when it comes to changing His purposes
concerning a sinful community. This praying of Abraham was no mere performance,
no dull, lifeless ceremony, but an earnest plea, a strong advocacy, to secure a
desired end, to have an influence, one person with another person.</p>
<p id="ii-p27">How
full of meaning is this series of remarkable intercessions made by Abraham!
Here we have arguments designed to convince God, and pleas to persuade God to
change His purpose. We see deep humility, but holy boldness as well,
perseverance, and advances made based on victory in each petition. Here we have
enlarged asking encouraged by enlarged answers. God stays and answers as long
as Abraham stays and asks. To Abraham God is existent, approachable, and all
powerful, but at the same time He defers to men, acts favourably on their
desires, and grants them favours asked for. Not to pray is a denial of God, a
denial of His existence, a denial of His nature, and a denial of His purposes
toward mankind.</p>
<p id="ii-p28">God
has specifically to do with prayer promises in their breadth, certainty and
limitations. Jesus Christ presses us into the presence of God with these prayer
promises, not only by the assurance that God will answer, but that no other
being but God can answer. He presses us to God because only in this way can we
move God to take a hand in earth’s affairs, and induce Him to intervene in our
behalf.</p>
<p id="ii-p29">“All
things whatsoever ye ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive,” says Jesus,
and this all-comprehensive condition not only presses us to pray for all
things, everything great and small, but it sets us on and shuts us up to God,
for who but God can cover the illimitable of universal things, and can assure
us certainly of receiving the very thing for which we may ask in all the
Thesaurus of earthly and heavenly good?</p>
<p id="ii-p30">It is
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who makes demands on us to pray, and it is He who
puts Himself and all He has so fully in the answer. He it is who puts Himself
at our service and answers our demands when we pray.</p>
<p id="ii-p31">And
just as He puts Himself and the Father at our command in prayer, to come
directly into our lives and to work for our good, so also does He engage to
answer the demands of two or more believers who are agreed as touching any one
thing. “If two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything, that they shall
ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven.” None but God
could put Himself in a covenant so binding as that, for God only could fulfill
such a promise and could reach to its exacting and all controlling demands. God
only can answer for the promises.</p>
<p id="ii-p32">God
needs prayer, and man needs prayer, too. It is indispensable to God’s work in
this world, and is essential to getting God to work in earth’s affairs. So God
binds men to pray by the most solemn obligations. God commands men to pray, and
so not to pray is plain disobedience to an imperative command of Almighty God.
Prayer is such a condition without which the graces, the salvation and the good
of God are not bestowed on men. Prayer is a high privilege, a royal prerogative
and manifold and eternal are the losses by failure to exercise it. Prayer is
the great, universal force to advance God’s cause; the reverence which hallows
God’s name; the ability to do God’s will, and the establishment of God’s
kingdom in the hearts of the children of men. These, and their coincidents and
agencies, are created and affected by prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p33">One
of the constitutional enforcements of the Gospel is prayer. Without prayer, the
Gospel can neither be preached effectively, promulgated faithfully, experienced
in the heart, nor be practiced in the life. And for the very simple reason that
by leaving prayer out of the catalogue of religious duties, we leave God out,
and His work cannot progress without Him.</p>
<p id="ii-p34">The
movements which God purposed under Cyrus, king of Persia,
prophesied about by Isaiah many years before Cyrus was born, are conditioned on
prayer. God declares His purpose, power, independence and defiance of obstacles
in the way of Him carrying out those purposes. His omnipotent and absolutely
infinite power is set to encourage prayer. He has been ordering all events,
directing all conditions, and creating all things, that He might answer prayer,
and then turns Himself over to His praying ones to be commanded. And then all
the results and power He holds in His hands will be bestowed in lavish and
unmeasured munificence to carry out prayers and to make prayer the mightiest
energy in the world.</p>
<p id="ii-p35">The
passage in <scripRef passage="Isaiah 45" id="ii-p35.1" parsed="|Isa|45|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.45">Isaiah 45</scripRef> is too lengthy to be quoted in its entirety but it is well
worth reading. It closes with such strong words as these, words about prayer,
which are the climax of all which God has been saying concerning His purposes
in connection with Cyrus:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="ii-p35.2">
<p id="ii-p36">“Thus saith the Lord, the Holy One of Israel, and his Maker:
Ask me of things to come, concerning my sons, and concerning the work of my
hands command ye me. I have made the earth, and created man upon it; I, even my
hands, have stretched out the heavens, and all their hosts have I commanded.”</p></div>
<p id="ii-p37">In
the conclusion of the history of Job, we see how God intervenes in behalf of Job
and calls upon his friends to present themselves before Job that he may pray
for them. “My wrath is kindled against thee and against thy two friends,” is
God’s statement, with the further words added, “My servant Job shall pray for
you, for him will I accept,” a striking illustration of God intervening to
deliver Job’s friends in answer to Job’s prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p38">We
have heretofore spoken of prayer affecting God, angels and men. Christ wrote
nothing while living. Memoranda, notes, sermon writing, sermon making, were
alien to Him. Autobiography was not to His taste. The Revelation of John was
His last utterance. In that book we have pictured the great importance, the
priceless value, and the high position which prayer obtains in the movements,
history, and unfolding progress of God’s Church in this world. We have this
picture in <scripRef passage="Rev. 8:3" id="ii-p38.1" parsed="|Rev|8|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.8.3">Rev. 8:3</scripRef>, disclosing the interest the angels in heaven have in the
prayers of the saints and in accomplishing the answers to those prayers:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="ii-p38.2">
<p id="ii-p39">“And another angel came and stood at the altar, having a
golden censer, and there was given unto him much incense, that he should offer
it with the prayers of all saints, upon the golden altar which was before the
throne. And the smoke of the incense which came with the prayers of the saints,
ascended up before God, out of the angel’s hand. And the angel took the censer,
and filled it with fire of the altar, and cast it into the earth, and there
were voices, and thunderings and lightnings and an earthquake.”</p></div>
<p id="ii-p40">Translated
into the prose of everyday life, these words show how the capital stock by
which heaven carries on the business of salvation under Christ, is made up of
the prayers of God’s saints on earth, and discloses how these prayers in
flaming power come back to earth and produce its mighty commotions, influences
and revolutions.</p>
<p id="ii-p41">Praying
men are essential to Almighty God in all His plans and purposes. God’s secrets,
councils and cause have never been committed to prayerless men. Neglect of
prayer has always brought loss of faith, loss of love, and loss of prayer.
Failure to pray has been the baneful, inevitable cause of backsliding and
estrangement from God. Prayerless men have stood in the way of God fulfilling
His Word and doing His will on earth. They tie the divine hands and interfere
with God in His gracious designs. As praying men are a help to God, so
prayerless men are a hindrance to Him.</p>
<p id="ii-p42">We
press the Scriptural view of the necessity of prayer, even at the cost of
repetition. The subject is too important for repetition to weaken or tire, too
vital to be trite or tame. We must feel it anew. The fires of prayer have
burned low. Ashes and not flames are on its altars.</p>
<p id="ii-p43">No
insistence in the Scriptures is more pressing than prayer. No exhortation is
oftener reiterated, none is more hearty, none is more solemn and stirring, than
to pray. No principle is more strongly and broadly declared than that which
urges us to prayer. There is no duty to which we are more strongly obliged than
the obligation to pray. There is no command more imperative and insistent than
that of praying. Art thou praying in everything without ceasing, in the closet,
hidden from the eyes of men, and praying always and everywhere? That is the
personal, pertinent and all-important question for every soul.</p>
<p id="ii-p44">Many
instances occur in God’s Word showing that God intervenes in this world in
answer to prayer. Nothing is clearer when the Bible is consulted than that
Almighty God is brought directly into the things of this world by the praying
of His people. Jonah flees from duty and takes ship for a distant port. But God
follows him, and by a strange providence this disobedient prophet is cast out
of the vessel, and the God who sent him to Nineveh
prepares a fish to swallow him. In the fish’s belly he cries out to the God
against whom he had sinned, and God intervenes and causes the fish to vomit
Jonah out on dry land. Even the fishes of the great deep are subject to the law
of prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p45">Likewise
the birds of the air are brought into subjection to this same law. Elijah had
foretold to Ahab the coming of that prolonged drouth, and food and even water
became scarce. God sent him to the brook Cherith, and said unto him, “It shall
be that thou shalt drink of the brook, and I have commanded the ravens to feed
thee there. And the ravens brought bread and flesh in the morning, and bread
and flesh in the evening.” Can any one doubt that this man of God, who later on
shut up and opened the rain clouds by prayer was not praying about this time,
when so much was at stake? God interposed among the birds of the air this time
and strangely moved them to take care of His servant so that he would not want
food and water.</p>
<p id="ii-p46">David
in an evil hour, instead of listening to the advice of Joab, his prime
minister, yielded to the suggestion of Satan, and counted the people, which
displeased God. So God told him to choose one of three evils as a retribution
for his folly and sin. Pestilence came among the people in violent form, and
David betakes himself to prayer.</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="ii-p46.1">
<p id="ii-p47">“And David said unto God, Is it not I that commanded the
people to be numbered? Even I it is that hath sinned and done evil indeed. But
as for these sheep, what have they done? Let thy hand, I pray thee, O Lord my
God, be on me, and on my father’s house; but not on thy people, that they
should be plagued” <span style="font-style:normal" id="ii-p47.1">(<scripRef passage="1 Chron. 21:17" id="ii-p47.2" parsed="|1Chr|21|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Chr.21.17">1 Chron. 21:17</scripRef>).</span></p></div>
<p id="ii-p48">And
though God had been greatly grieved at David for numbering Israel,
yet He could not resist this appeal of a penitent and prayerful spirit, and God
was moved by prayer to put His hand on the springs of disease and stop the
fearful plague. God was put to work by David’s prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p49">Numbers
of other cases could be named. These are sufficient. God seems to have taken
great pains in His divine revelation to men to show how He interferes in
earth’s affairs in answer to the praying of His saints.</p>
<p id="ii-p50">The
question might arise just here in some over-critical minds as to the so-called
“laws of nature,” who are not strong believers in prayer, as if there was a
conflict between what they call the “laws of nature” and the law of prayer.
These people make nature a sort of imaginary god entirely separate of Almighty
God. What is nature anyway? It is but the creation of God, the Maker of all
things. And what are the “laws of nature” but the laws of God, through which He
governs the material world. As the law of prayer is also the law of God, there
cannot possibly be any conflict between the two sets of laws, but all must work
in perfect harmony. Prayer does not violate any natural law. God may set aside
one law for the higher working of another law, and this He may do when He answers
prayer. Or Almighty God may answer prayer working through the course of natural
law. But whether or not we understand it, God is over and above all nature, and
can and will answer prayer in a wise, intelligent and just manner, even though
man may not comprehend it. So that in no sense is there any discord or conflict
between God’s several laws when God is induced to interfere with human affairs
in answer to prayer.</p>
<p id="ii-p51">In
this connection another word might be said. We used the form of words to which
there can be no objection, that prayer does certain things, but this of course
implies not that prayer as a human means accomplishes anything, but that prayer
only accomplishes things instrumentally. Prayer is the instrument, God is the
efficient and active agent. So that prayer in itself does not interfere in
earth’s affairs, but prayer in the hands of men moves God to intervene and do
things, which He would not otherwise do if prayer was not used as the
instrument.</p>
<p id="ii-p52">It is
as we say, “faith hath saved thee,” by which is simply meant that God through
the faith of the sinner saves him, faith being only the instrument used by the
sinner which brings salvation to him.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="III. THE NECESSITY FOR PRAYING MEN" progress="19.52%" prev="ii" next="iv" id="iii">
<h2 id="iii-p0.1">III. THE NECESSITY FOR PRAYING MEN</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="iii-p1"><i>“Praying
always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto
with all perseverance and supplication for all saints.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="iii-p1.1"><scripRef passage="Ephes. 6:18" id="iii-p1.2" parsed="|Eph|6|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6.18">Ephes. 6:18</scripRef></span>.</p>
<p class="IntroPar" id="iii-p2"><i>“Withal
praying for us also that God would open unto us a door of utterance to speak
the mystery of Christ, for which I am in bonds: that I may make it manifest as
I ought to speak.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="iii-p2.1"><scripRef passage="Col. 4:3" id="iii-p2.2" parsed="|Col|4|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.4.3">Col. 4:3</scripRef>.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="iii-p3"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="iii-p3.1">One</span> of the crying things of our day is
for men whose faith, prayers and study of the Word of God have been vitalized,
and a transcript of that Word is written on their hearts, and who will give it
forth as the incorruptible seed that liveth and abideth forever. Nothing more
is needed to clear up the haze by which a critical unfaith has eclipsed the
Word of God than the fidelity of the pulpit in its unwavering allegiance to the
Bible and the fearless proclamation of its truth. Without this the
standard-bearer fails, and wavering and confusion all along the ranks follow.
The pulpit has wrought its mightiest work in the days of its unswerving loyalty
to the Word of God.</p>
<p id="iii-p4">In
close connection with this, must we have men of prayer, men in high and low
places who hold to and practice Scriptural praying. While the pulpit must hold
to its unswerving loyalty to the Word of God, it must, at the same time, be
loyal to the doctrine of prayer which that same Word illustrates and enforces
upon mankind.</p>
<p id="iii-p5">Schools,
colleges and education considered simply as such cannot be regarded as being
leaders in carrying forward the work of God’s kingdom in the world. They have
neither the right, the will nor the power to do the work. This is to be
accomplished by the preached Word, delivered in the power of the Holy Ghost
sent down from heaven, sown with prayerful hands, and watered with the tears of
praying hearts. This is the divine law, and so “nominated in the bond.” We are
shut up and sealed to it—we would follow the Lord.</p>
<p id="iii-p6">Men
are demanded for the great work of soul saving, and men must go. It is no
angelic or impersonal force which is needed. Human hearts baptized with the
spirit of prayer, must bear the burden of this message, and human tongues on
fire as the result of earnest, persistent prayer, must declare the Word of God
to dying men.</p>
<p id="iii-p7">The
Church, today, needs praying men to execute her solemn and pressing
responsibility to meet the fearful crisis which is facing her. The crying need
of the times is for men, in increased numbers—God-fearing men, praying men,
Holy Ghost men, men who can endure hardness, who will count not their lives
dear unto themselves, but count all things but dross for the excellency of the
knowledge of Jesus Christ, the Saviour. The men who are so greatly needed in
this age of the Church are those who have learned the business of
praying,—learned it upon their knees, learned it in the need and agony of their
own hearts.</p>
<p id="iii-p8">Praying
men are the one commanding need of this day, as of all other days, in which God
is to have or make a showing. Men who pray are, in reality, the only religious
men, and it takes a full-measured man to pray. Men of prayer are the only men
who do or can represent God in this world. No cold, irreligious, prayerless man
can claim the right. They misrepresent God in all His work, and all His plans.
Praying men are the only men who have influence with God, the only kind of men
to whom God commits Himself and His Gospel. Praying men are the only men in
which the Holy Spirit dwells, for the Holy Spirit and prayer go hand-in-hand.
The Holy Spirit never descends upon prayerless men. He never fills them, He
never empowers them. There is nothing whatever in common between the Spirit of
God and men who do not pray. The Spirit dwells only in a prayer atmosphere.</p>
<p id="iii-p9">In
doing God’s work there is no substitute for praying. The men of prayer cannot
be displaced with other kinds of men. Men of financial skill, men of education;
men of worldly influence—none of these can possibly be put in substitution for
the men of prayer. The life, the vigour, the motive-power of God’s work is
formed by praying men. A vitally diseased heart is not a more fearful symptom
of approaching death than non-praying men are of spiritual atrophy.</p>
<p id="iii-p10">The
men to whom Jesus Christ committed the fortunes and destiny of His Church were
men of prayer. To no other kind of men has God ever committed Himself in this
world. The Apostles were preeminently men of prayer. They gave themselves to
prayer. They made praying their chief business. It was first in point of
importance and first in results. God never has, and He never will, commit the
weighty interests of His kingdom to prayerless men, who do not make prayer a
conspicuous and controlling factor in their lives. Men never rise to any
eminence of piety who do not pray. Men of piety are always men of prayer. Men
are never noted for the simplicity and strength of their faith who are not
preeminently men of prayer. Piety flourishes nowhere so rapidly and so rankly
as in the closet. The closet is the garden of faith.</p>
<p id="iii-p11">The
Apostles allowed no duty, however sacred, to so engage them as to infringe upon
their time and prevent them from making prayer the main thing. The Word of God
was ministered by apostolic fidelity and zeal. It was spoken by men with
apostolic commissions and whose heads the fiery tongues of Pentecost had
baptized. The Word was pointless and powerless without they were freshly endued
with power by continuous and mighty prayer. The seed of God’s Word must be
saturated in prayer to make it germinate. It grows readier and roots deeper
when it is prayer-soaked.</p>
<p id="iii-p12">The
Apostles were praying men, themselves. They were teachers of prayer, and
trained their disciples in the school of prayer. They urged prayer upon their
disciples not only that they might attain to the loftiest eminence of faith,
but that they might be the most powerful factors in advancing God’s kingdom.</p>
<p id="iii-p13">Jesus
Christ was the divinely appointed leader of God’s people, and no one thing in
His life proves His eminent fitness for that office so fully as His habit of
prayer. Nothing is more suggestive of thought than Christ’s continual praying,
and nothing is more conspicuous about Him than prayer. His campaigns were
arranged, His victories gained, in the struggles and communion of His all-night
praying. His praying rent the heavens. Moses and Elijah and the Transfiguration
glory waited on His praying. His miracles and His teaching had their force from
the same source. Gethsemane’s praying crimsoned Calvary
with serenity and glory. His prayer makes the history and hastens the triumphs
of His Church. What an inspiration and command to prayer is Christ’s life! What
a comment on its worth! How He shames our lives by His praying!</p>
<p id="iii-p14">Like
all His followers who have drawn God nearer to the world and lifted the world
nearer to God, Jesus was the man of prayer, made of God a leader and commander
to His people. His leadership was one of prayer. A great leader He was, because
He was great in prayer. All great leaders for God have fashioned their
leadership in the wrestlings of their closets. Many great men have led and
moulded the Church who have not been great in prayer, but they were great only
in their plans, great for their opinions, great for their organization, great
by natural gifts, by the force of genius or of character. However, they were
not great for God. But Jesus Christ was a great leader for God. His was the
great leadership of great praying. God was in His leadership greatly because
prayer was in it greatly. We might just well express the wish that we be taught
by Him to pray, and to pray more and more.</p>
<p id="iii-p15">Herein
has been the secret of the men of prayer in the past history of the Church.
Their hearts were after God, their desires were on Him, their prayers were
addressed to Him. They communed with Him, sought nothing of the world, sought
great things of God, wrestled with Him, conquered all opposing forces, and
opened up the channel of faith deep and broad between them and heaven. And all
this was done by the use of prayer. Holy meditations, spiritual desires,
heavenly drawings, swayed their intellects, enriched their emotions, and filled
and enlarged their hearts. And all this was so because they were first of all
men of prayer.</p>
<p id="iii-p16">The
men who have thus communed with God and who have sought after Him with their
whole hearts, have always risen to consecrated eminence, and no man has ever
risen to this eminence whose flames of holy desire have not all been dead to
the world and all aglow for God and heaven. Nor have they ever risen to the
heights of the higher spiritual experiences unless prayer and the spirit of
prayer have been conspicuous and controlling factors in their lives.</p>
<p id="iii-p17">The
entire consecration of many of God’s children stands out distinctly like
towering mountain-peaks. Why is this? How did they ascend to these heights?
What brought them so near to God? What made them so Christ-like? The answer is
easy-prayer. They prayed much, prayed long, and drank deeper and deeper still.
They asked, they sought, and they knocked, till heaven opened its richest inner
treasures of grace to them. Prayer was the Jacob’s Ladder by which they scaled
those holy and blessed heights, and the way by which the angels of God came
down to and ministered to them.</p>
<p id="iii-p18">The
men of spiritual mould and might always value prayer. They took time to be
alone with God. Their praying was no hurried performance. They had many serious
wants to be relieved, and many weighty pleas they had to offer. Many large
supplies they must secure. They had to do much silent waiting before God, and
much patient iteration and reiteration to utter to Him. Prayer was the only
channel through which supplies came, and was the only way to utter pleas. The
only acceptable waiting before God of which they knew anything was prayer. They
valued praying. It was more precious to them than all jewels, more excellent
than any good, more to be valued than the greatest good of earth. They esteemed
it, valued it, prized it, and did it. They pressed it to its farthest limits,
tested its greatest results, and secured its most glorious patrimony. To them
prayer was the one great thing to be appreciated and used.</p>
<p id="iii-p19">The
Apostles above everything else were praying men, and left the impress of their
prayer example and teaching upon the early Church. But the Apostles are dead,
and times and men have changed. They have no successors by official entail or
heirship. And the times have no commission to make other apostles. Prayer is
the entail to spiritual and apostolical leadership. Unfortunately the times are
not prayerful times. God’s cause just now needs very greatly praying leaders.
Other things may be needed, but above all else this is the crying demand of
these times and the urgent first need of the Church.</p>
<p id="iii-p20">This
is the day of great wealth in the Church and of wonderful material resources.
But unfortunately the affluence of material resources is a great enemy and a
severe hindrance to strong spiritual forces. It is an invariable law that the
presence of attractive and potent material forces creates a trust in them, and
by the same inevitable law, creates distrust in the spiritual forces of the
Gospel. They are two masters which cannot be served at one and the same time.
For just in proportion as the mind is fixed on one, will it be drawn away from
the other. The days of great financial prosperity in the Church have not been
days of great religious prosperity. Moneyed men and praying men are not
synonymous terms.</p>
<p id="iii-p21">Paul
in <scripRef passage="1 Tim. 2" id="iii-p21.1" parsed="|1Tim|2|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.2">1 Tim. 2</scripRef>, emphasizes the need of men to pray. Church leaders in his
estimation are to be conspicuous for their praying. Prayer ought and must of
necessity shape their characters, and must be one of their distinguishing
characteristics. Prayer ought to be one of their most powerful elements, so
much so that it cannot be hid. Prayer ought to make Church leaders notable.
Character, official duty, reputation and life, all should be shaped by prayer.
The mighty forces of prayer lie in its praying leaders in a marked way. The
standing obligation to pray rests in a peculiar sense on Church leaders. Wise will
the Church be to discover this prime truth and give prominence to it.</p>
<p id="iii-p22">It
may be laid down as an axiom, that God needs, first of all, leaders in the
Church who will be first in prayer, men with whom prayer is habitual and
characteristic, men who know the primacy of prayer. But even more than a habit
of prayer, and more than prayer being characteristic of them, Church leaders
are to be <i>impregnated </i>with prayer—men whose lives are made and moulded
by prayer, whose heart and life are made up of prayer. These are the men—the
only men—God can use in the furtherance of His kingdom and the implanting of
His message in the hearts of men.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="IV. GOD’S NEED OF MEN WHO PRAY" progress="25.52%" prev="iii" next="v" id="iv">
<h2 id="iv-p0.1">IV. GOD’S NEED OF MEN WHO PRAY</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="iv-p1"><i>“We
do what He commands. We go where He wants us to go. We speak what He wants us
to speak. His will is our law. His pleasure our joy. He is, today, seeking the
lost and He would have us seek with Him. He is shepherding the lambs and He
wants our cooperation. He is opening doors in heathen lands, and He wants our
money and our prayers.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="iv-p1.1">Anon.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="iv-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="iv-p2.1">We</span> proceed now to declare that it
demands prayer-leadership to hold the Church to God’s aims, and to fit it for
God’s uses. Prayer-leadership preserves the spirituality of the Church, just as
prayerless leaders make for unspiritual conditions. The Church is not spiritual
simply by the mere fact of its existence, nor by its vocation. It is not held
to its sacred vocation by generation, nor by succession. Like the new birth,
“It is not of blood, neither of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.”</p>
<p id="iv-p3">The
Church is not spiritual simply because it is concerned and deals in spiritual
values. It may hold its confirmations by the thousand, it may multiply its
baptisms, and administer its sacraments innumerable times, and yet be as far
from fulfilling its true mission as human conditions can make it.</p>
<p id="iv-p4">This
present world’s general attitude retires prayer to insignificance and
obscurity. By it, salvation and eternal life are put in the background. It
cannot be too often affirmed, therefore, that the prime need of the Church is
not men of money nor men of brains, but men of prayer. Leaders in the realm of
religious activity are to be judged by their praying habits, and not by their
money or social position. Those who must be placed in the forefront of the
Church’s business, must be, first of all, men who know how to pray.</p>
<p id="iv-p5">God
does not conduct His work, solely, with men of education or of wealth or of
business capacity. Neither can He carry on His work through men of large
intellects or of great culture, nor yet through men of great social eminence
and influence. All these can be made to count provided they are not regarded as
being primary. These men, by the simple fact of these qualities and conditions,
cannot lead in God’s work nor control His cause. Men of prayer, before anything
else, are indispensable to the furtherance of the kingdom
 of God on earth. No other sort will
fit in the scheme or do the deed. Men, great and influential in other things,
but small in prayer, cannot do the work Almighty God has set out for His Church
to do in this, His world.</p>
<p id="iv-p6">Men
who represent God and who stand here in His stead, men who are to build up His
kingdom in this world, must be in an eminent sense men of prayer. whatever else
they may have, whatever else they may lack, they must be men of prayer. Having
everything else and lacking prayer, they must fall. Having prayer and lacking
all else, they can succeed. Prayer must be the most conspicuous and the most
potent factor in the character and conduct of men who undertake divine
commission. God’s business requires men who are versed in the business of
praying.</p>
<p id="iv-p7">It
must be kept in mind that the praying to which the disciples of Christ is
called by Scriptural authority and enforcement, is a valorous calling, for
manly men. The men God wants and upon whom He depends, must work at prayer just
as they work at their worldly calling. They must follow this business of
praying <i>through, </i>just as they do their secular pursuits. Diligence,
perseverance, heartiness, and courage, must all be in it if it is to succeed.</p>
<p id="iv-p8">Everything
secured by Gospel promise, defined by Gospel measure, and represented by Gospel
treasure are to be found in prayer. All heights are scaled by it, all doors are
opened to it, all victories are gained through it, and all grace distills on
it. Heaven has all its good and all its help for men who pray.</p>
<p id="iv-p9">How
marked and strong is the injunction of Christ which sends men from the parade
of public giving and praying to the privacy of their closets, where with shut
doors, and in encircling silence they are alone in prayer with God!</p>
<p id="iv-p10">In
all ages, those who have carried out the divine will on the earth, have been
men of prayer. The days of prayer are God’s halcyon days. His heart, His oath,
and His glory are committed to one issuance—that every knee should bow to Him.
The day of the Lord, in a preeminent sense, will be a day of universal prayer.</p>
<p id="iv-p11">God’s
cause does not suffer through lack of divine ability, but by reason of the lack
of prayer-ability in man. God’s action is just as much bound up in prayer at this
time, as it was when He said to Abimelech, “Abraham shall pray for thee, and
thou shalt live.” So also it was when God said to Job’s friends, “My servant
Job shall pray for you, for him will I accept.”</p>
<p id="iv-p12">God’s
great plan for the redemption of mankind is as much bound up to prayer for its
prosperity and success as when the decree creating the movement was issued from
the Father, bearing on its frontage the imperative, universal and eternal
condition, “Ask of me, and I will give thee the heathen for thy inheritance and
the uttermost part of the earth for thy possession.”</p>
<p id="iv-p13">In
many places an alarming state of things has come to pass, in that the many who
are enrolled in our churches are not praying men and women. Many of those
occupying prominent positions in church life are not praying men. It is greatly
to be feared that much of the work of the Church is being done by those who are
perfect strangers to the closet. Small wonder that the work does not succeed.</p>
<p id="iv-p14">While
it may be true that many in the Church say prayers, it is equally true that
their praying is of the stereotyped order. Their prayers may be charged with
sentiment, but they are tame, timid, and without fire or force. Even this sort
of praying is done by a few straggling men to be found at prayer-meetings.
Those whose names are to be found bulking large in our great Church assemblies
are not men noted for their praying habits. Yet the entire fabric of the work
in which they are engaged has, perforce, to depend on the adequacy of prayer.
This fact is similar to the crisis which would be created were a country to
have to admit in the face of an invading foe that it cannot fight and have no
knowledge of the weapons whereby war is to be waged.</p>
<p id="iv-p15">In
all God’s plans for human redemption, He proposes that men <i>pray. </i>The men
are to pray in every place, in the church, in the closet, in the home, on
sacred days and on secular days. All things and everything are dependent on the
measure of men’s praying.</p>
<p id="iv-p16">Prayer
is the genius and mainspring of life. We pray as we live; we live as we pray.
Life will never be finer than the quality of the closet. The mercury of life
will rise only by the warmth of the closet. Persistent non-praying eventually
will depress life below zero.</p>
<p id="iv-p17">To
measure and weigh the conditions of prayer, is readily to discover why men do
not pray in larger numbers. The conditions are so perfect, so blessed, that it
is a rare character who can meet them. A heart all love, a heart that holds
even its enemies in loving contemplation and prayerful concern, a heart from
which all bitterness, revenge and envy are purged—how rare! Yet this is the
only condition of mind and heart in which a man can expect to command
the efficacy of prayer.</p>
<p id="iv-p18">There
are certain conditions laid down for authentic praying. Men are to pray, “lifting
up holy hands”; hands here being the symbol of life. Hands unsoiled by stains
of evil doing are the emblem of a life unsoiled by sin. Thus are men to come
into the presence of God, thus are they to approach the throne of the Highest,
where they can “obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.” Here,
then, is one reason why men do not pray. They are too worldly in heart and too
secular in life to enter the closet; and even though they enter there, they
cannot offer the “fervent, effectual prayer of the righteous man, which
availeth much.”</p>
<p id="iv-p19">Again,
“hands” are the symbols of supplication. Outstretched hands stand for an appeal
for help. It is the silent yet eloquent attitude of a helpless soul standing
before God, appealing for mercy and grace. “Hands,” too, are symbols of
activity, power and conduct. Hands outstretched to God in prayer must be “holy
hands,” unstained hands. The word “holy” here means undefiled, unspotted,
untainted, and religiously observing every obligation. How far remote is all
this from the character of the sin-loving, worldly-minded, fleshly disposed
men, soiled by fleshly lusts, spotted by worldly indulgence, unholy in heart
and conduct! “He who seeks equity must do equity,” is the maxim of earthly
courts. So he who seeks God’s good gifts must practice God’s good deeds. This
is the maxim of heavenly courts.</p>
<p id="iv-p20">Prayer
is sensitive, and always affected by the character and conduct of him who
prays. Water cannot rise above its own level, and a spotless prayer cannot flow
from a spotted heart. Straight praying is never born of crooked conduct. The
men, what men are, behind their praying, that gives character to their
supplication. The craven heart cannot do brave praying. Soiled men cannot make
clean, pure supplication.</p>
<p id="iv-p21">It is
neither words, nor thoughts nor ideas, nor feelings, which shape praying, but
character and conduct. Men must walk in upright fashion in order to be able to
pray well. Bad character and unrighteous living break down praying until it
be-comes a mere shibboleth. Praying takes its tone and vigour from the life of
the man or the woman exercising it. when character and conduct are at a low
ebb, praying can but barely live, much less thrive.</p>
<p id="iv-p22">The
man of prayer, whether layman or preacher, is God’s right-hand man. In the
realm of spiritual affairs, he creates conditions, inaugurates movements,
brings things to pass.</p>
<p id="iv-p23">By
the fact and condition of their creation and redemption, all men are under
obligation to pray. Every man <i>can </i>pray, and every man <i>should </i>pray.
But when it comes to the affairs of the Kingdom, let it be said, at once, that
a prayerless man in the Church of God
is like a paralyzed organ of the physical body. He is out of place in the
communion of saints, out of harmony with God, and out of accord with His purposes
for mankind. A prayerless man handicaps the vigour and life of the whole system
like a demoralized soldier is a menace to the force of which he forms part, in
the day of battle. The absence of prayer lessens all the life-forces of the
soul, cripples faith, sets aside holy living, shuts out heaven. Between praying
saints and non-praying men, in Holy Scripture, the line is sharply drawn. Of
Fletcher of Madeley—one of the praying saints—it is written that</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="iv-p23.1">
<p id="iv-p24">“He
was far more abundant in his public labours than the greater part of his
companions in the holy ministry. Yet these bore but little proportion to those
internal exercises of prayer and supplication to which he was wholly given up
in private, which were almost uninterruptedly maintained from hour to hour. He
lived in the spirit of prayer, and whatever employment in which he was engaged,
this spirit of prayer was constantly manifested through them all.</p>
<p id="iv-p25">“Without
this he neither formed any design, nor entered upon any duty. Without this he
neither read nor conversed. Without this, he neither visited nor received a
visitor. There have been seasons of supplications in which he appeared to be
carried out far beyond the ordinary limits of devotion, when, like his Lord
upon the Mount of Transfiguration, while he continued to pour out his mighty
prayer, the fashion of his countenance has been changed, and his face has
appeared as the face of an angel.”</p></div>
<p id="iv-p26">O
God, raise up more men of praying like John Fletcher! How we do need, in this
our day, men through whom God can work!</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="V. PRAYERLESS CHRISTIANS" progress="31.00%" prev="iv" next="vi" id="v">
<h2 id="v-p0.1">V. PRAYERLESS CHRISTIANS</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="v-p1"><i>“If
there was ever a time when Peter, James and John needed to remain awake it was
in Gethsemane. If James had persisted in
keeping awake it might have saved his decapitation a few years later. If Peter
had stirred himself to really intercede for himself and others he would not
have denied his Christ that night in the palace of Caiaphas.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="v-p1.1">H. W. Hodge.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="v-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="v-p2.1">There</span> is great need in this day for
Christian business men to inform their mundane affairs with the spirit of
prayer. There is a great army of successful merchants of almost every kind who
are members of Christ’s Church and it is high time these men attended to this
matter. This is but another version of the phrase, “putting God into business,”
the realization and restraint of His presence and of His fear in all the
secularities of life. We need the atmosphere of the prayer-closet to pervade
our public sales-rooms and counting-houses. The sanctity of prayer is needed to
impregnate business. We need the spirit of Sunday carried over to Monday and
continued until Saturday. But this cannot be done by prayerless men, but by men
of prayer. We need business men to go about their concerns with the same
reverence and responsibility with which they enter the closet. Men are badly
needed who are devoid of greed, but who, with all their hearts carry God with
them into the secular affairs of life.</p>
<p id="v-p3">Men
of the world imagine prayer to be too impotent a thing to come into rivalry
with business methods and worldly practices. Against such a misleading doctrine
Paul sets the whole commands of God, the loyalty to Jesus Christ, the claims
of pious character, and the demands of the salvation of the world. Men must
pray, and put strength and heart into their praying. This is part of the
primary business of life, and to it God has called men, first of all.</p>
<p id="v-p4">Praying
men are God’s agents on earth, the representative of government of heaven, set
to a specific task on the earth. While it is true that the Holy Spirit, the
angels of God, are agents of God in carrying forward the redemption of the
human race, yet among them there must be praying men. For such men God has
great use. He can make much of them, and in the past has done wonderful things
through them. These are His instruments in carrying out God’s great purposes on
the earth. They are God’s messengers, His watchmen, shepherds, workmen, who
need not be ashamed. Fully equipped for the great work to which they are
appointed, they honour God and bless the world.</p>
<p id="v-p5">Above
all things beside, Christian men and women must, primarily, be leaders in
prayer. No matter how conspicuous they may be in other activities, they fail if
they are not conspicuous in prayer. They must give their brain and heart to
prayer. Men who make and shape the program of Christ’s Church, who map out its
line of activity, should, themselves, be shaped and made by prayer. Men
controlling the Church finances, her thought, her action—should all be men of
prayer.</p>
<p id="v-p6">The
progress to consummation of God’s work in this world has two basic
principles—God’s ability to give and man’s ability to ask. Failure in either
one is fatal to the success of God’s work on earth. God’s inability to do or to
give would put an end to redemption. Man’s failure to pray would, just as
surely, set a limit to the plan. But God’s ability to do and to give has never
failed and <i>cannot </i>fail; but man’s ability to ask can fail, and often
does. Therefore the slow progress which is being made toward the realization of
a world won for Christ lies entirely with man’s limited asking. There is need
for the entire Church of God,
on the earth, to betake itself to prayer. The Church upon its knees would bring
heaven upon the earth.</p>
<p id="v-p7">The
wonderful ability of God to do for us is thus expressed by Paul in one of his
most comprehensive statements, “And God is able to make all grace abound toward
you,” he says, “that ye, always, having all sufficiency in all things, may
abound to every good work.”</p>
<p id="v-p8">Study,
I pray you, that remarkable statement—“God is able to make all grace abound.”
That is, He is able to give such sufficiency, that we may abound—overflow—to
every good work. Why are we not more fully fashioned after this overflowing
order? The answer is—lack of prayer-ability. “We have not because we ask not.”
We are feeble, weak and impoverished because of our failure to pray. God is
restrained in doing because we are restrained by reason of our non-praying. All
failures in securing heaven are traceable to lack of prayer or misdirected
petition.</p>
<p id="v-p9">Prayer
must be broad in its scope—it must plead for others. Intercession for others is
the hall-mark of all true prayer. When prayer is confined to self and to the
sphere of one’s personal needs, it dies by reason of its littleness, narrowness
and selfishness. Prayer must be broad and unselfish or it will perish. Prayer
is the soul of a man stirred to plead with God for men. In addition to being
interested in the eternal interests of one’s own soul it must, in its very
nature, be concerned for the spiritual and eternal welfare of others. One’s
ability to pray for self, finds its climax in the compassion its concern
expresses for others.</p>
<p id="v-p10">In <scripRef passage="1 Tim. 1" id="v-p10.1" parsed="|1Tim|1|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.1">1
Tim. 1</scripRef>, the Apostle Paul urges with singular and specific emphasis, that those
who occupy positions of influence and places of authority, are to give
themselves to prayer. “I will, therefore, that the men pray everywhere.” This
is the high calling of the men of the Church, and no calling is so engaging, so
engrossing and so valuable that we can afford to relieve Christian men from the
all-important vocation of secret prayer. Nothing whatever can take the place of
prayer. Nothing whatever can atone for the neglect of praying. This is
uppermost, first in point of importance and first in point of time. No man is
so high in position, or in grace, to be exempt from an obligation to pray. No
man is too big to pray, no matter who he is, nor what office he fills. The king
on his throne is as much obligated to pray as the peasant in his cottage. None
is so high and exalted in this world or so lowly and obscure as to be excused
from praying. The help of every one is needed in prosecuting the work of God,
and the prayer of each praying man helps to swell the aggregate. The leaders in
place, in gifts and in authority are to be chiefs in prayer.</p>
<p id="v-p11">Civil
and Church rulers shape the affairs of this world. And so civil and Church
rulers themselves need to be shaped personally in spirit, heart and conduct, in
truth and righteousness, by the prayers of God’s people. This is in direct line
with Paul’s words:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="v-p11.1">
<p id="v-p12">“I
exhort therefore,” he says, “that, first of all, supplications, prayers,
intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men, for rulers and all
that are in authority.”</p></div>
<p id="v-p13">It is
a sad day for righteousness when church politics instead of holy praying,
shapes the administration of the Kingdom and elevates men to place and power.
Why pray for all men? Because God wills the salvation of all men. God’s
children on earth must link their prayers to God’s will. Prayer is to carry out
the will of God. God wills the salvation of all men. His heart is set on this
one thing. Our prayers must be the creation and exponent of God’s will. We are
to grasp humanity in our praying as God grasps humanity in His love, His
interest and His plans to redeem humanity. Our sympathies, prayers, wrestling
and ardent desires must run parallel with the will of God, broad, generous,
world-wide and Godlike. The Christian man must in all things, first of all, be
conformed to the will of God, but nowhere shall this royal devotion be more
evident than in the salvation of the race of men. This high partnership with
God, as His vicegerents on earth, is to have its fullest, richest, and most
efficient exercise in prayer for all men.</p>
<p id="v-p14">Men
are to pray for all men, are to pray especially for rulers in Church and state,
“that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty.”
Peace on the outside and peace on the inside. Praying calms disturbing forces,
allays tormenting fears, brings conflict to an end. Prayer tends to do away
with turmoil. But even if there be external conflicts, it is well to have deep
peace within the citadel of the soul. “That we may lead a quiet and peaceable
life.” Prayer brings the inner calm and furnishes the outward tranquillity.
Praying rulers and praying subjects were they world-wide would allay turbulent
forces, make wars to cease, and peace to reign.</p>
<p id="v-p15">Men
must pray for all men that we may lead lives “in all godliness and honesty.”
That is with godliness and gravity. Godliness is to be like God. It is to be
godly, to have God-likeness, having the image of God stamped upon the inner
nature, and showing the same likeness in conduct and in temper. Almighty God is
the very highest model, and to be like Him is to possess the highest character.
Prayer moulds us into the image of God, and at the same time tends to mould
others into the same image just in proportion as we pray for others. Prayer
means to be God-like, and to be God-like is to love Christ and love God, to be
one with the Father and the Son in spirit, character and conduct. Prayer means
to stay with God till you are like Him. Prayer makes a godly man, and puts
within him “the mind of Christ,” the mind of humility, of self-surrender, of
service, of pity, and of prayer. If we really pray, we will become more like
God, or else we will quit praying.</p>
<p id="v-p16">“Men
are to pray everywhere,” in the closet, in the prayer-meeting, about the family
altar, and to do it, “lifting up holy hands, without wrath and doubting.” Here
is not only the obligation laid upon the men to pray, but instructions as to
how they should pray. “Men must pray without wrath.” That is, without
bitterness against their neighbours or brethren; without the obstinacy and
pertinacity of a strong will, and hard feelings, without an evil desire or
emotion kindled by nature’s fires in the carnal nature. Praying is not to be
done by these questionable things, nor in company with such evil feelings, but
“without” them, aloof and entirely separate from them. This is the sort of
praying the men are called upon to do, the sort which God hears and the kind
which prevails with God and accomplishes things. Such praying in the hands of
Christian men become divine agencies in God’s hands for carrying on God’s
gracious purposes and executing His designs in redemption.</p>
<p id="v-p17">Prayer
has a higher origin than man’s nature. This is true whether man’s nature as
separate from the angelic nature, or man’s carnal nature unrenewed and
unchanged be meant. Prayer does not originate in the realms of the carnal mind.
Such a nature is entirely foreign to prayer simply because “the carnal mind is
enmity against God.” It is by the new Spirit that we pray, the new spirit
sweetened by the sugar of heaven perfumed with the fragrance of the upper
world, and invigorated by a breath from the crystal sea. The “new spirit” is
native to the skies, panting after the heavenly things, inspired by the breath
of God. It is the praying temper from which all the old juices of the carnal,
unregenerate nature have been expelled, and the fire of God has created the
flame which has consumed worldly lusts, and the juices of the Spirit have been
injected into the soul, and the praying is entirely divorced from wrath.</p>
<p id="v-p18">Men
are also to pray “without doubting.” The Revised Version puts it, “without
disputings.” Faith in God, belief in God’s Word, they must have “without
question.” No doubting or disputing must be in the mind. There must be no
opinions, nor hesitancy, no questioning, no reasoning, no intellectual
quibbling, no rebellion, but a strict, stead-fast loyalty of spirit to God, a
life of loyalty in heart and intellect to God’s Word.</p>
<p id="v-p19">God
has much to do with believing men, who have a living, transforming faith in
Jesus Christ. These are God’s children. A father loves his children, supplies
their needs, hears their cries and answers their requests. A child believes his
father, loves him, trusts in him, and asks him for what he needs, believing
without doubting that his father will hear his requests. God has everything to
do with answering the prayer of His children. Their troubles concern Him, and
their prayers awaken Him. Their voice is sweet to Him. He loves to hear them
pray, and He is never happier than to answer their prayers.</p>
<p id="v-p20">Prayer
is intended for God’s ear. It is not man, but God who hears and answers prayer.
Prayer covers the whole range of man’s need. Hence, “in everything, by prayer
and supplication,” are “requests to be made known unto God.” Prayer includes
the entire range of God’s ability. “Is anything too hard for God?” Prayer
belongs to no favoured segment of man’s need, but reaches to and embraces the
entire circle of his wants, simply because God is the God of the whole man. God
has pledged Himself to supply the needs of the whole man, physical,
intellectual and spiritual. “But my God shall supply all your need according to
his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” Prayer is the child of grace, and grace
is for the whole man, and for every one of the children of men.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="VI. PRAYING MEN AT A PREMIUM" progress="37.19%" prev="v" next="vii" id="vi">
<h2 id="vi-p0.1">VI. PRAYING MEN AT A PREMIUM</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="vi-p1"><i>“Our
Redeemer was in the Garden
 of Gethsemane. His
hour was come. He felt as if He would be strengthened somewhat, if He had two
or three disciples near Him. His three chosen disciples were within a stone’s
cast of the scene of His agony; but they were all asleep that the Scripture
might be fulfilled—‘I have trodden the winepress alone, and of the people there
was none with Me.’ The eight, in the distance, were good and true disciples;
but they were only ordinary men, or men with a commonplace call.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="vi-p1.1">Alexander Whyte.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="vi-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="vi-p2.1">No</span> insistence in the Bible is more
pressing than the injunction it lays upon men to pray. No exhortation contained
therein is more hearty, more solemn, and more stirring. No principle is more
strongly inculcated than that “men ought always to pray and not to faint.” In
view of this enjoinder it is pertinent to inquire as to whether Christian people
are praying men and women in anything like body and bulk? Is prayer a fixed
course in the schools of the Church? In the Sunday school, the home, the
colleges, have we any graduates in the school of prayer? Is the Church
producing those who have diplomas from the great university of prayer? This is
what God requires, what He commands, and it is those who possess such
qualifications that He must have to accomplish His purposes and to carry out
the work of His Kingdom on earth.</p>
<p id="vi-p3">And
it is earnest praying that had need to be done. Languid praying, without heart
or strength, with neither fire nor tenacity, defeats its own avowed purpose.
The prophet of olden times laments that in a day which needed strenuous praying
there was no one who “stirred up himself to take hold of God.” Christ charges
us “not to faint” in our praying. Laxity and indifference are great hindrances
to prayer, both to the practice of praying and the process of receiving; it
requires a brave, strong, fearless and insistent spirit to engage in successful
prayer. Diffuseness, too, interferes with effectiveness. Too many petitions
break tension and unity, and breed neglect. Prayers should be specific and
urgent. Too many words, like too much width, breeds shallows and sand-bars. A
single objective which absorbs the whole being and inflames the entire man, is
the properly constraining force in prayer.</p>
<p id="vi-p4">It is
easy to see how prayer was a decreed factor in the dispensations preceding the
coming of Jesus, and how that their leaders had to be men of prayer; how that
God’s mightiest revelation of Himself was a revelation made through prayer.
And, finally, how that Jesus Christ, in His personal ministry, and in His
relation to God, was great and constant in prayer. His labours and dispensation
overflowed with fullness in proportion to His prayers. The possibilities of His
praying were unlimited and the possibilities of His ministry were in keeping.
The necessity of His praying was equaled only by the constancy with which He
practiced it during His early life.</p>
<p id="vi-p5">The
dispensation of the Holy Spirit is a dispensation of prayer, in a preeminent
sense. Here prayer has an essential and vital relation. Without depreciating
the possibilities and necessities of prayer in all the preceding dispensations
of God in the world it must be declared that it is in this latter dispensation
that the engagements and demands of prayer are given their greatest authority,
their possibilities rendered unlimited and their necessity insuperable.</p>
<p id="vi-p6">These
days of ours have sore need of a generation of praying men, a band of men and
women through whom God can bring His great and His greatest movements more
fully into the world. The Lord our God is not straitened within Himself, but He
<i>is </i>straitened in us, by reason of our little faith and weak praying. A
breed of Christian is greatly needed who will seek tirelessly after God,—who
will give Him no rest, day and night, until He hearken to their cry. The times
demand praying men who are all athirst for God’s glory, who are broad and
unselfish in their desires, quenchless for God, who seek Him late and early,
and who will give themselves no rest until the whole earth be filled with His
glory.</p>
<p id="vi-p7">Men
and women are needed whose prayers will give to the world the utmost power of
God; who will make His promises to blossom with rich and full results. God is
waiting to hear us and challenges us to bring Him to do this thing by our
praying. He is asking us, today, as He did His ancient Israel,
to “prove Him now herewith.” Behind God’s Word is God Himself, and we read:
“Thus saith the Lord, the Holy One of Israel, his Maker: Ask of me of things to
come and concerning my sons, and concerning the work of my hands, command ye
me.” As though God places Himself in the hands and at the disposal of His
people who pray—as indeed He does.</p>
<p id="vi-p8">The
dominant element of all praying is faith, that is conspicuous, cardinal and
emphatic. Without such faith it is impossible to please God, and equally
impossible to pray.</p>
<p id="vi-p9">There
is a current conception of spiritual duties which tends to separate the pulpit
and the pew, as though the pulpit bore the entire burden of spiritual concerns,
and while the pew was concerned only with duties that relate to the lower
sphere of the secular and worldly. Such a view needs drastic correction. God’s cause,
its obligations, efforts and successes, lie with equal pressure on pulpit and
pew.</p>
<p id="vi-p10">But
the man in the pew is not taxed with the burden of prayer as he ought to be,
and as he <i>must </i>be, ere any new visitation of power come to the Church.
The Church never will be wholly for God until the pews are filled with praying
men. The Church cannot be what God wants it to be until those of its members
who are leaders in business, politics, law, and society, are leaders in prayer.</p>
<p id="vi-p11">God
began His early movements in the world with men of prayer. He chose such a man
to be the father of that race who became His chosen people in the world for
hundreds of years, to whom He committed His oracles, and from whom sprang the
Promised Messiah. Abraham, a leader of God’s cause, was preeminently a praying
man. When we consider his conduct and character, we readily see how prayer
ruled and swayed this great leader of God’s people in the wilderness. “Abraham
planted a grove in Beersheba, and
called there on the name of the Lord, the everlasting God,” and it is an
outstanding fact that wherever he pitched his tent and camped for a season,
with his household, there he erected the altar of sacrifice and of prayer. His
was a personal and a family religion, in which prayer was a prominent and
abiding factor.</p>
<p id="vi-p12">Prayer
is the medium of divine revelation. It is through prayer that God reveals
Himself to the spiritual soul today, just as in the Old Testament days He made
His revelations to the men who prayed. God shows Himself to the man who prays.
“God is with thee in all that thou doest.” This was the clear conviction of
those who would fain make a covenant with Abraham, and the reason for this
tribute was the belief commonly held concerning the patriarch that, not only
was he a man of prayer, but a man whose prayers God would answer. This is the
summary and secret of divine rule in the Church. In all ages God has ruled the
Church by prayerful men. When prayer fails, the divine rulership falls. As we
have seen, Abraham, the father of the faithful, was a prince and a priest in
prayer. He had remarkable influence with God. God stays His vengeance while
Abraham prays. His mercy is suspended and conditioned on Abraham’s praying. His
visitations of wrath are removed by the praying of this ruler in Israel.
The movements of God are influenced by the prayers of Abraham, the friend of
God. Abraham’s righteous prayerfulness permits him to share the secrets of
God’s counsels, while the knowledge of these secrets draws out and intensifies
his praying. With Abraham, the altar of sacrifice is hard by the altar of
prayer. With him the altar of prayer sanctifies the altar of sacrifice. To
Abimelech God said, “Abraham is a prophet, and he shall pray for thee, and thou
shalt live.”</p>
<p id="vi-p13">Christian
people <i>must </i>pray for men. On one occasion, Samuel said unto the people,
“Moreover as for me, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing
to pray for you.” Fortunate for these sinful people who had rejected God, and
desired a human king, that they had in Israel
a man of prayer. The royal way to enlarge personal grace is to pray for others.
Intercessory prayer is a means of grace to those who exercise it. We enter the
richest fields of spiritual growth and gather its priceless riches in the
avenues of intercessory prayer. To pray for men is of divine nomination, and
represents the highest form of Christian service.</p>
<p id="vi-p14">Men
must pray, and men must be prayed for. The Christian must pray for all things,
of course, but prayers for men are infinitely more important, just as men are infinitely
more important than things. So also prayers for men are far more important than
prayers for things because men more deeply concern God’s will and the work of
Jesus Christ than things. Men are to be cared for, sympathized with and prayed
for, because sympathy, pity, compassion and care accompany and precede prayer
for men, when they are not called out for things.</p>
<p id="vi-p15">All
this makes praying a real business, not child’s play, not a secondary affair,
nor a trivial matter but a serious business. The men who have made a success of
praying have made a business of praying. It is a process demanding the time,
thought, energy and hearts of mankind. Prayer is business for time, business
for eternity. It is a man’s business to pray, transcending all other business
and taking precedence over all other vocations, professions or occupations. Our
praying concerns ourselves, all men, their greatest interests, even the
salvation of their immortal souls. Praying is a business which takes hold of
eternity and the things beyond the grave. It is a business which involves earth
and heaven. All worlds are touched and worlds are influenced by prayer. It has
to do with God and men, angels and devils.</p>
<p id="vi-p16">Jesus
was preeminently a leader in prayer, and His praying is an incentive to prayer.
How prominently prayer stands out in His life! The leading events of His
earthly career are distinctly marked by prayer. The wonderful experience and
glory of the Transfiguration was preceded by prayer, and was the result of the
praying of our Lord. What words He used as He prayed we know not, nor do we
know for what He prayed. But doubtless it was night, and long into its hours
the Master prayed. It was while He prayed the darkness fled, and His form was
lit with unearthly splendour. Moses and Elijah came to yield to Him not only
the palm of law and prophecy, but the palm of praying. None other prayed as did
Jesus nor had any such a glorious manifestation of the divine presence or heard
so clearly the revealing voice of the Father, “This is my beloved Son; hear ye
him.” Happy disciples to be with Christ in the school of prayer!</p>
<p id="vi-p17">How
many of us have failed to come to this glorious Mount of Transfiguration
because we were unacquainted with the transfiguring power of prayer! It is the
going apart to pray, the long, intense seasons of prayer, in which we engage
which makes the face to shine, transfigures the character, makes even dull,
earthly garments to glisten with heavenly splendour. But more than this: it is
real praying which makes eternal things real, close and tangible, and which
brings the glorified visitors and the heavenly visions. Transfigured lives
would not be so rare if there were more of this transfigured praying. These
heavenly visits would not be so few if there was more of this transfigured
praying.</p>
<p id="vi-p18">How
difficult it appears to be for the Church to understand that the whole scheme
of redemption depends upon men of prayer! The work of our Lord, while here on
the earth, as well of the Apostle Paul was, by teaching and example, to develop
men of prayer, to whom the future of the Church should be committed. How
strange that instead of learning this simple and all important lesson, the
modern Church has largely overlooked it! We have need to turn afresh to that
wondrous Leader of spiritual Israel, our Lord Jesus Christ, who by example and
precept enjoins us to prayer and to the great Apostle to the Gentiles, who by
virtue of his praying habits and prayer lessons is a model and an example to
God’s people in every age and clime.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="VII. THE MINISTRY AND PRAYER" progress="43.02%" prev="vi" next="viii" id="vii">
<h2 id="vii-p0.1">VII. THE MINISTRY AND
PRAYER</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="vii-p1"><i>“Of
course the preacher is above all others distinguished as a man of prayer. He
prays as an ordinary Christian, else he were a hypocrite. He prays more than
ordinary Christians else he were disqualified for the office he has undertaken
If you as ministers are not very prayerful you are to be pitied. If you become
lax in sacred devotion, not only will you need to be pitied but your people
also, and the day cometh in which you will be ashamed and confounded. Our
seasons of fastings and prayer at the Tabernacle have been high days indeed;
never has heaven’s gate stood wider; never have our hearts been nearer the
central glory.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="vii-p1.1">Charles Haddon
Spurgeon.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="vii-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="vii-p2.1">Preachers</span> are God’s leaders. They are
divinely called to their holy office and high purpose and, primarily, are
responsible for the condition of the Church. Just as Moses was called of God to
lead Israel out
of Egypt
through the wilderness into the Promised Land, so, also, does God call His
ministers to lead His spiritual Israel
through this world unto the heavenly land. They are divinely commissioned to
leadership, and are by precept and example to teach God’s people what God would
have them be. Paul’s counsel to the young preacher Timothy is in point: “Let no
man despise thy youth,” he says, “but be thou an example of the believers, in
word, conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity.”</p>
<p id="vii-p3">God’s
ministers shape the Church’s character, and give tone and direction to its
life. The prefacing sentence of the letter to each of the seven churches in Asia
reads, “To the angel of the Church,” seeming to indicate that the angel—the
minister—was in the same state of mind and condition of life as the membership
and that these “angels” or ministers were largely responsible for the spiritual
condition of things existing in each Church. The “angel” in each case was the
preacher, teacher, or leader. The first Christians knew full well and felt this
responsibility. In their helplessness, consciously felt, they cried out, “And
who is sufficient for things?” as the tremendous responsibility pressed upon
their hearts and heads. The only reply to such a question was, “God only.” So
they were necessarily compelled to look beyond themselves for help and throw
themselves on prayer to secure God. More and more as they prayed, did they feel
their responsibility, and more and more by prayer did they get God’s help. They
realized that their sufficiency was of God.</p>
<p id="vii-p4">Prayer
belongs in a very high and important sense to the ministry. It takes vigour and
elevation of character to administer the prayer-office. Praying prophets have
frequently been at a premium in the history of God’s people. In every age the
demand has been for leaders in Israel
who pray. God’s watchmen must always and everywhere be men of prayer.</p>
<p id="vii-p5">It
ought to be no surprise for ministers to be often found on their knees seeking
divine help under the responsibility of their call. These are the true prophets
of the Lord, and these are they who stand as mouthpieces of God to a generation
of wicked and worldly-minded men and women. Prayer preachers are boldest, the
truest and the swiftest ministers of God. They mount up highest and are nearest
to Him who has called them. They advance more rapidly and in Christian living
are most like God.</p>
<p id="vii-p6">In
reading the record of the four evangelists, we cannot but be impressed by the
supreme effort made by our Lord to rightly instruct the twelve Apostles in the
things which would properly qualify them for the tremendous tasks which would
be theirs after He had gone back to the bosom of the Father. His solicitude was
for the Church that she should have men, holy in life and in heart, and who
would know full well from whence came their strength and power in the work of
the ministry. A large part of Christ’s teaching was addressed to these chosen
Apostles, and the training of the twelve occupied much of His thought and
consumed much of His time. In all that training, prayer was laid down as a
basic principle.</p>
<p id="vii-p7">We
find the same thing to be true in the life and work of the Apostle Paul. While
he addressed himself to the edification of the churches to whom he ministered
and wrote, it was in his mind and purpose to rightly instruct and prepare
ministers to whom would be committed the interests of God’s people. The two
epistles to Timothy were addressed to a young preacher, while that to Titus was
also written to a young minister. And Paul’s design appears to have been to
give to each of them such instruction as would be needed rightly to do the work
of the ministry to which they had been called by the Spirit of God. Underlying
these instructions was the foundation-stone of prayer, since by no means would
they be able to “show themselves approved unto God, workmen that needeth not to
be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth,” unless they were men of
prayer.</p>
<p id="vii-p8">The
highest welfare of the Church of God
on earth depends largely upon the ministry, and so Almighty God has always been
jealous of His watchmen—His preachers. His concern has been for the character
of the men who minister at His altars in holy things. They must be men who lean
upon Him, who look to Him, and who continually seek Him for wisdom, help and
power effectively to do the work of the ministry. And so He has designed men of
prayer for the holy office, and has relied upon them successively to perform
the tasks He has assigned them.</p>
<p id="vii-p9">God’s
great works are to be done as Christ did them; are to be done, indeed, with
increased power received from the ascended and exalted Christ. These works are
to be done by prayer. Men must do God’s work in God’s way, and to God’s glory,
and prayer is a necessity to its successful accomplishment.</p>
<p id="vii-p10">The
thing far above all other things in the equipment of the preacher is prayer.
Before everything else, he must be a man who makes a specialty of prayer. A
prayerless preacher is a misnomer. He has either missed his calling, or has
grievously failed God who called him into the ministry. God wants men who are
not ignoramuses, who “study to show themselves approved.” Preaching the Word is
essential; social qualities are not to be underestimated, and education is
good; but under and above all else, prayer must be the main plank in the
platform of the man who goes forth to preach the unsearchable riches of Christ
to a lost and hungry world. The one weak spot in our Church institutions lies
just here. Prayer is not regarded as being the primary factor in church life
and activity, and other things, good in their places, are made primary. First
things need to be put first, and the first thing in the equipment of a minister
is prayer.</p>
<p id="vii-p11">Our
Lord is the pattern for all preachers, and, with Him, prayer was the law of
life. By it He lived. It was the inspiration of His toil, the source of His
strength, the spring of His joy. With our Lord prayer was no sentimental
episode, nor an afterthought, nor a pleasing, diverting prelude, nor an
interlude, nor a parade or form. For Jesus, prayer was exacting, all-absorbing,
paramount. It was the call of a sweet duty to Him, the satisfying of a restless
yearning, the preparation for heavy responsibilities, and the meeting of a
vigorous need. This being so, the disciple must be as his Lord, the servant as
his Master. As was the Lord Himself, so also must be those whom He has called
to be His disciples. Our Lord Jesus Christ chose His twelve Apostles only after
He had spent a night in praying; and we may rest assured that He sets the same
high value on those He calls to His ministry, in this our own day and time.</p>
<p id="vii-p12">No
feeble or secondary place was given to prayer in the ministry of Jesus. It
comes first—emphatic, conspicuous, controlling. Of prayerful habits, of a
prayerful spirit, given to long solitary communion with God, Jesus was above
all else, a man of prayer. The crux of His earthly history, in New Testament
terminology, is condensed to a single statement, to be found in <scripRef passage="Hebrews 5:7" id="vii-p12.1" parsed="|Heb|5|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.5.7">Hebrews 5:7</scripRef>:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="vii-p12.2">
<p id="vii-p13">“Who
in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with
strong crying and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death, and was
heard in that he feared.”</p></div>
<p id="vii-p14">As
was their Lord and Master, whose they are and whom they serve, so let His
ministers be. Let Him be their pattern, their example, their leader and
teacher. Much reference is made in some quarters about “following Christ,” but
it is confined to the following of Him in modes and ordinances, as if salvation
were wrapped up in the specific way of doing a thing. “The path of prayer
Thyself hath trod,” is the path along which we are to follow Him, and in no
other. Jesus was given as a leader to the people of God, and no leader ever exemplified
more the worth and necessity of prayer. Equal in glory with the Father,
anointed and sent on His special mission by the Holy Spirit, His incarnate
birth, His high commission, His royal anointing—all these were His but they did
not relieve Him from the exacting claims of prayer. Rather did they tend to
impose these claims upon Him with greater authority. He did not ask to be
excused from the burden of prayer; He gladly accepted it, acknowledged its
claims and voluntarily subjected Himself to its demands.</p>
<p id="vii-p15">His
leadership was preeminent, and His praying was preeminent. Had it not been, His
leadership had been neither preeminent nor divine. If, in true leadership,
prayer had been dispensable, then certainly Jesus could have dispensed with it.
But He did not, nor can any of His followers who desire effectiveness in
Christian activity do other than follow their Lord.</p>
<p id="vii-p16">While
Jesus Christ practiced praying Himself, being personally under the law of
prayer, and while His parables and miracles were but exponents of prayer, He
laboured directly to teach His disciples the specific art of praying. He said
little or nothing about how to preach or what to preach. But He spent His
strength and time in teaching men how to speak to God, how to commune with Him,
and how to be with Him. He knew full well that he who has learned the craft of
talking to God, will be well versed in talking to men. We may turn aside for a
moment to observe that this was the secret of the wonderful success of the
early Methodist preachers, who were far from being learned men. But with all
their limitations, they were men of prayer, and they did great things for God.</p>
<p id="vii-p17">All
ability to talk to men is measured by the ability with which a preacher can
talk to God for men. He “who ploughs not in his closet, will never reap in his
pulpit.”</p>
<p id="vii-p18">The
fact must ever be kept in the forefront and emphasized that Jesus Christ
trained His disciples to pray. This is the real meaning of that saying, “The
Training of the Twelve.” It must be kept in mind that Christ taught the world’s
preachers more about praying than He did about preaching. Prayer was the great
factor in the spreading of His Gospel. Prayer conserved and made efficient all
other factors. Yet He did not discount preaching when He stressed praying, but
rather taught the utter dependence of preaching on prayer.</p>
<p id="vii-p19">“The
Christian’s trade is praying,” declared Martin Luther. Every Jewish boy had to
learn a trade. Jesus Christ learned two, the trade of a carpenter, and that of
praying. The one trade subserved earthly uses; the other served His divine and
higher purposes. Jewish custom committed Jesus when a boy to the trade of a
carpenter; the law of God bound Him to praying from His earliest years, and
remained with Him to the end.</p>
<p id="vii-p20">Christ
is the Christian’s example, and every Christian must pattern after Him. Every
preacher must be like his Lord and Master, and must learn the trade of praying.
He who learns well the trade of praying masters the secret of the Christian
art, and becomes a skilled workman in God’s workshop, one who needeth not to be
ashamed, a worker together with his Lord and Master.</p>
<p id="vii-p21">“Pray
without ceasing,” is the trumpet call to the preachers of our time. If the
preachers will get their thoughts clothed with the atmosphere of prayer, if
they will prepare their sermons on their knees, a gracious outpouring of God’s
Spirit will come upon the earth.</p>
<p id="vii-p22">The
one indispensable qualification for preaching is the gift of the Holy Spirit,
and it was for the bestowal of this indispensable gift that the disciples were
charged to tarry in Jerusalem. The
absolute necessity there is for receiving this gift if success is to attend the
efforts of the ministry, is found in the command the first disciples had to
stay in Jerusalem till they
received it, and also with the instant and earnest prayerfulness with which
they sought it. In obedience to their Lord’s command to tarry in that city till
they were endued with power from on high, they immediately, after He left them
for heaven, entered on securing it by continued and earnest prayer. “These all
with one accord, continued steadfastly in prayer, with the women, and Mary the
mother of Jesus and with his brethren.” To this same thing John refers in his
First Epistle. “Ye have an unction from the Holy One,” he says. It is this divine
unction that preachers of the present day should sincerely desire, pray for,
remaining unsatisfied till the blessed gift be richly bestowed.</p>
<p id="vii-p23">Another
allusion to this same important procedure is made by our Lord shortly after His
resurrection, when He said to His disciples: “And ye shall receive power after
that the Holy Ghost is come upon you.” At the same time Jesus directed the
attention of His disciples to the statement of John the Baptist concerning the
Spirit, the identical thing for which He had commanded them to tarry in the
city of Jerusalem—“power from on high.” Alluding to John the Baptist’s words
Jesus said, “For John indeed baptized with water, but ye shall be baptized with
the Holy Ghost not many days hence.” Peter at a later date said of our Lord:
“God anointed him with the Holy Ghost and with power.”</p>
<p id="vii-p24">These
are the divine statements of the mission and ministry of the Holy Spirit to
preachers of that day and the same divine statements apply with equal force to
the preachers of <i>this </i>day. God’s ideal minister is a God-called,
divinely anointed, Spirit-touched man, separated unto God’s work, set apart
from secularities and questionable affairs, baptized from above, marked, sealed
and owned by the Spirit, devoted to his Master and His ministry. These are the
divinely-appointed requisites for a preacher of the Word; without them, he is
inadequate, and inevitably unfruitful.</p>
<p id="vii-p25">Today,
there is no dearth of preachers who deliver eloquent sermons on the need and
nature of revival, and advance elaborate plans for the spread of the kingdom of
God, but the praying preachers are far more rare and the greatest benefactor
this age can have is a man who will bring the preachers, the Church and the
people back to the practice of real praying. The reformer needed just now is
the praying reformer. The leader Israel
requires is one who, with clarion voice, will call the ministry back to their
knees.</p>
<p id="vii-p26">There
is considerable talk of the coming revival in the air, but we need to have the
vision to see that the revival we need and the only one that can be worth
having is one that is born of the Holy Spirit, which brings deep conviction for
sin, and regeneration for those who seek God’s face. Such a revival comes at
the end of a season of real praying, and it is utter folly to talk about or
expect a revival without the Holy Spirit operating in His peculiar office,
conditioned on much earnest praying. Such a revival will begin in pulpit and
pew alike, will be promoted by both preacher and lay-man working in harmony
with God.</p>
<p id="vii-p27">The
heart is the lexicon of prayer; the life the best commentary on prayer, and the
outward bearing its fullest expression. The character is made by prayer; the
life is perfected by prayer. And this the ministry needs to learn as thoroughly
as the laymen. There is but one rule for both.</p>
<p id="vii-p28">So
averse was the general body of Christ’s disciples to prayer, having so little
taste for it, and having so little sympathy with Him in the deep things of
prayer, and its mightier struggles, that the Master had to select a circle of
three more apt scholars—Peter, James and John—who had more of sympathy, and
relish for this divine work, and take them aside that they might learn the
lesson of prayer. These men were nearer to Jesus, fuller of sympathy, and more
helpful to Him because they were more prayerful.</p>
<p id="vii-p29">Blessed,
indeed, are those disciples whom Jesus Christ, in this day, calls into a more
intimate fellowship with Him, and who, readily responding to the call, are
found much on their knees before Him. Distressing, indeed, is the condition of
those servants of Jesus who, in their hearts, are averse to the exercise of the
ministry of prayer.</p>
<p id="vii-p30">All
the great eras of our Lord, historical and spiritual, were made or fashioned by
His praying. In like manner His plans and great achievements were born in
prayer and impregnated by the spirit thereof. As was the Master, so also must
His servant be; as his Lord did in the great eras of His life, so should the
disciple do when faced by important crises. “To your knees, O Israel!” should
be the clarion-call to the ministry of this generation.</p>
<p id="vii-p31">The
highest form of religious life is attained by prayer. The richest revelations
of God—Father, Son, and Spirit—are made, not to the learned, the great or the
“noble” of earth, but men of prayer. “For ye see your calling, brethren, that
not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are
called,” to whom God makes known the deep things of God, and reveals the higher
things of His character, but to the lowly, inquiring, praying ones. And again
must it be said, his is as true of preachers as of laymen. It is the spiritual
man who prays, and to praying ones God makes His revelations through the Holy
Spirit.</p>
<p id="vii-p32">Praying
preachers have always brought the greater glory to God, have moved His Gospel
onward with its greatest, speediest rate and power. A non-praying preacher and
a non-praying Church may flourish outwardly and advance in many aspects of
their life. Both preacher and church may become synonyms for success, but
unless it rest on a praying basis all success will eventually crumble into
deadened life and ultimate decay.</p>
<p id="vii-p33">“Ye
have not because ye ask not,” is the solution of all spiritual weakness both in
the personal life and in the pulpit. Either that or it is, “Ye ask and receive
not because ye ask amiss.” Real praying lies at the foundation of all real
success of the ministry in the things of God. The stability, energy and
facility with which God’s kingdom is established in this world are dependent
upon prayer. God has made it so, and so God is anxious for men to pray.
Especially is He concerned that His chosen ministers shall be men of prayer,
and so gives that wonderful statement in order to encourage His ministers to
pray, which is found in <scripRef passage="Matthew 6:9" id="vii-p33.1" parsed="|Matt|6|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.6.9">Matthew 6:9</scripRef>:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="vii-p33.2">
<p id="vii-p34">“But
I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock,
and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh, receiveth, and he
that seeketh, findeth; and to him that knocketh, it shall be opened.”</p></div>
<p id="vii-p35">Thus
both command and direct promise give accent to His concern that they shall
pray. Pause and think on these familiar words. “Ask, and it shall be given
you.” That itself would seem to be enough to set us all, laymen and preachers,
to praying, so direct, simple and unlimited. These words open all the treasures
of heaven to us, simply by asking for them.</p>
<p id="vii-p36">If we
have not studied the prayers of Paul, primarily a preacher to the Gentiles, we
can have but a feeble view of the great necessity for prayer, and how much it
is worth in the life and the work of a minister of the Gospel. Furthermore, we
shall have but a very limited view of the possibilities of the Gospel to enrich
and make strong and perfect Christian character, as well as to equip preachers
for their high and holy task. Oh, when will we learn the simple yet all
important lesson that the one great thing needed in the life of a preacher to
help him in his personal life, to keep his soul alive to God, and to give
efficacy to the Word preached by him, is real, constant prayer!</p>
<p id="vii-p37">Paul
with prayer uppermost in his mind, assures the Colossians that “Epaphras is
always labouring fervently for you in prayers, that ye may stand complete and
perfect in all the will of God.” To this high state of grace, “complete in all
the will of God,” he prays they may come. So prayer was the force which was to
bring them to that elevated, vigorous and stable state of heart. This is in
line with Paul’s teaching to the Ephesians, “And he gave some pastors and
teachers, for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the body of Christ,” where it is evidently affirmed that the whole
work of the ministry is not merely to induce sinners to repent, but it is also
the “perfecting of the saints.” And so Epaphras “laboured fervently in prayers”
for this thing. Certainly he was himself a praying man, in thus so earnestly
praying for these early Christians.</p>
<p id="vii-p38">The
Apostles put out their force in order that Christians should honour God by the
purity and consistency of their outward lives. They were to reproduce the character
of Jesus Christ. They were to perfect His image in themselves, imbibe His
temper and reflect His carriage in all their tempers and conduct. They were to
be imitators of God as dear children, to be holy as He was holy. Thus even
laymen were to preach by their conduct and character, just as the ministry
preached with their mouths.</p>
<p id="vii-p39">To
elevate the followers of Christ to these exalted heights of Christian
experience, they were in every way true in the ministry of God’s Word, in the
ministry of prayer, in holy consuming zeal, in burning exhortation, in rebuke
and reproof. Added to all these, sanctifying all these, invigorating all these,
and making all of them salutary, they centered and exercised constantly the
force of mightiest praying. “Night and day praying exceedingly,” that is,
praying out of measure, with intense earnestness, superabundantly, beyond
measure, exceeding abundantly.</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="vii-p39.1">
<p id="vii-p40">“Night
and day praying exceeding abundantly, that we might see your face, and might
perfect that which is lacking in your faith. Now God himself, and our Father,
and our Lord Jesus Christ, direct our way unto you.</p>
<p id="vii-p41">“And
the Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward another, and toward
all men, even as we do toward you; to the end he may establish your hearts unblamable
in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ
with all his saints.”</p></div>
<p id="vii-p42">It
was after this fashion that these Apostles—the first preachers in the early
Church—laboured in prayer. And only those who labour after the same fashion are
the true successors of these Apostles. This is the true, the Scriptural
“apostolical succession,” the succession of simple faith, earnest desire for
holiness of heart and life, and zealous praying. These are the things today
which make the ministry strong, faithful and efficient, “workmen who needeth
not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.”</p>
<p id="vii-p43">Jesus
Christ, God’s Leader and Commander of His people, lived and suffered under this
law of prayer. All His personal conquests in His life on earth were won by
obedience to this law, while the conquests which have been won by His
representatives since He ascended to heaven, were gained only when this
condition of prayer was heartily and fully met. Christ was under this one
prayer condition. His Apostles were under the same prayer condition. His saints
are under it, and even His angels are under it. By every token, therefore,
preachers are under the same prayer law. Not for one moment are they relieved
or excused from obedience to the law of prayer. It is their very life, the
source of their power, the secret of their religious experience and communion
with God.</p>
<p id="vii-p44">Christ
could do nothing without prayer. Christ could do all things by prayer. The
Apostles were helpless without prayer—and were absolutely dependent upon it for
success in defeating their spiritual foes. They could do all things by prayer.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="VIII. PRAYERLESSNESS IN THE PULPIT" progress="54.39%" prev="vii" next="ix" id="viii">
<h2 id="viii-p0.1">VIII. PRAYERLESSNESS IN THE PULPIT</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="viii-p1"><i>“Henry
Martyn laments that ‘want of private devotional reading and shortness of prayer
through incessant sermon-making had produced much strangeness between God and
his soul.’ He judges that he had dedicated too much time to public
ministrations and too little to private communion with God. He was much
impressed with the need of setting apart times for fasting and to devote times
to for solemn prayer. Resulting from this he records ‘Was assisted this morning
to pray for two hours.’”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="viii-p1.1">E. M. B.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="viii-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="viii-p2.1">All</span>
God’s saints came to their sainthood by the way of prayer. The saints could do
nothing without prayer. We can go further and say that the angels in heaven can
do nothing without prayer, but can do all things by praying. These messengers
of the Highest are largely dependent on the prayers of the saints for the
sphere and power of their usefulness, which open avenues for angelic usefulness
and create missions for them on the earth. And as it is with all the Apostles,
saints and angels in heaven, so is it of preachers. “The angels of the
churches” can do nothing without prayer which opens doors of usefulness and
gives power and point to their words.</p>
<p id="viii-p3">How
can a preacher preach effectively, make impressions on hearts and minds, and
have fruits to his ministry, who does not get his message first-hand from God?
How can he deliver a rightful message without having his faith quickened, his vision
cleared, and his heart warmed by his closeting with God?</p>
<p id="viii-p4">It
would be well for all of us, in this connection, to read again Isaiah’s vision
recorded in the seventh chapter of his prophecy when, as he waited, and
confessed and prayed before the throne, the angel touched his lips with a live
coal from God’s altar:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="viii-p4.1">
<p id="viii-p5">“Then
flew one of the seraphim unto me,” he says, “having a live coal in his hand,
which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar; and he laid it upon my
mouth, and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips, and thy iniquity is taken away
and thy sin is purged.”</p></div>
<p id="viii-p6">Oh,
the need there is for present-day preachers to have their lips touched with a
live coal from the altar of God! This fire is brought to the mouths of those
prophets who are of a prayerful spirit, and who wait in the secret place for
the appointed angel to bring the living flame. Preachers of the same temper as
Isaiah received visits from the angel who brings live coals to touch their
lips. Prayer always brings the living flame to unloose tongues, to open doors
of utterance, and to open great and effectual doors of doing good. This, above
all else, is the great need of the prophets of God.</p>
<p id="viii-p7">As
far as the abiding interests of religion are concerned, a pulpit without a
closet will always be a barren thing. Blessed is the preacher whose pulpit and
closet are hard by each other, and who goes from the one into the other. To
consecrate no place to prayer, is to make a beggarly showing, not only in
praying, but in holy living, for secret prayer and holy living are so closely
joined that they can never be dissevered. A preacher or a Christian may live a
decent, religious life, without secret prayer, but decency and holiness are two
widely different things. And the former is attained only by secret prayer.</p>
<p id="viii-p8">A
preacher may preach in an official, entertaining and learned way, without
prayer, but between this kind of preaching and the sowing of God’s precious
seed there is distance not easily covered.</p>
<p id="viii-p9">We
cannot declare too often or too strongly that prayer, involving all of its
elements, is the one prime condition of the success of Christ’s kingdom, and
that all else is secondary and incidental. Prayerful preachers, prayerful men
and prayerful women only can press this Gospel with aggressive power. They only
can put in it conquering forces. Preachers may be sent out by the thousand,
their equipments be ever so complete, but unless they be men skilled in the
trade of prayer, trained to its martial and exhaustive exercise, their going
will be lacking in power and effectiveness. Moreover, except the men and women
who are behind these preachers, who furnish their equipment, are men and women
in whose characters prayer has become to be serious labour, their outlay will
be a vain and bootless effort.</p>
<p id="viii-p10">Prayer
should be the inseparable accompaniment of all missionary effort, and must be
the one equipment of the missionaries as they go out to their fields of labour,
and enter upon their delicate and responsible tasks. Prayer and missions go
hand in hand. A prayerless missionary is a failure before he goes out, while he
<i>is </i>out, and when he returns to his native land. A prayerless board of
missions, too, needs to learn the lesson of the necessity of prayer.</p>
<p id="viii-p11">Prayer
enthrones God as sovereign and elevates Jesus Christ to sit with Him, and had
Christian preachers used to its full the power of prayer, long ere this the
“kingdoms of this world would have become the kingdom of God and of his
Christ.” Added to all the missionary addresses, the money raised for missions,
to the scores being sent out to needy fields, is prayer. Missions have their
root in prayer, must have prayer in all of its plans, and prayer must precede,
go with and follow all of its missionaries and labourers.</p>
<p id="viii-p12">In
the face of all difficulties which face the Church in its great work on earth,
and the almost superhuman and complex obstacles in the way of evangelizing the
world, God encourages us by His strongest promises: “Call unto me and I will
answer thee, and show great and mighty things which thou knowest not.” The
revelations of God to him who is of a prayerful spirit go far beyond the limits
of the praying. God commits Himself to answer the specific prayer, but He does
not stop there. He says, “Ask of me things to come concerning my sons, and
concerning the work of my hands, command ye me.” Think over that remarkable
engagement of God to those who pray, “Command ye me,” He actually places
Himself at the command of praying preachers and a praying Church. And this is a
sufficient answer to all doubts, fears and unbelief, and a wonderful
inspiration to do God’s work in His own way, which means by the way of prayer.</p>
<p id="viii-p13">And
as if to still fortify the faith of His ministry and of His Church, to hedge
about and fortify against any temptation to doubt or discouragement, He
declares by the mouth of the great Apostle to the Gentiles, “He is able to do
exceeding abundantly above all that ye can ask or think.”</p>
<p id="viii-p14">It is
unquestionably taught that preachers in going forward with their God-appointed
tasks, in their prayers, can command God, which is to command His ability, His
presence and His power. “Certainly I will be with thee,” is the reply to every
sincere inquiring minister of God. All of God’s called men in the ministry are
privileged to stretch their prayers into regions where neither words nor
thought can go, and are permitted to expect from Him beyond their praying, and
for their praying, God Himself, and then in addition, “great and mighty things
which thou knowest not.”</p>
<p id="viii-p15">Real
heart-praying, live-praying, praying by the power of the Spirit, direct,
specific, ardent, simple praying—this is the kind of praying which legitimately
belongs to the pulpit. This is the kind demanded just now by the men who stand
in the pulpit. There is no school in which to learn to pray in public but in
the closet. Preachers who have learned to pray in the closet, have mastered the
secret of pulpit praying. It is but a short step from secret praying to
effectual, live, pulpit praying. Good pulpit praying follows from good secret
praying. A closed closet with the preacher makes for cold, spiritless, formal
praying in the pulpit. Study how to pray, O preacher, but not by studying the
forms of prayer, but by attending the school of prayer on your knees before
God. Here is where we learn not only to pray before God, but learn also how to
pray in the presence of men. He who has learned the way to the closet has
discovered the way to pray when he enters the pulpit.</p>
<p id="viii-p16">How
easily we become professional and mechanical in the most sacred undertakings!
Henry Martyn learned the lesson so hard to learn, that the cultivation and
perfection of personal righteousness was the great and prime factor in the
preacher’s true success. So likewise he that learns the lesson so hard to
learn, that live, spiritual, effective pulpit praying is the outgrowth of
regular secret praying, has learned his lesson well. More-over: his work, as a
preacher, will depend upon his praying.</p>
<p id="viii-p17">The
great need of the hour is for good pray-ers in the pulpit as well as good
preachers. Just as live, spiritual preaching is the kind which impresses and
moves men, so the same kind of pulpit praying moves and impresses God. Not only
is the preacher called to preach well, but also he must be called to pray well.
Not that he is called to pray after the fashion of the Pharisees, who love to
stand in public and pray that they may be seen and heard of men. The right sort
of pulpit praying is far removed from Pharisaical praying, as far distant as
light is from darkness, as great as heat is from cold, as life is from death.</p>
<p id="viii-p18">Where
are we? What are we doing? Preaching is the very loftiest work possible for a
man to do. And praying goes hand-in-hand with preaching. It is a mighty, a
lofty work. Preaching is a life-giving work sowing the seeds of eternal life.
Oh, may we do it well, do it after God’s order, do it successfully! May we do
it divinely well, so that when the end comes, the solemn close of earthly
probation, we may hear from the Great Judge of all the earth, “Well done, good
and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.”</p>
<p id="viii-p19">When
we consider this great question of preaching, we are led to exclaim, “With what
reverence, simplicity and sincerity ought it to be done!” What truth in the
inward parts is demanded in order that it be done acceptably to God and with
profit to men! How real, true and loyal those who practise it ought to be! How
great the need to pray as Christ prayed, with strong cryings, and tears, with
godly fear! Oh, may we as preachers do the real thing of preaching, with no
sham, with no mere form of words, with no dull, cold, professional utterances,
but give ourselves to prayerful preaching and prayerful praying! Preaching
which gives life is born of praying which gives life. Preaching and praying
always go together, like Siamese twins, and can never be separated without
death to one or the other, or death to both.</p>
<p id="viii-p20">This
is not the time for kid-glove methods nor sugar-coated preaching. This is no
time for playing the gentleman as a preacher nor for putting on the garb of the
scholar in the pulpit, if we propose to disciple all nations, destroy idolatry,
crush the rugged and defiant forces of Mohammedanism, and overcome and destroy
the tremendous forces of evil now opposing the kingdom
 of God in this world. Brave men,
true men, praying men—afraid of nothing but God, are the kind needed just now.
There will be no smiting the forces of evil which now hold the world in
thralldom, no lifting of the degraded hordes of paganism, to light and eternal
life, by any but praying men. All others are merely playing at religion,
make-believe soldiers, with no armour and no ammunition, who are absolutely
helpless in the face of a wicked and gainsaying world. None but soldiers and
bond servants of Jesus Christ can possibly do this tremendous work. “Endure hardness
as a good soldier of Jesus Christ,” cries the great Apostle. This is no time to
think of self, to consult with dignity, to confer with flesh and blood, to
think of ease, or to shrink from hardship, grief and loss. This is the time for
toil, suffering, and self-denial. We must lose all for Christ in order to gain
all for Christ. Men are needed in the pulpit, as well as in the pew, who are
“bold to take up, firm to sustain, the consecrated cross.” Here is the sort of
preachers God wants. And this sort are born of much praying. For no man is
sufficient for these things who is a prayerless preacher. Praying preachers
alone can meet the demand and will be equal to the emergency.</p>
<p id="viii-p21">The
Gospel of Jesus has neither relish nor life in it when spoken by prayerless
lips or handled by prayerless hands. Without prayer the doctrines of Christ
degenerate into dead orthodoxy. Preaching them without the aid of the Spirit of
God, who comes into the preacher’s messages only by prayer, is nothing more
than mere lecturing, with no life, no grip, no force in the preaching. It
amounts to nothing more than live rationalism or sickly sentimentalism. “But we
will give ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word,” was
the settled and declared purpose of the apostolic ministry. The kingdom
 of God waits on prayer, and prayer
puts wings on the Gospel and power into it. By prayer it moves forward with
conquering force and rapid advance.</p>
<p id="viii-p22">If
prayer be left out of account, the preacher rises to no higher level than the
lecturer, the politician or the secular teacher. That which distinguishes him
from all other public speakers is the fact of prayer. And as prayer deals with
God, this means that the preacher has God with him, while other speakers do not
need God with them to make their public messages effective. The preacher above
everything else is a spiritual man, a man of the Spirit, who deals with
spiritual things. And this implies that he has to do with God in His pulpit
work in a high and holy sense. This can be said of no other public speaker. And
so prayer must necessarily go with the preacher and his preaching. Pure
intellectuality is the only qualification for other public speakers.
Spirituality which is born of prayer belongs to the preacher.</p>
<p id="viii-p23">In
the Sermon on the Mount Jesus Christ often speaks of prayer. It stands out
prominently in His utterances on that occasion. The lesson of prayer which He
taught was one of hallowing God’s name, of pushing God’s kingdom. We are to
long for the coming of the kingdom of
 God. It is to be longed for, and
must be first in our intercourse with God. God’s will must have its royal way
in the hearts and wills of those who pray. The point of urgency is made by our
Lord that men are to pray in earnest, by asking, seeking, knocking, in order to
hallow God’s name, bring His will to pass, and to forward His kingdom among
men.</p>
<p id="viii-p24">And
let it be kept in mind that while this prayer-lesson has to do with all men, it
has a peculiar application to the ministry, for it was the twelve would-be
preachers who made the request of our Lord Jesus Christ, “Lord, teach us to
pray, as John also taught his disciples.” So that primarily these words were
spoken first to twelve men just entering upon their work as ministers. Jesus
was talking as Luke records it, to preachers. So He speaks to the preachers of
this day. How He pressed these twelve men into the ministry of prayer! The
present-day ministry needs the same lesson to be taught them, and needs the
same urgency pressing them to prayer as their habit of life.</p>
<p id="viii-p25">Notwithstanding
all he may claim for himself, nor how many good things may be put down to his
credit, a prayerless preacher will never learn well God’s truth, which He is
called upon to declare with all fidelity and plainness of speech. Blind and
blinding still will he be if he lives a prayerless life. A prayerless ministry
cannot know God’s truth, and not knowing it, cannot teach it to ignorant men.
He who teaches us the path of prayer, must first of all walk in the same path.
A preacher cannot teach what he does not know. A blind leader of the blind will
be the preacher who is a stranger to prayer. Prayer opens the preacher’s eyes,
and keeps them open to the evil of sin, the peril of it, and the penalty it
incurs. A blind leader leading the blind will be the vocation of him who is
prayerless in his own life.</p>
<p id="viii-p26">The
best and the greatest offering which the Church and the ministry can make to
God is an offering of prayer. If the preachers of the twentieth century will
learn well the lesson of prayer, and use it fully in all its exhaustless
efficiency, the millennium will come to its noon
ere the century closes.</p>
<p id="viii-p27">The
Bible preacher prays. He is filled with the Holy Spirit, filled with God’s
Word, and is filled with faith. He has faith in God, faith in God’s only begotten
Son, his personal Saviour, and he has implicit faith in God’s Word. He cannot
do otherwise than pray. He cannot be other than a man of prayer. The breadth of
his life and the pulsations of his heart are prayer. The Bible preacher lives
by prayer, loves by prayer, and preaches by prayer. His bended knees in the
place of secret prayer advertise what kind of preacher he is.</p>
<p id="viii-p28">Preachers
may lose faith in God, in Jesus Christ as their personal and present Saviour,
become devoid of the peace of God and let the joy of salvation go out of their
hearts, and yet be unconscious of it. How needful for the preacher to be
continually examining himself, and inquiring into his personal relations to God
and into his religious state! The preachers, like the philosophers of old, may
defer to a system; and earnestly contend for it after they have lost all faith
in its great facts. Men may in the pulpit with hearts of unbelief, minister at
the altars of the Church, while alien to the most sacred and vital principles
of the Gospel.</p>
<p id="viii-p29">It is
a comparatively easy task for preachers to become so absorbed in the material
and external affairs of the Church as to lose sight of their own souls, forget
the necessity of prayer so needful to keep their own souls alive to God, and
lose the inward sweetness of a Christian experience.</p>
<p id="viii-p30">The
prayer which makes much of our preaching must itself be made much of. The
character of our praying will determine the character of our preaching. Serious
praying will give serious weight to preaching. Prayer makes preaching strong,
gives it unction and makes it stick. In every ministry, weighty for good,
prayer has always been a serious business prophetic of good.</p>
<p id="viii-p31">It
cannot be said with too much emphasis, the preacher must be preeminently a man
of prayer.</p>
<p id="viii-p32">He must
learn to pray, and he must have such an estimate of prayer and its great worth
that he feels he cannot afford to omit it from the catalogue of his private
duties. His heart must be attuned to prayer, while he himself touches the
highest note of prayer. In the school of prayer only can the heart learn to
preach. No gifts, no learning, no brain-force, can atone for the failure to
pray. No earnestness, no diligence, no study, no amount of social service, will
supply its lack. Talking to men for God may be a great thing, and may be very
commendable. But talking to God for men, is far more valuable and commendable.</p>
<p id="viii-p33">The
power of Bible preaching lies not simply or solely in superlative devotion to
God’s Word, and jealous passion for God’s truth. All these are essential,
valuable, helpful. But above all these things, there must be the sense of the
divine presence, and the consciousness of the divine power of God’s Spirit on
the preacher and in him. He must have an anointing, an empowering, a sealing of
the Holy Spirit, for the great work of preaching, making him akin to God’s
voice, and giving him the energy of God’s right hand, so that this Bible
preacher can say, “Thy words were found, and I did eat them; and thy word was
unto me the joy and rejoicing of my heart. For I am called by thy name, O Lord
of hosts.”</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="IX. PRAYER-EQUIPMENT FOR PREACHERS" progress="63.52%" prev="viii" next="x" id="ix">
<h2 id="ix-p0.1">IX. PRAYER-EQUIPMENT FOR PREACHERS</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="ix-p1"><i>“Go
back! Back to that upper room; back to your knees; back to searching of heart
and habit, thought and life; back to pleading, praying, waiting,
till the Spirit of the Lord floods the soul with light, and you are endued with
power from on high. Then go forth in the power of Pentecost, and the
Christ-life shall be lived, and the works of Christ shall be done. You shall
open blind eyes, cleanse foul hearts, break men’s fetters, and save men’s
souls. In the power of the indwelling Spirit, miracles become the commonplace
of daily living.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="ix-p1.1">Samuel Chadwick.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="ix-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="ix-p2.1">Almost</span> the last words uttered by our
Lord before His ascension to heaven, were those addressed to the eleven
disciples, words which, really, were spoken to, and having directly to do with,
preachers, words which indicate very clearly the needed fitness which these men
must have to preach the Gospel, beginning at Jerusalem: “But tarry ye in the
city of Jerusalem,” says Jesus, “till ye be endued with power from on high.”</p>
<p id="ix-p3">Two
things are very clearly set forth in these urgent directions. First, the power
of the Holy Ghost for which they must tarry. This was to be received after
their conversion, an indispensable requisite, equipping them for the great task
set before them. Secondly, the “promise of the Father,” this “power from on
high,” would come to them after they had waited in earnest, continuous prayer.
A reference to <scripRef passage="Acts 1:14" id="ix-p3.1" parsed="|Acts|1|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.1.14">Acts 1:14</scripRef> will reveal that these same men, with the women,
“continued with one accord in prayer and supplication,” and so continued until
the Day of Pentecost, when the power from on high descended upon them.</p>
<p id="ix-p4">This
“power from on high,” as important to those early preachers as it is to
present-day preachers, was not the force of a mighty intellect, holding in its
grasp great truths, flooding them with light, and forming them into verbal
shapeliness and beauty. Nor was it the acquisition of great learning, or the
result of an address, faultless and complete by rule of rhetoric. None of these
things. Nor was this spiritual power held then, nor is it held now, in the
keeping of any earthly sources of power. The effect and energy of all human
forces are essentially different in source and character, and do not at all result
from this “power from on high.” The transmission of such power is directly from
God, a bestowal, in rich measure, of the force and energy which pertains only
to God, and which is transmitted to His messengers only in answer to a longing,
wrestling attitude of his soul before his Master, conscious of his own
impotency and seeking the omnipotency of the Lord he serves, in order more
fully to understand the given Word and to preach the same to his fellow-men.</p>
<p id="ix-p5">The
“power from on high” may be found in combination with all sources of human
power, but is not to be confounded with them, is not dependent upon them, and
must never be superseded by them. Whatever of human gift, talent or force a
preacher may possess it is not to be made paramount, or even conspicuous. It
must be hidden, lost, overshadowed by this “power from on high.” The forces of
intellect and culture may all be present, but without this inward, heaven-given
power, all spiritual effort is vain and unsuccessful. Even when lacking the
other equipment but having this “power from on high,” a preacher cannot but
succeed. It is the one essential, all-important vital force which a messenger
of God must possess to give wings to his message, to put life into his
preaching, and to enable him to speak the Word with acceptance and power.</p>
<p id="ix-p6">A
word is necessary here. Distinctions need to be kept in mind. We must think
clearly upon this question. “Power from on high” means “the unction of the Holy
One” resting on and abiding in the preacher. This is not so much a power which
bears witness to a man being the child of God as it is a preparation for
delivering the Word to others. Unction must be distinguished from pathos.
Pathos may exist in a sermon while unction is entirely absent. So also, may
unction be present and pathos absent. Both may exist together; but they are not
to be confused, nor be made to appear to be the same thing. Pathos promotes
emotion, tender feeling, sometimes tears. Quite often it results from the
relation of an affecting incident, or when the tender side is peculiarly
appealed to. But pathos is neither the direct nor indirect result of the Holy
Spirit resting upon the preacher as he preaches.</p>
<p id="ix-p7">But
unction is. Here we are given the evidence of the workings of an undefinable
agency in the preacher, which results directly from the presence of this “power
from on high,” deep, conscious, life-giving and carrying, giving power and
point to the preached Word. It is the element in a sermon which arouses, stirs,
convicts and moves the souls of sinners and saints. This is what the preacher
requires, the great equipment for which he should wait and pray. This “unction
of the Holy One” delivers from dryness, saves from superficiality, and gives
authority to preaching. It is the one quality which distinguishes the preacher
of the Gospel from other men who speak in public; it is that which makes a
sermon unique, unlike the deliverance of any other public speaker.</p>
<p id="ix-p8">Prayer
is the language of a man burdened with a sense of need. It is the voice of the
beggar, conscious of his poverty, asking of another the things he needs. It is
not only the language of lack, but of <i>felt lack, </i>of lack consciously
realized. “Blessed are the poor in spirit,” means not only that the fact of
poverty of spirit brings the blessing, but also that poverty of spirit is
realized, known and acknowledged. Prayer is the language of those who need
something—something which they, themselves, cannot supply but which God has
promised them, and for which they ask. In the end, poor praying and prayerlessness
amount to the same thing, for poor praying proceeds from a lack of the sense of
need, while prayerlessness has its origin in the same soil. Not to pray is not
only to declare there is nothing needed, but to admit to a non-realization of
that need. This is what aggravates the sin of prayerlessness. It represents an
attempt at instituting an independence of God, a self-sufficient ruling of God
out of the life. It is a declaration made to God that we do not need Him, and
hence do not pray to Him.</p>
<p id="ix-p9">This
is the state in which the Holy Spirit, in His messages to the Seven Churches in
Asia, found the Laodicean Church and “the Laodicean state” has come to stand
for one in which God is ruled out, expelled from the life, put out of the
pulpit. The entire condemnation of this Church is summed up in one expression:
“Because thou sayest, I have need of nothing,” the most alarming state into
which a person, or church or preacher can come. Trusting in its riches, in its
social position, in things outward and material, the Church at Laodicea
omitted God, leaving Him out of their church plans and church work, and
declared, by their acts and by their omission of prayer, “I have need of
nothing.”</p>
<p id="ix-p10">No
wonder the self-satisfied declaration brought forth its sentence of punishment—“Because
thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.”
The idea conveyed is that such a backslidden state of heart is as repulsive to
God as an emetic is to the human stomach, and as the stomach expels that which
is objectionable, so Almighty God threatens to “spue out of His mouth” these
people who were in such a religious condition so repulsive to Him. All of it
was traceable to a prayerless state of heart, for no one can read this word of
the Spirit to this Laodicean Church
and not see that the very core of their sin was prayerlessness. How could a
Church, given to prayer, openly and vauntingly declare, “I have need of
nothing,” in the face of the Spirit’s assertion that it needed everything,
“Thou knowest not that thou art wretched, and poor, and miserable, and blind,
and naked”? In addition to their sin of self-sufficiency and of independence of
God, the Laodiceans were spiritually blind. Oh, what dullness of sight, what
blindness of soul! These people were prayerless, and knew not the import of
such prayerlessness. They lacked everything which goes to make up spiritual
life, and force, and self-denying piety, and vainly supposed themselves to need
nothing but material wealth, thus making temporal possessions a substitute for
spiritual wealth, leaving God entirely out of their activities, relying upon
human and material resources to do the work only possible to the divine and
supernatural, and secured alone by prayer.</p>
<p id="ix-p11">Nor
let it be forgotten that this letter (in common with the other six letters) was
primarily addressed to the preacher in charge of the church. All this
strengthens the impression that the “angel of the church” himself was in this
lukewarm state. He himself was living a prayerless life, relying upon things
other than God, practically saying, “I have need of nothing.” For these words
are the natural expression of the spirit of him who does not pray, who does not
care for God, and who does not feel the need of Him in his life, in his work
and in his preaching. Furthermore, the words of the Spirit seem to indicate
that the “angel of the church” at Laodicea
was indirectly responsible for this sad condition into which the Laodicean
 Church had fallen.</p>
<p id="ix-p12">May
not this sort of a church be found in modern times? Is it not likely that we
could discover some preachers of modern times who fall under a similar
condemnation to that passed upon the “angel of the church” of Laodicea?</p>
<p id="ix-p13">Preachers
of the present age excel those of the past in many, possibly in all, human
elements of success. They are well abreast of the age in learning, research,
and intellectual vigour. But these things neither insure “power from on high”
nor guarantee a live, thriving religious experience, or righteous life. These
purely human gifts do not bring with them an insight into the deep things of
God, or strong faith in the Scriptures, or an intense loyalty to God’s divine
revelation.</p>
<p id="ix-p14">The
presence of these earthly talents even in the most commanding and impressive
form, and richest measure do not in the least abate the necessity for the added
endowment of the Holy Spirit. Herein lies the great danger menacing the pulpit
of today. All around us we see a tendency to substitute human gifts and worldly
attainments for that supernatural, inward power which comes from on high in
answer to earnest prayer.</p>
<p id="ix-p15">In
many instances modern preaching seems to fail in the very thing which should
create and distinguish true preaching, which is essential to its being, and
which alone can make of it a divine and powerfully aggressive agency. It lacks,
in short, “the power from on high” which alone can make it a living thing. It
fails to become the channel through which God’s saving power can be made to
appeal to men’s consciences and hearts.</p>
<p id="ix-p16">Quite
often, modern preaching fails at this vital point, for lack of exercising a
potent influence which disturbs men in their sleep of security, and awakens
them to a sense of need and of peril. There is a growing need of an appeal
which will quicken and arouse the conscience from its ignoble stupor and give
it a sense of wrong-doing and a corresponding sense of repentance. There is
need of a message which searches into the secret places of man’s being,
dividing, as it were, the joints and the marrow, and laying bare the mysterious
depths before himself and his God. Much of our present-day preaching is lacking
in that quality which infuses new blood into the heart and veins of faith, that
arms it with courage and skill for the battle with the powers of darkness, and
secures it a victory over the forces of the world.</p>
<p id="ix-p17">Such
high and noble ends can never be accomplished by human qualifications, nor can
these great results be secured by a pulpit clothed only with the human elements
of power, however gracious, comfortable, and helpful they may be. The Holy
Spirit is needed. He alone can equip the ministry for its difficult and
responsible work in and out of the pulpit. Oh, that the present-day ministry
may come to see that its one great need is an enduement of “power from on
high,” and that this one need can be secured only by the use of God’s appointed
means of grace—the ministry of prayer.</p>
<p id="ix-p18">Prayer
is needed by the preacher in order that his personal relations with God may be
maintained and that because there is no difference between him and any other kind
of a man in so far as his personal salvation is concerned. This he must work
out “with fear and trembling,” just as all other men must do. Thus prayer is of
vast importance to the preacher in order that he may possess a growing
religious experience, and be enabled to live such a life that his character and
conduct will back up his preaching and give force to his message.</p>
<p id="ix-p19">A man
<i>must </i>have prayer in his pulpit work, for no minister can preach
effectively without prayer. He also has use for prayer in praying for others.
Paul was a notable example of a preacher who constantly prayed for those to
whom he ministered.</p>
<p id="ix-p20">But
we come, now, to another sphere of prayer, that of the people praying for the
preacher. “Brethren, pray for us,” This is the cry which Paul set in motion,
and which has been the cry of spiritually minded preachers—those who know God
and who know that value of prayer—in all succeeding ages. No condition of
success or the reverse of it must abate the cry. No degree of culture, no
abundance of talents, must cause that cry to cease. The learned preacher, as
well as the unlearned, has equal need to call out to the people they serve,
“Withal, praying also for us.” Such a cry voices the felt need of a preacher’s
heart who feels the need there is for sympathies of a people to be in harmony
with its minister. It is but the expression of the inner soul of a preacher who
feels his insufficiency for the tremendous responsibilities of the pulpit, who
realizes his weakness and his need of the divine unction, and who throws
himself upon the prayers of his congregation, and calls out to them, “Praying
always with all prayer and supplication, in the Spirit, and for me, that
utterance may be given me.” It is the cry of deep felt want in the heart of the
preacher who feels he must have this prayer made specifically for him that he
may do his work in God’s own way.</p>
<p id="ix-p21">When
this request to a people to pray for the preacher is cold, formal and official,
it freezes in-stead of fructifies. To be ignorant of the necessity for the cry,
is to be ignorant of the sources of spiritual success. To fail to stress the
cry, and to fail to have responses to it, is to sap the sources of spiritual
life. Preachers must sound out the cry to the Church
 of God. Saints everywhere and of
every kind, and of every faith speedily respond and pray for the preacher. The
imperative need of the work demands it. “Pray for us,” is the natural cry of
the hearts of God’s called men—faithful preachers of the Word.</p>
<p id="ix-p22">Saintly
praying in the early Church helped apostolic preaching mightily, and rescued
apostolic men from many dire straits. It can do the same thing today. It can
open doors for apostolic labours, and apostolic lips to utter bravely and truly
the Gospel message. Apostolic movements wait their ordering from prayer, and
avenues long closed are opened to apostolic entrance by and through the power
of prayer. The messenger receives his message and is schooled as to how to
carry and deliver the message by prayer. The forerunner of the Gospel, and that
which prepares the way, is prayer; not only by the praying of the messenger
himself, but by the praying of the Church
 of God.</p>
<p id="ix-p23">Writing
along this line in his Second Epistle to the Thessalonians, Paul is first
general in his request and says, “Brethren, pray for us.” Then he becomes more
minute and particular:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="ix-p23.1">
<p id="ix-p24">“Finally,
brethren, pray for us,” he goes on, “that the word of the Lord may have free
course and be glorified, even as it is with you. And that we may be delivered
from unreasonable and wicked men; for all men have not faith.”</p></div>
<p id="ix-p25">The
Revised Version has for “free course” the word “run.” “The Word” means
doctrine, and the idea conveyed is that this doctrine of the Gospel is rapidly
propagated, a metaphor taken from the running of a race, and is an exhortation
to exert one’s self, to strive hard, to expend strength. Thus the prayer for
the spread of the Gospel gives the same energy to the Word of the Lord, as the
greatest outlay of strength gives success to the racer. Prayer in the pew gives
the preached Word energy, facility, and success. Preaching without the backing
of mighty praying is as limp and worthless an effort as can be imagined.
Prayerlessness in the pew is a serious hindrance to the running of the Word of
the Lord.</p>
<p id="ix-p26">The
preaching of the Word of the Lord falls to run and be glorified from many
causes. The difficulty may lie with the preacher himself, should his outward
conduct be out of harmony with the rule of the Scriptures and his own
profession. The Word <i>lived </i>must be in accord with the Word <i>delivered;
</i>the <i>life </i>must be in harmony with the <i>sermon. </i>The preacher’s
spirit and behaviour <i>out </i>of the pulpit must run parallel with the Word
of the Lord spoken <i>in </i>the pulpit. Otherwise, a man is an obstacle to the
success of his own message.</p>
<p id="ix-p27">Again,
the Word of the Lord may fail to run, may be seriously encumbered and crippled
by the inconsistent lives of those who are the hearers thereof. Bad living in
the pew will seriously cripple the Word of the Lord, as attempts to run on its
appointed course. Unrighteous lives among the laity heavily weights down the
Word of the Lord and hampers the work of the ministry. Yet prayer will remove
this burden which seriously handicaps the preached Word. It will tend to do
this in a direct way, or in an indirect manner. For just as you set laymen to
praying, for the preacher or even for themselves, it awakens conscience, stirs
the heart, and tends to correct evil ways and to promote good living. No man
will pray long and continue in sin. Praying breaks up bad living, while bad living
breaks down prayer. Praying goes into bankruptcy when a man goes to sinning. To
obey the cry of the preacher, “Brethren, pray for us,” sets men to doing that
which will induce right living in them, and will tend to break them away from
sin. So it comes about that it is worth no little to get the laity to pray for
the ministry. Prayer helps the preacher, is an aid to the sermon, assists the
hearer and promotes right living in the pew.</p>
<p id="ix-p28">Prayer
also moves him who prays for the preacher and for the Word of the Lord, to use
all his influence to remove any hindrance to that Word which he may see, and
which lies in his power to remove.</p>
<p id="ix-p29">But
prayer reaches the preacher directly. God hears the praying of a church for its
minister. Prayer for the preached Word is a direct aid to it. Prayer for the
preacher gives wings to the Gospel, as well as feet. Prayer makes the Word of
the Lord go forward strongly and rapidly. It takes the shackles off of the
message, and gives it a chance to run straight to the hearts of sinners and
saints, alike. It opens the way, clears the track, furnishes a free course. The
failure of many a preacher may be found just here. He was hampered, hindered,
crippled by a prayerless church. Non-praying officials stood in the way of the
Word preached, and became veritable stumbling blocks in the way of the Word,
definitely preventing its reaching the hearts of the unsaved.</p>
<p id="ix-p30">Unbelief
and prayerlessness go together. It is written of our Lord in Matthew’s Gospel
that when He entered into His own country, “he did not many mighty works there
because of their unbelief.” Mark puts it a little differently, but giving out
the same idea: “And he could there do no mighty work, save that he laid his
hands upon a few sick folks and healed them. And he marveled because of their
unbelief.” Unquestionably the unbelief of that people hindered our Lord in His
gracious work and tied His hands. And if that be true, it requires no undue
straining of the Scriptures when we say that the unbelief and prayerlessness of
a church can tie the hands of its preacher, and prevent him from doing many
great works in the salvation of souls and in edifying saints. Prayerlessness,
therefore, as it concerns the preacher is a very serious matter. If it exists
in the preacher himself, then he ties his own hands and makes the Word as
preached by him ineffective and void. If prayerless men be found in the pew,
then it hurts the preacher, robs him of an invaluable help, and interferes
seriously with the success of his work. How great the need of a praying church
to help on the preaching of the Word of the Lord! Both pew and pulpit are
jointly concerned in this preaching business. It is a copartnership. The two go
hand in hand. One must help the other, one can hinder the other. Both must work
in perfect accord or serious damage will result, and God’s plan concerning the
preacher and the preached Word be defeated.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="X. THE PREACHER’S CRY—PRAY FOR US!" progress="73.41%" prev="ix" next="xi" id="x">
<h2 id="x-p0.1">X. THE PREACHER’S CRY—PRAY
FOR US!</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="x-p1"><i>“That
the true apostolic preacher must have the prayers of others—good people to give
to his ministry its full quota of success, Paul is a preeminent example. He
asks, he covets, he pleads in an impassionate way for the help of all God’s
saints, He knew that in the spiritual realm as elsewhere, in union there is
strength; that the consecration and aggregation of faith, desire, and prayer
increased the volume of spiritual force until it became overwhelming and
irresistible in its power. Units of prayer combined, like drops of water, make
an ocean that defies resistance”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="x-p1.1">E.
M. B.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="x-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="x-p2.1">How</span>
far does praying for the preacher help preaching? It helps him personally and
officially. It helps him to maintain a righteous life, it helps him in
preparing his message, and it helps the Word preached by him to run to its
appointed goal, unhindered and unhampered.</p>
<p id="x-p3">A
praying church creates a spiritual atmosphere most favourable to preaching.
What preacher knowing anything of the real work of preaching doubts the
veracity of this statement? The spirit of prayer in a congregation begets an
atmosphere surcharged with the Spirit of the Highest, removes obstacles and
gives the Word of the Lord right of way. The very attitude of such a
congregation constitutes an environment most encouraging and favorable to
preaching. It renders preaching an easy task; it enables the Word to run
quickly and without friction, helped on by the warmth of souls engaged in
prayer.</p>
<p id="x-p4">Men
in the pew given to praying for the preacher, are like the poles which hold up
the wires along which the electric current runs. They are not the power,
neither are they the specific agents in making the Word of the Lord effective.
But they hold up the wires, along which the divine power runs to the hearts of
men. They give liberty to the preacher, exemption from being straitened, and
keep him from “getting in the brush.” They make conditions favorable for the
preaching of the Gospel. Preachers, not a few, who know God, have had large
experience and are aware of the truth of these statements. Yet how hard have
they found it to preach in some places! This was because they had no “door of
utterance,” and were hampered in their delivery, there appearing no response
whatever to their appeals. On the other hand, at other times, thought flowed
easily, words came freely, and there was no failure in utterance. The preacher
“had liberty,” as the old men used to declare.</p>
<p id="x-p5">The
preaching of the Word to a prayerless congregation falls at the very feet of
the preacher. It has no traveling force; it stops because the atmosphere is
cold, unsympathetic, unfavorable to its running to the hearts of men and women.
Nothing is there to help it along. Just as some prayers never go above the head
of him who prays, so the preaching of some preachers goes no farther than the
front of the pulpit from which it is delivered. It takes prayer in the pulpit
and prayer in the pew to make preaching arresting, life-giving and soul-saving.</p>
<p id="x-p6">The
Word of God is inseparably linked with prayer. The two are conjoined, twins
from birth, and twins by life. The Apostles found themselves absorbed by the
sacred and pressing duty of distributing the alms of the Church, till time was
not left for them to pray. They directed that other men should be appointed to
discharge this task, that they might be the better able to give themselves
continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word.</p>
<p id="x-p7">So it
might likewise be said that prayer for the preacher by the church is also
inseparably joined to preaching. A praying church is an invaluable help to the
faithful preacher. The Word of the Lord runs in such a church, “and is
glorified” in the saving of sinners in the reclamation of back-sliders, and in
the sanctifying of believers. Paul connects the Word of God closely in prayer
in writing to Timothy:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="x-p7.1">
<p id="x-p8">“For
every creature of God is good,”<span style="font-style:normal" id="x-p8.1"> he says,</span> “and nothing to be refused, if it be
received with thanksgiving. For it is sanctified by the Word of God and
prayer.”</p></div>
<p id="x-p9">And
so the Word of the Lord is dependent for its rapid spread and for its full, and
most glorious success in prayer.</p>
<p id="x-p10">Paul
indicates that prayer transmutes the ills which come to the preacher: “For I
know that this shall turn to my salvation through your prayer, and the supply
of the Spirit of Jesus Christ.” It was “through their prayer” he declares these
benefits would come to him. And so it is “through the prayer of a church” that
the pastor will be the beneficiary of large spiritual things.</p>
<p id="x-p11">In
the latter part of the Epistle to the Hebrews, we have Paul’s request for
prayer for himself addressed to the Hebrew Christians, basing his request on
the grave and eternal responsibilities of the office of a preacher:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="x-p11.1">
<p id="x-p12">“Obey
them that have the rule over you,” <span style="font-style:normal" id="x-p12.1">he says,</span> “and submit yourselves; for they
watch for your souls as they that must give account, that they may do it with
joy, and not with grief; for that is unprofitable for you. Pray for us; for we
trust we have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly.”</p></div>
<p id="x-p13">How
little does the Church understand the fearful responsibility attaching to the
office and work of the ministry! “For they watch for your souls as they that
must give account.” God’s appointed watchmen, to warn when danger is nigh;
God’s messengers sent to rebuke, reprove and exhort with all long-suffering;
ordained as shepherds to protect the sheep against devouring wolves. How
responsible is their position! And they are to give account to God for their
work, and are to face a day of reckoning. How much do such men need the prayers
of those to whom they minister! And who should be more ready to do this praying
than God’s people, His own Church, those presumably who are in heart sympathy
with the minister and his all-important work, divine in its origin.</p>
<p id="x-p14">Among
the last messages of Jesus to His disciples are those found in the fourteenth,
fifteenth and sixteenth chapters of John’s Gospel. In the fourteenth, as well
as in the others, are some very specific teachings about prayer, designed for
their help and encouragement in their future work. We must never lose sight of
the fact that these last discourses of Jesus Christ were given to disciples <i>alone,
</i>away from the busy crowds, and seem primarily intended for them in their
public ministry. In reality, they were words spoken to preachers, for these
eleven men were to be the first preachers of the new dispensation.</p>
<p id="x-p15">With
this thought in mind, we are able to see the tremendous importance given to
prayer by our Lord, and the high place He gave it in the life-work of
preachers, both in this day and in that day.</p>
<p id="x-p16">First
our Lord proposes that He will pray for these disciples, that the Father might
send them another Comforter, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world could not
receive. He preceded this statement by a direct command to them to pray, to
pray for anything, with the assurance that they would receive what they asked
for.</p>
<p id="x-p17">If,
therefore, there was value in their own praying, and it was of great worth that
our Lord should intercede for them, then of course it would be worth while that
the people to whom they would minister should also pray for them. It is no
wonder then that the Apostle Paul should take the key from our Lord, and
several times break out with the urgent exhortation, “Pray for us.”</p>
<p id="x-p18">True
praying done by the laymen helps in many ways, but in one particular way. It
helps very materially the preacher to be brave and true. Read Paul’s request to
the Ephesians:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="x-p18.1">
<p id="x-p19">“Praying
always with all prayer and supplication,” <span style="font-style:normal" id="x-p19.1">he says, </span>“in the Spirit, and watching
thereunto with all perseverance, and supplication for all saints; and for me,
that utterance may be given unto me, that I may open my mouth boldly, to make
known the mystery of the gospel; for which I am an ambassador in bonds, that
therein I may speak as I ought to speak.”</p></div>
<p id="x-p20">How
much of the boldness and loyalty of Paul was dependent upon the prayers of the
Church, or rather how much he was helped at these two points, we may not know.
But unquestionably there must have come to him through the prayers of the
Christians at Ephesus, Colossæ and
Thessalonica, much aid in preaching the Word, of which he would have been
deprived had these churches not have prayed for him. And in like manner, in
modern times, has the gift of ready and effective utterance in the preacher
been bestowed upon a preacher through the prayers of a praying church.</p>
<p id="x-p21">The
Apostle Paul did not desire to fall short of that most important quality in a
preacher of the Gospel, namely, boldness. He was no coward, or time-server, or
man-pleaser, but he needed prayer, in order that he might not, through any kind
of timidity, fail to declare the whole truth of God, or through fear of men,
declare it in an apologetic, hesitating way. He desired to remove himself as
far as possible from an attitude of this kind. His constant desire and effort
was to declare the Gospel with consecrated boldness and with freedom. “That I
may open my mouth boldly, to make known the mystery of the Gospel, that I may speak
boldly, as I ought to speak,” seemed to be his great desire, and it would
appear that, at times, he was really afraid that he might exhibit cowardice, or
be affected by the fear of the face of man.</p>
<p id="x-p22">This
is a day that has urgent need of men after the mould of the great Apostle—men
of courage, brave and true, who are swayed not by the fear of men, or reduced
to silence or apology by the dread of consequences. And one way to secure them
is for the pew to engage in earnest prayer for the preachers.</p>
<p id="x-p23">In
Paul’s word to the Ephesian elders given when on his way to Jerusalem,
Paul exculpates himself from the charge of blood-guiltiness, in that he had not
failed to declare the whole counsel of God to them. To his Philippian brethren,
also, he says, that through their prayers, he would prove to be neither ashamed
nor afraid.</p>
<p id="x-p24">Nothing,
perhaps, can be more detrimental to the advancement of the kingdom
 of God among men than a timid, or
doubtful statement of revealed truth. The man who states only the half of what
he believes, stands side by side with the man who fully declares what he only
half believes. No coward can preach the Gospel, and declare the whole counsel
of God. To do that, a man must be in the battle-attitude not from passion, but
by reason of deep conviction, strong conscience and full-orbed courage. Faith
is in the custody of a gallant heart while timidity surrenders, always, to a
brave spirit. Paul prayed, and prevailed on others to pray that he might be a
man of resolute courage, brave enough to do everything but sin. The result of
this mutual praying is that history has no finer instance of courage in a
minister of Jesus Christ than that displayed in the life of the Apostle Paul.
He stands in the premier position as a fearless, uncompromising, God-fearing
preacher of the Gospel of his Lord.</p>
<p id="x-p25">God
seems to have taken great pains with His prophets of old time to save them from
fear while delivering His messages to mankind. He sought in every way to
safeguard His spokesmen from the fear of man, and by means of command,
reasoning and encouragement sought to render them fearless and true to their
high calling. One of the besetting temptations of a preacher is the “fear” of
the face of man. Unfortunately, not a few surrender to this fear, and either
remain silent at times when they should be boldly eloquent, or temper with
smooth words the stern mandate it is theirs to deliver. “The fear of man
bringeth a snare.”</p>
<p id="x-p26">With
this sore temptation Satan often besets the preacher of the Word and few there
be who have not felt the force of this temptation. It is the duty of ministers
of the Gospel to face this temptation to fear the face of man with resolute
courage and to steel themselves against it, and, if need be, trample it under
foot. To this important end, the preacher should be prayed for by his church.
He needs deliverance from fear, and prayer is the agency whereby it can be
driven away and freedom from the bondage of fear given to his soul.</p>
<p id="x-p27">We
have a striking picture of the preacher’s need of prayer, and of what a people’s
prayers can do for him in <scripRef passage="Exodus 17" id="x-p27.1" parsed="|Exod|17|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Exod.17">Exodus 17</scripRef>. Israel
and Amalek were in battle, and the contest was severe and close. Moses stood on
top of the hill with his rod lifted up in his hands, the symbol of power and
victory. As long as Moses held up the rod, Israel
prevailed, but when he let down his hand with the rod, Amalek prevailed. While
the contest was in the balance, Aaron and Hur came to the rescue, and when
Moses’ hands were heavy, these two men “stayed up his
hands, . . . until the going down of the sun. And Joshua
discomfited Amalek and his people.”</p>
<p id="x-p28">By
common consent, this incident in the history of ancient Israel
has been recognized as a striking illustration of how a people may sustain
their preacher by prayer, and of how victory comes when the people pray for
their preacher.</p>
<p id="x-p29">Some
of the Lord’s very best men in Old Testament times had to be encouraged against
fear by Almighty God. Moses himself was not free from the fear which harasses
and compromises a leader. God told him to go to Pharaoh, in these words: “Come
now therefore, and I will send thee unto Pharaoh, that thou mayst bring forth
my people, the children of Israel,
out of Egypt.”
But Moses, largely through fear, began to offer objections and excuses for not
going, until God became angry with him, and said, finally, that He would send
Aaron with Moses to do the talking, as long as Moses insisted that he “was slow
of speech and of slow tongue.” But the fact was, Moses was afraid of the face
of Pharaoh, and it took God some time to circumvent his fears and nerve him to
face the Egyptian monarch and deliver God’s message to him.</p>
<p id="x-p30">And
Joshua, too, the successor of Moses, and a man seemingly courageous, must needs
be fortified by God against fear, lest he shrink from duty, and be reduced to
discouragement and timidity. “Be strong and of good courage,” God commanded
him. “Have I not commanded thee? Be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed, for
the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.”</p>
<p id="x-p31">As
good and true a man as Jeremiah was sorely tempted to fear and had to be warned
and strengthened lest he prove false to his charge. When God ordained him a
prophet unto the nations, Jeremiah began to excuse himself on the ground that
he could not speak, being but a child in that regard. So the Lord had to safeguard
him from the temptation of fear, that he might not prove faithless: “Thou
therefore, gird up thy loins, and arise, and speak unto them,” God said to His
servant, “all that I command thee; be not dismayed at their faces, lest I
confound thee before them.”</p>
<p id="x-p32">Since
these great men of old time were so beset with this temptation, and disposed to
shrink from duty we need not be surprised that preachers of our own day are to
be found in similar case. The devil is the same in all ages; nor has human
nature undergone any change. How needful, then, that we pray for the leaders of
our Israel
especially that they may receive the gift of boldness, and speak the Word of
God with courage.</p>
<p id="x-p33">This
was one reason why Paul insisted so vigorously that the brethren pray for him,
so that a door of utterance might be given him, and that he might be delivered
from the fear of man, and blessed with holy boldness in preaching the Word.</p>
<p id="x-p34">The
challenge and demand of the world in our own day is that Christianity be made
practical; that its precepts be expressed in practice, and brought down from
the realm of the ideal to the levels of every-day life. This can be done only
by praying men, who being much in sympathy with their ministers will not cease
to bear them up in their prayers before God.</p>
<p id="x-p35">A
preacher of the Gospel cannot meet the demands made upon him, alone, any more
than the vine can bear grapes without branches. The men who sit in the pews are
to be the fruit-bearing ones. They are to translate the “ideal” of the pulpit
into the “real” of daily life and action. But they will not do it, they cannot
do it, if they be not devoted to God and much given to prayer. Devotion to God
and devotion to prayer are one and the same thing.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="XI. MODERN EXAMPLES OF PRAYER" progress="81.04%" prev="x" next="xii" id="xi">
<h2 id="xi-p0.1">XI. MODERN EXAMPLES OF PRAYER</h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="xi-p1"><i>“When
the dragon-fly rends his husk and harnesses himself, in a clean plate of
sapphire mail, his is a pilgrimage of one or two sunny days over the fields and
pastures wet with dew, yet nothing can exceed the marvelous beauty in which he
is decked. No flowers on earth have a richer blue than the pure colour of his
cuirass. So is it in the high spiritual sphere. The most complete spiritual
loveliness may be obtained in the shortest time, and the stripling may die a
hundred years old, in character and grace.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="xi-p1.1">History
Of David Brainerd</span></p>
<p class="First" id="xi-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="xi-p2.1">God</span> has not confined Himself to Bible
days in showing what can be done through prayer. In modern times, also, He is
seen to be the same prayer-hearing God as aforetime. Even in these latter days
He has not left Himself without witness. Religious biography and Church
history, alike, furnish us with many noble examples and striking illustrations
of prayer, its necessity, its worth and its fruits, all tending to the
encouragement of the faith of God’s saints and all urging them on to more and
better praying. God has not confined Himself to Old and New Testament times in
employing praying men as His agents in furthering His cause on earth, and He
has placed Himself under obligation to answer their prayers just as much as He
did the saints of old. A selection from these praying saints of modern times
will show us how they valued prayer, what it meant to them, and what it meant
to God.</p>
<p id="xi-p3">Take
for example, the instance of Samuel Rutherford, the Scottish preacher, exiled
to the north of Scotland,
forbidden to preach, and banished from his home and pastoral charge. Rutherford
lived between 1600 and 1661. He was a member of the Westminster Assembly,
Principal of New College, and Rector of St. Andrews’ University. He is said to
have been one of the most moving and affectionate preachers of his time, or,
perhaps, in any age of the Church. Men said of him, “He is always praying,” and
concerning his and his wife’s praying, one wrote: “He who had heard either pray
or speak, might have learned to bemoan his ignorance. Oh, how many times have I
been convinced by observing them of the evil of insincerity before God and
unsavouriness in discourse! He so prayed for his people that he himself says,
‘There I wrestled with the Angel and prevailed.’”</p>
<p id="xi-p4">He
was ordered to appear before Parliament to answer the charge of high treason,
although a man of scholarly attainments and rare genius. At times he was
depressed and gloomy; especially was this the case when he was first banished
and silenced from preaching, for there were many murmurings and charges against
him. But his losses and crosses were so sanctified that Christ became more and
more to him. Marvelous are the statements of his estimate of Christ. This
devoted man of prayer wrote many letters during his exile to preachers, to
state officers, to lords temporal and spiritual, to honourable and holy men, to
honourable and holy women, all breathing an intense devotion to Christ, and all
born of a life of great devotion to prayer.</p>
<p id="xi-p5">Ardour
and panting after God have been characteristics of great souls in all ages of
the Church and Samuel Rutherford was a striking example of this fact. He was a
living example of the truth that he who prays always, will be enveloped in
devotion and joined to Christ in bonds of holy union.</p>
<p id="xi-p6">Then
there was Henry Martyn, scholar, saint, missionary, and apostle to India.
Martyn was born 
 February 18, 1781, and
sailed for India
 August 31, 1805. He died at Tokal,
 Persia, 
 October 16, 1812. Here is part of what he said
about himself while a missionary:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p6.1">
<p id="xi-p7">“What
a knowledge of man and acquaintance with the Scriptures, and what communion
with God and study of my own heart ought to prepare me for the awful work of a
messenger from God on business of the soul.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p8">Said
one of this consecrated missionary:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p8.1">
<p id="xi-p9">“Oh,
to be able to emulate his excellencies, his elevation of piety, his diligence,
his superiority to the world, his love for souls, his anxiety to improve all
occasions to do souls good, his insight into the mystery of Christ, and his
heavenly temper! These are the secrets of the wonderful impression he made in India.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p10">It is
interesting and profitable to note some of the things which Martyn records in
his diary. Here is an example:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p10.1">
<p id="xi-p11">“The
ways of wisdom appear more sweet and reasonable than ever,” he says, “and the
world more insipid and vexatious. The chief thing I mourn over is my want of
power, and lack of fervour in secret prayer, especially when attempting to
plead for the heathen. Warmth does not increase within me in proportion to my
light.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p12">If
Henry Martyn, so devoted, ardent and prayerful, lamented his lack of power and
want of fervour in prayer, how ought our cold and feeble praying abase us in
the very dust? Alas, how rare are such praying men in the Church of our own
day!</p>
<p id="xi-p13">Again
we quote a record from his diary. He had been quite ill, but had recovered and
was filled with thankfulness because it had pleased God to restore him to life
and health again.</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p13.1">
<p id="xi-p14">“Not
that I have yet recovered my former strength,” he says, “but I consider myself
sufficiently restored to prosecute my journey. My daily prayer is that my late
chastisement may have its intended effect, and make me, all the rest of my
days, more humble and less self-confident.</p>
<p id="xi-p15">“Self-confidence
has often led me down fearful lengths, and would, without God’s gracious
interference, prove my endless perdition. I seem to be made to feel this evil
of my heart more than any other at this time. In prayer, or when I write or
converse on the subject, Christ appears to me my life and my strength; but at
other times I am thoughtless and bold, as if I had all life and strength in
myself. Such neglects on our part are a diminution of our joys.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p16">Among
the last entries in this consecrated missionary’s journal we find the
following:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p16.1">
<p id="xi-p17">“I
sat in the orchard and thought, with sweet comfort and peace, of my God, in
solitude, my Company, my Friend, my Comforter. Oh, when shall time give place
to eternity!”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p18">Note
the words, “in solitude,”—away from the busy haunts of men, in a lonely place,
like his Lord, he went out to meditate and pray.</p>
<p id="xi-p19">Brief
as this summary is, it suffices to show how fully and faithfully Henry Martyn
exercised his ministry of prayer. The following may well serve to end our
portrayal of him:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p19.1">
<p id="xi-p20">“By
daily weighing the Scriptures, with prayer, he waxed riper and riper in his
ministry. Prayer and the Holy Scriptures were those wells of salvation out of
which he drew daily the living water for his thirsty immortal soul. Truly may
it be said of him, he prayed always with all prayer and supplication, in the
Spirit, and watched thereunto with all perseverance.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p21">David
Brainerd, the missionary to the Indians, is a remarkable example of a praying
man of God. Robert Hale thus speaks of him:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p21.1">
<p id="xi-p22">“Such
invincible patience and self-denial; such profound humility, exquisite
prudence, indefatigable industry; such devotedness to God, or rather such
absorption of the whole soul in zeal for the divine glory and the salvation of
men, is scarcely to be paralleled since the age of the Apostles. Such was the
intense ardour of his mind that it seems to have diffused the spirit of a
martyr over the common incidents of his life.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p23">Dr.
A. J. Gordon speaks thus of Brainerd:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p23.1">
<p id="xi-p24">“In
passing through Northampton, Mass.,
I went into the old cemetery, swept off the snow that lay on the top of the
slab, and I read these simple words:</p>
<p id="xi-p25">“‘Sacred
to the memory of David Brainerd, the faithful and devoted missionary to the
Susquehanna, Delaware and Stockbridge Indians of America, who died in this
town, October 8th, 1717.’</p>
<p id="xi-p26">“That
was all there was on the slab. Now that great man did his greatest work by
prayer. He was in the depths of those forests alone, unable to speak the
language of the Indians, but he spent whole days literally in prayer. What was
he praying for? He knew he could not reach these savages, for he did not
understand their language. If he wanted to speak at all, he must find somebody
who could vaguely interpret his thought. Therefore he knew that anything he
could do must be absolutely dependent upon God. So he spent whole days in
praying, simply that the power of the Holy Ghost might come upon him so
unmistakably that these people would not be able to stand before him.</p>
<p id="xi-p27">“What
was his answer? Once he preached through a drunken interpreter, a man so
intoxicated that he could hardly stand up. This was the best he could do. Yet
scores were converted through that sermon. We can account for it only that it
was the tremendous power of God behind him.</p>
<p id="xi-p28">“Now
this man prayed in secret in the forest. A little while afterward, William
Carey read his life, and by its impulse he went to India.
Payson read it as a young man, over twenty years old, and he said that he had
never been so impressed by anything in his life as by the story of Brainerd.
Murray McCheyne read it, and he likewise was impressed by it.</p>
<p id="xi-p29">“But
all I care is simply to enforce this thought, that the hidden life, a life
whose days are spent in communion with God, in trying to reach the source of
power, is the life that moves the world. Those living such lives may be soon
forgotten. There may be no one to speak a eulogy over them when they are dead.
The great world may take no account of them. But by and by, the great moving
current of their lives will begin to tell, as in the case of this young man,
who died at about thirty years of age. The missionary spirit of this nineteenth
century is more due to the prayers and consecration of this one man than to any
other one.</p>
<p id="xi-p30">“So I
say. And yet that most remarkable thing is that Jonathan Edwards, who watched
over him all those months while he was slowly dying of consumption, should also
say: ‘I praise God that it was in His Providence that he should die in my
house, that I might hear his prayers, and that I might witness his
consecration, and that I might be inspired by his example.’</p>
<p id="xi-p31">“When
Jonathan Edwards wrote that great appeal to Christendom to unite in prayer for
the conversion of the world, which has been the trumpet call of modern
missions, undoubtedly it was inspired by this dying missionary.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p32">To
David Brainerd’s spirit, John Wesley bore this testimony:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p32.1">
<p id="xi-p33">“I
preached and afterward made a collection for the Indian schools in America.
A large sum of money is now collected. But will money convert heathens? Find
preachers of David Brainerd’s spirit, and nothing can stand before them. But
without this, what will gold or silver do? No more than lead or iron.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p34">Some
selections from Brainerd’s diary will be of value as showing what manner of man
he was:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p34.1">
<p id="xi-p35">“My
soul felt a pleasing yet painful concern,” he writes, “lest I should spend some
moments without God. Oh, may I always live to God! In the evening I was visited
by some friends, and spent the time in prayer, and such conversation as tended
to edification. It was a comfortable season to my soul. I felt an ardent desire
to spend every moment with God. God is unspeakably gracious to me continually.
In time past, He has given me inexpressible sweetness in the performance of
duty. Frequently my soul has enjoyed much of God, but has been ready to say,
‘Lord, it is good to be here;’ and so indulge sloth while I have lived on the
sweetness of my feelings. But of late God has been pleased to keep my soul
hungry almost continually, so that I have been filled with a kind of pleasing
pain. When I really enjoy God, I feel my desires of Him the more insatiable,
and my thirstings after holiness the more unquenchable.</p>
<p id="xi-p36">“Oh,
that I may feel this continual hunger, and not be retarded, but rather animated
by every duster from Canaan, to reach forward in the
narrow way, for the full enjoyment and possession of the heavenly inheritance!
Oh, may I never loiter in my heavenly journey!</p>
<p id="xi-p37">“It
seems as if such an unholy wretch as I never could arrive at that blessedness,
to be holy as God is holy. At noon I
longed for sanctification and conformity to God. Oh, that is the one thing, the
all!</p>
<p id="xi-p38">“Toward
night enjoyed much sweetness in secret prayer, so that my soul longed for an
arrival in the heavenly country, the blessed paradise of God.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p39">If
inquiry be made as to the secret of David Brainerd’s heavenly spirit, his deep
consecration and exalted spiritual state, the answer will be found in the last
sentence quoted above. He was given to <i>much secret prayer, </i>and was so
close to God in his life and spirit that prayer brought forth much sweetness to
his inner soul.</p>
<p id="xi-p40">We
have cited the foregoing cases as illustrative of the great fundamental fact that
God’s great servants are men devoted to the ministry of prayer; that they are
God’s agents on earth who serve Him in this way, and who carry on His work by
this holy means.</p>
<p id="xi-p41">Louis
Harms was born in Hanover, in
1809, and then came a time when he was powerfully convicted of sin. Said he, “I
have never known what fear was. But when I came to the knowledge of my sins, I
quaked before the wrath of God, so that my limbs trembled.” He was mightily
converted to God by reading the Bible. Rationalism, a dead orthodoxy, and
worldliness, held the multitudes round Hermansburgh, his native town. His
father, a Lutheran minister, dying, he became his successor.</p>
<p id="xi-p42">He
began with all the energy of his soul to work for Christ, and to develop a
church of a pure, strong type. The fruit was soon evident. There was a
quickening on every hand, attendance at public services increased, reverence
for the Bible grew, conversation on sacred things revived, while infidelity,
worldliness and dead orthodoxy vanished like a passing cloud. Harms proclaimed
a conscious and present Christ, the Comforter, in the full energy of His
mission, the revival of apostolic piety and power. The entire neighbourhood
became regular attendants at church, the Sabbath was restored to its sanctity,
and hallowed with strict devotion, family altars were erected in the homes, and
when the noon bell sounded, every
head was bowed in prayer. In a very short time the whole aspect of the country
was entirely changed. The revival in Hermansburgh was essentially a prayer revival,
brought about by prayer and yielding fruits of prayer in a rich and an abundant
ingathering.</p>
<p id="xi-p43">William
Carvosso, an old-time Methodist class-leader, was one of the best examples
which modern times has afforded of what was probably the religious life of
Christians in the apostolic age. He was a prayer-leader, a class-leader, a
steward and a trustee, but never aspired to be a preacher. Yet a preacher he
was of the very first quality, and a master in the art and science of
soul-saving. He was a singular instance of a man learning the simplest
rudiments late in life. He had up to the age of sixty-five years never written
a single sentence, yet he wrote letters which would make volumes, and a book
which was regarded as a spiritual classic in the great world-wide Methodist
 Church.</p>
<p id="xi-p44">Not a
page nor a letter, it is believed, was ever written by him on any other subject
but religion. Here are some of his brief utterances which give us an insight
into his religious character. “I want to be more like Jesus.” “My soul
thirsteth for Thee, O God.” “I see nothing will do, O God, but being
continually filled with Thy presence and glory.”</p>
<p id="xi-p45">This
was the continual out-crying of his inner soul, and this was the strong inward
impulse which moved the outward man. At one time we hear him exclaiming, “Glory
to God! This is a morning without a cloud.” Cloudless days were native to his
sunny religion and his gladsome spirit. Continual prayer and turning all
conversation toward Christ in every company and in every home, was the inexorable
law he followed, until he was gathered home.</p>
<p id="xi-p46">On
the anniversary of his spiritual birth when he was born again, in great
joyousness of spirit he calls it to mind, and breaks forth: “Blessed be Thy
name, O God! The last has been the best of the whole. I may say with Bunyan, ‘I
have got into that land where the sun shines night and day.’ I thank Thee, O my
God, for this heaven, this element of love and joy, in which my soul now
lives.”</p>
<p id="xi-p47">Here
is a sample of Carvosso’s spiritual experiences, of which he had many:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p47.1">
<p id="xi-p48">“I
have sometimes had seasons of remarkable visitation from the presence of the
Lord,” he says. “I well remember one night when in bed being so filled, so
over-powered with the glory of God, that had there been a thousand suns shining
at noonday, the brightness of that divine glory would have eclipsed the whole.
I was constrained to shout aloud for joy. It was the overwhelming power of
saving grace. Now it was that I again received the impress of the seal and the
earnest of the Spirit in my heart. Beholding as in a glass the glory of the
Lord I was changed into the same image from glory to glory by the Spirit of the
Lord. Language fails in giving but a faint description of what I there
experienced. I can never forget it in time nor to all eternity.</p>
<p id="xi-p49">“Man
years before I was sealed by the Spirit in a somewhat similar manner. While
walking out one day, I was drawn to turn aside on the public road, and under
the canopy of the skies, I was moved to kneel down to pray. I had not long been
praying with God before I was so visited from Him that I was overpowered by the
divine glory, and I shouted till I could be heard at a distance. It was a
weight of glory that I seemed incapable of bearing in the body, and therefore I
cried out, perhaps unwisely, Lord, stay Thy hand. In this glorious baptism
these words came to my heart with indescribable power: ‘I have sealed thee unto
the day of redemption.’</p>
<p id="xi-p50">“Oh,
I long to be filled more with God! Lord, stir me up more in earnest. I want to
be more like Jesus. I see that nothing will do but being continually filled
with the divine presence and glory. I know all that Thou hast is mine, but I
want to feel a close union. Lord, increase my faith.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p51">Such
was William Carvosso—a man whose life was impregnated with the spirit of prayer,
who lived on his knees, so to speak, and who belonged to that company of
praying saints which has blessed the earth.</p>
<p id="xi-p52">Jonathan
Edwards must be placed among the praying saints—one whom God mightily used
through the instrumentality of prayer. As in the instance of the great New
Englander, purity of heart should be ingrained in the very foundation areas of
every man who is a true leader of his fellows and a minister of the Gospel of
Christ and a constant practicer in the holy office of prayer. A sample of the
utterances of this mighty man of God is here given in the shape of a resolution
which he formed, and wrote down:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p52.1">
<p id="xi-p53">“Resolved,”
he says, “to exercise myself in this all my life long, viz., with the greatest
openness to declare my ways to God, and to lay my soul open to God—all my sins,
temptations, difficulties, sorrows, fears, hopes, desires, and everything and
every circumstance.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p54">We
are not surprised, therefore, that the result of such fervid and honest praying
was to lead him to record in his diary:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p54.1">
<p id="xi-p55">“It was
my continual strife day and night, and my constant inquiry how I should be more
holy, and live more holily. The heaven I desired was a heaven of holiness. I
went on with my eager pursuit after more holiness and conformity to Christ.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p56">The
character and work of Jonathan Edwards were exemplifications of the great truth
that the ministry of prayer is the efficient agency in every truly God-ordered
work and life. He himself gives some particulars about his life when a boy. He
might well be called the “Isaiah of the Christian dispensation.” There was
united in him great mental powers, ardent piety, and devotion to study,
unequaled save by his devotion to God. Here is what he says about himself:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p56.1">
<p id="xi-p57">“When
a boy I used to pray five times a day in secret, and to spend much time in
religious conversation with other boys. I used to meet with them to pray
together. So it is God’s will through His wonderful grace, that the prayers of
His saints should be one great and principal means of carrying on the designs
of Christ’s kingdom in the world. Pray much for the ministers and the Church
 of God.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p58">The
great powers of Edwards’ mind and heart were exercised to procure an agreed
union in extraordinary prayer of God’s people everywhere. His life, efforts and
his character are an exemplification of his statement.</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p58.1">
<p id="xi-p59">“The
heaven I desire,” he says, “is a heaven spent with God; an eternity spent in
the presence of divine love, and in holy communion with Christ.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p60">At
another time he said:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p60.1">
<p id="xi-p61">“The
soul of a true Christian appears like a little white flower in the spring of
the year, low and humble on the ground, opening its bosom to receive the
pleasant beams of the sun’s glory, rejoicing as it were in a calm rapture,
diffusing around a sweet fragrance, standing peacefully and lovingly in the midst
of other flowers.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p62">Again
he writes:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xi-p62.1">
<p id="xi-p63">“Once
as I rode out in the woods for my health, having alighted from my horse in a
retired place, as my manner has been to walk for divine contemplation and
prayer, I had a view, that for me was extraordinary, of the glory of the Son of
God as Mediator between God and man, and of His wonderful, great, full, pure,
and sweet grace and love, and His meek and gentle condescension. This grace
that seemed so calm and sweet, appeared also great above the heavens. The person
of Christ appeared ineffably excellent with an excellency great enough to
swallow up all thought and conception, which continued, as near as I can judge,
about an hour. It kept me the greater part of the time in a flood of tears and
weeping aloud. I felt an ardency of soul to be, what I know not otherwise how
to express, emptied and annihilated, to lie in the dust; to be full of Christ
alone, to love Him with my whole heart.”</p></div>
<p id="xi-p64">As it
was with Jonathan Edwards, so it is with all great intercessors. They come into
that holy and elect condition of mind and heart by a thorough self-dedication
to God, by periods of God’s revelation to them, making distinct marked eras in
their spiritual history, eras never to be forgotten, in which faith mounts up
with wings as eagles, and has given it a new and fuller vision of God, a
stronger grasp of faith, a sweeter, clearer vision of all things heavenly, and
eternal, and a blessed intimacy with, and access to, God.</p>
</div1>

<div1 title="XII. MODERN EXAMPLES OF PRAYER (Continued)" progress="91.51%" prev="xi" next="xiii" id="xii">
<h2 id="xii-p0.1">XII. MODERN EXAMPLES OF PRAYER <i>(Continued)</i></h2>
<p class="IntroPar" id="xii-p1"><i>“Edward
Bounds did not merely pray well that he might write well about prayer. He
prayed for long years upon subjects to which easy-going Christians rarely give
a thought. He prayed for objects which men of less faith are ready to call
impossible. Yet from these continental, solitary prayer-vigils, year by year
there arose a gift of prayer-teaching equaled by few men. He wrote
transcendently about prayer because he was transcendent in its practice.”</i>—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="xii-p1.1">C. L. Chilton, Jr.</span></p>
<p class="First" id="xii-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="xii-p2.1">Lady Maxwell</span> was contemporary with John
Wesley, and a fruit of Methodism in its earlier phases. She was a woman of
refinement, of culture and of deep piety. Separating herself entirely from the
world, she sought and found the deepest religious experience, and was a woman
fully set apart to God. Her life was one of prayer, of complete consecration to
God, living to bless others. She was noted for her systematic habits of life,
which entered into and controlled her religion. Her time was economized and
ordered for God. She arose at four o’clock
in the morning, and attended preaching at five
 o’clock. After breakfast she held a family service. Then, from
eleven to twelve o’clock she observed
a season of intercessory prayer. The rest of the day was given to reading,
visiting and acts of benevolence.</p>
<p id="xii-p3">Her
evenings were spent in reading. At night, before retiring, religious services
were held for the family and sometimes in praising God for His mercies.</p>
<p id="xii-p4">Rarely
has God been served with more intelligence, or out of a richer experience, a
nobler ardour, a richer nobility of soul. Strongly, spiritually and ardently
attached to Wesley’s doctrine of entire dedication, she sought it with
persistency, and a never flagging zeal. She obtained it by faith and prayer,
and illustrated it in a life as holy and as perfect as is given mortals to
reach. If this great feature of Wesley’s teaching had, today, models and
teachers possessed of the profound spiritual understanding and experience as
had Fletcher of Madeley and Lady Maxwell of Edinburgh, it would not have been
so misunderstood, but would have commended itself to the good and pure
everywhere by holy lives, if not by its verbiage.</p>
<p id="xii-p5">Lady
Maxwell’s diary yields some rich counsel for secret prayer, holy experience,
and consecrated living. One of the entries runs as follows:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p5.1">
<p id="xii-p6">“Of
late I feel painfully convinced that I do not pray enough. Lord, give me the
spirit of prayer and of supplication. Oh, what a cause of thankfulness is it
that we have a gracious God to whom to go on all occasions! Use and enjoy this
privilege and you can never be miserable. Who gives thanks for this royal
privilege? It puts God in everything, His wisdom, power, control and safety.
Oh, what an unspeakable privilege is prayer! Let us give thanks for it, I do
not prove all the power of prayer that I wish.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p7">Thus
we see that the remedy for non-praying is <i>praying. </i>The cure for little
praying is more praying. Praying can procure all things necessary for our good.</p>
<p id="xii-p8">With
this excellent woman praying embraced all things and included everything. To
one of her most intimate friends she writes:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p8.1">
<p id="xii-p9">“I
wish I could provide you with a proper maid, but it is a difficult matter. You
have my prayers for it, and if I hear of one I will let you know.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p10">So
small a matter as the want of a housemaid for a friend was with her an event
not too small to take to God in prayer.</p>
<p id="xii-p11">In
the same letter, she tells her friend that she wants “more faith. Cry mightily
for it, and stir up the gift of God that is in you.”</p>
<p id="xii-p12">Whether
the need was a small secular thing as a servant, or a great spiritual grace,
prayer was the means to attain that end and supply that want. “There is
nothing,” she writes to a dear correspondent, “so hurtful to the nervous system
as anxiety. It preys upon the vitals and weakens the whole frame, and what is
more than all, it grieves the Holy Spirit.” Her remedy, again, for a common
evil, was prayer.</p>
<p id="xii-p13">How
prayer disburdens us of care by bringing God in to relieve and possess and
hold?</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p13.1">
<p id="xii-p14">“Be
careful for nothing,” says the Apostle, “but in everything by prayer and
supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests he made known unto God. And
the peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and
minds through Christ Jesus.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p15">The
figure is that of a beleagured and distressed garrison, unable to protect the
fort from the enemies which assault it, into which strong reinforcements are
poured. Into the heart oppressed, distracted and discouraged, true prayer
brings God, who holds it in perfect peace and in perfect safety. This Lady
Maxwell fully understood theoretically, but which was better, experimentally.</p>
<p id="xii-p16">Christ
Jesus is the only cure for undue care and over anxiety of soul, and we secure
God, His presence and His peace by prayer. Care is so natural and so strong,
that none but God can eject it. It takes God, the presence and personality of
God Himself, to oust the care and to enthrone quietness and peace. When Christ
comes in with His peace, all tormenting fears are gone, trepidation and
harrowing anxieties capitulate to the reign of peace, and all disturbing
elements depart. Anxious thought and care assault the soul, and feebleness,
faintness and cowardice are within. Prayer reinforces with God’s peace, and the
heart is kept by Him. “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed
on Thee.” All now is safety, quietness and assurance. “The work of
righteousness is peace, and the effect of righteousness, quietness and
assurance forever.”</p>
<p id="xii-p17">But
to ensure this great peace, prayer must pass into strenuous, insistent,
personal supplication, and thanksgiving must bloom into full flower. Our
exposed condition of heart must be brought to the knowledge of God, by prayer
and supplication, with thanksgiving. The peace of God will keep the heart and
thoughts, fixed and fearless. Peace, deep, exhaustless, wide, flowing like a
river, will come in.</p>
<p id="xii-p18">Referring
again to Lady Maxwell, we hear her saying:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p18.1">
<p id="xii-p19">“God
is daily teaching me more simplicity of spirit, and makes me willing to receive
all as His unmerited gift, and to call on Him for everything I need, as I need
it, and He supplies my wants according to existing needs. But I have certainly
felt more of it this last eighteen months than in former periods. I wish to
pray without ceasing. I see the necessity of praying always, and not fainting.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p20">Again
we hear her declaring: “I wish to be much in prayer. I greatly need it. The
prayer of faith shuts or opens heaven. Come, Lord, and turn my captivity.” If
we felt the need of prayer as this saintly woman did, we could bear her company
in her saintly ascension. Prayer truly “shuts or opens heaven.” Oh, for a
quality of faith that would test to the uttermost the power of prayer!</p>
<p id="xii-p21">Lady
Maxwell utters a great truth when she says:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p21.1">
<p id="xii-p22">“When
God is at work either among a people, or in the heart of an individual, the
adversary of souls is peculiarly at work also. A belief of the former should
prevent discouragement, and a fear of the latter should stir us up to much
prayer. Oh, the power of faithful prayer! I live by prayer! May you prove its
sovereign efficacy in every difficult case.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p23">We
find a record among Lady Maxwell’s writings which shows us that in prayer and
meditation she obtained enlarged views of the full salvation of God, and what
is thus discovered, faith goes out after, and according to its strength are its
returns.</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p23.1">
<p id="xii-p24">“I
daily feel the need of the precious blood of sprinkling,” she says, “and dwell
continually under its influence, and most sensibly feel its sovereign efficacy.
It is by momentary faith in this blood alone that I am saved from sin. Prayer
is my chief employ.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p25">If
this last statement “prayer, the chief employ” had ever been true of God’s
people, this world would have been by this time quite another world, and God’s
glory, instead of being dim, and shadowy, and only in spots, would now shine
with universal and unrivaled effulgence and power.</p>
<p id="xii-p26">Here
is another record of her ardent and faithful praying: “Lately, I have been
favoured with a more ardent spirit of praying than almost ever formerly.”</p>
<p id="xii-p27">We
need to study these words—“favoured with a more ardent spirit of praying”—for
they are pregnant words. The spirit of prayer, the ardent spirit of prayer and
its increase, and the more ardent spirit of prayer—all these are of God. They
are given in answer to prayer. The spirit of prayer and the more ardent spirit
are the result of ardent, importunate secret prayer.</p>
<p id="xii-p28">At
another time, Lady Maxwell declared that secret prayer was the means whereby
she derived the greatest spiritual benefit.</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p28.1">
<p id="xii-p29">“I do
Indeed prove it to be an especial privilege,” she says. “I could not live
without it, though I do not always find comfort in it. I still ardently desire
an enlarged sphere of usefulness, and find it comfortable to embrace the
opportunities afforded me.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p30">An
“enlarged sphere of usefulness” is certainly a proper theme of intense prayer,
but that prayer must ever be accompanied with an improvement of the
opportunities afforded by the present.</p>
<p id="xii-p31">Many
pages might be filled with extracts from Lady Maxwell’s diary as to the vital
importance of, and the nature of the ministry of prayer, but we must forbear.
For many years she was in ardent supplication for an enlargement of her sphere
of usefulness, but all these years of ardent praying may be condensed into one
statement:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p31.1">
<p id="xii-p32">“My
whole soul has been thirsting after a larger sphere of action,” she says,
“agreeably to the promises of a faithful God. For these few last weeks I have
been led to plead earnestly for more holiness. Lord, give me both, that I may
praise Thee.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p33">These
two things, for which this godly woman prayed, must go together. They are one,
and not to be separated. The desire for a larger field of work without the
accompanying desire for an increase of consecration, is perilous, and may be
supremely selfish, the offspring of spiritual pride.</p>
<p id="xii-p34">John
Fletcher, also a contemporary of John Wesley, was intimately associated with
the founder of Methodism. He was a scholar of courtesy and refinement, a
strong, original thinker, eloquent in simplicity and truth. That which
qualified him as a spiritual leader was his exceedingly great faith in God, his
nearness to God and his perfect assurance of dear unquestioned relationship to
his Lord. Fletcher had profound convictions concerning the truth of God, a deep
and perpetual communion with his Lord and Saviour, and was profound and humble
in his knowledge of God and Christian experience. He was a man of deep
spiritual insight into the things of God, and his thorough earnestness, his
truth, and his consecration, marked him as a man of God, well equipped by all
these things for a leader in Israel.</p>
<p id="xii-p35">Unceasing
prayer was the sign and secret of Fletcher’s sainthood, its power and
influence. His whole life was one of prayer. So intently was his mind fixed on
God, that he sometimes said, “I would not rise from my seat without lifting up
my heart to God.” A friend relates the fact that whenever they met, his first
salute was, “Do I meet you praying?” If they were talking on theology, in the
midst of it he would break off abruptly and say, “Where are our hearts now?” If
the misconduct of any person who was absent was mentioned, he would say, “Let
us pray for him.”</p>
<p id="xii-p36">The
very walls of his room—so it was said—were stained by the breath of his
prayers. Spiritually, Madeley was a dreary, desolate desert when he went to
live there, but it was so revolutionized by his prayers that it bloomed and
blossomed like the garden of the Lord. A friend of his thus writes of Fletcher:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p36.1">
<p id="xii-p37">“Many
of us have at times gone with him aside, and there we would continue for two or
three hours, wrestling like Jacob for the blessing, praying one after another.
And I have seen him on these occasions so filled with the love of God that he
could contain no more, but would cry out, ‘O my God, withhold Thy hand or the
vessel will burst!’ His whole life was a life of prayer.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p38">John
Foster, a man of exalted piety and deep devotion to God, while on his dying
bed, thus spoke concerning prayer when about to depart this life:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p38.1">
<p id="xii-p39">“Pray
without ceasing has been the sentence repeating itself in my silent thoughts,
and I am sure that it will be, it must be, my practice till the last conscious
hour of my life. O why was it not my practice throughout that long, indolent,
inanimate half century past! I often think mournfully of the difference it
would have made in me. Now there remains so little time for a mere genuine,
effective spiritual life.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p40">The
Reformation of the fifteenth century owes its origin to prayer. In all his
life-work, begun, continued and ended, Martin Luther was instant in prayer. The
secret of his extraordinary activity is found in this statement: “I have so
much work to do that I cannot get along without giving three hours daily of my
best time to prayer.” Another of his sayings was, “It takes meditation and
prayer to make a divine,” while his every day motto was, “He that has prayed
well, has studied well.”</p>
<p id="xii-p41">At
another time he thus confessed his lack: “I was short and superficial in prayer
this morning,” he says. How often is this the case with us! Let it be
remembered that the source of decline in religion and the proof of decline in a
Christian life is found just here, in “short and superficial praying.” Such
praying betokens and secures strangeness with God.</p>
<p id="xii-p42">William
Wilberforce once said of himself: “I have been keeping too late hours, and
hence have had but a hurried half hour to myself. I am lean and cold and hard.
I had better allow more time, say two hours, or an hour-and-a-half, daily to
religious exercises.”</p>
<p id="xii-p43">He
must be much skilled and habituated to long praying whose short prayers are not
superficial. Short prayers make shallow lives. Longer praying would work like
magic in many a decayed spiritual life. A holy life would not be so difficult
and rare a thing if our praying was not so brief, cold and superficial.</p>
<p id="xii-p44">George
Muller, that remarkable man of such simple yet strong faith in God, a man of
prayer and Bible reading, founder and promoter of the noted orphanage in England,
which cared for hundreds of orphan children, conducted the institution solely
by faith and prayer. He never asked a man for anything, but simply trusted in
the Providence of God, and it is a notorious fact that never did the inmates of
the home lack any good thing. From his paper he always excluded money matters,
and financial difficulties found no place in it. Nor would he mention the sums
which had been given him, nor the names of those who made contributions. He
never spoke of his wants to others nor asked a donation. The story of his life
and the history of this orphanage read like a chapter from the Scriptures. The
secret of his success was found in this simple statement made by him: “I went
to my God and prayed diligently, and received what I needed.” That was the
simple course which he pursued. There was nothing he insisted on with greater
earnestness than that, be the expenses what they might be, let them increase
ever so suddenly, he must not beg for anything. There was nothing in which he
took more delight and showed more earnestness in telling than that he had
prayed for every want which ever came to him in his great work. His was a work
of continuous and most importunate praying, and he always confidently claimed
that God had guided him throughout it all. A stronger proof of a divine
providence, and of the power of simple faith and of answered prayer, cannot be
found in Church history or religious biography.</p>
<p id="xii-p45">In
writing to a friend at one time. John Wesley helps, urges and prays, as we will
see from the following from his own pen: “Have you received a gleam of light
from above, a spark of faith? If you have, let it not go! Hold fast by His
grace that earnest of your inheritance. Come just as you are, and come boldly
to the throne of grace. You need not delay. Even now the bowels of Jesus yearn
over you. What have you to do with tomorrow? I love you today. And how much
more does He love you?</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p45.1">
<p id="xii-p46">“‘He
pities still His wandering sheep,</p>
<p id="xii-p47">And
longs to bring you to His fold.’</p></div>
<p id="xii-p48">“Today
hear His voice, the voice of Him that speaks as never man spake.”</p>
<p id="xii-p49">The
seekings of Madame Guyon after God were sincere, and her yearnings were strong
and earnest. She applied to a devout Franciscan friar for advice and comfort.
She stated her convictions and told him of her long and fruitless seeking.
After she had finished speaking to him, the friar remained silent for some
time, in inward meditation and prayer. Then he said to her:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p49.1">
<p id="xii-p50">“Your
efforts have been unsuccessful, because you have sought without what you can
only find within. Accustom yourself to seek God in your heart, and you will not
fail to find Him.”</p></div>
<p id="xii-p51">“When
God has specially promised the thing,” said Charles G. Finney, “we are bound to
believe we shall receive it when we pray for it. You have no right to put in an
‘if,’ and say, ‘Lord, if it be Thy will, give me Thy Holy Spirit.’ This is to
insult God. To put an ‘if’ in God’s promise when God has put none there, is
tantamount to charging God with being insincere. It is like saying, ‘O God, if
Thou art in earnest in making these promises, grant us the blessing we pray
for.’”</p>
<p id="xii-p52">We
may fittingly conclude this chapter by quoting a word of Adoniram Judson’s, the
noted missionary to Burma.
Speaking of the prevailing power of prayer he said:</p>
<div class="BlockQte" id="xii-p52.1">
<p id="xii-p53">“‘Nothing
is impossible,’ said one of the seven sages of Greece,
‘to industry.’ Let us change the word, ‘industry,’ to ‘persevering prayer,’ and
the motto will be more Christian and more worthy of universal adoption. God
loves importunate prayer so much that He will not give us much blessing without
it. God says, ‘Behold I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall
ye not know it? I will even make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the
desert. This people have I formed for myself; they shall shew forth my praise.’”</p></div>
</div1>


<div1 title="Indexes" progress="99.98%" prev="xii" next="xiii.i" id="xiii">
<h1 id="xiii-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

<div2 title="Index of Scripture References" progress="99.98%" prev="xiii" next="toc" id="xiii.i">
  <h2 id="xiii.i-p0.1">Index of Scripture References</h2>
  <insertIndex type="scripRef" id="xiii.i-p0.2" />



<div class="Index">
<p class="bbook">Exodus</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Exod&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=0#x-p27.1">17</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Chronicles</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Chr&amp;scrCh=21&amp;scrV=17#ii-p47.2">21:17</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Chronicles</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Chr&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=12#ii-p15.1">7:12-15</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Psalms</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=50&amp;scrV=15#ii-p20.2">50:15</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Isaiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=46&amp;scrV=0#ii-p35.1">46</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=58&amp;scrV=9#i-p1.3">58:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=58&amp;scrV=9#ii-p20.3">58:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=64&amp;scrV=4#ii-p1.2">64:4</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Jeremiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jer&amp;scrCh=29&amp;scrV=10#ii-p18.1">29:10-13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jer&amp;scrCh=33&amp;scrV=3#ii-p20.1">33:3</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Matthew</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=9#vii-p33.1">6:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Acts</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=14#ix-p3.1">1:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=1#i-p14.1">6:1-8</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Romans</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=12#i-p12.2">12:12</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Ephesians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=18#iii-p1.2">6:18</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Colossians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Col&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=3#iii-p2.2">4:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Col&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=12#i-p12.1">4:12</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Timothy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Tim&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=0#v-p10.1">1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Tim&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#iii-p21.1">2</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Hebrews</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=7#vii-p12.1">5:7</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Revelation</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=3#ii-p38.1">8:3</a> </p>
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