GOD wants me to pray, to be much
in prayer -- because all success in spiritual work is dependent
on prayer.
A preacher who prays little may
see some results of his labors, but if he does it will be
because someone, somewhere is praying for him. The
"fruit" is the pray-er's -- not the preacher's. How
surprised some of us preachers will be one day, when the Lord
shall "reward every man according to his works."
"Lord! Those were my converts! It was I who conducted that
mission at which so many were brought into the fold." Ah,
yes -- I did the preaching, the pleading, the persuading; but
was it "I" who did the praying?
Every convert is the result of the
Holy Spirit's pleading in answer to the prayers of some
believer.
O God, grant that such surprise
may not be ours. O Lord, teach us to pray!
We have had a vision of a God
pleadingly calling for prayer from His children. How am I
treating that call? Can I say, with St. Paul, ."I am 'not
disobedient to the heavenly vision' " ? Again we repeat, if
there are any regrets in heaven, the greatest will be that we
spent so little time in real intercession whilst we were on
earth.
Think of the wide sweep of prayer!
"Ask of Me, and I will give thee the heathen for thine
inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession" (Psalm ii. 8). Yet many people do not trouble
to bring even the little details of their own lives to God in
prayer, and nine out of ten Christian people never think of
praying for the heathen!
One is staggered at the
unwillingness of Christians to pray. Perhaps it is because they
have never experienced, or even heard of, convincing answers to
prayer.
In this chapter we are setting out
to do the "impossible." What is that? We long to bring
home to the heart and conscience of every reader the power of
prayer. We venture to describe this as "impossible."
For if men will not believe, and act upon, our Lord's promises
and commands, how can we expect them to be persuaded by any mere
human exhortations?
But do you remember that our Lord,
when speaking to His disciples, asked them to believe that He
was in the Father and the Father in Him? Then he added: "If
you cannot believe My bare word about this, believe Me for the
very works' sake" (John xiv. 11). It was as if He said,
"If My Person, My sanctified life, and My wonderful words
do not elicit belief in Me, then look at My works: surely they
are sufficient to compel belief? Believe Me because of what I
do."
Then He went on to promise that if
they would believe, they should do greater works than these. It
was after this utterance that He gave the first of those six
wonderful promises in regard to prayer. The inference surely is
that those "greater works" are to be done only as the
outcome of prayer.
May the disciple therefore follow
the Master's method? Fellow-worker, if you fail to grasp, fail
to trust our Lord's astounding promises regarding prayer, will
you not believe them "for the very works' sake"? That
is, because of those "greater works" which men and
women are performing today -- or, rather, the works which the
Lord Jesus is doing, through their prayerful co-operation?
What are we "out for"?
What is our real aim in life? Surely we desire most of all to be
abundantly fruitful in the Master's service. We seek not
position, or prominence, or power. But we do long to be fruitful
servants. Then we must be much in prayer. God can do more
through our prayers than through our preaching. A. J. Gordon
once said, "You can do more than pray, after you have
prayed, but you can never do more than pray until you have
prayed." If only we would believe this!
A lady in India was cast down
through the failure of her life and work. She was a devoted
missionary, but somehow or other conversions never resulted from
her ministry.
The Holy Spirit seemed to say to
her, "Pray more." But she resisted the promptings of
the Spirit for some time. "At length," said she,
"I set apart much of my time for prayer. I did it in fear
and trembling lest my fellow-workers should complain that I was
shirking my work. After a few weeks I began to see men and women
accepting Christ as their Savior. Moreover, the whole district
was soon awakened, and the work of all the other missionaries
was blessed as never before. God did more in six months than I
had succeeded in doing in six years. And," she added,
"no one ever accused me of shirking my duty." Another
lady missionary in India felt the same call to pray. She began
to give much time to prayer. No opposition came from without,
but it did come from within. But she persisted, and in two years
the baptized converts increased sixfold!
God promised that He would
"pour out the Spirit of grace and supplication upon all
flesh" (Joel ii. 28). How much of that Spirit of
"supplication" is ours? Surely we must get that Spirit
at all costs? Yet if we are not willing to spend time in
"supplication," God must perforce withhold His Spirit,
and we become numbered amongst those who are "resisting the
Spirit," and possibly "quenching" the Spirit. Has
not our Lord promised the Holy Spirit to them that ask? (Luke xi.
13).
Are not the very converts from
heathendom putting some of us to shame?
A few years ago, when in India, I
had the great joy of seeing something of Pandita Ramabai's work.
She had a boarding-school of 1,500 Hindu girls. One day some of
these girls came with their Bibles and asked a lady missionary
what St. Luke xii. 49 meant -- "I came to cast fire upon
the earth; and what will I, if it is already kindled?" The
missionary tried to put them off with an evasive answer, not
being very sure herself what those words meant. But they were
not satisfied, so they determined to pray for this fire. And as
they prayed -- and because they prayed -- the very fire of
heaven came into their souls. A very Pentecost from above was
granted them. No wonder they continued to pray!
A party of these girls upon whom
God had poured the "Spirit of supplication" came to a
mission house where I spent some weeks. "May we stay here
in your town and pray for your work?" they asked. The
missionary did not entertain the idea with any great enthusiasm.
He felt that they ought to be at school, and not "gadding
about" the country. But they only asked for a hall or barn
where they could pray; and we all value prayers on our behalf.
So their request was granted, and the good man sat down to his
evening meal, thinking. As the evening wore on, a native pastor
came round. He broke down completely. He explained, with tears
running down his face, that God's Holy Spirit had convicted him
of sin, and that he felt compelled to come and openly confess
his wrongdoing. He was quickly followed by one Christian after
another, all under deep conviction of sin.
There was a remarkable time of
blessing. Back-sliders were restored, believers were sanctified,
and heathen brought into the fold -- all because a few mere
children were praying.
God is no respecter of persons. If
anyone is willing to conform to His conditions, He for His part
will assuredly fulfill His promises. Does not our heart burn
within us, as we hear of God's wonderful power? And that power
is ours for the asking. I know there are "conditions."
But you and I can fulfill them all through Christ. And those of
us who cannot have the privilege of serving God in India or any
other overseas mission, may yet take our part in bringing down a
like blessing. When the Revival in Wales was at its height, a
Welsh missionary wrote home begging the people to pray that
India might be moved in like manner. So the coal-miners met
daily at the pit-mouth half an hour before dawn to pray for
their comrade overseas. In a few weeks' time the welcome message
was sent home: "The blessing has come."
Isn't it just splendid to know
that by our prayers we can bring down showers of blessing upon
India, or Africa, or China, just as readily as we can get the
few drops needed for our own little plot?
Many of us will recall the
wonderful things which God did for Korea a few years ago,
entirely in answer to prayer. A few missionaries decided to meet
together to pray daily at noon. At the end of the month one
brother proposed that, "as nothing had happened," the
prayer-meeting should be discontinued. "Let us each pray at
home as we find it convenient," said he. The others,
however, protested that they ought rather to spend even more
time in prayer each day. So they continued the daily
prayer-meeting for four months. Then suddenly the blessing began
to be poured out. Church services here and there were broken up
by weeping and confessing of sins. At length a mighty revival
broke out. At one place during a Sunday evening service the
leading man in the church stood up and confessed that he had
stolen one hundred dollars in administering a widow's legacy.
Immediately conviction of sin swept the audience. That service
did not end till 2 o'clock on Monday morning. God's wondrous
power was felt as never before. And when the Church was
purified, many sinners found salvation.
Multitudes flocked to the churches
out of curiosity. Some came to mock, but fear laid hold of them,
and they stayed to pray. Amongst the "curious" was a
brigand chief, the leader of a robber band. He was convicted and
converted. He went straight off to the magistrate and gave
himself up. "You have no accuser," said the astonished
official, "yet you accuse yourself! We have no law in Korea
to meet your case." So he dismissed him.
One of the missionaries declared,
"It paid well to have spent several months in prayer, for
when God gave the Holy Spirit, He accomplished more in half a
day than all the missionaries together could have accomplished
in half a year." In less than two months, more than 2,000
heathen were converted. The burning zeal of those converts has
become a byword. Some of them gave all they had to build a
church, and wept because they could not give more. Needless to
say, they realized the power of prayer. Those converts were
themselves baptized with the "Spirit of supplication."
In one church it was announced that a daily prayer-meeting would
be held at 4:30 every morning. The very first day 400 people
arrived long before the stated hour -- eager to pray! The number
rapidly increaased to 600 as days went on. At Seoul, 1,100 is
the average attendance at the weekly prayer-meeting.
Heathen people came -- to see what
was happening. They exclaimed in astonishment, "The living
God is among you." Those poor heathen saw what many
Christians fail to see. Did not Christ say, "Where two or
three are gathered together in My name, there am I in the midst
of them"? (Matt. xviii. 20). What is possible in Korea is
possible here. God is "no respecter" of nations. He is
longing to bless us, longing to pour His Spirit upon us.
Now, if we -- here in this
so-called Christian country -- really believed in prayer, i.e.,
in our Lord's own gracious promises, should we avoid
prayer-meetings? If we had any genuine concern for the lost
condition of thousands in our own land and tens of thousands in
heathen lands, should we withhold our prayers? Surely we do not
think, or we should pray more. "Ask of Me -- I will
give," says an almighty, all-loving God, and we scarcely
heed His words!
Verily, converts from heathendom
put us to shame. In my journeyings I came to Rawal Pindi, in
N.W. India. What do you think happened there? Some of Pandita
Ramabai's girls went there to camp. But a little while before
this, Pandita Ramabai had said to her girls, "If there is
any blessing in India, we may have it. Let us ask God to tell us
what we must do in order to have the blessing."
As she read her Bible she paused
over the verse, "Wait for the promise of the Father . . .
ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon
you" (Acts i. 4-8). "'Wait'! Why, we have never done
this," she cried. "We have prayed, but we have never
expected any greater blessing today than we had yesterday!"
Oh, how they prayed! One prayer-meeting lasted six hours. And
what a marvelous blessing God poured out in answer to their
prayers.
Whilst some of these girls were at
Rawal Pindi, a lady missionary, looking out of her tent towards
midnight, was surprised to see a light burning in one of the
girls' tents -- a thing quite contrary to rules. She went to
expostulate, but found the youngest of those ten girls -- a
child of fifteen -- kneeling in the farthest corner of the tent,
holding a little tallow candle in one hand and a list of names
for intercession in the other. She had 500 names on her list --
500 out of the 1,500 girls in Pandita Ramabai's school. Hour
after hour she was naming them before God. No wonder God's
blessing fell wherever those girls went, and upon whomsoever
those girls prayed for.
Pastor Ding Li Mei, of China, has
the names of 1,100 students on his prayer-list. Many hundreds
have been won to Christ through his prayers. And so out-and-out
are his converts that many scores of them have entered the
Christian ministry.
It would be an easy matter to add
to these amazing and inspiring stories of blessing through
prayer. But there is no need to do so. I know that God wants me
to pray. I know that God wants you to pray.
"If there is any blessing in
England we may have it." Nay, more -- if there is any
blessing in Christ we may have it. "Blessed be the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ" (Eph.
i. 3). God's great storehouse is full of blessings. Only prayer
can unlock that storehouse. Prayer is the key, and faith both
turns the key and opens the door, and claims the blessing.
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. And to
see Him is to pray aright.
Listen! We have come -- you and I
-- once more to the parting of the ways. All our past failure,
all our past inefficiency and insufficiency, all our past
unfruitfulness in service, can be banished now, once and for
all, if we will only give prayer its proper place. Do it today.
Do not wait for a more convenient time.
Everything worth having depends
upon the decision we make. Truly God is a wonderful God! And one
of the most wonderful things about Him is that He puts His all
at the disposal of the prayer of faith. Believing prayer from a
wholly-cleansed heart never fails. God has given us His word for
it. Yet vastly more wonderful is the amazing fact that Christian
men and women should either not believe God's word, or should
fail to put it to the test.
When Christ is "all in
all" -- when He is Savior and Lord and King of our whole
being, then it is really He Who prays our prayers. We can then
truthfully alter one word of a well-known verse and say that the
Lord Jesus ever liveth to make intercession in us. Oh, that we
might make the Lord Jesus "marvel" not at our unbelief
but at our faith! When our Lord shall again "marvel,"
and say of us, "Verily . . . I have not found so great
faith, no, not in Israel" (Matt. viii. 10), then indeed
shall "palsy" -- paralysis -- be transformed into
power.
Has not our Lord come to
"cast fire" upon us? Are we "already
kindled"? Can He not use us as much as he used those mere
children of Khedgaon? God is no respecter of persons. If we can
humbly and truthfully say, "To me to live is Christ"
(Phil. i. 21), will He not manifest forth His mighty power in
us?
Some of us have been reading about
Praying Hyde. Truly, his intercession changed things. Men tell
us that they were thrilled when John Hyde prayed. They were
stirred to their inmost being when he just pleaded the name
"Jesus! -- Jesus! -- Jesus!" and a baptism of love and
power came upon them.
But it was not John Hyde, it was
the Holy Spirit of God whom one consecrated man, filled with
that Spirit, brought down upon all around him. May we not all
become "Praying Hydes"? Do you say "No! He had a
special gift of prayer"? Very well -- how did he get it? He
was once just an ordinary Christian man -- just like any of us.
Have you noticed that, humanly
speaking, he owed his prayer-life to the prayers of his father's
friend? Now get hold of this point. It is one of greatest
importance, and one which may profoundly affect your whole life.
Perhaps I may be allowed to tell the story fully, for so much
depends upon it. Shall we quote John Hyde himself? He was on
board a ship sailing for India, whither he was going as a
missionary. He says, "My father had a friend who greatly
desired to be a foreign missionary, but was not permitted to go.
This friend wrote me a letter directed in care of the ship. I
received it a few hours out of New York harbor. The words were
not many, but the purport of them was this: 'I shall not cease
praying for you, dear John, until you are filled with the Holy
Spirit.' When I had read the letter I crumpled it up in anger
and threw it on the deck. Did this friend think I had not
received the baptism of the Spirit, or that I would think of
going to India without this equipment? I was angry. But by and
by better judgment prevailed, and I picked up the letter, and
read it again. Possibly I did need something which I had not yet
received. I paced up and down the deck, a battle raging within.
I felt uncomfortable: I loved the writer; I knew the holy life
he lived, and down in my heart there was a conviction that he
was right, and that I was not fit to be a missionary. . . . This
went on for two, or three days, until I felt perfectly
miserable. . . . At last, in a kind of despair, I asked the Lord
to fill me with the Holy Spirit; and the moment I did this . . .
I began to see myself, and what a selfish ambition I had."
But he did not yet receive the
blessing sought. He landed in India and went with a
fellow-missionary to an open-air service. "The missionary
spoke," said John Hyde, "and I was told that he was
speaking about Jesus Christ as the real Savior from sin. When he
had finished his address, a respectable-looking man, speaking
good English, asked the missionary whether he himself had been
thus saved? The question went home to my heart; for if it had
been asked me, I would have had to confess that Christ had not
fully saved me, because I knew there was a sin in my life which
had not been taken away. I realized what a dishonor it would be
on the name of Christ to have to confess that I was preaching a
Christ that had not delivered me from sin, though I was
proclaiming to others that He was a perfect Savior. I went back
to my room and shut myself in, and told the Lord that it must be
one of two things: either He must give me victory over all my
sins, and especially over the sin that so easily beset me, or I
must return to America and seek there for some other work. I
said I could not stand up to preach the Gospel until I could
testify of its power in my own life. I . . . realized how
reasonable this was, and the Lord assured me that He was able
and willing to deliver me from all sin. He did deliver me, and I
have not had a doubt of this since."
It was then, and then only, that
John Hyde became Praying Hyde. And it is only by such a full
surrender and such a definite claiming to be delivered from the
power of sin in our lives that you and I can be men of
prevailing prayer. The point we wish to emphasize, however, is
the one already mentioned. A comparatively unknown man prays for
John Hyde, who was then unknown to the world, and by his prayers
brings down such a blessing upon him that everyone knows of him
now as "Praying Hyde." Did you say in your heart, dear
reader, a little while ago, that you could not hope to be a
Praying Hyde? Of course we cannot all give so much time to
prayer. For physical or other reasons we may be hindered from
long-continued praying. But we may all have his spirit of
prayer. And may we not all do for others what the unnamed friend
did for John Hyde?
Can we not pray the blessing down
upon others -- upon your vicar or pastor? Upon your friend? Upon
your family? What a ministry is ours, if we will but enter it!
But to do so, we must make the full surrender which John Hyde
made. Have we done it? Failure in prayer is due to fault in the
heart. Only the "pure in heart" can see God. And only
those who "call on the Lord out of a pure heart" (II
Tim. ii. 22) can confidently claim answers to their prayers.
What a revival would break out,
what a mighty blessing would come down if only everyone who read
these words would claim the fullness of the Holy Spirit now!
Do you not see why it is that God
wants us to pray? Do you now see why everything worth having
depends upon prayer? There are several reasons, but one stands
out very clearly and vividly before us after reading this
chapter. It is just this: if we ask and God does not give, then
the fault is with us. Every unanswered prayer is a clarion call
to search the heart to see what is wrong there; for the promise
is unmistakable in its clearness: "If ye shall ask anything
in My name, that will I do" (John xiv. 14).
Truly he who prays puts, not God, but his own spiritual life to
the test!
Let me come closer to Thee, Jesus,
Oh, closer every day;
Let me lean harder on Thee, Jesus,
Yes, harder all the way.