"DOES God indeed answer
prayer?" is a question often on the lips of people, and
oftener still in their inmost hearts. "Is prayer of any
real use?" Somehow or other we cannot help praying; but
then even pagan savages cry out to someone or something to aid
them in times of danger and disaster and distress.
And those of us who really do
believe in prayer are soon faced with another question: "Is
it right to put God to the test?" Moreover, a further
thought flashes into our minds: "Dare we put God to the
test?" For there is little doubt failure in the prayer-life
is often -- always? -- due to failure in the spiritual life. So
many people harbor much unbelief in the heart regarding the
value and effectiveness of prayer; and without faith, prayer is
vain.
Asking for signs? Putting God to
the test? Would to God we could persuade Christian men and women
to do so. Why, what a test this would be of our own faith in
God, and of our own holiness of life. Prayer is the touchstone
of true godliness. God asks our prayers, values our prayers,
needs our prayers. And if those prayers fail, we have only
ourselves to blame. We do not mean by this that effective prayer
always gets just what it asks for. Now, the Bible teaches us
that we are allowed to put God to the test. The example of
Gideon in Old Testament days is sufficient to show us that God
honors our faith even when that faith is faltering. He allows us
to "prove Him" even after a definite promise from
Himself. This is a very great comfort to us.
Gideon said unto God, "If
Thou wilt save Israel by mine hand, as Thou hast said, behold, I
will put a fleece of wool on the floor; and if the dew be on the
fleece only . . . then shall I know that Thou wilt save Israel
by mine hand, as Thou has said." Yet, although there was a
"bowl full of water" in the fleece the next morning,
this did not satisfy Gideon! He dares to put God to the test the
second time, and to ask that the fleece should be dry instead of
wet the following night. "And God did so that night"
(Judges vi. 40).
It is all very wonderful, the
Almighty God just doing what a hesitating man asks Him to do! We
catch our breath and stand amazed, scarcely knowing which
startles us the more -- the daring of the man, or the
condescension of God! Of course, there is more in the story than
meets the eye. No doubt Gideon thought that the
"fleece" represented himself, Gideon.
If God would indeed fill him with
His Spirit, why, salvation was assured. But as he wrung the
fleece out, he began to compare himself with the saturated wool.
"How unlike this fleece am I! God promises deliverance, but
I do not feel full of the Spirit of God. No inflow of the mighty
power of God seems to have come into me. Am I indeed fit for
this great feat?" No! But then, it is "Not I, but
God." "O God, let the fleece be dry -- canst Thou
still work? Even if I do not feel any superhuman power, any
fullness of spiritual blessing within me: even if I feel as dry
as this fleece, canst Thou still deliver Israel by my arm?"
(Little wonder that he prefaced his prayer with the words,
"Let not Thine anger be hot against me"!) "And
God did so that night: for it was dry upon the fleece only, and
there was dew on all the ground" (verse 40).
Yes, there is more in the story
than can be seen at a glance. And is it not so in our own case?
The devil so often assures us that our prayers cannot claim an
answer because of the "dryness" of our souls. Answers
to prayer, however, do not depend upon our feelings, but upon
the trustworthiness of the Promiser.
Now, we are not urging that
Gideon's way of procedure is for us, or for anyone, the normal
course of action. It seems to reveal much hesitation to believe
God's Word. In fact, it looks gravely like doubting God. And
surely it grieves God when we show a faith in Him which is but
partial.
The higher and better and safer
way is to "ask, nothing doubting." But it is very
comforting and assuring to us to know that God allowed Gideon to
put Him to the test. Nor is this the only such case mentioned in
Scripture. The most surprising instance of "proving
God" happened on the Sea of Galilee. St. Peter put our Lord
Himself to the test. "If it be Thou --" yet our Savior
had already said, "It is I." "If it be Thou, bid
me come unto Thee on the water." And our Lord said,
"Come," and Peter "walked on the water"
(Matt. xiv. 28, 29). But this "testing-faith" of
Peter's soon failed him. "Little faith" (verse 31) so
often and so quickly becomes "doubt." Remember that
Christ did not reprove him for coming. Our Lord did not say,
"Wherefore didst thou come?" but "Wherefore didst
thou doubt?"
To put God to the test is, after
all, not the best method. He has given us so many promises
contingent on believing prayer, and has so often proved His
power and His willingness to answer prayer, that we ought, as a
rule, to hesitate very much before we ask Him for signs as well
as for wonders!
But, someone may be thinking, does
not the Lord God Almighty Himself bid us to put Him to the test?
Did He not say, "Bring ye the whole tithe into the
storehouse . . . and prove Me now herewith, saith the Lord of
Hosts, if I will not open unto you the windows of heaven, and
pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to
receive it"? (Mal. iii. 10).
Yes that is true: God does say,
"Prove Me: test Me." But it is really we ourselves who
are thus tested. If the windows of heaven are not opened when we
pray, and this blessing of fullness-to-overflowing is not
bestowed upon us, it can only be because we are not whole-tithers.
When we are in very deed wholly yielded to God -- when we have
brought the whole tithe into the storehouse for God -- we shall
find such a blessing that we shall not need to put God to any
test! This is a thing we shall have to speak about when we come
to the question of unanswered prayer.
Meanwhile we want every Christian
to ask, "Have I ever fairly tested prayer?" How long
is it since you last offered up a definite prayer? People pray
for "a blessing" upon an address, or a meeting, or a
mission; and some blessing is certain to come, for others are
also pleading with God about the matter. You ask for relief from
pain or healing of sickness: but Godless people, for whom no one
appears to be praying, often recover, and sometimes in a
seemingly miraculous way. And we may feel that we might have got
better even if no prayer had been offered on our behalf. It
seems to me that so many people cannot put their finger upon any
really definite and conclusive answer to prayer in their own
experience. Most Christians do not give God a chance to show His
delight in granting His children's petitions; for their requests
are so vague and indefinite. If this is so, it is not surprising
that prayer is so often a mere form -- an almost mechanical
repetition, day by day, of certain phrases; a few minutes'
"exercise" morning and evening.
Then there is another point. Have
you, when in prayer, ever had the witness borne in upon you that
your request was granted? Those who know something of the
private life of men of prayer are often amazed at the complete
assurance which comes over them at times that their prayers are
answered, long before the boon they seek is actually in their
possession. One prayer-warrior would say, "A peace came
over my soul. I was confident my request was granted me."
He then just thanked God for what he was quite sure God had done
for him. And his assurance would prove to be absolutely well
founded.
Our Lord Himself always had this
assurance, and we should ever bear in mind that, although He was
God, He lived His earthly life as a perfect Man, depending upon
the Holy Spirit of God.
When He stood before the opened
tomb of Lazarus, before He had actually called upon the dead to
come forth, He said, "Father, I thank Thee that Thou hast
heard Me. And I know that Thou hearest Me always" (John xi.
41, 42). Why, then, did He utter His thanks? "Because of
the people which stand by I said it, that they may believe that
Thou hast sent Me." If Christ is dwelling in our hearts by
faith: if the Holy Spirit is breathing into us our petitions,
and we are "praying in the Holy Ghost," ought we not
to know that the Father "hears" us? (Jude 20). And
will not those who stand by begin to recognize that we, too, are
God-sent?
Men of prayer and women of prayer
will agonize before God for something which they know is
according to His will, because of some definite promise on the
page of Scripture. They may pray for hours, or even for days,
when suddenly the Holy Spirit reveals to them in no uncertain
way that God has granted their request; and they are confident
that they need no longer send up any more petitions to God about
the matter. It is as if God said in clear tones: "Thy
prayer is heard and I have granted thee the desire of thy
heart." This is not the experience of only one man, but
most men to whom prayer is the basis of their life will bear
witness to the same fact. Nor is it a solitary experience in
their lives: it occurs again and again.
Then prayer must give place to
action. God taught Moses this: "Wherefore criest thou unto
Me? Speak unto the children of Israel that they go forward"
(Exod. xiv. 15).
We are not surprised to find that
Dr. Goforth, a much-used missionary in China, often has this
assurance given him that his petitions are granted. "I knew
that God had answered. I received definite assurance that He
would open the way." For why should anyone be surprised at
this? The Lord Jesus said, "Ye are My friends, if ye do the
things I command you. No longer do I call you servants; for the
servant knoweth not what his lord doeth: but I have called you
friends" (John xv. 14, 15). Do you think it surprising,
then, if the Lord lets us, His "friends," know
something of His plans and purposes?
The question at once arises, does
God mean this to be the experience of only a few chosen saints,
or does He wish all believers to exercise a like faith, and to
have a like assurance that their prayers are answered?
We know that God is no respecter
of persons, and therefore we know that any true believer in Him
may share His mind and will. We are His friends if we do the
things He commands us. One of those things is
"prayer." Our Savior begged His disciples to
"have faith in God" (the literal translation is
"Have the faith of God"). Then, He declares, you can
say to a mountain, "Be thou taken up and cast into the
sea," and if you believe and doubt not, it shall come to
pass. Then He gives this promise: "All things whatsoever ye
pray and ask for, believe that ye have received them [that is,
in heaven], and ye shall have them [on earth]" (Mark xi.
24). Now, this is exactly the experience we have been talking
about. This is just what real men of prayer do. Such things
naturally pass the comprehension of unbelievers. Such things are
perplexing to the half-believers. Our Lord, however, desires
that men should know that we are His disciples, sent as He was
sent (John xvii. 18 and xx. 21). They will know this if we love
one another (John xiii. 35). But another proof is provided, and
it is this: if we know and they see that "God heareth us
always" (John xi. 42).
Some of us at once recall to mind
George Muller's wonderful prayer-life. On one occasion, when
crossing from Quebec to Liverpool, he had prayed very definitely
that a chair he had written to New York for should arrive in
time to catch the steamer, and he was quite confident that God
had granted his petition. About half an hour before the tender
was timed to take the passengers to the ship, the agents
informed him that no chair had arrived, and that it could not
possibly come in time for the steamer. Now, Mrs. Muller suffered
much from sea-sickness, and it was absolutely essential that she
should have the chair. Yet nothing would induce Mr. Muller to
buy another one from a shop near by. "We have made special
prayer that our Heavenly Father would be pleased to provide it
for us, and we will trust Him to do so," was his reply; and
he went on board absolutely sure that his trust was not
misplaced, and would not miscarry. Just before the tender left,
a van drove up, and on the top of the load it carried was Mr.
Muller's chair. It was hurried on board and placed into the
hands of the very man who had urged George Muller to buy another
one! When he handed it to Mr. Muller, the latter expressed no
surprise, but quietly removed his hat and thanked his Heavenly
Father. To this man of God such an answer to prayer was not
wonderful, but natural. And do you not think that God allowed
the chair to be held back till the very last minute as a lesson
to Mr. Muller's friends-and to us? We should never have heard of
that incident but for that delay.
God does all He can to induce us
to pray and to trust, and yet how slow we are to do so! Oh, what
we miss through lack of faith and want of prayer! No one can
have very real and deep communion with God who does not know how
to pray so as to get answers to prayer.
If one has any doubt as to God's
willingness to be put to the test, let him read a little book
called Nor Scrip (Marshall, Morgan and Scott, Ltd.). Miss Amy
Wilson Carmichael tells us in its pages how again and again she
"proved God." One gets the impression from the book
that it was no accident that led her to do so. Surely God's hand
was in it? For instance, in order to rescue a Hindu child from a
life of "religious" shame, it was necessary to spend a
hundred rupees. Was she justified in doing so? She could help
many girls for such a sum: ought she to spend it on one? Miss
Wilson Carmichael felt led to pray that God would send her the
round sum of a hundred rupees -- no more, no less -- if it was
His will that the money should be spent in this way. The money
came -- the exact amount -- and the sender of it explained that
she had sat down to write a check for a broken sum, but had been
impelled to make it just a hundred rupees.
That happened over fifteen years
ago, and since that time this same missionary has put God to the
test over and over again, and He has never failed her. This is
what she says: "Never once in fifteen years has a bill been
left unpaid; never once has a man or woman been told when we
were in need of help; but never once have we lacked any good
thing. Once, as if to show what could be done if it were
required, 25 pounds came by telegram! Sometimes a man would
emerge from the clamoring crowd at a railway station, and slip
some indispensable gift of money into the hand, and be lost in
the crowd again before the giver could be identified."
Is it wonderful? Wonderful! Why,
what does St. John say, speaking by the Spirit of God? "And
this is the boldness which we have towards Him, that if we ask
anything, according to His will, He heareth us; and if we know
that He heareth us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the
petitions which we have asked of Him" (I John v.14, 15).
Have you and I such "boldness"? If not, why not?
To call it wonderful is to show
our want of faith. It is natural to God to answer prayer:
normal, not extraordinary.
The fact is -- let us be quite
honest and straightforward about it -- the fact is so many of us
do not believe God. We may just as well be quite candid about
it. If we love God we ought to pray, because He wants us to
pray, and commands us to pray. If we believe God we shall pray
because we cannot help doing so: we cannot get on without it.
Fellow-Christian, you believe in God, and you believe on Him
(John iii. 16), but have you advanced far enough in the
Christian life to believe Him; that is, to believe what He says
and all He says? Does it not sound blasphemous to ask such a
thing of a Christian man? Yet how few believers really believe
God! -- God forgive us! Has it ever struck you that we trust the
word of our fellow-man more easily than we trust God's word? And
yet, when a man does "believe God," what miracles of
grace God works in and through him! No man ever lived who has
been revered and respected by so many peoples and tongues as
that man of whom we are told three times over in the New
Testament that "He believed God" (Rom. iv. 3; Gal.
iii. 6; James ii. 23). Yes, "Abraham believed God, and it
was reckoned unto him for righteousness." And today,
Christian and Jew and Moslem vie with each other in honoring his
name. We implore every believer on Christ Jesus never to rest
till he can say, "I believe God, and will act on that
belief" (Acts xxvii. 25).
But before we leave the question
of testing God, we should like to point out that sometimes God
leads us on "to prove Him." Sometimes God has put it
into the heart of Miss Wilson Carmichael to ask for things she
saw no need for. Yet she felt impelled by the Holy Spirit to
ask. Not only were they granted her, but they also proved an
inestimable boon. Yes, God knows what things we have need of,
whether we want them or not, before we ask (Matt. vi. 8). Has
not God said, "I will in no wise fail thee"?
Oftentimes the temptation would
come to Miss Wilson Carmichael to let others know of some
special need. But always the inner assurance would come, as in
the very voice of God, "I know, and that is enough."
And, of course, God was glorified. During the trying days of the
war, even the heathen used to say, "Their God feeds
them." "Is it not known all the country round,"
said a worldly heathen, "that your God hears prayer?"
Oh, what glory to God was brought
about by their simple faith! Why do not we believe God? Why do
we not take God at His word? Do believers or unbelievers ever
say of us, "We know your prayers are answered"? Ye
missionaries the wide world over, listen! (Oh, that these words
might reach every ear, and stir every heart!) It is the yearning
desire of God -- of our loving Savior Jesus Christ -- that every
one of us should have the same strong faith as that devoted lady
missionary we are speaking about.
Our loving Father does not wish
any child of His to have one moment's anxiety or one unsatisfied
need. No matter how great our need may be; no matter how
numerous our requirements, if we only "prove Him" in
the manner He bids us, we shall never have room enough to
receive all the blessing He will give (Mal. iii. 10).
Oh,
what peace we often forfeit !
Oh, what needless pain we bear!
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer;
or all because, when we do
"carry it," we do not believe God's word. Why is it we
find it so hard to trust Him? Has He ever failed us? Has He not
said over and over and over again that He will grant all
petitions offered out of a pure heart, "in His name"?
"Ask of Me"; "Pray ye"; "Prove
Me"; "Try Me." The Bible is full of answers to
prayer -- wonderful answers, miraculous answers; and yet somehow
our faith fails us, and we dishonor God by distrusting Him!
If
our faith were but more simple
We should take Him at His word,
And our lives would be all sunshine
In the bounties of our Lord.
But our eye must be
"single" if our faith is to be simple and our
"whole body full of light" (Matt. vi. 22). Christ must
be the sole Master. We cannot expect to be free from anxiety if
we are trying to serve God and Mammon (Matt. vi. 24, 25). Again
we are led back to the Victorious Life! When we indeed present
our bodies "a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to
God" (Rom. xii. 1); when we present our members "as
servants to righteousness and sanctification" (Rom. vi.
19); then He presents Himself to us and fills us with all the
fullness of God (Eph. iii. 19).
Let us ever bear in mind that real
faith not only believes that God can, but that He does answer
prayer. We may be slothful in prayer, but "the Lord is not
slack concerning His promise" (II Peter iii. 9). Is not
that a striking expression?
Perhaps the most extraordinary
testing of God which that Dohnavur missionary tells us of is the
following. The question arose of purchasing a rest-house in the
hills near by. Was it the right thing to do? Only God could
decide. Much prayer was made. Eventually the petition was
offered up that if it was God's will that the house should be
purchased, the exact sum of 100 pounds should be received. That
amount came at once. Yet they still hesitated. Two months later
they asked God to give them again the same sign of His approval
of the purchase. That same day another check for 100 pounds
came. Even now they scarcely liked to proceed in the matter. In
a few days' time, how-
ever, another round sum of 100
pounds was received, earmarked for the purchase of such a house.
Does it not flood our hearts with joy to remember that our
gracious Savior is so kind? It is St. Luke the physician who
tells us that God is kind (Luke vi. 35). Love is always
"kind" (I Cor. xiii. 4); and God is Love. Think over
it when you pray. Our Lord is "kind." It will help us
in our intercessions. He bears so patiently with us when our
faith would falter. "How precious is Thy lovingkindness, O
God" (Psalm xxxvi.7); "Thy lovingkindness is better
than life" (Psalm lxiii. 3).
The danger is that we read of such
simple faith in prayer, and say, "How wonderful!" and
forget that God desires every one of us to have such faith and
such prayer. God has no favorites! He wants me to pray; He wants
you to pray. He allows such things to happen as we have
described above, and suffers them to come to our knowledge, not
to surprise us, but to stimulate us. One sometimes wishes that
Christian people would forget all the man-made rules with which
we have hedged prayer about! Let us be simple. Let us be
natural. Take God at His word. Let us remember that "the
kindness of God our Savior, and His love toward man," has
appeared (Titus iii. 4). God sometimes leads men into the
prayer-life. Sometimes, however, God has to drive us into such a
life.
As some of us look back over our
comparatively prayerless life, what a thrill of wonder and of
joy comes over us as we think of the kindness and "patience
of Christ" (II Thess. iii. 5). Where should we have been
without that? We fail Him, but, blessed be His name, He has
never failed us, and He never will do so. We doubt Him, we
mistrust His love and His providence and His guidance; we
"faint because of the way"; we murmur because of the
way; yet all the time He is there blessing us, and waiting to
pour out upon us a blessing so great that there shall not be
room to receive it.
The promise of Christ still holds
good: "Whatsoever ye shall ask in My name, that will I do,
that the Father may be glorified in the Son" (John xiv.
14).
Prayer changes things -- and yet how blind
And slow we are to taste and see
The blessedness that comes to those
Who trust in Thee.
But henceforth we will just believe God.