What do we mean by prayer? I
believe the vast majority of Christians would say, "Prayer
is asking things from God." But surely prayer is much more
than merely "getting God to run our errands for us,"
as someone puts it. It is a higher thing than the beggar
knocking at the rich man's door.
The word "prayer" really
means "a wish directed towards," that is, towards God.
All that true prayer seeks is God Himself, for with Him we get
all we need. Prayer is simply "the turning of the soul to
God." David describes it as the lifting up of the living
soul to the living God. "Unto Thee, O Lord, do I lift up my
soul" (Psa. xxv. 1). What a beautiful description of prayer
that is! When we desire the Lord Jesus to behold our souls, we
also desire that the beauty of holiness may be upon us.
When we lift up our souls to God
in prayer it gives God an opportunity to do what He will in us
and with us. It is putting ourselves at God's disposal. God is
always on our side. When man prays, it is God's opportunity. The
poet says:
Prayer
is the soul's sincere desire,
Uttered or unexpressed,
The motion of a hidden fire
That trembles in the breast.
"Prayer," says an old
Jewish mystic, "is the moment when heaven and earth kiss
each other."
Prayer, then, is certainly not
persuading God to do what we want God to do. It is not bending
the will of a reluctant God to our will. It does not change His
purpose, although it may release His power. "We must not
conceive of prayer as overcoming God's reluctance," says
Archbishop Trench, "but as laying hold of His highest
willingness."
For God always purposes our
greatest good. Even the prayer offered in ignorance and
blindness cannot swerve Him from that, although, when we
persistently pray for some harmful thing, our wilfulness may
bring it about, and we suffer accordingly. "He gave them
their request," says the Psalmist, "but sent leanness
into their soul" (Psa. cvi. 15). They brought this
"leanness" upon themselves. They were "cursed
with the burden of a granted prayer."
Prayer, in the minds of some
people, is only for emergencies! Danger threatens, sickness
comes, things are lacking, difficulties arise -- then they pray.
Like the infidel down a coal mine: when the roof began to fall
he began to pray. An old Christian standing by quietly remarked,
"Aye, there's nowt like cobs of coal to make a man
pray."
Prayer is, however, much more than
merely asking God for something, although that is a very
valuable part of prayer if only because it reminds us of our
utter dependence upon God. It is also communion with God --
intercourse with God -- talking with (not only to) God. We get
to know people by talking with them. We get to know God in like
manner. The highest result of prayer is not deliverance from
evil, or the securing of some coveted thing, but knowledge of
God. "And this is life eternal, that they should know Thee,
the only true God" (John xvii. 3). Yes, prayer discovers
more of God, and that is the soul's greatest discovery. Men
still cry out, "O, that I knew where I might find Him, that
I might come even to His seat" (Job xxiii. 3).
The kneeling Christian always
"finds" Him, and is found of Him. The heavenly vision
of the Lord Jesus blinded the eyes of Saul of Tarsus on his
downward course, but he tells us, later on, that when he was
praying in the temple at Jerusalem he fell into a trance and saw
Jesus. "I . . . saw him" (Acts xxii. 18). Then it was
that Christ gave him his great commission to go to the Gentiles.
Vision is always a precursor of vocation and venture. It was so
with Isaiah. "I saw the Lord high and lifted up, and his
train filled the temple" (Isa vi. 1). The prophet was
evidently in the sanctuary praying when this happened. This
vision also was a prelude to a call to service, "Go. . .
." Now, we cannot get a vision of God unless we pray. And
where there is no vision the soul perishes.
A vision of God! Brother Lawrence
once said, "Prayer is nothing else than a sense of God's
presence" -- and that is just the practice of the presence
of God.
A friend of Horace Bushnell was
present when that man of God prayed. There came over him a
wonderful sense of God's nearness. He says: "When Horace
Bushnell buried his face in his hands and prayed, I was afraid
to stretch out my hand in the darkness, lest I should touch
God." Was the Psalmist of old conscious of such a thought
when he cried, "My soul, wait thou only upon God"? (Psa.
lxii. 5.) I believe that much of our failure in prayer is due to
the fact that we have not looked into this question, "What
is prayer?" It is good to be conscious that we are always
in the presence of God. It is better to gaze upon Him in
adoration. But it is best of all to commune with Him as a Friend
-- and that is prayer.
Real prayer at its highest and
best reveals a soul athirst for God -- just for God alone. Real
prayer comes from the lips of those whose affection is set on
things above. What a man of prayer Zinzendorf was. Why? He
sought the Giver rather than His gifts. He said: "I have
one passion: it is He, He alone." Even the Mohammedan seems
to have got hold of this thought. He says that there are three
degrees in prayer. The lowest is that spoken only by the lips.
The next is when, by a resolute effort, we succeed in fixing our
thoughts on Divine things. The third is when the soul finds it
hard to turn away from God. Of course, we know that God bids us
"ask" of Him. We all obey Him so far; and we may rest
well assured that prayer both pleases God and supplies all our
need. But he would be a strange child who only sought his
father's presence when he desired some gift from him! And do we
not all yearn to rise to a higher level of prayer than mere
petition? How is it to be done?
It seems to me that only two steps
are necessary -- or shall we say two thoughts? There mustt be,
first of all, a realization of God's glory, and then of God's
grace. We sometimes sing:
Grace
and glory flow from Thee;
Shower, O shower them, Lord, on me.
Nor is such a desire fanciful,
although some may ask what God's glory has to do with prayer.
But ought we not to remind
ourselves Who He is to Whom we pray? There is logic in the
couplet:
Thou
art coming to a King;
Large petitions with thee bring.
Do you think that any one of us
spends enough time in pondering over, yes, and marveling over,
God's exceeding great glory? And do you suppose that any one of
us has grasped the full meaning of the word "grace"?
Are not our prayers so often ineffective and powerless -- and
sometimes even prayerless -- because we rush unthinkingly and
unpreparedly into God's presence, without realizing the majesty
and glory of the God Whom we are approaching, and without
reflecting upon the exceeding great riches of His glory in
Christ Jesus, which we hope to draw upon? We must "think
magnificently of God."
May we then suggest that before we
lay our petitions before God we first dwell in meditation upon
His glory and then upon His grace -- for He offers us both. We
must lift up the soul to God. Let us place ourselves, as it
were, in the presence of God and direct our prayer to the King
of kings, and Lord of lords, Who only hath immortality, dwelling
in light unapproachable . . . to Whom be honor and power eternal
(I Tim. vi. 16). Let us then give Him adoration and praise
because of His exceeding great glory. Consecration is not
enough. There must be adoration.
"Holy, holy, holy, is the
Lord of Hosts," cry the seraphim; "the whole earth is
full of his glory" (Isa. vi. 3). "Glory to God in the
highest," cries the "whole multitude of the heavenly
host" (Luke ii. 14). Yet some of us try to commune with God
without stopping to "put off our shoes from off our
feet" (Exod. iii. 5).
Lips
cry "God be merciful"
That ne'er cry "God be praised."
O come let us adore Him!
And we may approach His glory with
boldness. Did not our Lord pray that His disciples might behold
His glory? (John xvii. 24). Why? And why is "the whole
earth full of His glory"? The telescope reveals His
infinite glory. The microscope reveals His uttermost glory. Even
the unaided eye sees surpassing glory in landscape, sunshine,
sea and sky. What does it all mean? These things are but a
partial revelation of God's glory. It was not a desire for
self-display that led our Lord to pray, "Father, glorify
Thy Son" . . . "O Father, glorify Thou Me" (John
xvii. 1, 3). Our dear Lord wants us to realize His infinite
trustworthiness and unlimited power, so that we can approach Him
in simple faith and trust.
In heralding the coming of Christ
the prophet declared that "glory of the Lord shall be
revealed, and all flesh shall see it together" (Isa. xl.
5). Now we must get a glimpse of that glory before we can pray
aright. So our Lord said, "When ye pray, say Our Father,
Who art in heaven [the realm of glory], hallowed be Thy
name." There is nothing like a glimpse of glory to banish
fear and doubt. Before we offer up our petitions may it not help
us to offer up our adoration in the words of praise used by some
of the saints of old? Some devout souls may not need such help.
We are told that Francis of Assisi would frequently spend an
hour or two in prayer on the top of Mount Averno, whilst the
only word which escaped his lips would be "God"
repeated at intervals. He began with adoration -- and often
stopped there!
But most of us need some help to
realize the glory of the invisible God before we can adequately
praise and adore Him. Old William Law said, "When you begin
to pray, use such expressions of the attributes of God as will
make you sensible of His greatness and power."
This point is of such tremendous
importance that we venture to remind our readers of helpful
words. Some of us begin every day with a glance heavenwards
whilst saying, "Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and
to the Holy Ghost." The prayer, "O Lord God most holy,
O Lord most mighty, O holy and merciful Savior!" is often
enough to bring a solemn awe and a spirit of holy adoration upon
the soul. The Gloria in Excelsis of the Communion Service is
most uplifting: "Glory be to God on high and in earth
peace. . . . We praise Thee; we bless Thee; we worship Thee; we
glorify Thee; we give thanks to Thee for Thy great glory, O Lord
God, heavenly King, God the Father Almighty." Which of us
can from the heart utter praise like that and remain unmoved,
unconscious of the very presence and wondrous majesty of the
Lord God Almighty? A verse of a hymn may serve the same purpose.
My
God. how wonderful Thou art!
Thy majesty how bright.
How beautiful Thy mercy-seat
In depths of burning light!
How wonderful, how beautiful
The sight of Thee must be;
Thine endless wisdom, boundless power
And awful purity.
This carries us into the very heavenlies, as also do the words:
Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty,
All Thy works shall praise Thy name
In earth, and sky, and sea.
We need to cry out, and to cry
often, "My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath
rejoiced in God my Savior" (Luke i. 46, 47). Can we catch
the spirit of the Psalmist and sing, "Bless the Lord, O my
soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy name"? (Psa.
ciii. 1.) "Bless the Lord, O my soul. O Lord my God, Thou
art very great; Thou are clothed with honor and majesty" (Psa.
civ. 1). When shall we learn that "in His temple everything
saith Glory!" (Psa. xxix. 9, R.V.) Let us, too, cry, Glory!
Such worship of God, such
adoration and praise and thanksgiving, not only put us into the
spirit of prayer, but in some mysterious way they help God to
work on our behalf. Do you remember those wonderful words,
"Whoso, offereth the sacrifice of thanksgiving, glorifyeth
Me and prepareth a way that I may show him the salvation of
God"?, (Psa. l. 23, R.V., marg.) Praise and thanksgiving
not only open the gates of heaven for me to approach God, but
also "prepare a way" for God to bless me. St. Paul
cries, "Rejoice evermore!" before he says, "Pray
without ceasing." So then our praise, as well as our
prayers, is to be without ceasing.
At the raising of Lazarus our
Lord's prayer had as its first utterance a note of thanksgiving.
"Father, I thank Thee that Thou heardest Me" (John xi.
41). He said it for those around to hear. Yes, and for us to
hear.
You may perhaps be wondering why
it is that we should specially give thanks to God for His great
glory when we kneel in prayer; and why we should spend any time
in thinking of and gazing upon that glory. But is He not the
King of Glory? All He is and all He does is glory. His holiness
is "glorious" (Exod. xv. 11). His name is glorious
(Deut. xxviii. 58). His work is "glorious" (Psa. cxi.
3). His power is glorious (Col. i. 11). His voice is glorious (Isa.
xxx. 30).
All
things bright and beautiful
All creatures great and small.
All things wise and wonderful,
The Lord God made them all.
for His glory.
"For of him and through him
and unto him are all things; to whom be glory for ever"
(Rom. xi. 36). And this is the God who bids us come to Him in
prayer. This God is our God, and He has "gifts for
men" (Psa. lxviii. 18). God says that everyone that is
called by His name has been created for His glory (Isa. xliii.
7). His Church is to be a "glorious" Church -- holy
and without blemish (Eph. v. 27). Have you ever fully realized
that the Lord Jesus desires to share with us the glory we see in
Him? This is His great gift to you and me, His redeemed ones.
Believe me, the more we have of God's glory, the less shall we
seek His gifts. Not only in that day "when he shall come to
be glorified in his saints" (II Thess. i. 10) is there
glory for us, but here and now -- today. He wishes us to be
partakers of His glory. Did not our Lord Himself say so?
"The glory which thou has given me, I have given unto
them," He declares (John xvii. 22). What is God's command?
"Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the
Lord is risen upon thee." Nay, more than this: "His
glory shall be seen upon thee," says the inspired prophet (Isa.
Ix. 1, 2).
God would have people say of us as
St. Peter said of the disciples of old: "The Spirit of
Glory and the Spirit of God resteth upon you" (I Peter iv.
14). Would not that be an answer to most of our prayers? Could
we ask for anything better? How can we get this glory? How are
we to reflect it? Only as the result of prayer. It is when we
pray, that the Holy Spirit takes of the things of Christ and
reveals them unto us (John xvi. 15).
It was when Moses prayed,
"Show me, I pray thee, thy glory," that he not only
saw somewhat of it, but shared something of that glory, and his
own face shone with the light of it (Exod. xxxiii. 18, xxxiv.
29). And when we, too, gaze upon the "glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ" (II Cor. iv. 6), we shall see not
only a glimpse of that glory, but we shall gain something of it
ourselves.
Now, that is prayer, and the
highest result of prayer. Nor is there any other way of securing
that glory, that God may be glorified in us (Isa. Ix. 21).
Let us often meditate upon
Christ's glory -- gaze upon it and so reflect it and receive it.
This is what happened to our Lord's first disciples. They said
in awed tones, "We beheld his glory!" Yes, but what
followed? A few plain, unlettered, obscure fishermen companied
with Christ a little while, seeing His glory; and lo! they
themselves caught something of that glory. And then others
marveled and "took knowledge of them that they had been
with Jesus" (Acts iv. 13). And when we can declare, with
St. John, "Yea, and our fellowship is with the Father and
with His Son Jesus Christ" (I John i. 3), people will say
the same of us: "They have been with Jesus!"
As we lift up our soul in prayer
to the living God, we gain the beauty of holiness as surely as a
flower becomes beautiful by living in the sunlight. Was not our
Lord Himself transfigured when He prayed? And the "very
fashion" of our countenance will change, and we shall have
our Mount of Transfiguration when prayer has its rightful place
in our lives. And men will see in our faces "the outward
and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace." Our
value to God and to man is in exact proportion to the extent in
which we reveal the glory of God to others.
We have dwelt so much upon the
glory of Him to Whom we pray, that we must not now speak of His
grace.
What is prayer? It is a sign of
spiritual life. I should as soon expect life in a dead man as
spiritual life in a prayerless soul! Our spirituality and our
fruitfulness are always in proportion to the reality of our
prayers. If, then, we have at all wandered away from home in the
matter of prayer, let us today resolve, "I will arise and
go unto my Father, and say unto Him, Father
At this point I laid down my pen,
and on the page of the first paper I picked up were these words:
"The secret of failure is that we see men rather than God.
Romanism trembled when Martin Luther saw God. The 'great
awakening' sprang into being when Jonathan Edwards saw God. The
world became the parish of one man when John Wesley saw God.
Multitudes were saved when Whitfield saw God. Thousands of
orphans were fed when George Muller saw God. And He is 'the same
yesterday, today, and forever.' "
Is it not time that we got a new
vision of God -- of God in all His glory? Who can say what will
happen when the Church sees God? But let us not wait for others.
Let us, each one for himself, with unveiled face and unsullied
heart, get this vision of the glory of the Lord.
"Blessed are the pure in
heart, for they shall see God" (Matt. v. 8). No missioner
whom it has been my joy to meet ever impressed me quite as much
as Dr. Wilbur Chapman. He wrote to a friend: "I have
learned some great lessons concerning prayer. At one of our
missions in England the audiences were exceedingly small. But I
received a note saying that an American missionary . . . was
going to pray God's blessing down upon our work. He was known as
'Praying Hyde.' Almost instantly the tide turned. The hall
became packed, and at my first invitation fifty men accepted
Christ as their Savior. As we were leaving I said, 'Mr. Hyde, I
want you to pray for me.' He came to my room, turned the key in
the door, and dropped on his knees, and waited five minutes
without a single syllable coming from his lips. I could hear my
own heart thumping and his beating. I felt the hot tears running
down my face. I knew I was with God. Then, with upturned face,
down which the tears were streaming, he said 'O God!' Then for
five minutes at least he was still again; and then, when he knew
that he was talking with God . . . there came up from the depth
of his heart such petitions for men as I had never heard before.
I rose from my knees to know what real prayer was. We believe
that prayer is mighty, and we believe it as we never did
before."
Dr. Chapman used to say, "It
was a season of prayer with John Hyde that made me realize what
real prayer was. I owe to him more than I owe to any man for
showing me what a prayer-life is, and what a real consecrated
life is. . . . Jesus Christ became a new Ideal to me, and I had
a glimpse of His prayer-life; and I had a longing which has
remained to this day to be a real praying man." And God the
Holy Spirit can so teach us.
Oh, ye who sigh and languish
And mourn your lack of power,
Hear ye this gentle whisper:
"Could ye not watch one hour?"
For fruitfulness and blessing
There is no royal road;
The power for holy service
Is intercourse with God.