nChrist
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« Reply #1 on: April 29, 2011, 05:13:40 PM » |
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Beloved, real prayer has always power to relieve a burdened mind. What would we do sometimes — if it were not for the throne of grace? When the mind is burdened with worldly cares, domestic anxieties, church troubles, and ten thousand fears arising from a variety of quarters — nothing but prayer will afford us relief. We can tell no one but God what we think, what we feel, what we fear; but in telling him sometimes, while our faces are covered with blushes, and our souls are shaken with cogitations — we feel a secret and sacred influence exerted. There is no positive or immediate deliverance — but we ourselves are softened, soothed, and stimulated to start afresh, and quietly carry our cross after Jesus.
Prayer has power to elevate the downcast. Guilty fears, painful misgivings, and dreary forebodings — often cast us down. With David we have to exclaim, "My soul is cast down within me!" The lips are closed to our fellow-travelers; we can tell no one what we feel, fear, or think; Satan takes advantage of this, and harasses us still more, until we are weary, dejected, and depressed. Then we go to the Lord. We cast ourselves at his feet. A deep sigh, a heavy groan, a silent tear, an upward glance — is all that we can give. We kneel in silence before the Lord. We pace our room. We envy others whom we think have liberty at the mercy-seat. We sigh out, "Oh, that I could find access to breathe my sorrows there!"
While thus exercised, it may be that the cry ascends, the tear drops — and the Lord looks down, and now we can confess our sins, plead the atoning blood, exercise faith in the Savior's loving Word, and we begin to rise. The next thing is, we feel the solid rock under our feet, we inhale the pure air of the better land, and then the sun breaks out upon us, and then we can sing, "I waited patiently for the Lord, and he inclined unto me, and heard my cry. He brought me up also out of the horrible pit, out of the miry clay — and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings!"
The soul begins now to feel its wings and plume its feathers, the strengthened eye looks upward, and an inward fluttering is felt. See, it is rising. It ascends higher still. The bosom of Jesus is reached. The holiest is entered. The sorrows of life are forgotten. The joys of salvation are realized. The promise is fulfilled, "Those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint!"
The soul is no longer downcast or dejected — but may be addressed as the church was once, "Though you have lain among the pots — yet shall you be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her feathers with yellow gold."
There is power in prayer to embolden the timid. What made Martin Luther so courageous? It was prayer! What made John Knox so bold? It was prayer! What cheered the holy martyrs in prison, supported them before their cruel judges, and made them joyful in the flames? It was prayer! Many a good man has gone into the Lord's presence as timid as a bird — but has come out as bold as a lion. Prayer makes the feeble spirit brave, and nerves him for the constant fight. It fortifies the discouraged, and makes the weak say, "I am strong!"
Prayer has power to bring down the richest, choicest, greatest, blessings from God. As the prayer of Elijah opened Heaven, and thoroughly watered the thirsty land of Israel after a drought of three years and six months — so the prayers of the least, the feeblest, of the Lord's people, will bring down a full pardon of all sin into the soul, sweet peace into the conscience, and joy unspeakable and full of glory into the heart.
There is not a blessing provided in the everlasting covenant, or promised in the blessed Bible, or needed by the hungry soul — but prayer has power to bring it down. "All things, whatever you ask in prayer believing — you shall receive." "Whatever you ask in my name," said Jesus, "that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son." "Ask — and you shall receive; seek — and you shall find; knock — and it shall be opened unto you; for everyone that asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him that knocks — it shall be opened."
Reader, do you pray? I ask not, do you repeat prayers, or read forms of prayers? For I cannot understand how a mere form can satisfy a living soul. I believe that the Lord teaches all his children to speak to him, and that he loves to hear them speak to him in their own language. It may be simple, it may be broken, it may be very ungrammatical — but it is the child's own. The Father says, "Let me hear your voice." The child replies, "My voice you shall hear early in the morning; early will I cry unto you, and will look up."
No mere form of prayer would have suited Hannah; and if taught of God, no mere form of prayer will suit you.
Do you pray? Is your prayer the utterance of your heart's feelings, desires and fears? Do you, when upon your knees, tell the Lord just what you feel, fear, desire, wish, and hope for? Do you speak to him in your own language — as to a loving father, who knows your frame, and remembers that you are but dust? Is there power in your prayers? I do not mean, Do you feel power — though that is very desirable, and often very sweet. But did you ever obtain a blessing from God in answer to prayer, a spiritual blessing, the very blessing that you prayed for?
Have you taken to him your doubts — and exchanged them for confidence?
Have you taken to him your fears — and exchanged them for courage?
Have you taken to him your guilt — and exchanged it for pardon?
Have you taken to him your filthy rags — and exchanged them for his spotless robes?
Have you taken to him the Hell of misery sometimes felt in the heart — and exchanged it for the Heaven of joy which descends from God's right hand?
Do you pray for temporal things — because your Father is the God of providence?
Do you pray for spiritual blessings — because he is the God of grace?
Do you sometimes feel driven to prayer — by outward trouble and inward anguish? And do you sometimes feel drawn to prayer — by the sweet, winning, constraining grace of the Holy Spirit in your soul? The Lord's people learn by experience, that real prayer . . . flows from divine life in the soul, is produced by the Holy Spirit, ascends through Jesus, eases the mind, relieves the conscience, cheers the heart, elevates the soul, smoothes the rugged way, repels the attacks of Satan, and that at times raises it above the love of life and the fear of death.
Do you know anything of this experience?
If you live without prayer, you are dead in sin. If you are satisfied with a mere form of prayer — you are in no better state. If you carry a form with you when you go to address your Father in private — you act very unlike a child. God loves the prayer of the heart — the prayer that expresses confidence in him — the prayer that asks and expects great and numerous blessings from him. He does not look at the language — but at the feelings; and if there is faith, fervency, and importunity — he approves, accepts, and answers.
Oh, for the power of the Spirit of God within us, that the power of prayer may be exerted by us — and the rich, needed, and much-desired blessing of God, may be brought down by us on our souls, our families, the church, and the world around us!
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