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True PrayerTrue Power!
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, August 12th, 1860, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At Exeter Hall, Strand
"Therefore I say unto you, what things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive and ye shall have them."Mark 11:24.
This verse has something to do with the faith of
miracles; but I think it hath far more reference to the miracle of faith. We shall say at
any rate, this morning, consider it in that light. I believe that this text is the
inheritance not only of the apostles, but of all those who walked in the faith of the
apostles, believing in the promises of the Lord Jesus Christ. The advice which Christ gave
to the twelve and to his immediate followers, is repeated to us in God's Word this
morning. May we have grace constantly to obey it. "What things soever ye desire, when
ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them." How many persons
there are who complain that they do not enjoy prayer. They do not neglect it, for they
dare not; but they would neglect it if they dared, so far are they from finding any
pleasure therein. And have we not to lament that sometimes the chariot-wheels are taken
off, and we drive right heavily when we are in supplication? We spend the time allotted,
but we rise from our knees unrefreshed, like a man who has lain upon his bed but has not
slept so as to really recover his strength. When the time comes round again conscience
drives us to our knees, but there is not sweet fellowship with God. There is no telling
out of our wants to him in the firm conviction that he will supply them. After having gone
again through a certain round of customary utterances, we rise from our knees perhaps more
troubled in conscience and more distressed in mind than we were before. There are many
Christians, I think, who have to complain of thisthat they pray not so much because
it is a blessed thing to allowed to draw near to God, as because they must pray, because
it is their duty, because they feel that if they did not, they would lose one of the sure
evidences of being Christians. Brethren, I do not condemn you; but at the same time, if I
may be the means of lifting you up this morning from so low a state of grace into a higher
and more healthy atmosphere, my soul shall be exceeding glad. If I can show you a more
excellent way; if from this time forth you may come to look at prayer as your element, as
one of the most delightful exercises of your life; if you shall come to esteem it more
than your necessary food, and to value it as one of heaven's best luxuries, surely I shall
have answered a great end, and you shall have to thank God for a great blessing.
Give me than your attention while I beg you, first, to look at the text; secondly to
look about you; and the, to look above you.
I. First, LOOK AT THE TEXT. If you look at it carefully, I think you will perceive the
essential qualities which are necessary to any great success and prevalence in prayer.
According to our Saviour's description of prayer, there should always be some definite
objects for which we should plead. He speaks of things"what things
soever ye desire." It seems then that he did not put it that God's children would go
to him to pray when they have nothing to pray for. Another essential qualification of pray
is earnest desire; for the Master supposes here that when we pray we have desires.
Indeed it is not prayer, it may be something like prayer, the outward form or the bare
skeleton, but it is not the living thing, the all-prevailing, almighty thing, called
prayer, unless there be a fulness and overflowing of desires. Observe, too, that faith
is an essential quality of successful prayer"believe that ye receive
them." Ye cannot pray so as to be heard in heaven and answered to your soul's
satisfaction, unless you believe that God really hears and will answer you. One other
qualification appears here upon the very surface, namely, that a realizing expectation
should always go with a firm faith"believe that ye receive them." Not
merely believe that "ye shall" but "ye do" receive themcount
them as if they were received, reckon them as if you had them already, and act as if you
had themact as if you were sure you should have thembelieve that ye receive
them, and ye shall have them." Let us review these four qualifications, one by one.
To make prayer of any value, there should be definite objects for which to plead. My
brethren, we often ramble in our prayers after this, that, and the other, and we get
nothing because in each we do not really desire anything. We chatter about many subjects,
but the soul does not concentrate itself upon any one object. Do you not sometimes fall on
your knees without thinking beforehand what you mean to ask God for? You do so as a matter
of habit, without any motion of your heart. You are like a man who should go to a shop and
not know what articles he would procure. He may perhaps make a happy purchase when he is
there, but certainly it is not a wise plan to adopt. And so the Christian in prayer may
afterwards attain to a real desire, and get his end, but how much better would he speed if
having prepared his soul by consideration and self-examination, he came to God for an
object at which he was about to aim with real request. Did we ask an audience at Her
Majesty's court, we should be expected to reply to the question, "What do you wish to
see her for?" We should not be expected to go into the presence of Royalty, and then
to think of some petition after we came there. Even so with the child of God. He should be
able to answer the great question, "What is thy petition and what is thy request, and
it shall be done unto thee?" Imagine an archer shooting with his bow, and not knowing
where the mark is! Would he be likely to have success? Conceive a ship on a voyage of
discovery, putting to sea without the captain having any idea of what he was looking for!
Would you expect that he would come back heavily laden either with the discoveries of
science, or with the treasures of gold? In everything else you have a plan. You do not go
to work without knowing that there is something that you designed to make; how is it that
you go to God without knowing what you design to have? If you had some object you would
never find prayer to be dull and heavy work; I am persuaded that you would long for it.
You would say, "I have something that I want. Oh that I could draw near my God, and
ask him for it; I have a need, I want to have it satisfied, and I long till I can get
alone, that I may pour out my heart before him, and ask him for this thing after which my
soul so earnestly pants" You will find it more helpful to your prayers if you have
some objects at which you aim, and I think also if you have some persons whom you will
mention. Do not merely plead with God for sinners in general, but always mention some in
particular. If you are a Sunday-school teacher, don't simply ask that you class may be
blessed, but pray for your children definitely by name before the Most High. And if there
be a mercy in your household that you crave, don't go in a round-about way, but be simple
and direct in your pleadings with God. When you pray to him, tell him what you want. If
you have not money enough, if you are in poverty, if you are in straits, state the case.
Use no mock-modesty with God. Come at once to the point; speak honestly with him. He needs
no beautiful periphrasis such as men will constantly use when they don't like to say right
out what they mean. If you want either a temporal or spiritual mercy, say so. Don't
ransack the Bible to find out words in which to express it. Express your wants in the
words which naturally suggest themselves to you. They will be the best words, depend upon
it. Abraham's words were the best for Abraham, and yours will be the best for you. You
need not study all the texts in Scripture, to pray just as Jacob and Elias did, using
their expressions. If you do you will not imitate them. You may imitate them literally and
servilely, but you lack the soul that suggested and animated their words. Pray in your own
words. Speak plainly to God; ask at once for what you want. Name persons, name things, and
make a straight aim at the object of your supplications, and I am sure you will soon find
that the weariness and dullness of which you often complain in your intercessions, will no
more fall upon you; or at least not so habitually as it has heretofore done.
"But," saith one, "I do not feel that I have any special objects for which
to pray." Ah! My dear brother, I know not who you are, or where you live, to be
without special objects for prayer, for I find that every day brings neither its need or
its trouble, and that I have every day something to tell to my God. But if we had not a
trouble, my dear brethren, if we had attained to such a height in grace that we had
nothing to ask for, do we love Christ so much that we have no need to pray that we may
love hi more? Have we so much faith that we have ceased to cry, "Lord increase
it?" You will always, I am sure, by little self-examination, soon discover that there
is some legitimate object for which you may knock at Mercy's door and cry, "Give me,
Lord, the desire of my heart." And if you have not any desire, you have but to ask
the first tried Christian you meet, and he will tell you of one. "Oh," he will
reply to you, "If you have nothing to ask for yourself, pray for me. Ask that a sick
wife may be recovered. Pray that the Lord will lift up the light of his countenance upon a
desponding heart; ask that the Lord would send help to some minister who has been
labouring in vain, and spending his strength for nought." When you have done for
yourself, plead for others; and if you cannot meet with one who can suggest a theme, look
on this huge, Sodom, this city like another Gomorrah lying before you; carry it constantly
in your prayers before God and cry, "Oh that London may live before thee, that its
sin may be stayed, that its righteousness may be exalted, that the God of the earth may
get unto himself much people out of this city."
Equally necessary is it with the definite object for prayer that there should be an
earnest desire for its attainment. "Cold prayers," says an old divine, "ask
for a denial." When we ask the Lord coolly, and fervently, we do as it were, stop his
hand, and restrain him from giving us the very blessing we pretend that we are seeking.
When you have your object in your eye, your soul must become so possessed with the value
of that object, with your own excessive need for it, with the danger which you will be in
unless that object should be granted, that you will be compelled to plead for it as a man
pleadeth for his life. There was a beautiful illustration of true prayer addressed to man
in the conduct of two noble ladies, whose husbands were condemned to die and were about to
be executed, when they came before. king George and supplicated for their pardon. The king
rudely and cruelly repulsed them. George the first! it was like his very nature. And when
they pleaded yet again, and again, and again, they could not be gotten to rise from their
knees; they had actually to be dragged out of court, for they would not retire until the
king had smiled upon them, and told them that their husbands should live. Alas! they
failed, but they were noble women for their perseverance in thus pleading for their
husbands' lives. That is the way for us to pray to God. We must have such a desire for the
thing we want, that we will not rise until we have itbut in submission to his divine
will, nevertheless. Feeling that the thing we ask for cannot be wrong, and that he himself
hath promised it, we have resolved it must be given, and if not given, we will plead the
promise, again, and again, till heaven's gates shall shake before our pleas shall cease.
No wonder that God has not blessed us much of late, because we are not fervent in prayer
as we should be. Oh, those cold-hearted prayers that die upon the lipsthose frozen
supplications; they do not move men's hearts, how should they move God's heart? they do
not come from our own souls, they do not well up from the deep secret springs of our
inmost heart, and therefore they cannot rise up to him who only hears the cry of the soul,
before whom hypocrisy can weave no veil, or formality practice any disguise. We must be
earnest, otherwise we have no right to hope that the Lord will hear our prayer.
And surely, my brethren, it were enough to restrain all lightness and constrain an
unceasing earnestness, did we apprehend the greatness of the Being before whom we plead.
Shall I come into thy presence, O my God, and mock thee with cold-hearted words? Do the
angels veil their faces before thee, and shall I be content to prattle through a form with
no soul and no heart? Ah, my brethren! we little know how many of our prayers are an
abomination unto the Lord. It would be an abomination to you and to me to hear men ask us
in the streets, as if they did not want what they asked for. But have we not done the same
to God? Has not that which is heaven's greatest boon to man, become to us a dry dead duty?
It was said of John Bradford that he had a peculiar art in prayer, and when asked for his
secret he said, "When I know what I want I always stop on that prayer until I feel
that I have pleaded it with God, and until God and I have had dealings with each other
upon it." I never go on to another petition till I have gone through the first."
Alas! for some men who begin "Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy
name;" and before they have realized the adoring thought"hallowed be thy
name,"they have begun to repeat the next words"Thy kingdom
come;" then perhaps something strikes their mind, "Do I really wish his kingdom
to come? If it were to come now where should I be?" And while they are thinking of
that, their voice is going on with, "Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven;" so they jumble up their prayers and run the sentences together. Oh! stop at
each one till you have really prayed it. Do not try to put two arrows on the string at
once, they will both miss. He that would load his gun with two charges cannot expect to be
successful. Discharge one shot first, and then load again. Plead once with God and
prevail, and then plead again. Get the first mercy, and then go again for the second. Do
not be satisfied with running the colours of your prayers into one another, till there is
no picture to look at but just a huge daub, a smear of colours badly laid on. Look at the
Lord's Prayer itself. What clear sharp outlines there are in it. There are certain
definite mercies, and they do not run into one another. There it stands, and as you look
at the whole it is a magnificent picture; not confusion, but beautiful order. Be it so
with your prayers. Stay on one till you have prevailed with that, and then go on to the
next. With definite objects and with fervent desires mixed together, there is the dawning
of hope that ye shall prevail with God.
But again: these two things would not avail if they were not mixed with a still more
essential and divine quality, namely, a firm faith in God. Brethren, do you believe in
prayer? I know you pray because you are God's people; but do you believe in the power of
prayer? There are a great many Christians that do not, they think it is a good thing, and
they believe that sometimes it does wonders; but they do not think that prayer, real
prayer, is always successful. They think that its effect depends upon many other things,
but that it has not any essential quality or power in itself. Now, my own soul's
conviction is, that prayer is the grandest power in the entire universe; that it has a
more omnipotent force than electricity, attraction, gravitation, or any other of those
secret forces which men have called by names, but which they do not understand. Prayer
hath as palpable, as true, as sure, as invariable and influence over the entire universe
as any of the laws of matter. When a man really prays, it is not a question whether God
will hear him or not, he must hear him; not because there is any compulsion in the prayer,
but there is a sweet and blessed compulsion in the promise. God has promised to hear
prayer, and he will perform his promise. As he is the most high and true God, he cannot
deny himself. Oh! to think of this; that you a puny man may stand here and speak to God,
and through God may move all the worlds. Yet when your prayer is heard, creation will not
be disturbed; though the grandest ends be answered, providence will not be disarranged for
a single moment. Not a leaf will fall earlier from the tree, not a star will stay in its
course, nor one drop of water trickle more slowly from its fount, all will go on the same,
and yet your prayer will have effected everything. It will speak to the decrees and
purposes of God, as they are being daily fulfilled; and they will all shout to your
prayer, and cry, "Thou art our brother; we are decrees, and thou a prayer; but thou
art thyself a decree, as old, as sure, as ancient as we are." Our prayers are God's
decrees in another shape. The prayers of God's people are but God's promises breathed out
of living hearts, and those promises are the decrees, only put into another form and
fashion. Do not say, "How can my prayers affect the decrees?" They cannot,
except in so much that your prayers are decrees, and that as they come out, every prayer
that is inspired of the Holy Ghost unto your soul is as omnipotent and as eternal as that
decree which said, "Let there be light, and there was light;" or as that decree
which chose his people, and ordained their redemption by the precious blood of Christ.
Thou has power in prayer, and thou standest to-day among the most potent ministers in the
universe that God has made. Thou has power over angels, they will fly at thy will. Thou
hast power over fire, and water, and the elements of earth. Thou hast power to make thy
voice heard beyond the stars; where the thunders die out in silence, thy voice shall wake
the echoes of eternity. The ear of God himself shall listen and the hand of God himself
shall yield to thy will. He bids thee cry, "Thy will be done," and thy will
shall be done. When thou canst plead his promise then thy will is his will. Seems it not
my dear friends, an awful thing to have such a power in one's hands as to be able to pray?
You have heard sometimes of men who pretended to have a weird and mystic might, by which
they could call up spirits from the vasty deep, by which they could make showers of rain,
or stop the sun. It was all a figment of the fancy, but were it true the Christian is a
greater magician still. If he has but faith in God, there is nothing impossible to him. He
shall be delivered out of the deepest watershe shall be rescued out of the sorest
troublesin famine he shall be fedin pestilence he shall go
unscathedamidst calamity he shall walk firm and strongin war he shall be ever
shieldedand in the day of battle he shall lift up his head, if he can but believe
the promise, and hold it up before God's eyes and plead it with the spell of unfaltering
reliance. There is nothing, I repeat it, there is no force so tremendous, no energy so
marvellous, as the energy with which God has endowed every man, who like Jacob can
wrestle, like Israel can prevail with him in prayer. But we must have faith in this; we
must believe prayer to be what it is, or else it is not what it: should be. Unless I
believe my prayer to be effectual it will not be, for on my faith will it to a great
extent depend. God may give me the mercy even when I have not faith; that will be his own
sovereign grace, but he has not promised to do it. But when I have faith and can plead the
promise with earnest desire, it is no longer a probability as to whether I shall get the
blessing, or whether my will shall be done. Unless the Eternal will swerve from his Word,
unless the oath which he has given shall be revoked, and he himself shall cease to be what
he is, "We know that we have the petitions that we desired of him."
And now to mount one step higher, together with definite objects, fervent desires and
strong faith in the efficacy of prayer there should beand ()h may divine grace make
it so with us!there should be mingled a realising expectation. We should be able to
count over the mercies before we have got them, believing that they are on the road.
Reading the other day in a sweet little book, which I would commend to the attention of
you all, written by an American author who seems to know the power of prayer thoroughly,
and to whom I am indebted for many good thingsa little book called The Still
Hour, I met with a reference to a passage in the book of Daniel, the tenth chapter I
think, where, as he says, the whole machinery of prayer seems to be laid bare. Daniel is
on his knees in prayer, and Michael the archangel come to him. He talks with him and tells
him that as soon as ever Daniel began to set his heart to understand, and to chasten
himself before God, his words were heard, and the Lord had dispatched the angel. Then he
tells him in the most business-like manner in the world, "I should have been here
before, but the Prince of Persia withstood me; nevertheless the prince of thy nation
helped me, and I am come to comfort and instruct thee." See now. God breathes the
desire into our hearts, and as soon as the desire is there, before we call he begins to
answer. Before the words have got half way up to heaven, while they are yet trembling on
the lipknowing the words we mean to speakhe begins to answer them, sends the
angel; the angel comes and brings down the needed blessing. Why the thing is a revelation
if you could see it with your eyes. Some people think that spiritual things are dreams,
and that we are talking fancies. Nay, I do believe there is as much reality in a
Christian's prayer as in a lightning flash; and the utility and excellency of the prayer
of a Christian may be just as sensibly known as the power of the lightning flash when it
rends the tree, breaks off its branches, and splits it to the very root. Prayer is not a
fancy of fiction; it is a real actual thing, coercing the universe, binding the laws of
God themselves in fetters, and constraining the High and Holy One to listen to the will of
his poor hut. favoured creature-man. But we want always to believe this. We need a
realizing assurance in prayer. To count over the mercies before they are come! To be sure
that they are coming! To act as if we had got them! When you have asked for your daily
bread, no more to be disturbed with care, but to believe that God has heard you, and will
give it to you. When you have taken the case of your sick child before God to believe that
the child will recover, or if it should not, that it will be a greater blessing to you and
more glory to God, and so to leave it to him. To be able to say, "I know he has heard
me now; I will stand on my watch-tower; I will look for my God and hear what he will say
to my soul." Were you ever disappointed yet, Christian, when you prayed in faith and
expected the answer? I bear my own testimony here this morning, that I have never yet
trusted him and found him fail me. I have trusted man and have been deceived, but my God
has never once denied the request I have made to him, when I have backed up the request
with belief in his willingness to hear, and in the assurance of his promise.
But I hear some one say, "May we pray for temporals?" Ay, that you may. In
everything make known your wants to God. It is not merely for spiritual, but for everyday
concerns. Take your smallest trials before him. He is a God that heareth prayer; he is
your household God as well as the God of the Sanctuary. Be ever taking all that you have
before God. As one good man who is about to be united with this Church told me of his
departed wife, "Oh," said he, "she was a woman that I could never get to do
anything till she had made a matter of prayer of it. Be it what it might, she used to say,
'I must make it a matter of prayer;'" Oh for more of this sweet habit of spreading
everything before the Lord, just as Hezekiah did Rabshekah's letter, and there leaving it,
saying, "Thy will be done, I resign it to thee!" Men say Mr. Muller of Bristol
is enthusiastic, because he will gather seven hundred children and believe that God will
provide for them; though there is nothing in the purse he is only doing what ought to be
the commonplace action of every Christian man. He is acting upon a rule at which the
worldling always must scoff, because he does not understand it; a system which must always
appear to weak judgment of sense, not upon common sense, but upon something higher than
common senseupon uncommon faith. Oh that we had that uncommon faith to take God at
his word! He cannot and he will not permit the man that trusteth him to he ashamed or
confounded. I have thus now, as best I could, set forth before you what I conceive to be
four essentials of prevailing prayer"Whatsoever things ye desire when ye pray,
believe that ye receive them and ye shall have them."
II. Having thus asked you to look at the text, I want you now to LOOK ABOUT YOU. Look
about you at our meetings for prayer, and look about you at your private intercessions,
and judge them both by the tenour of this text. First, look about you at the meetings for
prayer; I cannot speak very pointedly in this matter, because I do honestly believe that
the prayer-meetings which are usually held among us, have far less of the faults which I
am about to indicate, that any others I have ever attended. But, still they have some of
the faults, and I hope that what we shall say, will be taken personally home by every
brother who is in the habit of engaging publicly in supplication at prayer-meetings. Is it
not a fact, that as soon as you enter the meeting, you feel, the case of many praying men
(to speak hardly perhaps, but I think honestly) lies in having a good memory to recollect
a great many texts, which always have been quoted since the days of our grandfather's
grandfather, and to be able to repeat them in good regular order. The gift lies also in
some churches, especially in village churches, in having strong lungs, so as to be able to
hold out, without taking breath for five and twenty minutes when you are brief, and three
quarters of an hour when you are rather drawn out. The gift lies also in being able not to
ask for anything in particular, but in passing through a range of everything, making the
prayer, not an arrow with a point, but rather like a nondescript machine, that has no
point whatever, and yet is meant to be all point, which is aimed at everything, and
consequently strikes nothing. Those brethren are often the most frequently asked to pray,
who have those peculiar, and perhaps, excellent gifts, although I certainly must say that
l cannot obey the apostle's injunction in coveting very earnestly such gifts as these.
Now, if instead thereof, some man is asked to pray, who has never prayed before in public;
suppose he rises and says, "Oh Lord, I feel myself such a sinner that I can
scarcely speak to thee, Lord, help me to pray! o Lord, save my poor soul! O that thou
wouldst save my old companions! Lord, bless our minister! be pleased to give us a revival.
O Lord, 1 can say no more; hear me for Jesu's sake! Amen." Well, then, you feel
somehow, as if you had begun to pray yourself. You feel an interest in that man, partly
from fear lest he should stop, and also because you are sure that what he did say, he
meant. And if another should get up after that, and pray in the same spirit, you go out
and say, "This is real prayer." I would sooner have three minutes prayer like
that, that thirty minutes of the other sort, because the one is praying, and the other is
preaching. Allow me to quote what an old preacher said upon the subject of prayer, and
give it to you as a little word of advice"Remember, the Lord will not hear
thee, because of the arithmetic of thy prayers; he does not count their numbers. He
will not hear thee because of the rhetoric of thy prayers; he does not care for the
eloquent language in which they are conveyed. He will not listen to thee because of the geometry
of thy prayers; he does not compute them by their length, or by their breadth. He will not
regard thee because of the music of thy prayers; he doth not care for sweet voices,
nor for harmonious periods. Neither will he look at thee because of the logic of
thy prayers; because they are well arranged, and excellently comparted. But he will hear
thee, and he will measure the amount of the blessing he will give thee, according to the divinity
of thy prayers. If thou canst plead the person of Christ, and if the Holy Ghost inspire
thee with zeal and earnestness, the blessings which thou shalt ask, shall surely come unto
thee." Brethren, I would like to burn the whole stock of old prayers that we have
been using this fifty years. That "oil that goes from vessel to
vessel,"that "horse that rushes into the battle,"that misquoted
mangled text, "where two or three are met together, thou wilt be in the midst of
them," and that to bless them,"and all those other quotations which we
have been manufacturing, and dislocating, and copying from man to man. I would we came to
speak to God, just out of our own hearts. It would be a grand thing for our prayer
meetings; they would be better attended; and I am sure they would be more fruitful, if
every man would shake off that habit of formality, and talk to God as a child talks to his
father; ask him for what we want and then sit down and have done. I say this with all
Christian earnestness. Often, because I have not chosen to pray in any conventional form,
people have said, "That man is not reverent!" My dear sir, you are not a judge
of my reverence. To my own master, I stand or fall. I do not think that Job quoted
anybody. I do not think that Jacob quoted the old saint in heaven,his father
Abraham. I do not find Jesus Christ quoted Scripture in prayer. They did not pray in other
people's words, but they prayed in their own. God does not want you to go gathering up
those excellent but very musty spices of the old sanctuary. He wants the new oil just
distilled from the fresh olive of your own soul. He wants spices and frankincense, not of
the old chests where they have been lying until they have lost their savour, but he wants
fresh incense, and fresh myrrh, brought from the ophir of your own soul's experience. Look
well to it that you really pray, do not learn the language of prayer, but seek the spirit
of prayer, and God Almighty bless you, and make you more mighty in your supplications.
I have said, "Look about you." I want you to continue the work, and look about
at your own closets. Oh, Brethren and sisters, there is no place that some of us need to
be so much ashamed to look at as our closet door. I cannot say the hinges are rusty; they
do open and shut at their appointed seasons. I cannot say that the door is locked and
cobwebbed. We do not neglect prayer itself; but those walls, those beams out of the wall,
what a tale might they tell! "Oh!" the wall mighty cry out, "I have heard
thee when thou hast been in so vast a hurry that thou couldst scarcely spend two minutes
with thy God, and I have heard thee, too, when thou wast neither asleep nor awake, and
when thou didst not know what thou wast saying." Then one beam might cry out, "I
have heard thee come and spend ten minutes and not ask for anything, at least thy heart
did not ask. The lips moved, but the heart did not ask. The lips moved, but the heart was
silent." How might another beam cry out"Oh! I have heard thee groan out
thy soul, but I have seen thee go away distrustful, not believing thy prayer was heard,
quoting the promise, but not thinking God would fulfil it." Surely the four walls of
the closet might come together and fall down upon us in their anger, because we have so
often insulted God with our unbelief and with our hurry, and with all manner of sins. We
have insulted him even at his mercy seat, on the spot where his condescension is most
fully manifested. Is it not so with you? Must we not each confess it in our turn? See to
it then, Christian brethren, that an amendment be made, and God make you more mighty and
more successful in your prayers that heretofore.
III. But not to detain you, the last point is look upward, LOOK ABOVE. Look above.
Christian brethren and sisters, and let us weep. Oh God, thou hast given us a mighty
weapon, and we have permitted it to rust. Thou hast given us that which is mighty as
thyself, and we have let that power lie dormant. Would it not be a vile crime if a man had
an eye given him which he would not open, or a hand that he would not lift up, or a foot
that grew stiff because he would not use it. And what must we say of ourselves when God
has given us power in prayer, and yet that power lies still. Oh, if the universe was as
still as we are, where should we be? Oh God, thou givest light to the sun and he shines
with it. Thou givest light even to the stars and they twinkle. To the winds thou givest
force and they blow. And to the air thou givest life and it moves, and men breathe
thereof. But to thy people thou hast given a gift that is better than force, and life, and
light, and yet they permit it to lie still. Forgetful almost that they wield the power,
seldom exercising it, though it would be blessed to countless myriads. Weep, Christian
man. Constantine, the Emperor of Rome, saw that on the coins of the other Emperors, their
images were in an erect posturetriumphing. Instead thereof he ordered that his image
should be struck kneeling, for said he"That is the way in which I have
triumphed." We shall never triumph till our image is struck kneeling. The reason why
we have been defeated, and why our banners trail in the dust, is because we have not
prayed. Gogo ye back to your God, with sorrow, confess before him, ye children of
Ephraim, that ye were armed, and carried bows, but turned your backs in the day of battle.
Go to your God and tell him that if souls are not saved, it is not because he has not
power to save, but because you have never travailed as it were in birth for perishing
sinners. Your bowels have not sounded like a harp for Kir-haresh, neither has your spirit
been moved, because of the defenses of the tribe of Reuben. Wake up, wake up, ye people of
Israel; be astonished, ye careless ones; ye who have neglected prayer; ye sinners that are
in Zion's own self, and that have been at ease. Wake up yourselves; wrestle and strive
with your God, and then the blessing shall comethe early and the latter rain of his
mercy, and the earth shall bring forth plenteously, and all the nations shall call him
blessed. Look up then, and weep.
Once more look up and rejoice. Though you have sinned against him he loves you still. Ye
have not prayed unto him nor sought his face, but behold he cries to you
still"Seek ye my face;" and he saith not "Seek ye me in vain."
Ye may not have gone to the fountain, but it flows as freely as before. Ye have not drawn
near to God, but he waiteth to be gracious still, and is ready to hear all your petitions.
Behold, he says unto you, "Enquire of me concerning things to come, and concerning my
sons and daughters, command ye me." What a blessed thing it is that the master in
heaven is always ready to hear! Augustine has a very beautiful thought upon the parable of
the man who knocked at his friend's door at midnight, saying, "Friend, give me three
loaves." His paraphrase of it runs something like thisI knock at mercy's door,
and it is the dead of night. "Will not some of the servants of the louse come and
answer me?" No; I knock, but they are asleep. Oh! ye apostles of Godye
glorified martyrsye are asleep; ye rest in your beds; ye cannot hear my prayer. But
will not the children answer? Are there not children who are ready to come and open the
door to their brother? No; they are asleep. My brethren that have departedwith whom
I took sweet counsel, and who were the companions of my heartye cannot answer me for
ye rest in Jesus; your works do follow you, but you cannot work for me. But while the
servants are asleep, and while the children cannot answer, the Master is awake,awake
at midnight too. It may be midnight with my soul, but he hears me, and when I am saying
"Give me three loaves," he comes to the door and giveth me as much as I need.
Christian, look up then and rejoice. There is always an open ear if you have an open
mouth. There is always already hand if you have a ready heart. You have but to cry and the
Lord hears; nay, before you call he will answer, and while you are speaking he will hear.
Oh! be not backward then in prayer. Go to him when you reach your home; nay, on the very
way lift up you ears silently; and whatever your petition or request may be, ask it in
Jesu's name, and it shall be done unto you.
Yet, again, look up dear Christian brethren, and amend your prayers from this time forth.
Look on prayer no loner as a romantic fiction or as an arduous duty; look at it as a real
power, as a real pleasure. When philosophers discover some latent power, they seem to have
a delight to put it in action. I believe there have been many great engineers, who have
designed and constructed some of the most wonderful of human works, not because they would
be renumerative, but simply from a love of showing their own power to accomplish wonders.
To show the world what skill could do and what man could accomplish, they have tempted
companies into speculations that could never remunerate apparently, so far as I could see,
in order that they might have an opportunity of displaying their genius. O Christian men,
and shall a great Engineer attempt great works and display his power, and will you who
have a mightier power that ever was wielded by any man apart from his Godwill you
let that be still? Nay think of some great object, strain the sinews of your supplications
for it. Let every vein of your heart be full to the brim with the rich blood of desire,
and struggle, and wrestle, and tug and strive with God for it, using the promises and
pleading the attributes, and see if God does not give you your heart's desire. I challenge
you this day to exceed in prayer my Master's bounty. 1 throw down the gauntlet to you.
Believe him to be more than he is; open your mouth so wide that he cannot fill it; go to
him now for more faith than the promise warrants; venture it, risk it, outdo the Eternal
if it be possible; attempt it. Or as I would rather put it thus, take your petitions and
wants and see if he does not honor you. Try whether if you believe him he doth not fulfill
the promise, and richly bless you with the anointing oil of his Spirit by which you will
be strong in prayer.
I cannot refrain from adding just these few syllables as you go away. I know there are
some of you that never prayed in your lives. You have said a form of prayer, perhaps, many
years, but have never prayed once. Ah! poor soul, you must be born again, and until you
are born again you cannot pray as I have been directing the Christian to pray. But let me
say this much to you. Does your heart long after salvation? Has the Spirit whispered,
"Come to Jesus, sinner, he will hear you?" Believe that whisper, for he will
hear you. The prayer of the awakened sinner is acceptable to God. He heareth the broken in
heart and healeth them too. Take your groanings and your sighs to God and he will answer
you. "Ah," but says one, "I have nothing to plead." Well, but plead as
David did"Pardon my iniquity, for it is great." You have that
pleasay, for his dear sake who shed his blood," and you shall prevail, sinner.
But do not go to God, and ask for mercy with thy sin in thy hand. What would you think of
the rebel, who appeared before the face of his sovereign and asked for pardon with the
dagger sticking in his belt, and with the declaration, of his rebellion on his breast?
Would he deserve to he pardoned? He could not deserve it in any case, and surely he would
deserve double his doom for having thus mocked his master while he pretended to be seeking
mercy. If a wife had forsaken her husband do you think she would have the impudence, with
brazen forehead, to come back and ask pardon for leaning on the arm of her paramour? No,
she could not have such impudence, and yet it is so with youperhaps asking for mercy
and going on in sinpraying to be reconciled to God, and yet harbouring and indulging
your lust. Awake! awake! and call upon thy God, thou sleeper. The boat is nearing the
rock, perhaps to-morrow it may strike and be shivered, and thou be cast into the
unfathomable depths of everlasting woe. Call on thy God, I say, and when thou callest upon
him, cast away thy sin or he cannot hear thee. If thou lift up thy unholy hands with a lie
in they right hand, a prayer is worthless on they lip. Oh, come unto him, say unto him,
"Take away all iniquity, receive us graciously, love us freely," and he will
hear you, and you shall yet pray as prevailing princes, and one day shall stand as more
than conquerors before the starry throne of him who ever reigns God over all, blessed for
evermore.
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