CHAPTER IV
PRAYING IN THE NAME OF CHRIST AND ACCORDING TO THE WILL OF GOD
- 1. It was a wonderful word about prayer that Jesus spoke to
His disciples on the night before His crucifixion, "Whatsoever ye shall ask IN
MY NAME, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If ye
shall ask anything in My name, I will do it."
- Prayer in the name of Christ has power with God. God is
well pleased with His Son Jesus Christ. He hears Him always, and He also hears
always the prayer that is really in His name. There is a fragrance in the name
of Christ that makes acceptable to God every prayer that bears it.
But what is it to pray in the name of Christ?
Many explanations have been attempted that to ordinary minds do not explain.
But there is nothing mystical or mysterious about this expression. If one will
go through the Bible and examine all the passages in which the expression "in
My name" or "in His name" or synonymous expressions are used, he will find
that it means just about what it does in modern usage. If I go to a bank and
hand in a check with my name signed to it, I ask of that bank IN MY OWN NAME.
If I have money deposited in that bank, the check will be cashed; if not, it
will not be. If, however, I go to a bank with somebody else's name signed to
the check, I am asking IN HIS NAME, and it does not matter whether I have
money in that bank or any other, if the person whose name is signed to the
check has money there, the check will be cashed.
> If, for example, I should go to the First National Bank of Chicago, and
present a check which I had signed for $50.00, the paying teller would say to
me:
"Why, Mr. Torrey, we cannot cash that. You have no money in this bank."
But if I should go to the First National Bank with a check for $5,000.00 made
payable to me, and signed by one of the large depositors in that bank, they
would not ask whether I had money in that bank or in any bank, but would honor
the check at once.
So it is when I go to the bank of heaven, when I go to God in prayer. I have
nothing deposited there, I have absolutely no credit there, and if I go in my
own name I will get absolutely nothing; but Jesus Christ has unlimited credit
in heaven, and He has granted to me the privilege of going to the bank with
His name on my checks, and when I thus go, my prayers will be honored to any
extent.
To pray then in the name of Christ is to pray on the ground, not of my credit,
but His; to renounce the thought that I have any claims on God whatever, and
approach Him on the ground of God's claims. Praying in the name of Christ is
not merely adding the phrase "I ask these things in Jesus' name" to my prayer.
I may put that phrase in my prayer and really be resting in my own merit all
the time. But when I really do approach God, not on the ground of my merit,
but on the ground of Christ's merit, not on the ground of my goodness, but on
the ground of the atoning blood (Heb. 10:19), God will hear me. Very much of
our modern prayer is vain because men approach God imagining that they have
some claim upon God whereby He is under obligations to answer their prayers.
Years ago when Mr. Moody was young in Christian work, he visited a town in
Illinois. A judge in the town was an infidel. This judge's wife besought Mr.
Moody to call upon her husband, but Mr. Moody replied:
"I cannot talk with your husband. I am only an uneducated young Christian, and
your husband is a book infidel."
But the wife would not take no for an answer, so Mr. Moody made the call. The
clerks in the outer office tittered as the young salesman from Chicago went in
to talk with the scholarly judge.
> The conversation was short. Mr. Moody said:
"Judge, I can't talk with you. You are a book infidel, and I have no learning,
but I simply want to say if you are ever converted, I want you to let me
know."
The judge replied: "Yes, young man, if I am ever converted I will let you
know. Yes, I will let you know."
The conversation ended. The clerks tittered still louder when the zealous
young Christian left the office, but the judge was converted within a year.
Mr. Moody visiting the town again asked the judge to explain how it came
about. The judge said:
"One night, when my wife was at prayer meeting, I began to grow very uneasy
and miserable. I did not know what was the matter with me, but finally retired
before my wife come home. I could not sleep all that night. I got up early,
told my wife that I would eat no breakfast, and went down to the office. I
told the clerks they could take a holiday, and shut myself up in the inner
office. I kept growing more and more miserable, and finally I got down and
asked God to forgive my sins, but I would not say `for Jesus' sake,' for I was
a Unitarian and I did not believe in the atonement. I kept praying 'God
forgive my sins'; but no answer came. At last in desperation I cried, 'O God,
for Christ's sake forgive my sins,' and found peace at once."
> The judge had no access to God until he came in the name of Christ, but when
he thus came, he was heard and answered at once.
- 2. Great light is thrown upon the subject "How to Pray" by
1_John 5:14,15: "And this is the boldness which we have toward 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." (R.V.)
- This passage teaches us plainly that if we are to pray
aright, we must pray according to God's will, then will we beyond a
peradventure get the thing we ask of Him.
But can we know the will of God? Can we know that any specific prayer is
according to His will?
We most surely can.
How?
- (1) First by the Word. God has revealed His will in His
Word. When anything is definitely promised in the Word of God, we know that
it is His will to give that thing. If then when I pray, I can find some
definite promise of God's Word and lay that promise before God, I know that
He hears me, and if I know that He hears me, I know that I have the petition
that I have asked of Him. For example, when I pray for wisdom I know that it
is the will of God to give me wisdom, for He says so in James 1:5: "If any
of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally,
and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." So when I ask for wisdom I
know that the prayer is heard, and that wisdom will be given me. In like
manner when I pray for the Holy Spirit I know from Luke 11:13 that it is
God's will, that my prayer is heard, and that I have the petition that I
have asked of Him: "If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto
your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit
to them that ask Him?"
Some years ago a minister came to me at the close of an address on prayer at
a Y.M.C.A. Bible school, and said,
"You have produced upon those young men the impression that they can ask for
definite things and get the very things that they ask."
I replied that I did not know whether that was the impression that I
produced or not, but that was certainly the impression that I desired to
produce.
"But," he replied, "that is not right. We cannot be sure, for we don't know
God's will."
I turned him at once to James 1:5, read it and said to him, "Is it not God's
will to give us wisdom, and if you ask for wisdom do you not know that you
are going to get it?"
"Ah!" he said, "we don't know what wisdom is." I said, "No, if we did, we
would not need to ask; but whatever wisdom may be, don't you know that you
will get it?"
Certainly it is our privilege to know. When we have a specific promise in
the Word of God, if we doubt that it is God's will, or if we doubt that God
will do the thing that we ask, we make God a liar.
Here is one of the greatest secrets of prevailing prayer: To study the Word
to find what God's will is as revealed there in the promises, and then
simply take these promises and spread them out before God in prayer with the
absolutely unwavering expectation that He will do what He has promised in
His Word.
- (2) But there is still another way in which we may know
the will of God, that is, by the teaching of His Holy Spirit. There are many
things that we need from God which are not covered by any specific promise,
but we are not left in ignorance of the will of God even then. In Rom.
8:26,27 we are told, "And in like manner the Spirit also helpeth our
infirmity: for we know not how to pray as we ought; but the Spirit Himself
maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered; and He
that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the spirit, because He
maketh intercession for the saints ACCORDING TO THE WILL OF GOD." (R.V.)
Here we are distinctly told that the Spirit of God prays in us, draws out
our prayer, in the line of God's will. When we are thus led out by the Holy
Spirit in any direction, to pray for any given object, we may do it in all
confidence that it is God's will, and that we are to get the very thing we
ask of Him, even though there is no specific promise to cover the case.
Often God by His Spirit lays upon us a heavy burden of prayer for some given
individual. We cannot rest, we pray for him with groanings which cannot be
uttered. Perhaps the man is entirely beyond our reach, but God hears the
prayer, and in many a case it is not long before we hear of his definite
conversion.
The passage 1_John 5:14,15 is one of the most abused passages in the Bible:
"This is THE CONFIDENCE that we have in Him, that, if we ask anything
according to His will, He heareth us; and if we know that He hear us,
whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we desired of
Him." The Holy Spirit beyond a doubt put it into the Bible to encourage our
faith. It begins with "This is THE CONFIDENCE that we have in Him," and
closes with "WE KNOW that we have the petitions that we desired of Him;" but
one of the most frequent usages of this passage, which was so manifestly
given to beget confidence, is to introduce an element of uncertainty into
our prayers. Oftentimes when one waxes confident in prayer, some cautious
brother will come and say:
"Now, don't be too confident. If it is God's will He will do it. You should
put in, `If it be Thy will.'"
Doubtless there are many times when we do not know the will of God, and in
all prayer submission to the excellent will of God should underlie it; but
when we know God's will, there need be no "ifs"; and this passage was not
put into the Bible in order that we might introduce "ifs" into all our
prayers, but in order that we might throw our "ifs" to the wind, and have
"CONFIDENCE" and "KNOW that we have the petitions which we have asked of
Him."
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How To Pray by R. A. Torrey - Public Domain [Copy Freely]