You need not utterly despair even of those who for the present "turn again and rend you." For if all your arguments and persuasives fail, there is yet another remedy left, and one that is frequently found effectual, when no other method avails. This is prayer. Therefore, whatsoever you desire or want, either for others or for your own soul, "Ask, and it shall be given you." -- JOHN WESLEY
WITHOUT the promise prayer is eccentric and baseless. Without prayer,
the promise is dim, voiceless, shadowy, and impersonal. The promise makes prayer
dauntless and irresistible. The Apostle Peter declares that God has given to us
"exceeding great and precious promises." "Precious" and "exceeding great"
promises they are, and for this very cause we are to "add to our faith," and
supply virtue. It is the addition which makes the promises current and
beneficial to us. It is prayer which makes the promises weighty, precious and
practical. The Apostle Paul did not hesitate to declare that God's grace so
richly promised was made operative and efficient by prayer. "Ye also helping
together by prayer for us."
The promises of God are "exceeding great and precious," words which clearly
indicate their great value and their broad reach, as grounds upon which to base
our expectations in praying. Howsoever exceeding great and precious they are,
their realization, the possibility and condition of that realization, are based
on prayer. How glorious are these promises to the believing saints and to the
whole Church! How the brightness and bloom, the fruitage and cloudless midday
glory of the future beam on us through the promises of God! Yet these promises
never brought hope to bloom or fruit to a prayerless heart. Neither could these
promises, were they a thousandfold increased in number and preciousness, bring
millennium glory to a prayerless Church. Prayer makes the promise rich, fruitful
and a conscious reality.
Prayer as a spiritual energy, and illustrated in its enlarged and mighty
working, makes way for and brings into practical realization the promises of
God.
God's promises cover all things which pertain to life and godliness, which
relate to body and soul, which have to do with time and eternity. These promises
bless the present and stretch out in their benefactions to the illimitable and
eternal future. Prayer holds these promises in keeping and in fruition. Promises
are God's golden fruit to be plucked by the hand of prayer. Promises are God's
incorruptible seed, to be sown and tilled by prayer.
Prayer and the promises are interdependent. The promise inspires and
energizes prayer, but prayer locates the promise, and gives it realization and
location. The promise is like the blessed rain falling in full showers, but
prayer, like the pipes, which transmit, preserve and direct the rain, localizes
and precipitates these promises, until they become local and personal, and
bless, refresh and fertilize. Prayer takes hold of the promise and conducts it
to its marvellous ends, removes the obstacles, and makes a highway for the
promise to its glorious fulfillment.
While God's promises are "exceeding great and precious," they are specific,
clear and personal. How pointed and plain God's promise to Abraham:
"And the angel of the Lord called unto Abraham out of heaven the second
time,
"And said, By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, for because thou hast
done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son;
"That in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy
seed as the stars of heaven, and as the sand which is upon the seashore; and thy
seed shall possess the gate of his enemies;
"And in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed; because
thou hast obeyed my voice."
But Rebekah through whom the promise is to flow is childless. Her barren
womb forms an invincible obstacle to the fulfillment of God's promise. But in
the course of time children are born to her.
Isaac becomes a man of prayer through whom the promise is to be realized,
and so we read:
"And Isaac entreated the Lord for his wife, because she was barren, and the
Lord was entreated for him, and Rebekah his wife conceived."
Isaac's praying opened the way for the fulfilment of God's promise, and
carried it on to its marvellous fulfillment, and made the promise effectual in
bringing forth marvellous results.
God spoke to Jacob and made definite promises to him:
"Return unto the land of thy fathers, and to thy kindred, and I will be
with thee."
Jacob promptly moves out on the promise, but Esau confronts him with his
awakened vengeance and his murderous intention, more dreadful because of the
long years, unappeased and waiting. Jacob throws himself directly on God's
promise by a night of prayer, first in quietude and calmness, and then when the
stillness, the loneliness and the darkness of the night are upon him, he makes
the all-night wrestling prayer.
"With thee I mean all night to stay,
And wrestle till the break of day."
God's being is involved, His promise is at stake, and much is involved in
the issue. Esau's temper, his conduct and his character are involved. It is a
notable occasion. Much depends upon it. Jacob pursues his case and presses his
plea with great struggles and hard wrestling. It is the highest form of
importunity. But the victory is gained at last. His name and nature are changed
and he becomes a new and different man. Jacob himself is saved first of all. He
is blessed in his life and soul. But more still is accomplished. Esau undergoes
a radical change of mind. He who came forth with hate and revenge in his heart
against his own brother, seeking Jacob's destruction, is strangely and
wonderfully affected, and he is changed and his whole attitude toward his
brother becomes radically different. And when the two brothers meet, love takes
the place of fear and hate, and they vie with each other in showing true
brotherly affection.
The promise of God is fulfilled. But it took that all night of importunate
praying to do the deed. It took that fearful night of wrestling on Jacob's part
to make the promise sure and cause it to bear fruit. Prayer wrought the
marvellous deed. So prayer of the same kind will produce like results in this
day. It was God's promise and Jacob's praying which crowned and crowded the
results so wondrously.
"Go show thyself to Ahab and I will send rain on the earth," was God's
command and promise to His servant Elijah after the sore famine had cursed the
land. Many glorious results marked that day of heroic faith and dauntless
courage on Elijah's part. The sublime issue with Israel had been successful, the
fire had fallen, Israel had been reclaimed, the prophets of Baal had been
killed, but there was no rain. The one thing, the only thing, which God had
promised, had not been given. The day was declining, and the awestruck crowds
were faint, and yet held by an invisible hand.
Elijah turns from Israel to God and from Baal to the one source of help for
a final issue and a final victory. But seven times is the restless eagerness of
the prophet stayed. Not till the seventh repeated time is his vigilance rewarded
and the promise pressed to its final fulfillment. Elijah's fiery, relentless
praying bore to its triumphant results the promise of God, and rain descended in
full showers.
"Thy promise, Lord, is ever sure,
And they that in Thy house would dwell
That happy station to secure,
Must still in holiness excel."
Our prayers are too little and feeble to execute the purposes or to claim
the promises of God with appropriating power. Marvellous purposes need
marvellous praying to execute them. Miracle-making promises need miracle-making
praying to realize them. Only Divine praying can operate Divine promises or
carry out Divine purposes. How great, how sublime, and how exalted are the
promises God makes to His people! How eternal are the purposes of God! Why are
we so impoverished in experience and so low in life when God's promises are so
"exceeding great and precious"? Why do the eternal purposes of God move so
tardily? Why are they so poorly executed? Our failure to appropriate the Divine
promises and rest our faith on them, and to pray believingly is the solution.
"We have not because we ask not." "We ask and receive not because we ask amiss."
Prayer is based on the purpose and promise of God. Prayer is submission to
God. Prayer has no sigh of disloyalty against God's will. It may cry out against
the bitterness and the dread weight of an hour of unutterable anguish: "If it be
possible, let this cup pass from me." But it is surcharged with the sweetest and
promptest submission. "Yet not my will, but thine be done."
But prayer in its usual uniform and deep current is conscious conformity to
God's will, based upon the direct promise of God's Word, and under the
illumination and application of the Holy Spirit. Nothing is surer than that the
Word of God is the sure foundation of prayer. We pray just as we believe God's
Word. Prayer is based directly and specifically upon God's revealed promises in
Christ Jesus. It has no other ground upon which to base its plea. All else is
shadowy, sandy, fickle. Not our feelings, not our merits, not our works, but
God's promise is the basis of faith and the solid ground of prayer.
"Now I have found the ground wherein
Sure my soul's anchor may remain;
The wounds of Jesus -- for my sin,
Before the world's foundation slain."
The converse of this proposition is also true. God's promises are dependent
and conditioned upon prayer to appropriate them and make them a conscious
realization. The promises are inwrought in us, appropriated by us, and held in
the arms of faith by prayer. Let it be noted that prayer gives the promises
their efficiency, localizes and appropriates them, and utilizes them. Prayer
puts the promises to practical and present uses. Prayer puts the promises as the
seed in the fructifying soil. Promises, like the rain, are general. Prayer
embodies, precipitates, and locates them for personal use. Prayer goes by faith
into the great fruit orchard of God's exceeding great and precious promises, and
with hand and heart picks the ripest and richest fruit. The promises, like
electricity, may sparkle and dazzle and yet be impotent for good till these
dynamic, life-giving currents are chained by prayer, and are made the mighty
forces which move and bless.
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The Possibilities of Prayer by E. M. Bounds - Public Domain [Copy Freely]