Nothing so pleases God in connection with our prayer as our praise, . . . and nothing so blesses the man who prays as the praise which he offers. I got a great blessing once in China in this connection. I had received bad and sad news from home, and deep shadows had covered my soul. I prayed, but the darkness did not vanish. I summoned myself to endure, but the darkness only deepened. Just then I went to an inland station and saw on the wall of the mission home these words: "Try Thanksgiving." I did, and in a moment every shadow was gone, not to return. Yes, the Psalmist was right, "It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord." -- HENRY W. FROST
THE possibilities of prayer are gauged by faith in God's ability to do.
Faith is the one prime condition by which God works. Faith is the one prime
condition by which man prays. Faith draws on God to its full extent. Faith gives
character to prayer. A feeble faith has always brought forth feeble praying.
Vigorous faith creates vigorous praying. At the close of a parable, "And he
spake a parable unto them to this end, that men always ought to pray, and not to
faint," in which He stressed the necessity of vigorous praying, Christ asks this
pointed question, "When the Son of Man cometh, shall he find faith on the
earth?"
In the case of the lunatic child which the father brought first to the
disciples, who could not cure him, and then to the Lord Jesus Christ, the father
cried out with all the pathos of a declining faith and of a great sorrow, "If
thou canst do anything for us, have compassion on us and help us." And Jesus
said unto him, "If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that
believeth." The healing turned on the faith in the ability of Christ to heal the
boy. The ability to do was in Christ essentially and eternally, but the doing of
the thing turned on the ability of the faith. Great faith enables Christ to do
great things.
We need a quickening faith in God's power. We have hedged God in till we
have little faith in His power. We have conditioned the exercise of His power
till we have a little God, and a little faith in a little God.
The only condition which restrains God's power, and which disables Him to
act, is unfaith. He is not limited in action nor restrained by the conditions
which limit men.
The conditions of time, place, nearness, ability and all others which could
possibly be named, upon which the actions of men hinge, have no bearing on God.
If men will look to God and cry to Him with true prayer, He will hear and can
deliver, no matter how dire soever may be the state, how remediless their
conditions may be.
Strange how God has to school His people in His ability to do! He made a
promise to Abraham and Sarah that Isaac would be born. Abraham was then nearly
one hundred years old, and Sarah was barren by natural defect, and had passed
into a barren, wombless age. She laughed at the thought of having a child as
preposterous. God asked, "Why did Sarah laugh? Is anything too hard for the
Lord?" And God fulfilled His promise to these old people to the letter.
Moses hesitated to undertake God's purpose to liberate Israel from Egyptian
bondage, because of his inability to talk well. God checks him at once by an
inquiry:
"And Moses said unto the Lord, O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither
heretofore, nor since thou hast spoken unto thy servant; but I am slow of speech
and of a slow tongue.
"And the Lord said unto him, Who hath made man's mouth? or who maketh the
dumb, or deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? Have not I the Lord?
"Now, therefore, go, and I will be with thy mouth, and teach thee what thou
shalt say."
When God said He would feed the children of Israel a whole month with meat,
Moses questioned His ability to do it. The Lord said unto Moses, "Is the Lord's
hand waxed short? Thou shalt see now whether my word shall come to pass unto
thee or not."
Nothing is too hard for the Lord to do. As Paul declared, "He is able to do
exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think." Prayer has to do with
God, with His ability to do. The possibility of prayer is the measure of God's
ability to do.
The "all things," the "all things whatsoever," and the "anything," are all
covered by the ability of God. The urgent entreaty reads, "Ask whatsoever ye
will," because God is able to do anything and all things that my desires may
crave, and that He has promised. In God's ability to do, He goes far beyond
man's ability to ask. Human thoughts, human words, human imaginations, human
desires and human needs, cannot in any way measure God's ability to do.
Prayer in its legitimate possibilities goes out on God Himself. Prayer goes
out with faith not only in the promise of God, but faith in God Himself, and in
God's ability to do. Prayer goes out not on the promise merely, but "obtains
promises," and creates promises.
Elijah had the promise that God would send the rain, but no promise that He
would send the fire. But by faith and prayer he obtained the fire, as well as
the rain, but the fire came first.
Daniel had no specific promise that God would make known to him the dream
of the king, but he and his associates joined in united prayer, and God revealed
to Daniel the king's dream and the interpretation, and their lives were spared
thereby.
Hezekiah had no promise that God would cure him of his desperate sickness
which threatened his life. On the contrary the word of the Lord came to him by
the mouth of the prophet, that he should die. However, he prayed against this
decree of Almighty God, with faith, and he succeeded in obtaining a reversal of
God's word and lived.
God makes it marvellous when He says by the mouth of His prophet: "Thus
saith the Lord, the Holy One of Israel and his Maker: Ask me of things to come,
concerning my sons, and concerning the work of my hands, command ye me." And in
this strong promise in which He commits Himself into the hands of His praying
people, He appeals in it to His great creative power: "I have created the earth
and made man upon it. I, even my hands, have stretched out the heavens, and all
their hosts have I commanded."
The majesty and power of God in making man and man's world, and constantly
upholding all things, are ever kept before us as the basis of our faith in God,
and as an assurance and urgency to prayer. Then God calls us away from what He
Himself has done, and turns our minds to Himself personally. The infinite glory
and power of His Person are set before our contemplation: "Remember ye not the
former things neither consider the things of old?" He declares that He will do a
"new thing," that He does not have to repeat Himself, that all He has done
neither limits His doing nor the manner of His doing, and that if we have prayer
and faith, He will so answer our prayers and so work for us, that His former
work shall not be remembered nor come into mind. If men would pray as they ought
to pray, the marvels of the past would be more than reproduced. The Gospel would
advance with a facility and power it has never known. Doors would be thrown open
to the Gospel, and the Word of God would have a conquering force rarely if ever
known before.
If Christians prayed as Christians ought, with strong commanding faith,
with earnestness and sincerity, men, God-called men, God-empowered men
everywhere, would be all burning to go and spread the Gospel world-wide. The
Word of the Lord would run and be glorified as never known heretofore. The
God-influenced men, the God-inspired men, the God-commissioned men, would go and
kindle the flame of sacred fire for Christ, salvation and heaven, everywhere in
all nations, and soon all men would hear the glad tidings of salvation and have
an opportunity to receive Jesus Christ as their personal Saviour. Let us read
another one of those large illimitable statements in God's Word, which are a
direct challenge to prayer and faith:
"He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall
he not with him freely give us all things?"
What a basis have we here for prayer and faith, illimitable, measureless in
breadth, in depth and in height! The promise to give us all things is backed up
by the calling to our remembrance of the fact that God freely gave His only
Begotten Son for our redemption. His giving His Son is the assurance and
guarantee that He will freely give all things to him who believes and prays.
What confidence have we in this Divine statement for inspired asking! What
holy boldness we have here for the largest asking! No commonplace tameness
should restrain our largest asking. Large, larger, and largest asking magnifies
grace and adds to God's glory. Feeble asking impoverishes the asker, and
restrains God's purposes for the greatest good and obscures His glory.
How enthroned, magnificent and royal the intercession of our Lord Jesus
Christ at His Father's right hand in heaven! The benefits of His intercession
flow to us through our intercessions. Our intercession ought to catch by
contagion, and by necessity the inspiration and largeness of Christ's great work
at His Father's right hand. His business and His life are to pray. Our business
and our lives ought to be to pray, and to pray without ceasing.
Failure in our intercession affects the fruits His intercession. Lazy,
heartless, feeble, and indifferent praying by us mars and hinders the effects of
Christ's praying.
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The Possibilities of Prayer by E. M. Bounds - Public Domain [Copy Freely]