IV. GOD'S NEED OF MEN WHO PRAY
WE proceed now to declare that it demands prayer-leadership to hold the
Church to God's aims, and to fit it for God's uses. Prayer-leadership preserves
the spirituality of the Church, just as prayerless leaders make for unspiritual
conditions. The Church is not spiritual simply by the mere fact of its
existence, nor by its vocation. It is not held to its sacred vocation by
generation, nor by succession. Like the new birth, " It is not of blood, neither
of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." The Church is not spiritual
simply because it is concerned and deals in spiritual values. It may hold its
confirmations by the thousand, it may multiply its baptisms, and administer its
sacraments innumerable times, and yet be as far from fulfilling its true mission
as human conditions can make it. This present world's general attitude retires
prayer to insignificance and obscurity. By it, salvation and eternal life are
put in the background. It cannot be too often affirmed, therefore, that the
prime need of the Church is not men of money nor men of brains, but men of
prayer. Leaders in the realm of religious activity are to be judged by their
praying habits, and not by their money or social position. Those who must be
placed in the forefront of the Church's business, must be, first of all, men who
know how to pray.
God does not conduct His work, solely, with men of education or of wealth or of
business capacity. Neither can He carry on His work through men of large
intellects or of great culture, nor yet through men of great social eminence and
influence. All these can be made to count provided they are not regarded as
being primary. These men, by the simple fact of these qualities and conditions,
cannot lead in God's work nor control His cause. Men of prayer, before anything
else, are indispensable to the furtherance of the kingdom of God on earth. No
other sort will fit in the scheme or do the deed. Men, great and influential in
other things, but small in prayer, cannot do the work Almighty God has set out
for His Church to do in this, His world. Men who represent God and who stand
here in His stead, men who are to build up His kingdom in this world, must be in
an eminent sense men of prayer. Whatever else they may have, whatever else they
may lack, they must be men of prayer. Having everything else and lacking prayer,
they must fail. Having prayer and lacking all else, they can succeed. Prayer
must be the most conspicuous and the most potent factor in the character and
conduct of men who undertake divine commission. God's business requires men who
are versed in the business of praying. It must be kept in mind that the praying
to which the disciples of Christ is called by Scriptural authority and
enforcement, is a valorous calling, for manly men. The men God wants and upon
whom He depends, must work at prayer just as they work at their worldly calling.
They must follow this business of praying through, just as they do their secular
pursuits. Diligence, perseverance. heartiness, and courage, must all be in it if
it is to succeed.
Everything secured by Gospel promise, defined by Gospel measure, and represented
by Gospel treasure are to be found in prayer. All heights are scaled by it, all
doors are opened to it, all victories are gained through it, and all grace
distills on it. Heaven has all its good and all its help for men who pray. How
marked and strong is the injunction of Christ which sends men from the parade of
public giving and praying to the privacy of their closets, where with shut
doors, and in encircling silence they are alone in prayer with God! In all ages,
those who have carried out the divine will on the earth, have been men of
prayer. The days of prayer are God's halcyon days. His heart, His oath, and His
glory are committed to one issuance - that every knee should how to Him. The day
of the Lord, in a preeminent sense, will be a day of universal prayer. God's
cause does not suffer through lack of divine ability, but by reason of the lack
of prayer ability in man. God's action is just as much bound up in prayer at
this time, as it was when He said to Abimelech, "Abraham shall pray for thee,
and thou shalt live." So also it was when God said to Job's friends, " My
servant Job shall pray for you, for him will I accept."
God's great plan for the redemption of mankind is as much bound up to prayer for
its prosperity and success as when the decree creating the movement was issued
from the Father, bearing on its frontage the imperative, universal and eternal
condition, "Ask of me, and I will give thee the heathen for thy inheritance and
the uttermost part of the earth for thy possession." In many places an alarming
state of things has come to pass, in that the many who are enrolled in our
churches are not praying men and women. Many of those occupying prominent
positions in church life are not praying men. It is greatly to feared that much
of the work of the Church is being done by those who are perfect strangers to
the closet. Small wonder that the work does not succeed. While it may be true
that many in the Church say prayers, it is equally true that their praying is of
the stereotyped order. Their prayers may be charged with sentiment, but they are
tame, timid, and without fire or force. Even this sort of praying is done by a
few straggling men to be found at prayer-meetings. Those whose names are to be
found bulking large in our great Church assemblies are not men noted for their
praying habits. Yet the entire fabric of the work in which they are engaged has,
perforce, to depend on the adequacy of prayer. This fact is similar to the
crisis which would be created were a country to have to admit in the face of an
invading foe that it cannot fight and have no knowledge of the weapons whereby
war is to be waged. In all God's plans for human redemption, He proposes that
men pray. The men are to pray in every place, in the church, in the closet, in
the home, on sacred days and on secular days. All things and everything are
dependent on the measure of men's praying. Prayer is the genius and mainspring
of life. We pray as we live; we live as we pray. Life will never be finer than
the quality of the closet. The mercury of life will rise only by the warmth of
the closet. Persistent non-praying eventually will depress life below zero.
To measure and weigh the conditions of prayer, is readily to discover why men do
not pray in larger numbers. The conditions are so perfect, so blessed, that it
is a rare character who can meet them. A heart all love, a heart that holds even
its enemies in loving contemplation and prayerful concern, a heart from which
all bitterness, revenge and envy are purged - how rare! Yet this is the only
condition of mind and heart in which a man can expect to command the efficacy of
prayer. There are certain conditions laid down for authentic praying. Men are to
pray, " lifting up holy hands"; hands here being the symbol of life. Hands
unsoiled by stains of evil doing are the emblem of a life unsoiled by sin. Thus
are men to come into the presence of God, thus are they to approach the throne
of the Highest, where they can "obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of
need." Here, then, is one reason why men do not pray. They are too worldly in
heart and too secular in life to enter the closet; and even though they enter
there, they cannot offer the fervent, effectual prayer of the righteous man,
which availeth much." Again, " hands " are the symbols of supplication.
Outstretched hands stand for an appeal for help. It is the silent yet eloquent
attitude of a helpless soul standing before God, appealing for mercy and grace.
"Hands," too, are symbols of activity, power and conduct. Hands outstretched to
God in prayer must be holy hands, "unstained hands. The word "holy" here means
undefiled, unspotted, untainted, and religiously observing every obligation. How
far remote is all this from the character of the sin-loving, worldly-minded,
fleshly disposed men, soiled by fleshly lusts, spotted by worldly indulgence,
unholy in heart and conduct! "He who seeks equity must do equity," is the maxim
of earthly courts. So he who seeks God's good gifts must practice God's good
deeds. This is the maxim of heavenly courts.
Prayer is sensitive, and always affected by the character and conduct of him who
prays. Water cannot rise above its own level, and a spotless prayer cannot flow
from a spotted heart. Straight praying is never born of crooked conduct. The
men, what men are, behind their praying, that gives character to their
supplication. The craven heart cannot do brave praying. Soiled men cannot make
clean, pure supplication. It is neither words, nor thoughts nor ideas, nor
feelings, which shape praying, but character and conduct. Men must walk in
upright fashion in order to be able to pray well. Bad character and unrighteous
living break down praying until it becomes a mere shibboleth. Praying takes its
tone and vigour from the life of the man or the woman exercising it. When
character and conduct are at a low ebb, praying can but barely live, much less
thrive. The man of prayer, whether layman or preacher, is God's right-hand man.
In the realm of spiritual affairs, he creates conditions, inaugurates movements,
brings things to pass. By the fact and condition of their creation and
redemption, all men are under obligation to pray. Every man can pray, and every
man should pray. But when it comes to the affairs of the Kingdom, let it be
said, at once, that a prayerless man in the Church of God is like a paralysed
organ of the physical body. He is out of place in the communion of saints, out
of harmony with God, and out of accord with His purposes for mankind. A
prayerless man handicaps the vigour and life of the whole system like a
demoralized soldier is a menace to the force of which he forms part, in the day
of battle. The absence of prayer lessens all the life-forces of the soul,
cripples faith, sets aside holy living, shuts out heaven. Between praying saints
and non-praying men, in Holy Scripture, the line is sharply drawn. Of Fletcher
of Madeley - one of the praying saints - it is written that He was far more
abundant in his public labours than the greater part of his companions in the
holy ministry. Yet these bore but little proportion to those internal exercises
of prayer and supplication to which he was wholly given up in private, which
were almost uninterruptedly maintained from hour to hour. He lived in the spirit
of prayer, and whatever employment in which he was engaged, this spirit of
prayer was constantly manifested through them all. "Without this he neither
formed any design, nor entered upon any duty. Without this he neither read nor
conversed. Without this, he neither visited nor received a visitor. There have
been seasons of supplications in which he appeared to be carried out far beyond
the ordinary limits of devotion, when, like his Lord upon the Mount of
Transfiguration, while he continued to pour out his mighty prayer, the fashion
of his countenance has been changed, and his face has appeared as the face of an
angel." God, raise up more men of praying like John Fletcher! How we do need, in
this our day, men through whom God can work!