| SIXTH LESSON. |
| 'How much more?' Or, The Infinite Fatherliness of God. |
'Or what man is there of you, who, if his son ask him for a loaf, will give him
a stone; or if he shall ask for a fish, will give him a serpent? If ye then,
being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall
your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask Him?'--MATT.
vii. 9-11
IN these words our Lord
proceeds further to confirm what He had said of the certainty of an answer to
prayer. To remove all doubt, and show us on what sure ground His promise rests,
He appeals to what every one has seen and experienced here on earth. We are all
children, and know what we expected of our fathers. We are fathers, or
continually see them; and everywhere we look upon it as the most natural thing
there can be, for a father to hear his child. And the Lord asks us to look up
from earthly parents, of whom the best are but evil, and to calculate HOW MUCH
MORE the heavenly Father will give good gifts to them that ask Him. Jesus would
lead us up to see, that as much greater as God is than sinful man, so much
greater our assurance ought to be that He will more surely than any earthly
father grant our childlike petitions. As much greater as God is than man, so
much surer is it that prayer will be heard with the Father in heaven than
with a father on earth.
As simple and intelligible as this parable is, so deep and spiritual is the
teaching it contains. The Lord would remind us that the prayer of a child owes
its influence entirely to the relation in which he stands to the parent. The
prayer can exert that influence only when the child is really living in that
relationship, in the home, in the love, in the service of the Father. The power
of the promise, 'Ask, and it shall be given you,' lies in the loving
relationship between us as children and the Father in heaven; when we live and
walk in that relationship, the prayer of faith and its answer will be the
natural result. And so the lesson we have today in the school of prayer is
this: Live as a child of God, then you will be able to pray as a child, and as
a child you will most assuredly be heard.
And what is the true child-life? The answer can be found in any home. The
child that by preference forsakes the father's house, that finds no pleasure in
the presence and love and obedience of the father, and still thinks to ask and
obtain what he will, will surely be disappointed. On the contrary, he to whom
the intercourse and will and honour and love of the father are the joy of his
life, will find that it is the father's joy to grant his requests. Scripture
says, 'As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the children of
God:' the childlike privilege of asking all is inseparable from the childlike
life under the leading of the Spirit. He that gives himself to be led by the
Spirit in his life, will be led by Him in his prayers too. And he will find
that Fatherlike giving is the Divine response to childlike living.
To see what this childlike living is, in which childlike asking and believing
have their ground, we have only to notice what our Lord teaches in the Sermon on
the Mount of the Father and His children. In it the prayer-promises are
imbedded in the life-precepts; the two are inseparable. They form one whole;
and He alone can count on the fulfilment of the promise, who accepts too all
that the Lord has connected with it. It is as if in speaking the word, 'Ask,
and ye shall receive,' He says: I give these promises to those whom in the
beatitudes I have pictured in their childlike poverty and purity, and of whom I
have said, 'They shall be called the children of God' (Matt. v. 3-9): to
children, who 'let your light shine before men, so that they may glorify your
Father in heaven:' to those who walk in love, 'that ye may be children of your
Father which is in heaven,' and who seek to be perfect 'even as your Father in
heaven is perfect' (v. 45): to those whose fasting and praying and almsgiving
(vi. 1-18) is not before men, but 'before your Father which seeth in secret;'
who forgive 'even as your Father forgiveth you' (vi. 15); who trust the heavenly
Father in all earthly need, seeking first the kingdom of God and His
righteousness (vi. 26-32); who not only say, Lord, Lord, but do the will of my
Father which is in heaven (vii. 21). Such are the children of the Father, and
such is the life in the Father's love and service; in such a child-life answered
prayers are certain and abundant.
But will not such teaching discourage the feeble one? If we are first to answer
to this portrait of a child, must not many give up all hope of answers to
prayer? The difficulty is removed if we think again of the blessed name of
father and child. A child is weak; there is a great difference among children
in age and gift. The Lord does not demand of us a perfect fulfilment of the
law; no, but only the childlike and whole-hearted surrender to live as a child
with Him in obedience and truth. Nothing more. But also, nothing less. The
Father must have the whole heart. When this is given, and He sees the child
with honest purpose and steady will seeking in everything to be and live as a
child, then our prayer will count with Him as the prayer of a child. Let any
one simply and honestly begin to study the Sermon on the Mount and take it as
his guide in life, and he will find, notwithstanding weakness and failure, an
ever-growing liberty to claim the fulfilment of its promises in regard to
prayer. In the names of father and child he has the pledge that his petitions
will be granted.
This is the one chief thought on which Jesus dwells here, and which He would
have all His scholars take in. He would have us see that the secret of
effectual prayer is: to have the heart filled with the Father-love of God. It
is not enough for us to know that God is a Father: He would have us take time
to come under the full impression of what that name implies. We must take the
best earthly father we know; we must think of the tenderness and love with which
he regards the request of his child, the love and joy with which he grants every
reasonable desire; we must then, as we think in adoring worship of the infinite
Love and Fatherliness of God, consider with how much more tenderness and
joy He sees us come to Him, and gives us what we ask aright. And then,
when we see how much this Divine arithmetic is beyond our comprehension, and
feel how impossible it is for us to apprehend God's readiness to hear us, then
He would have us come and open our heart for the Holy Spirit to shed abroad
God's Father-love there. Let us do this not only when we want to pray, but let
us yield heart and life to dwell in that love. The child who only wants to know
the love of the father when he has something to ask, will be disappointed. But
he who lets God be Father always and in everything, who would fain live his
whole life in the Father's presence and love, who allows God in all the
greatness of His love to be a Father to him, oh! he will experience most
gloriously that a life in God's infinite Fatherliness and continual answers to
prayer are inseparable.
Beloved fellow-disciple! we begin to see what the reason is that we know so
little of daily answers to prayer, and what the chief lesson is which the Lord
has for us in His school. It is all in the name of Father. We thought of new
and deeper insight into some of the mysteries of the prayer-world as what we
should get in Christ's school; He tells us the first is the highest lesson; we
must learn to say well, 'Abba, Father!' 'Our Father which art in heaven.' He
that can say this, has the key to all prayer. In all the compassion with which
a father listens to his weak or sickly child, in all the joy with which he hears
his stammering child, in all the gentle patience with which he bears with a
thoughtless child, we must, as in so many mirrors, study the heart of our
Father, until every prayer be borne upward on the faith of this Divine word:
'How much more shall your heavenly Father give good gifts to them that
ask Him.'
Blessed Lord! Thou knowest that this, though it be one of the first and
simplest and most glorious lessons in Thy school, is to our hearts one of the
hardest to learn: we know so little of the love of the Father. Lord! teach us
so to live with the Father that His love may be to us nearer, clearer, dearer,
than the love of any earthly father. And let the assurance of His hearing our
prayer be as much greater than the confidence in an earthly parent, as the
heavens are higher than earth, as God is infinitely greater than man. Lord!
show us that it is only our unchildlike distance from the Father that hinders
the answer to prayer, and lead us on to the true life of God's children. Lord
Jesus! it is fatherlike love that wakens childlike trust. O reveal to us the
Father, and His tender, pitying love, that we may become childlike, and
experience how in the child-life lies the power of prayer.
Blessed Son of God! the Father loveth Thee and hath given Thee all things. And
Thou lovest the Father, and hast done all things He commanded Thee, and
therefore hast the power to ask all things. Lord! give us Thine own Spirit,
the Spirit of the Son. Make us childlike, as Thou wert on earth. And let every
prayer be breathed in the faith that as the heaven is higher than the earth, so
God's Father-love, and His readiness to give us what we ask, surpasses all we
can think or conceive. Amen.
'Your Father which is in heaven.' Alas! we speak of it only as the
utterance of a reverential homage. We think of it as a figure borrowed from an
earthly life, and only in some faint and shallow meaning to be used of God. We
are afraid to take God as our own tender and pitiful father. He is a
schoolmaster, or almost farther off than that, and knowing less about us--an
inspector, who knows nothing of us except through our lessons. His eyes are not
on the scholar, but on the book, and all alike must come up to the standard.
Now open the ears of the heart, timid child of God; let it go sinking right down
into the inner most depths of the soul. Here is the starting-point of holiness,
in the love and patience and pity of our heavenly Father. We have not to learn
to be holy as a hard lesson at school, that we may make God think well of us; we
are to learn it at home with the Father to help us. God loves you not because
you are clever not because you are good, but because He is your Father.
The Cross of Christ does not make God love us; it is the outcome and measure of
His love to us. He loves all His children, the clumsiest, the dullest, the
worst of His children. His love lies at the back of everything, and we must get
upon that as the solid foundation of our religious life, not growing up into
that, but growing up out if it. We must begin there or our beginning
will come to nothing. Do take hold of this mightily. We must go out of
ourselves for any hope, or any strength, or any confidence. And what hope, what
strength, what confidence may be ours now that we begin here, your Father
which is in heaven!
We need to get in at the tenderness and helpfulness which lie in these words,
and to rest upon it--your Father. Speak them over to yourself until
something of the wonderful truth is felt by us. It means that I am bound to God
by the closest and tenderest relationship; that I have a right to His love and
His power and His blessing, such as nothing else could give me. O the boldness
with which we can draw near! O the great things we have a right to ask for! Your
Father. It means that all His infinite love and patience and wisdom bend
over me to help me. In this relationship lies not only the
possibility of holiness; there is infinitely more than that.
Here we are to begin, in the patient love of our Father. Think how He
knows us apart and by ourselves, in all our peculiarities, and in all our
weaknesses and difficulties. The master judges by the result, but our Father
judges by the effort. Failure does not always mean fault. He knows how much
things cost, and weighs them where others only measure. YOUR FATHER. Think how
great store His love sets by the poor beginnings of the little ones, clumsy and
unmeaning as they may be to others. All this lies in this blessed relationship
and infinitely more. Do not fear to take it all as your own.
1 From Thoughts on Holiness, by Mark Guy Pearse. What is so beautifully
said of the knowledge of God's Fatherliness as the starting-point of holiness is
no less true of prayer.
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With Christ in the School of Prayer by Andrew Murray - Public Domain
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