| TWENTY-THIRD LESSON |
| `Bear fruit, that the Father may give what ye ask;' Or, Obedience the Path to Power in Prayer. |
`Ye did not choose me, but I chose you, and appointed you, that ye should go and
bear fruit, and that your fruit should abide: that whatsoever ye shall ask
the Father in my name, He may give it you.'-JOHN xv. 16.
`The fervent effectual prayer of a righteous man availeth much.'-JAS. v.
16.
THE promise of the
Father's giving whatsoever we ask is here once again renewed, in such a
connection as to show us to whom it is that such wonderful influence in the
council chamber of the Most High is to be granted. `I chose you,' the Master
says, `and appointed you that ye should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit
should abide;' and then He adds, to the end `that whatsoever ye,' the
fruit-bearing ones, `shall ask of the Father in my name, He may give it you.'
This is nothing but the fuller expression of what He had spoken in the words,
`If ye abide in me.' He had spoken of the object of this abiding as the bearing
`fruit,' `more fruit,' `much fruit;' in this was God to be glorified, and the
mark of discipleship seen. No wonder that He now adds, that where the reality
of the abiding is seen in fruit abounding and abiding, this would be the
qualification for praying so as to obtain what we ask. Entire consecration to
the fulfilment of our calling is the condition of effectual prayer, is the key
to the unlimited blessings of Christ's wonderful prayer-promises.
There are Christians who fear that such a statement is at variance with the
doctrine of free grace. But surely not of free grace rightly understood, nor
with so many express statements of God's blessed word. Take the words of St.
John (1 John iii. 22): `Let us love in deed and truth; hereby shall we
assure our heart before Him. And whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him,
because we keep His commandments, and do the things that are pleasing in His
sight.'' Or take the oft-quoted words of James: `The fervent effectual prayer of
a righteous man availeth much;' that is, of a man of whom, according to
the definition of the Holy Spirit, it can be said, `He that doeth righteousness,
is righteous even as He is righteous.' Mark the spirit of so many of the
Psalms, with their confident appeal to the integrity and righteousness of the
supplicant. In Ps. xviii, David says: `The Lord rewarded me according to my
righteousness; according to the cleanness of my hands hath He recompensed me. .
. . I was upright before Him, and I kept myself from mine iniquity: therefore
hath the Lord recompensed me according to my righteousness.' (Ps. xviii. 20-26.
See also Ps. vii. 3-5, xv. 1, 2, xviii. 3, 6, xxvi. 1-6, cxix. 121, 153.) If
we carefully consider such utterances in the light of the New Testament, we
shall find them in perfect harmony with the explicit teaching of the Saviour's
parting words: `If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love;'
`Ye are my friends if ye do what I command you.' The word is indeed
meant literally: `I appointed you that ye should go and bear fruit, that,'
then, `whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, He may give it you.'
Let us seek to enter into the spirit of what the Saviour here teaches us. There
is a danger in our evangelical religion of looking too much at what it offers
from one side, as a certain experience to be obtained in prayer and faith.
There is another side which God's word puts very strongly, that of obedience as
the only path to blessing. What we need is to realize that in our relationship
to the Infinite Being whom we call God who has created and redeemed us, the
first sentiment that ought to animate us is that of subjection: the surrender
to His supremacy, His glory, His will, His pleasure, ought to be the first and
uppermost thought of our life. The question is not, how we are to obtain and
enjoy His favour, for in this the main thing may still be self. But what this
Being in the very nature of things rightfully claims, and is infinitely and
unspeakably worthy of, is that His glory and pleasure should be my one object.
Surrender to His perfect and blessed will, a life of service and obedience, is
the beauty and the charm of heaven. Service and obedience, these were the
thoughts that were uppermost in the mind of the Son, when He dwelt upon earth.
Service and obedience, these must become with us the chief objects of desire
and aim, more so than rest or light, or joy or strength: in them we shall find
the path to all the higher blessedness that awaits us.
Just note what a prominent place the Master gives it, not only in the 15th
chapter, in connection with the abiding, but in the 14th, where He speaks of the
indwelling of the Three-One God. In verse 15 we have it: `If ye love
me, keep my commandments, and the Spirit will be given you of the Father.
Then verse 21: `He that hath my commandments and keepeth them, he it is
that loveth me;' and he shall have the special love of my Father resting on him
and the special manifestation of myself. And then again, verse 23, one of the
highest of all the exceeding great and precious promises: `If a man love me
he will keep my words, and the Father and I will come and take up our abode
with him.' Could words put it more clearly that obedience is the way to the
indwelling of the Spirit, to His revealing the Son within us, and to His again
preparing us to be the abode, the home of the Father? The indwelling of the
Three-One God is the heritage of them that obey. Obedience and faith are but
two aspects of one act,--surrender to God and His will. As faith strengthens
for obedience, it is in turn strengthened by it: faith is made perfect by
works. It is to be feared that often our efforts to believe have been
unavailing because we have not taken up the only position in which a large faith
is legitimate or possible,--that of entire surrender to the honour and the will
of God. It is the man who is entirely consecrated to God and His will who will
find the power come to claim everything that His God has promised to be for him.
The application of this in the school of prayer is very simple, but very solemn.
`I chose you,' the Master says, `and appointed you that ye should go and bear
fruit,' much fruit (verses 5, 8), `and that your fruit should abide,' that your
life might be one of abiding fruit and abiding fruitfulness, `that' thus,
as fruitful branches abiding in me, `whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my
name, He may give it you.' O how often we have sought to be able to pray the
effectual prayer for much grace to bear fruit, and have wondered that the answer
came not. It was because we were reversing the Master's order. We wanted to
have the comfort and the joy and the strength first, that we might do the work
easily and without any feeling of difficulty or self-sacrifice. And He wanted
us in faith, without asking whether we felt weak or strong, whether the work was
hard or easy, in the obedience of faith to do what He said: the path of
fruit-bearing would have led us to the place and the power of prevailing prayer.
Obedience is the only path that leads to the glory of God. Not obedience
instead of faith, nor obedience to supply the shortcomings of faith; no, but
faith's obedience gives access to all the blessings our God has for us. The
baptism of the Spirit (xiv. 16), the manifestation of the Son (xiv. 21), the
indwelling of the Father (xiv. 23), the abiding in Christ's love (xv. 10), the
privilege of His holy friendship (xv. 14), and the power of all-prevailing
prayer (xv. 16),--all wait for the obedient.
Let us take home the lessons. Now we know the great reason why we have not had
power in faith to pray prevailingly. Our life was not as it should have been:
simple downright obedience, abiding fruitfulness, was not its chief mark. And
with our whole heart we approve of the Divine appointment: men to whom God is
to give such influence in the rule of the world, as at their request to do what
otherwise would not have taken place, men whose will is to guide the path in
which God's will is to work, must be men who have themselves learned obedience,
whose loyalty and submission to authority must be above all suspicion. Our
whole soul approves the law: obedience and fruit-bearing, the path to
prevailing prayer. And with shame we acknowledge how little our lives have yet
borne this stamp.
Let us yield ourselves to take up the appointment the Saviour gives us. Let us
study His relation to us as Master. Let us seek no more with each new day to
think in the first place of comfort, or joy, or blessing. Let the first thought
be: I belong to the Master. Every moment and every movement I must act as His
property, as a part of Himself, as one who only seeks to know and do His will.
A servant, a slave of Jesus Christ,--let this be the spirit that animates me.
If He says, `No longer do I call you servants, but I have called you friends,'
let us accept the place of friends: `Ye are my friends if ye do the things
which I command you.'
The one thing He commands us as His branches is to bear fruit. Let us live to
bless others, to testify of the life and the love there is in Jesus. Let us in
faith and obedience give our whole life to that which Jesus chose us for and
appointed us to-fruit-bearing. As we think of His electing us to this, and take
up our appointment as coming from Him who always gives all He demands, we shall
grow strong in the confidence that a life of fruit-bearing, abounding and
abiding, is within our reach. And we shall understand why this fruit-bearing
alone can be the path to the place of all prevailing prayer. It is the man who,
in obedience to the Christ of God, is proving that he is doing what his Lord
wills, for whom the Father will do whatsoever he will: `Whatsoever we ask we
receive, because we keep His commandments, and do the things that are pleasing
in His sight.'
Blessed Master! teach me to apprehend fully what I only partly realize, that it
is only through the will of God, accepted and acted out in obedience to His
commands, that we obtain the power to grasp His will in His promises and fully
to appropriate them in our prayers. And teach me that it is in the path of
fruit-bearing that the deeper growth of the branch into the Vine can be
perfected, and we attain to the perfect oneness with Thyself in which we ask
whatsoever we will.
O Lord! Reveal to us, we pray Thee, how with all the hosts of heaven, and with
Thyself the Son on earth, and with all the men of faith who have glorified Thee
on earth, obedience to God is our highest privilege, because it gives access
to oneness with Himself in that which is His highest glory-His all perfect will.
And reveal to us, we pray Thee, how in keeping Thy commandments and bearing
fruit according to Thy will, our spiritual nature will grow up to the full
stature of the perfect man, with power to ask and to receive whatsoever we will.
O Lord Jesus! Reveal Thyself to us, and the reality of Thy purpose and Thy
power to make these Thy wonderful promises the daily experience of all who
utterly yield themselves to Thee and Thy words. Amen.
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With Christ in the School of Prayer by Andrew Murray - Public Domain
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