Sunday, May 25, 2014

Prayer - Anna Shipton (Triumphs of Faith 7.2)

PRAYER

BY ANNA SHIPTON.


He will be very gracious unto thee at the voice of thy cry; when He shall hear it,
He will answer thee.-Is. xxx:19.

Prayer is a great fact. Men may philosophize, argue, scorn and deny its efficacy; but there it stands with its rich promises in the covenant of grace; it glows like a pillar of light in our own lives and in the lives of others. It is a trophy of the Saviour’s triumph (John xvi: 24), vested in the hand and heart of the believer, whose strength is in the Lord Jesus Christ, the power of God, and the wisdom of God.

Why do we see so little result from this hallowed power committed to a child of the dust, an heir of glory, when its exercise involves untold influences?

Wonderful to reply,-from the incredulity of Christians, whom have been allotted the positions of the prince of priest (I Peter ii:9); to whom have been intrusted the golden key of the treasury of heaven (John xv:7_, with a thousand promises to encourage the timid soul to enter into the presence-chamber with his petition. Yet with aching heart he often stands without, not knowing if the thing he desires is according to the mind of God, not asking for spiritual intelligence, which would strengthen him to ask and receive. “The Lord is at hand. Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known unto God. And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep you hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.”-(Phil. iv:5, 6, 7.) The faith that pleads, must wait in faith; for He who caused the east wind to blow, by His power can bring the south wind.

Perhaps the suppliant is weary of waiting; he has cried once, twice, thrice, to the lord, and then, fainthearted and afraid, the hands become slack, as if it were in vain to wait upon the Lord God any longer.-(2 Kings xiii:18.) To receive the fullness of his request he should have knocked six, seven, nay, seventy times, if need by; knocked according to his need, and the faithfulness of Him to whom he had made known his request. “For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the true; but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us.”-(Heb. ix 24.)

Preserving prayer is the fruit of faith and patience. If we consider God’s ways with us afortime, we shall not be discouraged when the answer tarries, to teach us that this perseverance is to nourish the hidden life. “But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it.”-(Rom. viii. 25.)

We are prone to dwell on the external trials of our natural life, as if a citizen of heaven were to be exempt from them, forgetting that we are appointed thereunto. (I Thess. iii:3.) By the exercise of faith which they involve, we are led to realize the position of the worshiper within the veil, when the Great High Priest stand to plead for and to judge his people.-(Is. iii:13.)

We can not fathom God’s purposes; but we may and often should seek Him in the circumstances that so often rise like battlements against us, in the way of service and testimony into which we have been guided by Him. “Now that the just shall live by faith; but if any man draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him.”-(Heb. x:38.)

Patience (The least sought and least cultivated fruit of the Holy Spirit) manifests by its presence that the soil that the husbandman is tilling is neither barren nor unfruitful. Let any one gather up the injunctions and promises linked with this heavenly grace, and he will assuredly more ardently desire the quiet confidence that springs from the root of faith; for “the trying of your faith worketh patience.”-(James.) And “by faith and patience we inherit the promises.”

How shall we define prayer? Where shall we limit it? As to where it begins or where it ends; what is too high or what is too mean for a subject of prayer? If the aspirations after a deeper knowledge of Christ Himself be prayer; if all the desires for the glory of God, enfolded in our longings for others to partake in the treasures hid in Jesus, be prayer; if the yearning to serve Him better in His sanctuary, and the carving of the soul for deeper, closer, more intimate communication with Him, be prayer,- then prayer is the most important of all services, the most heavenly of all occupations, the truest preparation for the endless life. The service here may be unseen of men save by its result; yet it is a perpetual testimony by its influence, and a source of marvel to principalities and powers, of the mystery of the Cross; for the Great Adversary watches for the soul that becomes strange to the mercy seat, and
            “Trembles when he sees,
               The weakest saint upon his knees.”

The incredulity of Christians as to the efficacy and necessity of prayer is one of the marvels of this age of religious ceremonial. Any one may gain a hearing with idle Christians- men will listen to sermons or addresses by the hour, who will not spend the same time alone before the mercy seat themselves. The object of the Enemy is to prevent this. If no one snare succeeds, he will fill the mind with abstruse questions, that have no bearing on the salvation, no influence to induce continual communion with the Lord; or he will weary the body with what he suggest is work for the Lord, but which is nothing more than nature’s energy, so that the jaded body, acting on the nerves, throws the shadow of despondency on its heavenly enjoyment of prayer and praise. This is Satan’s masterpiece. Then, when prayer is no longer possible, the Enemy comes down upon the sad, bewildered heart, taunting it with remembered transgressions, drawing the unwary foot to Sinai. Thus precious hours, which might have been records of the grace and goodness and glory of God, are swallowed up in self-retrospection. For the God that Satan sets before us is an austere master,-a jealous God, a righteous and implacable judge; and beneath the terrors of the law, we forget that the Father gave His beloved Son to die for one who now cries in despairing grief, as if there were no God in Zion, “The Lord hath forsaken me, and my God hath forgotten me.” Nay, hath not He declared in ancient days, and does He not repeat today, “Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? Yea, they may forget, but I will not forget thee. Behold I have graven thee upon the palms of My hands.”

“When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall life up a standard against him.”

***
He is ever waiting to be gracious, delighting in mercy, taking pleasure in the prosperity of His servants.

When David turned his harp to tell of the goodness of the Lord to the unthankful and rebellious, he declared Him “nigh to all that call upon Him in truth. He will fulfill the desire of them that fear Him; He also will hear their cry, and will save them.” David, remembering the catalogue of mercies shown to the people of Israel could tell out of his own rich experience, “In my distress I cried unto the Lord, and He heard me.”-(Ps. cxx:1.) If you place yourself in the position of blessing, you must be blest. If you have sought light, help, counsel,-believe, and you shall have it. But if we leave thy Throne of Grace, and the means of grace, with the natural satisfaction that we have done a good work, rather than that we have receive,-whether it be counsel, guidance, reproof, or whatsoever we needed,-we shall find that we have lost, not gained; lost our time, our strength, and often, in the end, our peace. We are there to receive, out of that fullness that waits to give. When we remember that every prayer is heard and considered, we shall be often led to scrutinize the form of our petitions, and what prayer really is. It is the heart’s desire that rests on Almighty love to grant-on Omnipotence alone to give.

Prayer may have been eloquent, yet have had no real need expressed, and therefore have seen no practical result. The momentary satisfaction of having spoken words with ease and fluency, will fade away as the petitioner returns into more practical life; and instead of watching unto prayer, and working out bye heavenly wisdom what the lips requested, the monetary content of having performed a duty will have passed as the morning cloud, and as the early dew it goeth away.

The need of our daily extremities to bring us face to face with Omnipotence will be more and more evident to those who seek to walk intelligently with the Lord. If the soul would grow in knowledge of Him, it must be constantly at the Source of Life.

If we would know the Lord God Almighty, who brought us out of the land of Egypt, we must wait on Him to reveal Himself to us, and not set the from and manner of that revelation in our reason or imagination. “Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God. For the Lord giveth wisdom; out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding. He layeth up sound wisdom for the righteous; he is a buckler to them that walk uprightly. He preserveth the way of His saints.”-(Prov ii:5-8.) Surely He is more ready to give than we to receive. Wherefore, then, should there be any doubt that the grace ordained shall be given? Will He withhold one good thing from His waiting people, who only rely on His faithfulness for blessing? He ever liveth to make intercession for us; and while the tempted, troubled heart sinks in its effort to rise to God, like a dove beaten in a storm, there sounds through the heavenly atmosphere, could we but catch the echo, “I have prayed for thee.” Let all the earth keep silence before Him.

            -From “Hidden Springs.”