f
all the promises connected with the command, ‘ABIDE IN ME,’ there is none
higher, and none that sooner brings the confession, ‘Not that I have
already attained, or am already made perfect,’ than this: ‘If ye abide in
me, ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto you.’ Power with God
is the highest attainment of the life of full abiding.
And of all the traits of a life LIKE CHRIST there is none higher and more
glorious than conformity to Him in the work that now engages Him without
ceasing in the Father’s presence—His all-prevailing intercession. The more
we abide in Him, and grow unto His likeness, will His priestly life work
in us mightily, and our life become what His is, a life that ever pleads
and prevails for men.
‘Thou hast made us kings and priests unto God.’ Both in the king and the
priest the chief thing is power, influence, blessing. In the king it is
the power coming downward; in the priest, the power rising upward,
prevailing with God. In our blessed Priest-King, Jesus Christ, the kingly
power is founded on the priestly ‘He is able to save to the uttermost,
because He ever liveth to make intercession.’ In us, His priests and
kings, it is no otherwise: it is in intercession that the Church is to
find and wield its highest power, that each member of the Church is to
prove his descent from Israel, who as a prince had power with God and with
men, and prevailed.
It is under a deep impression that the place and power of prayer in the
Christian life is too little understood, that this book has been written.
I feel sure that as long as we look on prayer chiefly as the means of
maintaining our own Christian life, we shall not know fully what it is
meant to be. But when we learn to regard it as the highest part of the
work entrusted to us, the root and strength of all other work, we shall
see that there is nothing that we so need to study and practise as the art
of praying aright. If I have at all succeeded in pointing out the
progressive teaching of our Lord in regard to prayer, and the distinct
reference the wonderful promises of the last night (John xiv. 16) have to
the works we are to do in His Name, to the greater works, and to the
bearing much fruit, we shall all admit that it is only when the Church
gives herself up to this holy work of intercession that we can expect the
power of Christ to manifest itself in her behalf. It is my prayer that God
may use this little book to make clearer to some of His children the
wonderful place of power and influence which He is waiting for them to
occupy, and for which a weary world is waiting too.
In connection with this there is another truth that has come to me with
wonderful clearness as I studied the teaching of Jesus on prayer. It is
this: that the Father waits to hear every prayer of faith, to give us
whatsoever we will, and whatsoever we ask in Jesus’ name. We have become
so accustomed to limit the wonderful love and the large promises of our
God, that we cannot read the simplest and clearest statements of our Lord
without the qualifying clauses by which we guard and expound them. If
there is one thing I think the Church needs to learn, it is that God means
prayer to have an answer, and that it hath not entered into the heart of
man to conceive what God will do for His child who gives himself to
believe that his prayer will be heard. God hears prayer; this is a truth
universally admitted, but of which very few understand the meaning, or
experience the power. If what I have written stir my reader to go to the
Master’s words, and take His wondrous promises simply and literally as
they stand, my object has been attained.
And then just one thing more. Thousands have in these last years found an
unspeakable blessing in learning how completely Christ is our life, and
how He undertakes to be and to do all in us that we need. I know not if we
have yet learned to apply this truth to our prayer-life. Many complain
that they have not the power to pray in faith, to pray the effectual
prayer that availeth much. The message I would fain bring them is that the
blessed Jesus is waiting, is longing, to teach them this. Christ is our
life: in heaven He ever liveth to pray; His life in us is an ever-praying
life, if we will but trust Him for it. Christ teaches us to pray not only
by example, by instruction, by command, by promises, but by showing us
HIMSELF, the ever-living Intercessor, as our Life. It is when we believe
this, and go and abide in Him for our prayer-life too, that our fears of
not being able to pray aright will vanish, and we shall joyfully and
triumphantly trust our Lord to teach us to pray, to be Himself the life
and the power of our prayer. May God open our eyes to see what the holy
ministry of intercession is to which, as His royal priesthood, we have
been set apart. May He give us a large and strong heart to believe what
mighty influence our prayers can exert. And may all fear as to our being
able to fulfil our vocation vanish as we see Jesus, living ever to pray,
living in us to pray, and standing surety for our prayer-life.
ANDREW MURRAY
WELLINGTON, 28th October 1895 |