By E. M. Bounds
WONDERS OF GOD THROUGH PRAYER
IN the fearful contest in this world between God
and the devil, between good and evil, and between heaven and hell, prayer is the
mighty force for overcoming Satan, giving dominion over sin, and defeating hell.
Only praying leaders are to be counted on in this dreadful conflict. Praying men
alone are to be put to the front. These are the only sort who are able to
successfully contend with all the evil forces. The "prayers of all
saints" are a perpetual force against all the powers of darkness. These prayers
are a mighty energy in overcoming the world, the flesh and the devil and in
shaping the destiny of God's movements, to overcome evil and get the victory
over the devil and all his works. The character and energy of God's movements
lie in prayer. Victory is to come at the end of praying. The wonders of
God's power are to be kept alive, made real and present, and repeated only by
prayer. God is not now so evident in the world, so almighty in manifestation as
of old, not because miracles have passed away, nor because God has ceased to
work, but because prayer has been shorn of its simplicity, its majesty, and its
power. God still lives, and miracles still live while God lives and acts, for
miracles are God's ways of acting. Prayer is dwarfed, withered and petrified
when faith in God is staggered by doubts of His ability, or through the
shrinking caused by fear. When faith has a telescopic, far-off vision of God,
prayer works no miracles, and brings no marvels of deliverance. But when God is
seen by faith's closest, fullest eye, prayer makes a history of
wonders. Think about God. Make much of Him, till He broadens and fills
the horizon of faith. Then prayer will come into its marvellous inheritance of
wonders. The marvels of prayer are seen when we remember that God's purposes are
changed by prayer, God's vengeance is stayed by prayer, and God's penalty is
remitted by prayer. The whole range of God's dealing with man is affected by
prayer. Here is a force which must be increasingly used, that of prayer, a force
to which all the events of life ought to be subjected. To "pray without
ceasing," to pray in everything, and to pray everywhere -- these commands of
continuity are expressive of the sleepless energy of prayer, of the exhaustless
possibilities of prayer, and of its exacting necessity. Prayer can do all
things. Prayer must do all things.
Prayer is asking God for something, and for something which He has promised. Prayer is using the divinely appointed means for obtaining what we need and for accomplishing what God proposes to do on earth.
And prayer brings to us blessings which we need,
and which only God can give, and which prayer can alone convey to us. In
their broadest fullness, the possibilities of prayer are to be found in the very
nature of prayer. This service of prayer is not a mere rite, a ceremony through
which we go, a sort of performance. Prayer is going to God for something needed
and desired. Prayer is simply asking God to do for us what He has promised us He
will do if we ask Him. The answer is a part of prayer, and is God's part of it.
God's doing the thing asked for is as much a part of the prayer as the asking of
the thing is prayer. Asking is man's part. Giving is God's part. The praying
belongs to us. The answer belongs to God. Man makes the plea and God
makes the answer. The plea and the answer compose the prayer. God is more ready,
more willing and more anxious to give the answer than man is to give the asking.
The possibilities of prayer lie in the ability of man to ask large things and in
the ability of God to give large things. God's only condition and
limitation of prayer is found in the character of the one who prays. The measure
of our faith and praying is the measure of His giving. Like as our Lord said to
the blind man, "According to your faith be it unto you," so it is the same in
praying, "According to the measure of your asking, be it unto you." God measures
the answer according to the prayer. He is limited by the law of prayer in the
measure of the answers He gives to prayer. As is the measure of prayer, so will
be the answer. If the person praying has the characteristics which
warrant praying, then the possibilities are illimitable. They are declared to be
"all things whatsoever." Here is no limitation in character or kind, in
circumference or condition. The man who prays can pray for anything and for
everything, and God will give everything and anything. If we limit God in the
asking, He will be limited in the giving. Looking ahead, God declares in
His Word that the wonder of wonders will be so great in the last days that
everything animate and inanimate will be excited by His power:
But these days of God's mighty working, the days of His magnificent and wonder-creating power, will be days of magnificent praying.
It has ever been so. God's marvellous, miracle-working times have been times of marvellous, miracle-working praying. The greatest thing in God's worship by His own estimate is praying. Its chief service and its distinguishing feature is prayer:
This was true under all the gorgeous rites and
parade of ceremonies under the Jewish worship. Sacrifice, offering and the
atoning blood were all to be impregnated with prayer. The smoke of burnt
offering and perfumed incense which filled God's house was to be but the flame
of prayer, and all of God's people were to be anointed priests to minister at
His altar of prayer. So all things were to be done with mighty prayer, because
mighty prayer was the fruitage and inspiration of mighty faith. But much more is
it now true every way under the more simple service of the Gospel. The
course of nature, the movements of the planets, and the clouds, have yielded to
the influence of prayer, and God has changed and checked the order of the sun
and the seasons under the mighty energies of prayer. It is only necessary to
note the remarkable incident when Joshua, through this divine means of prayer,
caused the sun and the moon to stand still in order that a more complete victory
could be given to the armies of Israel in the contest with the armies of the
Amorites. If we believe God's word, we are bound to believe that prayer
affects God, and affects Him mightily; that prayer avails, and that prayer
avails mightily. There are wonders in prayer because there are wonders in God.
Prayer has no talismanic influence. It is no mere fetish. It has no so-called
powers of magic. It is simply making known our requests to God for things
agreeable to His will in the name of Christ. It is just yielding our requests to
a Father, who knows all things, who has control of all things, and who is able
to do all things. Prayer is infinite ignorance trusting to the wisdom of God.
Prayer is the voice of need crying out to Him who is inexhaustible in resources.
Prayer is helplessness reposing with childlike confidence on the word of its
Father in heaven. Prayer is but the verbal expression of the heart of perfect
confidence in the infinite wisdom, the power and the riches of Almighty God, who
has placed at our command in prayer everything we need. How all the gracious
results of such gracious times are to come to the world through prayer, we are
taught in God's Word. God's heart seems to overflow with delight at the prospect
of thus blessing His people. By the mouth of the Prophet Joel, God thus
speaks:
What wonderful material things are these which God proposes to bestow upon His people! They are marvellous temporal blessings He promises to bestow on them. They almost astonish the mind when they are studied. But God does not restrict His large blessings to temporal things. Looking down the ages, He foresees Pentecost, and makes these exceeding great and precious promises concerning the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, these very words being quoted by Peter on that glad day of Pentecost:
But these marvellous blessings will not be bestowed upon the people by sovereign power, nor be given unconditionally. God's people must do something precedent to such glorious results. Fasting and prayer must play an important part as conditions of receiving such large blessings. By the mouth of the same prophet, God thus speaks:
Prayer reaches even as far as does the presence of God go. It reaches everywhere because God is everywhere. Let us read from Psalm 139:1:
This may be said as truly of prayer as it is said
of the God of prayer. The mysteries of death have been fathomed by prayer, and
its victims have been brought back to life by the power of prayer, because God
holds dominion over death, and prayer reaches where God reigns. Elisha and
Elijah both invaded the realms of death by their prayers, and asserted and
established the power of God as the power of prayer. Peter by prayer brings back
to life the saintly Dorcas to the early Church. Paul doubtless exercised the
power of prayer as he fell upon and embraced Eutychus who fell out of the window
when Paul preached at night. Our Lord several times explicitly declared
the far-reaching possibilities and the illimitable nature of prayer as covering
"all things whatsoever." The conditions of prayer are exalted into a personal
union with Himself. That successful praying glorified God was the condition upon
which labourers of first quality and sufficient in numbers were to be secured in
order to press forward God's work in the world. The giving of all good things is
conditioned upon asking for them. The giving of the Holy Spirit to God's
children is based upon the asking of the children of God. God's will on earth
can only be secured by prayer. Daily bread is obtained and sanctified by prayer.
Reverence, forgiveness of sins, and deliverance from the evil one, and salvation
from temptation, are in the hands of prayer. The first jewelled
foundation Christ lays as the basic principle of His religion in the Sermon on
the Mount reads on this wise: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven." As prayer follows from the inner sense of need, and prayer
is the utterance of a deep poverty-stricken spirit, so it is evident he who is
"poor in spirit" is where he can pray and where he does pray. Prayer is a
tremendous force in the world. Take this picture of prayer and its wonderful
possibilities. God's cause is quiet and motionless on the earth. An angel,
strong and impatient to be of service, waits round about the throne of God in
heaven, and in order to move things on earth and give impetus to the movements
of God's cause in this world, he gathers all the prayers of all God's saints in
all ages, and puts them before God just like Aaron used to cloud, flavour and
sweeten himself with the delicious incense when he entered the holy sanctuary,
made awful by the immediate presence of God. The angel impregnates all the air
with that holy offering of prayers, and then takes its fiery body and casts it
on the earth. Note the remarkable result. "There were voices and
thunderings and lightnings and an earthquake." What tremendous force is this
which has thus convulsed the earth? The answer is that it is the "prayers of the
saints," turned loose by the angel round about the throne, who has charge of
those prayers. This mighty force is prayer, like the power of earth's mightiest
dynamite. Take another fact showing the wonders of prayer wrought by
Almighty God in answer to the praying of His true prophet. The nation of God's
people was fearfully apostate in head and heart and life. A man of God went to
the apostate king with the fearful message which meant so much to the land,
"There shall not be rain nor dew these years but according to my word." Whence
this mighty force which can stay the clouds, seal up the rain, and hold back the
dew? Who is this who speaks with such authority? Is there any force which can do
this on earth? Only one, and that force is prayer, wielded in the hands of a
praying prophet of God. It is he who has influence with God and over God in
prayer, who thus dares to assume such authority over the forces of nature. This
man Elijah is skilled in the use of that tremendous force. "And Elijah prayed
earnestly, and it rained not on the earth for three years and six
months." But this is not all the story. He who could by prayer lock up
the clouds and seal up the rain, could also unlock. the clouds and unseal the
rain by the same mighty power of prayer. "And he prayed again, and the heaven
gave rain, and the earth gave forth her fruit." Mighty is the power of
prayer. Wonderful are its fruits. Remarkable things are brought to pass by men
of prayer. Many are the wonders of prayer wrought by an Almighty hand. The
evidences of prayer's accomplishments almost stagger us. They challenge our
faith. They encourage our expectations when we pray. From a cursory
compend like this, we get a bird's-eye view of the large possibilities of prayer
and the urgent necessity of prayer. We see how God commits Himself into the
hands of those who truly pray. Great are the wonders of prayer because great is
the God who hears and answers prayer. Great are these wonders because great are
the rich promises made by a great God to those who pray. We have seen
prayer's far-reaching possibilities and its absolute, unquestioned necessity,
and we have also seen that the foregoing particulars and elaboration were
requisite in order to bring the subject more clearly, truly and strongly before
our minds. The Church more than ever needs profound convictions of the vast
importance of prayer in prosecuting the work committed to it. More praying must
be done and better praying if the Church shall be able to perform the difficult,
delicate and responsible task given to it by her Lord and Master. Defeat awaits
a non-praying Church. Success is sure to follow a Church given to much prayer.
The supernatural element in the Church, without which it must fail, comes only
through praying. More time, in this busy bustling age, must be given to prayer
by a God-called Church. More thought must be given to prayer in this
thoughtless, silly age of superficial religion. More heart and soul must be in
the praying that is done if the Church would go forth in the strength of her
Lord and perform the wonders which is her heritage by Divine promise.
It might be in order to give an instance or two in the life of Rev. John Wesley, showing some remarkable displays of spiritual power. Many times it is stated this noted man gathered his company together, and prayed all night, or till the mighty power of God came upon them. It was at a Watch Night service, at Fetter Lane, December 31, 1738, when Charles and John Wesley, with Whitfield, sat up till after midnight singing and praying. This is the account:
On another occasion, Mr. Wesley gives us this account:
Often does this godly man make the record to this
effect, "We continued in ministering the Word and in prayer and praise till
morning." One of his all-night wrestlings in prayer alone with God is
said to have greatly affected a Catholic priest, who was really awakened by the
occurrence to a realization of his spiritual condition. As often as God
manifested His power in Scriptural times in working wonders through prayer, He
has not left Himself without witness in modern times. Prayer brings the Holy
Spirit upon men to-day in answer to importunate, continued prayer just as it did
before Pentecost. The wonders of prayer have not ceased. |
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