SOUL-WINNERS AND THEIR PRAYERS
"The inwrought fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth
much" (James v. 16, R.V.).
All great soul-winners have been men of much and mighty
prayer, and all great revivals have been preceded and
carried out by persevering, prevailing knee-work in the
closet. Before Jesus began His ministry, when great
multitudes followed Him, He spent forty days and nights in
secret prayer and fasting (Matt. iv. 1-11).
Paul prayed without ceasing. Day and night his prayers and
pleadings and intercessions went up to God (Acts xvi. 25;
Phil. i. 3-11; Col. i. 3, 9-11).
The Pentecostal baptism of the Spirit and the three thousand
conversions in one day were preceded by ten days of prayer
and praise and heart-searching and Bible-searching. And they
continued in prayer until, on another day, five thousand
were converted, and "a great company of the priests became
obedient to the faith" (Acts ii. 4-6; iv. 4; vi. 4-7).
Luther used to pray three hours a day, and he broke the spell of
ages and set captive nations free.
John Knox used to spend nights in prayer, and cry to God, saying,
"Give me Scotland, or I die!" and God gave him Scotland.
Baxter stained the walls of his study with praying breath, and sent
a tide of salvation through all the land.
Over and over again, Mr. Wesley in his Journals -- which, for lively
interest, are next to the Acts of the Apostles -- tells us of half,
and whole, nights of prayer, in which God drew near and blessed
people beyond expectation, and then he and his helpers were
empowered to rescue England from paganism and send a revival of
pure, aggressive religion throughout the whole earth.
David Brainerd used to lie on the frozen ground at night, wrapped in
a bear's skin, and spit blood, and cry to God to save the Indians;
and God heard him, and converted and sanctified the poor, ignorant,
heathenish, quarrelsome, drunken beings by the scores and hundreds.
The night before Jonathan Edwards preached the wonderful sermon that
started the revival which convulsed New England, he and some others
spent the night in prayer.
A young man named Livingstone, in Scotland, was appointed to preach
at one of the great assemblies. Feeling his own utter weakness, he
spent the night in prayer, and next day preached a sermon, and five
hundred people were converted. Glory to God! Oh, my Lord, raise up
some praying people!
Mr. Finney used to pray till whole communities were put under the
spell of the Spirit of God and men could not resist the mighty
influence. At one time, he was so prostrated by his labors that his
friends sent him on a voyage of rest to the Mediterranean Sea. But
he was so intent upon the salvation of men that he could not rest,
and, on his return, he got into an agony of soul for the
evangelization of the world. At last, the earnestness and agony of
his soul became so great that he prayed all day, till in the evening
he got a restful assurance that God would carry on the work. On
reaching New York, he delivered his "Revival Lectures," which were
published at home and abroad, and resulted in revivals all over the
world. Then his writings fell into the hands of Catherine Booth and
mightily influenced her; so that The Salvation Army is in part God's
answer to that man's agonizing, pleading, prevailing prayer that God
would glorify His own name and save the world.
There is a young evangelist in America who was saved from Roman
Catholicism. Everywhere he goes a "revival tornado" strikes the
place and hundreds of people are converted. I wondered wherein lay
the secret of his power, till a lady at whose house he stopped said
he prayed all the time. She could hardly get him to his meals from
his mighty wrestlings with God.
Before joining The Salvation Army, I was one day talking with Dr.
Cullis, of Boston, that man of simple, wonder-working faith. He was
showing me some photographs, and among them was one of Bramwell
Booth, our Chief of the Staff.
"There," said the doctor, "that man leads the mightiest holiness
meetings in all England."
He then told me about those famous Whitechapel meetings. When I went
to England, I determined, if possible, to find out the secret of
them.
"For one thing," said an officer, "Mr. Bramwell used to conduct
young men's meetings at headquarters at that time, and he used to
ask each saved young fellow to spend five minutes alone with God
every day, wherever they could get it, praying for those Friday
night meetings. One, who is a Brigadier now and was then employed in
a large warehouse, had to squeeze himself into a great wicker
packing-case to get a chance to pray for five minutes."
God has not changed. He waits to do the will of praying men.
Mr. Finney tells of a church in which there was a continuous revival
for thirteen years. At last the revival stopped, and everybody
feared and questioned why, till on day a tearful man arose and told
how for thirteen years he had prayed every Saturday night till after
midnight for God to glorify Himself and save the people. But two
weeks before, he had stopped this praying, and then the revival had
stopped. If God will answer prayer like that, what a tremendous
responsibility rests on us all to pray!
Oh, for a holy soldier in every corps and a believing member in
every church, who would spend half of every Saturday night in
prayer! Here is work for resting officers, and for people who cannot
go into Salvation Army work because of insurmountable difficulties.
You can do some needed knee-work.
But let no one imagine that this is easy work. It is difficult and
amounts sometimes to an agony, but it will turn to an agony of joy
in union and fellowship with Jesus. How Jesus prayed!
The other day a Captain, who prays an hour or more each morning and
half an hour before his evening meeting, and who is very successful
in getting souls saved, was lamenting to me that he often has to
force himself to secret prayer. But in this he is tempted and tried
like his brethren. All men of much prayer have suffered the same.
The Rev. Wm. Bramwell, who used to see hundreds of people converted
and sanctified everywhere he went, prayed six hours a day, and yet
he said he always went to secret prayer reluctantly. He had to pull
himself up to it. And after he began to pray, he would often have
dry seasons, but he persevered in faith, and the heavens would open,
and he would wrestle with God until the victory came. Then, when he
preached, the clouds would break and rain down blessings on the
people.
One man asked another the reason why Mr. Bramwell was able to say
such new and wonderful things, that brought blessings to so many
people. "Because he lives so near the Throne that God tells him His
secrets, and then he tells them to us," said the other.
The Rev. John Smith, whose life, William Booth once told me, had
been a marvelous inspiration to him, like Bramwell, always spent
much time in prayer. He always found it hard to begin, and then got
so blessed that it was hard to stop. Everywhere he went, mighty
revival waves went also with him.
This reluctance to secret prayer may arise from one or more of
several causes:
1. From wicked spirits. I imagine the devil does not care much to
see the majority of cold-hearted people on their knees in public,
for he knows they do it simply because it is proper and the fashion.
But he hates to see one on his knees in secret, for that man means
business, and, if he perseveres in faith, is bound to move God and
all Heaven in the interests he represents. So the devils oppose that
man.
2. From the sluggishness of the body and mind, caused by sickness,
loss of sleep, too much sleep, or overeating, which unduly taxes the
digestive organs, clogs the blood, and dulls all the higher and
nobler powers of the soul.
3. From a failure to respond quickly when we feel led by the Spirit
to go to secret prayer. If; when we feel we should pray, we hesitate
longer than is necessary and continue reading or talking when we
could just as well be praying, the spirit of prayer will be
quenched.
We should cultivate gladness at the thought of getting alone with
Jesus in secret communion and prayer, as much as lovers expect
pleasure and joy in each other's society.
We should promptly respond to the inward call to prayer. "Resist the
devil and he will flee from you," and, "Keep our bodies under, lest
after having preached to others we ourselves should be castaways."
Jesus said, "Men ought always to pray, and not to faint" (Luke
xviii. 1); and Paul said, "Pray without ceasing" (I Thess. v. 17).
One dare-devil, praying, believing man can get the victory for a
whole city or nation sometimes. Elijah did on Mount Carmel. Moses
did for backsliding Israel; Daniel did in Babylon. But if a number
of people can be led to pray in this way, the victory will be all
the more sweeping. Let no one imagine, in a wicked heart of
unbelief; that God is grudging and unwilling to answer prayer. He is
more willing to answer those whose hearts are right with Him than
parents are to give bread to their children. When Abraham prayed for
Sodom, God answered till Abraham stopped asking (Gen. xviii. 22-33).
And is He not often angry with us because we ask so timidly, and for
such small blessings, just as the prophet Elisha was angry with the
king who smote but thrice when he should have smitten five or six
times? (2 Kings xiii. 18, 19).
Let us come boldly to the Throne of Grace and ask largely, that our
joy may be full! (Heb. iv. 16).
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