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The Power Of Prayer
R. A. Torey |
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I BRING YOU A MESSAGE FROM GOD contained in seven short
words. Six of the seven words are monosyllables, and the remaining word
has but two syllables and is one of the most familiar and most easily
understood words in the English language. Yet there is so much in these
seven short, simple words that they have transformed many a life and
brought many an inefficient worker into a place of great power.
I spoke on these seven words some years ago at a Bible conference in
central New York. Some months after the conference, I received a letter
from the man who had presided at the conference, one of the best-known
ministers of the gospel in America. He wrote me, "I have been unable to
get away from the seven words on which you spoke at Lake Keuka, they have
been with me day and night. They have transformed my ideas, transformed my
methods, transformed my ministry." The man who wrote those words has since
been the pastor of what is probably the most widely known of any
evangelical church in the world. I trust that the words may sink into some
of your hearts today as they did into his on that occasion and that some
of you will be able to say in future months and years, "I have been unable
to get away from those seven words, they nave seen with me day and night.
They have transformed my ideas, transformed my methods, transformed my
life, and transformed my service for God."
You will find these seven words in James 4:2, the seven closing words of
the verse, "Ye have not, because ye ask not. "
The Secret of Christians' Powerlessness
These seven words contain the secret of the poverty and powerlessness of
the average Christian, of the average minister, and of the average church.
"Why is it," many a Christian is asking, "that I make such poor progress
in my Christian life? Why do I have so little victory over sin? Why do I
win so few souls to Christ? Why do I grow so slowly into the likeness of
my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ?" And God answers in the words of the
text: "Neglect of prayer. You have not, because you ask not."
"Why is it," many a minister is asking, "that I see so little fruit from
my ministry? Why are there so few conversions? Why does my church grow so
slowly? Why are the members of my church so little helped by my ministry,
and built up so little in Christian knowledge and life?" And again God
replies: "Neglect of prayer. You have not, because you ask not."
"Why is it," both ministers and churches are asking, "that the church of
Jesus Christ is making such slow progress in the world today? Why does it
make so little headway against sin, against unbelief, against error in all
its forms? Why does it have so little victory over the world, the flesh,
and the devil? Why is the average church member living on such a low plane
of Christian living? Why does the Lord Jesus Christ get so little honor
from the state of the church today?" And, again, God replies: "Neglect of
prayer. You have not, because you ask not."
The Early Church's Victory
When we read the only inspired church history that was ever written, the
history of the church in the days of the apostles as it is recorded by
Luke (under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit) in the Acts of the
Apostles, what do we find? We find a story of constant victory, a story of
perpetual progress. We read, for example, such statements as Acts 2:47:
"The Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved" and Acts 4:4:
"Many of them which heard the word believed; and the number of the men was
about five thousand," and Acts 5:14: "And believers were the more added to
the Lord, multitudes both of men and women." In addition Luke in Acts 6:7
states: "And the word of God increased: and the number of the disciples
multiplied in Jerusalem greatly; and a great company of the priests were
obedient to the faith."
And so we go on, chapter after chapter, through the twenty-eight chapters
of Acts, and in every one of the twenty-seven chapters after the first, we
find the same note of victory. I once went through the Acts of the
Apostles marking the note of victory in every chapter, and without one
single exception the triumphant shout of victory rang out in every
chapter. How different the history of the church as here recorded is from
the history of the church of Jesus Christ today. Take, for example, that
first statement, "The Lord added to the church daily [that is, every day]
such as should be saved." Why, nowadays, if we have a revival once a year
with an accession of fifty or sixty members and spend all the rest of the
year slipping back to where we were before, we think we are doing pretty
well. But in those days there was a revival all the time and accessions
every day of those who not only "hit the trail" but "were [really] being
saved."
Why this difference between the early church and the church of Jesus
Christ today? Someone will answer, "Because there is so much opposition
today." Ah, but there was opposition in those days, most bitter, most
determined, most relentless opposition in comparison with which that which
you and I meet today is but child's play. But the early church went right
on beating down all opposition, surmounting every obstacle, conquering
every foe, always victorious, right on without a setback from Jerusalem to
Rome, in the face of the most firmly entrenched and most mighty heathenism
and unbelief. I repeat the question, "Why was it?" If you will turn to the
chapters from which I have already quoted, you will get your answer.
Steadfast Prayer
Turn, for example, to Acts 2:42: "And they continued steadfastly in the
apostles' doctrine and fellowship, in breaking of bread and in prayers."
That is a picture very brief but very suggestive of the early church. It
was a praying church. It was a church in which they prayed, not merely
occasionally, but where they all "continued steadfastly . . . in prayers."
They all prayed, not a select few, but the whole membership of the church;
and all prayed continuously with steadfast determination. "They gave
themselves to prayer," as the same Greek word is translated in Acts 6:4.
Now turn to Acts 6:4 and you will get the rest of your answer. "We will
give ourselves continually to prayer." That is a picture of the apostolic
ministry: it was a praying ministry, and a ministry that "gave themselves
continually to prayer," or, to translate that Greek word as it is
translated in former passage (Acts 2:42), "They continued steadfastly in
prayer." A praying church and a praying ministry! Ah, such a church and
such a ministry can achieve anything that ought to be achieved. It will go
steadily on, beating down all opposition, surmounting every obstacle,
conquering every foe, just as much today as it did in the days of the
apostles.
Present-day Departure From Prayer
There is nothing else in which the church and the ministry of today or, to
be more explicit, you and I have departed more notably and more lamentably
from apostolic precedent than in this matter of prayer. We do not live in
a praying age. A very considerable proportion of the membership of our
evangelical churches today do not believe even theoretically in prayer.
Many of them now believe in prayer as having a beneficial "reflex
influence," that is, as benefitting the person who prays, a sort of
lifting yourself up by your spiritual bootstraps. But as for prayer
bringing anything to pass that would not have come to pass if we had not
prayed, they do not believe in it, and many of them frankly say so, and
even some of our "modern ministers" say so. I believe it is still the vast
majority in our evangelical churches-even they do not make the use of this
mighty instrument that God has put into our hands that one would naturally
expect. As I said, we do not live in a praying age. We live in an age of
hustle and bustle, of man's efforts and man's determination, of man's
confidence in himself and in his own power to achieve things, an age of
human organization and human machinery, human push and human scheming, and
human achievement, which in the things of God means no real achievement at
all.
I think it would be perfectly safe to say that the church of Christ was
never in all its history so fully, so skillfully and so thoroughly and so
perfectly organized as it is today. Our machinery is wonderful; it is just
perfect, but, alas, it is machinery without power; and when things do not
go right, instead of going to the real source of our failure, our neglect
to depend on God and look to God for power, we look around to see if there
is not some new organization we can get up, some new wheel that we can add
to our machinery. We have altogether too many wheels already. What we need
is not so much some new organization, some new wheel, but "the Spirit of
the living creature in the wheels" we already possess.
I believe that the devil stands and looks at the church today and laughs
in his sleeve as he sees how its members depend on their own scheming and
powers of organization and skillfully devised machinery. "Ha, ha," he
laughs, "you may have your Boy Scouts, your costly church edifices, your
multi-thousand-dollar church organs, your brilliant university-bred
preachers, your high-priced choirs, your gifted sopranos and altos and
tenors and bases, your wonderful quartets, your immense men's Bible
classes, yes, and your Bible conferences, and your Bible institutes, and
your special evangelistic services, all you please of them; it does not in
the feast trouble me, if you will only leave out of them the power of the
Lord God Almighty sought and obtained by the earnest, persistent,
believing prayer that will not take no for an answer." But when the devil
sees a man or woman who really believes in prayer, who knows how to pray,
and who really does pray, and, above all, when he sees a whole church on
its face before God in prayer, "he trembles" as much as he ever did, for
he knows that his day in that church or community is at an end.
Prayer has as much power today, when men and women are themselves on
praying ground and meeting the conditions of prevailing prayer, as it ever
has had. God has not changed, and His ear is just as quick to hear the
voice of real prayer and His hand is just as long and strong to save as
they ever were. "Behold, the Lord's hand is not shortened, that it cannot
save: neither his ear heavy, that it cannot hear. But our iniquities may
"have separated between us and our God, and "our sins have hid his face
from you, that he will not hear" (Isaiah 59:1,2). Prayer is the key that
unlocks all the storehouses of God's infinite grace and power. All that
God is, and all that God has, are at the disposal of player. But we must
use the key. Prayer can do anything that God can do, and as God can do
anything, prayer is omnipotent. No one can stand against the one who knows
how to pray and who meets all the conditions of prevailing prayer and who
really prays. "The Lord God Omnipotent" works from him and works through
him.
Prayer Will Promote Our Personal Holiness as
Nothing Else, Except the Study of the Word of God
But what, specifically, will prayer do? We have been dealing in
generalities; let us come down to the definite and specific. The Word of
God very plainly answers the question.
In the first place, prayer will promote our personal piety, our individual
holiness, our individual growth into the likeness of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ as almost nothing else, as nothing else but the study of the
Word of God. These two things, prayer and study of the Word of God, always
go hand-in-hand, for there is no true prayer without study of the Word of
God, and there is no true study of the Word of God without prayer.
Other things being equal, your growth and mine into the likeness of our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ will be in exact proportion to the time and
to the heart we put into prayer. Please note exactly what I say: "Your
growth and mine into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ will
be in exact proportion to the time and to the heart we put into prayer." I
put it in that way because there are many who put a great deal of time but
so little heart into their praying that they do very little praying in the
long time they spend at it.
On the other hand, there are others who, perhaps, may not put so much time
into praying but put so much heart into praying that they accomplish
vastly more by their praying in a short time than the others accomplish by
praying in a long time. God Himself has told us in Jeremiah 29: 13: "And
ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your
heart."
We are told in Ephesians 1:3, that God "hash blessed us with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in -Christ." That is to say,
Jesus Christ by His atoning death and by His resurrection and ascension to
the right hand of the Father has obtained for every believer in Jesus
Christ every possible spiritual blessing. There is no spiritual blessing
that any believer enjoys that may not be yours. It belongs to you now;
Christ purchased it by His atoning death and God has provided it in Him.
It is there for you; but it is your part to claim it, to put out your hand
and take it. God's appointed way for claiming blessings by putting out
your hand and appropriating to yourself the blessings that are procured
for you by the atoning death of Jesus Christ is by prayer. Prayer is the
hand that takes to ourselves the blessings that God has already provided
in His Son.
Go through your Bible and you will find it definitely stated that every
conceivable spiritual blessing is obtained by prayer. For example, it is
in answer to prayer, as we learn from Psalm 139:23, 24, that God searches
us and knows our hearts, tries us and knows our thoughts, brings to light
the sin that there is in us and delivers us from it. It is in answer to
prayer, as we learn from Psalm 19:12,13, that we are cleansed from secret
faults and that God keeps us back from presumptuous sins. It is in answer
to prayer, as we learn from the 14th verse of the same Psalm, that the
words of our mouth and the meditations of our heart are made acceptable in
God's sight. It is in answer to prayer, as we learn from Psalm 25:4,5,
that God shows us His ways, teaches us His path, and guides us in His
truth. It is in answer to prayer, as we learn from the prayer our Lord
Himself taught us, that we are kept from temptation and delivered from the
power of the wicked one (Matthew 6:13). It is in answer to prayer, as we
learn from Luke 11:13, that God gives us His Holy Spirit. And so we might
go on through the whole catalog of spiritual blessings and find that every
one is obtained by asking for it. Indeed, our Lord Himself has said in
Matthew 7:11: "If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your
children, how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good
things to them that ask him."
One of the most instructive and suggestive passages in the entire Bible as
showing the mighty power of prayer to transform us into the likeness of
our Lord Jesus Himself, is found in 2 Corinthians 3:18: "But we all, with
open face beholding as in a glass [The English Revision reads better,
"reflecting as a mirror"] the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same
image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord." The thought
is that the Lord is the sun, you and I are mirrors, and just as a
mischievous boy on a bright sunshiny day will catch the rays of the sun in
a piece of broken looking-glass and reflect them into your eyes and mine
with almost blinding power, so we, as mirrors, when we commune with God,
catch the rays of His moral glory and reflect them out on the world "from
glory to glory." That is, each time we commune with Him we catch something
new of His glory and reflect it out on the world.
I'm sure you remember the story of Moses, how he went up into the mount
and tarried about forty days with God, gazing on that ineffable glory, and
caught so much of the glory in his own face that when he came down from
the mount, though he himself did not know it, his face so shone that he
had to draw a veil over it to hide the blinding glory of it from his
fellow Israelites.
Even so we, going up into the mount of prayer, away from the world, alone
with God, catch the rays of His glory, so that when we come down to other
people, it is not so much our faces that shine (though I do believe that
sometimes even our faces shine), but our characters, with the glory that
we have been beholding. We then reflect out on the world the moral glory
of God from "glory to glory," each new time of communion with Him catching
something new of His glory to reflect out on the world. Oh, here is the
secret of becoming much like God by remaining long alone with God. If you
won't stay long with Him, you won't be much like Him.
One of the most remarkable men in Scotland's history was John Welch,
son-in-law of John Knox, the great Scotch reformer; he is as well-known as
his famous father-in-law, but in some respects a far more remarkable man
than John Knox himself. Most people have the idea that it was John Knox
who prayed, "Give me Scotland or I die." It was not, it was John Welch,
his son-in-law. John Welch put it on record before he died that he counted
that day ill-spent that he did not put seven or eight hours into secret
prayer. When John Welch came to die, an old Scotchman who had known him
from his boyhood said of him, "John Welch was a type of Christ." Of
course, that was an inaccurate use of language, but what the old Scotchman
meant was, that Jesus Christ had stamped the impress of His character on
John Welch. When had Jesus Christ done it? In those seven or eight hours
of daily communion with Himself. I do not suppose that God has called many
of us, if any of us, to put seven or eight hours a day into prayer, but I
am confident God has called most of us, if not every one of us, to put
more time into prayer than we now do. That is one of the great secrets of
holiness, indeed, the only way in which we can become really holy and
continue holy.
Some years ago we often sang a hymn, "Take Time to Be Holy." I wish we
sang it more in these days. It takes time to be holy, one cannot be holy
in a hurry, and much of the time that it takes to be holy must go into
secret prayer. Some people express surprise that professing Christians
today are so little like their Lord, but when I stop to think how little
time the average Christian today puts into secret prayer the thing that
astonished me is, not that we are so little like the Lord, but that we are
as much like the Lord as we are, when we take so little time for secret
prayer.
Prayer Will Bring the Power of God Into Our Work
But not only will prayer promote as almost nothing else our personal
holiness, but prayer will also bring the power of God into our work. We
read in Isaiah 40:31: "They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their
strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and
not be weary; and they shall walk [plod right along day after day, which
is far harder than running or flying], and not faint."
It is the privilege of every child of God to have the power of God in his
service. And the verse just quoted tells us how to obtain it, and that is
by "waiting upon the Lord." Sometimes you will hear people stand up in a
meeting, not so frequently perhaps in these days as in former days, and
say: "I am trying to serve God in my poor, weak way." Well, if you are
trying to serve God in your poor, weak way, quit it; your duty is to serve
God in His strong, triumphant way. But you say, "I have no natural
ability." Then get supernatural ability.
The religion of Jesus Christ is a supernatural religion from start to
finish, and we should live our lives in supernatural power, the power of
God through Jesus Christ, and we should perform our service with
supernatural power, the power of God ministered by the Holy Spirit through
Jesus Christ. You say, "I have no natural gifts." Then get supernatural
gifts. The Holy Spirit is promised to every believer in order that he may
obtain the supernatural gifts which qualify him for the particular service
to which God calls him. "He [The Holy Spirit] divideth to each one [that
is, to each and every believer] severally even as he will" ([Corinthians
12:11). It is ours to have the power of God if we will only seek it by
prayer in any and every line of service to which God calls us.
Are you a mother or a father? Do you wish power from God to bring your own
children up in the "nurture and admonition of the Lord"? God commands you
to do it and especially commands the father to do it. God says in
Ephesians 6:4: "Ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring
them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord."
Now, God never commands the impossible, and as He commands us fathers, and
the mothers also, to bring our children up in the nuture and admonition of
the Lord, it is possible for us to do it. If any one of your children is
not saved, the first blame lies at your own door. Paul said to the jailer
in Philippi: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved,
and thy house" (Acts 16:31).
Oh, mothers and fathers, it is your privilege to have every one of your
children saved. But it costs something to have them saved. It costs your
spending much time alone with God, to be much in prayer, and it costs also
your making those sacrifices and straightening out those things in your
life that are wrong; it costs the fulfilling the conditions of prevailing
prayer. And if any of you have unsaved children, when you go home today
get alone with God and ask God to show you what it is in your own life
that is responsible for the present condition of your children. Straighten
it out at once and then get down alone before God and hold to Him in
earnest prayer for the definite conversion of each one of your children.
Do not rest until, by prayer and by your putting forth every effort, you
know beyond question that every one of your children is definitely and
positively converted and born again.
Are you in more public work, a preacher perhaps, or speaking from the
public platform? Do you long for power in that work? Ask for it. |
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