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  |   | Purpose In Prayer- EM Bounds-Chapter 2 « Thread Started on Aug 28, 2012, 9:29pm » |     ![[Delete] [Delete]](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_sm7fQ489q78qKNGnABhdudeKXfyrI0pvPFWl5I5B6VMsD37MFxFXHY2WXvsUt_8OvtqlX0x05fB5q3N3wEC71K0Fgr1xTM5G1xuAog8f0xG8SHg5A=s0-d)  |    "That we ought to give ourselves to God with regard to things both  temporal and spiritual, and seek our satisfaction only in the fulfilling  His will, whether He lead us by suffering, or by consolation, for all  would be equal to a Soul truly resigned. Prayer is nothing else but a  sense of God’s presence."—Brother Lawrence "Be sure you look to your  secret duty; keep that up whatever you do. The soul cannot prosper in  the neglect of it. Apostasy generally begins at the closet door. Be much  in secret fellowship with God. It is secret trading that enriches the  Christian.
  "Pray alone. Let prayer be the key of the morning and  the bolt at night. The best way to fight against sin is to fight it on  our knees."—Philip Henry
  "The prayer of faith is the only power  in the universe to which the Great Jehovah yields. Prayer is the  sovereign remedy."—Robert Hall
  "An hour of solitude passed in  sincere and earnest prayer, or the conflict with and conquest over a  single passion or subtle bosom sin will teach us more of thought, will  more effectually awaken the faculty and form the habit of reflection  than a year’s study in the schools without them."—Coleridge
  "A  man may pray night and day and deceive himself, but no man can be  assured of his sincerity who does not pray. Prayer is faith passing into  act. A union of the will and intellect realising in an intellectual  act. It is the whole man that prays. Less than this is wishing or lip  work, a sham or a mummery.
  "If God should restore me again to  health I have determined to study nothing but the Bible. Literature is  inimical to spirituality if it be not kept under with a firm  hand."—Richard Cecil
  "Our sanctification does not depend upon  changing our works, but in doing that for God’s. sake which we commonly  do for our own. The time of business does not with me differ from the  time of prayer. Prayer is nothing else but a sense of the presence of  God."—Brother Lawrence
  "Let me burn out for God. After all,  whatever God may appoint, prayer is the great thing. Oh that I may be a  man of prayer."—Henry Martyn
  The possibilities and necessity of  prayer, its power and results are manifested in arresting and changing  the purposes of God and in relieving the stroke of His power. Abimelech  was smitten by God: So Abraham prayed unto God: and God healed Abimelech, and his wife, and his maid-servants; and they bare children.
  For the Lord had fast closed up all the wombs of the house of Abimelech, because of Sarah Abraham’s wife.
  Job’s  miserable, mistaken, comforters had so deported themselves in their  controversy with Job that God’s wrath was kindled against them. “My  servant Job shall pray for you,” said God, “for him will I accept.”
  “And the Lord turned the captivity of Job when he prayed for his friends.”
  Jonah  was in dire condition when “the Lord sent out a great wind into the  sea, and there was a mighty tempest.” When lots were cast, “the lot fell  upon Jonah.” He was cast overboard into the sea, but “the Lord had  prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah ... Then Jonah prayed unto the  Lord his God out of the fish’s belly ... and the Lord spake unto the  fish, and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry land.”
  When the disobedient prophet lifted up his voice in prayer, God heard and sent deliverance.
  Pharaoh  was a firm believer in the possibilities of prayer, and its ability to  relieve. When staggering under the woeful curses of God, he pleaded with  Moses to intercede for him. “Intreat the Lord for me,” was his pathetic  appeal four times repeated when the plagues were scourging Egypt. Four  times were these urgent appeals made to Moses, and four times did prayer  lift the dread curse from the hard king and his doomed land.
  The  blasphemy and idolatry of Israel in making the golden calf and  declaring their devotions to it were a fearful crime. The anger of God  waxed hot, and He declared that He would destroy the offending people.  The Lord was very wroth with Aaron also, and to Moses He said, “Let Me  alone that I may destroy theme—But Moses prayed, and kept on praying;  day and night he prayed forty days. He makes the record of his prayer  struggle. “I fell down,” he says, “before the Lord at the first forty  days and nights; I did neither eat bread nor drink water because of your  sins which ye sinned in doing wickedly in the sight of the Lord to  provoke Him to anger. For I was afraid of the anger and hot displeasure  wherewith the Lord was hot against you to destroy you. But the Lord  hearkened to me at this time also. And the Lord was very angry with  Aaron to have destroyed him. And I prayed for him also at the same  time.”
  “Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. It was  the purpose of God to destroy that great and wicked city. But Nineveh  prayed, covered with sackcloth; sitting in ashes she cried “mightily to  God,” and “God repented of the evil that He said He would do unto them;  and He did it not.”
  The message of God to Hezekiah was: “Set  thine house in order; for thou shalt die and not live.” Hezekiah turned  his face toward the wall, and prayed unto the Lord, and said: “Remember  now, O Lord, I beseech Thee, how I have walked before Thee in truth, and  with a perfect heart, and have done that which is good in Thy sight.”  And Hezekiah wept sore. God said to Isaiah, “Go, say to Hezekiah, I have  heard thy prayer, I have seen thy tears; behold, I will add unto thy  days fifteen years.”
  These men knew how to pray and how to  prevail in prayer. Their faith in prayer was no passing attitude that  changed with the wind or with their own feelings and circumstances; it  was a fact that God heard and answered, that His ear was ever open to  the cry of His children, and that the power to do what was asked of Him  was commensurate with His willingness. And thus these men, strong in  faith and in prayer, “subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained  promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the power of fire,  escaped the edge of the sword, from weakness were made strong, waxed  mighty in war, turned to flight the armies of the aliens.”
  Everything  then, as now, was possible to the men and women who knew how to pray.  Prayer, indeed, opened a limitless storehouse, and God’s hand withheld  nothing. Prayer introduced those who practised it into a world of  privilege, and brought the strength and wealth of heaven down to the aid  of finite man. What rich and wonderful power was theirs who had learned  the secret of victorious approach to God! With Moses it saved a nation;  with Ezra it saved a church.
  And yet, strange as it seems when  we contemplate the wonders of which God’s people had been witness, there  came a slackness in prayer. The mighty hold upon God, that had so often  struck awe and terror into the hearts of their enemies, lost its grip.  The people, backslidden and apostate, had gone off from their praying—if  the bulk of them had ever truly prayed. The Pharisee’s cold and  lifeless praying was substituted for any genuine approach to God, and  because of that formal method of praying the whole worship became a  parody of its real purpose. A glorious dispensation, and gloriously  executed, was it by Moses, by Ezra, by Daniel and Elijah, by Hannah and  Samuel; but the circle seems limited and shortlived; the praying ones  were few and far between. They had no survivors, none to imitate their  devotion to God, none to preserve the roll of the elect.
  In vain  had the decree established the Divine order, the Divine call. Ask of Me.  From the earnest and fruitful crying to God they turned their faces to  pagan gods, and cried in vain for the answers that could never come. And  so they sank into that godless and pitiful state that has lost its  object in life when the link with the Eternal has been broken. Their  favoured dispensation of prayer was forgotten; they knew not how to  pray. What a contrast to the achievements that brighten up other  pages of holy writ. The power working through Elijah and Elisha in  answer to prayer reached down even to the very grave. In each case a  child was raised from the dead, and the powers of famine were broken.  “The supplications of a righteous man avail much.” Elijah was a man of  like passions with us. He prayed fervently that it might not rain, and  it rained not on the earth for three years and six months. And he prayed  again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her fruit.  Jonah prayed while imprisoned in the great fish, and he came to dry  land, saved from storm and sea and monsters of the deep by the mighty  energy of his praying.
  How wide the gracious provision of the  grace of praying as administered in that marvellous dispensation. They  prayed wondrously. Why could not their praying save the dispensation  from decay and death? Was it not because they lost the fire without  which all praying degenerates into a lifeless form? It takes effort and  toil and care to prepare the incense. Prayer is no laggard’s work. When  all the rich, spiced graces from the body of prayer have by labour and  beating been blended and refined and intermixed, the fire is needed to  unloose the incense and make its fragrance rise to the throne of God.  The fire that consumes creates the spirit and life of the incense.  Without fire prayer has no spirit; it is, like dead spices, for  corruption and worms.
  The casual, intermittent prayer is never  bathed in this Divine fire. For the man who thus prays is lacking in the  earnestness that lays hold of God, determined not to let Him go until  the blessing comes. “Pray without ceasing,” counselled the great  Apostle. That is the habit that drives prayer right into the mortar that  holds the building stones together. “You can do more than pray after  you have prayed,” said the godly Dr. A. J. Gordon, “but you cannot do  more than pray until you have prayed.” The story of every great  Christian achievement is the history of answered prayer.
  “The  greatest and the best talent that God gives to any man or woman in this  world is the talent of prayer,” writes Principal Alexander Whyte. “And  the best usury that any man or woman brings back to God when He comes to  reckon with them at the end of this world is a life of prayer. And  those servants best put their Lord’s money “to the exchangers” who rise  early and sit late, as long as they are in this world, ever finding out  and ever following after better and better methods of prayer, and ever  forming more secret, more steadfast, and more spiritually fruitful  habits of prayer, till they literally “pray without ceasing,” and till  they continually strike out into new enterprises in prayer, and new  achievements, and new enrichments.”
  Martin Luther, when once  asked what his plans, for the following day were, answered: “Work, work,  from early until late. In fact, I have so much to do that I shall spend  the first three hours in prayer.” Cromwell, too, believed in being much  upon his knees. Looking on one occasion at the statues of famous men,  he turned to a friend and said: “Make mine kneeling, for thus I came to  glory.”
  It is only when the whole heart is gripped with the  passion of prayer that the life-giving fire descends, for none but the  earnest man gets access to the ear of God.
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