V. PRAYERLESS CHRISTIANS
"If there was ever a time when Peter, James and John needed to remain awake it was in Gethsemane. If James had persisted in keeping awake it might have saved his decapitation a few years later. If Peter had stirred himself to really intercede for himself and others he would not have denied his Christ that night in the palace of Caiaphas."
-- H. W. Hodge
THERE is great need in this day for Christian business men to inform their
mundane affairs with the spirit of prayer. There is a great army of successful
merchants of almost every kind who are members of Christ's Church and it is high
time these men attended to this matter. This is but another version of the
phrase, "putting God into business," the realization and restraint of His
presence and of His fear in all the secularities of life. We need the atmosphere
of the prayer-closet to pervade our public salesrooms and counting-houses. The
sanctity of prayer is needed to impregnate business. We need the spirit of
Sunday carried over to Monday and continued until Saturday. But this cannot be
done by prayerless men, but by men of prayer. We need business men to go about
their concerns with the same reverence and responsibility with which they enter
the closet. Men are badly needed who are devoid of greed, but who, with all
their hearts, carry God with them into the secular affairs of life. Men of the
world imagine prayer to be too impotent a thing to come into rivalry with
business methods and worldly practices. Against such a misleading doctrine Paul
sets the whole commands of God, the loyalty to Jesus Christ, the claims of pious
character, and the demands of the salvation of the world. Men must pray, and put
strength and heart into their praying. This is part of the primary business of
life, and to it God has called men, first of all.
Praying men are God's
agents on earth, the representative of government of heaven, set to a specific
task on the earth. While it is true that the Holy Spirit, the angels of God, are
agents of God in carrying forward the redemption of the human race, yet among
them there must be praying men. For such men God has great use. He can make much
of them, and in the past has done wonderful things through them. These are His
instruments in carrying out God's great purposes on the earth. They are God's
messengers, His watchmen, shepherds, workmen, who need not be ashamed. Fully
equipped for the great work to which they are appointed, they honour God and
bless the world. Above all things beside, Christian men and women must,
primarily, be leaders in prayer. No matter how conspicuous they may be in other
activities, they fail if they are not conspicuous in prayer. They must give
their brain and heart to prayer. Men who make and shape the program of Christ's
Church, who map out its line of activity, should, themselves, be shaped and made
by prayer. Men controlling the Church finances, her thought, her action - should
all be men of prayer.
The progress to consummation of God's work in this
world has two basic principles - God's ability to give and man's ability to ask.
Failure in either one is fatal to the success of God's work on earth. God's
inability to do or to give would put an end to redemption. Man's failure to pray
would, just as surely, set a limit to the plan. But God's ability to do and to
give has never failed and cannot fail; but man's ability to ask can fail, and
often does. Therefore the slow progress which is being made toward the
realization of a world won for Christ lies entirely with man's limited asking.
There is need for the entire Church of God, on the earth, to betake itself to
prayer. The Church upon its knees would bring heaven upon the earth. The
wonderful ability of God to do for us is thus expressed by Paul in one of his
most comprehensive statements, "And God is able to make all grace abound toward
you," he says, "that ye, always, having all sufficiency in all things, may
abound to every good work." Study, I pray you, that remarkable statement - "God
is able to make all grace abound." That is, He is able to give such sufficiency,
that we may abound - overflow - to every good work. Why are we not more fully
fashioned after this overflowing order? The answer is - lack of
prayer-ability.
"We have not because we ask not." We are feeble, weak and
impoverished, because of our failure to pray. God is restrained in doing because
we are restrained by reason of our non-praying. All failures in securing heaven
are traceable to lack of prayer or misdirected petition. Prayer must be broad in
its scope - it must plead for others. Intercession for others is the hall-mark
of all true prayer. When prayer is confined to self and to the sphere of one's
personal needs, it dies by reason of its littleness, narrowness and selfishness.
Prayer must be broad and unselfish or it will perish. Prayer is the soul of a
man stirred to plead with God for men. In addition to being interested in the
eternal interests of one's own soul it must in its very nature, be concerned for
the spiritual and eternal welfare of others. One's ability to pray for self,
finds its climax in the compassion its concern expresses for others.
In 1
Timothy 2, the Apostle Paul urges with singular and specific emphasis, that
those who occupy positions of influence and places of authority, are to give
themselves to prayer. "I will, therefore, that the men pray everywhere." This is
the high calling of the men of the Church, and no calling is so engaging, so
engrossing and so valuable that we can afford to relieve Christian men from the
all-important vocation of secret prayer. Nothing whatever can take the place of
prayer. Nothing whatever can atone for the neglect of praying. This is
uppermost, first in point of importance and first in point of time. No man is so
high in position, or in grace, to be exempt from an obligation to pray. No man
is too big to pray, no matter who he is , nor what office he fills. The king on
his throne is as much obligated to pray as the peasant in his cottage. None is
so high and exalted in this world or so lowly and obscure as to be excused from
praying. The help of every one is needed in prosecuting the work of God, and the
prayer of each praying man helps to swell the aggregate. The leaders in place,
in gifts and in authority are to be chiefs in prayer. Civil and Church rulers
shape the affairs of this world. And so civil and Church rulers themselves need
to be shaped personally in spirit, heart and conduct, in truth and
righteousness, by the prayers of God's people. This is in direct line with
Paul's words: " I exhort therefore," he says, " that, first of all,
supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men
for rulers and all that are in authority." It is a sad day for righteousness
when church politics instead of holy praying, shapes the administration of the
Kingdom and elevates men to place and power. Why pray for all men? Because God
wills the salvation of all men. God's children on earth must link their prayers
to God's will. Prayer is to carry out the will of God. God wills the salvation
of all men. His heart is set on this one thing. Our prayers must be the creation
and exponent of God's will. We are to grasp humanity in our praying as God
grasps humanity in His love, His interest and His plans to redeem humanity. Our
sympathies, prayers, wrestling and ardent desires must run parallel with the
will of God, broad, generous, world-wide and Godlike. The Christian man must in
all things, first of all, be conformed to the will of God, but nowhere shall
this royal devotion be more evident than in the salvation of the race of men.
This high partnership with God, as its vicegerents on earth, is to have its
fullest, richest, and most efficient exercise in prayer for all men.
Men
are to pray for all men, are to pray especially for rulers in Church and state,
" that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty."
Peace on the outside and peace on the inside. Praying calms disturbing, forces,
allays tormenting fears, brings conflict to an end. Prayer tends to do away with
turmoil. But even if there be external conflicts, it is well to have deep peace
within the citadel of the soul. "That we may lead a quiet and peaceable life."
Prayer brings the inner calm and furnishes the outward tranquillity. Praying
rulers and praying subjects were they worldwide would allay turbulent forces,
make wars to cease, and peace to reign. Men must pray for all men that we may
lead lives " in all godliness and honesty." That is with godliness and gravity.
Godliness is to be like God. It is to be godly, to have God-likeness, having the
image of God stamped upon the inner nature, and showing the same likeness in
conduct and in temper. Almighty God is the very highest model, and to be like
Him is to possess the highest character. Prayer moulds us into the image of
God;' and at the same time tends to mould others into the same image just in
proportion as we pray for others. Prayer means to be God-like, and to be
God-like is to love Christ and love God, to be one with the Father and the Son
in spirit, character and conduct. Prayer means to stay with God till, you are
like Him.
Prayer makes a godly man, and puts within him "the mind of
Christ," the mind of humility, of self-surrender, of service, of pity, and of
prayer. If we really pray, we will become more like God, or else we will quit
praying. "Men are to pray everywhere," in the closet, in the prayer-meeting,
about the family altar, and to do it, "lifting up holy hands, without wrath and
doubting." Here is not only the obligation laid upon the men to pray, but
instructions as to how they should pray. "Men must pray without wrath." That is
without bitterness against their neighbours or brethren; without the obstinacy
and pertinacity of a strong will, and hard feelings, without an evil desire or
emotion kindled by nature's fires in the carnal nature. Praying is not to be
done by these questionable things, nor in company with such evil feelings, but
"without " them, aloof and entirely separate from them. This is the sort of
praying the men are called upon to do, the sort which God hears and the kind
which prevails with God and accomplishes things. Such praying in the hands of
Christian men become divine agencies in God's hands for carrying on God's
gracious purposes and executing His designs in redemption. Prayer has a higher
origin than man's nature. This is true whether man's nature as separate from the
angelic nature, or man's carnal nature unrenewed and unchanged be meant. Prayer
does not originate in the realms of the carnal mind. Such a nature is entirely
foreign to prayer simply because "the carnal mind is enmity against God." It is
by the new Spirit that we pray, the new spirit sweetened by the sugar of heaven
perfumed with the fragrance of the upper world, and invigorated by a breath from
the crystal sea. The "new spirit " is native to the skies, panting after the
heavenly things, inspired by the breath of God. It is the praying temper from
which all the old juices of the carnal, unregenerate nature have been expelled,
and the fire of God has created the flame which has consumed worldly lusts, and
the juices of the Spirit have been injected into the soul, and the praying is
entirely divorced from wrath.
Men are also to pray " without doubting."
The Revised Version puts it, "without disputings." Faith in God, belief in God's
Word, they must have "without question." No doubting or disputing must be in the
mind. There must be no opinions, nor hesitancy, no questioning, no reasoning, no
intellectual quibbling, no rebellion, but a strict, steadfast loyalty of spirit
to God, a life of loyalty in heart and intellect to God's Word. God has much to
do with believing men, who have a living, transforming faith in Jesus Christ.
These are God's children. A father loves his children, supplies their needs,
hears their cries and answers their requests. A child believes his father, loves
him, trusts in him, and asks him for what he needs, believing without doubting
that his father will hear his requests. God has everything to do with answering
the prayer of His children. Their troubles concern Him, and their prayers awaken
Him. Their voice is sweet to Him. He loves to hear them pray, and He is never
happier than to answer their prayers. Prayer is intended for God's ear. It is
not man, but God who hears and answers prayer. Prayer covers the whole range of
man's need. Hence, in everything, by prayer and supplication, "are requests to
be made known unto God." Prayer includes the entire range of God's ability. "Is
anything too hard for God?" Prayer belongs to no favoured segment of man's need,
but reaches to and embraces the entire circle of his wants, simply because God
is the God of the whole man. God has pledged Himself to supply the needs of the
whole man, physical, intellectual and spiritual. "But my God shall supply all
your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus." Prayer is the child
of grace, and grace is for the whole man, and for every one of the children of
men.