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 | |  | Purpose In Prayer- EM Bounds-Chapter 4 « Thread Started on Aug 30, 2012, 9:43pm »
 | ![[Quote] [Quote]](http://images.proboards.com/new/buttons/quote.png)  ![[Modify] [Modify]](http://images.proboards.com/new/buttons/modify.png)  ![[Delete] [Delete]](http://images.proboards.com/new/buttons/delete.png) |  | "The potency of prayer hath subdued the strength of fire; it had bridled  the rage of lions, hushed the anarchy to rest, extinguished wars,  appeased the elements, expelled demons, burst the chains of death,  expanded the gates of heaven, assuaged diseases, repelled frauds,  rescued cities from destruction, stayed the sun in its course, and  arrested the progress of the thunderbolt. Prayer is an all-efficient  panoply, a treasure undiminished, a mine which is never exhausted, a sky  unobscured by clouds, a heaven unruffled by the storm. It is the root,  the fountain, the mother of a thousand blessings."—Chrysostom
 
 "The  prayers of holy men appease God’s wrath, drive away temptations, resist  and overcome the devil, procure the ministry and service of angels,  rescind the decrees of God. Prayer cures sickness and obtains pardon; it  arrests the sun in its course and stays the wheels of the chariot of  the moon; it rules over all gods and opens and shuts the storehouses of  rain, it unlocks the cabinet of the womb and quenches the violence of  fire; it stops the mouths of lions and reconciles our suffering and weak  faculties with the violence of torment and violence of persecution; it  pleases God and supplies all our need."—Jeremy Taylor
 
 "More  things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of. wherefore, let  thy voice Rise like a fountain for me night and day. For what are men  better than sheep or goats, That nourish a blind life within the brain,  If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer Both for themselves and  those who call them friend? For so the whole round earth is every way  Bound by gold chains about the feet of God."—Tennyson
 
 "Perfect prayer is only another name for love."—Fenelon
 
 It  was said of the late C. H. Spurgeon, that he glided from laughter to  prayer with the naturalness of one who lived in both elements. With him  the habit of prayer was free and unfettered. His life was not divided  into compartments, the one shut off from the other with a rigid  exclusiveness that barred all intercommunication. He lived in constant  fellowship with his Father in Heaven. He was ever in touch with God, and  thus it was as natural for him to pray as it was for him to breathe.
 
 “What  a fine time we have had; let us thank God for it,” he said to a friend  on one occasion, when, out under the blue sky and wrapped in glorious  sunshine, they had enjoyed a holiday with the unfettered enthusiasm of  schoolboys. Prayer sprang as spontaneously to his lips as did ordinary  speech, and never was there the slightest incongruity in his approach to  the Divine throne straight from any scene in which he might be taking  part.
 
 That is the attitude with regard to prayer that ought to  mark every child of God. There are, and there ought to be, stated  seasons of communication with God when, everything else shut out, we  come into His presence to talk to Him and to let Him speak to us; and  out of such seasons springs that beautiful habit of prayer that weaves a  golden bond between earth and heaven. Without such stated seasons the  habit of prayer can never be formed; without them there is no  nourishment for the spiritual life. By means of them the soul is lifted  into a new atmosphere—the atmosphere of the heavenly city, in which it  is easy to open the heart to God and to speak with Him as friend speaks  with friend.
 Thus, in every circumstance of life, prayer is the most  natural out-pouring of the soul, the unhindered turning to God for  communion and direction. Whether in sorrow or in joy, in defeat or in  victory, in health or in weakness, in calamity or in success, the heart  leaps to meet with God just as a child runs to his mother’s arms, ever  sure that with her is the sympathy that meets every need.
 
 Dr.  Adam Clarke, in his autobiography, records that when Mr. Wesley was  returning to England by ship, considerable delay was caused by contrary  winds. Wesley was reading, when he became aware of some confusion on  board, and asking what was the matter, he was informed that the wind was  contrary. “Then,” was his reply, “let us go to prayer.”
 
 After  Dr. Clarke had prayed, Wesley broke out into fervent supplication which  seemed to be more the offering of faith than of mere desire. “Almighty  and everlasting God,” he prayed. “Thou hast sway everywhere, and all  things serve the purpose of Thy will, Thou holdest the winds in Thy  fists and sittest upon the water floods, and reignest a King for ever.  Command these winds and these waves that they obey Thee, and take us  speedily and safely to the haven whither we would go.”
 
 The power  of this petition was felt by all. Wesley rose from his knees, made no  remark, but took up his book and continued reading. Dr. Clarke went on  deck, and to his surprise found the vessel under sail, standing on her  right course. Nor did she change till she was safely at anchor. On the  sudden and favourable change of wind, Wesley made no remark; so fully  did he expect to be heard that he took it for granted that he was heard.
 
 That  was prayer with a purpose—the definite and direct utterance of one who  knew that he had the ear of God, and that God had the willingness as  well as the power to grant the petition which he asked of Him.
 
 Major  D. W. Whittle, in an introduction to the wonders of prayer, says of  George Muller, of Bristol: “I met Mr. Muller in the express, the morning  of our sailing from Quebec to Liverpool. About half-an-hour before the  tender was to take the passengers to the ship, he asked of the agent if a  deck chair had arrived for him from New York. He was answered, “No,”  and told that it could not possibly come in time for the steamer. I had  with me a chair I had just purchased, and told Mr. Muller of the place  nearby, and suggested, as but a few moments remained, that he had better  buy one at once. His reply was, “No, my brother. Our Heavenly Father  will send the chair from New York. It is one used by Mrs. Muller. I  wrote ten days ago to a brother, who promised to see it forwarded here  last week. He has not been prompt, as I would have desired, but I am  sure our Heavenly Father will send the chair. Mrs. Muller is very sick  on the sea, and has particularly desired to have this same chair, and  not finding it here yesterday, we have made special prayer that our  Heavenly Father would be pleased to provide it for us, and we will trust  Him to do so.” As this dear man of God went peacefully on board,  running the risk of Mrs. Muller making the trip without a chair, when,  for a couple of dollars, she could have been provided for, I confess I  feared Mr. Muller was carrying his faith principles too far and not  acting wisely. I was kept at the express office ten minutes after Mr.  Muller left. Just as I started to hurry to the wharf, a team drove up  the street, and on top of a load just arrived front New York was Mr.  Muller’s chair. It was sent at once to the tender and placed in my hands  to take to Mr. Muller, just as the boat was leaving the dock (the Lord  having a lesson for me). Mr. Muller took it with the happy, pleased  expression of a child who has just received a kindness deeply  appreciated, and reverently removing his hat and folding his hands over  it, he thanked the Heavenly Father for sending the chair.”
 
 One of  Melancthon’s correspondents writes of Luther’s praying: “I cannot  enough admire the extraordinary, cheerfulness, constancy, faith and hope  of the man in these trying and vexatious times. He constantly feeds  these gracious affections by a very diligent study of the Word of God.  Then not a day passes in which he does not employ in prayer at least  three of his very best hours. Once I happened to hear him at prayer.  Gracious God! What spirit and what faith is there in his expressions! He  petitions God with as much reverence as if he was in the divine  presence, and yet with as firm a hope and confidence as he would address  a father or a friend. “I know,” said he, “Thou art our Father and our  God; and therefore I am sure Thou wilt bring to naught the persecutors  of Thy children. For shouldest Thou fail to do this Thine own cause,  being connected with ours, would be endangered. It is entirely thine own  concern. We, by Thy providence, have been compelled to take a part.  Thou therefore wilt be our defence.” Whilst I was listening to Luther  praying in this manner, at a distance, my soul seemed on fire within me,  to hear the man address God so like a friend, yet with so much gravity  and reverence; and also to hear him, in the course of his prayer,  insisting on the promises contained in the Psalms, as if he were sure  his petitions would be granted.”
 
 Of William Bramwell, a noted  Methodist preacher in England, wonderful for his zeal and prayer, the  following is related by a sergeant major. “In July, 1811, our regiment  was ordered for Spain, then the seat of a protracted and sanguinary war.  My mind was painfully exercised with the thoughts of leaving my dear  wife and four helpless children in a strange country, unprotected and  unprovided for. Mr. Bramwell felt a lively interest in our situation,  and his sympathising spirit seemed to drink in all the agonised feelings  of my tender wife. He supplicated the throne of grace day and night in  our behalf. My wife and I spent the evening previous to our march at a  friend’s house, in company with Mr. Bramwell, who sat in a very pensive  mood, and appeared to be in a spiritual struggle all the time. After  supper, he suddenly pulled his hand out of his bosom, laid it on my  knee, and said: “Brother Riley, mark what I am about to say! You are not  to go to Spain. Remember what I tell you, you are not; for I have been  wrestling with God on your behalf, and when my Heavenly Father  condescends in mercy to bless me with power to lay hold on Himself, I do  not easily let Him go; no, not until I am favoured with an answer.  Therefore you may depend upon it that the next time I hear from you, you  will be settled in quarters.” This came to pass exactly as he said. The  next day the order for going to Spain was countermanded.”
 These men  prayed with a purpose. To them God was not far away, in some  inaccessible region, but near at hand, ever ready to listen to the call  of His children. There was no barrier between. They were on terms of  perfect intimacy, if one may use such a phrase in relation to man and  his Maker. No cloud obscured the face of the Father from His trusting  child, who could look up into the Divine countenance and pour out the  longings of his heart. And that is the type of prayer which God never  fails to hear. He knows that it comes from a heart at one with His own;  from one who is entirely yielded to the heavenly plan, and so He bends  His ear and gives to the pleading child the assurance that his petition  has been heard and answered.
 
 Have we not all had some such  experience when with set and undeviating purpose we have approached the  face of our Father? In an agony of soul we have sought refuge from the  oppression of the world in the anteroom of heaven; the waves of despair  seemed to threaten destruction, and as no way of escape was visible  anywhere, we fell back, like the disciples of old, upon the power of our  Lord, crying to Him to save us lest we perish. And then in the  twinkling of an eye, the thing was done. The billows sank into a calm;  the howling wind died down at the Divine command; the agony of the soul  passed into a restful peace as over the whole being there crept the  consciousness of the Divine presence, bringing with it the assurance of  answered prayer and sweet deliverance.
 
 “I tell the Lord my  troubles and difficulties, and wait for Him to give me the answers to  them,” says one man of God. “And it is wonderful how a matter that  looked very dark will in prayer become clear as crystal by the help of  God’s Spirit. I think Christians fail so often to get answers to their  prayers because they do not wait long enough on God. They just drop down  and say a few words, and then jump up and forget it and expect God to  answer them. Such praying always reminds me of the small boy ringing his  neighbour’s door-bell, and then running away as fast as he can go.”
 
 When  we acquire the habit of prayer we enter into a new atmosphere. “Do you  expect to go to heaven?” asked someone of a devout Scotsman. “Why, man, I  live there,” was the quaint and unexpected reply. It was a pithy  statement of a great truth, for all the way to heaven is heaven begun to  the Christian who walks near enough to God to hear the secrets He has  to impart.
 This attitude is beautifully illustrated in a story of  Horace Bushnell, told by Dr. Parkes Cadman. Bushnell was found to be  suffering from an incurable disease. One evening the Rev. Joseph  Twichell visited him, and, as they sat together under the starry sky,  Bushnell said: “One of us ought to pray.” Twichell asked Bushnell to do  so, and Bushnell began his prayer; burying his face in the earth, he  poured out his heart until, said Twichell, in recalling the incident, “I  was afraid to stretch out my hand in the darkness lest I should touch  God.”
 
 To have God thus near is to enter the holy of holies—to  breathe the fragrance of the heavenly air, to walk in Eden’s delightful  gardens. Nothing but prayer can bring God and man into this happy  communion. That was the experience of Samuel Rutherford, just as it is  the experience of every one who passes through the same gateway. When  this saint of God was confined in jail at one time for conscience sake,  he enjoyed in a rare degree the Divine companionship, recording in his  diary that Jesus entered his cell, and that at His coming “every stone  flashed like a ruby.”
 Many others have borne witness to the same  sweet fellowship, when prayer had become the one habit of life that  meant more than anything else to them. David Livingstone lived in the  realm of prayer and knew its gracious influence. It was his habit every  birthday to write a prayer, and on the next to the last birthday of all,  this was his prayer: “O Divine one, I have not loved Thee earnestly,  deeply, sincerely enough. Grant, I pray Thee, that before this year is  ended I may have finished my task.” It was just on the threshold of the  year that followed that his faithful men, as they looked into the hut of  Ilala, while the rain dripped from the eaves, saw their master on his  knees beside his bed in an attitude of prayer. He had died on his knees  in prayer.
 Stonewall Jackson was a man of prayer. Said he: “I have so  fixed the habit in my mind that I never raise a glass of water to my  lips without asking God’s blessing, never seal a letter without putting a  word of prayer under the seal, never take a letter from the post  without a brief sending of my thoughts heavenward, never change my  classes in the lecture-room without a—minute’s petition for the cadets  who go out and for those who come in.”
 James Gilmour, the pioneer  missionary to Mongolia, was a man of prayer. He had a habit in his  writing of never using a blotter. He made a rule when he got to the  bottom of any page to wait until the ink dried and spend the time in  prayer.
 
 In this way their whole being was saturated with the  Divine, and they became the reflection of the heavenly fragrance and  glory. Walking with God down the avenues of prayer we acquire something  of His likeness, and unconsciously we become witnesses to others of His  beauty and His grace. Professor James, in his famous work, “Varieties of  Religious Experience,” tells of a man of forty-nine who said: “God is  more real to me than any thought or thing or person. I feel His presence  positively, and the more as I live in closer harmony with His laws as  written in my body and mind. I feel Him in the sunshine or rain; and all  mingled with a delicious restfulness most nearly describes my feelings.  I talk to Him as to a companion in prayer and praise, and our communion  is delightful. He answers me again and again, often in words so clearly  spoken that it seems my outer ear must have carried the tone, but  generally in strong mental impressions. Usually a text of Scripture,  unfolding some new view of Him and His love for me, and care for my  safety ... That He is mine and I am His never leaves me; it is an  abiding joy. Without it life would be a blank, a desert, a shoreless,  trackless waste.”
 
 Equally notable is the testimony of Sir Thomas  Browne, the beloved physician who lived at Norwich in 1605, and was the  author of a very remarkable book of wide circulation, “Religio Medici.”  In spite of the fact that England was passing through a period of  national convulsion and political excitement, he found comfort and  strength in prayer. “I have resolved,” he wrote in a journal found among  his private papers after his death, “to pray more and pray always, to  pray in all places where quietness inviteth, in the house, on the  highway and on the street; and to know no street or passage in this city  that may not witness that I have not forgotten God.” And he adds: “I  purpose to take occasion of praying upon the sight of any church which I  may pass, that God may be worshipped there in spirit, and that souls  may be saved there; to pray daily for my sick patients and for the  patients of other physicians; at my entrance into any home to say, “May  the peace of God abide here”; after hearing a sermon, to pray for a  blessing on God’s truth, and upon the messenger; upon the sight of a  beautiful person to bless God for His creatures, to pray for the beauty  of such an one’s soul, that God may enrich her with inward graces, and  that the outward and inward may correspond; upon the sight of a deformed  person, to pray God to give them wholeness of soul, and by and by to  give them the beauty of the resurrection.”
 
 What an illustration  of the praying spirit! Such an attitude represents prayer without  ceasing, reveals the habit of prayer in its unceasing supplication, in  its uninterrupted communion, in its constant intercession. What an  illustration, too, of purpose in prayer! Of how many of us can it be  said that as we pass people in the street we pray for them, or that as  we enter a home or a church we remember the inmates or the congregation  in prayer to God?
 
 The explanation of our thoughtlessness or  forgetfulness lies in the fact that prayer with so many of us is simply a  form of selfishness; it means asking for something for ourselves t that  and nothing more.
 
 And from such an attitude we need to pray to be delivered.
 
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