Lunes, Hulyo 30, 2018

Constant, Instant, Expectant ((Charles H. Spurgeon, 1879)

Romans 12:12

“Rejoicing in hope; patient in tribulation; continuing instant in prayer;” 

This is placed in connection with a large number of
     brief but very weighty precepts. Prayer has a distinct
     relationship to all Christian duties and graces. It is
     not possible for us to carry out the holy commands of
     our Lord Jesus unless we are abundant in supplication.
     The Romans at the time that Paul wrote to them were
     subject to persecution, and in this verse he mentions
     two remedies for impatience under such afflictions,
     remedies which are equally effectual under all the
     trials of life. The old physicians tell us of two
     antidotes against poison, the hot and the cold, and
     they dilate upon the special excellence of each of
     these: in like manner the apostle Paul gives us first
     the warm antidote-"Rejoicing in hope," and then he
     gives us the cool antidote, "Patient in tribulation."
     Either of these, or both together, will work
     wonderfully for the sustaining of the spirit in the
     hour of affliction; but it is to be observed, that
     neither of these remedies can be taken into the soul
     except they be mixed with a draught of prayer. Joy and
     patience are curative essences, but they must be
     dropped into a glass full of supplication, and then
     they will be wonderfully efficient. How can we "rejoice
     in hope" if we know nothing about prayer to the God of
     hope. Whenever your hope seems to fail you and your joy
     begins to sink,-the shortest method is to take to your
     knees. By remembering the promise in prayer hope will
     be sustained, and then joy is sure to spring from it,
     for joy is the first-born child of hope. As for
     "patience," how can we be patient if we cannot pray?
     Have not holy men of old always sustained themselves in
     their worst times of grief and depression by betaking
     themselves to prayer? Mind that you do the same.
     Impatience will be sure to follow prayerlessness, but
     the endurance of the divine will grows out of communion
     with God in prayer. I like that beautiful, though sad,
     picture of the Norwich martyr, Hudson, of whom Foxe
     tells us that, when he stood at the stake with the
     chain about him to be burnt, he fell under a cloud. The
     Lord had withdrawn the light of his countenance from
     him, and therefore this man of God slipped from under
     the chain to have a few minutes alone with God. Some
     thought that he was about to recant, and his fellow
     martyrs began exhorting him to be steadfast and to play
     the man, but this dear believer knew what he was at,
     and when he had spoken with his God he came back to the
     stake with a bright and beaming countenance, saying,
     "Now, I thank God, I am strong, and fear not what man
     can do unto me," and stood in his place with his fellow
     sufferers and there burned quick to the death without
     fear. Oh the power of prayer! If we do but know how to
     get in contact with the Eternal and and Omnipotent, we
     shall be joyful and patient in all tribulations, and
     bravely endure even the keen edge of death.
     
     Prayer is to be exercised in all things, for from its
     position in the present context we are taught that it
     is not without prayer that we proceed to "distribute to
     the necessities of the saints." Because we have prayed
     for them we are ready to befriend them by deeds of
     love. If we have not been accustomed to pray for the
     brethren, we shall not be "given to hospitality"; much
     less shall we "bless them which persecute us." prayer
     is the life-blood of duty, the secret sap of holiness,
     the fountain of obedience. Upon prayer as spoken of in
     the text may the Holy Spirit help us now to meditate.
     
     Three things I shall speak upon which will be
     remembered the better by being linked with three
     words-Instant, constant, expectant.
     
     I. First, then, Instant-"Continuing instant in prayer."
     It may be proper a this stage to say that there words,
     though I shall dwell upon them in the English, are not
     identical with the Greek, in which there is but one
     word. I do not know that a better translation could
     possibly be given, and so I shall content myself with
     the very words of our own version. The word "instant,"
     as used by our translators, meant pressing, urgent,
     importunate, earnest. The Greek word is said to have
     the signification of "always applying strength in
     prayer," or continuing with all your might in prayer.
     Our prayer is to be full of strength; "blessed is the
     man whose strength is in thee." Master Brooks saith
     that the word is a metaphor taken from hunting dogs,
     which will never give up the game till they have got
     it. A hunting dog when in pursuit of its victim works
     itself into full motion, using every limb and muscle to
     follow as fast as possible. If you catch a glimpse of
     it you will see that it throws itself forward with
     intense eagerness, the whole body and soul of the dog
     is in motion towards one object; no portion of him
     lingers, not so much as a glance is given to anything
     else, the whole creature is instant after the game
     which it pursues, urgently pressing, hot foot, as we
     say, to overtake the prey. Now, this is the way in
     which we are to pray. Prayer as a mere form is but a
     mockery; prayer in a languid, half-hearted manner may
     be more dishonouring to God than honouring to him; we
     ourselves may be rather injured by lukewarm prayer than
     benefited by it. Prevalent prayer is frequently spoken
     of in Scripture as an agony-"striving together with me
     in your prayers." We frequently speak of it as
     "wrestling," and we do well, for so it is. In wrestling
     a man hath all his mind as well as all his body
     occupied with the desire to overthrow his antagonist.
     Now he bends and twists, and anon he strains and
     stretches: now he uses one foot and then another; he
     tries his arm and stretches: now he uses one foot and
     then another; he tries his arm and now his leg; he
     shifts his ground, he shifts his ground, he takes up
     another position, and he keeps his eye perpetually open
     lest he should be caught unawares. He hath both his
     hands eager for a grip, his whole body ready for a
     throw: the whole man is in his wrestling. After such a
     manner pray ye; the whole of your mind, your memory,
     your judgement, your affection, your hopes, your fears,
     and even your imagination must be concentrated upon
     this labour of prayer. May the Holy Ghost work in you
     this comprehensive ardour, this energy of the whole
     man. We must go with our whole soul to God or he will
     not accept us. It will be ill for us if we are half-
     hearted, for it is written, "their heart is divided;
     now shall they be found faulty." "The Kingdom of heaven
     suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force."
     We are exhorted to "knock," and as our model we are
     directed to him who at midnight aroused his slumbering
     friend. We are exhorted to be importunate, like the
     widow with the unjust judge. We are to pray as if all
     depended upon our praying; though after all that
     praying is in itself an affect of a cause which has
     existed long before. We are to be as importunate as if
     God were unwilling, and to plead as earnestly as if he
     did not already know far better than we do what things
     we have need of. Earnestness must be present in all our
     prayers or they will return to us unanswered: this is
     reasonable enough. Shall God be expected to give to us
     that which we do not value? If we do not value the
     blessing sufficiently to be eager in seeking it, is it
     not right that he should withhold it until we are in a
     better mind? Are we to worship God with a divided
     reverence? Are we to treat him as though it were quite
     enough for him if we gave him a stray thought, or a
     half-hearted desire, now and then, as a sort of
     compliment? Can we expect that he will receive our
     sacrifice if we lay no fire under it? If we have no
     impetuous earnestness of spirit, can we expect that we
     shall be accepted? He loathes the lukewarm, will he not
     loath our prayers? See how we deal with our fellow men;
     if they ask a favour of us and we see that they care
     but little about it, we are in no great haste to put
     ourselves about to do them the turn, but if they are
     very pressing, we yield to their entreaties; and so
     doth God in his mercy yield to their entreaties of his
     people. As one hath very prettily said, the nurse when
     she hath her child in the cradle, though it beginneth
     to cry and whinny a little, she leaves it and
     continueth at her household work, and when it cries a
     little more, and a little more she still hearkens, but
     she lets it be where it is. But when at last the babe
     takes to vehement crying, then straightway she presses
     it to her bosom with many a kiss and a kindly word.
     Children of God, you must cry mightily unto the Lord,
     and pour out your hearts like water before him, and
     then will he have regard unto the voice of your cry,
     and it shall be unto you even according to your desire.
     Instancy in prayer is needful; we must be fervent or
     burning, or we shall not prevail.
     
     How are we to attain to this urgency? God's gracious
     Spirit must give it to us, but what are the methods by
     which, under his direction, we may become instant in
     prayer?
     
     I answer first, let us study very thoroughly the value
     of the mercy which we are seeking at God's hand.
     Seeker, take heed to this.
     
     Whatever it is that thou are asking for, it is nor
     trifle. Look at it. If it be a thing about which thou
     art not certain that it would be according to God's
     mind, lay it aside: thou hast no right to be very
     fervent about that which is of questionable necessity.
     If this may or may not be good for thee, put up thy
     requests to the great Father gently once or twice, and
     then lay them lightly in Jesus' hand. But when thou art
     certain that the blessing sought for is a good and
     necessary thing for thy soul, then in order that thy
     spirit may be strong in prayer get a deep sense of it's
     value, its goodness, and its necessity; examine it as a
     goldsmith inspects a jewel when he wishes to estimate
     its worth. A man's ardour in pursuit will be in
     proportion to his consciousness of the value of that
     which he pursues. Get thou to feel what a precious
     thing grace is, what it cost the Lord to bring it to
     thee; what blessings it brings with it for time and for
     eternity, and when thy heart sees that it seeks after
     an unspeakably precious gift, then will its desire be
     stirred up to pray with intense longings.
     
     When thou hast done this, meditate much upon thy
     necessities that thou mayest get a sense of thy need of
     the mercy thou art seeking. See thy soul's poverty and
     thine own undeservingness. Look at what will happen to
     thee unless this blessing come. If it be some
     absolutely indispensable spiritual blessing, picture to
     thyself where thou wilt be if God should withhold it,
     what evils will spring of thy continuing in want of it,
     and what further wants may yet beset thee. The more thy
     need smites thee the more eagerly wilt thou cry unto
     the Lord concerning it. Art thou desirous of bread for
     thy soul, be hungry, and let thine hunger eat into thy
     heart. Art thou desirous of the water of life; be
     thirsty, and let thy thirst burn thee till thou art
     dried up like a potsherd. Let thy necessities have
     liberty, by meditation, to seize thee and to distress
     thee with a sense of thine emptiness and nothingness.
     Nothing sets a man more eagerly upon prayer than a deep
     sense of his need of that which he is seeking at the
     Lord's hand. He will eagerly seek for garments who
     shivers in his nakedness amid the winter's blast. He
     will earnestly long for home who feels himself lost
     upon a moor in the midst of a midnight fog. Get thou a
     consciousness of where and what thou art apart from
     Christ and from the mercy of God, and then, when thou
     perceivest well thy need, this, with a sense of the
     greatness of the blessing, will much quicken thee as to
     instancy in prayer.
     
     Endeavour also to get a distinct consciousness of the
     fact that God must give thee this blessing, or thou
     wilt never have it. It requires time to think over
     these things, therefore set thyself apart awhile from
     all other occupations, and think on these matters. Say
     to thyself-Here is such and such a spiritual mercy, and
     I can never get it out of myself, for I am a dry well.
     Nothing can come out of nothing, and I am nothing. I
     cannot bring a clean thing out of an unclean, and I am
     unclean. This spiritual blessing I cannot obtain from
     my fellow-man; nor king nor priest could bring it to
     me. I cannot climb to heaven after it, nor dive into
     the abyss to find it; nor earth nor heaven can yield
     it, nor can either time or eternity produce it. God
     alone must give it to me, and he is a sovereign, he has
     a right to give or to withhold. I cannot claim it of
     him as a matter of right, he must give it to me of his
     mere mercy, it must be a boon of undeserved favour. Oh,
     if you get that truth well wrought into your soul you
     will pray earnestly, and you will use the right
     arguments,-"Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy
     lovingkindness, according unto the multitude of thy
     tender mercies." God alone can help you, and if he
     refuse you are undone for ever, therefore cry mightily
     unto him.
     
     Further to make you instant in prayer endeavour eagerly
     to desire the good thing. Stand not before God if thou
     wouldst win at his hands, as one who will be content
     whether or no. Say not "Give it or withhold it, it is
     all one to me. I knock at thy door, and if thou open I
     will be somewhat pleased, but if thy door be shut I
     will be pleased too." Oh no; such listlessness will
     never prevail with God. There are times when you must
     be brought to this condition that you will not be
     denied. There is a holy "impudency," as the Puritans
     were wont to call it, to which we must be brought, in
     which we shall with holy boldness dare to say like
     Jacob, "I will not let thee go, except thou bless me."
     Such language would be blasphemy if it were not
     permitted, it would be presumption if it were not
     encouraged; but there is little fear of our being too
     bold, for in these times men are more inclined to keep
     at a distance than to come too near. We are permitted
     to use the liberty of obedient, loving children. We are
     allowed in the holy confidence of faith to resolve that
     we will seek until we find, we will ask until we
     receive, we will knock until the door is opened unto
     us. Our case is urgent, and we must needs press it till
     our suit is gained. Never was a man brought to such a
     pass by the grace of God but what speedily the Lord was
     pleased to open the hand of his liberality and give him
     according to his desire; but this vehemence must be
     manifested. A certain person is mentioned in John
     Bunyan's "Holy War," Whose name is Mr. Desiresawake,
     and their prayers lie dormant like certain wild beasts
     in winter; fain would I stir them out of their dens.
     Wake up, man, wake up when you pray, for it is
     insulting to God to give him sleepy worship. Dreaming
     at praying and playing at praying, as some do, are
     grievous sins. No, no, prayer must be heart work, soul-
     work, spirit work. Prayer ought to be the sweat of the
     soul, it should sometimes be even as the bloody sweat
     of an agonizing heart, crying mightily unto the Lord,
     as Jesus did in the garden. To such the Lord sendeth
     down his angel to strengthen them or in some way
     heareth their pleadings in that concerning which they
     were filled with anguish. Intensity of desire must be
     exhibited or else it may come to pass that the time of
     the bestowal is not yet come.
     
     I will suppose, dear brother, that you have followed
     these directions so far by the help of God's Spirit,
     and now you know your need of the mercy, and something
     of the value of it; you see that God alone can give it
     you, and you are anxiously desirous to have it. Now
     comes the tug of war; you are to plead with all your
     might. Gather up all your faculties to see whether this
     thing be a matter of promise or no. Take down the Book,
     your charter and your Father's will, and see if there
     be any part of the charter which promises this good
     thing to you. When you have found the promise lay your
     finger on it. Better still, with your spirit grasp it
     in your hand, and go before God with it. If your prayer
     be as Luther calls it, "bombarda Christianorum," the
     Christian's great gun with which he doth bombard
     heaven, then surely the promise is the shot which he
     sends forth. Plead the promise by saying, "Lord, do as
     thou hast said. Fulfil this word unto thy servant upon
     which thou hast caused me to hope." If you do not seem
     to prevail with one promise seek out another and plead
     it. This, perhaps will be more to the point,-a promise
     which your very soul seems to suck in as though it were
     spoken to you newly and freshly, as if never another
     man had ever received it. Spread this second promise
     before the Lord. Nothing pleases him more than seeing
     his own word pleaded by his own children. Try this, and
     if it is manifest that you have not succeeded turn to
     yet another promise, and another and another and
     another, and then plead, "For thy name's sake, for thy
     truth's sake, for thy covenant's sake" ; and then came
     in with the greatest plea of all, "For Jesus' sake and
     in his name, for the blood's sake, I plead with thee,
     my God. O thou that hearest prayer, wilt thou not keep
     touch with thine own word, and be true to thine own
     Son?" You have prevailed there. By that sign you have
     conquered. Again it shall be seen that the Lord hath
     hearkened to the voice of a man.
     
     Still there is one thing more wanted, and that is
     strong faith, not only that God is, but that he is the
     rewarder of them that diligently seek him. You cannot
     be instant in prayer, nay, you cannot offer an
     acceptable prayer at all except as you believe in the
     prayer-hearing God. The modern wise men assure us, with
     a patronizing air, that prayer is a pious exercise,
     exceedingly beneficial to ourselves, but quite
     inoperative with God. They are kind enough to allow us
     to pray, only we must not suppose that it has the
     slightest effect. And do they think that we are such
     idiots that we would stand and whistle to the wind and
     find good for our souls in such a stupid proceeding?
     They must have formed their notion of our mental
     condition from their own if they imagine that we should
     pray if we knew that God did not hear us, and would not
     answer us. Prayer apart from the idea of a hearing God
     is not praying; it is soliloquizing, or, in plainer
     words, a silly talking to yourself, such as one sees in
     half-witted old persons who have outlived what few
     senses they once possessed. You must believe that God
     is, and that your pleadings are a part of the divine
     way of blessing you, or else you are not praying but
     maundering and chattering. The Lord does really listen
     to the pleadings of his people, and though he does not
     alter his ordinance and his decree, yet in some way or
     other he makes the prayers of his people to be an
     efficient link in the machinery of his providence and
     grace, so that not without prayer doth he bless them,
     but with it he doth bless them abundantly. Dear
     friends, may the Lord the Holy Spirit stir us all up to
     be instant in mighty, energetic prayer.
     
     II. Now, secondly, comes the CONSTANT-"continuing
     instant in prayer." To go back to the hunting dog with
     which we set out. We saw him rushing like the wind
     after his game, but this will not be enough if it only
     lasts for a little; he must continue running if he is
     to catch his prey. It matters not how fast the stag-
     hound goes if after having kept the pace awhile he
     begins to slacken-the stag will escape from him. It is
     a sign of failure in the iron trade when the furnaces
     are blown out; when business flourishes the fire blazes
     both day and night; and so will it be with prayer when
     the soul is in a flourishing state. If prayer be the
     Christian's vital breath, how can he leave off praying?
     
     We must maintain the ardour of prayer; we must be
     intense always. Prayer is not to be a thing of
     yesterday, but of to-day, and to-morrow, until it
     changeth into praise above. Perhaps prayer will
     continue even in heaven. Certainly the souls under the
     alter cry "How long?" and unfulfilled prophecies yet
     big with future events will be pleaded even there.
     Praise, however, is the chief characteristic of the
     future state, as prayer is the characteristic of the
     present one. We are to get into a good pace-"instant in
     prayer," and then to keep it up-continuing instant in
     prayer. "That is difficult" says one. Who said it was
     not? All the processes of the Christian life are
     difficult; indeed, they are impossible apart from the
     abiding help of the divine Spirit: but "the Spirit
     helpeth our infirmities." Now then, brethren, that we
     may be helped to keep up our fervency in prayer, please
     to notice that prayer must be continuous, because it is
     so singularly mixed with the whole gospel dispensation.
     As the incense filled the temple, so does prayer fill
     the gospel economy. The blood was upon the mercy seat,
     and upon the alter, and the laver, and the candlestick,
     and the book; it was sprinkled everywhere in the Jewish
     Tabernacle, and thus atonement was the most conspicuous
     object in the worship prescribed by the law of Moses;
     but next to this, prayer was most prominent in the
     continual calling upon God, and in the smoke of the
     incense by which prayer was symbolized. It is the high
     privilege of those who are believers in Jesus to draw
     nigh unto God with their petitions perpetually. The
     whole church, like the twelve tribes, is instantly
     serving God day and night in prayer, hoping for the
     fulfillment of the promise of the glorious appearing.
     "Behold, he prayeth" is the very mark of the individual
     Christian, and the unity, the life, and the
     spirituality of the church are best seen in prayer.

               "Nor prayer is made on earth alone;
                     The Holy Spirit pleads;
                And Jesus, on the eternal throne,
                    For sinners intercedes."
     
     Prayer was dear to Jesus when he was the Man of
     Nazareth upon the mountain's lonely side; and prayer is
     dear to him now that as the Son of God he intercedes in
     glory. Even to him the covenant hath this condition of
     prayer appended, "Ask of me, and I will give thee the
     heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts
     of the earth for thy possession." Prayer is the
     atmosphere which surrounds Emanuel's land: as the
     clouds hang on the mountains, so doth prayer linger
     over every great mercy of God.
     
     Prayer is connected with every covenant blessing. Why,
     beloved, it is to him that calleth upon the name of the
     Lord that the promise of salvation is given. Our
     heavenly Father gives the Holy Spirit to those that ask
     him. Justification was given to the publican rather
     than to the Pharisee, because he had offered humble,
     believing, acceptable prayer ; whereas the Pharisee
     asked nothing, but only glorified himself. Adoption
     begets prayer, for it brings us the spirit of adoption
     whereby we cry, Abba, Father. From election right
     onward to perfection in Christ there is no blessing of
     the covenant but what is understood, received, enjoyed,
     fed upon, and practically used in the way of prayer.
     Those who would safely navigate the sea of life must
     pray their passage to heaven.
     
     Moreover, beloved, prayer has been connected with every
     living spiritual experience you have ever had. Will you
     kindly look back to the hour when you were under the
     fig tree and Jesus saw you. Were you not at prayer?
     When you first arose to go to your Father, was not you
     first step a prayer? When you received the assurance of
     salvation, was it not in answer to prayer? When his
     banner over you has been love, have you not felt it
     sweet to pray? When you have feasted at his table, and
     he has revealed himself to you as he does not to the
     world, have you not then been in the spirit of prayer?
     The hill Mizar and the Hermonites-places you never can
     forget, those choicest of spots, which seem as you look
     back along the vista of life to be gleaming with a
     supernatural splendour-has not prayer been connected
     with them all? There has been nothing grandly great or
     good in your spiritual life, but Jabbok has flowed near
     it, and the top of Carmel has been near to view, where
     you have wrestled with God and have prevailed.
     
     Now, beloved, we are commanded to be constant in our
     instancy. Is not this right? Is there any time when we
     can afford to slacken prayer? Would you kindly put your
     finger on the map of the way, and tell me where a
     Christian man may leave off praying? Is it when he
     prospers? No, for then he needs grace to carry a full
     cup with a steady hand. Is it when he is in distress?
     Doth not nature itself teach us that in time of
     affliction we should especially draw near to God in
     prayer? When should he pray, nay, when should he not
     pray? Where may he pray? The answer is, he may pray
     everywhere, for as one has well said, a man who carries
     his temple about with him is always in a place where he
     may pray ; and know ye not that your bodies are the
     temples of the Holy Ghost? Wherever you go you carry
     your temples with you, and therefore be sure that you
     do pray. If you are on the housetop with Peter pray
     there, and if waiting at table with Nehemiah, pray
     there: if in the field with Isaac or on the mountain
     with the Lord, or in the sea with Jonah, or in a prison
     with Joseph, or in the article of death with Stephen,
     pray there.

           "Long as they live should Christians pray,
              For only while they pray they live."
     
     When they are under the wings of the cherubim crying
     unto God at his mercy seat then are they in the secret
     place of the tabernacle of the Most High, and then
     shall they abide under the shadow of the Almighty.
     
     But specially we ought to be constant in prayer,
     because such remarkable gifts are vouchsafed to
     importunity. God often gives liberally to prayer when
     it speaks but once, but frequent pleading begets
     abundant answering. That is the most soul-enriching
     prayer which is long in winning its way with God. When
     prayers like great ships have been long on the voyage
     you may hope that they have gone far and have gathered
     rich cargoes and will come home freighted with all the
     goodlier merchandise. If you can but quietly hope, and
     patiently wait, all will be well. The very choicest
     blessings of heaven are reserved for the Elijahs who
     can say, "Go again seven times," for the men who come
     again and again and again and never faint. Wait then
     upon the Lord with holy importunity of prayer, and your
     reward shall more than repay you. It is good for us to
     be compelled to pray like this ; it brings us up from
     spiritual childhood to perfect manhood. Therefore be ye
     constant in prayer, and gather strength for importunate
     pleadings.
     
     No reason can be given why we should not continue in
     prayer. I can suppose one brother saying, "I feel I
     cannot pray." When you feel you cannot pray, be sure
     that you are more in need of prayer than ever. Is not a
     disinclination to prayer one of the saddest marks of
     your soul's condition, one of those reasons which ought
     above all others to drive you to the mercy-seat? "Would
     you say the same, sir, if I tell you that I can pray?"
     Precisely the same, for now when the wind is favourable
     you should hoist all sail. If you cannot make progress
     now, when will you? Therefore pray when you can pray,
     and pray when you cannot pray. "Alas, sir, I cannot get
     beyond a groan." Brother, be not distressed, for the
     best praying in all the world consists of "groanings
     that cannot be uttered." We may sometimes have a doubt
     whether the Spirit of God helps us to pray in cheerful
     prayers, though I do not say that there is any need for
     the doubt,-but we cannot have a question about our sad
     prayings, for it is expressly said he "maketh
     intercession for us with groanings which cannot be
     uttered." Do you think that the chief end of a
     Christian's life is to be comfortable? It is often more
     good to us to mourn like doves than to sing like
     nightingales. Sometimes there may be more prayer in a
     sigh than in a long oration. Often do I myself
     personally look back upon times of bondage when I cried
     to God with all my soul, and thought I did not pray,
     and I wish that I prayed now as I did then. Therefore
     always pray; whether you feel in a mind for prayer or
     not, still pray. The fisherman at Mentone keep on
     fishing with their great net; ay, by the score these
     fishermen take it out and haul it in again, and
     frequently they get no more than one little sardine for
     their pains. Many and many a time I have seen no more
     than they could hold in their hand as the produce of a
     net which covered acres of the sea. But why do they go
     on? Because they are fishermen, and cannot do anything
     else. You and I are praying men, and there is nothing
     else we can do but wait upon the Lord. So if, after
     many a throw of the net, we get but one small answer,
     we will try again, for this is all we can do. "Lord, to
     whom should we go but thee?"
     
     Continue in prayer because the continuance of our
     instancy in prayer is the test of the reality of our
     devotion. Men that are in business and are in earnest
     cannot afford to open the shop and do a little
     occasional trade, and then put up a notice, "The
     proprietor of this shop has gone out for an excursion,
     and will resume his business when he feels inclined
     to." This would be trifling, and not trading; and it is
     so in prayer: a little bit of praying and then a
     stretch of neglect will prove a delusion and a snare. A
     poor simpleton who had never been to sea before, when
     he was going to Australia, asked a friend on board the
     vessel what the sailors did with the vessel at night.
     "Do of a night," was the reply, "Why, sail as fast as
     they can go." "I did not know," he said, "they worked
     in the night, I thought they stopped the ship." He must
     have thought he was out on some pleasure excursion
     along the coast, and that the yacht would anchor when
     the sun went down; but he was in an ocean clipper which
     was out for work and not for play. The man who means
     business must sail whether it is dark or light; and so
     in prayer we must serve God instantly, both day and
     night. Real prayers are constant prayers. There is a
     fish, you know, that sometimes attempts to fly, but it
     is no bird for all that. It only takes a little flight
     and then it is in the water again; but a true bird
     keeps on the wing, especially if it is such a bird as
     the eagle, whose untiring wing bears it above the
     clouds. Beware of prayers which leap up like a
     grasshopper and are soon down again. Let your prayers
     have the wings of a dove, let them fly away from earth
     and rest in God. Hypocrites pray by fits and starts,
     the genuine Christian "prays without ceasing."
     
     Beware of judging yourselves by certain spasms of
     prayer. When I put my lamp out last night, as I
     thought, it flashed up, then went down again, and yet
     again flashed up; it did so many times, as I stood
     waiting, but I knew it must go out ere long. Some have
     a way of flashing a prayer or two, but their piety is
     only a dying light, it will all be over soon. Continue
     instant in prayer, it shall be the test of whether your
     prayer is a lamp of the Lord or a dying light of your
     own kindling.
     
     Beloved, we must continue in prayer, but the Holy
     Spirit alone can enable us to do it. We may, however,
     be much helped in it by occasionally setting apart a
     special time. Days of prayer and hours of prayer, and
     set seasons of prayer are very helpful. We ought to
     have our appointed seasons each day, but special times
     over and above our regular custom may stir the fire and
     enable it to burn more brightly. To unite with other
     Christians in prayer is often very helpful. Private
     prayer is more important than public prayer under any
     aspects, and is a better test of a Christian; still
     public prayer often reacts upon private devotion, and
     when two or three are together, and are agreed as
     touching the kingdom, their supplications will often be
     helpful to each other and obtain the thing which they
     desire.
     
     III. Our last word EXPECTANT. It is not in the text
     verbally, but it must be there really, because there
     will be no such thing as instancy or constancy unless
     there is an expectation, and a belief that God can and
     will give that which we seek. Let us go back to our dog
     again: the dog would not run at so great a rate if he
     did not expect to seize his prey; but see how every
     limb is stretched with intensity, and he goes over
     hedge and ditch after his game because he has almost
     seized it, and though it flies before him with all its
     might, yet he close upon it. There is no praying with
     any fervour unless there is faith that God will hear
     you; at least if instancy can be felt for a while,
     constancy cannot be kept up long without it. Expectancy
     that God will hear. I was awakened at about four
     o'clock this morning by a sharp shrill sound. I thought
     it was a swallow screaming by the window, and I fell
     asleep again. A young bird had found its way into my
     room, and was crying for liberty. I left my bed and
     opened the window to let the captive free. It did not
     seem to know its way, and so I caught it and gently
     placed it at the window, and in a moment it flew to the
     oak tree close by and sat itself down. I watched its
     movement. The moment it had perched itself comfortably
     it began to utter sharp cries, and it turned its little
     head round on all sides as if looking for some one. It
     was crying for its mother, and why? Because it expected
     to be fed. And why did it expect to be fed? Because it
     had been fed before. If it had been a full-grown bird,
     it would not have called for food, but would have
     helped itself; but this poor little creature had been
     nourished by its parents, and it was looking round to
     be supplied again. This is why we pray. O Lord, thou
     hast supplied our wants so long and so often in answer
     to prayer, that we are in the way of it; and now we
     pray, not only because we ought to do so, but because
     it has become natural to us to pray, and we expect thee
     to hear us. When thou dost hear us we bless thee, but
     we are not surprised, as though it were a strange
     thing. Thy truth causes great admiration but no
     astonishment, for it is like thee to keep thy word, We
     are poor dependent children, and thou a wise and tender
     Father; thou has never left us and thou wilt never
     leave us, and so we continue instant in prayer, because
     we are expectant of thy grace. Some professors seldom
     exercise expectancy in prayer, but the soul of prayer
     is gone when you have no expectation. God will the cry
     of your desire, but the hand into which he will put the
     mercy is the hand of your expectation. You must believe
     that you have the blessing, or you will not have it
     unless it be by some extraordinary mercy beyond what is
     promised. His usual way is to raise our expectations so
     that we look out for the favour, and then he sends it.
     If some people looked out for answers to prayer they
     might soon have them, for their prayers would be
     answered by themselves. I was reminded of that by a
     little boy whose father prayed in the family that the
     Lord would visit the poor and relieve their wants. When
     he had finished, his little boy said, "Father, I wish I
     had your money." "Why so?" "Because," he said, "I would
     answer your prayers for you." "Which prayers, John?"
     "Why, father, you prayed that the poor might be helped,
     and you could do it very well with your own money." I
     like better still that story of the good man at the
     prayer-meeting, who reading the list of prayers found
     one for a poor widow that her distress might be
     relived, so he began to read it, but stopped and added,
     "we won't trouble the Lord with that, I will attend to
     that myself." Numbers of prayers are of that kind: we
     are praying God to do what we ought to do ourselves,
     and that is sheer impertinence. If we really prayed in
     earnest, expecting to be heard, our answer would often
     come in this very way, by our being stirred up to see
     that the Lord had heard us. The Lord might well say to
     us, "Thou sayest, Thy kingdom come; arise and help to
     make my kingdom come! Thou askest that my name may be
     hallowed; go thyself and hallow my name." Oh, that we
     had the expectancy which would teach us practical
     action, so that we should find the answer to our prayer
     given before we asked, according to the promise,
     "Before they call I will answer them, and while they
     are yet speaking I will hear."
     
     I had many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear
     them now, for the time has passed. I shall close by
     recommending to all of you one simple but very
     comprehensive prayer. It was offered by a poor man in
     Fife, and it was copied out by the Duchess of Gordon,
     and found among her papers when she died. "O Lord, give
     me grace to feel my need of thy grace! Give me grace to
     ask for thy grace! Give me grace to receive thy grace!"
     See ye not what scope there is for prayer! You will
     never need to leave off pleading for want of subjects.
     Continue, therefore, to be instant in it.
     
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