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Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com April 26th, 2005 Newsletter!
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Matthew 6 - The Lord's Prayer
5"And when you pray, you must
not be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in the
synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others.
Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward.
6But when you pray, go into your
room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And
your Father who sees in secret will reward you.
7"And when you pray, do not
heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they
will be heard for their many words. 8Do
not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask
him. 9Pray then like this:
"Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name.
10Your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
11Give us this day our daily
bread,
12and forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
13And lead us not into
temptation,
but deliver us from evil.
14For if you forgive others
their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you,
15but if you do not forgive others
their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.
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Teach us to Pray by Pastor Dodds (Covenant
OPC, Grove City)
Are we found in prayer? Do we understand what prayer is?
Like the disciples, we need to be found in prayer. Prayer is a holy
conversation, a means of grace that is a privilege and a duty of
believers, whereby we can draw strength and joy.
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Sermon Outline
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God's Sovereignty and Prayer
by A. W. Pink
"If we ask anything according to His will, He heareth us" (1
John 5:14).
Throughout this book it has been our chief aim to exalt the Creator
and abase the creature. The well-nigh universal tendency now, is to
magnify man and dishonor and degrade God. On every hand it will be
found that, when spiritual things are under discussion, the human side
and element is pressed and stressed, and the Divine side, if not
altogether ignored, is relegated to the background. This holds true of
very much of the modern teaching about prayer. In the great majority
of the books written and in the sermons preached upon prayer the human
element fills the scene almost entirely: it is the conditions which
we must meet, the promises we must "claim," the things
we must do in order to get our requests granted; and God's
claims, God's rights, God's glory are disregarded.
As a fair example of what is being given out today we subjoin a
brief editorial which appeared recently in one of the leading
religious weeklies entitled "Prayer, or Fate?"
"God in His Sovereignty has ordained that human destinies may be
changed and molded by the will of man. This is at the heart of the
truth that prayer changes things, meaning that God changes things when
men pray. Someone has strikingly expressed it this way: 'There are
certain things that will happen in a man's life whether he prays or
not. There are other things that will happen if he prays; and will not
happen if he does not pray.' A Christian worker was impressed by these
sentences as he entered a business office and he prayed that the Lord
would open the way to speak to some one about Christ, reflecting that
things would be changed because he prayed. Then his mind turned to
other things and the prayer was forgotten. The opportunity came to
speak to the business man upon whom he was calling, but he did not
grasp it, and was on his way out when he remembered his prayer of a
half hour before, and God's answer. He promptly returned and had a
talk with the business man, who, though a church-member, had never in
his life been asked whether he was saved. Let us give ourselves to
prayer, and open the way for God to change things. Let us beware lest
we become virtual fatalists by failing to exercise our God-given wills
in praying."
The above illustrates what is being taught on the subject of
prayer, and the deplorable thing is that scarcely a voice is lifted in
protest. To say that "human destinies may be changed and molded
by the will of man" is rank infidelity-that is the only proper
term for it. Should any one challenge this classification, we would
ask them whether they can find an infidel anywhere who would dissent
from such a statement, and we are confident that such an one could not
be found. To say that "God has ordained that human
destinies may be changed and molded by the will of man" is absolutely
untrue. "Human destiny" is settled not by the will of man, but
by the will of God. That which determines human destiny is whether or
not a man has been born again, for it is written, "Except a man be
born again he cannot see the kingdom of God." And as to whose
will, whether God's or man's, is responsible for the new birth is
settled, unequivocally, by John 1:13-"Which were born, not of blood,
nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but OF
GOD." To say that "human destiny" may be changed by the will of
man is to make the creature's will supreme, and that is,
virtually, to dethrone God. But what saith the Scriptures? Let
the Book answer: "The LORD killeth, and maketh alive: He
bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up. The Lord maketh poor, and
maketh rich: He bringeth low, and lifteth up. He raiseth
up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth up the beggar from the
dunghill, to set them among princes, and to make them inherit the
throne of glory" (1 Sam. 2:6-8).
Turning back to the Editorial here under review, we are next told,
"This is at the heart of the truth that prayer changes things, meaning
that God changes things when men pray." Almost everywhere we go today
one comes across a motto-card bearing the inscription "Prayer Changes
Things." As to what these words are designed to signify is evident
from the current literature on prayer-we are to persuade God to
change His purpose. Concerning this we shall have more to say
below.
Again, the Editor tells us, "Some one has strikingly expressed it
this way: 'There are certain things that will happen in a man's life
whether he prays or not. There are other things that will happen if he
prays, and will not happen if he does not pray.'" That things happen
whether a man prays or not is exemplified daily in the lives of the
unregenerate, most of whom never pray at all. That 'other things will
happen if he prays' is in need of qualification. If a believer prays
in faith and asks for those things which are according to God's will
he will most certainly obtain that for which he has asked. Again, that
other things will happen if he prays is also true in respect to the
subjective benefits derived from prayer: God will become more real to
him and His promises more precious. That other things 'will not happen
if he does not pray' is true so far as his own life is concerned-a
prayerless life means a life lived out of communion with God and all
that is involved by this. But to affirm that God will not and cannot
bring to pass His eternal purpose unless we pray is utterly erroneous,
for the same God who has decreed the end has also decreed that His end
shall be reached through His appointed means, and One of these is
prayer. The God who has determined to grant a blessing also gives a
spirit of supplication which first seeks the blessing.
The example cited in the above Editorial of the Christian worker
and the business man is a very unhappy one to say the least, for
according to the terms of the illustration the Christian worker's
prayer was not answered by God at all, inasmuch as, apparently, the
way was not opened to speak to the business man about his soul. But on
leaving the office and recalling his prayer the Christian worker
(perhaps in the energy of the flesh) determined to answer the prayer
for himself, and instead of leaving the Lord to "open
the way" for him, took matters into his own hand.
We quote next from one of the latest books issued on Prayer. In it
the author says, "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." Such an
assertion as this is a horrible reflection upon the character of the
Most High God, who "doeth according to His will in the army of Heaven,
and among the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay His hand,
or say unto Him, What doest Thou?" (Dan. 4: 35). There is no
need whatever for God to change His designs or alter His
purpose for the all-sufficient reason that these were framed under the
influence of perfect goodness and unerring wisdom. Men may have
occasion to alter their purposes, for in their
short-sightedness they are frequently unable to anticipate what may
arise after their plans are formed. But not so with God, for He
knows the end from the beginning. To affirm God changes His
purpose is either to impugn His goodness or to deny His eternal
wisdom.
In the same book we are told, "The prayers of God's saints are the
capital stock in Heaven by which Christ carries on His great work upon
earth. The great throes and mighty convulsions on earth are the
results of these prayers. Earth is changed, revolutionized, angels
move on more powerful, more rapid wing, and God's policy is shaped
as the prayers are more numerous, more efficient." If possible,
this is even worse, and we have no hesitation in denominating it as
blasphemy. In the first place, it flatly denies Ephesians 3:11 which
speaks of God's having an "eternal purpose." If God's purpose
is an eternal one then His "policy" is not being "shaped"
today. In the second place, it contradicts Ephesians 1:11 which
expressly declares that God "worketh all things after the
counsel of His own will," therefore it follows that,
"God's policy" is not being "shaped" by man's prayers. In the
third place, such a statement as the above makes the will of the
creature supreme, for if our prayers shape God's policy
then is the Most High subordinate to worms of the earth. Well might
the Holy Spirit ask through the Apostle, "For who hath known the mind
of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor?" (Rom. 11:34).
Such thoughts on prayer as we have been citing are due to low and
inadequate conceptions of God Himself. It ought to be apparent that
there could be little or no comfort in praying to a God that was like
the chameleon, which changes its color every day. What encouragement
is there to lift up our hearts to One who is in one mind yesterday and
another today? What would be the use of petitioning an earthly monarch
if we knew he was so mutable as to grant a petition one day and deny
it another? Is it not the very unchangeableness of God which is
our greatest encouragement to pray? It is because He is
"without variableness or shadow of turning" we are assured that if
we ask anything according to His will we are most certain of being
heard. Well did Luther remark, "Prayer is not overcoming God's
reluctance, but laying hold of His willingness."
And this leads us to offer a few remarks concerning the design
of prayer. Why has God appointed that we should pray? The
vast majority of people would reply, In order that we may obtain from
God the things which we need. While this is one of the purposes
of prayer it is by no means the chief one. Moreover, it considers
prayer only from the human side, and prayer sadly needs to be
viewed from the Divine side. Let us look, then, at some of the
reasons why God has bidden us to pray.
First and foremost, prayer has been appointed that the Lord God
Himself should be honored. God requires we should recognize
that He is, indeed, "the high and lofty One that
inhabiteth eternity" (Isa. 57:15). God requires that we shall own His
universal dominion: in petitioning God for rain Elijah
did but confess His control over the elements; in praying to God to
deliver a poor sinner from the wrath to come we acknowledge that
"salvation is of the LORD" (Jonah 2:9); in supplicating His blessing
on the Gospel unto the uttermost parts of the earth we declare His
rulership over the whole world.
Again; God requires that we shall worship Him, and prayer,
real prayer, is an act of worship. Prayer is an act of worship
inasmuch as it is the prostrating of the soul before Him; inasmuch as
it is a calling upon His great and holy name; inasmuch as it is the
owning of His goodness, His power, His immutability, His grace, and
inasmuch as it is the recognition of His Sovereignty, owned by a
submission to His will. It is highly significant to notice in this
connection that the Temple wasn't termed by Christ the House of
Sacrifice, but instead, the House of Prayer.
Again; prayer redounds to God's glory, for in prayer we do
but acknowledge dependency upon Him. When we humbly supplicate the
Divine Being we cast ourselves upon His power and mercy. In seeking
blessings from God we own that He is the Author and Fountain of every
good and perfect gift. That prayer brings glory to God is further seen
from the fact that prayer calls faith into exercise, and nothing from
us is so honoring and pleasing to Him as the confidence of our hearts.
In the second place, prayer is appointed by God for our
spiritual blessing, as a means for our growth in grace.
When seeking to learn the design of prayer, this should ever
occupy us before we regard prayer as a means for obtaining the
supply of our need. Prayer is designed by God for our humbling.
Prayer, real prayer, is a coming into the Presence of God, and a sense
of His awful majesty produces a realization of our nothingness and
unworthiness. Again; prayer is designed by God for the exercise of
our faith. Faith is begotten in the Word (Rom. 10:8), but it is
exercised in prayer; hence, we read of "the prayer of faith." Again;
prayer calls love into action. Concerning the hypocrite the
question is asked, "Will he delight himself in the Almighty? Will he
always call upon God?" (Job 27:10). But they that love the Lord cannot
be long away from Him, for they delight in unburdening
themselves to Him. Not only does prayer call love into action but
through the direct answers vouchsafed to our prayers our love to God
is increased-"I love the LORD, because He hath heard my voice
and my supplications" (Psa. 116:1). Again; prayer is designed by God
to teach us the value of the blessings we have sought from Him,
and it causes us to rejoice the more when He has bestowed upon
us that for which we supplicate Him.
Third, prayer is appointed by God for our seeking from Him the
things which we are in need of. But here a difficulty may present
itself to those who have read carefully the previous chapters of this
book. If God has foreordained, before the foundation of the world,
everything which happens in time, what is the use of prayer? If it is
true that "of Him and through Him and to Him are all things"
(Rom. 11:30), then why pray? Ere replying directly to these queries it
should be pointed out how that there is just as much reason to ask,
What is the use of me coming to God and telling Him what He already
knows? Wherein is the use of me spreading before Him my need, seeing
He is already acquainted with it? as there is to object, What is the
use of praying for anything when everything has been ordained
beforehand by God? Prayer is not for the purpose of informing God, as
if He were ignorant (the Saviour expressly declared "for your Father
knoweth what things ye have need of, before ye ask Him"-Matt. 6:8),
but it is to acknowledge He does know what we are in need of.
Prayer is not appointed for the furnishing of God with the knowledge
of what we need, but is designed as a confession to Him of our
sense of need. In this, as in everything, God's thoughts are not
as ours. God requires that His gifts should be sought for. He designs
to be honored by our asking, just as He is to be thanked
by us after He has bestowed His blessing.
However, the question still returns on us, If God be the
Predestinator of everything that comes to pass, and the Regulator of
all events, then is not prayer a profitless exercise? A sufficient
answer to these questions is that God bids us to pray, "Pray
without ceasing" (1 Thess. 5:17). And again, "men ought
always to pray" (Luke 18:1). And further: Scripture declares that
"the prayer of faith shall save the sick," and "the effectual fervent
prayer of a righteous man availeth much" (James 5:15, 16); while the
Lord Jesus Christ, our perfect Example in all things, was preeminently
a Man of Prayer. Thus, it is evident, that prayer is neither
meaningless nor valueless. But still this does not remove the
difficulty nor answer the question with which we started out.
What then is the relationship between God's Sovereignty and Christian
prayer?
First of all, we would say with emphasis, that prayer is not
intended to change God's purpose, nor is it to move Him to
form fresh purposes. God has decreed that certain events shall
come to pass through the means He has appointed for their
accomplishment. God has elected certain ones to be saved, but He has
also decreed that these shall be saved through the preaching
the Gospel. The Gospel, then, is one of the appointed means for the
working out of the eternal counsel of the Lord; and prayer is another.
God has decreed the means as well as the end, and among the means is
prayer. Even the prayers of His people are included in His eternal
decrees. Therefore, instead of prayers being in vain they are among
the means through which God exercises His decrees. "If indeed all
things happen by a blind chance, or a fatal necessity prayers in that
case could be of no moral efficacy, and of no use; but since they are
regulated by the direction of Divine wisdom, prayers have a place in
the order of events" (Haldane).
That prayers for the execution of the very things decreed by
God are not meaningless is clearly taught in the Scriptures.
Elijah knew that God was about to give rain, but that
did not prevent him from at once betaking himself to prayer (James
5:17, 18). Daniel "understood" by the writings of the prophets that
the captivity was to last but seventy years, yet when these seventy
years were almost ended we are told that he set his face "unto the
Lord God, to seek by prayer and supplications, with fasting,
and sackcloth, and ashes" (Dan. 9:2, 3). God told the prophet Jeremiah
"For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the LORD,
thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end"; but
instead of adding, there is, therefore, no need for you to supplicate
Me for these things, He said, "Then shall ye call upon Me, and
ye shall go and pray unto Me, and I will hearken unto you" (Jer.
29:11, 12).
Here then is the design of prayer: not that God's will may
be altered, but that it may be accomplished in His own good
time and way. It is because God has promised certain things
that we can ask for them with the full assurance of faith. It is God's
purpose that His will shall be brought about by His own
appointed means, and that He may do His people good upon His own
terms, and that is, by the 'means' and 'terms' of entreaty and
supplication. Did not the Son of God know for certain that
after His death and resurrection He would be exalted by the
Father. Assuredly He did. Yet we find Him asking for this very
thing: "O Father, glorify Thou Me with Thine Own Self with the glory
which I had with Thee before the world was" (John 17:5)! Did not He
know that none of His people could perish? yet He besought the Father
to "keep" them (John 17:11)!
Finally, it should be said that God's will is immutable, and cannot
be altered by our cryings. When the mind of God is not toward a people
to do them good, it cannot be turned to them by the most fervent and
importunate prayer of those who have the greatest interest in Him:
"Then said the LORD unto me, Though Moses and Samuel stood before Me,
yet My mind could not be toward this people: cast them out of
My sight, and let them go forth" (Jer. 15:1). The prayers of Moses to
enter the promised land is a parallel case.
Our views respecting prayer need to be revised and brought into
harmony with the teaching of Scripture on the subject. The prevailing
idea seems to be that I come to God and ask Him for something
that I want, and that I expect Him to give me that which I have
asked. But this is a most dishonoring and degrading conception. The
popular belief reduces God to a servant, our servant: doing our
bidding, performing our pleasure, granting our desires. No; prayer is
a coming to God, telling Him my need, committing my way unto
the Lord, and leaving Him to deal with it as seemeth Him best.
This makes my will subject to His, instead of, as in the former
case, seeking to bring His will into subjection to mine. No prayer is
pleasing to God unless the spirit actuating it is "not my will,
but Thine be done." "When God bestows blessings on a praying people,
it is not for the sake of their prayers, as if He was inclined and
turned by them; but it is for His own sake, and of His own Sovereign
will and pleasure. Should it be said, to what purpose then is prayer?
it is answered, This is the way and means God has appointed for the
communication of the blessing of His goodness to His people. For
though He has purposed, provided, and promised them, yet He will be
sought unto, to give them, and it is a duty and privilege to ask. When
they are blessed with a spirit of prayer it forebodes well, and looks
as if God intended to bestow the good things asked, which should be
asked always with submission to the will of God, saying, Not my
will but Thine be done" (John Gill).
The distinction just noted above is of great practical importance
for our peace of heart. Perhaps the one thing that exercises
Christians as much as anything else is that of unanswered prayers.
They have asked God for something: so far as they are able to judge
they have asked in faith believing they would receive that for which
they had supplicated the Lord: and they have asked earnestly and
repeatedly, but the answer has not come. The result is that, in
many cases, faith in the efficacy of prayer becomes weakened, until
hope gives way to despair and the closet is altogether neglected. Is
it not so?
Now will it surprise our readers when we say that every real
prayer of faith that has ever been offered to God has been
answered? Yet we unhesitatingly affirm it. But in saying this we must
refer back to our definition of prayer. Let us repeat it. Prayer is a
coming to God, telling Him my need (or the need of others),
committing my way unto the Lord, and then leaving Him to deal with the
case as seemeth Him best. This leaves God to answer the prayer in
whatever way He sees fit, and often, His answer may be the very
opposite of what would be most acceptable to the flesh; yet, if we
have really LEFT our need in His hands it will be His
answer, nevertheless. Let us look at two examples.
In John 11 we read of the sickness of Lazarus. The Lord "loved"
him, but He was absent from Bethany. The sisters sent a messenger unto
the Lord acquainting Him of their brother's condition. And note
particularly how their appeal was worded-"Lord, behold, he whom
Thou lovest is sick." That was all. They did not ask Him to heal
Lazarus. They did not request Him to hasten at once to Bethany. They
simply spread their need before Him, committed the case into His
hands, and left Him to act as He deemed best! And what was our
Lord's reply? Did He respond to their appeal and answer their mute
request? Certainly He did, though not, perhaps, in the way they had
hoped. He answered by abiding "two days still in the same place where
He was" (John 11:6), and allowing Lazarus to die! But in this instance
that was not all. Later, He journeyed to Bethany and raised Lazarus
from the dead. Our purpose in referring here to this case is to
illustrate the proper attitude for the believer to take before God in
the hour of need. The next example will emphasize rather, God's method
of responding to His needy child.
Turn to 2 Corinthians 12. The Apostle Paul had been accorded an
unheard-of privilege. He had been transported into Paradise. His ears
had listened to and his eyes had gazed upon that which no other mortal
had heard or seen this side of death. The wondrous revelation was more
than the Apostle could endure. He was in danger of becoming "puffed
up" by his extraordinary experience. Therefore, a thorn in the flesh,
the messenger of Satan, was sent to buffet him lest he be exalted
above measure. And the Apostle spreads his need before the Lord; he
thrice beseeches Him that this thorn in the flesh should be
removed. Was his prayer answered? Assuredly, though not in the
manner he had desired. The "thorn" was not removed but grace was given
to bear it. The burden was not lifted but strength was vouchsafed to
carry it.
Does someone object that it is our privilege to do more than spread
our need before God? Are we reminded that God has, as it were, given
us a blank check and invited us to fill it in? Is it said that the
promises of God are all-inclusive, and that we may ask God for what
we will? If so, we must call attention to the fact that it is
necessary to compare Scripture with Scripture if we are to learn the
full mind of God on any subject, and that as this is done we discover
God has qualified the promises given to praying souls by saying
"If ye ask anything according to His will He heareth us" (1
John 5:14). Real prayer is communion with God so that there
will be common thoughts between His mind and ours. What is needed is
for Him to fill our hearts with His thoughts and then His
desires will become our desires flowing back to Him. Here then
is the meeting-place between God's Sovereignty and Christian prayer:
If we ask anything according to His will He heareth us, and if
we do not so ask He does not hear us; as saith the
Apostle James, "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss,
that ye may consume it upon your lusts" or desires (4:3).
But did not the Lord Jesus tell His disciples, "Verily, verily, I
say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in My name, He
will give it you" (John 16:23)? He did; but this promise does not give
praying souls carte blanche. These words of our Lord are in
perfect accord with those of the Apostle John: "If ye ask anything
according to His will He heareth us." What is it to ask "in the name
of Christ"? Surely it is very much more than a prayer formula, the
mere concluding of our supplications with the words "in the
name of Christ." To apply to God for anything in the name of
Christ, it must needs be in keeping with what Christ is! To ask God in
the name of Christ is as though Christ Himself were the suppliant.
We can only ask God for what Christ would ask. To ask in the name
of Christ is therefore to set aside our own wills, accepting
God's!
Let us now amplify our definition of prayer. What is prayer? Prayer
is not so much an act as it is an attitude-an attitude
of dependency, dependency upon God. Prayer is a confession of
creature weakness, yea, of helplessness. Prayer is the acknowledgment
of our need and the spreading of it before God. We do not say that
this is all there is in prayer, it is not: but it is the
essential, the primary element in prayer. We freely admit that we are
quite unable to give a complete definition of prayer within the
compass of a brief sentence, or in any number of words. Prayer is both
an attitude and an act, an human act, and yet there is
the Divine element in it too, and it is this which makes an
exhaustive analysis impossible as well as impious to attempt. But
admitting this, we do insist again that prayer is fundamentally an
attitude of dependency upon God. Therefore, prayer is the very
opposite of dictating to God. Because prayer is an attitude of
dependency, the one who really prays is submissive, submissive
to the Divine will; and submission to the Divine will means that we
are content for the Lord to supply our need according to the dictates
of His own Sovereign pleasure. And hence it is that we say every
prayer that is offered to God in this spirit is sure of
meeting with an answer or response from Him.
Here then is the reply to our opening question, and the scriptural
solution to the seeming difficulty. Prayer is not the requesting of
God to alter His purpose or for Him to form a new one. Prayer is the
taking of an attitude of dependency upon God, the spreading of our
need before Him, the asking for those things which are in accordance
with His will, and therefore there is nothing whatever inconsistent
between Divine Sovereignty and Christian prayer.
In closing this chapter we would utter a word of caution to
safeguard the reader against drawing a false conclusion from what has
been said. We have not here sought to epitomize the whole
teaching of Scripture on the subject of prayer, nor have we even
attempted to discuss in general the problem of prayer; instead,
we have confined ourselves, more or less, to a consideration of the
relationship between God's Sovereignty and Christian prayer. What
we have written is intended chiefly as a protest against much
of the modern teaching, which so stresses the human element in
prayer that the Divine side is almost entirely lost sight of.
In Jeremiah 10:23 we are told "It is not in man that walketh to
direct his steps" (cf. Prov. 16:9); and yet in many of his prayers man
impulse presumes to direct the Lord as to His way, and as to
what He ought to do: even implying that if only he had
the direction of the affairs of the world and of the church he
would soon have things very different from what they are. This cannot
be denied: for anyone with any spiritual discernment at all could not
fail to detect this spirit in many of our modern prayer-meetings where
the flesh holds sway. How slow we all are to learn the lesson that the
haughty creature needs to be brought down to his knees and humbled
into the dust. And this is where the very act of prayer is intended
to put us. But man (in his usual perversity) turns the footstool
into a throne from whence he would fain direct the Almighty as to what
He ought to do! giving the onlooker the impression that if God
had half the compassion that those who pray (?) have, all would
quickly be right! Such is the arrogance of the old nature even in a
child of God.
Our main purpose in this chapter has been to emphasize the need for
submitting, in prayer, our wills to God's. But it must also be
added that prayer is much more than a pious exercise, and far
otherwise than a mechanical performance. Prayer is, indeed, a Divinely
appointed means whereby we may obtain from God the things we ask,
providing we ask for those things which are in accord with His
will. These pages will have been penned in vain unless they lead both
writer and reader to cry with a deeper earnestness than heretofore,
"Lord, teach us to pray" (Luke 11:1).
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This excerpt is from
http://www.reformed.org/books/pink/pink_sov_09.html
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