“They
shall abundantly utter the memory of thy
great
goodness.”
THIS chapter is written more than
seven years later than the foregoing, in further testimony
and praise.
Returning to Canada at the time of
the Great War, we came face to face with a serious
financial crisis. Only two ways seemed open to
us. One was to lay our affairs frankly before
the Board, showing that our salary was quite insufficient,
with war conditions and prices, to meet our requirements.
The other course was to just go forward, get a suitable
home and whatever we required, and trust our Father
to supply what was needed above our income. We
decided on the latter course.
A dear daughter felt indignant that
we should have a salary insufficient for our needs;
but we assured her that to trust God for what was lacking
was not begging. The day came when this child
and myself took possession of our new home. As
we entered the dining-room we found a large mail from
China on the table.
One letter was forwarded from the
lady in Australia whose gifts, in the past, seemed
always to have met some felt need. Her letter
enclosed fifty pounds, with the expressed wish that
thirty pounds should be used for work in China, but
twenty pounds was to be used to meet some personal
need. I handed the letter to my daughter, saying:
“Shall we not believe that God will undertake
for us? It seems to me as if our Father were
beside us saying, ’My child, take this hundred
dollars as an earnest of what I am going to do for
you.’”
Tears stood in her eyes as my daughter
gave the letter back, saying: “Mother,
we don’t trust God half enough!”
Were I to attempt to write the history
of the months that followed, a long chapter would
be required; but my testimony along this line is surely
sufficient.
It was on this same furlough that
I came to have an enlarged vision of my Heavenly Father’s
willingness to undertake in what some might term the
minor details of everyday life. Missionaries,
especially we missionary women, know only too well
how we are criticized in the matter of dress, when
in the homeland and when traveling. I have had,
through the years, not only many amusing but trying
experiences in this connection, and I resolved to
make the question of dress a definite matter of prayer.
And I rejoice to testify that the result of this decision
became a constant source of wonder and praise.
Yes, I found the Lord could guide me even in trimming
my hat to his glory! That is, so that I could
stand up before an audience and not bring discredit
to my Master. Praise his name!
“There is nothing too
great for his power,
And nothing too small for his love!”
At the time of the Great War a son
had gone to England with the first Canadian contingent.
When this news reached us in China, I began to pray
definitely that the Lord would use my son’s gifts
in the best way for his country’s good, but
would keep him back from the trenches and from actual
warfare. My boy did not know of this prayer.
Some weeks after reaching England
he was looking forward to leaving for the trenches
in France, when orders came that he was needed in the
Orderly Room, and his unit left without him. Months
later a call came for volunteers, to fill the great
gaps made at the time of the first use of gas.
My boy resigned his position, and joined the company
of volunteers to be sent to France. Just before
they were to leave he was again sent for from Headquarters,
and told he was to go to the Canadian Base in France
as adjutant. His duties in this capacity kept
him at the Forwarding Base. A year later he again
planned to resign, in order to get to the trenches.
He had begun making arrangements for this step, when
he had a fall from his horse, which caused him to be
invalided home to Canada, where he was kept till the
close of the war.
It would indeed be difficult to persuade
his mother that all this happened by chance; for one
day, when in great distress, expecting any day a cable
to say he had left for the trenches, I received a most
clear assurance from the Lord that he had the boy
in his keeping.
After our return to China, when in
great trouble, I prayed the Lord to grant me a clear
sign of his favor by giving me a certain petition,
which affected a child in the homeland. The request
was a complicated one, including several definite
details. A little more than a month later, a
letter reached me from the one for whom I had asked
the Lord’s favor. She wrote joyously, telling
that she had received just what I had asked for, and
in every detail as I had prayed.
When my husband resigned the regular
field work of Changte, Honan, it became necessary
for us to find a home elsewhere. The only suitable
place, meeting all our requirements, was on the hills
at Kikungshan, South Honan. On going there to
get a site for our home, though we looked for more
than a week, we could find no place. As we started
down the hill, one morning soon after midnight, I
was feeling our failure very keenly, for we had given
up our old home. When my husband saw how bad I
felt, as he told me later, he began to cry earnestly
to the Lord to give us a site. And before we
reached the station the assurance had come that we
would get a place. A friend on the train, traveling
third class, saw us getting on the second class, and
came in for a few words before getting off the train.
When he heard we had failed to get a site, he said:
“I know of a beautiful site
which our Mission is reserving for a future missionary.
I’ll ask them to give it to you.”
A few days later the treasurer of
this Mission wrote us that they had unanimously and
gladly voted to give us the site.
I am now writing these closing words
in our God-given home, built on this beautiful site,
one of the most lovely spots to be found in China.
So from this quiet mountain retreat, a monument of
what God can give in answer to prayer, this little
book of Prayer Testimonies is sent forth.
As the past has been reviewed, and
God’s wonderful faithfulness recalled, there
has come a great sense of regret that I have not trusted
God more, and asked more of him, both for my family
and the Chinese. Yes, it is truly wonderful!
But the wonder is not that God can answer prayer,
but that he does, when we so imperfectly meet
the conditions clearly laid down in his Word.
In recent years I have often tested
myself by these conditions, when weeks, and perhaps
months, have passed without some answer to prayer,
and there has come a conscious spiritual sagging.
As the discerning soul can plainly see, all the conditions
mentioned in the list below may be included in the
one word “Abide.”
Conditions of Prevailing Prayer
1. Contrite humility
before God and forsaking of sin 2 Chron
7:14.
2. Seeking God with the
whole heart. Jer 29:12, 13.
3. Faith in God. Mark
11:23, 24.
4. Obedienc
John 3:22.
5. Dependence on the
Holy Spirit. Rom 8:26.
6. Importunity. Mark
7:24-30; Luke 11:5-10.
7. Must ask in accordance
with God’s will 1 John 5:14.
8. In Christ’s
Name. John 14:13, 14, and many other passages.
9. Must be willing to
make amends for wrongs to others. Matt
5:23, 24.
Causes of Failure in Prayer
1. Sin in the heart and
life. Psa 66:18; Isa 59:1, 2.
2. Persistent refusal
to obey God. Prov 1:24-28; Zech 7:11,
13.
3. Formalism and hypocrisy. Isa
1:2-15.
4. Unwillingness to forgive
others. Mark 11:25, 26.
5. Wrong motives. James
4:2, 3.
6. Despising God’s
law. Amos 2:4.
7. Lack of love and mercy. Prov
21:13.