CHAPTER XXXIII. ANSWERED PRAYER.
“And the Lord heard the
voice of Elijah.” 1 Kings
xvi.
Yes, and He will hear your voice if
you are as much in earnest as he was! Why should
not God hear the voice of William, or Robert, Sarah
or Edith? He is no respecter of persons.
Is it not written over the door of mercy, “Knock,
and it shall be opened?” Aye, and the knocker
is so low a child’s hand may reach it.
St. James tells us that Elijah was “a man of
like passions.” He was a human being like
you and me, but he had faith in God. Why should
we not believe in God as much as the prophet did?
Is He not God yet? Have any of these sceptics
removed Him from His throne? If He is still there,
let us come with boldness as Elijah did.
This was not the first time God had
heard the voice of His servant, and answered his prayer,
and there is no reason why we should not have repeated
and continuous replies in answer to our requests.
Had Elijah the same wealth of promise we have?
Jesus Christ has spoken since those times,
and has said things which ought to fill us with hopefulness
whenever we pray. What wonderful words of cheer
He said in those last few days of His life, such as
“Ask and ye shall receive, that your joy may
be full.” Look up the references to that
verse, and you will feel you must kneel down and ask
for something.
But is there not suggested by that
word “Ask,” the secret of so much failure?
Do we ask? How often, in what is called prayer,
there is little or no supplication? We are to
make our requests known. Listen to Elijah:
“Lord, let this child’s soul come into
him again.” Why should we not pray in
the same direct style? Our prayers would not
weary others by their length, if, before we knelt
down, we thought
What is needed, and needed
now.
What a scene when the child began
to breathe again! and when the anxious mother was
summoned to receive her boy from the dead. “Now,”
said she, “I know thou art a man of God, and
that the word of the Lord in thy mouth is truth.”
When the church fights its battles on its knees, it
prevails. Only let us, who say we believe in
God, put our faith into petition, and obtain answers,
then Infidelity will hide its head. Mr. Finney
tells that when he first began to attend a place of
worship, it was as an honest inquirer after truth.
The members of the church noticed his coming to the
prayer meetings with regularity, and presently it occurred
to them that the young man might be anxious about his
soul. Accordingly they asked him if he would
like them to pray for him. He somewhat roughly
declined, for, said he, “You don’t get
any answers to your prayers for yourselves.
You have been for months praying to be revived, and
you are not any better.” Perhaps he was
right, though rude. We may have in our midst
those who would believe the Bible if they saw that
we had only to ask to receive.
Let every father bear this in mind
when he leads the devotions of his family. Nothing
is so likely to save our children from infidelity as
their knowing that we receive when we ask, and that
our knock brings an open door. If only the family
altar were the meeting place between God and man,
Atheists might sneer and chatter, but they would never
be able to cause our children to listen, for would
not they say, “I know my father is a man of
God, and the word of the Lord in his mouth is true.”
Reader, is the family altar at your
house a bridge from earth to heaven, or is it a sham,
and a helper to those who say, Prayer is an exploded
superstition?
PREACH REPENTANCE.
Is there any truth in the allegation
that we do not preach Repentance as much as we ought
to do? There is a soft sort of preaching abroad
which we Methodists should abhor, namely, a gospel
which has no dread of hell in it. We do not
say that we should spend much time in proving the
eternity of punishment, but certainly the thought of
the fate of the impenitent should be in solution in
the preacher’s mind, and then, like the bitter
herbs eaten with the Paschal Lamb, penitence will make
the gospel relishing. We have little doubt that
The doctrine of the
cross is and must be, tasteless
to those who do not sorrow
for sin.
Those who preach repentance are in
good company. He who fails here does not tread
in the steps of Jesus, who said, “Repent ye,
and believe the gospel.” Is human nature
any better now than it was then, that we should cease
to say to the people what Christ said? Depend
upon it, He knew what to preach. None of the
New Testament preachers said as much about hell as
He did, and yet, forsooth! we are told that such preaching
is coarse, and behind the age. When the age
is astray, the farther we are behind it the better
for us. It is sickening to hear men talk as though
they were more refined than was the Son of God!
Such preaching is like raking the garden with the
teeth upwards. You may as well have no rake
at all, if you do not use the teeth.