With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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3
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6
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7
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10
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Lesson 11
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15
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Lesson 11:
Believe That Ye Have Received; Or, The Faith That TakesTherefore I say unto you, All things
whatsoever ye pray and ask for, believe that ye have received them, and ye
shall have them.
Mark 11:24
WHAT a promise! so large, so Divine, that our little hearts
cannot take it in, and in every possible way seek to limit it to what we think
safe or probable; instead of allowing it, in its quickening power and energy,
just as He gave it, to enter in, and to enlarge our hearts to the measure of
what His love and power are really ready to do for us. Faith is very far from
being a mere conviction of the truth of God's word, or a conclusion drawn from
certain premises. It is the ear which has heard God'say what He will do, the
eye which has seen Him doing it, and, therefore, where there is true faith, it
is impossible but the answer must come. If we only see to it that we do the one
thing that He asks of us as we pray: BELIEVE that ye have received; He
will see to it that He does the thing He has promised: Ye shall have
them. The key-note of Solomon s prayer (2 Chron. 6:4), Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, who hath
with His hands fulfilled that which He spake with His mouth to
my father David, is the key-note of all true prayer: the joyful adoration of a
God whose hand always secures the fulfilment of what His mouth
hath spoken. Let us in this spirit listen to the promise Jesus gives; each part
of it has its Divine message.
All things whatsoever. At this first word our human
wisdom at once begins to doubt and ask: This surely cannot be literally true?
But if it be not, why did the Master speak it, using the very strongest
expression He could find: All things whatsoever. And it is not as if this were
the only time He spoke thus; is it not He who also said, If thou canst believe,
ALL THINGS are possible to him that believeth; If ye have faith, NOTHING shall
be impossible to you. Faith is so wholly the work of God's Spirit through His
word in the prepared heart of the believing disciple, that it is impossible
that the fulfilment should not come; faith is the pledge and forerunner of the
coming answer. Yes, ALL THINGS WHATSOEVER ye shall ask in prayer believing,
ye receive. The tendency of human reason is to interpose here, and with
certain qualifying clauses, if expedient, if according to God's will, to break
the force of a statement which appears dangerous. O let us beware of dealing
thus with the Master s words. His promise is most literally true. He wants His
oft repeated ALL THINGS to enter into our hearts, and reveal to us how mighty
the power of faith is, how truly the Head calls the members to share with Him
in His power, how wholly our Father places His power at the disposal of the
child that wholly trusts Him. In this all things faith is to have its food and
strength: as we weaken it we weaken faith. The WHATSOEVER is unconditional: the
only condition is what is implied in the believing. Ere we can believe we must
find out and know what God's will is believing is the exercise of a soul
surrendered and given up to the influence of the Word and the Spirit; but when
once we do believe nothing shall be impossible. God forbid that we should try
and bring down His ALL THINGS to the level of what we think possible. Let us
now simply take Christ s WHATSOEVER as the measure and the hope of our faith:
it is a seed-word which, if taken just as He gives it, and kept in the heart,
will unfold itself and strike root, fill our life with its fulness, and bring
forth fruit abundantly.
All things whatsoever ye pray and ask for. It is in
prayer that these all things are to be brought to God, to be asked and received
of Him. The faith that receives them is the fruit of the prayer. In one aspect
there must be faith before there can be prayer; in another the faith is the
outcome and the growth of prayer. It is in the personal presence of the
Saviour, in intercourse with Him, that faith rises to grasp what at first
appeared too high. It is in prayer that we hold up our desire to the light of
God's Holy Will, that our motives are tested, and proof given whether we ask
indeed in the name of Jesus, and only for the glory of God. It is in prayer
that we wait for the leading of the Spirit to show us whether we are asking the
right thing and in the right spirit. It is in prayer that we become conscious
of our want of faith, that we are led on to say to the Father that we do
believe, and that we prove the reality of our faith by the confidence with
which we persevere. It is in prayer that Jesus teaches and inspires faith. He
that waits to pray, or loses heart in prayer, because he does not yet feel the
faith needed to get the answer, will never learn to believe. He who begins to
pray and ask will find the Spirit of faith is given nowhere so surely as at the
foot of the Throne.
Believe that ye have received. It is clear that what we
are to believe is, that we receive the very things we ask. The Saviour does not
hint that because the Father knows what is best He may give us something else.
The very mountain faith bids depart is cast into the sea. There is a prayer in
which, in everything, we make known our requests with prayer and supplication,
and the reward is the sweet peace of God keeping heart and mind. This is the
prayer of trust. It has reference to things of which we cannot find out if God
is going to give them. As children we make known our desires in the countless
things of daily life, and leave it to the Father to give or not as He thinks
best. But the prayer of faith of which Jesus speaks is something different,
something higher. When, whether in the greater interests of the Master s work,
or in the lesser concerns of our daily life, the soul is led to see how there
is nothing that so honours the Father as the faith that is assured that He will
do what He has said in giving us whatsoever we ask for, and takes its stand on
the promise as brought home by the Spirit, it may know most certainly that it
does receive exactly what it asks. Just see how clearly the Lord sets this
before us in verse 23: Whosoever shall not doubt in his heart, but shall
believe that what he saith cometh to pass, he shall have it. This is the
blessing of the prayer of faith of which Jesus speaks.
Believe that ye have received. This is the word of
central importance, of which the meaning is too often misunderstood. Believe
that you have received! now, while praying, the thing you ask for. It may only
be later that you shall have it in personal experience, that you shall see what
you believe; but now, without seeing, you are to believe that it has been given
you of the Father in heaven. The receiving or accepting of an answer to prayer
is just like the receiving or accepting of Jesus or of pardon, a spiritual
thing, an act of faith apart from all feeling. When I come as a supplicant for
pardon, I believe that Jesus in heaven is for me, and so I receive or take Him.
When I come as a supplicant for any special gift, which is according to God's
word, I believe that what I ask is given me: I believe that I have it, I hold
it in faith; I thank God that it is mine. If we know that He heareth us,
whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions which we have asked of
Him.
And ye shall have them. That is, the gift which we
first hold in faith as bestowed upon us in heaven will also become ours in
personal experience. But will it be needful to pray longer if once we know we
have been heard and have received what we asked? There are cases in which such
prayer will not be needful, in which the blessing is ready to break through at
once, if we but hold fast our confidence, and prove our faith by praising for
what we have received, in the face of our not yet having it in experience.
There are other cases in which the faith that has received needs to be still
further tried and strengthened in persevering prayer. God only knows when
everything in and around us is fully ripe for the manifestation of the blessing
that has been given to faith. Elijah knew for certain that rain would come; God
had promised it; and yet he had to pray the seven times. And that prayer was no
show or play; an intense spiritual reality in the heart of him who lay pleading
there, and in the heaven above where it had its effectual work to do. It is
through faith and patience we inherit the promises. Faith says most
confidently, I have received it. Patience perseveres in prayer until the gift
bestowed in heaven is seen on earth. Believe that ye have received, and
ye shall have. Between the have received in heaven, and the
shall have of earth, believe: believing praise and prayer is the
link.
And now, remember one thing more: It is Jesus who said this.
As we see heaven thus opened to us, and the Father on the Throne offering to
give us whatsoever we ask in faith, our hearts feel full of shame that we have
so little availed ourselves of our privilege, and full of fear lest our feeble
faith still fail to grasp what is so clearly placed within our reach. There is
one thing must make us strong and full of hope: it is Jesus who has brought us
this message from the Father. He Himself, when He was on earth, lived the life
of faith and prayer. It was when the disciples expressed their surprise at what
He had done to the fig-tree, that He told them that the very same life He led
could be theirs; that they could not only command the fig-tree, but the very
mountain, and it must obey. And He is our life: all He was on earth He is in us
now; all He teaches He really gives. He is Himself the Author and the Perfecter
of our faith: He gives the spirit of faith; let us not be afraid that such
faith is not meant for us. It is meant for every child of the Father; it is
within reach of each one who will but be childlike, yielding himself to the
Father's Will and Love, trusting the Father's Word and Power. Dear
fellow-Christian! let the thought that this word comes through Jesus, the Son,
our Brother, give us courage, and let our answer be: Yea, Blessed Lord, we do
believe Thy Word, we do believe that we receive.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
Blessed Lord! Thou didst come from the Father to show us all
His love, and all the treasures of blessing that love is waiting to bestow.
Lord! Thou hast this day again flung the gates so wide open, and given us such
promises as to our liberty in prayer, that we must blush that our poor hearts
have so little taken it in. It has been too large for us to believe.
Lord! we now look up to Thee to teach us to take and keep and
use this precious word of Thine: All things whatsoever ye ask, believe that ye
have received. Blessed Jesus! it is Thy self in whom our faith must be rooted
if it is to grow strong. Thy work has freed us wholly from the power of sin,
and opened the way to the Father; Thy Love is ever longing to bring us into the
full fellowship of Thy glory and power; Thy Spirit is ever drawing us upward
into a life of perfect faith and confidence; we are assured that in Thy
teaching we shall learn to pray the prayer of faith. Thou wilt train us to pray
so that we believe that we receive, to believe that we really have what we ask.
Lord! teach me so to know and trust and love Thee, so to live and abide in
Thee, that all my prayers rise up and come before God in Thee, and that my soul
may have in Thee the assurance that I am heard. Amen.

Bible Prayer Fellowship - Discussions Questions for Chapter
11
1. How do we seek to limit Gods promise in Mark 11:24?
2. If we
would allow it what would that promise do?
3. How does the author describe
faith?
4. Where is it impossible for the answer not to come?
5. What
is the one thing we must do?
6. What was the essence of Solomons
prayer?
7. What is that first word which our human wisdom begins to doubt?
8. Where else did Jesus give this great promise?
9. Who must build
our faith?
10. What are some of the qualifiers human reason tends to
intervene with Gods promise?
11. What phrase does Jesus want to
enter our hearts?
12. At whose disposal does our Father place His power?
13. What must we find out before we can believe?
14. What must we
pray that we do not limit?
15. What must there be before there can be
prayer?
16. What is the result prayer?
17. What are we to believe
that we receive?
18. What does the prayer of trust make reference to?
19. How does the prayer of faith honor God?
20. Without seeing the thing
you asked in faith what are you to believe?
21. What must I believe when I
go to Jesus asking for forgiveness?
22. When is it not necessary to pray
any longer?
23. Does our faith sometimes need to be tried and strengthened
in persevering prayer?
24. When did Jesus tell His disciples that the very
same life He led could also be theirs?

"With Christ in the School of Prayer" by Rev. Andrew
Murray. This document is from the Christian
Classics Ethereal Library at Calvin College. Questions provided by Rev.
Rev. Oliver W. Price, Bible Prayer
Fellowship
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