With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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7
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9
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10
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11
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12
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13
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Lesson 14
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15
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Lesson 14:
When Ye Stand Praying, Forgive; Or Prayer And Love
And whensoever ye stand praying, forgive, if
ye have aught against any one; that your Father also which is in heaven may
forgive you your trespasses.
Mark 11:25.
THESE words follow immediately on the great
prayer-promise, All things whatsoever ye pray, believe that ye have received
them, and ye shall have them. We have already seen how the words that preceded
that promise, Have faith in God, taught us that in prayer all depends upon our
relation to God being clear; these words that follow on it remind us that our
relation with fellow-men must be clear too. Love to God and love to our
neighbour are inseparable: the prayer from a heart, that is either not right
with God on the one side, or with men on the other, cannot prevail. Faith and
love are essential to each other.
We find that this is a thought to which our Lord
frequently gave expression. In the Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 5:23, 24), when
speaking of the sixth commandment, He taught His disciples how impossible
acceptable worship to the Father was if everything were not right with the
brother: If thou art offering thy gift at the altar, and there rememberest that
thy brother hath aught against thee, leave there thy gift before the altar, and
go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy
gift. And so later, when speaking of prayer to God, after having taught us to
pray, Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors, He added at
the close of the prayer: If you forgive not men their trespasses, neither will
your Father forgive your trespasses. At the close of the parable of the
unmerciful servant He applies His teaching in the words: So shall also my
Heavenly Father do unto you, if ye forgive not every one his brother from your
hearts. And so here, beside the dried-up fig-tree, where He speaks of the
wonderful power of faith and the prayer of faith, He all at once, apparently
without connection, introduces the thought, Whensoever ye stand praying,
forgive, if ye have aught against any one; that your Father also which is in
heaven may forgive you your trespasses. It is as if the Lord had learned during
His life at Nazareth and afterwards that disobedience to the law of love to men
was the great sin even of praying people, and the great cause of the feebleness
of their prayer. And it is as if He wanted to lead us into His own blessed
experience that nothing gives such liberty of access and such power in
believing as the consciousness that we have given ourselves in love and
compassion, for those whom God loves.
The first lesson taught here is that of a forgiving
disposition. We pray, Forgive, even as we have forgiven. Scripture says,
Forgive one another, even as God also in Christ forgave you. God's full and
free forgiveness is to be the rule of ours with men. Otherwise our reluctant,
half-hearted forgiveness, which is not forgiveness at all, will be God's rule
with us. Every prayer rests upon our faith in God's pardoning grace. If God
dealt with us after our sins, not one prayer could be heard. Pardon opens the
door to all God's love and blessing: because God has pardoned all our sin, our
prayer can prevail to obtain all we need. The deep sure ground of answer to
prayer is God's forgiving love. When it has taken possession of the heart, we
pray in faith. But also, when it has taken possession of the heart, we live in
love. God's forgiving disposition, revealed in His love to us, becomes a
disposition in us; as the power of His forgiving love shed abroad and dwelling
within us, we forgive even as He forgives. If there be great and grievous
injury or injustice done us, we seek first of all to possess a Godlike
disposition; to be kept from a sense of wounded honour, from a desire to
maintain our rights, or from rewarding the offender as he has deserved. In the
little annoyances of daily life, we are watchful not to excuse the hasty
temper, the sharp word, the quick judgment, with the thought that we mean no
harm, that we do not keep the anger long, or that it would be too much to
expect from feeble human nature, that we should really forgive the way God and
Christ do. No, we take the command literally, Even as Christ forgave,
so also do ye. The blood that cleanses the conscience from dead works,
cleanses from selfishness too; the love it reveals is pardoning love, that
takes possession of us and flows through us to others. Our forgiving love to
men is the evidence of the reality of God's forgiving love in us, and so the
condition of the prayer of faith.
There is a second, more general lesson: our daily
life in the world is made the test of our intercourse with God in prayer. How
often the Christian, when he comes to pray, does his utmost to cultivate
certain frames of mind which he thinks will be pleasing. He does not
understand, or forgets, that life does not consist of so many loose pieces, of
which now the one, then the other, can be taken up. Life is a whole, and the
pious frame of the hour of prayer is judged of by God from the ordinary frame
of the daily life of which the hour of prayer is but a small part. Not the
feeling I call up, but the tone of my life during the day, is God's criterion
of what I really am and desire. My drawing nigh to God is of one piece with my
intercourse with men and earth: failure here will cause failure there. And that
not only when there is the distinct consciousness of anything wrong between my
neighbour and myself; but the ordinary current of my thinking and judging, the
unloving thoughts and words I allow to pass unnoticed, can hinder my prayer.
The effectual prayer of faith comes out from a life given up to the will and
the love of God. Not according to what I try to be when praying, but what I am
when not praying, is my prayer dealt with by God.
We may gather these thoughts into a third lesson:
In our life with men the one thing on which everything depends is love. The
spirit of forgiveness is the spirit of love. Because God is love, He forgives:
it is only when we are dwelling in love that we can forgive as God forgives. In
love to the brethren we have the evidence of love to the Father, the ground of
confidence before God, and the assurance that our prayer will be heard, (1 John
iv. 20, 3:18-21, 23.). Let us love in deed and truth; hereby shall we
assure our heart before Him. If our heart condemn us not, we have boldness
toward God, and whatever we ask, we receive of Him. Neither faith nor work will
profit if we have not love; it is love that unites with God, it is love that
proves the reality of faith. As essential as in the word that precedes the
great prayer-promise in Mark 11:24, Have faith in God, is this one that follows
it, Have love to men. The right relations to the living God above me, and the
living men around me, are the conditions of effectual prayer.
This love is of special consequence when we labour
for such and pray for them. We sometimes give ourselves to work for Christ,
from zeal for His cause, as we call it, or for our own spiritual health,
without giving ourselves in personal self-sacrificing love for those whose
souls we seek. No wonder that our faith is feeble and does not conquer. To look
on each wretched one, however unloveable he be, in the light of the tender love
of Jesus the Shepherd seeking the lost; to see Jesus Christ in him, and to take
him up, for Jesus sake, in a heart that really loves, this, this is the secret
of believing prayer and successful effort. Jesus, in speaking of forgiveness,
speaks of love as its root. Just as in the Sermon on the Mount He connected His
teaching and promises about prayer with the call to be merciful, as the Father
in heaven is merciful (Matt. 5:7, 9, 22, 38-48), so we see it here: a loving
life is the condition of believing prayer.
It has been said: There is nothing so
heart-searching as believing prayer, or even the honest effort to pray in
faith. O let us not turn the edge of that self-examination by the thought that
God does not hear our prayer for reasons known to Himself alone. By no means.
Ye ask and receive not, because ye ask amiss. Let that word of God'search us.
Let us ask whether our prayer be indeed the expression of a life wholly given
over to the will of God and the love of man. Love is the only soil in which
faith can strike its roots and thrive. As it throws its arms up, and opens its
heart heavenward, the Father always looks to see if it has them opened towards
the evil and the unworthy too. In that love, not indeed the love of perfect
attainment, but the love of fixed purpose and sincere obedience, faith can
alone obtain the blessing. It is he who gives himself to let the love of God
dwell in him, and in the practice of daily life to love as God loves, who will
have the power to believe in the Love that hears his every prayer. It is the
Lamb, who is in the midst of the throne: it is suffering and forbearing
love that prevails with God in prayer. The merciful shall obtain mercy; the
meek shall inherit the earth.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
Blessed Father! Thou art Love, and only he that
abideth in love abideth in Thee and in fellowship with Thee. The Blessed Son
hath this day again taught me how deeply true this is of my fellowship with
Thee in prayer. O my God! let Thy love, shed abroad in my heart by the Holy
Spirit, be in me a fountain of love to all around me, that out of a life in
love may spring the power of believing prayer. O my Father! grant by the Holy
Spirit that this may be my experience, that a life in love to all around me is
the gate to a life in the love of my God. And give me especially to find in the
joy with which I forgive day by day whoever might offend me, the proof that Thy
forgiveness to me is a power and a life.
Lord Jesus! my Blessed Teacher! teach Thou me
to forgive and to love. Let the power of Thy blood make the pardon of my sins
such a reality, that forgiveness, as shown by Thee to me, and by me to others,
may be the very joy of heaven. Show me whatever in my intercourse with
fellowmen might hinder my fellowship with God, so that my daily life in my own
home and in society may be the school in which strength and confidence are
gathered for the prayer of faith. Amen.

Bible Prayer Fellowship - Discussions Questions for Chapter
14
1. In prayer what does everything depend on?
2. Who must we forgive to
claim the prayer promise in Mark 11:24?
3. What must we do before we offer
our gift at the altar?
4. What was (and still is) the great sin of even
praying people?
5. What is the first lesson we are taught here?
6.
What should be the model of our forgiveness of men?
7. What is the deep
sure ground of answers to prayer?
8. How does Gods forgiving nature
become our nature?
9. What should we never excuse in the little annoyances
of daily life?
10. What command should we take literally?
11. What is
the evidence of Gods forgiving love in us?
12. What is the test of
our daily communication with God in prayer?
13. What can hinder my prayer?
14. What does the effective prayer of faith come from?
15. In life
among human beings what is the one thing on which everything depends?
16.
What are the conditions for effective prayer?
17. What is the root of
believing prayer?
18. Who will have the power to believe in the love that
hears his every prayer?

"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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