With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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Lesson 18:
Whose Is This Image? Or Prayer In Harmony With The Destiny
of Man
He saith unto them, Whose is this image and
superscription?
Matt. 21: 20.
And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our
likeness.
Gen. 1:26.
WHOSE is this image? It was by this question that Jesus foiled
His enemies, when they thought to take Him, and settled the matter of duty in
regard to the tribute. The question and the principle it involves are of
universal application. Nowhere more truly than in man himself. The image he
bears decides his destiny. Bearing God's image, he belongs to God: prayer to
God is what he was created for. Prayer is part of the wondrous likeness he
bears to His Divine original; of the deep mystery of the fellowship of love in
which the Three-One has His blessedness, prayer is the earthly image and
likeness.
The more we meditate on what prayer is, and the wonderful power
with God which it has, the more we feel constrained to ask who and what man is,
that such a place in God's counsels should have been allotted to him. Sin has
so degraded him, that from what he is now we can form no conception of what he
was meant to be. We must turn back to God's own record of man's creation to
discover there what God's purpose was, and what the capacities with which man
was endowed for the fulfilment of that purpose.
Man's destiny appears clearly from God's language at creation.
It was to fill, to subdue, to have dominionover the earth
and all in it. All the three expressions show us that man was meant, as God's
representative, to hold rule here on earth. As God's viceroy he was to fill
God's place: himself subject to God, he was to keep all else in subjection to
Him. It was the will of God that all that was to be done on earth should be
done through him: the history of the earth was to be entirely in his hands.
In accordance with such a destiny was the position he was to
occupy, and the power at his disposal. When an earthly sovereign sends a
viceroy to a distant province, it is understood that he advises as to the
policy to be adopted, and that that advice is acted on: that he is at liberty
to apply for troops and the other means needed for carrying out the policy or
maintaining the dignity of the empire. If his policy be not approved of, he is
recalled to make way for some one who better understands his sovereign's
desires as long as he is trusted, his advice is carried out. As God's
representative man was to have ruled; all was to have been done under his will
and rule; on his advice and at his request heaven was to have bestowed its
blessing on earth. His prayer was to have been the wonderful, though simple and
most natural channel, in which the intercourse between the King in heaven and
His faithful servant man, as lord of this world, was to have been maintained.
The destinies of the world were given into the power of the wishes, the will,
the prayer of man.
With sin all this underwent a terrible changeman's fall brought
all creation under the curse. With redemption the beginning was seen of a
glorious restoration. No sooner had God begun in Abraham to form for Himself a
people from whom kings, yea the Great King, should come forth, than we see what
power the prayer of God's faithful servant has to decide the destinies of those
who come into contact with him. In Abraham we see how prayer is not only, or
even chiefly, the means of obtaining blessing for ourselves, but is the
exercise of his royal prerogative to influence the destinies of men, and the
will of God which rules them. We do not once find Abraham praying for himself.
His prayer for Sodom and Lot, for Abimelech, for Ishmael, prove what power a
man, who is God's friend, has to make the history of those around him.
This had been man's destiny from the first. Scripture not only
tells us this, but also teaches us how it was that God could entrust man with
such a high calling. It was because He had created him in His own image and
likeness. The external rule was not committed to him without the inner
fitness: the bearing God's image in having dominion, in being lord of all, had
its root in the inner likeness, in his nature. There was an inner agreement and
harmony between God and man, and incipient Godlikeness, which gave man a real
fitness for being the mediator between God and His world, for he was to be
prophet, priest, and king, to interpret God's will, to represent nature's
needs, to receive and dispense God's bounty. It was in bearing God's image that
he could bear God's rule; he was indeed so like God, so capable of entering
into God's purposes, and carrying out His plans, that God could trust him with
the wonderful privilege of asking and obtaining what the world might need. And
although sin has for a time frustrated God's plans, prayer still remains what
it would have been if man had never fallen: the proof of man's Godlikeness, the
vehicle of his intercourse with the Infinite Unseen One, the power that is
allowed to hold the hand that holds the destinies of the universe. Prayer is
not merely the cry of the suppliant for mercy; it is the highest forth-putting
of his will by man, knowing himself to be of Divine origin, created for and
capable of being, in king-like liberty, the executor of the counsels of the
Eternal.
What sin destroyed, grace has restored. What the first Adam
lost, the second has won back. In Christ man regains his original position, and
the Church, abiding in Christ, inherits the promise: Ask what ye will, and it
shall be done unto you. Such a promise does by no means, in the first place,
refer to the grace or blessing we need for ourselves. It has reference to our
position as the fruit-bearing branches of the Heavenly Vine, who, like Him,
only live for the work and glory of the Father. It is for those who abide in
Him, who have forsaken self to take up their abode in Him with His life of
obedience and self-sacrifice, who have lost their life and found it in Him, who
are now entirely given up to the interests of the Father and His kingdom. These
are they who understand how their new creation has brought them back to their
original destiny, has restored God's image and likeness, and with it the power
to have dominion. Such have indeed the power, each in their own circle, to
obtain and dispense the powers of heaven here on earth. With holy boldness they
may make known what they will: they live as priests in God's presence; as kings
the powers of the world to come begin to be at their disposal. 1 They enter upon the fulfilment of the promise: Ask whatsoever
ye will, it shall be done unto you.
Church of the living God! thy calling is higher and holier than
thou knowest. Through thy members, as kings, and priests unto God, would God
rule the world; their prayers bestow and withhold the blessing of heaven. In
His elect who are not just content to be themselves saved, but yield themselves
wholly, that through them, even as through the Son, the Father may fulfil all
His glorious counsel, in these His elect, who cry day and night unto Him, God
would prove how wonderful man's original destiny was. As the image-bearer of
God on earth, the earth was indeed given into his hand. When he fell, all fell
with him: the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together. But now
he is redeemed; the restoration of the original dignity has begun. It is in
very deed God's purpose that the fulfilment of His eternal purpose, and the
coming of His kingdom, should depend on those of His people who, abiding in
Christ, are ready to take up their position in Him their Head, the great
Priest-King, and in their prayers are bold enough to say what they will that
their God should do. As image-bearer and representative of God on earth,
redeemed man has by his prayers to determine the history of this earth. Man was
created, and has now again been redeemed, to pray, and by his prayer to have
dominion.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
Lord! what is man, that Thou art mindful of him? and the son of
man, that Thou visitest him? for Thou has made him a little lower than the
angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honour. Thou madest him to have
dominion over the work of Thy hands: Thou hast put all things under his feet. O
Lord our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all the earth!
Lord God! how low has sin made man to sink. And how terribly
has it darkened his mind, that he does not even know his Divine destiny, to be
Thy servant and representative. Alas! that even Thy people, when their eyes are
opened, are so little ready to accept their calling and to seek to have power
with God, that they may have power with men too to bless them.
Lord Jesus! it is in Thee the Father hath again crowned man
with glory and honour, and opened the way for us to be what He would have us. O
Lord, have mercy on Thy people, and visit Thine heritage! Work mightily in Thy
Church, and teach Thy believing disciples to go forth in their royal
priesthood, and in the power of prayer, to which Thou hast given such wonderful
promises, to serve Thy kingdom, to have rule over the nations, and make the
name of God glorious in the earth. Amen.
1God
is seeking priests among the sons of men. A human priesthood is one of the
essential parts of His eternal plan. To rule creation by man is His
design; to carry on the worship of creation by man is no less part of His
design.
Priesthood is the appointed link between heaven and earth, the
channel of intercourse between the sinner and God. Such a priesthood, in so far
as expiation is concerned, is in the hands of the Son of God alone; in so far
as it is to be the medium of communication between Creator and creature, is
also in the hands of redeemed menof the Church of God.
God is seeking kings. Not out of the ranks of angels. Fallen
man must furnish Him with the rulers of His universe. Human hands must wield
the sceptre, human heads must wear the crown. The Rent Veil, by Dr. H.
Bonar.

Bible Prayer Fellowship - Discussions Questions for Chapter
18
What decides mans destiny?
1. What has sin done to man?
2. Where
in the Bible does mans destiny appear clearly?
3. What was Gods
will for everything done on earth?
4. How was man to have ruled?
5. To
what were the destinies of the world given?
6. How did Abrahams prayer
power affect people who came in touch with him?
7. What do Abrahams
prayers for Sodom, Abimelech and Ishmael prove?
8. What gave man real
fitness for being a mediator?
9. What was man supposed to do for
people?
10. Through whom does man regain his original position?
11. For
whom was the promise in John 15:7 given?
12. What does God want to do
through church members?
13. Through whom does God want to prove how
wonderful mans original destiny was?
14. Upon whom does the
fulfillment of Gods eternal and His coming kingdom depend?
15. Why was
man created and then redeemed?

"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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