With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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Lesson 22:
My Words In You, Or The Word And Prayer
If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask
whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto you.
John 15:7.
THE vital connection between the word and prayer is one of the
simplest and earliest lessons of the Christian life. As that newly-converted
heathen put it: I pray I speak to my father; I read my Father speaks to me.
Before prayer, it is God's word that prepares me for it by revealing what the
Father has bid me ask. In prayer, it is God's word strengthens me by giving my
faith its warrant and its plea. And after prayer, it is God's word that brings
me the answer when I have prayed, for in it the Spirit gives me to hear the
Father's voice. Prayer is not monologue but dialogue; God's voice in response
to mine in its most essential part. Listening to God's voice is the secret of
the assurance that He will listen to mine. Incline thine ear, and hear; Give
ear to me; Hearken to my voice; are words which God speaks to man as well as
man to God. His hearkening will depend on ours; the entrance His words find
with me, will be the measure of the power of my words with Him. What God's
words are to me, is the test of what He Himself is to me, and so of the
uprightness of my desire after Him in prayer.
It is this connection between His word and our prayer that
Jesus points to when He says, If ye abide in me, and my words abide in
you, ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto you. The deep
importance of this truth becomes clear if we notice the other expression of
which this one has taken the place. More than once Jesus had said, Abide
in me and I in you. His abiding in us was the complement and the crown
of our abiding in Him. But here, instead of Ye in me and I in you, He
says, Ye in me and my words in you. His words abiding are the equivalent
of Himself abiding.
What a view is here opened up to us of the place the words of
God in Christ are to have in our spiritual life, and especially in our prayer.
In a man's words he reveals himself. In his promises he gives
himself away, he binds himself to the one who receives his promise. In his
commands he sets forth his will, seeks to make himself master of him
whose obedience he claims, to guide and use him as if he were part of himself.
It is through our words that spirit holds fellowship with spirit, that the
spirit of one man passes over and transfers itself into another. It is through
the words of a man, heard and accepted, and held fast and obeyed, that he can
impart himself to another. But all this in a very relative and limited
sense.
But when God, the infinite Being, in whom everything is life
and power, spirit and truth, in the very deepest meaning of the words, when God
speaks forth Himself in His words, He does indeed give HIMSELF, His Love and
His Life, His Will and His Power, to those who receive these words, in a
reality passing comprehension. In every promise He puts Himself in our
power to lay hold of and possess; in every command He puts Himself in
our power for us to share with Him His Will, His Holiness, His Perfection. In
God's Word God gives us HIMSELF; His Word is nothing less than the Eternal Son,
Christ Jesus. And so all Christ's words are God's words, full of a Divine
quickening life and power. The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit and
they are life.
Those who have made the deaf and dumb their study, tell us how
much the power of speaking depends on that of hearing, and how the loss of
hearing in children is followed by that of speaking too. This is true in a
wider sense: as we hear, so we speak. This is true in the highest sense of our
intercourse with God. To offer a prayer to give utterance to certain wishes and
to appeal to certain promises is an easy thing, and can be learned of man by
human wisdom. But to pray in the Spirit, to speak words that reach and touch
God, that affect and influence the powers of the unseen world, such praying,
such speaking, depends entirely upon our hearing God's voice. Just as far as we
listen to the voice and language that God speaks, and in the words of God
receive His thoughts, His mind, His life, into our heart, we shall learn to
speak in the voice and the language that God hears. It is the ear of the
learner, wakened morning by morning, that prepares for the tongue of the
learned, to speak to God as well as men, as should be (Isa. l. 4).
This hearing the voice of God is something more than the
thoughtful study of the Word. There may be a study and knowledge of the Word,
in which there is but little real fellowship with the living God. But there is
also a reading of the Word, in the very presence of the Father, and under the
leading of the Spirit, in which the Word comes to us in living power from God
Himself; it is to us the very voice of the Father, a real personal fellowship
with Himself. It is the living voice of God that enters the heart, that brings
blessing and strength, and awakens the response of a living faith that reaches
the heart of God again.
It is on this hearing the voice, that the power both to obey
and believe depends. The chief thing is, not to know what God has said
we must do, but that God Himself says it to us. It is not the law, and
not the book, not the knowledge of what is right, that works obedience, but the
personal influence of God and His living fellowship. And even so it is not the
knowledge of what God has promised, but the presence of God
Himself as the Promiser, that awakens faith and trust in prayer. It is only
in the full presence of God that disobedience and unbelief become
impossible.
If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask
whatsoever ye will, it shall be done unto you. We see what this means. In the
words the Saviour gives Himself. We must have the words in us, taken up
into our will and life, reproduced in our disposition and conduct. We must have
them abiding in us: our whole life one continued exposition of the
words that are within, and filling us; the words revealing Christ within, and
our life revealing Him without. It is as the words of Christ enter our very
heart, become our life and influence it, that our words will enter His heart
and influence Him. My prayer will depend on my life; what God's words are to me
and in me, my words will be to God and in God. If I do what God says, God will
do what I say.
How well the Old Testament saints understood this connection
between God's words and ours, and how really prayer with them was the loving
response to what they had heard God speak! If the word were a promise, they
counted on God to do as He had spoken. Do as Thou hast said; For Thou,
Lord, hast spoken it; According to Thy promise; According to Thy word; in such
expressions they showed that what God spake in promise was the root and the
life of what they spake in prayer. If the word was a command, they simply
did as the Lord had spoken: So Abram departed as the Lord had spoken.
Their life was fellowship with God, the interchange of word and thought. What
God spoke they heard and did; what they spoke God heard and did. In each word
He speaks to us, the whole Christ gives Himself to fulfil it for us. For each
word He asks no less that we give the whole man to keep that word, and to
receive its fulfilment.
If my words abide in you; the condition is simple and clear.
In His words His will is revealed. As the words abide in me, His will rules me;
my will becomes the empty vessel which His will fills, the willing instrument
which His will wields; He fills my inner being. In the exercise of obedience
and faith my will becomes ever stronger, and is brought into deeper inner
harmony with Him. He can fully trust it to will nothing but what He wills; He
is not afraid to give the promise, If my words abide in you, ask whatsoever ye
will, it shall be done unto you. To all who believe it, and act upon it, He
will make it literally true.
Disciples of Christ! is it not becoming more and more clear to
us that while we have been excusing our unanswered prayers, our impotence in
prayer, with a fancied submission to God's wisdom and will, the real reason has
been that our own feeble life has been the cause of our feeble prayers. Nothing
can make strong men but the word coming to us from God's mouth: by that we must
live. It is the word of Christ, loved, lived in, abiding in us, becoming
through obedience and action part of our being, that makes us one with Christ,
that fits us spiritually for touching, for taking hold of God. All that is of
the world passeth away; he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever. O let
us yield heart and life to the words of Christ, the words in which He ever
gives HIMSELF, the personal living Saviour, and His promise will be our rich
experience: If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatsoever ye
will, and it shall be done unto you.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
Blessed Lord! Thy lesson this day has again discovered to me my
folly. I see how it is that my prayer has not been more believing and
prevailing. I was more occupied with my speaking to Thee than Thy speaking to
me. I did not understand that the secret of faith is this: there can be only so
much faith as there is of the Living Word dwelling in the soul.
And Thy word had taught me so clearly: Let every man be swift
to hear, slow to speak; let not thine heart be hasty to utter anything before
God. Lord, teach me that it is only with Thy word taken up into my life that my
words can be taken into Thy heart; that Thy word, if it be a living power
within me, will be a living power with Thee; what Thy mouth hath spoken Thy
hand will perform.
Lord! deliver me from the uncircumcised ear. Give
me the opened ear of the learner, wakened morning by morning to hear the
Father's voice. Even as Thou didst only speak what Thou didst hear, may my
speaking be the echo of Thy speaking to me. When Moses went into the tabernacle
to speak with Him, he heard the voice of One speaking unto him from off the
mercy-seat. Lord, may it be so with me too. Let a life and character bearing
the one mark, that Thy words abide and are seen in it, be the preparation for
the full blessing: Ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto you.
Amen.
Bible Prayer Fellowship - Discussions Questions for Chapter
22
1.What did the newly converted heathen say?
2. What is the most
essential part of prayer?
3. What does Gods hearkening to our prayers
depend on?
4. What is the test of what God means to you?
5. How did
Jesus point to the connection between His words and our prayers?
6. What is
the difference between John 14:20 and 15:7?
7. How does a man give himself
away?
8. When God reveals Himself in His words what does He give?
9.
What does God give in every promise?
10. What does Gods Word give us?
11. What follows the loss of hearing in children?
12. What does
reaching God by praying in the Spirit depend on?
13. In Isaiah 50:4 how
does the man prepare himself to speak to God?
14. How does the Word of God
come to us in living power?
15. What does the power to obey and believe
depend on?
16. In what words does the Savior give Himself to us?
17. If
I do what God says, what will God do?
18. How did the Old Testament saints
prayers show that they understood the connection between Gods Word and
ours?
19. What was the root and the life of what the Old Testament saints
spoke in prayer?
20. Compare the Old Testament saints speaking and action
with Gods speaking and action?
21. When I abide in Christ what does
my will become?
22. How does obedience and faith affect us?
23. What
has been the cause of our feeble prayers?

"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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