Prayer and Faith
"A dear friend of mine who was quite a lover of the chase, told me the following
story: 'Rising early one morning,' he said, 'I heard the baying of a score of deerhounds
in pursuit of their quarry. Looking away to a broad, open field in front of me,
I saw a young fawn making its way across, and giving signs, moreover, that its race
was well run. Reaching the rails of the enclosure, it leaped over and crouched within
ten feet from where I stood.
A moment later two of the hounds came over, when the
fawn ran in my direction and pushed its head between my legs. I lifted the little
thing to my breast, and, swinging round and round, fought off the dogs. I felt,
just then, that all the dogs in the West could not, and should not capture that
fawn after its weakness had appealed to my strength.' So is it, when human helplessness
appeals to Almighty God. Well do I remember when the hounds of sin were after my
soul, until, at last, I ran into the arms of Almighty God." -- A. C. Dixon.
In any study of the principles, and procedure of prayer, of its activities and enterprises,
first place, must be given to faith. It is the initial quality in the heart of any
man who essays to talk to the Unseen. He must, out of sheer helplessness, stretch
forth hands of faith. He must believe, where he cannot prove. In the ultimate
issue, prayer is simply faith, claiming its natural yet marvellous prerogatives
-- faith taking possession of its illimitable inheritance. True godliness is just
as true, steady, and persevering in the realm of faith as it is in the province
of prayer. Moreover: when faith ceases to pray, it ceases to live.
Faith does the impossible because it brings God to undertake for us, and nothing
is impossible with God. How great -- without qualification or limitation -- is the
power of faith! If doubt be banished from the heart, and unbelief made stranger
there, what we ask of God shall surely come to pass, and a believer hath vouchsafed
to him "whatsoever he saith."
Prayer projects faith on God, and God on the world. Only God can move mountains,
but faith and prayer move God. In His cursing of the fig-tree our Lord demonstrated
His power. Following that, He proceeded to declare, that large powers were committed
to faith and prayer, not in order to kill but to make alive, not to blast but to
bless.
At this point in our study, we turn to a saying of our Lord, which there is need
to emphasize, since it is the very keystone of the arch of faith and prayer.
"Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire when ye pray, believe that
ye receive them, and ye shall have them."
We should ponder well that statement -- "Believe that ye receive them, and ye shall
have them." Here is described a faith which realizes, which appropriates, which
takes. Such faith is a consciousness of the Divine, an experienced communion,
a realized certainty.
Is faith growing or declining as the years go by? Does faith stand strong and four
square, these days, as iniquity abounds and the love of many grows cold? Does faith
maintain its hold, as religion tends to become a mere formality and worldliness
increasingly prevails? The enquiry of our Lord, may, with great appropriateness,
be ours. "When the Son of Man cometh," He asks, "shall He find faith on the earth?"
We believe that He will, and it is ours, in this our day, to see to it that the
lamp of faith is trimmed and burning, lest He come who shall come, and that
right early.
Faith is the foundation of Christian character and the security of the soul. When
Jesus was looking forward to Peter's denial, and cautioning him against it, He said
unto His disciple:
"Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath desired to have you, to sift you as wheat; but
I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fall not."
Our Lord was declaring a central truth; it was Peter's faith He was seeking to guard;
for well He knew that when faith is broken down, the foundations of spiritual life
give way, and the entire structure of religious experience falls. It was Peter's
faith which needed guarding. Hence Christ's solicitude for the welfare of His disciple's
soul and His determination to fortify Peter's faith by His own all-prevailing prayer.
In his Second Epistle, Peter has this idea in mind when speaking of growth
in grace as a measure of safety in the Christian life, and as implying fruitfulness.
"And besides this," he declares, "giving diligence, add to your faith virtue; and
to virtue knowledge; and to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and
to patience godliness."
Of this additioning process, faith was the starting-point -- the basis of the other
graces of the Spirit. Faith was the foundation on which other things were to be
built. Peter does not enjoin his readers to add to works or gifts or virtues but
to faith. Much depends on starting right in this business of growing in grace.
There is a Divine order, of which Peter was aware; and so he goes on to declare
that we are to give diligence to making our calling and election sure, which election
is rendered certain adding to faith which, in turn, is done by constant, earnest
praying. Thus faith is kept alive by prayer, and every step taken, in this adding
of grace to grace, is accompanied by prayer.
The faith which invokes powerful praying is the faith which centers itself on a
powerful Person. Faith in Christ's ability to do and to do greatly,
is the faith which prays greatly. Thus the leper lay hold upon the power of Christ.
"Lord, if Thou wilt," he cried, "Thou canst make me clean." In this instance, we
are shown how faith centered in Christ's ability to do, and how it secured
the healing power.
It was concerning this very point, that Jesus questioned the blind men who came
to Him for healing:
"Believe ye that I am able to do this?" He asks. "They said unto Him, Yea, Lord.
Then touched He their eyes, saying, According to your faith be it unto you."
It was to inspire faith in His ability to do that Jesus left behind Him,
that last, great statement, which, in the final analysis, is a ringing challenge
to faith. "All power," He declared, "is given unto Me in heaven and in earth."
- E.M. Bounds