With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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Lesson 9
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Lesson 9:
Pray The Lord Of The Harvest Or, Prayer Provides Labourers
"Why doesn't God help me?" she sobbed.
Then saith He unto His disciples, The harvest truly is
plenteous, but the labourers are few. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the
harvest, that He will send forth labourers into His harvest.
Matt. 9:37-38.
THE Lord frequently taught His disciples that they
must pray, and how; but seldom what to pray. This he left to
their sense of need, and the leading of the Spirit.But here we have one thing
He expressly enjoins them to remember: in view of the plenteous harvest, and
the need of reapers, they must cry to the Lord of the harvest to send forth
labourers. Just as in the parable of the friend at midnight, He would have them
understand that prayer is not to be selfish; so here it is the power through
which blessing can come to others. The Father is Lord of the harvest; when we
pray for the Holy Spirit, we must pray for Him to prepare and send forth
labourers for the work.
Strange, is it not, that He should ask His disciples to pray
for this? And could He not pray Himself? And would not one prayer of His avail
more than a thousand of theirs? And God, the Lord of the harvest, did He not
see the need? And would not He, in His own good time, send forth labourers
without their prayer? Such questions lead us up to the deepest mysteries of
prayer, and its power in the Kingdom of God. The answer to such questions will
convince us that prayer is indeed a power, on which the ingathering of the
harvest and the coming of the Kingdom do in very truth depend.
Prayer is no form or show. The Lord Jesus was Himself the
truth; everything He spake was the deepest truth. It was when (see ver. 36) He
saw the multitude, and was moved with compassion on them, because they were
scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd, that He called on the disciples
to pray for labourers to be sent among them. He did so because He really
believed that their prayer was needed, and would help. The veil which so hides
the invisible world from us was wonderfully transparent to the holy human soul
of Jesus. He had looked long and deep and far into the hidden connection of
cause and effect in the spirit world. He had marked in God's Word how, when God
called men like Abraham and Moses, Joshua and Samuel and Daniel, and given them
authority over men in His name, He had at the same time given them authority
and right to call in the powers of heaven to their aid as they needed them. He
knew that as to these men of old, and to Himself for a time, here upon earth,
the work of God had been entrusted, so it was now about to pass over into the
hands of His disciples. He knew that when this work should be given in charge
to them, it would not be a mere matter of form or show, but that on them, and
their being faithful or unfaithful, the success of the work would actually
depend. As a single individual, within the limitations of a human body and a
human life, Jesus feels how little a short visit can accomplish among these
wandering sheep He sees around Him, and He longs for help to have them properly
cared for. And so He tells His disciples now to begin and pray, and, when they
have taken over the work from Him on earth, to make this one of the chief
petitions in their prayer: That the Lord of the harvest Himself would send
forth labourers into His harvest. The God who entrusted them with the work, and
made it to so large extent dependent on them, gives them authority to apply to
Him for labourers to help, and makes the supply dependent on their prayer.
How little Christians really feel and mourn the need of
labourers in the fields of the world so white to the harvest. And how little
they believe that our labour-supply depends on prayer, that prayer will really
provide as many as he needeth. Not that the dearth of labour is not known or
discussed. Not that efforts are not sometimes put forth to supply the want. But
how little the burden of the sheep wandering without a Shepherd is really borne
in the faith that the Lord of the harvest will, in answer to prayer,
send forth the labourers, and in the solemn conviction that without this prayer
fields ready for reaping will be left to perish. And yet it is so. So wonderful
is the surrender of His work into the hands of His Church, so dependent has the
Lord made Himself on them as His body, through whom alone His work can be done,
so real is the power which the Lord gives His people to exercise in heaven and
earth, that the number of the labourers and the measure of the harvest does
actually depend upon their prayer.
Solemn thought! O why is it that we do not obey the
injunction of the Master more heartily, and cry more earnestly for labourers?
There are two reasons for this. The one is: We miss the compassion of Jesus,
which gave rise to this request for prayer. When believers learn that to love
their neighbours as themselves, that to live entirely for God's glory in their
fellow-men, is the Father's first commandment to His redeemed ones, they will
accept of the perishing ones as the charge entrusted to them by their Lord.
And, accepting them not only as a field of labour, but as the objects of loving
care and interest, it will not be long before compassion towards the hopelessly
perishing will touch their heart, and the cry ascend with an earnestness till
then unknown: Lord! send labourers. The other reason for the neglect of the
command, the want of faith, will then make itself felt, but will be overcome as
our pity pleads for help. We believe too little in the power of prayer to bring
about definite results. We do not live close enough to God, and are not enough
entirely given up to His service and Kingdom, to be capable of the confidence
that He will give it in answer to our prayer. O let us pray for a life so one
with Christ, that His compassion may stream into us, and His Spirit be able to
assure us that our prayer avails.
Such prayer will ask and obtain a twofold blessing. There will
first be the desire for the increase of men entirely given up to the service of
God. It is a terrible blot upon the Church of Christ that there are times when
actually men cannot be found for the service of the Master as ministers,
missionaries, or teachers of God's Word. As God's children make this a matter
of supplication for their own circle or Church, it will be given. The Lord
Jesus is now Lord of the harvest. He has been exalted to bestow gifts the gifts
of the Spirit. His chief gifts are men filled with the Spirit. But the supply
and distribution of the gifts depend on the co-operation of Head and members.
It is just prayer will lead to such co-operation; the believing suppliants will
be stirred to find the men and the means for the work.
The other blessing to be asked will not be less. Every believer
is a labourer; not one of God's children who has not been redeemed for service,
and has not his work waiting. It must be our prayer that the Lord would so fill
all His people with the spirit of devotion, that not one may be found standing
idle in the vineyard. Wherever there is a complaint of the want of helpers, or
of fit helpers in God's work, prayer has the promise of a supply. There is no
Sunday school or district visiting, no Bible reading or rescue work, where God
is not ready and able to provide. It may take time and importunity, but the
command of Christ to ask the Lord of the harvest is the pledge that the prayer
will be heard: I say unto you, he will arise and give him as many as he
needeth.
Solemn, blessed thought! this power has been
given us in prayer to provide in the need of the world, to secure the servants
for God's work. The Lord of the harvest will hear. Christ, who called us so
specially to pray thus, will support our prayers offered in His name and
interest. Let us set apart time and give ourselves to this part of our
intercessory work. It will lead us into the fellowship of that compassionate
heart of His that led Him to call for our prayers. It will elevate us to the
insight of our regal position, as those whose will counts for something with
the great God in the advancement of His Kingdom. It will make us feel how
really we are God's fellow-workers on earth, to whom a share in His work has in
downright earnest been entrusted. It will make us partakers in the soul
travail, but also in the soul satisfaction of Jesus, as we know how, in answer
to our prayer, blessing has been given that otherwise would not have come.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
Blessed Lord! Thou hast this day again given us
another of Thy wondrous lessons to learn. We humbly ask Thee, O give us to see
aright the spiritual realities of which Thou hast been speaking. There is the
harvest which is so large, and perishing, as it waits for sleepy disciples to
give the signal for labourers to come. Lord, teach us to look out upon it with
a heart moved with compassion and pity. There are the labourers, so few. Lord,
show us how terrible the sin of the want of prayer and faith, of which this is
the token. And there is the Lord of the harvest, so able and ready to send them
forth. Lord, show us how He does indeed wait for the prayer to which He has
bound His answer. And there are the disciples, to whom the commission to pray
has been given: Lord, show us how Thou canst pour down Thy Spirit and breathe
upon them, so that Thy compassion and the faith in Thy promise shall rouse them
to unceasing, prevailing prayer.
O our Lord! we cannot understand how Thou canst
entrust such work and give such power to men so slothful and unfaithful. We
thank Thee for all whom Thou art teaching to cry day and night for labourers to
be sent forth. Lord, breathe Thine own Spirit on all Thy children, that they
may learn to live for this one thing alone the Kingdom and glory of their Lord
and become fully awake to the faith of what their prayer can accomplish. And
let all our hearts in this, as in every petition, be filled with the assurance
that prayer, offered in loving faith in the living God, will bring certain and
abundant answer. Amen.

Bible Prayer Fellowship - Discussions Questions for Chapter
9
1.What did Jesus seldom tell His disciples?
What is the one thing He
expressly directed them to remember?
2. Why does He ask His disciples to
pray for this one thing?
3. What did Jesus really believe about praying for
this one thing?
4. What was wonderfully transparent to Jesus' holy human
soul?
5. What does the success of the work of the harvest depend on?
6.
What are Jesus' followers to make one of their chief petitions in prayer?
7. What did Jesus say about "How little they believe
" ?
8. What
did Jesus say about "how little does the burden of the sheep
" ?
9. To
whom has the Lord surrendered His work? And what is He dependent on?
10.
What is the first reason we don't obey the Master's instruction?
11. What
is the other reason for neglect of the command to pray the Lord of the harvest?
12. Why should we pray for a life in union with Christ?
13. What is the
first blessing from praying this prayer?
14. What is a terrible blot on the
church of Christ?
15. What does Jesus' supply and distribution of men
filled with the Spirit depend on?
16. What happens to those who cooperate
with Jesus in prayer?
17. What other blessing is equally great?
18. How
has this power to provide servants for the needs of the world been given to us?
19. When we give ourselves to this part of intercession into what
fellowship will God lead us?
20. What is happening to your faith and your
prayers through this study?

"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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