With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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Lesson 10
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Lesson 10:
What Wilt Thou? Or, Prayer Must Be DefiniteAnd Jesus answered him, and said, What wilt thou that I
should do unto thee?
Mark 10:51; Luke 18:41.
THE blind man had been crying out aloud, and that a great
deal, Thou Son of David, have mercy on me. The cry had reached the ear of the
Lord; He knew what he wanted, and was ready to grant it him. But ere He does
it, He asks him: What wilt thou that I should do unto thee? He wants to
hear from his own lips, not only the general petition for mercy, but the
distinct expression of what his desire was. Until he speaks it out, he is not
healed.
There is now still many a suppliant to whom the Lord puts the
same question, and who cannot, until it has been answered, get the aid he ask.
Our prayers must not be a vague appeal to His mercy, an indefinite cry for
blessing, but the distinct expression of definite need. Not that His loving
heart does not understand our cry, or is not ready to hear. But He desires it
for our own sakes. Such definite prayer teaches us to know our own needs
better. It demands time, and thought, and self-scrutiny to find out what really
is our greatest need. It searches us and puts us to the test as to whether our
desires are honest and real, such as we are ready to persevere in. It leads us
to judge whether our desires are according to God's Word, and whether we really
believe that we shall receive the things we ask. It helps us to wait for the
special answer, and to mark it when it comes.
And yet how much of our prayer is vague and pointless. Some cry
for mercy, but take not the trouble to know what mercy must do for them. Others
ask, perhaps, to be delivered from sin, but do not begin by bringing any sin by
name from which the deliverance may be claimed. Still others pray for God's
blessing on those around them, for the outpouring of God's Spirit on their land
or the world, and yet have no special field where they wait and expect to see
the answer. To all the Lord says: And what is it now you really want and expect
Me to do? Every Christian has but limited powers, and as he must have his own
special field of labour in which he works, so with his prayers too. Each
believer has his own circle, his family, his friends, his neighbours. If he
were to take one or more of these by name, he would find that this really
brings him into the training-school of faith, and leads to personal and pointed
dealing with his God. It is when in such distinct matters we have in faith
claimed and received answers, that our more general prayers will be believing
and effectual.
We all know with what surprise the whole civilised world heard
of the way in which trained troops were repulsed by the Transvaal Boers at
Majuba. And to what did they owe their success? In the armies of Europe the
soldier fires upon the enemy standing in large masses, and never thinks of
seeking an aim for every bullet. In hunting game the Boer had learnt a
different lesson: his practised eye knew to send every bullet on its special
message, to seek and find its man. Such aiming must gain the day in the
spiritual world too. As long as in prayer we just pour out our hearts in a
multitude of petitions, without taking time to see whether every petition is
sent with the purpose and expectation of getting an answer, not many will reach
the mark. But if, as in silence of soul we bow before the Lord, we were to ask
such questions as these: What is now really my desire? do I desire it in faith,
expecting to receive? am I now ready to place and leave it in the Father s
bosom? is it a settled thing between God and me that I am to have the answer?
we should learn so to pray that God would see and we would know what we really
expect.
It is for this, among other reasons, that the Lord warns us
against the vain repetitions of the Gentiles, who think to be heard for their
much praying. We often hear prayers of great earnestness and fervour, in which
a multitude of petitions are poured forth, but to which the Saviour would
undoubtedly answer What wilt thou that I should do unto thee? If I am in a
strange land, in the interests of the business which my father owns, I would
certainly write two different sorts of letters. There will be family letters
giving expression to all the intercourse to which affection prompts; and there
will be business letters, containing orders for what I need. And there may be
letters in which both are found. The answers will correspond to the letters. To
each sentence of the letters containing the family news I do not expect a
special answer. But for each order I send I am confident of an answer whether
the desired article has been forwarded. In our dealings with God the business
element must not be wanting. With our expression of need and sin, of love and
faith and consecration, there must be the pointed statement of what we ask and
expect to receive; it is in the answer that the Father loves to give us the
token of His approval and acceptance.
But the word of the Master teaches us more. He does not say,
What dost thouwish? but, What does thouwill? One often wishes for
a thing without willing it. Iwishto have a certain article, but I find
the price too high; I resolve not to take it; Iwish, but do
notwillto have it. The sluggard wishes to be rich, but does not will it.
Many a one wishes to be saved, but perishes because he does not will it. The
will rules the whole heart and life; if I really will to have anything that is
within my reach, I do not rest till I have it. And so, when Jesus says to us,
What wilt thou? He asks whether it is indeed our purpose to have what we ask at
any price, however great the sacrifice. Dost thou indeed so will to have it
that, though He delay it long, thou dost not hold thy peace till He hear thee?
Alas! how many prayers are wishes, sent up for a short time and then forgotten,
or sent up year after year as matter of duty, while we rest content with the
prayer without the answer.
But, it may be asked, is it not best to make our wishes known
to God, and then to leave it to Him to decide what is best, without seeking to
assert our will? By no means. This is the very essence of the prayer of faith,
to which Jesus sought to train His disciples, that it does not only make known
its desire and then leave the decision to God. That would be the prayer of
submission, for cases in which we cannot know God's will. But the prayer of
faith, finding God's will in some promise of the Word, pleads for that till it
come. In Matthew (ix. 28) we read Jesus said to the blind man:Believe
yethat I can do this? Here, in Mark, He says:What wilt thouthat I
should do? In both cases He said that faith had saved them. And so He said to
the Syrophenician woman, too: Great is thyfaith: be it unto thee even as
thouwilt. Faith is nothing but the purpose of the will resting on God's
word, and saying: I must have it. To believe truly is to will firmly.
But is not such a will at variance with our dependence on God
and our submission to Him? By no means; it is much rather the true submission
that honours God. It is only when the child has yielded his own will in entire
surrender to the Father, that he receives from the Father liberty and power to
will what he would have. But, when once the believer has accepted the will of
God, as revealed through the Word and Spirit, as his will, too, then it is the
will of God that His child should use this renewed will in His service. The
will is the highest power in the soul; grace wants above everything to sanctify
and restore this will, one of the chief traits of God's image, to full and free
exercise. As a son, who only lives for his Father's interests, who seeks not
his own but his Father's will is trusted by the father with his business, so
God'speaks to His child in all truth, What wilt thou? It is often spiritual
sloth that, under the appearance of humility, professes to have no will,
because it fears the trouble of searching out the will of God, or, when found,
the struggle of claiming it in faith. True humility is ever in company with
strong faith, which only seeks to know what is according to the will of God,
and then boldly claims the fulfilment of the promise: Ye shall askwhat ye
will, and it shall be done unto you.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
Lord Jesus! teach me to pray with all my heart and strength,
that there may be no doubt with Thee or with me as to what I have asked. May I
so know what I desire that, even as my petitions are recorded in heaven, I can
record them on earth too, and note each answer as it comes. And may my faith in
what Thy Word has promised be so clear that the Spirit may indeed work in me
the liberty to will that it shall come. Lord! renew, strengthen, sanctify
wholly my will for the work of effectual prayer.
Blessed Saviour! I do beseech Thee to reveal to me the
wonderful condescension Thou showest us, thus asking us to say what we will
that Thou shouldest do, and promising to do whatever we will. Son of God! I
cannot understand it; I can only believe that Thou hast indeed redeemed us
wholly for Thyself, and dost seek to make the will, as our noblest part, Thy
most efficient servant. Lord! I do most unreservedly yield my will to Thee, as
the power through which Thy Spirit is to rule my whole being. Let Him take
possession of it, lead it into the truth of Thy promises, and make it so strong
in prayer that I may ever hear Thy voice saying: Great is thy faith: be it unto
thee even as thou wilt. Amen.

Bible Prayer Fellowship - Discussions Questions for Chapter
10
1.What did Jesus want before he healed the man?
2. Do prayers need to be
specific today?
3. What does definite prayer teach us?
4. What test
must our desires pass to be heard?
5. What does the Lord say to everyone?
6. What are the four questions we must ask before we make a request in
prayer?
7. What would the Savior have to ask some folks who pour out a
multitude of requests?
8. Explain the two kinds of letters a man might send
home?
9. In our dealings with God what element must be present?
10.
Instead of asking "What do you wish? what does God ask?
11. "Do you
really will to have it enough
"?
12. What does the prayer of faith
do?
13. What did Jesus say to the blind man and to the Syrophenician woman?
14. What does it mean "To believe truly
"?
15. What must the
child do to receive the liberty and the power to will what he desires?
16.
What kind of a son is Gods child like?
17. What always accompanies
true humility?
18. Explain how faith can boldly claim the fulfillment of
the promise?

"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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