With Christ In The School Of Prayer
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Lesson 31
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Lesson 31:
Pray Without Ceasing, Or A Life Of Prayer
Rejoice evermore. Pray without ceasing. In everything
give thanks.
I Thess. 5:16, 17, 18.
OUR Lord spake the parable of the widow and the unjust judge
to teach us that men ought to pray always and not faint. As the widow
persevered in seeking one definite thing, the parable appears to have reference
to persevering prayer for some one blessing, when God delays or appears to
refuse. The words in the Epistles, which speak of continuing instant in prayer,
continuing in prayer and watching in the same, of praying always in the Spirit,
appear more to refer to the whole life being one of prayer. As the soul is
filling with the longing for the manifestation of God's glory to us and in us,
through us and around us, and with the confidence that He hears the prayers of
His children; the inmost life of the soul is continually rising upward in
dependence and faith, in longing desire and trustful expectation.
At the close of our meditations it will not be difficult to say
what is needed to live such a life of prayer. The first thing is undoubtedly
the entire sacrifice of the life to God's kingdom and glory. He who seeks to
pray without ceasing because he wants to be very pious and good, will never
attain to it. It is the forgetting of self and yielding ourselves to live for
God and His honour that enlarges the heart, that teaches us to regard
everything in the light of God and His will, and that instinctively recognises
in everything around us the need of God's help and blessing, an opportunity for
His being glorified. Because everything is weighed and tested by the one thing
that fills the heart the glory of God, and because the soul has learnt that
only what is of God can really be to Him and His glory, the whole life becomes
a looking up, a crying from the inmost heart, for God to prove His power and
love and so show forth His glory. The believer awakes to the consciousness that
he is one of the watchmen on Zion s walls, one of the Lord s remembrancers,
whose call does really touch and move the King in heaven to do what would
otherwise not be done. He understands how real Paul s exhortation was, praying
always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit for all the saints and
for me, and continue in prayer, withal praying also for us. To forget oneself,
to live for God and His kingdom among men, is the way to learn to pray without
ceasing.
This life devoted to God must be accompanied by the deep
confidence that our prayer is effectual. We have seen how our Blessed Lord
insisted upon nothing so much in His prayer-lessons as faith in the Father as a
God who most certainly does what we ask. Ask and ye shall receive; count
confidently on an answer, is with Him the beginning and the end of His teaching
(compare Matt. 7:8 and John 16:24). In proportion as this assurance
masters us, and it becomes a settled thing that our prayers do tell and that
God does what we ask, we dare not neglect the use of this wonderful power: the
soul turns wholly to God, and our life becomes prayer. We see that the Lord
needs and takes time, because we and all around us are the creatures of time,
under the law of growth; but knowing that not one single prayer of faith can
possibly be lost that there is sometimes a needs-be for the storing up and
accumulating of prayer, that persevering pray is irresistible, prayer becomes
the quiet, persistent living of our life of desire and faith in the presence of
our God. O do not let us any longer by our reasonings limit and enfeeble such
free and sure promises of the living God, robbing them of their power, and
ourselves of the wonderful confidence they are meant to inspire. Not in God,
not in His secret will, not in the limitations of His promises, but in us, in
ourselves is the hindrance; we are not what we should be to obtain the promise.
Let us open our whole heart to God's words of promise in all their simplicity
and truth: they will search us and humble us; they will lift us up and make us
glad and strong. And to the faith that knows it gets what it asks, prayer is
not a work or a burden, but a joy and a triumph; it becomes a necessity and a
second nature.
This union of strong desire and firm confidence again is
nothing but the life of the Holy Spirit within us. The Holy Spirit dwells in
us, hides Himself in the depths of our being, and stirs the desire after the
Unseen and the Divine, after God Himself. Now in groanings that cannot be
uttered, then in clear and conscious assurance; now in special distinct
petitions for the deeper revelation of Christ to ourselves, then in pleadings
for a soul, a work, the Church or the world, it is always and alone the Holy
Spirit who draws out the heart to thirst for God, to long for His being made
known and glorified. Where the child of God really lives and walks in the
Spirit, where he is not content to remain carnal, but seeks to be spiritual, in
everything a fit organ for the Divine Spirit to reveal the life of Christ and
Christ Himself, there the never-ceasing intercession-life of the Blessed Son
cannot but reveal and repeat itself in our experience. Because it is the Spirit
of Christ who prays in us, our prayer must be heard; because it is we who pray
in the Spirit, there is need of time, and patience, and continual renewing of
the prayer, until every obstacle be conquered, and the harmony between God s
Spirit and ours is perfect.
But the chief thing we need for such a life of unceasing prayer
is, to know that Jesus teaches us to pray. We have begun to understand a little
what His teaching is. Not the communication of new thoughts or views,
not the discovery of failure or error, not the stirring up of desire and faith,
of however much importance all this be, but the taking us up into the
fellowship of His own prayer-life before the Father this it is by which Jesus
really teaches. It was the sight of the praying Jesus that made the disciples
long and ask to be taught to pray. It is the faith of the ever-praying Jesus,
whose alone is the power to pray, that teaches us truly to pray. We know why:
He who prays is our Head and our Life. All He has is ours and is given to us
when we give ourselves all to Him. By His blood He leads us into the immediate
presence of God. The inner sanctuary is our home, we dwell there. And He that
lives so near God, and knows that He has been brought near to bless those who
are far, cannot but pray. Christ makes us partakers with Himself of His
prayer-power and prayer-life. We understand then that our true aim must not be
to work much and have prayer enough to keep the work right, but to pray much
and then to work enough for the power and blessing obtained in prayer to find
its way through us to men. It is Christ who ever lives to pray, who saves and
reigns. He communicates His prayer-life to us: He maintains it in us if we
trust Him. He is surety for our praying without ceasing. Yes, Christ teaches to
pray by showing how He does it, by doing it in us, by leading us to do it in
Him and like Him. Christ is all, the life and the strength too for a
never-ceasing prayer-life.
It is the sight of this, the sight of the ever-praying Christ
as our life, that enables us to pray without ceasing. Because His priesthood is
the power of an endless life, that resurrection-life that never fades and never
fails, and because His life is our life, praying without ceasing can become to
us nothing less than the life-joy of heaven. So the Apostle says: Rejoice
evermore; pray without ceasing; in everything give thanks.
Borne up between the never-ceasing joy and the never-ceasing praise,
never-ceasing prayer is the manifestation of the power of the eternal life,
where Jesus always prays. The union between the Vine and the branch is in very
deed a prayer-union. The highest conformity to Christ, the most blessed
participation in the glory of His heavenly life, is that we take part in His
work of intercession: He and we live ever to pray. In the experience of our
union with Him, praying without ceasing becomes a possibility, a reality, the
holiest and most blessed part of our holy and blessed fellowship with God. We
have our abode within the veil, in the presence of the Father. What the Father
says, we do; what the Son says, the Father does. Praying without ceasing is the
earthly manifestation of heaven come down to us, the foretaste of the life
where they rest not day or night in the song of worship and adoration.
Lord, Teach Us To Pray
O my Father, with my whole heart do I praise Thee for this
wondrous life of never-ceasing prayer, never-ceasing fellowship, never-ceasing
answers, and never-ceasing experience of my oneness with Him who ever lives to
pray. O my God! keep me ever so dwelling and walking in the presence of Thy
glory, that prayer may be the spontaneous expression of my life with Thee.
Blessed Saviour! with my whole heart I praise Thee that Thou
didst come from heaven to share with me in my needs and cries, that I might
share with Thee in Thy all-prevailing intercession. And I thank Thee that Thou
hast taken me into the school of prayer, to teach the blessedness and the power
of a life that is all prayer. And most of all, that Thou hast taken me up into
the fellowship of Thy life of intercession, that through me too Thy blessings
may be dispensed to those around me.
Holy Spirit! with deep reverence I thank Thee for Thy work in
me. It is through Thee I am lifted up into a share in the intercourse between
the Son and the Father, and enter so into the fellowship of the life and love
of the Holy Trinity Spirit of God! perfect Thy work in me; bring me into
perfect union with Christ my Intercessor. Let Thine unceasing indwelling make
my life one of unceasing intercession. And let so my life become one that is
unceasingly to the glory of the Father and to the blessing of those around me.
Amen.

"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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