Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Job: 39 JOB 42:10 Intercessory Prayer
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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Job: 39 JOB 42:10 Intercessory Prayer
TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Job (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 39 JOB 42:10 Intercessory Prayer
Other Subjects in this Topic:
Intercessory Prayer
August the 11, 1861
by
C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)
"And the Lord turned the captivity of Job, when he prayed for his friends"
-Job_42:10
The Lord turned the captivity of Job." So, then, our longest sorrows have a
close, and there is a bottom to the profoundest depths of our misery. Our
winters shall not frown for ever; summer shall soon smile. The tide shall not
eternally ebb out; the floods retrace their march. The night shall not hang
its darkness for ever over our souls; the sun shall yet arise with healing
beneath his wings,-"The Lord turned again the captivity of Job." Our sorrows
shall have an end when God has gotten his end in them. The ends in the case
of Job were these, that Satan might be defeated, foiled with his own weapons,
blasted in his hopes when he had everything his own way. God, at Satan's
challenge, had stretched forth his hand and touched Job in his bone and in
his flesh, and yet the tempter could not prevail against him, but received
his rebuff in those conquering words, "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in
him." When Satan is defeated, then shall the battle cease. The Lord aimed
also at the trial of Job's faith. Many weights were hung upon this palm tree,
but it still grew uprightly. The fire had been fierce enough, the gold was
undiminished, and only the dross was consumed. Another purpose the Lord had
was his own glory. And God was glorified abundantly. Job had glorified God on
his dunghill; now let him magnify his Lord again upon his royal seat in the
gate. God had gotten unto himself eternal renown through that grace by which
he supported his poor afflicted servant under the heaviest troubles which
ever fell to the lot of man. God had another end, and that also was served.
Job had been sanctified by his afflictions. His spirit had been mellowed.
That small degree of tartness towards others, which may have been in Job's
temper had been at last removed, and any self-justification which once had
lurked within, was fairly driven out. Now God's gracious designs are
answered, he removed the rod from his servant's back, and takes the melted
silver from the midst of the glowing coals. God doth not afflict willingly,
nor grieve the children of men for nought, and he shows this by the fact that
he never afflicts them longer than there is a need for it, and never suffers
them to be one moment longer in the furnace than is absolutely requisite to
serve the purposes of his wisdom and of his love. "The Lord turned again the
captivity of Job." Beloved brother in Christ, thou hast had a long captivity
in affliction. God hath sold thee into the hand of thine adversaries, and
thou hast wept by the waters of Babylon, hanging thy harp upon the willows.
Despair not! He that turned the captivity of Job can turn thine as the
streams in the south. He shall make again thy vineyard to blossom, and thy
field to yield her fruit. Thou shalt again come forth with those that make
merry, and once more shall the song of gladness be on thy lip. Let not
Despair rivet his cruel fetters about thy soul. Hope yet, for there is hope.
Trust thou still, for there is ground of confidence. He shall bring thee up
again rejoicing from the land of thy captivity, and thou shalt say of him,
"He hath turned my mourning into dancing."
The circumstance which attended Job's restoration is that to which I invite
your particular attention. "The Lord turned again the captivity of Job, when
he prayed for his friends." Intercessory prayer was the omen of his returning
greatness. It was the bow in the cloud, the dove bearing the olive branch,
the voice of the turtle announcing the coming summer. When his soul began to
expand itself in holy and loving prayer for his erring brethren, then the
heart of God showed itself to him by returning to him his prosperity without,
and cheering his soul within. Brethren, it is not fetching a laborious
compass, when from such a text as this I address you upon the subject of
prayer for others. Let us learn today to imitate the example of Job, and pray
for our friends, and peradventure if we have been in trouble, our captivity
shall be turned.
Four things I would speak of this morning, and yet but one thing; I would
speak upon intercessory prayer thus-first, by way of commending the exercise;
secondly, by way of encouraging you to enlist in it; thirdly, by way of
suggestion, as to the persons for whom you should especially pray; and
fourthly, by way of exhortation to all believers to undertake and persevere
in the exercise of intercession for others.
I. First, then, BY WAY OF COMMENDING THE EXERCISE, let me remind you that
intercessory prayer has been practiced by all the best of God's saints. We
may not find instances of it appended to every saint's name, but beyond a
doubt, there has never been a man eminent for piety personally, who has not
always been pre-eminent in his anxious desires for the good of others, and in
his prayers for that end. Take Abraham, the father of the faithful. How
earnestly did he plead for his son Ishmael! "O that Ishmael might live before
thee!" With what importunity did he approach the Lord on the plains of Mamre,
when he wrestled with him again and again for Sodom; how frequently did he
reduce the number, as though, to use the expression of the Puritan, "He were
bidding and beating down the price at the market." "Peradventure there be
fifty; peradventure there lack five of the fifty; peradventure there be
twenty found there; peradventure there be ten righteous found there: wilt
thou not spare the city for the sake of ten?" Well did he wrestle, and if we
may sometimes be tempted to wish he had not paused when he did, yet we must
commend him for continuing so long to plead for that doomed and depraved
city. Remember Moses, the most royal of men, whether crowned or uncrowned;
how often did he intercede! How frequently do you meet with such a record as
this-"Moses and Aaron fell on their faces before God!" Remember that cry of
his on the top of the mount, when it was to his own personal disadvantage to
intercede, and yet when God had said, "Let me alone, I will make of thee a
great nation," yet how he continued, how he thrust himself in the way of the
axe of justice, and cried, "Spare them, Lord, and if not," (and here he
reached the very climax of agonizing earnestness) "blot my name out of the
Book of Life." Never was there a mightier prophet than Moses, and never one
more intensely earnest in intercessory prayer. Or pass on, if you will, to
the days of Samuel. Remember his words, "God forbid that I should sin against
the Lord, in ceasing to pray for you." Or bethink you of Solomon, and of his
earnest intercession at the opening of the temple, when, with outstretched
hands he prayed for the assembled people; or if you want another royal
example, turn to Hezekiah with Sennacherib's letter spread out before the
Lord, when he prayed not only for himself, but for God's people of Israel in
those times of straits. Think ye, too, of Elias, who for Israel's sake would
bring down the rain that the land perish not; as for himself, miracles gave
him his bread and his water, it was for others that he prayed, and said to
his servant, "Go again seven times." Forget not Jeremy, whose tears were
prayers-prayers coming too intensely from his heart to find expression in any
utterance of the lip. He wept himself away, his life was one long shower,
each drop a prayer, and the whole deluge a flood of intercession. And if you
would have an example taken from the times of Christ and his apostles,
remember how Peter prays on the top of the house, and Stephen amidst the
falling stones. Or think you, if you will, of Paul, of whom even more than of
others it could be said, that he never ceased to remember the saints in his
prayers, "making mention of you daily in my prayers," stopping in the very
midst of the epistle and saying, "For which cause I bow my knee unto the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ." As for the cloud of holy witnesses in
our own time, I will hazard the assertion that there is not a single child of
God who does not plead with God for his children, for his family, for the
church at large, and for the poor ungodly perishing world. I deny his
saintship if he does not pray for others.
But further, while we might commend this duty by quoting innumerable examples
from the lives of eminent saints, it is enough for the disciple of Christ if
we say that Christ in His holy gospel has made it your duty and your
privilege to intercede for others. When he taught us to pray, he said, "Our
Father," and the expressions which follow are not in the singular but in the
plural-"Give us this day our daily bread." "Forgive us our debts"; "Lead us
not into temptation"; evidently intending to set forth that none of us are to
pray for ourselves alone, that while we may have sometimes prayers so bitter
that they must be personal like the Saviour's own-"Father, if it be possible,
let this cup pass from me"; yet, as a rule, our prayers should be public
prayers, though offered in private; and even in secret we should not forget
the church of the living God. By the mouth of Paul how frequently does the
Holy Ghost exhort us to pray for ministers! "Brethren," says Paul, "pray for
us"; and then after exhorting them to offer prayers and supplications for all
classes and conditions of men, he adds, "And for us also that we may have
boldness to speak as we ought to speak." While James, who is ever a practical
apostle, bids us pray for one another; in that same verse, where he says,
"Confess your sins the one to the other," he says, "and pray one for
another," and adds the privilege "that ye may be healed," as if the healing
would not only come to the sick person for whom we pray, but to us who offer
the prayer; we, too, receiving some special blessing when our hearts are
enlarged for the people of the living God.
But, brethren, I shall not stay to quote the texts in which the duty of
praying for others is definitely laid down. Permit me to remind you of the
high example of your Master; he is your pattern; follow ye his leadership.
Was there even one who interceded as he did? Remember that golden prayer of
his, where he cried for his own people, "Father, keep them, keep them from
the evil!" Oh what a prayer was that! He seems to have thought of all their
wants, of all their needs, of all their weaknesses, and in one long stream of
intercession, he pours out his heart before his Father's throne. Bethink you
how, even in the agonies of his crucifixion, he did not forget that he was
still an intercessor for man. "Father, forgive them, for they know not what
they do." Oh, remember, brethren, it is your Saviour's example to you today,
for there before the throne, with outstretched hands, he prays not for
himself, for he has attained his glory; not for himself, for he rests from
his labours, and has received his everlasting recompense; but for you, for
the purchase of his blood, for as many as are called by his grace, yea, and
for those who shall believe on him through our word-
"For all that come to God by him,
Salvation he demands;
Points to the wounds upon his heart,
And spreads his bleeding hands."
Come, brethren, with such an example as this, we are verily guilty if we
forget to plead for others.
But I will go a little further. If in the Bible there were no example of
intercessory supplication, if Christ had not left it upon record that it was
his will that we should pray for others, and even if we did not know that it
was Christ's practice to intercede, yet the very spirit of our holy religion
would constrain us to plead for others. Dost thou go up into thy closet, and
in the face and presence of God think of none but thyself? Surely the love of
Christ cannot be in thee, for the spirit of Christ is not selfish. No man
liveth unto himself when once he has the love of Christ in him. I know there
are some whose piety is comfortably tethered within the limits of their own
selfish interests. It is enough for them if they hear the Word, if they be
saved, if they get to heaven. Ah, miserable spirit, thou shalt not get there!
It would need another heaven for thee, for the heaven of Christ is the heaven
of the unselfish, the temple of the large-hearted, the bliss of living
spirits, the heaven of those who, like Christ, are willing to become poor
that others may be rich. I cannot believe-it were a libel upon the cross of
Christ, it were a scandal upon the doctrine which he taught-if I could ever
believe that the man whose prayers are selfish has anything of the spirit of
Christ within him. Brethren, I commend intercessory prayer, because it opens
man's soul, gives a healthy play to his sympathies, constrains him to feel
that he is not everybody, and that this wide world and this great universe
were not after all made that he might be its petty lord, that everything
might bend to his will, and all creatures crouch at his feet. It does him
good, I say, to make him know that the cross was not uplifted alone for him,
for its far-reaching arms were meant to drop with benedictions upon millions
of the human race. Thou lean and hungry worshipper of self, this is an
exercise which would make another man of thee, a man more like the Son of
Man, and less like Nabal the churl. But again; I commend the blessed
privilege of intercession, because of its sweet brotherly nature. You and I
may be naturally hard, and harsh, and unlovely of spirit, but praying much
for others will remind us we have, indeed, a relationship to the saints, that
their interests are ours, that we are jointly concerned with them in all the
privileges of grace. I do not know anything which, through the grace of God,
may be a better means of uniting us the one to the other than constant prayer
for each other. You cannot harbour enmity in your soul against your brother
after you have learned to pray for him. If he hath done you ill, when you
have taken that ill to the mercy seat, and prayed over it, you must forgive.
Surely you could not be such a hypocrite as to invoke blessings on his head
before God and then come forth to curse him in your own soul. When there have
been complaints brought by brother against brother, it is generally the best
way to say, "Let us pray before we enter into the matter." Wherever there is
a case to be decided by the pastor, he ought always to say to the brethren
who contend, "Let us pray first," and it will often happen that through
prayer the differences will soon be forgotten. They will become so slight, so
trivial, that when the brethren rise from their knees they will say, "They
are gone; we cannot contend now after having been one in heart before the
throne of God." I have heard of a man who had made complaints against his
minister, and his minister wisely said to him, "Well, don't talk to me in the
street; come to my house, and let us hear it all." He went, and the minister
said, "My brother, I hope that what you have to say to me may be greatly
blessed to me; no doubt I have my imperfections as well as any other man, and
I hope I shall never be above being told of them, but in order that what you
have to say to me may be blessed to me let us kneel down and pray together."
So our quarrelsome friend prayed first and the minister prayed next, both
briefly. When they rose from their knees, he said, "Now, my brother, I think
we are both in a good state of mind; tell me what it is that you have to find
fault with." The man blushed, and stammered, and stuttered, and said, he did
not think there was anything at all, except in himself. "I have forgotten to
pray for you, sir," said he, "and of course I cannot expect that God will
feed my soul through you when I neglect to mention you at the throne of
grace." Ah, well, brethren, if you will exercise yourselves much in
supplication for your brethren you will forgive their tempers, you will
overlook their rashness, you will not think of their harsh words; but knowing
that you also may be tempted, and are men of like passions with them, you
will cover their faults, and bear with their infirmities.
Shall I need to say more in commendation of intercessory prayer except it be
this, that it seems to me that when God gives any man much grace, it must be
with the design that he may use it for the rest of the family. I would
compare you who have near communion with God to courtiers in the king's
palace. What do courtiers do? Do they not avail themselves of their influence
at court to take the petitions of their friends, and present them where they
can be heard? This is what we call patronage-a thing with which many find
fault when it is used for political ends, but there is a kind of heavenly
patronage which you ought to use right diligently. I ask you to use it on my
behalf. When it is well with you, then think of me. I pray you use it on the
behalf of the poor, the sick, the afflicted, the tempted, the tried, the
desponding, the despairing; when thou hast the King's ear, speak to him for
us. When thou art permitted to come very near to his throne, and he saith to
thee, "Ask, and I will give thee what thou wilt"; when thy faith is strong,
thine eye clear, thine access near, thine interest sure, and the love of God
sweetly shed abroad in thy heart-then take the petitions of thy poor brethren
who stand outside at the gate and say, "My Lord, I have a poor brother, a
poor child of thine, who has desired me to ask of thee this favour. Grant it
unto me; it shall be a favour shown unto myself; grant it unto him, for he is
one of thine. Do it for Jesus' sake!" Nay, to come to an end in this matter
of commendation, it is utterly impossible that you should have a large
measure of grace, unless it prompts you to use your influence for others.
Soul, if thou hast grace at all, and art not a mighty intercessor, that grace
must be but as a grain of mustard-seed-a shrivelled, uncomely, puny thing.
Thou hast just enough grace to float thy soul clear from the quicksand, but
thou hast no deep floods of grace, or else thou wouldst carry in thy joyous
bark a rich cargo of the wants of others up to the throne of God, and thou
wouldst bring back for them rich blessings which but for thee they might not
have obtained. If thou be like an angel with thy foot upon the golden ladder
which reaches to heaven, if thou art ascending and descending, know that thou
wilt ascend with others' prayers and descend with others' blessings, for it
is impossible for a full-grown saint to live or to pray for himself alone.
Thus much on commendation.
II. We turn to our second point, and endeavour to say something BY WAY OF
ENCOURAGEMENT, that you may cheerfully offer intercessory supplications.
First, remember that intercessory prayer is the sweetest prayer God ever
hears. Do not question it, for the prayer of Christ is of this character. In
all the incense which now our Great High Priest puts into the censer, there
is not a single grain that is for himself. His work is done; his reward
obtained. Now you do not doubt but that Christ's prayer is the most
acceptable of all supplications. Very well, my brethren, the more like your
prayer is to Christ's, the more sweet it will be; and while petitions for
yourself will be accepted, yet your pleadings for others, having in them more
of the fruits of the Spirit, more love, perhaps more faith, certainly more
brotherly kindness, they will be as the sweetest oblation that you can offer
to God, the very fat of thy sacrifice. Remember, again, that intercessory
prayer is exceedingly prevalent. What wonders it has wrought! Intercessory
prayer has stayed plagues. It removed the darkness which rested over Egypt;
it drove away the frogs which leaped upon the land; it scattered the lice and
locusts which plagued the inhabitants of Zoar; it removed the murrain, and
the thunder, and the lightning; it stayed all the ravages which God's
avenging hand did upon Pharaoh and his people. Intercessory prayer has healed
diseases; -we know it did in the early church. We have evidence of it in old
Mosaic times. When Miriam was smitten with leprosy, Moses prayed, and the
leprosy was removed. It has restored withered limbs. When the king's arm was
withered, he said to the prophet, "Pray for me," and his arm was restored as
it was before. Intercessory prayer has raised the dead, for Elias stretched
himself upon the child seven times, and the child sneezed, and the child's
soul returned. As to how many souls intercessory prayer has instrumentally
saved, recording angel, thou canst tell! Eternity, thou shalt reveal! There
is nothing which intercessory prayer cannot do. Oh! believer, you have a
mighty engine in your hand, use it well, use it constantly, use it now with
faith, and thou shalt surely prevail. But perhaps you have a doubt about
interceding for some one who has fallen far into sin. Brethren, did ye ever
hear of men who have been thought to be dead while yet alive? Have ye never
heard by the farmer's fire some old-fashioned story of one who was washed and
laid out, and wrapped up in his shroud to be put into his coffin, and yet he
was but in a trance and not dead? And have ye not heard old legends of men
and women who have been buried alive? I cannot vouch for the accuracy of
those tales, but I can tell you that spiritually there has been many a man
given up for dead that was still within reach of grace. There has been many a
soul that has been put into the winding sheet even by Christian people, given
up to damnation even by the ministers of Christ, consigned to perdition even
by their own kinsfolk. But yet into perdition they did not come, but God
found them, and took them out of the horrible pit and out of the miry clay,
and set their living feet upon his living rock. Oh! give up nobody; still
pray, lay none out for spiritually dead until they are lain out for dead
naturally. But perhaps you say, "I cannot pray for others, for I am so weak,
so powerless." You will get strength, my brethren, by the exertion. But
besides, the prevalence of prayer does not depend upon the strength of the
man who prays, but upon the power of the argument he uses. Now, brethren, if
you sow seed you may be very feeble, but it is not your hand that puts the
seed into the ground which produces the harvest,-it is the vitality in the
seed. And so in the prayer of faith. When you can plead a promise and drop
that prayer into the ground with hope, your weakness shall not make it
miscarry; it shall still prevail with God and bring down blessings from on
high. Job! thou comest from thy dunghill to intercede, and so may I come from
my couch of weakness;-thou comest from thy poverty and thy desertion to
intercede for others, and so may we. Elias was a man of like passions-sweet
word!-of like passions, like infirmities, like tendencies to sin, but he
prevailed, and so shalt thou; only do thou see to it that thou be not
negligent in these exercises, but that thou pray much for others even as Job
prayed for his friends.
Now that the air is very hot, and the atmosphere heavy and becalmed, our
friends find it difficult to listen, more difficult even than the speaker
finds it to preach. Now, that I may have your attention yet once again-and a
change of posture may do you all good-will you stand up and put the text into
use by offering an intercessory prayer and then I will go on again. It shall
be this one:
"Pity the nations, O our God,
Constrain the earth to come;
Send thy victorious word abroad,
And bring the strangers home!"
(The congregation here rose, and sung the verse.)
III. The third head is A SUGGESTION AS TO THE PERSONS FOR WHOM WE SHOULD MORE
PARTICULARLY PRAY. It shall be but a suggestion, and I will then turn to my
last point. In the case of Job, he prayed for his offending friends. They had
spoken exceedingly harshly of him. They had misconstrued all his previous
life, and though there had never been a part of his character which deserved
censure-for the Lord witnessed concerning him, that he was a perfect and an
upright man-yet they accused him of hypocrisy, and supposed that all he did
was for the sake of gain. Now, perhaps, there is no greater offence which can
be given to an upright and a holy man, than to his face, to suspect his
motives, and to accuse him of self-seeking. And yet, shaking off everything,
as the sun forgets the darkness that has hidden its glory, and scatters it by
its own beams, Job comes to the mercy seat, and pleads. He is accepted
himself, and he begs that his friends may be accepted too. Carry your
offending ones to the throne of God; it shall be a blessed method of proving
the trueness of your forgiveness. Do not do that, however, in a threatening
way. I remember having to deal faithfully with a hypocrite, who told me, by
way of threatening, he should pray for me. It was a horrid threat, for who
would wish to have his name associated with a prayer which would be an
abomination to the Lord. Do not do it in that sense, as though like a
supercilious hypocrite, you would make your prayer itself a stalking horse
for your vain glory; but do it when you are alone before God, and in secret;
not that you may gratify your revenge by telling the story out again, for
that were abominable indeed; but that you may remove from your erring brother
any sin which may have stained his garments, by asking the Lord to forgive
him.
Again: be sure you take there your controverting friends. These brethren had
been arguing with Job, and the controversy dragged its weary length along.
Brethren, it is better to pray than it is to controvert. Sometimes you think
it would be a good thing to have a public discussion upon a doctrine. It
would be a better thing to have prayer over it. You say, "Let two good men,
on different sides, meet and fight the matter out." I say, "No! let the two
good men meet and pray the matter out." He that will not submit his doctrine
to the test of the mercy seat, I should suspect is wrong. I can say that I am
not afraid to offer prayer that my brethren who do not see "Believers'
baptism" may be made to see it. If they think it is wrong, I wish that they
would pray to God to set us right; but I have never heard them do that; I
have never heard them pray to the Lord to convince us of the truth of infant
sprinkling-I wish they would, if they believe it to be scriptural, and I am
perfectly willing to put it to the old test, the God that answereth by fire,
let him be God, and whichever shall prevail, when prayer shall be the
ultimate arbiter, let that stand. Carry your dear friends who are wrong in
practice, not to the discussion-room, or to the debating-club, but carry them
before God, and let this be your cry, "Oh! Thou that teachest us to our
profit, teach me if I be wrong, and teach my friend wherein he errs, and make
him right."
This is the thing we ought also to do with haughty friends. Eliphaz and
Bildad were very high and haughty-Oh! how they looked down upon poor Job!
They thought he was a very great sinner, a very desperate hypocrite; they
stayed with him, but doubtless they thought it very great condescension. Now,
you sometimes hear complaints made by Christians about other people being
proud. It will not make them humble for you to grumble about that. What if
there be a Mrs. So-and-so who wears a very rustling dress, and never takes
any notice of you because you cannot rustle too! What if there be a brother
who can afford to wear creaking boots, and will not notice you in the street
because you happen to be poor! Tell your Father about it; that is the best
way. Why, you would not be angry, I suppose, with a man for having the gout,
or a torpid liver, or a cataract in the eye; you would pity him. Why be angry
with your brother because of his being proud? It is a disease, a very bad
disease, that scarlet fever of pride; go and pray the Lord to cure him; your
anger will not do it; it may puff him up and make him worse than ever he was
before, but it will not set him right. Pray him down, brother, pray him down;
have duel with him, and have the choice of weapons yourself, and let that be
the weapon of all-prayer; and if he be proud, I know this, if you prevail
with God, God will soon take the pride out of his own child and make him
humble as he should be. But particularly let me ask you to pray most for
those who are disabled from praying for themselves. Job's three friends could
not pray for themselves, because the Lord said he would not accept them if
they did. He said he was angry with them, but as for Job, said he, "Him will
I accept." Do not let me shock your feelings when I say there are some, even
of God's people, who are not able to pray acceptably at certain seasons. When
a man has just been committing sin, repentance is his first work, not prayer;
he must first set matters right between God and his own soul before he may go
and intercede for others. And there are many poor Christians that cannot
pray; doubt has come in, sin has taken away their confidence, and they are
standing outside the gate with their petitions; they dare not enter within
the veil. There are many tried believers, too, that are so desponding that
they cannot pray with faith, and therefore they cannot prevail. Now, my dear
brethren, if you can pray, take their sins into court with you, and when you
have had your own hearing, then say, "But, my Lord, inasmuch as thou hast
honoured me, and made me to eat of thy bread, and drink from thy cup, hear me
for thy poor people who are just now denied the light of thy countenance."
Besides, there are millions of poor sinners who are dead in sin and they
cannot pray, pray for them; it is a blessed thing-that vicarious repentance
and vicarious faith; which a saint may exert towards a sinner. "Lord, that
sinner does not feel; help me to feel for him because he will not feel; Lord,
that sinner will not believe in Christ, he does not think that Christ can
save him, but I know he can, and I will pray believingly for that sinner, and
I will repent for him, and though my repentance and my faith will not avail
him without his personal repentance and faith, yet it may come to pass that
through me he may be brought to repentance and led to prayer."
IV. Now, lest I should weary you, let me come to the closing part of my
discourse. And, O God, lend us thy strength now, that this duty may come
forcibly home to our conscience, and we may at once engage in this exercise!
Brethren, I have to EXHORT YOU TO PRAY FOR OTHERS. Before I do it, I will ask
you a personal question. Do you always pray for others? Guilty or not guilty,
here? Do you think you have taken the case of your children, your church,
your neighbourhood, and the ungodly world before God as you ought to have
done? If you have, I have not. For I stand here a chief culprit before the
Master to make confession of the sin; and while I shall exhort you to
practice what is undoubtedly a noble privilege, I shall be most of all
exhorting myself.
I begin thus, by saying, Brethren, how can you and I repay the debt we owe to
the Church unless we pray for others? How was it that you were converted? It
was because somebody else prayed for you. I, in tracing back my own
conversion, cannot fail to impute it, through God's Spirit, to the prayers of
my mother. I believe that the Lord heard her earnest cries when I knew not
that her soul was exercised about me. There are many of you that were prayed
for when you were asleep in your cradles as unconscious infants. Your
mothers' liquid prayers fell hot upon your infant brows, and gave you what
was a true christening while you were still but little ones. There are
husbands here who owe their conversion to their wives' prayers; brothers who
must acknowledge that it was a sister's pleading; children who must confess
that their sabbath-school teachers were wont to pray for them. Now, if by
others' prayers you and I were brought to Christ, how can we repay this
Christian kindness, but by pleading for others? He who has not a man to pray
for him may write himself down a hopeless character. During one of the
revivals in America, a young man was going to see the minister, but he did
not, because the minister had avoided him with considerable coldness. A
remark was made to the minister upon what he had done, and he said, "Well, I
did not want to see him; I knew he had only come to mock and scoff; what
should I see him for; you do not know him as well as I do, or else you would
have done the same." A day or two after there was a public meeting, where the
preaching of the Word was to be carried on in the hope that the revival might
be continued. A young man who had been lately converted through the prayers
of another young man was riding to the worship on his horse, and as he was
riding along he was overtaken by our young friend whom the minister thought
so godless. He said to him, "Where are you going today, William?" "Well, I am
going to the meeting, and I hear that you have been converted." "I thank God
I have been brought to a knowledge of the truth," he answered. "Oh!" said the
other, "I shall never be; I wish I might." His friend was surprised to hear
him whom the minister thought to be so hard say that, and he said, "But why
cannot you be converted?" "Why?" said the other, "you know you were converted
through the prayers of Mr. K-." "Yes, so I was." "Ah," said the other, "there
is nobody to pray for me; they have all given me up long ago." "Why," said
his friend, "it is very singular, but Mr. K-, who prayed for me, has been
praying for you too; we were together last night, and I heard him." The other
threw himself back in his saddle, and seemed as if he would fall from his
horse with surprise. "Is that true?" said he. "Yes, it is." "Then blessed be
God, there is hope for me now, and if he has prayed for me, that gives me a
reason why I should now pray believingly for myself." And he did so, and that
meeting witnessed him confessing his faith in Christ. Now, let no man of your
acquaintance say that there is nobody to pray for him; but as you had
somebody to plead for you, let poor souls of your acquaintance find in you a
person to plead for them.
Then, again, permit me to say, how are you to prove your love to Christ or to
his church if you refuse to pray for men? "We know that we have passed from
death unto life, because we love the brethren." If we do not love the
brethren, we are still dead. I will aver no man loves the brethren who does
not pray for them. What! It is the very least thing you can do, and if you do
not perform the least, you certainly will fail in the greater. You do not
love the brethren unless you pray for them, and then it follows you are dead
in trespasses and sins. Let me ask you again how is it that you hope to get
your own prayers answered if you never plead for others? Will not the Lord
say, "Selfish wretch, thou art always knocking at my door, but it is always
to cry for thine own welfare and never for another's; inasmuch as thou hast
never asked for a blessing for one of the least of these my brethren, neither
will I give a blessing to thee. Thou lovest not the saints, thou lovest not
thy fellow men, how canst thou love me whom thou hast not seen, and how shall
I love thee and give thee the blessing which thou askest at my hands?"
Brethren, again I say I would earnestly exhort you to intercede for others,
for how can you be Christians if you do not? Christians are priests, but how
priests if they offer no sacrifice? Christians are lights, but how lights
unless they shine for others? Christians are sent into the world, even as
Christ was sent into the world, but how sent unless they are sent to pray?
Christians are meant not only to be blessed themselves, but in them shall all
the nations of the earth be blessed, but how if you refuse to pray? Give up
your profession, cast down, I pray you, the ephod of a priest if you will not
burn the incense, renounce your Christianity if you will not carry it out,
make not a mock and sport of solemn things. And you must do so if you still
refuse selfishly to give to your friends a part and a lot in your
supplications before the throne. O brethren, let us unite with one heart and
with one soul to plead with God for this neighbourhood! Let us carry "London"
written on our breasts just as the high priest of old carried the names of
the tribes. Mothers, bear your children before God! Fathers, carry your sons
and your daughters! Men and brethren, let us take a wicked world and the dark
places thereof which are full of the habitations of cruelty! Let us cry aloud
and keep no silence, and give to the Lord no rest till he establish and make
his Church a praise in the earth. Wake, ye watchmen upon Zion's walls, and
renew your shouts! Wake, ye favourites of heaven, and renew your prayers! The
cloud hangs above you, it is yours to draw down its sacred floods in genial
showers by earnest prayers. God hath put high up in the mountains of his
promise springs of love, it is yours to bring them down by the divine channel
of your intense supplications. Do it, I pray you, lest inasmuch as you have
shut your bowels of compassion and have refused to plead with God for the
conversion of others, he should say in his wrath, "These are not my children.
They have not my spirit. They are not partakers of my love, neither shall
they enter into my rest." Why, there are some of you that have not prayed for
others for months, I am afraid, except it be at a prayer meeting. You know
what your night prayers are. It is, "Lord, take care of my family." You know
how some farmers pray. "Lord, send fair weather in this part of the country.
Lord, preserve the precious fruits of the field all round this neighbourhood.
Never mind about their being spoilt anywhere else, for that will send the
markets up." And so there are some who make themselves special objects of
supplication; and what care they for the perishing crowd. This is the drift
of some men's wishes, "Lord, bless the Church, but don't send another
minister into our neighbourhood lest he should take our congregations from
us. Lord, send labourers into the vineyard, but do not send them into our
corner lest they should take any of our glory from us." That is the kind of
supplication. Let us have done with such. Let us be Christians; let us have
expanded souls and minds that can feel for others. Let us weep with them that
weep, and rejoice with them that rejoice; and as a Church and as private
persons, we shall find the Lord will turn our captivity when we pray for our
friends. God help us to plead for others! And as for you that have never
prayed for yourselves, God help you to believe in the Lord Jesus! Amen.
Provided by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 314
Columbus, NJ, USA 08022
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