Friday, August 14, 2020

THE HEART OF TRUE CHRISTIANITY---- THE WHOLE ARMOR OF GOD #3

 ARMOR of God to Battle Satan #7


Praying Always ...



              



Paul finishes his discourse on the full armor of God to

battle Satan the Devil with:


"Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit,

and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for

all saints: And for me, that utterance may be given unto me, that

I may open my mouth boldly, to make known the mystery of the

Gospel ... that therein I may speak boldly, as I ought to speak"

(Eph.6:18-20).


     Prayer! Yes prayer is a weapon to use against the enemy

Satan and his darts of death.


     You pray always by being in the ever attitude of walking

with the Lord, of being mindful you are His, that He is, has

been, and forever will be. No matter where you are, in a crowd,

in the supermarket, driving your car, at work, at play ...

wherever ... you are "with the Lord" in ever contact with God and

His Son Christ Jesus. 

     Sometimes you may say, "Now, how would Jesus do this; how

would He act; how would Jesus speak" in some situations. Other

times, you may have to say, "Forgive me Lord, renew a right

spirit in me, I'm thinking the wrong things." "Lord, please help

me to get a right attitude in this situation." Or it may be,

"Thank you Father for your kind mercy, the situation could have

been terrible because of my mistake."


     Praying always is being in constant contact with our

heavenly Father, being aware nothing is hid from Him, we are an

open book before Him. And because we are still in the flesh, we

are sinners, and truly knowing that, we know we are saved by His

grace, not by any works we have done, are doing, or will yet do.

Praying always is being thankful that our Father deals with us in

patience; He corrects us not as we deserve, but with kindness and

love. Praying always is always being in a repentant attitude,

willing to be corrected, willing to grow in grace and knowledge

of our Lord and Savior Christ Jesus.


     Praying always is never getting hardened to sin and the evil

around us. It is always sighing and crying for the wickedness in

the world. Praying always is desiring, praying for "Thy Kingdom

come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven."


     Praying always is serving and helping others, yes, those

literal things to do for people, that is good and right, is a way

of praying always, for it is the way of ever being mindful you

are a child of God, and so being, His children would do this or

do that in loving their fellow man.


     Praying always is loving your neighbor as yourself. It is

not wrong to look after yourself, to obey the laws of health, to

eat right, to exercise, to get the proper amount of sleep. It is

not wrong to keep your mind on good wholesome things. It is not

wrong to have some pleasure time for yourself. All things in

moderation as the Bible teaches. So if looking after yourself

physically, emotionally, and spiritually, is not wrong, and is a

form of praying always, then that shows you how to love your

neighbor as yourself. You will want your neighbor to do well,

have a good and healthy and happy life. Yes, even if your

neighbor is not a Christian, even if they do not think about or

believe in a God in heaven above. You should still want the best

for your neighbor just as you would like it for yourself. When

you understand that everyone is spiritually blinded UNTIL God

removes that blindness, then you will have love and patience for

your spiritually blinded neighbor.


     Praying always is even loving your enemy, doing good to them

when they do you evil. It is praying for your enemy. It is as

Jesus did and said: "Forgive them Father, for they know not what

they do."


     Praying always is watching out for all the saints of God.

Certainly when you have saints around you, in your town, city,

village, or over in the next valley, you can get a personal

relationship with them. You can get to know them in their daily

lives, what their trials and problems are that they have to face.

You can get to know their children if they have any. Watching out

for the saints can get very personal, and I do not mean, sticking

your nose in when you need to keep it out. watching for the

saints is to know when, where, and how, and why, you need to be

involved with them, in any particular circumstance. All of that

kind of living with your fellow saint takes knowledge and wisdom;

you should be able to find many studies on my Website to help

you develop that knowledge and wisdom.


     Praying always and watching for your Christian brother

and/or sister, often ones you do not know, all you know is they

are out there as the salt of the earth. And you know there will

be times of trails, troubles, even literal persecutions for some,

in some countries of this earth. You get to know by reading, by

the news, by documentaries on TV, by the Internet, that some of

your brothers and sisters in Christ NEED your prayer for them. 


     You can get very specific in your prayers for your brethren,

from the above news that come your way, you can find out some of

their very personal needs, be it physical safety, clean water,

employment, deliverance from persecution, enough food for

themselves and their family.


     There are so many ways to be watching for all saints. And in

your situation perhaps you only have prayer to give them. But

NEVER THINK that "just prayer" is nothing of worthless. Far from

it, for through prayer miracles have happened. The stories put in

the form of books that could be written about miracles that came

ONLY through prayer, I'm sure could fill your house.



     This last piece of armor gets forgotten many times. The

POWER of prayer can be a mighty strong defensive and attacking

piece of armor. It can work as a defence and it can work as a

great weapon to slay the adversary. 


     Praying always with SUPPLICATION! That is with "petition" or

with requests, entreat, plea, beseechment, imploring, appeal,

request of, urge. Christians are not only to pray for each other

but to pray with an attitude of urgency in their beseechment with

the Father. Sometimes we known the specific requests to make on

behalf of others, then many times we do not know the specifics,

but we do known that the children of God somewhere, are going

through trials, tests, and troubles, maybe persecutions, maybe

rejections by family members, maybe the loss of a job, maybe

sickness. We can pray with earnest beseeching that the Father

will give the power of His Spirit to His children in whatever

needs they may have at this time in their lives.

     And it is the Holy Spirit that will give Christians everywhere the 

strength and the will of mind to endure whatever they must endure, 

to the end. 

     We need to pray that true Christians will fight the good

fight, battle the wiles of the Devil, for as Peter said, he goes

about like a roaring lion trying to devour whoever he can. How

many of you have known many over the last 20 years or more that

have thrown in the towel, put up the white flag of surrender,

given up the battle? How many of you have known people that were

once enlightened with the truths of God, but through tests of

faith (i.e. ministers being unfaithful, or "organizations"

becoming corrupt, or leaders and organizations going back into

Roman Catholic and Protestant teachings) have now gone back into

the world, and just gave up on the Father and Christ and the

Bible completely? 

     Sadly, I have known of dozens of such people over the last

40 years, who have become as Peter said, like a dog returning to

its vomit. I have known men who were ministers, leaders, deacons,

men looked up to in their congregations, who not only turned

their back on truths of God, but who walked right back into the

world from which they came. I have known people who now do not

give one thought about God and Christ, and have stopped reading

the Bible.


     All of this Paul must have had running through his mind,

when he penned the words of verse 18. He saw it happen to ones he

knew:


"This charge I commit unto you, son Timothy, according to the

prophecies which went before on you, that you by them mighty war

a good warfare. HOLDING faith, and a good conscience, which SOME

HAVING PUT AWAY concerning faith have made shipwreck: Of whom is

Hymenaeus and Alexander ...." (1 Timothy 1:18-20).


     Going to the thought of Peter about the dog returning to its

vomit, I think it needful I quote his context:


"Which [people] have forsaken the right way, and are gone astray

... These are well without water, clouds they are carried with a

tempest ... For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the

world through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,

they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is

worse with them than the beginning. For it had been better for

them not to have known the way of righteousness, than, after they

have known it, to TURN FROM the Holy commandment delivered unto

them. But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb,

The dog is turned to his own vomit again, and the sow that was

washed to her wallowing in the mire" (2 Peter 15-22).


     Being a child of the Father is not always for a short

duration of our physical life, some are called as children, or

teens, or young adults. Most of us will have to face trials and

tests and troubles that can come along in this life time. Many of

us will have to battle through the times when "minister" fail,

when "organizations" corrupt themselves, when "organizations"

fall away and depart from the truths of God and go back into the

Babylon of religion that is all around us. 

     It is important we pray always for our brothers and sisters

in Christ, that they will remain true to the calling they have

been given.

     Yes I know it is also true that the wheat must be separated

from the chaff, that the blowing winds of the problems of this

life must come, so the chaff and the wheat can be separated. The

sheep and the goats must be separated. This is all true and God

has His ways of doing just that. But that does not mean we must

not pray always with supplication for the saints. We must pray

that the true saints will fight the good fight, remain faithful,

endure to the end.


     I like the words of Albert Barnes in his Bible Commentary:


"Praying Always: It would be well for the soldier who goes forth

to battle to pray - to pray for victory; or to pray that he may

be prepared for death, should he fall. But soldiers do not often

feel the necessity of this. To the Christian soldier, however, it

is indispensable. Prayer crowns all lawful efforts with success,

and gives a victory when nothing else would. No matter how

complete the armor; no matter how skilled we may be in the

science of war; no matter how courageous we may be; - we may be

certain that without prayer we shall be defeated. God alone can

give the victory; and when the Christian soldier goes forth armed

completely for the spiritual conflict, if he looks to God by

prayer, he may be sure of a triumph. This prayer is not to be

intermitted; it is to be ALWAYS! In every temptation and

spiritual conflict we are to pray.

WITH ALL PRAYER AND SUPPLICATION: With all kinds of prayer;

prayer in the closet, the family, the social meeting, the great

assembly; prayer at the usual hours; prayer when we are specially

tempted, and when we feel just like praying; prayer in the form

of supplication for ourselves, and in the form of intercession

for others. This is, after all, the great weapon of our spiritual

armor, and by this we may hope to prevail."




LIFE LESSONS IN PRAYER— various  sources



While standing dazed, evaluating the mess and wondering about the

future, he heard a stirring in the lumber pile that was the

remains of the henhouse. A rooster was climbing up through the

debris, and he didn't stop climbing until he had mounted the

highest board in the pile. That old rooster was dripping wet, and

most of his feathers were blown away. But as the sun came over

the eastern horizon, he flapped his bony wings and proudly

crowed.

That old, wet, bare rooster could still crow when he saw the

morning sun. And like that rooster, our world may be falling

apart, we may have lost everything, but if we trust in God, we'll

be able to see the light of God's goodness, pick ourselves out of

the rubble, and sing the Lord's praise.

......


     

In "Contemporary Christian Music," John Fischer writes:

I have a bad habit. When my children tell me about something

they've learned for the first time, I often act as if I knew

that. Even worse, sometimes I tell them how the same thing

happened to me years ago.

When my wife hears something "new" from the kids, her mouth drops

open and her eyes widen. It's as if she has never heard this kind

of thing before. The kids' faces brighten, and they feel as if

they have actually enlightened their mother.

I used to think my wife was just acting and sooner or later the

kids would find out and feel lied to. Then I realized it isn't an

act at all. Though she may already have experienced what they are

trying to tell her, she's never experienced it through them.

Their personal "revelations" are entirely new.

It's the same with God. As all-knowing and sovereign as he is,

I'm sure he's still eager to hear our prayers because he has

never heard it quite the way we say it. We are all unique. We

have our own signature attached to all we do and say. Our lives, 

our experiences, and our faith expressed to him are never old.

......



Bill Gates, who is chief executive at Microsoft (he was when this

was written) is hooked up to the international computer network

called Internet. Subscribers to the Internet can send through

their computers electronic mail (called e-mail) to other users of

the Internet. Bill Gates had an Internet address just like

everyone. But then the New Yorker magazine published his Internet

address. Anyone could send the computer genius a letter. In no

time Bill Gates was swamped with five thousand messages. It was

more than any human could handle. So Gates armed his computer

with software that filters through his e-mail, allowing important

messages through and sending other letters to electronic

oblivion.

People are limited. They can handle only so much communication

and offer only so much help.

God, on the other hand, never tires of s-mail (spirit mail). His

ear is always open to our prayers. And he has unlimited capacity

to help.

......



When our children were small, we played a game. I'd take some

coins in my fist. They'd sit on my lap and work to get my fingers

open. According to the international rules of finger opening,

once the finger was open, it couldn't be closed again. They would

work at it, until they got the pennies in my hand. They would

jump down and run away, filled with glee and delight. Just kids.

Just a game.

Sometimes when we come to God, his hand.

"Lord, I need a passing grade. Help me to study." "Lord, I need a

job." "Lord, my mother is ill."

We reach for the pennies. When God grants the request, we push

the hand away.

More important than the pennies in God's hand is the hand of God

himself. That's what prayer is about.

......



They tell us the 911 emergency system is the state of the art.

All you need do is dial those numbers, and you will almost

instantly be connected to a dispatcher. In front of the

dispatcher will be a read-out that lists your telephone number,

your address, and the name by which that telephone number is

listed at that address. Also listening in are the police, the

fire department, and the paramedics.

A caller might not be able to say what the problem is. Or perhaps

a woman's husband has just suffered a heart attack, and she is so

out of control that all she can do is hysterically scream into

the telephone. But the dispatcher doesn't need her to say

anything. He knows where the call is coming from. Help is already

on the way.

There come times in our lives when in our desperation and pain we

dial 911 prayers. Sometimes we're hysterical. Sometimes we don't

know the words to speak. But God hears. He knows our name and our

circumstance. Help is on the way; God has already begun to bring

the remedy.

......



In 1996 the Chicago Bulls basketball team won their fourth world

championship behind their leader Michael Jordan. Jordan's

contract ended after the season, however, and fans in Chicago

were uneasy about whether the Bulls could re-sign Jordan for the

upcoming year. Would owner Jerry Reinsdorf be willing to pay the

huge salary that everyone knew Jordan would request for a new

contract?

On July 12, 1996, the Chicago media discovered the answer. The

Bulls announced they had agreed to pay some $30 million. Bob

Verdi reported later in the Chicago Tribune that months prior to

the negotiations, when snow was on the ground, Reinsdorf had

joked with Jordan and his agent that when the season ended, if

the negotiations took more than five minutes, they would be

wasting their time. At a dinner with Jordan less than two weeks

before negotiations began, Reinsdorf repeated his intention to

wrap things up quickly. And when the time came to talk numbers,

Reinsdorf paid Jordan's asking price without a qualm.

"I could have tried to talk Michael down from what he asked,"

said Reinsdorf. "But why? ... Michael is unique. I can afford

what he's getting, he deserves what he's getting, and if it's not

the best business transaction I ever made, so what? This wasn't a

business deal in the truest sense, anyway. Call them psychic

dollars. When we couldn't give Michael what he deserved because

of the salary cap, I told him there would be a day. Well, the day

has come."

Like Michael Jordan asking for a big salary, we often come to God

with large requests, and we wonder how he will feel about it.

Jesus taught us that God's response to our prayers is guided in

large measure by how he feels about us. God's sons and daughters

are more special to him than Michael Jordan is to the owner of

the Chicago Bulls. For God, prayer isn't some spiritual

negotiation; prayer is love. God is giving "heart dollars."

......



In "Total Eclipse" Annie Dillard writes:

The Ring Nebula, in the constellation Lyra, looks, through

binoculars, like a smoke ring. It is a star in the process of

exploding. Light from its explosion first reached the earth in

1054; it was a supernova then, and so bright it shone in the

daytime. Now it is not so bright, but it is still exploding. It

expands at the rate of seventy million miles a day. It is

interesting to look through binoculars at something expanding

seventy million miles a day. It does not budge. Its apparent size

does not increase. Photographs of the Ring Nebula taken fifteen

years ago seem identical to photographs of it taken yesterday.

Huge happenings are not always visible to the naked

eye - especially in the spiritual realm. How often it is that this

nebula resembles the process of prayer. Sometimes we pray and

pray and seemingly see no change in the situation. But that's

only true from our perspective. If we could see from heavens

standpoint, we would know all that God is doing and intending to

do in our lives. We would see God working in hearts in ways we

cannot know. We would see God orchestrating circumstances that we

know nothing about. We would see a galaxy of details being set in

place for the moment when God brings the answer to fulfilment.

......



In May 1996, Valujet Flight 592 crashed into the Florida

Everglades, killing 110 passengers. To determine the cause of the

crash, the National Transportation Safety Board needed the

plane's black box. That would not be easy to find. The crash had

scattered plane debris across a large area of swamp. Dozens of

searchers descended on the scene to sift through muck and water

as much as eight feet deep in an attempt to find the black box.

Navy experts tried using special technology that detected

submerged metal, without success.

Holding a rope that kept them spaced three feet apart, other

searchers systematically poked through every square foot of the

crash area. After fourteen days, they had found nothing.

For workers the physical conditions were nigh unbearable. The

Florida sun beat upon them, and temperatures hovered in the 90s.

Diesel fuel and caustic hydraulic fluid from the wrecked plane

floated in the water, forcing searchers to wear several layers of

protective rubber and latex despite the heat and humidity.

Fourteen days of that had left many searchers dehydrated, but

they had to find the black box.

Sergeant Felix Jimenez, of the Metro-Dade police, was one of the

searchers. For fourteen days he had prayed for the bereaved

families and for the safety of his fellow workers, but on the

fifteenth day as he took a break, suddenly he realized he had

failed to pray for one important thing: that God would help them

find the black box. So he asked God for direction, resumed the

search, and when he stuck his pole into the water, he hit

something metallic. He pulled the object out of the muck. It was

the black box. Jimenez writes in Guideposts, "At the end of the

day ... I thought of the many days we had spent searching for the

recorder, how we must have tromped over it many times, and I

wondered why its retrieval had taken so long. Amid the low rustle

of saw grass and the call of a great white heron, I seemed to

hear the response: 'Why did it take you so long to ask?'"

......



James David Ford, chaplain of the United States House of

Representatives since 1979, told the following story about prayer

to "Leadership" journal:

In the spring of 19761 sailed the Atlantic Ocean with a couple of

friends. In a thirty-one-foot vessel, we sailed from Plymouth,

England, to New York - 5,992 miles. During the trip, we hit a

real hurricane - some of the waves were thirty-five feet high -

and frankly, I was scared. My father had said, "Don't go. You

have five children. Wait till they're grown."

The hurricane went into its third day, and I thought of my

father's words about the children. I thought, Why am I out here?

Was this thing that I thought was courage and adventure really

just foolhardy?

The skies were black, and clouds were scudding by. I wanted to

pray for God to stop the storm, but I felt guilty 'cause I'd

voluntarily gotten into this. I didn't have to go across the

ocean....

Finally I came up with a marvellous prayer, seven words: "O God,

I have had enough. Amen."

Within half an hour of that simple prayer, the sky in the west

lifted like a screen in a theater, and there was blue sky.

Was my prayer tied to the opening of the sky? I don't worry about

it.

One thing is certain: simple, sincere prayers are sufficient.

......


FROM THE BOOK "750 ENGAGING ILLUSTRATIONS" by Craig Larson and

Leadership Journal



YOU CAN DO MORE THAN PRAY after you have prayed, but you cannot

do more than pray until you have prayed - John Bunyan

......



THANK YOU FOR SAYING NO


Lord, day after day I've thanked you 

for saying yes.

For saying no?

Yet I shudder to think 

Of the possible smears 

The cumulative blots on my life 

Had You not been sufficiently wise 

To say an unalterable no.

So thank You for saying no 

When my want list for things 

Far exceeded my longing for You. 

When I asked for a stone 

Foolishly certain I asked for bread 

Thank You for saying no

To my petulant "Just this time, Lord?" 

Thank You for saying no

To senseless excuses 

Selfish motives 

Dangerous diversions.

Thank You for saying no

When the temptation that enticed me 

Would have bound me beyond escape.

Thank You for saying no

When I asked You to leave me alone.

Above all

Thank You for saying no 

When in anguish I asked 

"If I give You all else 

May I keep this?"

Lord, my awe increases 

When I see the wisdom 

Of Your divine no.


Ruth Harms Calkin, "Tell Me Again Lord, I Forget"

......



PRAYER IS SURRENDER - surrender to the will of God and

cooperation with that will. If I throw out a boat hook from a

boat and catch hold of the shore and pull, do I pull the shore to

me, or do I pull myself to the shore? Prayer is not pulling God

to my will, but the aligning of my will to the will of God.


E. Stanley Jones, "A Song of Ascents"

......



WILLIAM R. NEWELL says kneeling is a good way to pray because it

is uncomfortable. Daniel prayed on his knees. Jim Elliot said,

"God is still on His throne, we're still His footstool, and

there's only a knee's distance between!" He also said, "That

saint who advances on his knees never retreats."


Elisabeth Elliot, "Shadow of the Almighty"

......



THERE'S SOMETHING EXQUISITELY LUXURIOUS about room 

service in a hotel. All you have to do is pick up the phone and somebody 

is ready and waiting to bring you breakfast, lunch, dinner, a

chocolate milkshake, whatever your heart desires and your stomach

will tolerate. Or by another languid motion of the wrist, you can

telephone for someone who will get a soiled shirt quickly

transformed into a clean one or a rumpled suit into a pressed

one. That's the concept that some of us have of prayer. We have

created God in the image of a divine bellhop. Prayer, for us, is

the ultimate in room service, wrought by direct dialing.

Furthermore, no tipping, and everything is charged to that great

credit card in the sky. Now prayer is many things, but I'm pretty

sure this is not one of the things it is.


Kenneth Wilson, quoted in Lloyd Cory, "Quote Unquote"

......



HEAVEN IS FILLED with a room that will surprise all of us when we

see it. The room has within it large boxes neatly packaged with a

lovely ribbon on top with your name on it, "Never delivered to

Earth because never requested from Earth."



PRAYER IS NOT A SUBSTITUTE for work, thinking, watching,

suffering, or giving; prayer is a support for all other efforts.


George Buttrick, quoted in Lloyd Cory, "Quote Unquote"

......



I asked God for strength, that I might achieve;

I was made weak, that I may learn humbly to obey. 

I asked God for health, that I may do greater things; 

I was given infirmity, that I might do better things. 

I asked for riches, that I may be happy;

I was given poverty, that I might be wise.

I asked for power, that I might have the praise of men; 

I was given weakness, that I might feel the need of God. 

I asked for all things, that I might enjoy life;

I was given life, that I might enjoy all things.

I got nothing I asked for but everything I hoped for. 

I am, among all men, most richly blessed.


A Confederate Soldier

Croft M. Pentz, "Speaker's Treasury of 400 Quotable Poems"

......



DEPTH, not length, is important. . . . When the Gettysburg

battleground became a national cemetery, Edward Everett was to

give the dedication speech and Abraham Lincoln was asked to say

"a few appropriate words" Everett spoke eloquently for one hour

and fifty-seven minutes then took his seat as the crowd roared

its enthusiastic approval. Then Lincoln stood to his feet,

slipped on his steel spectacles, and began what we know today as

the "Gettysburg Address: Poignant words "... The world will

little note nor long remember ..." - suddenly, he was finished.

No more than two minutes after he had begun he stopped. His talk

had been so prayer-like it seemed almost inappropriate to

applaud. As Lincoln sank into his settee, John Young of the

Philadelphia Press whispered, "Is that all?" The President

answered, "Yes, that's all."

Don't underestimate two minutes with God in prayer.


Charles R. Swindoll, "Quest for Character"

......



IF I COULD HEAR Christ praying for me in the next room, I would

not fear a million enemies. Yet distance makes no difference. He

is praying for me.


Robert Murray McCheyne, quoted in Lloyd John Ogilvie, "Drumbeat

of Love"

......



GOD ANSWERS SHARP and sudden on some prayers, / and thrusts the

thing we have prayed for in our face. / A gauntlet with a gift in it.


Elizabeth Barrett Browning, "Aurora Leigh"

......



IT IS POSSIBLE to move men through God by prayer alone.


J. Oswald Sanders, "Spiritual Leadership"

......



BROOM HILDA, a cartoon character, is a little three-foot-high

witch who is all hair and face. In one amusing comic strip she

approaches a wishing well and, standing next to it, puts her

hands on the edge of the well and says loudly, "I don't want

anything!" And the next panel is quiet. Then she steps back and

says, "I just thought you'd enjoy knowing there was one satisfied

person around."


THE CARTOON CHARACTER Ziggy is standing, looking up on a

mountain. The sky is dark and there's one cloud up there. Ziggy

says, "Have I been put on hold for the rest of my life?"

Sometimes prayer feels like that, doesn't it? "Will You ever

answer?" As one man put it, "The heavens are brass and nothing

comes back."


Tom Wilson cartoon, Universal Press Syndicate, July 18, 1980

......


(Ah, but it does come back, in God's time, in His time not ours -

Keith Hunt)



DR. LEWIS SPERRY CHAFER told a story on the subject. 

It seems that a certain minister was in the habit of profound prayers,

oftentimes resorting to words beyond the ken of his simple flock.

This went on week after week, to the dismay and frustration of

the congregation. At last, a wee Scottish woman in the choir

ventured to take the matter in hand. On a given Sunday, as the

minister was waxing his most eloquently verbose, the little woman

reached across the curtain separating the choir from the pulpit.

Taking a firm grasp on the frock tail of the minister, she gave

it a yank, and was heard to whisper, "Jes' call Him Fether, and

ask 'im for somethin."


Richard Seurne, "Shoes for the Road"

......



TWO IRISHMEN, Pat and Mike, had narrowly escaped death on a

sinking ship. They were floundering around in icy ocean waters on

a couple of planks. Pat was addicted to the grossest profanity

and he thought he ought to repent of it and then the Lord would

come to his rescue. Mike thought his theology was sound. Pat

began to pray, but just before arriving at the main thesis of his

repentant prayer, Mike spotted a ship coming toward them. As

delighted as Columbus when he first spotted the North American

shore, Mike hollered, "Hold it, Pat. Don't commit yourself.

Here's a ship." Pat immediately stopped praying! Isn't that the

way many of us are? The only time we pray is when we are "in a

jam." As soon as things improve we forget God.


John Haggai, "How to Win over Worry"

......



O THOU WHO HAS GIVEN US SO MUCH, mercifully grant us one thing

more  -- a grateful heart.


George Herbert

......



A MAN WAS BEING PURSUED by a roaring, hungry lion. Feeling the

beast's hot breath on his neck and knowing his time was short, he

prayed as he ran. He cried out in desperation, "O Lord, please

make this lion a Christian." Within seconds, the frightened man

became aware the lion had stopped the chase. When he looked

behind him, he found the lion kneeling, lips moving in obvious

prayer. Greatly relieved at this turn of events - and desirous of

joining the lion in meditation, he approached the king of the

jungle. When he was near enough, he heard the lion praying, 

"And bless, O Lord, this food for which I'm exceedingly grateful!"

......


FROM "SWINDOLL'S ULTIMATE BOOK OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND QUOTES"



PRAYER QUOTES:


I am often, I believe, praying for others when I should be doing

things for them. It's so much easier to pray for a bore than to

go and see him.


C.S. Lewis



Souls without prayer are like people whose bodies or limbs are

paralyzed: They possess feet and hands but they cannot control

them.


Teresa of Avila



In prayer it is better to have a heart without words than words

without heart.


John Bunyan



I have often learned more in one prayer than I have been able to

glean from much reading and reflection.


Martin Luther



As we are involved in unceasing thinking, so we are called to

unceasing prayer.


Henri Nouwen



I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming

conviction that I had nowhere else to go. My wisdom, and that of

all about me, seemed insufficient for the day.


Abraham Lincoln



In prayer, we are aware that God is in action and that when the

circumstances are ready, when others are in the right place, and

when our hearts are prepared, he will call us into the action.

Waiting in prayer is a disciplined refusal to act before God

acts.


Eugene Peterson



Not to want to pray is the sin behind sin.


P.T.Forsyth



To pray is the greatest thing we can do, and to do it well, there

must be calmness, time, and deliberation.


E. M. Bounds



The penalty of not praying is the loss of one's capacity to pray.

Pray the largest prayers. You cannot think a prayer so large that

God, in answering it, will not wish you had made it larger. Pray

not for crutches but for wings!


Phillips Brooks



We are too busy to pray, and so we are too busy to have power. 

We have a great deal of activity but we accomplish little; many

services but few conversions; much machinery but few results.


R.A. Torrey



ILLUSTRATION OF PRAYER


Jean Giono tells the story of Elzeard Bouffier, a shepherd he met

in 1913 in the French Alps.

At that time, because of careless deforestation, the mountains

around Provence, France, were barren. Former villages were

deserted because their springs and brooks had run dry. The wind

blew furiously, unimpeded by foliage.

While mountain climbing, Giono came to a shepherd's hut, where he

was invited to spend the night.

After dinner Giono watched the shepherd meticulously sort through

a pile of acorns, discarding those that were cracked or

undersized. When the shepherd had counted out 100 perfect acorns,

he stopped for the night and went to bed.

Giono learned that the fifty-five-year-old shepherd had been

planting trees on the wild hillsides for over three years. He had

planted 100,000 trees, 20,000 of which had sprouted. Of those, he

expected half to be eaten by rodents or die due to the elements,

and the other half to live.

After World War I, Giono returned to the mountainside and

discovered incredible rehabilitation: There was a veritable

forest, accompanied by a chain reaction in nature. Water flowed

in the once-empty brooks. The ecology, sheltered by a leafy roof

and bonded to the earth by a mat of spreading roots, became

hospitable. Willows, rushes, meadows, gardens, and flowers were

birthed.

Giono returned again after World War II. Twenty miles from the

lines, the shepherd had continued his work, ignoring the war of

1939 just as he had ignored that of 1914. The reformation of the

land continued. Whole regions glowed with health and prosperity.

Giono writes: "On the site of the ruins I had seen in 1913 now

stand neat farms.... The old streams, fed by the rains and snows

that the forest conserves, are flowing again.... Little by

little, the villages have been rebuilt. People from the plains,

where land is costly, have settled here, bringing youth, motion,

the spirit of adventure."

Those who pray are like spiritual reforesters, digging holes on

barren land and planting the seeds of life. Through these seeds,

dry spiritual wastelands are transformed into harvestable fields,

and life-giving water is brought to parched and barren souls.


Hal Seed

......


FROM "1001 QUOTES, ILLUSTRATIONS AND HUMOROUS STORIES" by Edward K.Rowell




PRAYER BEFORE MEALS


Where Did This Come From?


At supper one night, seven-year-old Brad asked why his dad

thanked God before eating food that had come from the grocery

store. The father picked up a roll and asked, "Where did this

come from?"

"From the store," Brad said. 

"Where did they get it?"

"I dunno. From the bakery?" 

"Where did they get it?" 

"They made it."

"From what?" asked the father. 

"From flour."

"Where did that come from?" 

"From wheat."

"Where did the wheat come from?" 

"The farmers."

"And where did the farmer get it?" 

"He grew it," said Brad.

"From what?" 

"Seed.,"

"And who made the seed?" 

"God, I guess," said Brad. 

"And that," said the father, "is why we thank Him."

......



BACK OF THE LOAF:


Back of the loaf is the snowy flour, And back of the flour the

mill, And back of the mill are the wheat and the shower, And the

sun, and the Father's will.


Anonymous

......




In his book "Home: Where Life Makes Up Its Mind," Charles Swindon

says:

Most of us did not learn to pray in church. And we weren't taught

it in school, or even in pajamas beside our bed at night. If the

truth were known, we've done more praying around the kitchen

table than anywhere else on earth. From our earliest years we've

been programmed: if you don't pray, you don't eat. It started

with Pablum in the high chair, and it continues through

porterhouse at the restaurant. Right? Like passing the salt or

doing the dishes, a meal is incomplete without it.

Swindoll goes on to offer several suggestions for saying grace

before meals, including:


* Think before you pray. What's on the table? Call the food and

drink by name. "Thank you, Lord, for the hot chicken-and-rice

casserole in front of us. Thank you for the cold lemonade."

* Involve others in prayer: Try some sentence prayers around the

table. 

* Sing your family blessing.

* Keep it brief, please.

* Occasionally pray after the meal.

......



UNGRATEFUL BEGGERS


According to "Our Daily Bread," when King Alfonso XII of Spain

learned that the attendants of his court were neglecting to pray

before eating, he determined to teach them a lesson. A huge

banquet was prepared, and all the king's guests plowed in, none

of them pausing to give thanks to God. But by pre-arrangement, a

filthy beggar wandered into the banquet hall, seated himself at

the head table, and chowed down.

The guests waited for the guards to seize the man, but, to their

amazement, he continued gobbling up the food without hindrance.

Then the beggar wiped his mouth, rose and stalked out without a

word.

Someone near the king said, "What a despicable fellow! He didn't

even say ,thank you."

Rising, King Alfonso said to them all: "Do you realize that

you've been bolder and more ungrateful than that beggar? Every

day you sit down at a table abundantly supplied by your Heavenly

Father, yet you neither ask His blessing nor express your

gratitude!"

It was a lesson none of them ever forgot.

......



FOOD FOR ALL


George Mueller, born into a German tax collector's family, was

often in trouble. He learned early to steal and gamble and drink.

As a teenager, he learned how to in stay in expensive hotels,

then sneak out without paying the bill. But at length he was

caught and jailed. Prison did him little good, for upon release

he continued his crime spree until, on a Saturday night in 1825,

he met Jesus Christ.

Mueller married and settled down in Bristol, England, growing

daily in faith and developing a burden for the homeless children

running wild and ragged through the streets. At a public meeting

in Bristol on December 9, 1835, he presented a plan for an

orphanage. Several contributions came in. Mueller rented Number 6

Wilson Street, and on April 11, 1836, the doors of the orphanage

opened. Twenty-six children were immediately taken in. A second

house soon opened, then a third.

From the beginning, Mueller refused to ask for funds or even to

speak of the ministry's financial needs. He believed in praying

earnestly and trusting the Lord to provide. And the Lord did

provide, though sometimes at the last moment. The best-known

story involves a morning when the plates and bowls and cups were

set on the tables, but there was no food or milk. The children

sat waiting for breakfast while Mueller led in prayer for their

daily bread. A knock sounded at the door. It was the baker. "Mr.

Mueller," he said, "I couldn't sleep last night. Somehow I felt

you didn't have bread for breakfast, so I got up at 2 A.M. and

baked some fresh bread." A second knock sounded. The milkman 

had broken down right in front of the orphanage, and he wanted 

to give the children his milk so he could empty his wagon and repair it.

Such stories became the norm for Mueller's work. During the

course of his ninety-three years, Mueller housed more than ten

thousand orphans, "prayed in" millions of dollars, travelled to

scores of countries preaching the Gospel, and recorded fifty

thousand answers to prayer.


Robert Morgan, "On This Day" (Nashville: Thomas Nelson

Publishers, 1997), April 11th.

......



NEVER AGAIN


Charles Colson, former special assistant to President Richard

Nixon, went to prison for his role in the Watergate scandal and

was converted to Christ through reading C. S. Lewis' "Mere

Christianity."

He wrote of his conversion in "Born Again," a book that was

launched with a backbreaking tour that ended up in California.

Arriving late at his hotel, he and his friend Fred Denne went to

the coffee shop for a snack. The room had a Spanish motif; red

tile on the floor, wrought iron tables and chairs. A waitress in

a pink uniform waited on them. The men noticed she looked like a

young starlet, blondish hair and pleasant-faced.

"Two cheese omelets, one milk, and one iced tea," said Fred.

After she left, the two men reviewed the next day's schedule a

few minutes, then decided to ask the Lord's blessings on their

anticipated meal. They bowed their heads, and, as blessings go,

it was fairly long. When they raised their heads, the waitress

was standing nearby, omelets in hand.

"Hey," she said loudly, "were you guys praying?" Everyone in the

small room turned to look at them.

"Yes, we were," said Colson.

"Hey, that's neat," said the waitress. "I've never seen anybody

do that in here before. Are you preachers?"

They said no, but she persisted in asking questions. Then she

said, "I'm a Christian. At least I was once."

"What happened?" the men asked.

"I accepted Jesus as my Savior at a rally when I was a teenager.

Then I went to live in Hawaii. Well, I just lost interest, I

guess. Forgot about it."

"I don't think you lost it," Colson said gently. "You just put it

aside for a while." The waitress seemed thoughtful. "It's funny,

but the moment I saw you guys praying I felt excited all over

again."

They talked to her at some length about returning to the Lord,

about the prodigal son, and about the Lord's love and

forgiveness.

Later during their stay at the hotel they saw her again. "Hey,

you guys," she shouted. She told them she had already called a

Christian friend and was joining a Bible study the next day. "And

I'm going to find a church, too. I've come back."

Colson later wrote, "Until that night, I had felt awkward at

times praying over meals in crowded restaurants. Never again."


Charles W Colson, "Life Sentence" (Minneapolis: World Wide,

1979), 105-106.



HELLO ...


Hello. This is Emily. I'm fine, how are you? Thanks for the sky

and birds and stuff. Actually I'm having a pretty good week.

And thanks for the mashed potatoes, but not for the lima beans. I

thank you really much for the meatloaf.

And thanks for the chairs, and the tables, and the doors, and the

couch and the television and the walls and the roof and the bed

and the bathroom and the towels and the grass and the clouds and

the street and ...

... Take care. Amen, from Emily. - 


Prayer of a five-year-old, reported by Robert Fulghum "Uh-Oh" 

(New York: Villard Books, 1991), 140-141.

......



SOMEONE ONCE SAID ...


It is a good thing to let prayer be the first business of the

morning and the last in the evening. - Martin Luther, in a

forty-page letter to his barber who had asked him about the

Christian life.


*    Prayer is the key to the morning and the bolt of the

evening. - 

Anonymous 


*    A day hemmed in prayer is less likely to come unravelled. -

Anonymous


*    The one concern of the devil is to keep Christians from

praying. He fears nothing from prayerless studies, prayerless

work, prayerless religion. He laughs at our toil, mocks at our

wisdom, but trembles when we pray. - 

Samuel Chadwick


*    Prayer is a mighty instrument, not for getting man's will

done in Heaven, but for getting God's will done on earth. -

Robert Law


*    I never prayed sincerely for anything but it came, at some

time ... somehow, in some shape. - 

Adoniram Judson 


*    Prayer delights God's ear, it melts His heart, it opens His

hand: God cannot deny a praying soul. - 

Thomas Watson


*    I must talk to Father about this. - 

Billy Bray


*    Prayer bathes the soul in an atmosphere of the divine

presence. - 

Charles Finney


*    When life knocks you to your knees - well, that's the best

position in which to pray, isn't it.? - 

Ethel Barrymore


*    Daniel would rather spend a night with the lions than miss a

day in prayer. - 

Anonymous

......



WHEN YOU DON'T FEEL LIKE PRAYING


*    When thou feelest most indisposed to pray, yield not to it.

But strive and endeavor to pray even when thou thinkest thou

canst not pray. - 

an old divine


*    Pray when you feel like it, for it is a sin to neglect such

an opportunity. Pray when you don't feel like it, for it is

dangerous to remain in such a condition. - quoted by 

Ruth Bell Graham


*    It is a good thing to let prayer be the first business in

the morning and the last in the evening. Guard yourself against

such false and deceitful thoughts that keep whispering: Wait a

while. In an hour or so I will pray. I must first finish this or

that. Thinking such thoughts we get away from prayer into other

things that will hold us and involve us till the prayer of the

day comes to naught. - 

Martin Luther, in a forty-page letter to his barber, Peter Beskendorf, 

who had asked, "Dr. Luther, how do you pray?"

......



WHO PRAYS?


Newsweek Magazine devoted its cover-story on January 6, 1992, to

the subject of prayer, saying, "This week, if you believe in all

the opinion surveys, more of us will pray than will go to work,

or exercise, or have sexual relations. According to the recent

studies at NORC, a research center, by Andrew M. Greeley, the

sociologist-novelist-priest, more than three quarters (78 percent)

of all Americans pray at least once a week; more than half (57

percent) report praying at least once a day. Indeed, Greeley

finds that even among the 13 percent of Americans who are

atheists or agnostics, nearly one in five still prays daily....

"Indeed, the current edition of 'Books in Print' lists nearly two

thousand titles on prayer, meditations, and techniques for

spiritual growth - more than three times the number devoted to

sexual intimacy and how to achieve it."

The article goes on to talk about the benefits that are

experienced by couples who pray together in marriage, saying, 

"As some young couples have found, praying together is the tie that

really binds.... Greeley's surveys show that spouses who pray

together report greater marital satisfaction than those who

don't, and that frequent sex coupled with frequent prayer make

for the most satisfying marriages."

......


[Sad to say but I doubt those statistics apply in 2020 as I post this to my blog

Keith Hunt]


WHAT WE PRAY FOR


According to a Yankelovich Poll reported in USA Today

commissioned for the Lutheran Brotherhood, nine out of ten adults

in America say they pray. What do they pray for most often?


*    98% - Our own families 

*    81% - World's Children 

*    77% - World Peace

*    69% - Co-workers


[I doubt this applies today in 2020, as the Western world becomes more 

and more secular - Keith Hunt]



PRAYER UNANSWERED


The following was an unpublished poem of hymn-writer Fanny

Crosby, recently discovered by Donald Hustad. The manuscript

carried several notations, including the initials "M.S." and the

name "H. P. Main." There is also a question, "Is this O.K.?"

signed by "I.A.S" - Ira Allan Sankey - and the further notes

"O.K." and "This is fine." At the upper right the paper is

embossed with the name "HAMILTON." The poem is entitled, 

"For What His Love Denies."


God does not give me all I ask, 

Nor answer as I pray; 

But, O, my cup is brimming o'er 

With blessings day by day. 

How oft the joy I thought withheld 

Delights my longing eyes, 

And so I thank Him from my heart 

For what His love denies.


Sometimes I miss a treasured link 

In friendship's hallowed chain,

And yet His smile is my reward 

For every throb of pain. 

I look beyond, where purer joys 

Delight my longing eyes; 

And so I thank Him from my heart 

For what His love denies.


How tenderly He leadeth me 

When earthly hopes are dim;

And when I falter by the way, 

He bids me lean on Him. 

He lifts my soul above the clouds 

Where friendship never dies; 

And so I thank Him from my heart 

For what His love denies. 


Fanny Crosby, Jan. 6, 1899

......



GOD'S FOUR ANSWERS


In talking with people who are concerned because God doesn't seem

to be answering their prayers, Pastor Bill Hybels uses a little

outline he borrowed from a pastor friend of his:


*    If the request is wrong, God says: No 


*    If the timing is wrong, God says: Slow 


*    If you are wrong, God says: Grow


*    But if the request is right, the timing is right, and you

are right, God says: Go!

......




AWAKENED TO PRAYER


His nightmares began each day when he awoke.

James Stegalls was nineteen. He was in Vietnam. Though he carried

a small Gideon New Testament in his shirt pocket, he couldn't

bring himself to read it. His buddies were cut down around him,

terror was building within him, and God seemed far away. His

twentieth birthday passed, then his twenty-first. At last, he

felt he couldn't go on.

On February 26, 1968, he prayed for it all to end, and his heart

told him he would die before dusk. Sure enough, his base came

under attack that day and Jim heard a rocket coming straight

toward him. Three seconds to live, he told himself, then two,

then. . .

A friend shoved him into a grease pit, and he waited for the

rocket to explode, but there was only a surreal silence. The fuse

malfunctioned.

For five hours James knelt in that pit, and finally his quivering

hand reached into his shirt pocket and took out his Testament.

Beginning with Matthew, he continued through the first 18

chapters.

"When I read Matthew 18:19-20," he said, "I somehow knew things

would be all right."

Long after Jim returned home, as he visited his wife's

grandmother, Mrs.Harris, she told him a night years before when

she had awakened in terror. Knowing Jim was in Vietnam, she had

sensed he was in trouble. She began praying for God to spare his

life. Unable to kneel because of arthritis, she lay prone on the

floor, praying and reading her Bible all night.

Just before dawn she read Matthew 18:19-20: If two of you agree

down here on earth concerning anything you ask, my Father in

heaven will do it for you. For where two or three gather together

because they are mine, I am there among them.

She immediately called her Sunday school teacher, who got out of

bed and went to Mrs.Harris' house where together they claimed the

Lord's promise as they prayed for Jim until reassured by God's

peace.

Having told Jim the story, Mrs.Harris opened her Bible to show

him where she had marked the passage.

In the margin were the words: Jim, February 26, 1968.

......



URGENT IMPRESSION


Archibald Gracie relished his swim on April 14, 1912. The ship's

pool was a "six-foot tank of salt water, heated to a refreshing

temperature. In no swimming bath had I ever enjoyed such pleasure

before." But his account went on to say, "How near it was to

being my last plunge. Before dawn of another day I would be

swimming for my life in mid-ocean in a temperature of 28

degrees!"

After his swim that Sunday night aboard ship, Colonel Archibald

Gracie retired to his cabin and fell asleep, only to be awakened

by "a sudden shock and noise." Dressing quickly, he ascended to

the deck and learned the ship had collided with an iceberg.

During the same moments in New York, his wife's sleep was also

disturbed. Seized by sudden anxiety, she sank to her knees

holding her prayerbook, "which by chance opened to the prayer

'For Those At Sea.'" She prayed earnestly until about 5 A.M. when

the burden lifted. She rested quietly until eight when her sister

"came softly to the door, newspaper in hand, to gently break the tragic

news that the Titanic had sunk."

What had happened meantime to her husband? "I was in a whirlpool,

swirling round and round, as I still tried to cling to the

railing as the ship plunged to the depths below. Down, down, I

went. it seemed a great distance ... (Ascending back to the

surface) I could see no Titanic. She had entirely disappeared

beneath the surface of the ocean without a sign of any wave. A

thin light grey smoky vapor hung like a pall a few feet above the

sea. There arose the most horrible sounds ever heard by mortal

man, the agonizing cries of death from over a thousand throats

..."


Col. Archibald Gracie later wrote: "I know of no recorded

instance of Providential deliverance, he wrote, more directly

attributable to ... prayer."


Colonel Archibald Gracie, "Titanic: A Survivor's Story"

(Gloucestershire, the United Kingdom, 1985).

......


 

COMING TO THE KING


Thou art coming to a King 

Large petitions with thee bring; 

For His grace and power are such 

None can ever ask too much. 


John Newton

......


FROM "NELSON'S COMPLETE BOOK OF STORIES, ILLUSTRATIONS, AND

QUOTES"


by Robert J. Morgan


                             ................



     I have spent much time and effort in this 7th piece of armor

we need to put on to battle Satan the Devil. It is indeed one of

our greatest defence and attack weapons. We defend and we attack

with PRAYER!


     Paul went on to request prayer for himself (likewise for 

others also) that he would be able to open his mouth or I suppose

write with his pen, in BOLD manner, the mysteries of the GOSPEL.

He was at the time in chains in prison (verse 20), yet he wanted

prayers on his behalf that he could even in prison open his mouth

BOLDLY and speak the Gospel.


     At the present in this year of 2009 [as I write] there is still relative

FREEDOM to proclaim the mysteries of the Gospel. I have freedom

to continue writing and uploading studies to this Website, to

give forth the truths of the Word of the Lord. The day will come

when there will be a mighty blackout on being able to have

freedom to publish what you can find on this Website. I thank you

for your prayers. I request as Paul did that you will remember me

in your prayers, that as long as this age goes on, before the

last 42 months come, that I will be in health, that I will be

able to BOLDLY publish the truths of God, that I will be guided

to speak therein as I ought, so many others around the world will

come to know the salvation of God, and who will accept Christ

Jesus as their PERSONAL Savior, and who will give their lives in

humble repentance to live by every word of God, as our Savior

taught us to do (Mat.4:4).


     With all the complete ARMOR of God, brethren, we can stand up

TALL AND STRONG to face the enemy, to go to battle with the

unseen powers of spiritual wickedness, and to not only fight the

good fight, but to WIN the battle, to FINISH THE COURSE, and to

be able to say with Paul, "I HAVE KEPT THE FAITH: HENCEFORTH

THERE IS LAID UP FOR ME A CROWN OF RIGHTEOUSNESS, 

which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me

only, but unto ALL  them that LOVE HIS APPEARING!" (2 Tim.4:6-8).


     May our God richly BLESS you all as you SERVE Him with His

WHOLE ARMOR upon you.


                         ........................



Keith Hunt, May 2009


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