In the case of Sister F, there needed to
be a great work accomplished. Those who united in praying for
her needed a work done for them. Had God answered their prayers,
it would have proved their ruin.
In such cases of affliction, where Satan has control of the mind,
before engaging in prayer there should be the closest self-examination
to discover if there are not sins which need to be repented of,
confessed, and forsaken. Deep humility of soul before God is
necessary, and firm, humble reliance upon the merits of the blood
of Christ alone. Fasting and prayer will accomplish nothing while
the heart is estranged from God by a wrong course of action.
"Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to loose the bands
of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed
go free, and that ye break every yoke? Is it not to deal thy
bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast
out to thy house? when thou seest the naked, that thou cover
him; and that thou hide not thyself from thine own flesh?"
"Then shalt thou call, and the Lord shall answer; thou shalt
cry, and He shall say, Here I am. If thou take away from the
midst of thee the yoke, the putting forth of the finger, and
speaking vanity; and if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry,
and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in
obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday: and the Lord shall
guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and
make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden,
and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not."
It is heartwork that the Lord requires,
good works springing from a heart filled with love. All should
carefully and prayerfully consider the above scriptures, and
investigate their motives and actions. The promise of God to
us is on condition of obedience, compliance with all His requirements.
"Cry aloud," saith the prophet Isaiah, "spare
not, lift up thy voice like a trumpet, and show My people their
transgression, and the house of Jacob their sins. Yet they seek
Me daily, and delight to know My ways, as a nation that did righteousness,
and forsook not the ordinance of their God: they ask of Me
the ordinances of justice; they take delight
in approaching to God. Wherefore have we fasted, say they, and
Thou seest not? wherefore have we afflicted our soul, and Thou
takest no knowledge?"
A people are here addressed who make high
profession, who are in the habit of praying, and who delight
in religious exercises; yet there is a lack. They realize that
their prayers are not answered; their zealous, earnest efforts
are not observed in heaven, and they earnestly inquire why the
Lord makes them no returns. It is not because there is any neglect
on the part of God. The difficulty is with the people. While
professing godliness, they do not bear fruit to the glory of
God; their works are not what they should be. They are living
in neglect of positive duties. Unless these are performed, God
cannot answer their prayers according to His glory. In the case
of offering prayer for Sister F, there was confusion of sentiment.
Some were fanatical and moved from impulse. They possessed a
zeal, but not according to knowledge. Some looked at the great
thing to be accomplished in this case and began to triumph before
the victory was gained. There was much of the Jehu spirit manifested:
"Come with me, and see my zeal for the Lord." In place
of this self-confident assurance, the case should have been presented
to God with a spirit of humbleness and distrustfulness of self,
and with a broken and a contrite heart.
I was shown that in case of sickness, where
the way is clear for the offering up of prayer for the sick,
the case should be committed to the Lord in calm faith, not with
a storm of excitement. He alone is acquainted with the past life
of the individual and knows what his future will be. He who is
acquainted with the hearts of all men knows whether the person,
if raised up, would glorify His name or dishonor Him by backsliding
and apostasy. All that we are required to do is to ask God to
raise the sick up if in accordance with His will, believing that He hears the reasons which we
present and the fervent prayers offered. If the Lord sees it
will best honor Him, He will answer our prayers. But to urge
recovery without submission to His will is not right.
What God promises He is able at any time
to perform, and the work which He gives His people to do He is
able to accomplish by them. If they will live according to every
word He has spoken, every good word and promise will be fulfilled
unto them. But if they come short of perfect obedience, the great
and precious promises are afar off, and they cannot reach the
fulfillment.
All that can be done in praying for the
sick is to earnestly importune God in their behalf, and in perfect
confidence rest the matter in His hands. If we regard iniquity
in our hearts the Lord will not hear us. He can do what He will
with His own. He will glorify Himself by working in and through
them who wholly follow Him, so that it shall be known that it
is the Lord and that their works are wrought in God. Said Christ:
"If any man serve Me, him will My Father honor." When
we come to Him we should pray that we may enter into and accomplish
His purpose, and that our desires and interests may be lost in
His. We should acknowledge our acceptance of His will, not praying
Him to concede to ours. It is better for us that God does not
always answer our prayers just when we desire, and in just the
manner we wish. He will do more and better for us than to accomplish
all our wishes, for our wisdom is folly.
We have united in earnest prayer around
the sickbed of men, women, and children, and have felt that they
were given back to us from the dead in answer to our earnest
prayers. In these prayers we thought we must be positive and,
if we exercised faith, that we must ask for nothing less than
life. We dared not say, "If it will glorify God," fearing
it would admit a semblance of doubt. We have anxiously watched
those who have been given back, as it were,
from the dead. We have seen some of these, especially youth,
raised to health, and they have forgotten God, become dissolute
in life, causing sorrow and anguish to parents and friends, and
have become a shame to those who feared to pray. They lived not
to honor and glorify God, but to curse Him with their lives of
vice.
We no longer mark out a way nor seek to
bring the Lord to our wishes. If the life of the sick can glorify
Him, we pray that they may live; nevertheless, not as we will
but as He will. Our faith can be just as firm, and more reliable,
by committing the desire to the all-wise God, and, without feverish
anxiety, in perfect confidence, trusting all to Him. We have
the promise. We know that He hears us if we ask according to
His will. Our petitions must not take the form of a command,
but of intercession for Him to do the things we desire of Him.
When the church are united, they will have strength and power;
but when part of them are united to the world, and many are given
to covetousness, which God abhors, He can do but little for them.
Unbelief and sin shut them away from God. We are so weak that
we cannot bear much spiritual prosperity, lest we take the glory,
and accredit goodness and righteousness to ourselves as the reason
of the signal blessing of God, when it was all because of the
great mercy and lovingkindness of our compassionate heavenly
Father, and not because any good was found in us.
We should ever exert an influence which
will be sanctifying on those around us. This saving, ennobling
influence has been very feeble at -----. Many have mingled with
the world and partaken of its spirit and influence, and its friendship
has separated them from God. Jesus has passed a day's journey
in advance of them. They can no longer hear His voice of counsel
and warning, and they follow their own wisdom and judgment. They
follow a course which appears right in their own eyes, but which
afterward proves to be folly. God will not
allow His work to be mixed with worldly policy. Shrewd, calculating
men of the world are not the men to take leading positions in
this most solemn, sacred work. They must either be converted,
or engage in that calling which is appropriate to their world-loving
inclinations, and which does not involve such eternal consequences.
God will never enter into partnership with worldlings. Christ
gives everyone his choice: Will you have Me or the world? Will
you suffer reproach and shame, be peculiar, and zealous of good
works, even if hated of the world, and take My name, or will
you choose the esteem, the honor, the applause and profits the
world has to give, and have no part in Me? "Ye cannot serve
God and mammon."