BRETHREN,
PRAY FOR US
02-09-58
1
THESSALONIANS 5:12-28
And
the sermon tonight is in the 25th verse, BRETHREN, PRAY FOR US. And it arises out of this past week things
that are on my heart that arise as I go and preach at these state evangelistic
conferences, BRETHREN, PRAY FOR US.
This
is not a new appeal on the part of the Apostle Paul as though it were unique or
strange or unusual. He wrote that many
times.
For
example, in the 15th chapter of the Book of Romans and the 30th verse, he says,
"Now I beseech you, brethren, for the Lord Jesus Christ's sake, and for
the love of the Spirit, that you sunagonizo, that you strive, that you
agonize with me in your prayers to God for me."
"I
beseech you, brethren" -- could you say it more emphatically
or more preciously or more appealingly than that? -- "I beg of
you, brethren, for the Lord Jesus Christ's sake, and for the love of the
Spirit, that ye agonize together with me in your praying to God for
me."
I
say that is not a unique appeal on his part.
Listen
here to the 5th [sic, 6th] chapter of the Ephesian letter which was a
circular letter; it was an encyclical.
It was sent to all the churches of Asia, "Praying always with all
prayer and supplication in the Spirit, ...watching with all perseverance and
supplication for all saints; and for me..."
"Praying
for all the people and for me. That
utterance may be given to me that I may open my mouth boldly to make known the
mystery of the gospel
"For
which I am an ambassador in bonds, that therein I may speak as boldly as I
ought to speak."
You'll
find the same spirit of appeal in the last chapter of the letter to the church
at Colosse, "Continue in prayer, and watch in the same with thanksgiving;
"Withal
praying also for us, that God would open unto us a door of utterance, to speak
the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in bonds;
"That
I may make it manifest, as I ought to speak." "Praying" -- and then repeats it, "Praying for
us."
Then
in this passage that you read, "Pray without ceasing."
"Brethren, pray for us."
There is a way of God for His sake, for His people, for us. God has a way for us, a chosen way.
I
couldn't hardly illustrate it better than in something the Lord tells His
people in the 36th chapter of Ezekiel and the 37th verse, "Thus saith the
Lord God, `I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel to do it
for them.'"
Why
doesn't He just go ahead and do it? Why pray?
Why God have them ask and beseech and endure and importune and knock and
seek? Why? He says here, "I will yet for this be inquired of by the
house of Israel to do it for them."
And
you in that context, which I haven't time to read, He tells there all that He's
going to do for Israel, great and wonderful things; and things, by the way,
which are not fulfilled.
They
are yet in the future. God says,
"I'm going to do all this."
And
then He says, "But I want to be inquired of it. I want to be asked about it.
I want to be talked to about it.
I want to be prayed to about it.
Yet for this will I be inquired of the house of Israel to do it for
them."
Now,
I cannot understand that. Why doesn't
God just go ahead and do it before we ask -- He knows all about us -- before we
delineate or define a single need? God
knows all of our needs, then why bother Him with our importunity? Why knock at the door? Why say it?
God knows it all and whether He's going to do it or not and whether He's
going to answer or not and everything. Why bother with knocking at the door?
All
I know is this, that that is the chosen way for the people of God. And like all other things of God, they are
inexplicable. This also is a chosen way
of God, and to us is inexplicable, I suppose.
God
has His way in the macrocosms up there.
In that vast infinitude, there are solar systems and Milky Ways and
constellations and stars and suns in their courses and orbits and planets. Why does God do it all that way? I don't know. That's just God.
Every
one of them obeys the mandate and they love the Lord. And each one in his course there swinging through the infinitude
of God's spaciousness, there they are doing exactly what God told them to
do.
And
God has the same infinite, inscrutable will in the microcosms around us, all
those little electrons and protons and neutrons swirling around in their
universes that we call atoms.
Why
does God do all that just like He does it?
I don't know. That's God. He made the law and it is unbreakable. And all the manifestation of that little,
tiny, infinitesimal world that cannot be seen obeys the law of the
Almighty.
And
that's the same thing that I see in this world around me. All of it is obedient to the will and
purposes of God.
These
seasons, summer and winter and spring and fall, all of them, according to the
will of God, and the tide of ebb and flow and all of the storms and the rains
and everything in this world, obeying the mandate of Almighty God.
And
that's the world that I see in life all around me. God's little seeds and their buds and their stalks and their
blooms and their flowers and their leaves, all according to the will and work
of God. And the world of life around
me, the birds in the air and the beasts of the field and the fish of the sea,
all of it according to the commandment and work of God.
Why
didn't He do it a different way? Why
didn't He do something else? I do not
know. That is God. And it is the same in this spiritual world
in which His children live and breathe and have their beings. There is no such thing as any channel of the
power of God except through intercession and prayer.
The
agonizing with our fellow citizens in the household of faith to God for one
another and for this great cause and purpose that He hath laid on our heart and
to which He hath so solemnly commended us and called us and chosen us and
commissioned us.
Now,
why didn't God just do it anyway? I'm
not debating. I'm not arguing. All I know is the sun shines and God said,
"Let it shine."
All
I know is the seasons come and God said, "Until the end, there shall be
summer and winter."
Same
thing about these great spiritual truths of the Almighty.
A
prayerless church is a weak church. A
prayerless preacher is a weak preacher.
A prayerless Christian is a feeble, anemic Christian. A service that is not baptized and bathed in
intercession is a weak and feeble service.
There
is no avenue and no power from the throne of God for His church and for His
people except in this intercession we call prayer.
That's
the channel. That's the way God reaches
down to us and the way we knock at the gates of heaven and reach up to
God.
Now,
I say these things with several corollaries to be drawn therefrom, and the
first is this: Without prayer and without intercession and without great appeal
on the part of the people, a church can be correct and orthodox and fundamental
and Bible-loving and Bible-believing and Bible-preaching.
It
can be all of that and at the same time be weak and anemic, surrounded on every
side, drowned and overwhelmed in the city or in the state or in the nation in
which it lives.
I
have severally been overwhelmed by that great truth as in these last several
months I have preached in Canada, I have preached in the northeastern part of
the United States, and now this last week preaching in Washington, Oregon, to
which in attendance were a great many people from Vancouver and other places in
British Columbia and some of them from Alberta.
I
am surprised. I am amazed at the
development of the Christian life in different parts of this nation. And that is a development that overwhelms
me. Here are a little band of faithful
people. They are consecrated. They love the Lord. They are far more dedicated than we
are.
Why,
those people, it would be unthinkable for them that they'd go to a picture
show, a theater, a vaudeville and entertainment. They would never do such a thing. It would be unthinkable for them that they'd have a member in
their church that smoked a cigarette.
It
would be unthinkable for those people that they would countenance on many, many
of the worldly things they call them that live in the membership of our
church. They are consecrated. They love the Lord. Their services are holy and their preachers
are given to the Word of God.
And
yet -- and yet all that I know of them are small. They are anemic. They are
little. They're on the defensive. They are overwhelmed and drowned in the
vast, growing world of heathenism and paganism around me. Well, what's the matter? What's the matter?
I
think one thing -- and I haven't lived there, and if I lived there,
maybe I'd change my mind, say something else -- but as I look at it
and upon it and compare our people with them, I think they lack this one thing:
There is not in them that great outreach of evangelism, of intercession, of
appeal to the lost, of doing all they can to knock at the door of heaven in
behalf of the people who are not saved.
They
are glorious Christians. And they know
it. And they have wonderful little
churches, and they're cognizant of it.
But
there is not that pulsating, agonizing, prayerful appeal that God will bless
the message that Paul asked these people to pray for, that he might speak
boldly to the lost, that he might preach the gospel to the heathen, to the
nations, to Gentiles.
And
I tell you that thing must be in our church day and night if the favor of God
is to continue upon us. This prayerful
intercession that God will use us, and what we're able to do in song or sermon
or teaching or ministry of training that people might be saved.
I
do not know of a finer sign of God moving among us than when people come to me
and say, "Pastor, I notice that
out of a great throng who joined the church this last Sunday, there were very
few who were saved."
They'll
not just tell the preacher about it, but labor in that ministry where you were,
in your Sunday school class, as God shall give us an open door to intercede and
to pray in behalf of the lost.
Thanking
God for His blessings, never forgetful that He regenerated us and gave us a
love for the Book and for the Word and for one another.
But
most of all, praying God day and night that we might be instruments of
salvation in His hands. Evangelism,
winning the lost.
All
right. Another thing. This world, this world we have no other
choice -- no other choice but to beg and to pray and to importune
and to intercede and to knock and to plead and to beseech at heaven's door day
and night in behalf -- in behalf of this lost world, God did.
In
the 2nd chapter of the Book of Ephesians, Paul refers to people who are lost as
dead in trespasses and in sins. Dead,
dead.
What
do you do in the presence of the dead?
Dead. Preach to the dead, they
are dead. Appeal to the dead, they are
dead. Entice them, try to win
them. They are dead. Dead in trespasses and in sins. Dead.
There's
not anything that a man can do to give life to the dead, try it. Go to any cemetery or any mausoleum and
speak to the dead. Preach to the dead. God has to do something or a man can never
be saved. God has to do something or
the appeal of the gospel of Christ is never effected. God has to do something before any man can come to Christ.
It's
resurrection. Resurrection in life and
creation are a prerogative of God and not of man. I can create nothing.
Just try. Here is a piece of
vacant space. Create something in that
vacant space. Just try it. Create anything. It belongs to God alone to create.
And
if any man be in Christ, he is a new creation.
Resurrection belongs to God.
Life belongs to God. And as it
is in a man's physical life, it can only be re-created by the word of God. So it is in a man's spiritual life. He can only be raised, resurrected by the
quickening power of God.
And
we are dependent upon Him. I could
preach forever, and you could teach forever, and you could plead forever. But a man who is saved, God has to do
something on the inside of him there.
Has to be a regeneration. There
has to be a recreation. And that, I
say, is the prerogative of God.
We
have to pray. We have to plead. We have to beg. We have to knock. We have
to think. There is no other way. God must do work and the Spirit of God must
convict and win or a man can never be saved.
And this world, I say, is dead.
It is lost in trespasses and in sin.
Coming
back yesterday afternoon on a big, big Continental liner, they assigned each
one a seat. And because I was late,
they gave me a seat, and I had one way back there in the back. And so after we found our altitude, plane
coming from the Pacific over there a way, while they mixed up all of those
liquors like they do on these luxurious liners.
And
seated at the back I watched them mix them all. Then they start at the front and serve them. There was one little glass of orange juice
in all of those multitudes of trays of liquor that they served, just one little
glass of tomato juice. Well, it was
handed to me, just the one.
That
one lonely, little glass of tomato juice.
And I thought, well, you know, this will be a good idea of how the
ballots would be cast if we took a vote here about whether we're going to vote
out liquor or not. And I could just see
how many votes are for us and how many are for the liquor purveyors and sellers
and manufacturers.
So
I watched all the way up. And I want
you to know when that tray which was filled several times got to me, that
little thing of orange juice -- of tomato juice was still on
there. Still on there. Well, sir, the fellow over here seated by
me, she said, "What do you want, a Manhattan or a martini?"
What
is the difference between a Manhattan and a martini? She asked him, "Do you want a Manhattan or a martini?"
One
of them was white and one of them was brown.
That's the only difference I could see.
And
he said he wanted a Manhattan and she gave him the brown one. Well, he reached up with his hands -- and
good night alive, I thought I must be sitting by a fellow with delirium
treatment. He reached up with his hand
and did like that, and he took it with both of his hands, and he couldn't get
his hands back down again. And that was
over me. See, she was standing here and
he was sitting there and he had his hands over here.
And
I thought, "Oh, my, what am I going to do? He's going to spill that all over me, and Betty's going to meet
me at the plane. What will she think
about me?"
Oh,
so I reached up and I said, "Here, I will take it for you."
So
I took it and he got his hands back down again. And then I gave it to him.
And he said, "Thank you so much."
I
said, "Where have you been?"
He
said, "I've been in Las Vegas."
"What
you been doing in Las Vegas?"
Well, it can't repeated here in the pulpit.
And
after he drank, that he said, "Now I feel a lot better."
Then
I just looked at that group. So far as
I know, out of that big plane full of people -- what does one of
them hold, sixty-five -- out of that big plane of people, I
was the only one that refused to drink liquor.
I was the only one. Now, I don't
go to these parties, and I'm not down here in this business world, and I don't
know about it.
I
don't live in that kind of a world. But
as I looked at that group which is a cross-section of the business life
of America, there was one person on board that refused to drink liquor, and he
was a Baptist preacher. Why, this
world, this world.
Now,
I want to continue with that.
"Dead in trespasses and in sins." This world, and unless God does something, there is no
regeneration, no salvation.
Now,
I want to continue with that. I
preached at the state evangelistic conference for the states of Washington,
Oregon, and Idaho, in the city of Portland.
And
when the evening came before I went to the service, I went to the dining room
of the hotel. And when I walked in the
door, a group of people at a large, round table asked me if I wouldn't come and
eat dinner with them. So I sat down
with them and ate dinner with them.
They
introduced themselves as Canadians.
Some of them were from British Columbia and some of them were from
Alberta.
They
were very devout and very consecrated, and they had come down there to attend
the evangelistic conference. So as we
talked, they began to tell me how they were saved.
The
man to my left was a distinguished-looking man, iron gray hair, splendidly
dressed, fine speech, a wonderful man.
And this is how he was saved. In
the later years of his life, he went to live in Vancouver, the big city in
British Columbia. And his mother lived
in the same city.
And
his mother said to her son, who is now in the latter years of his life, she
said, "Son, I want you to go with me to church." Upon her insistence, he went to church.
He
said to me, "For three months I went with my mother to church. Sat down there by her side and wondered,
"What is it all about? Why do I
these people come here?" He said, "It was the most meaningless
exercise I think I ever listened to or shared in."
I
have been in church all my life. I have
been a Christian all my life. As soon
as I was old enough to know the difference between right and wrong, I gave my
heart to the Lord. And the services
always have meant something to me.
Every part of them.
Yet
that man in the world, go to church, knew nothing of its meaning at all, and it
meant nothing to him. Dead, like the
Bible says, "dead in trespasses and in sin."
As
I listened to him, I wondered about our services. People who are lost in the world coming in.
Does
any of it mean anything to them? Do
they wonder why do these people gather together? There -- was he sitting there just because of his mother? No meaning in the service at all. Absolutely dead, dead, dead.
But
he said, "I had an experience I cannot explain."
I
guess it was an answer to his mother's prayers or maybe the people who came to
know him there at church, I do not know.
But he said, "I had an experience, an experience of grace."
He
said, "I got on my knees one night in my room, knelt by the side of my bed. And there," he said, "in my
bedroom I gave my heart to Jesus and became a Christian."
And
since that time, apparently he is the pilary [sic, pillar] in the
church. The whole church life, as I
talked to him, seems to revolve around that wonderful, fine and consecrated
businessman. Yet dead, dead. Meant nothing to him at all. Wondered why they gathered there. No meaning whatsoever. Dead.
God
has to do something. Somebody's got to
pray. Mother's got to pray or wife has
to pray or child has to pray or the pastor has to pray or the people have to
pray. Somebody has to pray. God has to
be moved to resurrect the dead.
Now,
I must close, but not without one other thing.
Do you remember this morning?
What service was it? The first
or the second service, that couple came with that precious little girl and I
said -- I wanted to say something about that. I didn't have time this morning;
may I say it now?
The
man to my right -- they all told me how they were saved. The man to my right, this is what he
said. He said, "I was reared in a
very austere home. My father was very
rigid," he said. "When I was
nine years of age -- when I was nine years of age I had a great
conviction, a deep conviction in my soul, and I was lost. I was lost."
And
he said, "I went to my father in tears, weeping and crying. And I said to my father I was lost and I
wanted to be saved.
"And
my father said to me, 'Son, you are too young to understand. You cannot be saved. You're not old enough.'" He said for forty-two years that
feeling never came back again. Forty-two
years that feeling never came back again.
And
lost and out in the world and wayward, not attending church, not anything. He married.
And when the children got old enough, they took them to Sunday school
and he was converted, going to the services with the children and his
wife.
But
he said this to me, he said, "A month ago my mother died." And he said, "As I sat by my mother and
she talked to me just before she died, she said, 'Son, when your father died,
he and I spoke about you.
"'And
your father said to me, "Wife, the greatest mistake we ever made in our lives
was when that nine-year-old boy came and we wouldn't let him give
his heart to Jesus. We said he's too
young."'"
Forty-two
years, I do not understand that. It is
strange. But for forty-two years
after that, out and away. When the time
comes, at the troubling of the water, at the moving of the Spirit, that's the
day. That's the day. I've preached all my life that I did not
think a man could be saved just when he took a notion to. I may be wrong in that.
I
think Esau cried and wept and begged, and the day of his opportunity was
past. I think there are times when God
knocks at the door, when a man says no, it may come or it may not come
again.
I
am not God. There is an inscrutable
mystery of our salvation that I cannot understand how is it that I'm saved, and
there and there and yonder they are not.
The elected purpose and choice of God.
Oh, how I want to thank Him for me!
O God, thank Thee for saving me.
If
the Spirit calls, that's the time to respond.
A little child or a youth or you.
When the Spirit is nigh and the Lord is near and the people are praying,
that's the time to be saved, to give your heart to God, to give your life to
Jesus. And that's the appeal that we
make in this service tonight.
I
wanted to change that song, changing the sermon. I want you to sing number three hundred twenty-eight. Number three hundred twenty-eight, and
while we sing that song -- it's a song of prayer.
While
we sing that song, is there someone tonight whom the Lord calls? Would you come and stand by me?
Down
that stairwell, front or back, from the sides in this place, into that aisle
down here to the front, would you come and give me your hand?
"Preacher,
I give tonight my heart to God. In
token, I give you my hand."
Would
you come, a one, or a family you, while we sing. By letter, by confession of faith, by baptism, as God shall open
the door and make the appeal, would you come, while we stand and while we sing.