THE PLACE OF PRAYER IN THE
LIFE AND MINISTRY OF THE CHRISTIAN
Dr. W. A. Criswell
1 Thessalonians 3:1-13
12-29-57 10:50 a.m.
You
are sharing with us the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the Pastor bringing the morning message at the eleven o’clock hour, entitled The Place of Prayer in the Life and Ministry of the Christian.
In our preaching through the Word of God, we have come to the third chapter of
the first Thessalonian letter, which is the passage that we read together a moment
ago.
The
letter of Paul to the church at Thessalonica shows forth the burden on his
heart in behalf of these new converts, this young church that has been
established in the midst of great suffering and trial. In the second chapter
of his letter, in the sixth verse, he speaks of the burden on his heart for
them; then he describes himself as being like a nursing mother who cherisheth
her children. He speaks of himself as being affectionately desirous, willing
to impart not only the gospel of God but his own soul because, he says, “Ye are
dear unto us.” Then in the eleventh verse he compares himself again, to a
father who loves his children: “As ye know how we exhorted and comforted and
charged every one of you, as a father doth his children.” Then in the
eighteenth verse of the same second chapter, he tells why it was he has not
been able to see them. He says, “Wherefore we would have come unto you, even I
Paul, once and again, but Satan hindered us.” Then in the third chapter, he
describes what finally he did. First he says, when they were in Athens,
because of the earnest intercession in his soul in behalf of the church at
Thessalonica, he finally, because he could bear the burden no longer, he
finally sent Timothy, his young son in the faith, to go to Thessalonica to
inquire of their spiritual welfare. And he says that he was left alone in Athens, sending Timothy to them. In the meantime, Paul went from Athens to Corinth, and began his ministry in that Greek city.
While
he was there in Corinth, he was greatly discouraged; he was burdened still
further.
And
in the midst of that discouragement there came to him from Thessalonica his
young son in the ministry, Timothy. Then see how the whole word changes. He
says, “But when Timothy came from you unto us, and brought us good tidings of
your faith and love,” Timothy came back, and as Paul says elsewhere in the
letter, Timothy came back and told the apostle how from the church at
Thessalonica, not six months old, yet from that little band there had sounded
out the gospel of Jesus Christ to all the region, that they were growing in
faith, and maturing in the Word of the Lord. When Timothy brought that message
back, now you can turn to the eighteenth chapter of the book of Acts and see
what happened to Paul when that report came: he was greatly encouraged, and he
set himself anew and again in a new fervency and devotion to the preaching of
the Word of the Lord in the city of Corinth.
Then
he says here, in the third chapter of the First Thessalonian letter, “For now
we live, knowing that ye stand fast in the Lord.” And that is no
exaggeration: his life was lent a new color, a new exuberance, a new buoyancy,
a new faith, a new victory, “For now we live,” having heard from Timothy the
wonderful report of his Christian converts in Thessalonica. Then he closes the
chapter with a prayer, which is the message of the morning:
For
what thanks can we render to God for you,
Because
already for your sakes we pray night and day; praying that your faith might be
perfected,
That
the Lord would make you increase and abound in love toward one another and to
all men,
And
that he may establish your hearts unblameable, in holiness before God, even our
Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His saints.
[1
Thessalonians 3: 9-13]
So,
what Paul does is this; hindered by Satan to see them, prohibited to be in
their presence, there is one thing, he says that he can do and does do. He can
influence them and reach them by his prayers. So he gives himself to prayer
for the church at Thessalonica, to which he could not go, among whom he could
not visit, prohibited and hindered by Satan from even coming to where they met.
Now
could I make an aside here, concerning many, many, who every Lord’s Day listen
to these services over this radio? There are a great many of the people who
belong to this church, who in days passed were present every time the door was
open, who cannot come anymore. They are afflicted by illness; and as Dr.
Fowler says in his prayer so often, prohibited from coming by age and
infirmity. There are even young people who belong to our church, who because
of a permanent illness are not able to come. A thing like that could not but
bring despondency and sometimes despair to the heart,
There
God’s people are, gathered in Sunday School, and I can’t be present; gathered
in the services of the church, and I cannot attend; planning all these
wonderful programs by which we seek to reach the city for God, and I cannot
share in them. All I can do is just stay in this house, or lie on this bed.
But
that other thing that you can do, and so many of you also truly do, means more
than you could ever realize or we could ever say in words. You can do what
Paul did when he wrote this letter to the church at Thessalonica. “I cannot
come, I cannot be with you; but I can pray for you. And night and day,” he
says, “I do it, praying exceedingly.” I suppose the great poet Tennyson was
right when he said, “More things are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of;”
reaching out through the arms of intercession, molding and framing and guiding
the work of the Kingdom of God, by prayer and supplication.
I
do not suppose there was ever a true and mighty minister of Christ who did not
have back of him an interceding and praying people; somebody who can speak to
God. I have often said, to me the sweetest and most meaningful sentence I ever
read from the lips of a great preacher was this: one time Charles Haddon
Spurgeon said to a dear friend, “Sir, sometime, when you have the ear of the
great King, would you mention my name?”
“Cannot
come, cannot be with you, cannot be present; but I pray for you.” And Paul was
persuaded that in the praying of his heart and the pouring out of his soul to
God, there would come blessings, and power, and honor, and unction to the
little band of Christians in the church at Thessalonica.
Now
let us see for what Paul prayed. “For your sakes, before our God, night and
day praying exceedingly,” and he has three things in his prayer. First, that
they might be perfect, might be mature; that that which is lacking in their
life, that they might have from God those things that make for grown-up
Christians; no longer babes, no longer children, no longer adolescent, but grow
up in the faith; “might perfect that which is lacking in your faith.” Second
thing, that they might exhibit that maturity in Christ: “That the Lord might
make you to increase and abound in love to one another and toward all men.”
And then the third: “That God might establish their hearts unblameable in
holiness.”
Now,
that is very representative of the attitude of Paul in the preaching of the
whole gospel message of Christ. He was not only an evangelist, a missionary, a
flaming soul-winner and preacher; but he also was a faithful teacher, who
brooded over the souls of his converts, that they might grow and mature in the
faith. That is, it is not enough just to win people to Christ, to be
evangelistic, to have the flame of appeal in your heart; but we must also be
teachers, and we must have a burden on our hearts for the growth of these who
are won to Christ. It is not enough just to preach for the salvation of the
souls of men; but we must also be full of care for their spiritual growth and
maturity.
It
is not enough for the father and the mother to rejoice in the birth of a little
child, see what God hath given, there bone of your bone, flesh of your flesh;
this little gift into your arms. But there must also be in our rejoicing in
the birth of the child also a prayer, a continuing prayer, that God will grant
the little child growth; growth in his mind and understanding, growth in wisdom
and knowledge, growth in stature, in body, growth in spirit toward God. And
the delight of a home will inevitably be found in the growth of that child to
speak a word, to take a step, to grow, to be able to sit up, to walk. That is
a true picture of Paul’s prayer for his converts: not only that they be saved,
but that they also grow in the Christian faith.
That
is the meaning of the sixth chapter of the Book of Hebrews. Writing to the
little church made up of Jewish people, he says to them, “We are not to be
engrossed and given all the time to whether I’ve been saved or not, was my
repentance just right or not, was my faith just perfect or not.” Leaving those
principles of those primary doctrines of Christ, the foundation of repentance
from dead works, of faith toward God, of the doctrine of baptisms and eternal
judgment, all of that is to be in the past. “We,” he says, “leaving these principles
are to go on unto perfection, unto maturity.”
Now
let me tell you something. One of the commonest conferences that I have,
frequent, has been all of my ministry, is this. “Pastor, I do not know whether
I am saved or not. I do not know whether I have been converted or not. I am
not sure.” Therefore their minds are turned back, and they go over and over
and over again, “Did I repent just right? Did I have saving faith just so?
Was I genuinely born again? Is my name in the Book of Life? Was I truly
converted?” That is one of the commonest experiences of Christian people.
And if I were to ask all the people here this morning, all of you, who have
gone through that experience, “Am I saved? Am I really born again?” most of
you would hold up your hands, “I have gone through that experience.”
That
is childishness. That is adolescence. That is immaturity. Having done the
best you could at some time in your life, “I went down that aisle, I took Jesus
Christ as my Savior;” you can’t ever do that in any other way; when you have
turned from sin and turned to God in faith, done the best you could to receive
Him as your Savior, you cannot do any more. That is all a human mortal can do
to save himself; and you’re not to go over and over and over that again and
again and again. What you are to do is, having confessed your faith in the
Lord, having the best you know how taken Him as your Savior, you are to go on;
on to what? That’s the thing that most of our people do not realize.
What
is the matter with them is, there is a dearth and a drought and a lack of
unction and meaning and power in their lives; and they think they’re not
converted. “Pastor, I don’t know what’s the matter with me. God doesn’t
answer my prayers. I don’t have any ableness before God. My life is like a
desert, and my heart is like an arid place.” What’s the matter is not, “haven’t
been saved, haven’t been converted”; you wouldn’t be here if you weren’t
interested in God, nor would you be talking to the pastor if it were not a
burden on your heart to please the Lord. Well what’s the matter?
This
is it. When a man is saved, when you’re converted, you’re just born, you’re a
babe, you’re a child, you’ve just started out; and to stay a child is to be
frustrated and defeated in all of the ultimate purposes of God, and you feel
it. If you are powerless and immature and childlike in the Christian faith,
naturally you feel something is wrong, and you think, “Well I haven’t been
saved.” It’s not that at all. There is a great something else for God’s child
and that is the fullness of the Spirit, the spiritual understanding of the
Word. Sometimes they’ll call it “the baptism of the Holy Spirit”, sometimes
“the endowment from on high”, sometimes “the fullness of the Spirit”; however
the nomenclature, there is for the Christian a something else and a something
further, a something great and mighty and wonderful. Seek that. Don’t keep
your face turned to the back. Turn your face forward. “Lord, back there I
repented, I accepted Jesus as my Savior. I was baptized. Now, Lord, give me
this other full blessing: the baptism of the Spirit, the understanding of the
Word of God, the fullness of Heaven, a victory in Thee, a rejoicing in God my
Savior.”
Well
how do you do that? It is a very simple thing, and it is here in the
Scriptures. The means of our grace are always the same; and they are very
simple. The means of grace by which we are saved, and the means of grace by
which we grow, are both the same. They are alike, and they are very simple.
They are first, the Word of God; and second, they are prayer, intercession,
speaking to God. And it takes both of them. The means of grace by which we
are saved are those two.
Listen
to the Word of the Lord: First Peter 1:23-25, “Born again by the Word of God,
which liveth and abideth forever; and this is the word which by the gospel is
preached unto you.” James 1:18, “Of His own will begat He us, by the Word of
God.” But also, Romans 10:13, “For whosoever shall call upon the name of the
Lord shall be saved.” So a man is saved by listening to the Word of God, by
hearing the gospel of Jesus Christ. We are saved by the Word of the Lord, and
by prayer, by calling upon Him. “Whosoever shall call upon the name of the
Lord shall be saved.” I am saved through the mediation of the gospel message of
Christ, the Word of God; I am saved by calling upon the name of the Lord; those
two means of grace.
Now,
those same two means of grace grant us also our growth in the Christian spirit
and faith. I grow by feeding upon the Word of God. First Peter 1, 2:2, the
following passage that I quoted a while ago, immediately he says, “Therefore as
newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the Word, that ye may grow thereby.”
John 17:17, the prayer of our Lord, “Father, sanctify them through Thy truth, Thy
word is truth.” Ephesians 5:26, “Ye are cleansed, ye are sanctified, with the
washing of water by the Word.” But also, I am admonished to watch and to pray,
lest I enter into temptation so the two are together: feeding, eating,
drinking the Word of God; and speaking to the Lord in prayer; the same two
means of grace by which I am saved, by which I grow in the faith.
And
both of them are necessary. If I read the Word of God and study the Word of
God without praying, then I become a historical critic. I become very learned
in all of the historical meanings and foundations and developments of the Holy
Scriptures. And I can become brilliant in all the doctrines of the faith but I
have no unction, and no power, and it is nothing more than a mass of historical
facts and incidents. I become puffed up in learning and knowledge. I become
superior in theological training. But I have not the power and the Spirit and
the true message of God in my heart if I read the Word and do not pray.
Now
turn it around. If I pray and do not read the Word of God, then I become
introverted and subjective; I become esoteric and abstruse. I become a
fanatic. I am blown about with every wind of doctrine. When I pray I must know
and learn the mind of God, if I am ever to come in maturity in the faith of
Jesus Christ. So, for this great blessing that will hallow and sanctify the
life of the Christian, I must give myself to the Word of God and to prayer.
Now,
may I make this comment of our day and our generation? I do not know of any
day or any generation but that has felt its weakness and its powerlessness in
the preached Word of Jesus Christ; but how true is that of our day? There
never was any time or any era when the pulpits of the Christian church were
filled with more learned, and trained, and educated men, than we have today.
Our men for the most part, in most every pulpit in the land is a man trained in
the college. He has a graduate course in theology in the seminary. And from
the east side to the west side, there are men who are greatly educated and
wonderfully trained; some of them brilliant indeed as they stand in the
pulpit.
But
when you listen, you wonder at the lack of moving power, the fire from Heaven,
the burning from above. What is it? It is simply this; that the young man,
that the preacher, has poured over the Scriptures in the light of his
historical criticism, in the light of his books of theology, in the light of
all of the history and background and manners and customs, exegetical
commentaries, and all of the things that enter into the learning. He has done
it magnificently but he has not done what Jesus did; pour out His soul before
God. And he has not done what Paul did: “Wherefore I bow the knee before God
the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” [Ephesians 3:14] and stay on his face or on
his knees, or by himself until he has a message from God.
I
do not know of any calamity that has overtaken the modern preacher greater than
this: he’s a maneuverer, he’s a politician, he’s a machine greaser, he’s an
organizer, he’s an advertising agent, and he’s an editor, he’s a publisher,
he’s a civic speaker, he’s a go-between, he’s a gad about, he’s an up and down
the streeter, he’s a back slapper, he’s a glad hander, and a few other things I
could think about it that’d be just as true. But how many could you say, “This
is a man of God. This man has a message from the Lord?” You can’t be that
way, and you can’t have that burning word without a closet that’s shut and
closed, and there you stay and you stay and you stay and you stay.
One
of these great, great preachers of the last century, Richard Cecil, said,
There
is a manifest want of spiritual influence on the ministry of the present day.
I feel it in my own case, and I can see it in that of others. I am afraid
there is too much of a low managing, contriving, maneuvering temper of mind
among us. We are laying ourselves out more than is expedient to meet one man’s
taste, and another man’s dislikes. The ministry should find in us a simple
habit of spirit, and a holy but humble indifference to all consequences. Just
leading, knowing, praying for the mind of God.
And
that incomparable preacher, Richard Newton, said,
The
principle cause of my leanness and unfruitfulness is owing to an unaccountable
backwardness to pray. I can write or read or converse or hear with a ready
heart; but prayer is more spiritual and inward than any of these. And the more
spiritual any duty is, the more my carnal heart is apt to start from it.
Prayer and patience and faith are never disappointed. When I can find my heart
and frame in liberty for prayer, everything else is comparatively easy.
William
Penn, for whom Pennsylvania is named – not because of himself, but when the king
granted him the charter he made him name it Penn, put his name there,
Pennsylvania – of George Fox, the great founder of his faith, of the Society of
Friends, he said,
But
above all, he excelled in prayer. The inwardness and weight of his spirit, the
reverence and solemnity of his address and behavior, and the fewness and
fullness of his words have often struck even strangers with admiration. The
most awesome living reverend frame I ever felt or beheld, I must say, was his
prayer. And truly it was a testimony. He knew and lived nearer to the Lord
than other men; for they that knew him most will see most reason to approach
him with reverence and fear.
And
I took this out of a word from the William Carey Brotherhood, over there in Serampore
at the mouth of the Ganges River, near Calcutta, in India,
Let
us look at David Brainard in the woods of America, pouring out his very soul
before God for the perishing heathen. Prayer, secret, fervent, believing
prayer, lies at the root of all personal godliness. A heart given up to God in
closet religion, this more than all knowledge or all other gifts, will fit us
to become the instruments of God in the great work of human redemption.
When
I say these things and read these things, my own heart smites me, and I can
sense in the congregation that same conviction of dereliction and lack and want
and need. Our spiritual lives are so shallow, and our faith is so weak, and
our prayer life is so barren.
Could
I say two things that enter into our praying? First, always and always, when
we kneel, when we bow, when we talk to God, first there must always be the
spirit of submissiveness, of yieldedness on our part. “Not my will but Thine
be done. Lord, I have come to speak of Thee, of these matters.” Then lay them
before the Lord. One of these blessed, sainted women, who was so ill, was
asked by her friend, “If you had to choose, would it be to live or to die?”
And she said, “As God chooses.” But she was pressed, “If God should refer it
to you, which would you choose?” And she replied, “Truly, I would refer it to
God again.”
A
yieldedness, a surrender, a submission, “Lord, we have come to speak of Thee of
this matter. I am ill in body,” or, “I am broken in soul and in heart.” Then
lay it before the Lord; and as the Lord shall choose, “Shall I get well, then
to use health and strength for his glory. Shall I be sick, then Lord, may I
exhibit the patience and the dependence and the humility of a true Christian.”
As God shall choose, praying in yieldedness and in submission.
Then
this second thing: praying in a waiting faith. It isn’t like that, it doesn’t
work like that: rush into the presence of God, ask Him, run away with an
answer, “Sure I got it.” It doesn’t work that way. A little boy said to his
teacher, he was such a bright-eyed, earnest-faced boy, “Teacher, why is it that
so many prayers are unanswered? For the Bible says, ‘Ask and it shall, you’ll
get an answer, seek and you’ll find, knock and it’ll be opened unto you.’
Teacher, why don’t we receive these things for which we ask?” And the teacher
replied, she said,
Son,
sitting by a fire some evening, did you ever have somebody knock at the door,
and then you go to answer the summons and look out, and there is nobody there,
it is just darkness? But down the street you hear the patter of little feet.
One of your little friends came and knocked on the door then he ran away. He
didn’t expect an answer. He didn’t expect to enter. He was just a mischievous
boy, just playing a trick on you.
And
she said, “Son, that’s the way it is with God’s children. So many times we ask
and don’t expect to receive. And we knock, and don’t wait for entrance. Son,”
she said, “when you pray in true faith, you wait and you knock and you wait and
you knock, and by your importunity God looks into the heart and sees the
earnestness of the request, and God grants entrance, and God grants answer;” to
wait, to wait, to pray importunately, and to wait in faith.
Reading
these things, preparing this sermon, I came across so much. Oh, if you had an
hour or two hours just to say what you find, as I prepare these messages.
Moody, coming into a hotel, fellow pointed and said, “You see that man seated
there? He’s the leader of the infidel club in this city.”
“Well,”
said Moody, and he walked over there and sat down by the man in the hotel. And
the infidel with sarcasm turned to Moody and said, “How long are you going to
continue this humbugging business, telling these people that God answers your
prayers?” He said, “Moody, why don’t you try it on me, and see if God answers
prayer?” Mr. Moody said, “I will.” And he got down there on his knees in the
foyer of the hotel and prayed for the infidel, that God would save him. And
when Moody got up from his knees, the infidel looked at him with sarcasm and
said, “See there, it didn’t work. I’m not converted.” Moody turned to him and
solemnly said, “But you will.” And a little while after that they were having
a big revival meeting in the city, and guess the businessman who was leading
it? It was that infidel, that infidel. “But you will. But you will;” praying
in faith, and then just wait on God.
In
my much reading, I read an address by George Mueller. I can’t tell you the end
of it, but I can tell you what he said up to that time. George Mueller, the
great man of faith and prayer of England said, he said, “Five men were laid
upon my heart, to pray for them, that they be converted, five men.” He said,
“I prayed for those five men. One of them was converted eighteen months later.
The second,” he said, “was converted five years later.” He said, “I continued
to give myself in prayer, and twelve and a half years later a third was
converted.” And then he said, “I have prayed for the other two for forty
years, and I have the assurance that God will give me their souls too.”
I
cannot go any further with the story because I was unable to find how
ultimately it ended. But think of that. Eighteen months and one saved. Five
years and another saved. Twelve and a half years and a third saved. And forty
years in faith that God would give him the other two. Sometimes these prayers
of ours are answered after these who have prayed have gone to glory.
One
of these men that came down here and took me by the hand, and gave his heart to
God, said to me, “Oh preacher, oh preacher, that Mother was still alive, that Mother
was still alive, that I could tell her, that I could tell her.” Why his mother
had been dead for years. He was an older man. She had been in Heaven for
years. She had died and no answer to her prayer. That is, it didn’t seem as
though her prayer was answered; but down the aisle here at this church comes this
older man, and he says, “Oh preacher, that my mother were still alive, that I
could tell her, that I could tell her.”
The
most dramatic incident that I ever witnessed as a student was in a revival
meeting at Baylor, when Dr. Scarborough held a revival meeting there. And one
of those boys was converted, and he came down to testify and plead with other
young men to give their hearts to the Lord. And he closed his testimony looking
up to heaven, and he said, “Oh Mother, can you see me? Can you see me?
Mother, do you know? God has answered your prayers.”
Maybe
after we’re gone, maybe after we’re dead, may be after we’re in glory, but
we’re praying in faith, if it is the will of God, if it is right, if it is
according to what God would choose, we’re to ask in faith and wait, and wait.
I
must close. These ministries of reading the Word of God, and of intercession,
those simple ministries are God’s means of grace. That is the way you are
saved: listening to the invitation of Christ, and receiving it in your heart,
“Lord, I open my heart to Thee. Save me, remember me, forgive me.” And that is
the way we grow in grace: listening to the Word of God, reading the Word of
the Lord, and asking God’s blessings and His favor upon us, looking to Him in
prayer and in faith.
While
we sing this song this morning, somebody, you, give his heart to the Lord.
Would you come? “Here I am, pastor. I give you my hand. I give my heart to
God.” A family of you to come, put your life in the church. I’m just a voice,
an echo. It is the Spirit of the Lord, it is His work, it is His appeal. He
speaks to your soul. Would you answer? Would you come? In this balcony
around, down these stairwells at the back, at the front, “Here I come.” This
great throng of people on this lower floor. “Here I am, pastor; I take the
Lord as my Savior.” Or, “I put my life in the fellowship of the church.” While
we make appeal, would you make it now? While we stand and while we sing.