PREVAILING IN PRAYER
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 9:20-23
2-27-72 10:50 a.m.
On
the radio and on television you’re sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas; and this is the Pastor bringing the message entitled Prevailing
in Prayer. In our preaching through the Book of Daniel, we have come to
the ninth chapter, which is one of the great chapters in all the Bible. And
we’re in the middle of it. I begin reading at verse twenty and read through
verse twenty-three. Daniel 9:20-23.
And
whiles I was speaking, and praying, and confessing my sin and the sin of my
people Israel, and presenting my supplication before the Lord my God for the
holy mountain of my God;
Yea,
whiles I was speaking in prayer, even the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the
vision at the beginning, being caused to fly swiftly, touched me about the time
of the evening oblation.
And
he informed me, and talked with me, and said, O Daniel, I am no come forth to
give thee skill and understanding.
At
the beginning of thy supplications the commandment came forth, and I am come to
show thee; for thou art greatly beloved
[Daniel 9: 20-23]
Is
not that a remarkable and wonderful thing? Twice he repeats it, “Whiles I was
speaking,” verse 20; verse 21, “Whiles I was speaking, God sent the man
Gabriel,” his name means “man of God”, “the man Gabriel, the angel Gabriel; and
he said, At the beginning of thy supplications the commandment came forth,” the
prayer was answered immediately, swiftly, while Daniel was making supplication.
As
Isaiah wrote in Isaiah 65:24, quoting God who says, “Before they call I will
answer, and while they are speaking I will hear;” and it is so in this passage
in Daniel. While he is praying God sends forth the commandment. And He does
it by the angel Gabriel.
Four
times is this man of God, this messenger of the Lord who described himself, “As
I am Gabriel, who stand in the presence of God,” four times is he mentioned in
the Bible. In the eighth chapter of Daniel he is the angel who interprets to
Daniel the vision in the eighth chapter, the vision of Persia and Greece. In the ninth chapter he is sent here. He twice again appears in the first
chapter of Luke.
He
announces to Zacharias and to Elizabeth the birth of John the Baptist. Then he
is sent to Nazareth to a virgin named Mary to announce to her that she will be
the mother of the foreordained, foretold child; the man, the messenger
Gabriel. And while Daniel is praying, making supplication, immediately God sends
Gabriel to tell Daniel that, “At the beginning of thy supplications the
commandment came forth.”
This
is the object of his intercession; the commandment to return God’s people home,
to rebuild the holy city, and to restore the sanctuary. While he is praying,
“At the beginning of thy supplications,” Gabriel says, “the commandment came
forth.”
That
commandment was either the decree of God that it should be done, or else a
decree from the Persian king giving order for the return and restoration of
God’s holy people. But in either event, whether it is the decree of heaven or
whether it is a decree of the Persian king, the effect of it is the same. In
either way it is an immediate answer to Daniel’s prayer.
How
is it that you pray like that? How does Daniel touch God? How is it that God
bows down to hear this statesman prophet as he intercedes? How do you do it?
How do you find immediate answer in supplication? O dear God, there is such
vast eliminable potency, power, in Thy hands, in Thy will and purpose, if only
we could reach it. The whole world around us is filled with untapped, pent up,
stored up energy, if only we could touch it. If we can just learn the
conditions of its use, think of the blessing it could be in life, in us, in all
dear to our hearts.
The
entire world of creation around us, this handiwork of God, all of it lives and
moves and has being under certain conditions. And if we can find those working
conditions, the whole stored up energy of the creation of ours, all of it will
bless our trade, and our commerce, and our industry, and our living, if we can
just supplicate in the right way. If we can find out those laws by which they
respond, the very forests and the fields under our cultivation will yield their
fruit and their increase.
If
we can just know what are the laws that lie back of these ether waves we can
make our voices and these very pictures seen and heard thousands of miles away,
around the whole earth. If we could just discover the laws of aerodynamics we
can fly above the clouds through the skies. If we can just learn the secrets
of the earth, out of its very bowels we can pump great energy for the wheels of
our factories. If we supplicate correctly the commandment immediately goes
forth.
Shall
I persuade myself that what is true on this lower plane of nature God’s handiwork
would be any less true in the great higher plane of God’s spiritual being? If
I can just learn the conditions by which he responds and blesses and answers.
Daniel did it. God heard him, and the answer came immediately. “While I was
making supplication, the commandment came forth.”
What
is it that Daniel did? What is the secret of the touching of this power, and majesty,
and mystery of Almighty God? As I study the prayer there are four things that
come to my mind that I clearly see that characterize the supplication of
Daniel. And I think in these four things we find that answer. How do you
supplicate and the commandment go forth? How do you pray and the answer is
immediately given, how? There are four things.
One,
he prayed according to the mind and purpose of God. He begins the ninth
chapter, “In the first year of the reign of Darius the Mede, I Daniel
understood by the Holy Scriptures the word of the Lord that came through
Jeremiah the prophet.” He found the mind and purpose of God in his study of
the holy Scriptures, and especially its prophetic predictive portion.
As
the apocalyptic Revelation begins, “Blessed are they that hear, and they that
read the words of this prophecy.” [Revelation 1:3] So Daniel, studying the Scriptures, learned from the
sacred pages the purposes of God, and he gave himself in supplication, in
prayer, beseeching according to the will and mind of Heaven.
So,
in his prayer he importunes, “O Lord God, cause Thy face to shine upon Thy
people and Thy city and Thy sanctuary that is desolate, for the Lord’s sake.”
He does not pray, “O God, send us more prophets.” Nor does he ask, “O Lord
God, raise up more kings.” Nor does he say, “O God, we beseech, empower Thy
people.” Nor does he say this, nor that.
He
says one thing; the object, and the reaching out, and the subject, and the
whole circumference of his intercession, lies in God. He casts himself upon
the mercies of Heaven, “O Lord God, cause Thy face to shine upon Thy people.”
And if God shines like the sun in its strength, and if the favor of Heaven is
given, all of the rest is just a part of the working out of the sovereign will
of the Almighty.
The
favor of God is not a part or a piece. It is everything. It is not
something. It is all in all to the nation, to the church, to the life, to
you. “O Lord God, cause Thy face to shine upon Thy people.” He pleads the
mercies and the remembrances of deity, “O Lord, hear, O Lord, forgive, O Lord,
hearken and do, O Lord, for Thy name’s sake, and the people call by Thy name.”
It is God.
Now,
as I studied, I found that that is the glory of God thus to answer by fire, by
strong and mighty arm, by the commandment immediately being sent forth. What
is the glory of God? The glory of God is His goodnesses to men. This is the
glory of God, that He answers prayer, that He works with His people, that He
blesses those who supplicate Him. That is the glory of God.
I
never saw this before, I don’t know why. In that tender and moving appeal of
Moses to the Almighty when he said, “O God, I beseech Thee, show me Thy glory,
show me Thy glory; let me see Thee Lord in all the garments, the Shekinah light
of heaven. Show me Thy glory.” And God said,” this is the next sentence, “and
God said, I will make all My goodnesses pass before thee.” [Exodus 33:18, 19]
What
is the glory of God? It is the goodnesses by which the favor of Heaven shines
like the sun upon us who lean upon His kind arm. And the Lord passed by before
Moses, and proclaimed the Lord God merciful and gracious, longsuffering and
abundant in goodness, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and
transgression and sin; that is the glory of God.
There
is more and richer glory in the stooping of God to bless and to help a fallen
man, sinners such as we are. And the glory of God manifest in the creation when
He stooped to fling the worlds into space. And there is more of majesty in
Jesus the Christ when He said to the thief dying on the cross, “Today shalt
thou be with Me in paradise,” [Luke 23:43]
than when He said, “In the beginning,” in Genesis, “theu uchshk and there
was light.” [Genesis
1:3]
What
is the glory of God? “Show me Thy glory. And God said, I’ll make all My
goodnesses to pass before thee.” For the glory of God is mercy and
forgiveness, longsuffering and abounding in gracious, and heavenly, and benedictory
remembrance and Daniel learned that.
And
in his prayer he cast himself upon the mercies of God. He pleads deity, “Lord
make Thy face to shine upon us.” And when he did, and when he did, having
found in the Scriptures the purpose of God for his people, “While he was
praying, at the beginning of his supplication, the commandment came forth,”
immediately, swiftly.
All
right, a second thing I learned as I studied this prayer; the prayer not only
in the mind and purpose of God, reading the Holy Scriptures, but the prayer was
made in intensity and in importunity. The next verse: “And I set my face unto
the Lord God, to seek by prayer and supplication, with fasting, and sackcloth,
and ashes; and I set my face unto the Lord.”
For
me just to read it, just to quote it is to bring to our minds the sensitivity
that we all feel in the sentence. “I set my face;” there is determined
resolve, there is committed perseverance. “I set my face unto the Lord God, to
seek by prayer and supplication.” Doesn’t that rebuke us for our trivial, and
flippant, and lightsome intercessions? We pray incidentally, lethargically,
indifferently. “I set my face unto the Lord God.”
No
soldier or warrior ever won a battle who did not offer his life in the
conflict. Nor was there ever any statesman or hero who ever broke a yoke of
bondage and emancipated his nation but that he offered himself. Nor was there
ever any merchant who ever succeeded who did not strive in his business. Nor
was there ever any athlete who excelled who did not strain for a victory. Nor
was there ever any musician who ever attained but who worked and tried.
“I
set my face unto the Lord my God.” I can just feel and sense, as you do, the
intensity of that importunity: “Lord, Lord, Lord.” And then you see it in his
prayer. He finally breaks into broken sentences, “O my God, incline thine ear,
and hear; O Lord, hear; O Lord, forgive; O Lord, hearken and do; for Thy people
are called by Thy name.”
We
have beautiful prayers in public. I hear them. I read them. On stated
occasions they’ll be written out. I did it one time myself, just one time in
my life, wrote out a beautiful prayer. And I balanced every sentence, and I
saw that every grammatical construction was just so. Then I read the prayer
over a p.a. system. I did that one time in my life.
Now
I have no deprecatory marks to make about any public prayer that is beautifully
worded, and that is grammatically structured, and that is eloquently expressed
addressing God in Heaven. I sometimes think of the preacher in the Boston paper, after he heard him in a prayer dedicate the monument at Bunker Hill.
The
paper published the sentence. It was the most eloquent prayer. It was the
most eloquent prayer that God ever heard. That’s fine. That’s wonderful. But
I sometimes think, and you do too, that the most powerful and potent prayers
are not those that fall into beautiful language and sentence structure that is
literary. But it is prayer that is expressed in broken sentences. It doesn’t
come out grammatically and it doesn’t find expression in eloquent language and
literary classical words. But it’s a cry. It’s an agony. It’s a tear. It’s
a heartache. It’s an appeal in a groan, as the apostle writes in the eighth
chapter of Romans, “With groanings that are unutterable.” [Romans 8:26]
In
1771, there was born a gifted poet in England. His name is James Montgomery.
And when he was forty-three years old he was gloriously saved, and he joined
the Moravian community near where he lived in England. He wrote a hymn. I
read it:
Prayer
is the soul’s sincere desire, unuttered and unexpressed
The
motion of a hidden fire that trembles in the breast
Prayer
is the burden of a sigh, the falling of a tear
The
upward glancing of an eye when none but God is near
Prayer
is the simplest form of speech that infant lips can try
Prayer,
the sublimest strain that reached the majesty on high
Prayer
is the Christian’s vital breath, the Christians native air
His
watchward at the gates of death, he enters Heaven by prayer
The
saints in prayer appear as one, in word and deed and mind
When
with the Father and the Son their fellowship they find
Nor
prayer is made on earth alone, the Holy Spirit pleads
And
Jesus on the eternal throne for sinners intercedes
O
Thou by whom we come to God, the life, the truth, the way
The
path of prayer thyself hath trod, Lord teach us how to pray
In broken and
agonizing sentences, sometimes in just words and sometimes too deep for tears,
can’t express it, just the welling up of a soul that pleads with God.
Not
only praying according to the mind and purpose of Heaven, and not only in
intensity and importunity, but praying in true and sublime and unselfish
altruism; not for himself alone but for all of his people; no reference does
Daniel make to himself except one: “And I confess my sin and the sin of my
people;” nothing of himself, but all for his people.
In
wormwood and in gall they lived in slavery, and the sanctuary in ruins, and the
holy city desolate; praying for his people. Isn’t all true prayer kind of like
that? It includes beyond ourselves. Isn’t true religion like that? The model
prayer, it isn’t, “My Father, give me this day my daily bread, and forgive me
my debts;” doesn’t it say beyond us, “Our Father in heaven, give us this day
our daily bread; and forgive us our debts, the shortcomings by which we fall
before God in need and want and lack, forgive us.” Always beyond just the
suppliant, beyond us, just the one true altruism, including others; and this is
Daniel’s prayer for his people.
You
know, I cannot but pause and comment about that, this statesman. When this
prayer was prayed he must have been at least ninety years of age. He had been
a captive in the courts of Nebuchadnezzar and of Cyrus and of Darius. He’d
been a captive there since he was a boy, a youth; could have been less than
fifteen years old. And now he’s toward ninety.
And
that snow white haired man of God praying with his windows open toward the holy
city, there is in him that flame of inextinguishable, unutterable yearning for
the restoration of his people, and the land, and the city, and the sanctuary.
Did you know, to me that is a sign of God? There burns in the hearts of those
people, Daniel’s people, that same inextinguishable longing and yearning for
the restoration of their land, and their city, and their temple.
On
top of that Dome of the Rock, on top of that rock now is a mosque, the Dome of
the Rock, the Mosque of Omar. And there down there at the base of the wall,
but they stand there through the days kissing those stones and bathing them
with their tears. God places that in the hearts of those people. And don’t
you pray that somehow that Jew, who does not accept the Jesus, the Savior, of
the Gospel of John, will somehow and unconsciously accept Jesus the Savior of
the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah?
A
few days ago, a Jewish friend whom I came to know, and to love, and to revere––one
of the most noble men it’s ever been my privilege to know––he was translated.
And as I was speaking of his death and thinking of the future that lies ahead
in the world that is yet to come, and somewhat maybe lamenting that he was not
an avowed and openly stated Christian, someone of discernment, and spiritual
intuition, and sensitivity said, “But remember, he heard you preach on
television many, many times. And you do not know but that unconsciously and
down in his heart, he trusted and accepted the Savior whom you know and whom
you love, whom you worship and whom you preach.”
Don’t
you wish that for all of those dear people, these for whom Daniel is making
supplication? And if I have any right to believe in the promises of God, one
of the assured passages in this Bible is in the eleventh chapter of the Book of
Romans, “And so all Israel will be saved.” Whatever that could mean, and does,
“And so all Israel will shall be saved.” [Romans 11:26]
Supplicating
not only according to the mind of God, and not only in intensity and in
importunity, and not only in altruism for others, but last, supplicating in
personal acceptance; “at the beginning of thy supplications, the commandment
came forth, and I am come to show thee, for thou art greatly beloved;
therefore,” and then the vision of the glory of the restoration. First, God
accepted Daniel, personally, himself, then God accepted his prayer.
In
the story of Cain and Abel, God rejected Cain, then He rejected his offering,
and his prayer, and his supplication. God accepted Abel and then received his
prayer, and his offering, and his supplication. Says the story of Esther when
she went in to the king for her people––she said to Mordecai, “He’s not called
for me in days and days, and if I go unbidden into his presence, it means
certain death. Just pray that when I appear in the throne room that he’ll
extend the golden scepter.” [Esther 4:11]
First she must be accepted, then her prayer and her supplication.
So
it is in Daniel. First Daniel was accepted. He was received, then his prayer
was answered. And there’s no prayer answered unless first the person who
offers it is accepted.
Would
that not strike terror to your soul? How is it that sinners and fallen such as
we are could ever appear in the majesty on high, the burning holiness of God?
How could we ever make appeal if first our persons must be accepted? Well,
that’s what Daniel did, and you didn’t see it, and you didn’t catch it, and you
didn’t observe it and note it when I read it. “Whiles I was speaking and
making supplication, at the time of the evening oblation, at the time of the
evening oblation;” at the time of the evening sacrifice.
When
the lamb is slain and its blood poured out, and the offering was made on the
brazen altar, at that time Daniel bowed before God, and prayed, and confessed
his sin and the sin of his people, and made supplication. How did they do
that? When a sinner came before God he brought with him a victim, a
sacrificial gift offering, and he put his hands on the head of the sacrificial
victim and confessed there his sin. Then the animal was slain, and the blood
poured out, and the body offered up.
It
was a type. It was a symbol of blood atonement, that the sinner approached God
in confession of sin and in blood of expiation. That is exactly what Daniel
did at the time of the evening oblation. At the time of the evening sacrifice
he bows before God, “praying and confessing my sin and the sin of my people;”
he comes with blood of expiation, and atonement, and reconciliation.
Can
we do any other? When we come before God in the light of God’s glory we are so
naked and ashamed. In the light of God’s holiness we’re so sinful. In the
light of God’s fullness we’re so empty. In the light of God’s majesty we’re so
lacking. In the light of God’s strength we’re so weak.
How
does a man come before God? As Job cried, “I’ve heard Thee by the hearing of
the ear, but now that mine eye seeth Thee I abhor myself in dust and in
ashes.” And as Elijah, when God passed by he covered his face and buried it in
his mantle.
As
the twenty-four elders in the apocalyptic vision, they bowed down before Him
who sits upon the throne. And so did Daniel. He sits in dust and ashes. He’s
clothed in sackcloth, he covers his mouth with his hand crying, “Unclean,
unclean.”
He
is bowed in heart. He is bowed in spirit. He is bowed in soul. And in
atonement, in blood and expiation, confessing his sin, he comes before God to
make supplication and appeal. That’s what we do when we come before the Lord.
Not in our goodness and not in our merit, but we plead the merit, and the
efficacy, and the grace of Jesus. And we come and we pray in His name for His
sake.
No
sentence in that prayer does Daniel commemorate something good that he did. No
sentence in that prayer does he say anything of his own worth and merit. But
at the time of the evening oblation, in blood and in sacrifice and in
confession of sin, he comes before God and makes appeal. That’s what we do.
Lord,
sinful creatures as we are, behold we take it upon ourselves to speak unto
Thee, thou holy and mighty God; we who are but dying, made of the dust of the
ground, ashes ourselves. Lord we don’t come in our strength, or in our merit,
or in our worth, or in our righteousness. But Lord we appear before Thee in
the name of Christ, in His blood, in His cross, in His atoning grace and
forgiveness. Lord, for Jesus’ sake, receive us.
And
He says, “Come boldly, come boldly, that ye might find grace to help in time of
need. Welcome.” And having received us in His blood and grace and
forgiveness, then God bows down His ear to hear what His children have to say.
This
is the Christian faith and the Christian hope and the Christian Bible and the
Christian way to God: in Christ, in atoning grace, in forgiveness, in mercy,
in the favor, when He makes his face to shine upon us. Would you do that
today?
In
a moment when we stand to sing, to give your heart for God, to put your life
with us in the circle of this church, however the Holy Spirit will press the
appeal to your heart, would you make it now and come now? In the balcony
round, there’s stairways at the front and the back and on either side, and
there’s time and to spare; come. On this lower floor, into the aisle and down
here to the front, “Here I am, Pastor, and here I come.” A family you, “This
is my wife, our darling children, we’re all coming today.” Come. A couple you
or just one somebody you, make the decision now in the quiet of this moment.
Then when we stand to sing, stand into that aisle, down to the front. “Here I
am, pastor, I’m coming now.” Do it. Do it while we stand and while we sing.