The Oberlin Evangelist.
January 17, 1855
ON PERSEVERING PRAYER FOR OTHERS
By PRESIDENT FINNEY.
Reported by the Editor.
"And he said unto them, Which of you shall have a friend, and shall go unto him
at midnight, and say unto him, Friend, lend me three loaves:
"For a friend of mine in his journey is come to me, and I have nothing to set
before him?
"And he from within shall answer and say, Trouble me not; the door is now shut,
and my children are with me in bed; I cannot rise and give thee.
"I say unto you, Though he will not rise and give him, because he is his friend,
yet because of his importunity, he will rise and give him as many as he needeth."
--Luke 11:5-8
I propose, in speaking from this passage, to treat of prayer offered for others,
and the encouragement we have for such prayer. This passage seems to have been
designed to encourage us to pray for our friends and for others in general. The
same is true of the Lord's prayer, since many of its petitions obviously
contemplate blessings upon others not less than upon ourselves. Indeed, the
whole Bible is replete with instances and examples of prevailing prayer for
others. I might begin with the case of Abraham interceding, now for Ishmael,
anon for Abimelech, and yet again for Sodom; and then I might pass on to speak
of Moses and of Samuel; of Jeremiah also, and of other prophets; of the Apostles
moreover, who are continually in prayer for the churches. The Bible is full of
this, and must make the impression on every attentive reader, that intercession
for others is a natural development of the Christian spirit.
It is equally a dictate of nature to pray for others as to pray for one's self.
Who does not sometimes experience the spontaneous and irresistible impulse to
cry out to God for others? It is utterly impossible for a parent to see a child
in a house on fire, or sinking in deep waters, or in any great peril without
crying to God for help. You who read the Bible must notice how God's people are
continually in prayer for his church and his cause on earth. You see there how
parents pray for their children, how one prays for another under any
circumstances of want. This lies out on the face of the whole Bible. None can
fail to notice it who read their Bibles with any attention.
From the mere light of nature we expect God to hear our prayer for others.
Consider this point and you will see it to be so. Even the wickedest of men and
of women pray for their children in distress, and indeed for others besides
theirs. They have an innate conviction that God should be sought in prayer, and
that he will hear and help. Sometimes the impulse to pray for others is
irresistible and insuppressible. You cry out spontaneously--May God have mercy
on their souls! I doubt whether there is a man in our nation, however wicked,
who could have stood by and have seen the cars at Norwalk plunge off into the
river, without crying out, May God save their souls! This is quite as natural as
to pray for ourselves, and shows fully the instinct of our minds. You may say
what you please about there being no virtue in prayer, and you may try to
believe what you will; yet none the less this, sort of prayer will come with the
occasion that calls for it. The fact remains the same, despite of all that men
may strive to do by false philosophy to excuse themselves for praying so little.
I am aware that some men object, saying it is of no use to pray for others; but
this objection is utterly shallow and groundless. It assumes that prayer never
influences God, but ourselves only. They say the influence of prayer is wholly
subjective--i.e., on the person who prays; never objective--i.e., upon God.
Strange that men should ever adopt a notion so absurd. This subjective influence
never could be gained if men did not believe in the objective influence. How
much good would it do your own heart to pray if it were the fact and you
absolutely knew it to be, that God never hears and answers prayer? Think how
ridiculous for a man to go before God and say to him--"Lord, I don't expect my
prayer to influence thee in the least, for I know that thou canst not hear
prayer at all; but I want to get a certain subjective effect on myself by this
prayer, and therefore I obtrude myself before thy throne." How strange! Any man
would be shocked at his own folly and absurdity.
But some of you perhaps did not fully understand me when I said in my last
sermon that prayer did not change God's nature and purposes. Some men say--"Prayer
must change God's plans if he answers it." No, never. It has always been God's
plan to hear and answer prayer. This has always entered into his purposes.
Again, God's immutability implies that he will answer prayer. It would be
strange indeed if God should not change his course in answer to prayer, if he be
indeed immutable. If he were not to change for right prayer, it would prove him
to be not good--it would imply that he had ceased to be benevolent; indeed, it
would undeify him at once. When you come to resolve this idea into its elements,
you will see that it subverts the whole idea of God and of his attributes. It
must imply that God's creatures might come into any position before him, and he
can never answer their prayers.
But many say--I can see how prayer may benefit myself, but cannot see how it can
benefit others. I reply, the latter can easily be seen. No man can read the
Bible without seeing that this is the fact--prayer does benefit others. No man
can study his own convictions without seeing evidence of it. If prayer never
could benefit others, the fact would belie all our innate convictions.
I have said that to pray for others is a spontaneity of our nature. Even when
our enemies are in sudden danger and trouble, we lift up our cry for them
spontaneously. I doubt whether even an infidel could see a child struggling in
pain and peril, without crying out--May God help! Sometimes men in their sins
have fallen into fearful circumstances, and have cried mightily to God, and God
has interposed so signally as to astonish them. I have heard of many cases of
this sort. I recollect one, of a wicked man, on the point of drowning, who cried
to God for help. It was remarkable that all his sins seemed to be concentrated
into one present mass. He saw them--saw himself that great sinner who had sinned
so grievously; saw that he must turn from all his sins to God, as he would ever
hope for mercy;--did turn to God, saying, I yield, and I will be thine forever.
At once after this, he rose to the surface, and floated ashore.
I have heard of another case, of a man in his sins, praying for a sick child.
God heard, and wonderful to say, God answered, and the case made an impression
on his mind which terminated in his speedy conversion.
So God hears the young ravens when they cry. So he heard those heathen sailors
who were in the ship with Jonah. So he often hears sailors in distress as his
word most impressively declares. "God commandeth and raiseth the strong wind,
which lifteth up the waves thereof. They mount up to the heaven; they go down
again to the depths; their soul is melted because of trouble. Then they cry unto
the Lord, and he bringeth them out of their distresses. He maketh the storm a
calm, so that the waves thereof are still. Then they are glad because they be
quiet; so he bringeth them unto their desired haven." Ps. 107:25-30. Many a
sailor knows that God has heard him in his cry of distress. Some of them can
gratefully testify--God heard my cry and spared my life; now, therefore, I will
serve him as long as I live. How often does God hear such prayer so manifestly
as to leave no doubt, and no possibility of reasonable doubting!
Let us now ask--Why should we pray for others? Why has God so constituted us
that we feel that we may and must pray for others? I answer,
1. They need our prayer. They may be mentally incapable of prayer; or their
prayers for themselves may be utterly unavailing. Hence, they need the aid of
some one who has power with God to pray for them. I can well remember that, in
my own case, full one year before I was married, I had an irresistible
conviction on my mind that I should lose my soul if I were to marry any other
than a pious wife. I knew I could not pray for myself. An ungodly wife would not
pray for me, but would only strengthen me in my sins. I therefore came fully to
the conclusion that I should never marry any other than a pious woman. I had
never heard my father or my mother pray, and had no reason to suppose they ever
prayed for me. Hence, perhaps I felt the more need of a praying wife. But I have
often heard other men say the same in regard to marrying pious wives. This may
doubtless be abused; persons may depend too much on others' prayers; children
often do, upon the prayers of their parents.
2. We need the exercise of praying for others. It will do us as well as them
great good. This we may readily learn from our own experience.
3. Viewing God in his governmental relations and capacities, he needs this
intercessory prayer for its influence on his creatures. He wants to interest his
people in each other, and to cement their many hearts, as it were, into one. It
is his great desire to bring all his people to care for each other and to love
each other. Place before your mind the case of a great family. Suppose the
father should not encourage his children to ask favors for each other. You say
at once this would be very bad. Certainly a wise father would encourage that for
the sake of strengthening the bands of mutual sympathy in his household. Some of
the best families I ever knew have been remarkable for this. Each of the
children were in the habit of asking favors not for himself, but for his
brothers or sisters. You can easily see the value of this in a family. Surely
its value cannot be less in Gods' great family. It cannot be strange, therefore,
that God should encourage his children to expect to be heard when they pray for
their brethren and sisters. You can see how important it is that a father should
encourage in his children the benevolent spirit of asking favors for each other,
and should induce them to do so for the very purpose of cultivating benevolence
in their hearts. It certainly is a most salutary arrangement in any family, or
indeed in any government. Any good ruler loves to see his people interested in
each other. What do you think of that family, ten in number, with which I was
acquainted, who were accustomed, when they met each evening around the family
altar, to detail briefly the state of their minds to each other, and if anyone
was in darkness or in sin, all would unite to pray for that one, or even, if the
case seemed to call for it, would set apart an entire day for fasting and prayer
in his behalf. Was not that a most admirable practice? Or what would you say of
that church which should in this way pray for each other, and help those
especially who were in any affliction? And will not God encourage this spirit
among his people? Most assuredly you know it must be so.
Again, prayer for each other draws us into a deeper consideration of each
other's wants. When you begin to pray for another, you are compelled to study
his character, his temptations, his wants. This opens the way for a richer
heart-union.
Again, prayer for others draws us into sympathy with God's love, and with his
feelings towards his people. We may blame them more, or may pity them more; or
it may be that we shall simply love them more;--but, however this may be, we
shall be more likely to have the same mind towards them that God has.
Again, it is intrinsically fit and proper that God should manifest his pleasure
in every case of disinterested importunity for the souls of others. The case may
be that of a stranger to you, yet your heart becomes deeply engaged and your
very soul takes hold of the case; God sees it with delight. What do you want, my
child, says he. I want this soul should be converted, you reply. Is there not
some propriety in God's being pleased with this prayer? God looks on this
suppliant, saying--"You come not to plead for yourself, not for life, not for
any temporal good; but for your enemy. You come to pray for your enemy and you
want I should convert his soul. I will do it." Indeed, I suppose that, other
things being equal, a sincere prayer offered for any enemy is more sure to be
granted than any other prayer. But whether offered for an enemy, or for a
friend, it is impossible that God should not be greatly influenced by
self-sacrificing, really benevolent prayer. He must be if he loves real
benevolence, and seeks to promote it among his creatures.
Again, prayer for others needs this encouragement. If we were to pray earnestly
for others and God did not regard it, we should lose confidence in prayer, not
to say also in God himself.
This condescension on his part, is of the utmost importance to the whole
universe. They need to know that they can influence the Infinite Mind by prayer
for fellow creatures, for this will encourage them to try to help each other by
prayer, and will serve to knit the bonds of mutual affection and interest.
It is striking to notice how our dependent relations upon each other and upon
God multiply the occasions of prayer for each other. It would seem that God
loves to create these occasions and to multiply them continually. So he shuts us
up by his providence, straitens us all round about, and thus compels us to feel
the necessity of prayer. O how he loves to multiply these occasions, and bring
up one subject of prayer after another, keeping our hearts ever warm with
benevolent interest in our fellow-beings, and drawing us also exceedingly near
to himself. All this time he is never weary of giving us audience, and of
inviting us into the secret chamber of his love.
Prayer for others supplies one important condition in the government of God upon
which he can show mercy without detriment to any governmental interests. Every
one can readily see that a king might grant a favor to an offender for the sake
of a mutual friend, which he could not grant for the offender's sake alone.
Suppose a man here in Oberlin has committed a great crime; the Government cannot
pardon him on the strength of his own prayer only; but if all Oberlin were to
unite their petitions, he might, perhaps, for their sakes, grant the pardon.
This principle has a wide and well-known application. Thus a parent might get a
blessing for his child. The child may be guilty of high treason, but his father
may have rendered so great services to the government, that for the sake of
these, and in answer to his prayers, the Governor may honorably and safely
pardon him. The Governor would reply to the guilty son--I cannot pardon you for
your own sake, but for your father's sake I can. This principle has always been
exercised in God's government. For Abraham's sake God could bless Abimelech, and
Sarah, and almost Sodom. Noah, Daniel and Job are cited as examples of
intercessors whom God would hear except under the extreme circumstances of
guilt, when the nation had become really ripe for judgments. God's language to
Moses is striking and most significant. It was on the occasion of the golden
calf, that the Lord said to Moses, "I have seen this people, and behold, it is a
stiff-necked people; now, therefore, let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot
against them, and that I may consume them; and I will make of thee a great
nation." (Ex. 32:9-10) God could not hear the people, but did hear Moses;
indeed, he speaks as if he could not go on in the course of just judgment
against the people unless Moses would withdraw his intercession and let him go
on. How strong is the view thus given us of the power of prevailing prayer!
To pray for others, and to be heard and answered of God in our prayer, serves
greatly to increase our love to God in the form of affection, and our love to
man in the form of benevolence. No one ever prayed for another, with real
prayer, without feeling an increase of love towards that person, no matter
whether it be for a stranger or an acquaintance. So if a community or a church
pray for some individual, the more they pray, the better they will love. Prayer
creates a bond of union between our souls and the souls of those whom we love.
Let one pray for others till he prevails; it results in a wonderful sympathy,
like that between parent and child. I have seen extraordinary cases of prayer
for others, in which a most mysterious connection seemed to be established
between the party praying and the party prayed for, the latter seeming to know
that blessings came through prayer, and almost adoring and idolizing the source
through which they came.
We can often obtain for others what they cannot for themselves. Abraham prayed
for Abimelech, and obtained for him blessings, for which Abimelech's prayers
might have been made in vain. Job prayed successfully for his friends and God
heard him when he could not hear them. Moses, in like manner, prayed for Aaron
and Miriam, and God's hearing him, when he could not hear them, became a loud
rebuke of their envy and pride. This illustrates a great principle in God's
government, showing both that God means to encourage intercession for others,
and that in order to pray acceptably, persons must stand in favor before God--in
a position which does not demand his rebuke, but which does at least justify
manifestations of his favor. It is on this principle that God can and will hear
the prayers of his humble, obedient, trusting children.
I come next to speak of the importance of perseverance in prayer. This text,
like that of my last sermon, is designed to teach this doctrine. You will notice
how strong the case is made in our present text. "I say unto you, though he will
not rise and give him because he is his friend, yet because of his importunity,
he will rise and give him as many as he needeth." This, however, does not teach
that God's friendship for his people fails to induce him to give, but it is a
strong case to show that Christians get for their importunity what they could
not get without. There are cases where nothing short of importunity gains the
desired blessing. The case of the Syrophenician woman is to the same point. If
she had desisted after the first or the second rebuff, she had surely failed of
the great blessing. Daniel prayed on one occasion twenty-one days, and could not
give up. At last deliverance came. This being obliged to press out suit so long
compels us to study and to understand our case. It leads us into a deeper
sympathy with God and with all his views and policy.
We can better appreciate the value of the blessing, by how much the more it
costs us and the longer we have to pray for it. The more intensely we feel in
our prayer for a given case, the more fully we appreciate the blessing when it
comes. It supplies a deeper want of our souls and comes with a more refreshing
consolation.
Such persevering prayer develops all the Christian graces. Especially it
develops benevolence, the mother of all the rest. It brings this out in all its
rich and varied phases.
It is often important that he who prays for another should have time and
inducement to remove all obstacles out of the way. It does not, by any means,
consist with God's plans of moral government to hear your prayer for the
conversion of a soul, so long as you yourself are laying a stumbling-block in
his way. God will surely give you time by delaying to answer, for you to search
out and remove all such hindrances. Besides, providences must have time and
scope to operate. Providential difficulties must be removed out of the way, and
time may be requisite for this.
Often God delays that he may bring us lower in the dust before him. He leads us
into such views that we shall not be puffed up, and such that the blessing,
given, shall not injure us. To secure this object, often delays the answer long.
We are not low enough, so that he can give us the blessing without mischief to
ourselves. Study carefully the case of that Syrophenician woman. Some said, Send
her away, for she crieth after us. Even Christ said he was not sent save to the
lost sheep of the house of Israel. This was a dash of cold water upon her warm
hopes, for it seemed as if Christ intended to discourage her. As if even this
were not enough, he finally went so far as to say--"It is not suitable to take
the children's bread and cast it to dogs." Did it not seem to her cruel that he
should throw this foul Jewish prejudice into her teeth? But mark, what did she
do? Did she resent it? Did she turn away discouraged? By no means. She seemed to
say--You don't mean to put me away; you cannot do that, I know the goodness of
your heart too well. So she turned the very rebuke into an argument for her
case. Truth, said she, but I do not ask for children's bread; I only want the
crumbs that fall from the table, and those it is surely proper to give to dogs.
Now look at our blessed Lord. All overcome by such blended humility and
importunity and faith, he yielded and cried out, "O, woman, great is thy faith;
be it unto thee even as thou wilt." You see the great value of this importunity.
All the world over wherever this story has been read, what rich lessons it has
taught men on this subject.
The case of Jacob struggling with the angel of the covenant, is in point here.
It was only after he had safely passed the crisis, and said, "I will not let
thee go except thou bless me," that the Lord blessed him as he prayed.
Sometimes God delays for the sake apparently of drawing us into more and
mightier prayer. We become straitened, and agonized. Then God puts it into our
hearts to do something yet more for the soul prayed for. Our experience in
prayer reveals this. Then when we have done it, and are in every respect
prepared, God sends an arrow and does the work.
Another reason for delay may be, that you may become more deeply unified with
the subject of your prayer. Sometimes you pray for a person till you become so
unified with him that you say--If that soul goes to hell, I must go with him. I
have heard men say this as their own experience in prayer. So Christ himself
seems to have prayed for his dying people. He grasped the masses, saying--"I
must save them or sink to hell with them." Paul had a like experience when he
said--"I could wish myself accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen
according to the flesh." So, often God waits and delays his answer to prayer
till the suppliant becomes so unified that in sympathy they cannot be separated.
Moses said--"Save this people, or blot my name from this book." I have seen
precisely this in many cases. The Holy Ghost gives them such sympathy with the
person they pray for, and such a hold of God's promise in prayer, they cry
out--I cannot live unless God hear and save! How can I live and see this people
die! Now, God loves this spirit and often waits till it comes up. In the case of
parents, God frequently waits till they take hold of the case of their children
in this very way. I well remember the striking case of a father who was so
agonized in prayer for his children he told them he could not live unless he
could see the salvation of the Lord among them.
But why do not men pray more for others?
Mainly because they are not benevolent, but selfish only. They are selfish in
all the little prayer they do make.
Or, sometimes, they are skeptical and unbelieving, and for this reason they do
not lay out their strength in prayer. Or, they are presumptuous, and assume that
somebody else will pray enough to answer all purposes. Or, they are too carnal
to have any spirit of prayer. Ah, they do not care for the souls of the
perishing. Their tender mercies even, are cruel. They see sinners going to hell,
but are too carnal to pray for them. They offer no earnest, no agonizing prayer.
Brethren, what is your state of mind in regard to the various objects of prayer
around you? How do you feel for the young people gathered here? Do you
sympathize earnestly in prayer for the elder members of the church? What is your
state of mind towards the impenitent? Are you praying in earnest for those who
have long time remained impenitent among us? Do you feel deeply for the
strangers who are coming among us? Will you allow me to ask you in all
faithfulness, Have you the spirit of prayer for others? As a preacher, I think I
can tell when you pray by the light I experience in my own mind when I study my
sermons, and by the effect my words produce on the minds of my hearers. Do you
not know that when some are agonizing in prayer, some sinners are
correspondingly struggling under conviction? Just in proportion to the amount
and power of struggling prayer will be the struggles of those who are smitten
with arrows of convicting truth.
Some of you who once prayed with earnestness and power, I fear have lost that
spirit, or have let it sorely languish. Let me ask you all--Have you as much of
the spirit of prayer as you once had? Do you feel bowed down with grief because
God's work revives no more? Some of you can answer in the affirmative; but some
of you cannot. Some of you must say in truth, there has been a great falling off
in prayer, and in interest for souls. On one occasion, as I was preaching on
this subject, a man who was represented to be one of the most pious men in the
church rose and said, "I am the man--Mr. Finney, you need not say another word;
I am the Achan in this camp of Israel; you need not look any further for the
Achan--I am he." What he said seemed to have more effect than everything else in
the meeting, and was the commencement of a glorious revival.
To the students present, let me say--Are you aware how much you can do by
praying for each other? Are you in the habit of meeting in little circles for
this purpose? Are some of your classmates in their sins, and can you let them
live and die so? Are you not in fault for their impenitence? Have you set your
heart so intensely upon the conversion of these souls that you cannot live
unless they are converted?
And will you not all pray for your teachers and stay up their hands and make
their hearts strong by your sympathies and your prayers in their behalf? Cry
unto God for them that they may be made mighty through God for the converting
and saving of precious souls. O, if all the church were filled with the spirit
of prayer, what a rush we should see towards the kingdom of heaven, even this
very night! What is your practice during our meetings of enquiry? Are you
instant in prayer then? It always alarms me in a church to find that few or none
enquire about the state of these meetings with anxious sinners. It shows that
the hearts of the people are not there. Brethren, do you pray for those who have
set their faces enduringly towards Zion?