WHAT DOES THE WORD PRAY MEAN
What is the real suggestiveness of this word "pray"? The disciples was
taught by Truth Himself to start their prayer off with the words “Thy Kingdom
come.” If you take it as to its first simplicity and intention, it means-and
this is not complete but it will help us to reach the complete thought-to wish
forward, to desire toward the ultimate; or if you will have that interpreted by
the language of the apostle in one of his greatest epistles, that to the
Colossians, it means the seeking of things which are above (Col. 3:1). That does not at all suggest
that the Christian is forevermore to be sighing after heaven, and expressing
his discontent with the present world, and longing to escape from it; but
rather that the Christian is to seek the upper things, setting his mind upon
them, and everywhere and every when he is to be hoping for, and endeavoring
after, the ultimate. That is the simple meaning of prayer. Reaching forward,
wishing forward, desiring forward, seeking the upper, the higher, and the
nobler. Since we are going to this Kingdom to rule and reign with Him we have to
be perfected in mind, body, as well as soul. He had many things to say to them
but they were not ready to accept those things. New thoughts coming from a mind
like Christs. New feelings and desires from a heart that has been cleansed. And
ears to hear the things that God is forever to teach them. And their prayers
would give evidence of their need to reach past the thoughts, feelings that
were coming from their flesh. They needed to pick up their cross and follow
Him. So that in prayer there is included, first, always first, the thought of
worship and adoration, that content of the heart with the perfection and
acceptability and goodness of the will of God which bows the soul in worship to
the God Who sent the perfect example to rescue them from their own ways and
thoughts.That is the first attitude of prayer. To pray is forevermore to set
the life in its inspiration and in all its endeavor toward that ultimate goal
of the glory of God, "Being
justified by faith, let us have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ;
through Whom also we have had our access by faith into this grace wherein we
stand; and let us rejoice in hope of the glory of God." (Rom. 5:1-2) That is the first quantity
of quality of prayer, the vision of the ultimate with a corresponding attitude
of life toward it, which is that of perpetual endeavor after it, that is the
perfection He came to empower us with (Matt.
5:48; Jude 24; 1 John 3:2, Rom. 8:29; Col. 1:22). This means not merely
that in the midst of battle and strife and noise and smoke, and wounding and
blood and tears, that we see a better day, a golden age, but that the soul,
seeing that golden age as in the will of God, and realizing that the ultimate
fact of the vision is that of God Himself, the absolute attitude of the life
becomes that of submission, and the highest effort of the life is that of
co-operation with God toward the ultimate upon which His heart is set. That is
prayer. Prayer is not merely position of body, or of mind. Prayer is not merely
asking for something in order that I may obtain it for myself. Prayer
forevermore says when it asks for anything, "Not
my will, but Thine be done," (Luke
22:42) which means, if the thing I ask for, however much I desire it,
however good it seems to me to be, will hinder or postpone, by a hair's breadth
or a moment, the ultimate victory, will be denied to me. Those who know the
real secret of the prayer life have discovered the fact that denial is over and
over again the graciousness of overwhelming answer. To pray is to desire
forward, to seek forward, to endeavor after. It is to have a new vision of God,
and of the ways of God, to be overwhelmingly convinced of the perfection of God,
of the perfection of all He does, of the certainty of His ultimate victory, and
then to respond to the profound and tremendous conviction by petition, by
praise, and by endeavor; and so men "ought
always to pray" (Luke 18:1)
and to "pray without ceasing."
(1 Thess. 5:16).
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