Chapter 6
A PRAYING MINISTRY SUCCESSFUL
"The principal 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. I have long since learned that if ever I was to be a minister faith and prayer must make me one. When I can find my heart in frame and liberty for prayer, everything else is comparatively easy." - Richard Newton |
IT may
be put down as a spiritual axiom that in every truly successful ministry prayer
is an evident and controlling force -- evident and controlling in the life of
the preacher, evident and controlling in the deep spirituality of his work.
A ministry may be a very thoughtful ministry without prayer; the preacher may
secure fame and popularity without prayer; the whole machinery of the preacher's
life and work may be run without the oil of prayer or with scarcely enough to
grease one cog; but no ministry can be a spiritual one, securing holiness in
the preacher and in his people, without prayer being made an evident and controlling
force.
The preacher that prays indeed puts God into the work. God does not come into
the preacher's work as a matter of course or on general principles, but he comes
by prayer and special urgency. That God will be found of us in the day that
we seek him with the whole heart is as true of the preacher as of the penitent.
A prayerful ministry is the only ministry that brings the preacher into sympathy
with the people. Prayer as essentially unites to the human as it does to the
divine. A prayerful ministry is the only ministry qualified for the high offices
and responsibilities of the preacher. Colleges, learning, books, theology, preaching
cannot make a preacher, but praying does. The apostles' commission to preach
was a blank till filled up by the Pentecost which praying brought. A prayerful
minister has passed beyond the regions of the popular, beyond the man of mere
affairs, of secularities, of pulpit attractiveness; passed beyond the ecclesiastical
organizer or general into a sublimer and mightier region, the region of the
spiritual. Holiness is the product of his work; transfigured hearts and lives
emblazon the reality of his work, its trueness and substantial nature. God is
with him. His ministry is not projected on worldly or surface principles. He
is deeply stored with and deeply schooled in the things of God. His long, deep
communings with God about his people and the agony of his wrestling spirit have
crowned him as a prince in the things of God. The iciness of the mere professional
has long since melted under the intensity of his praying.
The superficial results of many a ministry, the deadness of others, are to be
found in the lack of praying. No ministry can succeed without much praying,
and this praying must be fundamental, ever-abiding, ever-increasing. The text,
the sermon, should be the result of prayer. The study should be bathed in prayer,
all its duties so impregnated with prayer, its whole spirit the spirit of prayer.
"I am sorry that I have prayed so little," was the deathbed regret
of one of God's chosen ones, a sad and remorseful regret for a preacher. "I
want a life of greater, deeper, truer prayer," said the late Archbishop
Tait. So may we all say, and this may we all secure.
God's true preachers have been distinguished by one great feature: they were
men of prayer. Differing often in many things, they have always had a common
center. They may have started from different points, and traveled by different
roads, but they converged to one point: they were one in prayer. God to there
was the center of attraction, and prayer was the path that led to God. These
men prayed not occasionally, not a little at regular or at odd times; but they
so prayed that their prayers entered into and shaped their characters; they
so prayed as to affect their own lives and the lives of others; they so prayed
as to make the history of the Church and influence the current of the times.
They spent much time in prayer, not because they marked the shadow on the dial
or the hands on the clock, but because it was to them so momentous and engaging
a business that they could scarcely give over.
Prayer was to them what it was to Paul, a striving with earnest effort of soul;
what it was to Jacob, a wrestling and prevailing; what it was to Christ, "strong
crying and tears." They "prayed always with all prayer and supplication
in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance." "The
effectual, fervent prayer" has been the mightiest weapon of God's mightiest
soldiers. The statement in regard to Elijah -- that he "was a man subject
to like passions as we are, and he prayed earnestly that it might not rain:
and it rained not on the earth by the space of three years and six months. And
he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her fruit"
-- comprehends all prophets and preachers who have moved their generation for
God, and shows the instrument by which they worked their wonders.