XV
PRAYER TO THE MOST HIGH
"Lord, teach us to pray."--Luke xi. 1.
"They return, but not to the Most High."--Hos. vii. 16.
THE Most High. The High and Lofty One, That
inhabiteth eternity, whose Name is Holy. The
King Eternal, Immortal, Invisible, the Only Wise
God. The Blessed and Only Potentate, the King
of kings, and Lord of lords: Who only hath
immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can
approach unto: Whom no man hath seen, nor can
see. Great and marvellous are Thy works, Lord
God Almighty: just and true are Thy ways, Thou
King of saints. Who shall not fear Thee, O Lord,
and glorify Thy Name? For Thou only art Holy.
God is a Spirit: Infinite, Eternal, and Unchangeable
in His Being, Wisdom, Power, Holiness, Justice,
Goodness and Truth. Lo! these are parts of His
ways: but how little a portion is heard of Him!
But the thunder of His power who can understand?
The Most High!
Now the greatness of God is the true index and
measure of the greatness of man. God made man
in His own image. God made man for Himself,
and not for any end short of Himself. "Man's
chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him for
ever." "In Thy presence is fulness of joy: at
Thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore."
"Then will I go unto the altar of God, unto God
my exceeding joy." "Enter thou into the joy of
thy Lord." The higher, then, that God is, the
higher is our everlasting destination to be. The
more blessed God is, the more blessed are we
purposed and predestinated to be. The more
surpassing all imagination of Prophets and Psalmists
and Apostles the Divine Nature is,--the more true
it is that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath
it entered into the heart of man what God hath
prepared for them who are for ever to be made
partakers of the Divine Nature. "I in them, and
Thou in me. And the glory which Thou gavest
Me, I have given them: that the Love wherewith
Thou hast loved Me may be in them: and I in
them." And then, in order to hedge up, and secure,
all these to their everlasting exaltation and blessedness,
God has made it the supreme law of all His
laws to us, that all men shall, above all things
else, seek their own chief end. And He has made
it the sin of sins, the one unpardonable sin, in any
man, to come short of his chief end--which is the
full enjoying of God to all eternity. And the
prophet Hosea has all that in his mind, and in his
heart, when he offers that great evangelical invitation
and encouragement, "Come and let us return
unto the Lord." And he has all that in his mind
and in his heart also, when he utters the sore
lamentation and bitter accusation of the text,
"They return, but not to the Most High."
Now it is necessary to know, and ever to keep
in mind, that prayer is the all-comprehending name
that is given to every step in our return to God.
True prayer, the richest and the ripest prayer, the
most acceptable and the most prevailing prayer,
embraces many elements: it is made up of many
operations of the mind, and many motions of the
heart. To begin to come to ourselves,--however
far off we may then discover ourselves to be,--to
begin to think about ourselves, is already to begin
to pray. To begin to feel fear, or shame, or
remorse, or a desire after better things, is to begin
to pray. To say within ourselves, "I will arise
and go to my Father,"--that is to begin to pray.
To see what we are, and to desire to turn from
what we are--that also is to pray. In short, every
such thought about ourselves, and about God, and
about sin and its wages, and about salvation, its
price and its preciousness; every foreboding
thought about death and judgment and heaven
and hell; every reflection about the blood and
righteousness of Jesus Christ; and every wish of
our hearts that we were more like Jesus Christ:
all our reading of the Word, all our meditation
reflection, contemplation, prostration and adoration;
all faith, all hope, all love; all that, and all
of that same kind,--it all comes, with the most
perfect truth and propriety, under the all-embracing
name of "prayer"; it all enters into the all-absorbing
life of prayer.
Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
Uttered or unexpressed:
The motion of a hidden fire
That trembles in the breast.
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Prayer is the burden of a sigh,
The falling of a tear,
The upward glancing of an eye
When none but God is near.
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Prayer is the simplest form of speech
That infant lips can try:
Prayer the sublimest strains that reach
The Majesty on High.
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How noble then is prayer! How incomparably
noble! Who would not be a man of prayer?
What wise, what sane man, will continue to neglect
prayer? "Ask, and it shall be given you; that
your joy may be full."
Now, be it understood that neither this text; nor
this sermon, is addressed to those who do not pray.
Both the prophet and the preacher have their eye
this morning on those who not only pray, on occasion,
but who also are at pains to perform all those
other exercises of mind and heart that enter into
prayer. They read the Word of God: they meditate
on what they read: they sing God's praise, at
home and in the sanctuary; and they repent and
reform their life. What more would this prophet
have than that? My brethren, this is what he
would have: he would have all that done
to God.
The prophets are all full of this very same accusation,
and remonstrance, and protest, that all the
acts prescribed by the law of God were done: but,
not being done to God, the most scrupulous, the
most punctual, the most expensive service was no
service at all in God's sight and estimation. "To
what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices
unto Me? saith the Lord. When ye come to
appear before Me, who hath required this at your
hands, to tread My courts? Bring no more vain
oblations: incense is an abomination unto Me:
the new moons and Sabbaths I cannot away with:
it is iniquity, even the solemn meeting. Your new
moons and your appointed feasts My soul hateth.
They are a trouble unto Me: I am weary to bear
them." That is the climax, indeed, of all such
accusations and indignations; but all the prophets
are full of the same accusation; and it is all summed
up in the short and sharp accusation of the text,
"They return, but not to the Most High."
But then on the other hand, we are very happy
in having the other side of this matter most
impressively and most instructively set before us in a
multitude of most precious psalms. And it is this
indeed that makes the Psalms the mother and the
model of all subsequent books of true devotion:
because we see in them those true and spiritual
worshippers in Israel returning, and returning to
the Most High. Take one of those truly returning
Psalmists, and hear him, and imitate him. "Against
Thee, Thee only, have I sinned, and done this evil
in Thy sight. Wash me throughly from mine
iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin. Behold,
Thou desirest truth in the inward parts: and in
the hidden part Thou shalt make me to know
wisdom. Hide Thy face from my sins: and blot
out all mine iniquities. Create in me a clean heart,
O God: and renew a right spirit within me. Cast
me not away from Thy presence: and take not Thy
Holy Spirit from me. The sacrifices of God are a
broken sprit: a broken and a contrite heart, O
God, Thou wilt not despise." That, my brethren,
is true returning to God. And God meets all such
returnings, and says, "Come now and let us reason
together: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall
be as white as snow: though they be red like
crimsom, they shall be as wool."
Now, while we have all that in the Old Testament,
for our direction, and for our imitation, and for our
encouragement, we, New Testament men, are met
at every step of our return to God with this great
utterance of our Lord on this whole matter: "No
man cometh, unto the Father but by Me." And,
no sooner have we heard that,--no sooner do we
believe that,--than every step of our return to the
Most High from that day takes on a new direction.
All out religious exercises, public and private, are
now directed towards Him of whom the Apostle
says, "He dwelt among us,and we have heard, we
have seen with our eyes, we have looked upon, and
our hands have handled, of the word of life. That
which we have seen and heard declare we unto you,
that ye also may have felIowship with us." Fellowship,
that is, in their fellowship with the Word
made flesh, till he that hath seen and heard the Son,
has as good as seen and heard the Father; and
till all our prayers and praises are to be directed, in
the first place, to the Word made flesh, even as in the
Old Testament they were directed immediately and
only to the Most High. But, with all our New Testament
nearness to God; with the Most High, now and
for ever, in our own nature; with Jesus Christ, the
one Mediator between God and man, near to every
one of us,--are we any better of all that? When
we return in prayer and in praise, do we return into
the very presence of Jesus Christ? Or are we,
with all that, as far from Him as the formalists in
Israel were far from the Most High? Have we
taken any real assistance, and any true advantage,
out of the Incarnation in this matter of prayer?
The Incarnation of the Son of God has brought
many assistances and many advantages to the
children of men: and one of the greatest and most
momentous is this,--that the Most High is now so
near us: and especially so near us when we pray.
Now, is that so? As a matter of experience and
practice is that so to us? Do we practise the
presence of Christ when we pray? Do we think
ourselves and imagine ourselves into His presence
when we stand up to sing, and kneel down to pray?
Have we as keen, and as quick, and as intense, and
as ever-present a sense of His presence as we have
of the presence of our fellow-worshippers? When,
at any time, we kneel in secret, is it no longer secret
as it once was; but is the whole place now peopled
with the presence of Christ? And, in public worship,
are we so overshadowed and overawed with His
presence that all those fellow-worshippers around
us are, for the time, but so many mere shadows to
us? Is it so? Is it becoming so? It will assuredly
be so when we return to Jesus Christ in our prayers,
and when He presents us and our returning prayers
to the Most High.
Speaking for myself,--I have found this device
very helpful in my own returnings to my Saviour.
And I recommend this same device to you. Make
great use of the Four Gospels in your efforts to
return to Jesus Christ. Think that you are living
in Jerusalem. Think that you are one of the
Twelve. Think that you are one of those amazing
people who had Him in their streets, and in their
homes, every day. And fall down before Him as
they did. Speak to Him as they did. Show Him
your palsies and your leprosies as they did. Follow
Him about, telling Him about your sons and
daughters as they did. Tell Him that you have a
child nigh unto death as they did. Wash His feet
with your tears, and wipe then with the hair of
your head, as they did. Work your way through
the Four Gospels, from end to end: and, all the
time, with a great exercise of faith, believe that He
is as much with you as He was with Simon the leper,
and with the Syro-Phoenician woman, and with Mary
Magdalene, and with Lazarus who had been four
days dead, and with the thief on the cross. Read,
and believe, and pray. Fall at His feet. Look
up in His face. Put Him in remembrance. Put
your finger on the very place, and ask Him if that is
really true. Ask Him if He did and said that.
Ask Him if you are really to believe that, and are
safe, in your case also, to act upon that. If you
are a scholar, say to yourself as the old scholarly
believers said,--
Deus ubique est et totus ubique est;
and set out again to return to God in Christ in the
strength of that. And, if you are an unlearned
and an ignorant man, like Peter and John, well,
like them say,--"Were not these His words to us
while He was yet with us,--Lo, I am with you
alway, even to the end of the world." And act
your faith again, as if it was indeed so. And the
more pure, and naked, and absolute faith you put
in Him, and into your prayer,--the more will He
take pleasure in you, till He will say to you: "O
woman! Woman! I have not found so great
faith; no, not in all Israel. Be it unto thee and
unto thy daughter, even as thou wilt!" "I came
to this at last," says a great Scottish saint,--"I
came at last to this, that I would not rise and go
away till I felt sure I had had an audience. And I
sometimes felt as sure that I was having an audience
as if He had been before me in the body."
But, before he came to that, he often said,--and
the saying has become classical in the North of
Scotland,--lamenting his parched heart he often
said, "Surely I have laid my pipe far short of the
fountain." And so he had. And so have we.
No words could describe our case better than the
text; and that other saying so like the text. For
we also are always returning; but not to the Most
High. We are always laying our pipe, but not
up to the fountain. We are always engaged in
the exercises of public and private religion. We
are not atheists. We are not scoffers. We do not
forsake the assembling of ourselves together. We
are glad when it is said to us,--Let us go up to the
House of the Lord. We enter into His courts with
thanksgiving, and into His gates with praise. At
the time appointed, we partake of the Lord's
Supper; and, again, we bring our children to be
baptized. We make our vow, and we pay it.
And when at any time we fall into a besetting sin,
we hasten to repent and to reform our lives. We
incline our hearts again to keep God's commandments.
But, with all that, this so heart-searching, this so
soul-exacting text discovers us, and condemns us.
We return to all that; but we do not return to the
Most High. We lay our pipe up to divine ordinances,
--to the most spiritual of divine ordinances: up
to prayer, and to praise, and to meditation, and to
Sabbaths and to sacraments: but, all the time, all
these things are but so many cisterns. All these
things, taken together, are not the Fountain. God
is the Fountain. And when we return to God,
when we lay our pipe up to the true Fountain of
living waters,--then we taste an immediateness of
communion, and an inwardness of consolation, and
a strength of assurance, and a solidity of peace,
and a fulness of joy, that are known to those only
who truly return to the Most High. Until we are
able to say,--and that not out of a great psalm
only but much more out of a great personal and
indisputable experience,--"Whom have I in heaven
but Thee? and there is none upon earth that I
desire beside Thee. My flesh and my heart faileth:
but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion
for ever."