"Lord, teach us to pray."--Luke xi. 1.
"Let us plead together."--Isa.xliii. 26.
WE all know quite well what it is to "plead together." We all plead with one another every day. We all understand the exclamation of the patriarch Job quite well--"O that one might plead for a man with God, as a man pleadeth for his neighbour." We have a special order of men among ourselves who do nothing else but plead with the judge for their neighbours. We call those men by the New Testament name of advocates: and a much-honoured and a much-sought-after office is the office of an advocate. But, what if in this also, "earth be but the shadow of heaven: and things therein each to other like, more than on earth is thought"?
Prayer, in its most comprehensive sense embraces many states of the mind, and many movements and manifestations of the heart. But our use of the word prayer this morning will be limited to these two elements in all true prayer--petition and pleading.
Petitioning and pleading are two quite distinct things. When we make a petition, we simply ask that something shall be granted and given to us. Whereas when we plead, we show reasons why our petition should be granted and given. Petitioning is asking: whereas pleading is arguing. When a petitioner is in dead earnest, he is not content with merely tabling his petition. He does not simply state his bare case, and then leave it to speak for itself. No. Far from that. He at once proceeds to support his case with all the reasons and arguments and appeals that he can command. His naked petition, he knows quite well, is not enough. And thus it is that, like Job, he hastens to "order his cause before God, and to fill his mouth with arguments."
Now, as was to be expected, we find that Holy
Scripture is full not only of petitioning but of
pleading also. Especially the Psalms. Then,
again, Job is an extraordinary book in many
respects; but in nothing is it more extraordinary
than just in its magnificent speeches of argumentation
and pleading, both with God and with man.
So much so, that a young advocate could study no
finer model of the loftiest rhetoric of his great
profession than just the passionate pleadings and
appeals of which this splendid book is so full. And
then, most wonderful of all, most instructive, most
impressive, and most heart-consoling of all, the
And then, the pleas, so to call them, that are
employed by the prophets and the psalmists,--and
much more by our Lord Himself,--are not only
so many argumentative pleas; they are absolutely
a whole, and an extraordinarily rich, theology in
themselves. The warrants they all build upon;
the justifications they all put forward; the reasons
they all assign why they should be heard and
answered,--all these things are a fine study in the
very deepest divinity. The things in God and in
themselves that all those petitioners put forward;
the allegations and pretexts they advance; the
refuges they run into; and the grounds they take
their last stand upon,--the prayers of God's great
saints are not only a mine for a divinity student
to work down to the bottom, but they are an
incomparable education to every practitioner of the
advocate's art. And if they are indisputably all
that, then much more are those inspired prayers the
Come then, and let us all join ourselves to them. Come, and let us learn to pray with them; and, especially, to plead. And, first, let us take the case of that man here, who has been a great transgressor. Such a transgressor as he was whose great transgressions were the occasion and the opportunity of our present text. Just see what a powerful, --what an all-powerful,--argument God gives to this great transgressor in Israel to plead. Just listen to the most wonderful words. "I, even I, am He that blotteth out thy transgressions for Mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins. Put Me in remembrance: let us plead together: declare thou, that thou mayest be justified."
Let the great transgressor listen to that. Let
Or, is the sanctification and true holiness of
your so sinful soul,--is that your special and your
always most pressing case before God? Is it the
positively awful pollution and depravity of your
heart that casts you, day and night, on your face
before God and man? Is this the cry that never
ceases before God from you: "Create in me a
clean heart, O God"? Is your inward enslavement
to sin something you have never seen or heard
equalled in Holy Scripture, or anywhere else? Is
that, indeed, so? Then,--just say so. You cannot
take into your mouth a better argument with
God than that. Tell Him: put Him in remembrance:
search the Scriptures: collect the promises,
and plead with Him to consider your case, and to
say if He has ever seen such a sad case as yours,--
ever since He began to sanctify and to save sinners.
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Or, again, are you a father, and is it your son's bondage to sin that you are to-day pleading before God? If that is your case, then put Him in remembrance that He is a Father also; and that He has prodigal sons as well as you. And that He has it is His power to make your heart, and your house, as glad as His own house, and His own heart, are again made glad, as often as any son of His which was lost is found, and which was dead is alive again. Read the Parable of the Prodigal Son, and read nothing else: plead the Parable of the Prodigal Son, and plead nothing else, --till it is all fulfilled to you, and till you, and your house, are all made as merry as heaven itself.
Or, is it some secret providence of God, some
secret dispensation, that is as dark as midnight to
you? Is it some terrible crook in your lot, that
will not even out, all you can do? Is it some cross,
so heavy that it is absolutely crushing out all faith,
Or, what else is your present case? Is it old age
that is fast descending on you, and that will not
be rolled back? Is it old age, age and death
itself, both of which--and before very long--will
claim you, and carry you off as their prey? If that
is your case--just listen to this recorded pleading of
a fast-ageing saint like yourself. And make his
successful pleading your own; if, indeed, you are
fast getting old, and are not entirely happy about
it. Plead in this way, for one hour every night:
and see what your reward will be. These are
that expert's very words, literally transcribed.
"Having spent the day"--he said every night--
"I give Thee thanks, O Lord. Evening draws
nigh: make it bright. For as day has its evening,
so has life: the evening of life is old age,
and old age is fast overtaking me: make it bright.
Cast me not off in the time of old age: forsake me
not when my strength faileth me. Even to old
age, be Thou He: and even to hoar hairs do Thou
carry me. Abide with me, Lord, for it is toward
evening, and the day of this toilful life is now far
spent. The day is fled and gone: life too is fast
going, this lifeless life. Night cometh: and then
And so on, and so on. Through all your life,
and in all its estates. Only, oh learn to pray, and
to plead. Study to pray. Study to plead. Give
yourself to prayer. Pray without ceasing. Take
lessons in prayer, and in pleading. Be ambitious
to become, yourselves, experts and even real
authorities in prayer. It is a noble ambition. It is the
noblest of all the ambitions--especially you, who
are advocates and pleaders already. You have an
immense start and advantage over ordinary men
in this matter of prayer. And, especially, in this
matter of pleading in prayer. It should be far
easier for the Holy Ghost to teach our advocates to
pray than to teach this heavenly art and office to
any other manner of man. For every true advocate
studies, down to the bottom, every case you put
into his hands to plead. And much more will he
study, till he has mastered, his own case before God.
Every true advocate absolutely ransacks the records
of the Court also for all former cases in any way
similar to this case he has in his hand. He puts the
judge in remembrance of his own past opinions,
But, instead of any advantage and start in
prayer, like that, you may well have this desperation
and hopelessness in your case, that you positively
hate to pray, or even to hear about prayer.
It is not only that you have had no experience in
prayer: you would never so much as bow your
knee if it were not for one thing before you,--that
without prayer you cannot escape. Well, awful
as your case is, it is not absolutely hopeless. God
is such, and He has made such provision for you,
that even you may yet become a man of prayer;
aye, and, what is more, an advocate for other men.
Go to Him just as you are. Make your dreadful
case your great argument with Him. Say this to
Him; say: "Lord, teach this reprobate now
before Thee to pray. Teach this castaway, if it be
possible, to pray! Lord, soften this stone to pray!"
Tell Him the truth, and the whole truth. Tell Him,
on your knees, how you hate to come to your knees.
Tell Him that you never spent a penny upon a help
to pray. Tell Him, honestly, that, if it were not
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