April
30, 2005
When
You Pray, #2
"And
when you pray, do not use vain repetitions as the heathen
do. For they think that they will be heard for their many
words. Therefore do not be like them. For your Father knows
the things you have need of before you ask Him." (1)
"The
heathen looked upon their prayers as having in themselves
merit to atone for sin. Hence the longer the prayer the greater
the merit. If they could become holy by their own efforts
they would have something in themselves in which to rejoice,
some ground for boasting. This idea of prayer is an outworking
of the principle of self-expiation which lies at the foundation
of all systems of false religion. The Pharisees had adopted
this pagan idea of prayer, and it is by no means extinct in
our day, even among those who profess to be Christians. The
repetition of set, customary phrases, when the heart feels
no need of God, is of the same character as the "vain
repetitions" of the heathen.
"Prayer
is not an expiation for sin; it has no virtue or merit of
itself. All the flowery words at our command are not equivalent
to one holy desire. The most eloquent prayers are but idle
words if they do not express the true sentiments of the heart.
But the prayer that comes from an earnest heart, when the
simple wants of the soul are expressed, as we would ask an
earthly friend for a favor, expecting it to be granted--this
is the prayer of faith. God does not desire our ceremonial
compliments, but the unspoken cry of the heart broken and
subdued with a sense of its sin and utter weakness finds its
way to the Father of all mercy." (2)
1. Matthew
6:7, 8.
2. Thoughts From The Mount Of Blessing, pp., 86, 87.
|