May
27, 2005
Ask,
And You Will Receive, Part II
"Ask,
and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock,
and it will be opened to you. (1) Ask, and you will receive,
that your joy may be full." (2)
"
'Knock.' We come to God by special invitation, and He waits
to welcome us to His audience chamber. The first disciples
who followed Jesus were not satisfied with a hurried conversation
with Him by the way; they said, 'Rabbi,... where are you staying...
They came and saw where He was staying, and remained with
Him that day.' (3) So we may be admitted into closest intimacy
and communion with God. 'He who dwells in the secret place
of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.'
(4) Let those who desire the blessing of God knock and wait
at the door of mercy with firm assurance, saying, For You,
O Lord, have said, 'Everyone who asks receives, and he who
seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.' (5)
"Jesus
looked upon those who were assembled to hear His words, and
earnestly desired that the great multitude might appreciate
the mercy and lovingkindness of God. As an illustration of
their need, and of God's willingness to give, He presents
before them a hungry child asking his earthly parent for bread.
'What man is there among you' He said, 'who if his son asks
for bread, will give him a stone?' (6) He appeals to the tender,
natural affection of a parent for his child and then says,
'If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your
children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven
give good things to those who ask Him!' (7) No man with a
father's heart would turn from his son who is hungry and is
asking for bread. Would they think him capable of trifling
with his child, of tantalizing him by raising his expectations
only to disappoint him? Would he promise to give him good
and nourishing food, and then give him a stone? And should
anyone dishonor God by imagining that He would not respond
to the appeals of His children?
"If
you, then, being human and evil, 'know how to give good gifts
to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father
give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!' (8) The Holy Spirit,
the representative of Himself, is the greatest of all gifts.
All 'good things' are comprised in this. The Creator Himself
can give us nothing greater, nothing better. When we beseech
the Lord to pity us in our distress, and to guide us by His
Holy Spirit, He will never turn away our prayer. It is possible
even for a parent to turn away from his hungry child, but
God can never reject the cry of the needy and longing heart."
(9)
1. Matthew
7:7.
2. John 16:24.
3. John 1:38, 39.
4. Psalm 91:1.
5. Matthew 7:8.
6. Matthew 7:9.
7. Matthew 7:11.
8. Luke 11:13
9. Thoughts From The Mount Of Blessing, pp., 131, 132.
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