
By E. M. Bounds
| PRAYER -- ITS POSSIBILITIES 
 HOW vast are the possibilities of prayer! How wide 
is its reach! What great things are accomplished by this divinely appointed 
means of grace! It lays its hand on Almighty God and moves Him to do what He 
would not otherwise do if prayer was not offered. It brings things to pass which 
would never otherwise occur. The story of prayer is the story of great 
achievements. Prayer is a wonderful power placed by Almighty God in the hands of 
His saints, which may be used to accomplish great purposes and to achieve 
unusual results. Prayer reaches to everything, takes in all things great and 
small which are promised by God to the children of men. The only limits to 
prayer are the promises of God and His ability to fulfill those promises. "Open 
thy mouth wide and I will fill it." The records of prayer's achievements 
are encouraging to faith, cheering to the expectations of saints, and an 
inspiration to all who would pray and test its value. Prayer is no mere untried 
theory. It is not some strange unique scheme, concocted in the brains of men, 
and set on foot by them, an invention which has never been tried nor put to the 
test. Prayer is a Divine arrangement in the moral government of God, designed 
for the benefit of men and intended as a means for furthering the interests of 
His cause on earth, and carrying out His gracious purposes in redemption and 
providence. Prayer proves itself. It is susceptible of proving its virtue by 
those who pray. Prayer needs no proof other than its accomplishments. "If any 
man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine." If any man will know the 
virtue of prayer, if he will know what it will do, let him pray. Let him put 
prayer to the test. What a breadth is given to prayer! What heights it 
reaches! It is the breathing of a soul inflamed for God, and inflamed for man. 
It goes as far as the Gospel goes, and is as wide, compassionate and prayerful 
as is that Gospel. How much of prayer do all these unpossessed, alienated 
provinces of earth demand in order to enlighten them, to impress them and to 
move them toward God and His Son, Jesus Christ? Had the professed disciples of 
Christ only have prayed in the past as they ought to have done, the centuries 
would not have found these provinces still bound in death, in sin, and in 
ignorance. Alas! how the unbelief of men has limited the power of God to work 
through prayer! What limitations have disciples of Jesus Christ put upon prayer 
by their prayerlessness! How the Church, with her neglect of prayer, has hedged 
about the Gospel and shut up doors of access! Prayer possibilities open 
doors for the entrance of the Gospel: "Withal praying also for us that God would 
open to us a door of utterance." Prayer opened for the Apostles doors of 
utterance, created opportunities and made openings to preach the Gospel. The 
appeal by prayer was to God, because God was moved by prayer. God was thereby 
moved to do His own work in an enlarged way and by new ways. Prayer possibility 
gives not only great power, and opens doors to the Gospel, but gives facility as 
well to the Gospel. Prayer makes the Gospel to go fast and to move with glorious 
fastness. A Gospel projected by the mighty energies of prayer is neither slow, 
lazy nor dull. It moves with God's power, with God's effulgence and with angelic 
swiftness. "Brethren, pray for us that the word of the Lord may have free 
course and be glorified," is the request of the Apostle Paul, whose faith 
reached to the possibilities of prayer for the preached Word. The Gospel moves 
altogether too slowly, often timidly, and with feeble steps. What will make this 
Gospel go rapidly like a race runner? What will give this Gospel Divine 
effulgence and glory, and cause it to move worthy of God and of Christ? The 
answer is at hand. Prayer, more prayer, better prayer will do the deed. This 
means of grace will give fast going, splendour and divinity to the 
Gospel. The possibilities of prayer reach to all things. Whatever 
concerns man's highest welfare, and whatever has to do with God's plans and 
purposes concerning men on earth, is a subject for prayer. In "whatsoever ye 
shall ask," is embraced all that concerns us or the children of men and God. And 
whatever is left out of "whatsoever" is left out of prayer. Where will we draw 
the lines which leave out or which will limit the word "whatsoever"? Define it, 
and search out and publish the things which the word does not include. If 
"whatsoever" does not include all things, then add to it the word "anything." 
"If ye shall ask anything in my name, I will do it." What riches of 
grace, what blessings, spiritual and temporal, what good for time and eternity, 
would have been ours had we learned the possibilities of prayer and our faith 
had taken in the wide range of the Divine promises to us to answer prayer! What 
blessings on our times and what furtherance to God's cause had we but learned 
how to pray with large expectations! Who will rise up in this generation and 
teach the Church this lesson? It is a child's lesson in simplicity, but who has 
learned it well enough to put prayer to the test? It is a great lesson in its 
matchless and universal good. The possibilities of prayer are unspeakable, but 
the lesson of prayer which realizes and measures up to these possibilities, who 
has learned? In His discourse in John, fifteenth chapter, our Lord seems 
to connect friendship for Him with that of prayer, and His choosing of His 
disciples seemed to have been with a design that through prayer they should bear 
much fruit. 
 Jesus puts fruit-bearing and fruit-remaining, 
ripe, unwithered, and rich fruit, that prayer might come to its full 
possibilities in order that the Father might give. Here we have again the 
undefined and unlimited word, "whatsoever," as covering the rights and the 
things for which we are to pray in the possibilities of prayer. We have 
still another declaration from Jesus: 
 Here is a very definite exhortation from our Lord 
to largeness in praying. Here we are definitely urged by Him to ask for large 
things, and announced with the dignity and solemnity indicated by the double 
amen, "Verily, Verily." Why these marvellous urgencies in this last recorded and 
vital conversation of our Lord with His disciples? The answer is that our Lord 
might prepare them for the New Dispensation, in which prayer was to have such 
marvellous results, and in which prayer was to be the chief agency to conserve 
and make aggressive His Gospel. In our Lord's language to His disciples 
about choosing them that should bear fruit, in this affluent statement of our 
Lord, He clearly teaches us that this matter of praying and fruit-bearing is not 
a petty business of our choice, or a secondary matter in relation to other 
matters, but that He has chosen us for this very business of praying. He had 
specially in mind our praying, and He has chosen us of His own Divine selection, 
and He expects us to do this one thing of praying and to do it intelligently and 
well. For He before says that He had made us His friends, and had brought us 
into bosom confidence with Him, and also into free and full conference with Him. 
The main object of choosing us as His disciples and of friendship for Him was 
that we might be the better fitted to bear the fruit of prayer. Let us 
not forget that we are noting the possibilities of the true praying ones. 
"Anything" is the word of area and circumference. How far it reaches we may not 
know. How wide it spreads, our minds fail to discover. What is there which is 
not within its reach? Why does Jesus repeat and exhaust these words, 
all-inclusive and boundless words, if He does not desire to emphasize the 
unbounded magnificence and illimitable munificence of prayer? Why does He press 
men to pray, so that our very poverty might be enriched and our limitless 
inheritance by prayer be secured? We affirm with absolute certainty that 
Almighty God answers prayer. The vast possibilities and the urgent necessity of 
prayer lie in this stupendous fact that God hears and answers prayer. And God 
hears and answers all prayer. He hears and answers every prayer, where the true 
conditions of praying are met. Either this is so or it is not. If not, then is 
there nothing in prayer. Then prayer is but the recitation of words, a mere 
verbal performance, an empty ceremony. Then prayer is an altogether useless 
exercise. But if what we have said is true, then are there vast possibilities in 
prayer. Then is it far reaching in its scope, and wide is its range. Then is it 
true that prayer can lay its hand upon Almighty God and move Him to do great and 
wonderful things. The benefits, the possibilities and the necessity of 
prayer are not merely subjective but are peculiarly objective in their 
character. Prayer aims at a definite object. Prayer has a direct design in view. 
Prayer always has something specific before the mind's eye. There may be some 
subjective benefits which accrue from praying, but this is altogether secondary 
and incidental. Prayer always drives directly at an object and seeks to secure a 
desired end. Prayer is asking, seeking and knocking at a door for something we 
have not, which we desire, and which God has promised to us. Prayer is a 
direct address to God. "In everything let your requests be made known unto God." 
Prayer secures blessings, and makes men better because it reaches the ear of 
God. Prayer is only for the betterment of men when it has affected God and moved 
Him to do something for men. Prayer affects men by affecting God. Prayer moves 
men because it moves God to move men. Prayer influences men by influencing God 
to influence them. Prayer moves the hand that moves the world. 
 The utmost possibilities of prayer have rarely 
been realized. The promises of God are so great to those who truly pray, when He 
puts Himself so fully into the hands of the praying ones, that it almost 
staggers our faith and causes us to hesitate with astonishment. His promise to 
answer, and to do and to give "all things," "anything," "whatsoever," and "all 
things whatsoever," are so large, so great, so exceeding broad, that we stand 
back in amazement and give ourselves to questioning and doubt. We "stagger at 
the promises through unbelief." Really the promises of God to prayer have been 
pared down by us to our little faith, and have been brought down to the low 
level of our narrow notions about God's ability, liberality and resources. Let 
us ever keep in mind and never for one moment allow ourselves to doubt the 
statement that God means what He says in all of His promises. God's promises are 
His own word. His veracity is at stake in them. To question them is to doubt His 
veracity. He cannot afford to prove faithless to His word. "In hope of eternal 
life, which God that cannot lie, promised before the world began." His promises 
are for plain people, and He means to do for all who pray just what He says He 
will do. "For He is faithful that hath promised." Unfortunately we have 
failed to lay ourselves out in praying. We have limited the Holy One of Israel. 
The ability to pray can be secured by the grace and power of the Holy Spirit, 
but it demands so strenuous and high a character that it is a rare thing for a 
man or woman to be on "praying ground and on pleading terms with God." It is as 
true to-day as it was in the days of Elijah, that "the fervent, effectual prayer 
of a righteous man availeth much." How much such a prayer avails, who can 
tell? The possibilities of prayer are the possibilities of faith. Prayer 
and faith are Siamese twins. One heart animates them both. Faith is always 
praying. Prayer is always believing. Faith must have a tongue by which it can 
speak. Prayer is the tongue of faith. Faith must receive. Prayer is the hand of 
faith stretched out to receive. Prayer must rise and soar. Faith must give 
prayer the wings to fly and soar. Prayer must have an audience with God. Faith 
opens the door, and access and audience are given. Prayer asks. Faith lays its 
hand on the thing asked for. God's omnipotent power is the basis of 
omnipotent faith and omnipotent praying. "All things are possible to him that 
believeth," and "all things whatsoever" are given to him who prays. God's decree 
and death yield readily to Hezekiah's faith and prayer. When God's promise and 
man's praying are united by faith, then "nothing shall be impossible." 
Importunate prayer is so all-powerful and irresistable that it obtains promises, 
or wins where the prospect and the promise seem to be against it. In fact, the 
New Testament promise includes all things in heaven and in earth. God, by 
promise, puts all things He possesses into man's hands. Prayer and faith put man 
in possession of this boundless inheritance. Prayer is not an indifferent 
or a small thing. It is not a sweet little privilege. It is a great prerogative, 
far-reaching in its effects. Failure to pray entails losses far beyond the 
person who neglects it. Prayer is not a mere episode of the Christian life. 
Rather the whole life is a preparation for and and the result of prayer. In its 
condition, prayer is the sum of religion. Faith is but a channel of prayer. 
Faith gives it wings and swiftness. Prayer is the lungs through which holiness 
breathes. Prayer is not only the language of spiritual life, but makes its very 
essence and forms its real character. 
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