
By E. M. Bounds
| PRAYER -- ITS POSSIBILITIES (Continued) 
 AFTER a comprehensive and cursory view of the 
possibilities of prayer, as mapped out in what has been said, it is important to 
descend to particulars, to Bible facts and principles in regard to this great 
subject. What are the possibilities of prayer as disclosed by Divine revelation? 
The necessity of prayer and its being are coexistent with man. Nature, even 
before a clear and full revelation, cries out in prayer. Man is, therefore 
prayer is. God is, therefore prayer is. Prayer is born of the instincts, the 
needs and the cravings and the very being of man. The prayer of Solomon 
at the dedication of the temple is the product of inspired wisdom and piety, and 
gives a lucid and powerful view of prayer in the wideness of its range, the 
minuteness of its details, and its abounding possibilities and its urgent 
necessity. How minute and exactly comprehending is this prayer! National and 
individual blessings are in it, and temporal and spiritual good is embraced by 
it. Individual sins, national calamities, sins, sickness, exile, famine, war, 
pestilence, mildew, drought, insects, damage to crops, whatever affects 
husbandry, enemies-whatsoever sickness, one's own sore, one's own guilt, one's 
own sin -- one and all are in this prayer, and all are for prayer. For 
all these evils prayer is the one universal remedy. Pure praying remedies all 
ills, cures all diseases, relieves all situations, however dire, most 
calamitous, most fearful and despairing. Prayer to God, pure praying, relieves 
dire situations because God can relieve when no one else can. Nothing is too 
hard for God. No cause is hopeless which God undertakes. No case is mortal when 
Almighty God is the physician. No conditions are despairing which can deter or 
defy God. Almighty God heard this prayer of Solomon, and committed 
Himself to undertake, to relieve and to remedy if real praying be done, despite 
all adverse and inexorable conditions. He will always relieve, answer and bless 
if men will pray from the heart, and if they will give themselves to real, true 
praying. After Solomon had finished his magnificent, illimitable and 
all-comprehending prayer, this is the record of what God said to him: 
 God put no limitation to His ability to save through true praying. No hopeless conditions, no accumulation of difficulties, and no desperation in distance or circumstance can hinder the success of real prayer. The possibilities of prayer are linked to the infinite rectitude and to the omnipotent power of God. There is nothing too hard for God to do. God is pledged that if we ask, we shall receive. God can withhold nothing from faith and prayer. 
 The many statements of God's Word fully set forth 
the possibilities and far-reaching nature of prayer. How full of pathos! "Call 
upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me." 
Again, read the cheering words: "He shall call upon me, and I will answer him; I 
will be with him in trouble; I will deliver him and honour him." How 
diversified the range of trouble! How almost infinite its extent! How universal 
and dire its conditions! How despairing its waves! Yet the range of prayer is as 
great as trouble, is as universal as sorrow, as infinite as grief. And prayer 
can relieve all these evils which come to the children of men. There is no tear 
which prayer cannot wipe away or dry up. There is no depression of spirits which 
it cannot relieve and elevate. Where is no despair which it cannot 
dispel. "Call unto me, and I will answer thee, and show thee great things 
and difficult, which thou knowest not." How broad these words of the Lord, how 
great the promise, how cheering to faith! They really challenge the faith of the 
saint. Prayer always brings God to our relief to bless and to aid, and brings 
marvellous revelations of His power. What impossibilities are there with God? 
Name them. "Nothing," He says, "is impossible to the Lord." And all the 
possibilities in God are in prayer. Samuel, under the Judges of Israel, 
will fully illustrate the possibility and the necessity of prayer. He himself 
was the beneficiary of the greatness of faith and prayer in a mother who knew 
what praying meant. Hannah, his mother, was a woman of mark, in character and in 
piety, who was childless. That privation was a source of worry and weakness and 
grief. She sought unto God for relief, and prayed and poured out her soul before 
the Lord. She continued her praying, in fact she multiplied her praying, to such 
an extent that to Old Eli she seemed to be intoxicated, almost beside herself in 
the intensity of her supplications. She was specific in her prayers. She wanted 
a child. For a man child she prayed. And God was specific in His answer. 
A man child God gave her, a man indeed he became. He was the creation of prayer, 
and grew himself to a man of prayer. He was a mighty intercessor, especially in 
emergencies in the history of God's people. The epitome of his life and 
character is found in the statement, "Samuel cried unto the Lord for Israel, and 
the Lord heard him." The victory was complete, and the Ebenezer was the memorial 
of the possibilities and necessity of prayer. Again, at another time, 
Samuel called unto the Lord, and thunder and rain came out of season in wheat 
harvest. Here are some statements concerning this mighty intercessor, who knew 
how to pray, and whom God always regarded when he prayed: "Samuel cried unto the 
Lord all night." Says he at another time in speaking to the Lord's 
people, "Moreover, as for me, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in 
ceasing to pray for you." These great occasions show how this notable ruler of 
Israel made prayer a habit, and that this was a notable and conspicuous 
characteristic of his dispensation. Prayer was no strange exercise to Samuel. He 
was accustomed to it. He was in the habit of praying, knew the way to God, and 
received answers from God. Through him and his praying God's cause was brought 
out of its low, depressed condition, and a great national revival began, of 
which David was one of its fruits. Samuel was one of the notable men of 
the Old Dispensation who stood out prominently as one who had great influence 
with God in prayer. God could not deny him anything he asked of Him. Samuel's 
praying always affected God, and moved God to do what would not have otherwise 
been done had he not prayed. Samuel stands out as a striking illustration of the 
possibilities of prayer. He shows conclusively the achievements of 
prayer. Jacob is an illustration for all time of the commanding and 
conquering forces of prayer. God came to him as an antagonist. He grappled 
Jacob, and shook him as if he were in the embrace of a deadly foe. Jacob, the 
deceitful supplanter, the wily, unscrupulous trader, had no eyes to see God. His 
perverted principles, and his deliberate overreaching and wrong-doing had 
blinded his vision. To reach God, to know God, and to conquer God, that 
was the demand of this critical hour. Jacob was alone, and all night witnessed 
to the intensity of the struggle, its changing issues, and its veering fortunes, 
as well as the receding and advancing lines in the conflict. Here was the 
strength of weakness, the power of self-despair, the energy of perseverance, the 
elevation of humility, and the victory of surrender. Jacob's salvation issued 
from the forces which he massed in that all-night conflict. He prayed and 
wept and importuned until the fiery hate of Esau's heart died and it was 
softened into love. A greater miracle was wrought on Jacob than on Esau. His 
name, his character and his destiny were all changed by that all-night praying. 
Here is the record of the results of that night's praying struggle: "As a prince 
hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed." "By his strength he 
had power with God, yea, he had power over the angel and prevailed." What 
forces lie in importunate prayer! What mighty results are gained by it in one 
night's struggle in praying! God is affected and changed in attitude, and two 
men are transformed in character and destiny. | |
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