
By E. M. Bounds
| ANSWERED PRAYER (Continued) 
 GOD has committed Himself to us by His Word in our 
praying. The Word of God is the basis and the inspiration and the heart of 
prayer. Jesus Christ stands as the illustration of God's Word, its illimitable 
good in promise as well as in realization. God takes nothing by halves. He gives 
nothing by halves. We can have the whole of Him when He has the whole of us. His 
words of promise are so far-reaching, and so all-comprehending, that they seem 
to have deadened our comprehension and have paralyzed our praying. This appears 
when we consider those large words, when He almost exhausts human language in 
promises, as in "whatever," "anything," and in the all-inclusive "whatsoever," 
and "all things." These oft-repeated promises, so very great, seem to daze us, 
and instead of allowing them to move us to asking, testing, and receiving, we 
turn away full of wonder, but empty handed and with empty hearts. We 
quote another passage from our Lord's teaching about prayer. By the most solemn 
verification, He declares as follows: 
 Twice in this passage He declares the answer, and 
pledging His Father, "He will give it to you," and declaring with impressive and 
most suggestive iteration, "Ask, and ye shall receive." So strong and so often 
did Jesus declare and repeat the answer as an inducement to pray, and as an 
inevitable result of prayer, the Apostles held it as so fully and invincibly 
established, that prayer would be answered, they held it to be their main duty 
to urge and command men to pray. So firmly were they established as to the truth 
of the law of prayer as laid down by our Lord, that they were led to affirm that 
the answer to prayer was involved in and necessarily bound up with all right 
praying. God the Father and Jesus Christ, His Son, are both strongly committed 
by all the truth of their word and by the fidelity of their character, to answer 
prayer. Not only do these and all the promises pledge Almighty God to 
answer prayer, but they assure us that the answer will be specific, and that the 
very thing for which we pray will be given. Our Lord's invariable 
teaching was that we receive that for which we ask, and obtain that for which we 
seek, and have that door opened at which we knock. This is according to our 
Heavenly Father's direction to us, and His giving to us for our asking. He will 
not disappoint us by not answering, neither will He deny us by giving us some 
other thing for which we have not asked, or by letting us find some other thing 
for which we have not sought, or by opening to us the wrong door, at which we 
were not knocking. If we ask bread, He will give us bread. If we ask an egg, He 
will give us an egg. If we ask a fish, He will give us a fish. Not something 
like bread, but bread itself will be given unto us. Not something like a fish, 
but a fish will be given. Not evil will be given us in answer to prayer, but 
good. Earthly parents, though evil in nature, give for the asking, and 
answer to the crying of their children. The encouragement to prayer is 
transferred from our earthly father to our Heavenly Father, from the evil to the 
good, to the supremely good; from the weak to the omnipotent, our Heavenly 
Father, centering in Himself all the highest conceptions of Fatherhood, abler, 
readier, and much more than the best, and much more than the ablest earthly 
father. "How much more," who can tell? Much more than our earthly father, will 
He supply all our needs, give us all good things, and enable us to meet every 
difficult duty and fulfill every law, though hard to flesh and blood, but made 
easy under the full supply of our Father's beneficent and exhaustless 
help. Here we have in symbol and as initial, more than an intimation of 
the necessity, not only of perseverance in prayer, but of the progressive stages 
of intentness and effort in the outlay of increasing spiritual force. Asking, 
seeking, and knocking. Here is an ascending scale from the mere words of asking, 
to a settled attitude of seeking, resulting in a determined, clamorous and 
vigorous direct effort of praying. Just as God has commanded us to pray 
always, to pray everywhere, and to pray in everything, so He will answer always, 
everywhere and in everything. God has plainly and with directness committed 
Himself to answer prayer. If we fulfill the conditions of prayer, the answer is 
bound to come. The laws of nature are not so invariable and so inexorable as the 
promised answer to pray. The ordinances of nature might fail, but the ordinances 
of grace can never fail. There are no limitations, no adverse conditions, no 
weakness, no inability, which can or will hinder the answer to prayer. God's 
doing for us when we pray has no limitations, is not hedged about, by provisos 
in Himself, or in the peculiar circumstances of any particular case. If we 
really pray, God masters and defies all things and is above all conditions. God 
explicitly says, "Call unto me, and I will answer." There are no limitations, no 
hedges, no hindrances in the way of God fulfilling the promise. His word is at 
stake. His word is involved. God solemnly engages to answer prayer. Man is to 
look for the answer, be inspired by the expectation of the answer, and may with 
humble boldness demand the answer. God, who cannot lie, is bound to answer. He 
has voluntarily placed Himself under obligation to answer the prayer of him who 
truly prays. 
 The prophets and the men of God of Old Testament 
times were unshaken in their faith in the absolute certainty of God fulfilling 
His promises to them. They rested in security on the word of God, and had no 
doubt whatever either as to the fidelity of God in answering prayer or of His 
willingness or ability. So that their history is marked by repeated asking and 
receiving at the hands of God. The same is true of the early Church. They 
received without question the doctrine their Lord and Master had so often 
affirmed that the answer to prayer was sure. The certainty of the answer to 
prayer was as fixed as God's Word was true. The Holy Ghost dispensation was 
ushered in by the disciples carrying this faith into practice. When Jesus told 
them to "Tarry at Jerusalem till they were endued with power from on high," they 
received it as a sure promise that if they obeyed the command, they would 
certainly receive the Divine power. So in prayer for ten days they tarried in 
the upper room, and the promise was fulfilled. The answer came just as Jesus 
said. So when Peter and John were arrested for healing the man who sat at the 
beautiful gate of the temple, after being threatened by the rulers in Jerusalem, 
they were released. "And being let go, they went to their own company," they 
went to those with whom they were in affinity, those of like minds, and not to 
men of the world. Still believing in prayer and its efficacy, they gave 
themselves to prayer, the prayer itself being recorded in Acts, chapter four. 
They recited some things to the Lord, and "when they had prayed, the place was 
shaken where they were assembled together, and they were filled with the Holy 
Ghost, and they spake the word of God with boldness." Here they were 
refilled for this special occasion with the Holy Ghost. The answer to prayer 
responded to their faith and prayer. The fullness of the Spirit always brings 
boldness. The cure for fear in the face of threatenings of the enemies of the 
Lord is being filled with the Spirit. This gives power to speak the word of the 
Lord with boldness. This gives courage and drives away fear. | |
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