
By E. M. Bounds
| PRAYER AND DIVINE PROVIDENCE (Continued) 
 TWO kinds of providences are seen in God's 
dealings with men, direct providences and permissive providences. God orders 
some things, others He permits. But when He permits an afflictive dispensation 
to come into the life of His saint, even though it originate in a wicked mind, 
and it be the act of a sinner, yet before it strikes His saint and touches him, 
it becomes God's providence to the saint. In other words, God consents to some 
things in this world, without in the least being responsible for them, or in the 
least excusing him who originates them, many of them very painful and 
afflictive, but such events or things always become to the saint of God the 
providence of God to him. So that the saint can say in each and all of these sad 
and distressing experiences, "It is the Lord; let him do what seemeth him good." 
Or with the Psalmist, he may say, "I was dumb; I opened not my mouth, because 
thou didst it." This was the explanation of all of Job's severe 
afflictions. They came to him in the providence of God, even though they had 
their origin in the mind of Satan, who devised them and put them into execution. 
God gave Satan permission to afflict Job, to take away his property, and to rob 
him of his children. But Job did not attribute these things to blind chance, nor 
to accident, neither did he charge them to Satanic agency, but said, "The Lord 
hath given, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord." He 
took these things as coming from his God, whom he feared and served and 
trusted. And to the same effect are Job's words to his wife when she left 
God out of the question, and wickedly told her husband, "Curse God and die." Job 
replied, "Thou speakest as one of the foolish women speaketh. What! Shall we 
receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?" It is no 
surprise under such a view of God's dealings with Job that it should be recorded 
of this man of faith, "In all this did not Job sin with his lips," and in 
another place was it said, "In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God 
foolishly." In nothing concerning God and the events of life do men talk more 
foolishly and even wickedly than in ignorantly making up their judgments on the 
providences of God in this world. O that we had men after the type of Job, who 
though afflictions and privations are severe in the extreme, yet they see the 
hand of God in providence and openly recognize God in it. The sequel to all 
these painful experiences are but illustrations of that familiar text of Paul, 
"And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God." Job 
received back more in the end than was ever taken away from him. He emerged from 
under these tremendous troubles with victory, and became till this day the 
exponent and example of great patience and strong faith in God's providences. 
"Ye have heard of the patience of Job," rings down the line of Divine 
revelation. God took hold of the evil acts of Satan, and worked them into His 
plans and brought great good out of them. He made evil work out for good without 
in the least endorsing the evil or conniving at it. We have the same 
gracious truth of Divine providence evidenced in the story of Joseph and his 
brethren, who sold him wickedly into Egypt and forsook him and deceived their 
old father. All this had its origin in their evil minds. And yet when it reached 
God's plans and purposes, it became God's providence both to Joseph and to the 
future of Jacob's descendants. Hear Joseph as he spoke to his brethren after he 
had discovered himself to them down in Egypt, -- in which he traces all the 
painful events back to the mind of God and made them have to do with fulfilling 
God's purposes concerning Jacob and his posterity: 
 Cowper's well-known hymn might well be read in this connection, one verse of which is sufficient just now: 
 The very same line of argument appears in the 
betrayal of our Lord by Judas. Of course it was the wicked act of an evil man, 
but it never touched our Lord till the Father gave His consent, and God took the 
evil design of Judas and worked it into His own plans for the redemption of the 
world. It did not excuse Judas in the least that good came out of his wicked 
act, but it does magnify the wisdom and greatness of God in so overruling it as 
that man's redemption was secured. It is so always in God's dealings with man. 
Things which come to us from second causes are no surprise to God, nor are they 
beyond His control. His hand can take hold of them in answer to prayer and lie 
can make afflictions, from whatever quarter they may come, "work for us a more 
exceeding and eternal weight of glory." The providence of God goes before 
His saints, opens the way, removes difficulties, solves problems and brings 
deliverances when escape seems hopeless. God brought Israel out of Egypt by the 
hand of Moses, His chosen leader of that people. They came to the Red Sea. But 
there were the waters in front, with no crossing nor bridges. On one side were 
high mountains, and behind came the hosts of Pharaoh. Every avenue of escape was 
closed. There seemed no hope. Despair almost reigned. But there was one way open 
which men overlooked, and that was the upward way. A man of prayer, Moses, the 
man of faith in God, was on the ground. This man of prayer, who recognized God 
in providence, with commanding force, spoke to the people on this wise: "Fear ye 
not; stand still and see the salvation of the Lord." With this he lifted 
up his rod, and according to Divine command, he stretched his hand over the sea. 
The waters divided, and the command issued forth, "Speak unto the children of 
Israel that they go forward." And Israel went over the sea dry shod. God had 
opened a way, and what seemed an impossible emergency was remarkably turned into 
a wonderful deliverance. Nor is this the only time that God has interposed in 
behalf of His people when their way was shut up. The whole history of the 
Jews is the story of God's providence. The Old Testament cannot be accepted as 
true without receiving the doctrine of a Divine, overruling providence. The 
Bible is preeminently a Divine revelation. It reveals things. It discovers, 
uncovers, brings to light things concerning God, His character and His manner of 
governing this world, and its inhabitants, not discoverable by human reason, by 
science or by philosophy. The Bible is a book in which God reveals Himself to 
men. And this is particularly true when we consider God's care of His creatures 
and His oversight of the world, His superintendence of its affairs. And to 
dispute the doctrine of providence is to discredit the entire revelation of 
God's Word. Everywhere this Word discovers God's hand in man's 
affairs. The Old Testament especially, but also the New Testament, is the 
story of prayer and providence. It is the tale of God's dealings with men of 
prayer, men of faith in His direct interference in earth's affairs, and with 
God's manner of superintending the world in the interest of His people and in 
carrying forward His work in His plans and purposes in creation and 
redemption. Praying men and God's providence go together. This was 
thoroughly understood by the praying ones of the Scripture. They prayed over 
everything because God had to do with everything. They took all things to God in 
prayer because they believed in a Divine providence which had to do with all 
things. They believed in an ever present God, who had not retired into the 
secret recesses of space, leaving His saints and His creatures to the mercy of a 
tyrant, called nature, and its laws, blind, unyielding, with no regard for any 
one who stood in its way. If that be the correct conception of God, why pray to 
Him? He is too far away to hear them when they pray, and too unconcerned to 
trouble Himself about those on earth. These men of prayer had an implicit 
faith in a God of special providence, who would gladly, promptly and readily 
respond to their cries for help in times of need and in seasons of 
distress. The so-called "laws of nature" did not trouble them in the 
least. God was above nature, in control of nature, while nature was but the 
servant of Almighty God. Nature's laws were but His own laws, since nature was 
but the offspring of the Divine hand. Laws of nature might be suspended and no 
evil would result. Every intelligent person is conversant every day when he sees 
man overruling and overcoming the law of gravitation, and no one is surprised or 
raises his hand or voice in horror at the thought of nature's laws being 
violated. God is a God of law and order, and all His laws in nature, in 
providence and in grace work together in perfect accord, with no clash nor 
disharmony. God suspends or overcomes the laws of disease and rain often 
without or independent of prayer. But quite often He does this in answer to 
prayer. Prayer for rain or for dry weather is not outside the moral government 
of God, nor is it asking God to violate any law which He has made, but only 
asking Him to give rain in His own way, according to His own laws. So also the 
prayer for the rebuking of disease is not a request at war with law either 
natural or otherwise, but is a prayer in accordance with law, even the law of 
prayer, a law set in operation by Almighty God as the so-called natural law 
which governs rain or which controls disease. The believer in the law of 
prayer has strong ground on which to base his plea. And the believer in a Divine 
providence, the companion of prayer, stands equally on strong granite 
foundations, from which he need not be shaken. These twin doctrines stand fast 
and will abide forever. 
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