| PRAYER 
												Prayer is the way of approach to God, and the soul-winner keeps 
			it open by constant use. It is the channel by which all spiritual 
			blessings and power are received, and therefore the life of the 
			soul-winner must be one of ceaseless prayer. "Pray without ceasing," 
			wrote Paul. It is the breath of the soul, and other things being 
			equal, it is the secret of power. 
 It is written of Jesus, "And it came to pass in those days that He 
			went out into. a mountain to pray, and continued all night in prayer 
			to God." And this was followed by mighty works.
 
 What an amazing statement is this: "Whatsoever things ye desire when 
			ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them;" and 
			this: "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the 
			Father in My name, He will give it you;" and this: "If ye abide in 
			Me and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will and it shall 
			be done unto you!" And yet, amazing as they are, there they stand in 
			"the Scripture of truth," a challenge to every child of God who is 
			jealous for God's glory, who longs for the triumph of righteousness 
			and who seeks the salvation of souls.
 
 The soul-winner must pray in secret; he must get alone with God and 
			pour his heart into his Heavenly Father's ear with intercessions and 
			pleadings and arguments, if he would have good success. There is no 
			substitute for much wide-awake, expectant, secret waiting upon God 
			for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, the gift of wisdom, strength, 
			courage, hope, faith, discernment of times and spirits, and a 
			glowing, burning, comprehensive message from Him to the people. If 
			men fail at this point, they will in due time fail at every point 
			Jesus said: "When thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou 
			hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret, and thy 
			Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly." Here, then, 
			is the secret of success closet communion and counselings and 
			conversations with God, who is our Father, and who can and will no 
			more turn away from us when we come in the spirit of an obedient and 
			affectionate child, than can the sunlight when we throw open the 
			windows and doors and stand in its beams. I say it reverently. He 
			cannot turn away from us, but will surely reward us, and that 
			openly, because He said He would, and He cannot lie.
 
 Prayer must be definite. Once, when Jesus was leaving Jericho with 
			his disciples and a great number of people, blind Bartimeus sat by 
			the wayside begging, and when he heard Jesus was passing by, he 
			began to cry out and say: "Jesus, Thou Son of David, have mercy on 
			me," but that prayer was not definite -- it was altogether too 
			general. Jesus knew what Bartimeus wanted, but He desired Bartimeus 
			to state exactly what he desired, and said to him:
 
 "What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?" Then the blind man 
			prayed a definite prayer.
 
 "Lord, that I might receive my sight," and the definite prayer then 
			received a definite answer, for Jesus said unto him:
 
 "Go thy way, thy faith hath made thee whole," and immediately he 
			received his sight.
 
 We should be as definite when we go to God, in asking him for what 
			we want, as we are when we go to the store. The salesman is prepared 
			to sell us anything and everything in the store, but he in reality 
			sells us nothing until we tell him what we want, and so it is with 
			our Heavenly Father.
 
 Our prayers must be bold Paul said: "We have a great High Priest who 
			has passed into the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, who is touched 
			with the feelings of our infirmities, and was tempted in all points 
			like as we are, yet without sin," and adds: "Let us come boldly unto 
			the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace in time 
			of need." Of course this boldness must be coupled with humility, but 
			the greater the humility, the greater the boldness, if mixed with 
			faith. I have often been amused and amazed at the boldness with 
			which children come to their parents for the things they need and 
			the things they want, and how gladly does the true parent respond to 
			the child's request, especially if it expresses a genuine need! And 
			Jesus said: "If ye then being evil, know how to give good gifts unto 
			your children, how much more will your Heavenly Father give good 
			things to them that ask Him?"
 
 The devil stands mocking and teasing the praying souls to drive him 
			from his knees and from his Father's face, but let him rather come 
			boldly in the name of Jesus and wait patiently for the things he 
			desires, and he shall have an abundant reward. It is not our 
			Heavenly Father's will to disappoint His trusting children, but 
			rather to give them their utmost desire, yea, "exceeding abundantly 
			above all they ask or think," for His heart is all love toward them; 
			therefore let them not be timid and wavering, but steadfast and bold 
			as His dear children.
 
 Prayer must be importunate, persevering. Jesus teaches this very 
			clearly in His parable of the importunate friend "Which of you," 
			said Jesus, "shall have a friend and shall go unto him at midnight 
			and shall say unto him; 'Friend, lend me three loaves, for a friend 
			of mine in his journey has come to me and I have nothing to set 
			before him and he from within shall say, 'Trouble me not, the door 
			is now shut, and my children are with me in bed I cannot rise and 
			give thee.' I say unto you, though he will not rise and give him 
			because he is his friend, yet because of his importunity, he will 
			rise and give him as many as he needeth;" and then Jesus adds: "Ask 
			and it shall be given you, seek and ye shall find, knock and it 
			shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh receiveth, and 
			he that seeketh findeth, and to him that knocketh it shall be opened 
			unto him;" by which Jesus means to teach that we are to hold on in 
			prayer till we get an answer. If the answer is delayed, our own 
			hearts will be searched, the purity of our motives will be proved, 
			and our faith will be purified, tried, developed and strengthened 
			for future and greater triumph.
 
 Jesus prayed three times that the cup of death in the garden of 
			Gethsemane might pass from Him. It was not death on the Cross, but 
			death in the garden He feared and the apostle tells us, in Hebrews 
			5:7, that He was heard. Daniel abstained from all pleasant food for 
			three weeks at one time, and prayed until God appeared unto him and 
			said: "O man, greatly beloved, fear not; peace be unto thee; be 
			strong; yea, be strong;" and added, "I will show thee that which is 
			noted in the Scriptures of truth," and then told him all that he 
			desired to know. And Elijah, after his victory over the priests of 
			Baal, sent his servant seven times to look for the cloud that should 
			bring rain, while he bowed his face between his knees, and poured 
			out his heart to God in prayer until the cloud appeared that should 
			bring the floods of rain. Muller sometimes prayed every day, and 
			often several times a day, and that for months and years for some 
			things he wanted, before the answer came, but come it did in due 
			time. Though the answer be delayed, it is not God's purpose to deny 
			us without letting us know the reason why.
 
 Prayer must be for the glory of God and according to His will. If we 
			ask things simply to gratify our own desires, God cannot grant them. 
			James said of certain ones, Ye ask ..... but ye ask amiss, that ye 
			may consume it upon your lusts," but John said, "This is the 
			confidence that we have in Him, that, if we ask anything according 
			to His will, He heareth us.; and if we know that He heareth us..... 
			we know that we have the petitions that we desired of Him" Jesus 
			said, "If ye abide in Me and My words abide in you. ye shall ask 
			what ye will and it shall be done unto you."
 
 We are to ask according, to the things revealed as His will in His 
			Word, and according to the principles laid down therein; therefore 
			we should study His Word constantly and hide it in our own hearts, 
			and see to it that we hide ourselves in His heart and thus be filled 
			with the truth; we shall then not ask amiss, and being filled with 
			the Spirit, we shall not be denied.
 
 Prayer must be mixed with faith -- must be believing prayer. 
			"Whatsoever ye desire when ye pray, believe that ye receive and ye 
			shall have." Oh, what a victory I got one morning over the devil, 
			when he tried to shake my faith and confidence! I laid hold of that 
			promise and wrestled through to the solid rock of believing prayer, 
			and had one of the most glorious soul-saving days in my life! The 
			man whose faith is constantly wavering shall receive nothing from 
			the Lord. (James 1: 6-7.)
 
 Finally, prayer must be in the name of Jesus. "Whatsoever ye will 
			ask in My name that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in 
			the Son," said Jesus.
 
 "The Blood, the Blood is all my plea," and with that plea the vilest 
			sinner may come, while the child of God may approach with unabashed 
			boldness into the presence of his Heavenly Father and claim all the 
			resources of Heaven in his warfare against sin, in his effort to 
			save sinners and build up the kingdom of God.
 
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