Quiet Talks on Prayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 197 pages of information about Quiet Talks on Prayer.

Quiet Talks on Prayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 197 pages of information about Quiet Talks on Prayer.

There is a strange feature to this parable, which must have a meaning. An utterly godless unscrupulous man is put in to represent God! This is startling.  In any other than Jesus it would seem an overstepping of the bounds.  But there is keenness of a rare sort here.  Such a man is chosen for judge to bring out most sharply this:—­the sort of thing required to win this judge is certainly not required with God.  The widow must persist and plead because of the sort of man she has to deal with.  But God is utterly different in character.  Therefore while persistence is urged in prayer plainly it is not for the reason that required the widow to persist.  And if that reason be cut out it leaves only one other, namely, that represented by the adversary.

Having purposely put such a man in the parable for God, Jesus takes pains to speak of the real character of God.  “And He is long-suffering over them.” That is God.  That word “long-suffering” and its equivalent on Jesus’ lips suggests at once the strong side of love, namely, patience, gentle, fine patience.  It has bothered the scholars in this phrase to know with whom or over what the long-suffering is exercised.  “Over them” is the doubtful phrase.  Long-suffering over these praying ones? Or, long-suffering in dealing righteously with some stubborn adversary—­which?  The next sentence has a word set in sharpest contrast with this one, namely “speedily.”  “Long-suffering” yet “speedily.”

Here are gleams of bright light on a dark subject with apparently more light obscured than is allowed to shine through.  Jesus always spoke thoughtfully.  He chooses His words.  Remembering the adversary against whom the persistence is directed the whole story seems to suggest this:  that there is a great conflict on in the upper spirit world.  Concerning it our patient God is long-suffering.  He is a just and righteous God.  These beings in the conflict are all His creatures.  He is just in His dealings with the devil and this splendid host of evil spirits even as with all His creation.  He is long-suffering that no unfairness shall be done in His dealings with these creatures of His.  Yet at the same time He is doing His best to bring the conflict to a speedy end, for the sake of His loyal loved ones, and that right may prevail.

The upshot of the parable is very plain.  It contains for us two tremendous, intense truths.  First is this:  prayer concerns three, not two but three.  God to whom we pray, the man on the contested earth who prays, and the evil one against whom we pray.  And the purpose of the prayer is not to persuade or influence God, but to join forces with Him against the enemy.  Not towards God, but with God against Satan—­that is the main thing to keep in mind in prayer.  The real pitch is not Godward but Satanward.

The second intense truth is this:—­the winning quality in prayer is persistence.  The final test is here.  This is the last ditch.  Many who fight well up to this point lose their grip here, and so lose all.  Many who are well equipped for prayer fail here, and doubtless fail because they have not rightly understood.  With clear, ringing tones the Master’s voice sounds in our ears again to-day, “always to pray, and not to faint.”

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Quiet Talks on Prayer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.