The Wonders of Prayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 451 pages of information about The Wonders of Prayer.

The Wonders of Prayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 451 pages of information about The Wonders of Prayer.

“My mother was very ill, and apparently dying.  The Doctor said that now, if at all, the children might be brought for her to look at them once more.  One by one we were brought to the bedside, and her hand was placed on our heads.

“Then my father bade her farewell, and she lay motionless as if soon to breathe her last.

“He then said to himself, ’There is yet one promise I have not pleaded, “If ye ask anything in my name I will do it.”  He stepped aside, and in an agony of soul exclaimed, ’O, Lord, for the honor of thy dear Son, give me the life of my wife!’

“He could say no more, and sank down exhausted.  Just then the nurse called him to the bedside saying, ’She has opened her mouth again as if for food.’  Nourishment was given, and from that time she began to recover.  The doctor said it was miraculous.  My father said it was God, who had heard his prayer.”

THE HELP OF THE LORD IN LITTLE THINGS.

The Rev. Dr. Patton, of Chicago, in receiving many letters from clergymen, received one from Mr. F., a pastor in Massachusetts.

In it he speaks of his unsuccessful search for a valuable knife, prized as a present from a friend, which he had lost on a hillside covered with laurels.  He paused in prayer, asked to be guided, commenced his search, and was almost immediately successful thereafter.

The same letter also mentions the case of a friend in a responsible position under the government, whose accounts failed to balance by reason of an error, which, after long search, he could not detect.

In great distress he betook himself to prayer, and then opening his books, on the very first page, which he happened to glance at, and at the top of the column, he saw instantly the looked for error, standing out so plainly that he wondered he had not seen it before.

The writer also speaks of a rubber shoe being lost and promptly found after mention in prayer.

These may seem little matters, but they are the privileges of the righteous to ask “anything” of “Him who careth for them.”

A BOY’S FAITH IN PRAYER

In a letter to Dr. W.W.  Patton, by Mr. T.I.  Goodwin, M.D., of Staten Island, he describes a little incident which happened to him when only thirteen years old.

“He lost a choice penknife while collecting and driving several cows from a pasture covered with grass two inches high.  Having read Huntington’s Book of Faith, he thought of prayer, and in childlike trust he knelt under a tree, outside the bars, and prayed for his lost treasure; for he was a farmer’s boy, and his spending money amounted to only about fifty cents a year.  ’I rose up, cast my eyes down on the ground, and without planning my course or making any estimate of probabilities, walked across the meadow centrally to near its farther edge, saw the penknife down in the grass directly before me, and picked it up all as readily as I could have done had any one stood there pointing to the exact place. Had I gone ten feet to the right or left I could not have seen the knife, for the grass was too high.’”

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The Wonders of Prayer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.