Chapter 6
Prevailing Prayer
Prevailing prayer is
that which secures an answer. Saying prayers is not offering prevailing prayer.
The prevalence of prayer does not depend so much on quantity as on quality. I do
not know how better to approach this subject than by relating a fact of my own
experience before I was converted. I relate it because I fear such experiences
are but too common among unconverted men.
I do not recollect
having ever attended a prayer meeting until after I began the study of law.
Then, for the first time, I lived in a neighborhood where there was a prayer
meeting weekly. I had neither known, heard, nor seen much of religion; hence I
had no settled opinions about it. Partly from curiosity and partly from an
uneasiness of mind upon the subject, which I could not well define, I began to
attend that prayer meeting. About the same time I bought the first Bible that I
ever owned, and began to read it. I listened to the prayers which I heard
offered in those prayer meetings with all the attention that I could give to
prayers so cold and formal. In every prayer they prayed for the gift and
outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Both in their prayers and in their remarks, which
were occasionally interspersed, they acknowledged that they did not prevail with
God. This was most evident, and had almost made me a skeptic.
Seeing me so frequently
in their prayer meeting, the leader, on one occasion, asked me if I did not wish
them to pray for me. I replied: "No." I said: "I suppose that I
need to be prayed for, but your prayers are not answered. You confess it
yourselves." I then expressed my astonishment at this fact, in view of what
the Bible said about the prevalence of prayer. Indeed, for some time my mind was
much perplexed and in doubt in view of Christ's teaching on the subject of
prayer and the manifest facts before me, from week to week, in this prayer
meeting. Was Christ a divine teacher? Did He actually teach what the Gospels
attributed to Him? Did He mean what He said? Did prayer really avail to secure
blessings from God? If so, what was I to make of what I witnessed from week to
week and month to month in that prayer meeting? Were they real Christians? Was
that which I heard real prayer, in the Bible sense? Was it such prayer as Christ
had promised to answer? Here I found the solution.
I became convinced that
they were under a delusion; that they did not prevail because they had no right
to prevail. They did not comply with the conditions upon which God had promised
to hear prayer. Their prayers were just such as God had promised not to answer.
It was evident they were overlooking the fact that they were in danger of
praying themselves into skepticism in regard to the value of prayer.
In reading my Bible I
noticed such revealed conditions as the following:
(a) Faith in God as the
answerer of prayer. This, it is plain, involves the expectation of receiving
what we ask.
(b) Another revealed
condition is the asking according to the revealed will of God. This plainly
implies asking not only for such things as God is willing to grant, but also
asking in such a state of mind as God can accept. I fear it is common for
professed Christians to overlook the state of mind in which God requires them to
be as a condition of answering their prayers.
For example: In
offering the Lord's Prayer, "Thy kingdom come," it is plain that
sincerity is a condition of prevailing with God. But sincerity in offering this
petition implies the whole heart and life devotion of the petitioner to the
building up of this kingdom. It implies the sincere and thorough consecration of
all that we have and all that we are to this end. To utter this petition in any
other state of mind involves hypocrisy, and is an abomination.
So in the next
petition, "Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven," God has not
promised to hear this petition unless it be sincerely offered. But sincerity
implies a state of mind that accepts the whole revealed will of God, so far as
we understand it, as they accept it in heaven. It implies a loving, confiding,
universal obedience to the whole known will of God, whether that will is
revealed in His Word, by His Spirit, or in His providence. It implies that we
hold ourselves and all that we have and are as absolutely and cordially at God's
disposal as do the inhabitants of heaven. If we fall short of this, and withhold
anything whatever from God, we "regard iniquity in our hearts," and
God will not hear us.
Sincerity in offering
this petition implies a state of entire and universal consecration to God.
Anything short of this is withholding from God that which is His due. It is
"turning away our ear from hearing the law." But what saith the
Scriptures? "He that turneth away his ear from hearing the law, even his
prayer shall be an abomination." Do professed Christians understand this?
What is true of
offering these two petitions is true of all prayer. Do Christians lay this to
heart? Do they consider that all professed prayer is an abomination if it be not
offered in a state of entire consecration of all that we have and are to God? If
we do not offer ourselves with and in our prayers, with all that we have; if we
are not in a state of mind that cordially accepts and, so far as we know,
perfectly conforms to the whole will of God, our prayer is an abomination. How
awfully profane is the use very frequently made of the Lord's Prayer, both in
public and in private. To hear men and women chatter over the Lord's Prayer,
"Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven,"
while their lives are anything but conformed to the known will of God is
shocking and revolting. To hear men pray, "Thy kingdom come," while it
is most evident that they are making little or no sacrifice or effort to promote
this kingdom, forces the conviction of bare-faced hypocrisy. Such is not
prevailing prayer.
(c) Unselfishness is a
condition of prevailing prayer. "Ye ask and receive not, because ye ask
amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts" (James 4:3).
(d) Another condition
of prevailing prayer is a conscience void of offense toward God and man. 1 John
3:20, 22: "If our heart (conscience) condemn us, God is greater than our
heart and knoweth all things; if our heart condemn us not, then have we
confidence toward God, and whatsoever we ask we receive of Him, because we keep
His commandments and do those things that are pleasing in His sight."
Here two things are
made plain: first, that to prevail with God we must keep a conscience void of
offense; and, second, that we must keep His commandments and do those things
that are pleasing in His sight.
(e) A pure heart is
also a condition of prevailing prayer. Psalm 66 18: "If I regard iniquity
in my heart, the Lord will not hear me."
(f) All due confession
and restitution to God and man is another condition of prevailing prayer.
Proverbs 28:13: "He that covereth his sins shall not prosper. Whoso
confesseth and forsaketh them shall find mercy."
(g) Clean hands is
another condition. Psalm 26:6: "I will wash mine hands in innocence, so
will I compass thine altar, O Lord." I Timothy 6:8: "I will that men
pray everywhere, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and doubting."
(h) The settling of
disputes and animosities among brethren is a condition. Matthew 5:23, 24:
"If thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy
brother hath ought against thee, leave there thy gift before the altar and go
thy way. First be reconciled to thy brother, then come and offer thy gift."
(I) Humility is another
condition of prevailing prayer. James 4:6: "God resisteth the proud, but
giveth grace to the humble."
(j) Taking up the
stumbling-blocks is another condition. Ezekiel 14:3: "Son of man, these men
have set up their idols in their heart, and put the stumbling-block of their
iniquity before their face. Should I be inquired of at all by them?"
(k) A forgiving spirit
is a condition. Matthew 6:12: "Forgive us our debts as we forgive our
debtors"; 15: "But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither
will your Heavenly Father forgive your trespasses."
(l) The exercise of a
truthful spirit is a condition. Psalm 51:6: "Behold, Thou desireth truth in
the inward parts." If the heart be not in a truthful state, if it be not
entirely sincere and unselfish, we regard iniquity in our hearts; and,
therefore, the Lord will not hear us.
(m) Praying in the name
of Christ is a condition of prevailing prayer.
(n) The inspiration of
the Holy Spirit is another condition. All truly prevailing prayer is inspired by
the Holy Ghost. Romans 8:26, 27: "For we know not what we should pray for
as we ought, but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings
which cannot be uttered. And He that searcheth the heart knoweth what is the
mind of the Spirit, because He maketh intercession for the saints according to
the will of God." This is the true spirit of prayer. This is being led by
the Spirit in prayer. It is the only really prevailing prayer. Do professed
Christians really understand this? Do they believe that unless they live and
walk in the Spirit, unless they are taught how to pray by the intercession of
the Spirit in them, they cannot prevail with God?
(o) Fervency is a
condition. A prayer, to be prevailing, must be fervent. James 5:16:
"Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may
be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much."
(p) Perseverance or
persistence in prayer is often a condition of prevailing. See the case of Jacob,
of Daniel, of Elijah, of the Syrophoenician woman, of the unjust judge, and the
teaching of the Bible generally.
(q) Travail of soul is
often a condition of prevailing prayer. "As soon as Zion travailed, she
brought forth her children." "My little children," said Paul,
"for whom I travail in birth again, till Christ be formed in you."
This implies that he had travailed in birth for them before they were converted.
Indeed, travail of soul in prayer is the only real revival prayer. If anyone
does not know what this is, he does not understand the spirit of prayer. He is
not in a revival state. He does not understand the passage already quoted Romans
8:26, 27. Until he understands this agonizing prayer he does not know the real
secret of revival power.
(r) Another condition
of prevailing prayer is the consistent use of means to secure the object prayed
for, if means are within our reach, and are known by us to be necessary to the
securing of the end. To pray for a revival of religion, and use no other means,
is to tempt God. This, I could plainly see, was the case of those who offered
prayer in the prayer meeting of which I have spoken. They continued to offer
prayer for a revival of religion, but out of meeting they were as silent as
death on the subject, and opened not their mouths to those around them. They
continued this inconsistency until a prominent impenitent man in the community
administered to them in my presence a terrible rebuke. He expressed just what I
deeply felt. He rose, and with the utmost solemnity and tearfulness said:
"Christian people, what can you mean? You continue to pray in these
meetings for a revival of religion. You often exhort each other here to wake up
and use means to promote a revival. You assure each other, and assure us who are
impenitent, that we are in the way to hell; and I believe it. You also insist
that if you should wake up, and use the appropriate means, there would be a
revival, and we should be converted. You tell us of our great danger, and that
our souls are worth more than all worlds; and yet you keep about your
comparatively trifling employments and use no such means. We have no revival and
our souls are not saved." Here he broke down and fell, sobbing, back into
his seat. This rebuke fell heavily upon that prayer meeting, as I shall ever
remember. It did them good; for it was not long before the members of that
prayer meeting broke down, and we had a revival. I was present in the first
meeting in which the revival spirit was manifest. Oh! how changed was the tone
of their prayers, confessions, and supplications. I remarked, in returning home,
to a friend: "What a change has come over these Christians. This must be
the beginning of a revival." Yes; a wonderful change comes over all the
meetings whenever the Christian people are revived. Then their confessions mean
something. They mean reformation and restitution. They mean work. They mean the
use of means. They mean the opening of their pockets, their hearts and hands,
and the devotion of all their powers to the promotion of the work.
(s) Prevailing prayer
is specific. It is offered for a definite object. We cannot prevail for
everything at once. In all the cases recorded in the Bible in which prayer was
answered, it is noteworthy that the petitioner prayed for a definite object.
(t) Another condition
of prevailing prayer is that we mean what we say in prayer; that we make no
false pretenses; in short, that we are entirely childlike and sincere, speaking
out of the heart, nothing more nor less than we mean, feel, and believe.
(u) Another condition
of prevailing prayer is a state of mind that assumes the good faith of God in
all His promises.
(v) Another condition
is "watching unto prayer" as well as "praying in the Holy
Ghost." By this I mean guarding against everything that can quench or
grieve the Spirit of God in our hearts.
Also watching for the
answer, in a state of mind that will diligently use all necessary means, at any
expense, and add entreaty to entreaty.
When the fallow ground
is thoroughly broken up in the hearts of Christians, when they have confessed
and made restitution if the work be thorough and honest they will naturally and
inevitably fulfill the conditions, and will prevail in prayer. But it cannot be
too distinctly understood that none others will. What we commonly hear in prayer
and conference meetings is not prevailing prayer. It is often astonishing and
lamentable to witness the delusions that prevail upon the subject. Who that has
witnessed real revivals of religion has not been struck with the change that
comes over the whole spirit and manner of the prayers of really revived
Christians? I do not think I ever could have been converted if I had not
discovered the solution of the question: "Why is it that so much that is
called prayer is not answered?"

Chapter
1. Power from on high
Chapter
2. What is it?
Chapter
3. The enduement of the spirit
Chapter
4. Enduement of power from on high
Chapter
5. Is it a hard saying?
Chapter
6. Prevailing prayer
Chapter
7. How to win souls
Chapter
8. Preacher, save thyself
Chapter
9. Innocent amusements
Chapter
10. How to overcome sin
Chapter
11. The decay of conscience
Chapter
12. The psychology of faith
Chapter
13. Psychology of righteousness
Return to Power from on High
