Answers to PrayerPart 1
“I
saw that there was a great lack of faith with the servants of God, as well as
with the church. They were too easily discouraged, too ready to doubt God, too
willing to believe that they had a hard lot and that God had forsaken them. I
saw that this was cruel. God so loved them as to give His dearly beloved Son to
die for them, and all heaven was interested in their salvation; yet after all
that had been done for them, it was hard to believe and trust so kind and good a
Father. He has said that He is more willing to give the Holy Spirit to them that
ask Him, than earthly parents are to give good gifts to their children. I saw
that the servants of God and the church were too easily discouraged. When they
asked their Father in heaven for things which they thought they needed, and
these did not immediately come, their faith wavered, their courage fled, and a
murmuring feeling took possession of them. This, I saw, displeased God. “Every
saint who comes to God with a true heart, and sends his honest petitions to Him
in faith, will have his prayers answered. Your faith must not let go of the
promises of God, if you do not see or feel the immediate answer to your prayers.
Be not afraid to trust God. Rely upon His sure promise: `Ask, and ye shall
receive.' God is too wise to err, and too good to withhold any good thing from
His saints that walk uprightly. Man is erring, and although his petitions are
sent up from an honest heart, he does not always ask for the things that are
good for himself, or that will glorify God. When this is so, our wise and good
Father hears our prayers, and will answer, sometimes immediately; but He gives
us the things that are for our best good and His own glory. God gives us
blessings; if we could look into His plan, we would clearly see that He knows
what is best for us and that our prayers are answered. Nothing hurtful is given,
but the blessing we need, in the place of something we asked for that would not
be good for us, but to our hurt. “I
saw that if we do not feel immediate answers to our prayers, we should hold fast
our faith, not allowing distrust to come in, for that will separate us from God.
If our faith wavers, we shall receive nothing from Him. Our confidence in God
should be strong; and when we need it most, the blessing will fall upon us like
a shower of rain. “When
the servants of God pray for His Spirit and blessing, it sometimes comes
immediately; but it is not always then bestowed. At such times, faint not. Let
your faith hold fast the promise that it will come. Let your trust be fully in
God, and often that blessing will come when you need it most, and you will
unexpectedly receive help from God when you are presenting the truth to
unbelievers, and will be enabled to speak the word with clearness and power. “It
was represented to me like children asking a blessing of their earthly parents
who love them. They ask something that the parent knows will hurt them; the
parent gives them the things that will be good and healthful for them, in the
place of that which they desired. I saw that every prayer which is sent up in
faith from an honest heart will be heard of God and answered, and the one that
sent up the petition will have the blessing when he needs it most, and it will
often exceed his expectations. Not a prayer of a true saint is lost if sent up
in faith from an honest heart.”—1 Testimonies, 120:01-121:03. “The
people of God must move understandingly. They should not be satisfied until
every known sin is confessed; then it is their privilege and duty to believe
that Jesus accepts them. They must not wait for others to press through the
darkness and obtain the victory for them to enjoy. Such enjoyment will last only
till the meeting closes. But God must be served from principle instead of from
feeling. Morning and night obtain the victory for yourselves in your own family.
Let not your daily labor keep you from this. Take time to pray, and as you pray,
believe that God hears you. Have faith mixed with your prayers. You may not at
all times feel the immediate answer; but then it is that faith is tried. You are
proved to see whether you will trust in God, whether you have living, abiding
faith. ‘Faithful is He that calleth you, who also will do it.’ Walk the
narrow plank of faith. Trust all on the promises of the Lord. Trust God in
darkness. That is the time to have faith. But you often let feeling govern you.
You look for worthiness in yourselves when you do not feel comforted by the
Spirit of God, and despair because you cannot find it. You do not trust enough
in Jesus, precious Jesus. You do not make His worthiness to be all, all. The
very best you can do will not merit the favor of God. It is Jesus' worthiness
that will save you, His blood that will cleanse you. But you have efforts to
make. You must do what you can on your part. Be zealous and repent, then
believe. “Confound
not faith and feeling together. They are distinct. Faith is ours to exercise.
This faith we must keep in exercise. Believe, believe. Let your faith take hold
of the blessing, and it is yours. Your feelings have nothing to do with this
faith. When faith brings the blessing to your heart, and you rejoice in the
blessing, it is no more faith, but feeling.”—1 Testimonies, 167:01-02. “God
does not require His people to imitate Baal's prophets, to afflict their bodies
and cry out and shout, and throw themselves into almost every attitude, having
no regard for order, until their strength fails through sheer exhaustion.
Religion does not consist in making a noise; yet when the soul is filled with
the Spirit of the Lord, sweet, heartfelt praise to God glorifies Him. Some have
professed to have great faith in God, and to have special gifts and special
answers to their prayers, although the evidence was lacking. They mistook
presumption for faith. The prayer of faith is never lost; but to claim that it
will be always answered in the very way and for the particular thing we have
expected, is presumption.”—1 Testimonies,
231:01. “
‘If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men
liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.’ Now the condition:
‘But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a
wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that
he shall receive anything of the Lord.’ This petition for wisdom is not to be
a meaningless prayer, out of mind as soon as finished. It is a prayer that
expresses the strong, earnest desire of the heart, arising from a conscious lack
of wisdom to determine the will of God. “After
the prayer is made, if the answer is not realized immediately, do not weary of
waiting and become unstable. Waver not. Cling to the promise, `Faithful is He
that calleth you, who also will do it.' Like the importunate widow, urge your
case, being firm in your purpose. Is the object important and of great
consequence to you? It certainly is. Then waver not, for your faith may be
tried. If the thing you desire is valuable, it is worthy of a strong, earnest
effort. You have the promise; watch and pray. Be steadfast and the prayer will
be answered; for is it not God who has promised? If it costs you something to
obtain it you will prize it the more when obtained. You are plainly told that if
you waver you need not think that you shall receive anything of the Lord. A
caution is here given not to become weary, but to rest firmly upon the promise.
If you ask, He will give you liberally and upbraid not. “Here
is where many make a mistake. They waver from their purpose, and their faith
fails. This is the reason they receive nothing of the Lord, who is our Source of
strength. None need go in darkness, stumbling along like a blind man; for the
Lord has provided light if they will accept it in His appointed way, and not
choose their own way. He requires of all a diligent performance of everyday
duties.”—2 Testimonies, 130:01-131:02. “In
the case of Sister F, there needed to be a great work accomplished. Those who
united in praying for her needed a work done for them. Had God answered their
prayers, it would have proved their ruin. In such cases of affliction, where
Satan has control of the mind, before engaging in prayer there should be the
closest self-examination to discover if there are not sins which need to be
repented of, confessed, and forsaken. Deep humility of soul before God is
necessary, and firm, humble reliance upon the merits of the blood of Christ
alone. Fasting and prayer will accomplish nothing while the heart is estranged
from God by a wrong course of action. ‘Is not this the fast that I have
chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let
the oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke? Is it not to deal thy bread
to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house? when
thou seest the naked, that thou cover him; and that thou hide not thyself from
thine own flesh?’ ‘Then shalt thou call, and the Lord shall answer; thou
shalt cry, and He shall say, Here I am. If thou take away from the midst of thee
the yoke, the putting forth of the finger, and speaking vanity; and if thou draw
out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light
rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday: and the Lord shall guide
thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and
thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters
fail not.’ “It
is heartwork that the Lord requires, good works springing from a heart filled
with love. All should carefully and prayerfully consider the above scriptures,
and investigate their motives and actions. The promise of God to us is on
condition of obedience, compliance with all His requirements. ‘Cry aloud,’
saith the prophet Isaiah, ‘spare not, lift up thy voice like a trumpet, and
show My people their transgression, and the house of Jacob their sins. Yet they
seek Me daily, and delight to know My ways, as a nation that did righteousness,
and forsook not the ordinance of their God: they ask of Me the ordinances of
justice; they take delight in approaching to God. Wherefore have we fasted, say
they, and Thou seest not? wherefore have we afflicted our soul, and Thou takest
no knowledge?’ “A
people are here addressed who make high profession, who are in the habit of
praying, and who delight in religious exercises; yet there is a lack. They
realize that their prayers are not answered; their zealous, earnest efforts are
not observed in heaven, and they earnestly inquire why the Lord makes them no
returns. It is not because there is any neglect on the part of God. The
difficulty is with the people. While professing godliness, they do not bear
fruit to the glory of God; their works are not what they should be. They are
living in neglect of positive duties. Unless these are performed, God cannot
answer their prayers according to His glory. In the case of offering prayer for
Sister F, there was confusion of sentiment. Some were fanatical and moved from
impulse. They possessed a zeal, but not according to knowledge. Some looked at
the great thing to be accomplished in this case and began to triumph before the
victory was gained. There was much of the Jehu spirit manifested: ‘Come with
me, and see my zeal for the Lord.' In place of this self-confident assurance,
the case should have been presented to God with a spirit of humbleness and
distrustfulness of self, and with a broken and a contrite heart. “I
was shown that in case of sickness, where the way is clear for the offering up
of prayer for the sick, the case should be committed to the Lord in calm faith,
not with a storm of excitement. He alone is acquainted with the past life of the
individual and knows what his future will be. He who is acquainted with the
hearts of all men knows whether the person, if raised up, would glorify His name
or dishonor Him by backsliding and apostasy. All that we are required to do is
to ask God to raise the sick up if in accordance with His will, believing that
He hears the reasons which we present and the fervent prayers offered. If the
Lord sees it will best honor Him, He will answer our prayers. But to urge
recovery without submission to His will is not right. “What
God promises He is able at any time to perform, and the work which He gives His
people to do He is able to accomplish by them. If they will live according to
every word He has spoken, every good word and promise will be fulfilled unto
them. But if they come short of perfect obedience, the great and precious
promises are afar off, and they cannot reach the fulfillment. “All
that can be done in praying for the sick is to earnestly importune God in their
behalf, and in perfect confidence rest the matter in His hands. If we regard
iniquity in our hearts the Lord will not hear us. He can do what He will with
His own. He will glorify Himself by working in and through them who wholly
follow Him, so that it shall be known that it is the Lord and that their works
are wrought in God. Said Christ: ‘If any man serve Me, him will My Father
honor.’ When we come to Him we should pray that we may enter into and
accomplish His purpose, and that our desires and interests may be lost in His.
We should acknowledge our acceptance of His will, not praying Him to concede to
ours. It is better for us that God does not always answer our prayers just when
we desire, and in just the manner we wish. He will do more and better for us
than to accomplish all our wishes, for our wisdom is folly. “We
have united in earnest prayer around the sickbed of men, women, and children,
and have felt that they were given back to us from the dead in answer to our
earnest prayers. In these prayers we thought we must be positive and, if we
exercised faith, that we must ask for nothing less than life. We dared not say,
‘If it will glorify God,’ fearing it would admit a semblance of doubt. We
have anxiously watched those who have been given back, as it were, from the
dead. We have seen some of these, especially youth, raised to health, and they
have forgotten God, become dissolute in life, causing sorrow and anguish to
parents and friends, and have become a shame to those who feared to pray. They
lived not to honor and glorify God, but to curse Him with their lives of vice. “We
no longer mark out a way nor seek to bring the Lord to our wishes. If the life
of the sick can glorify Him, we pray that they may live; nevertheless, not as we
will but as He will. Our faith can be just as firm, and more reliable, by
committing the desire to the all-wise God, and, without feverish anxiety, in
perfect confidence, trusting all to Him. We have the promise. We know that He
hears us if we ask according to His will. Our petitions must not take the form
of a command, but of intercession for Him to do the things we desire of Him.
When the church are united, they will have strength and power; but when part of
them are united to the world, and many are given to covetousness, which God
abhors, He can do but little for them. Unbelief and sin shut them away from God.
We are so weak that we cannot bear much spiritual prosperity, lest we take the
glory, and accredit goodness and righteousness to ourselves as the reason of the
signal blessing of God, when it was all because of the great mercy and
lovingkindness of our compassionate heavenly Father, and not because any good
was found in us.”—2 Testimonies, 145:01-149:01. “Time
is short, and you have no time to delay the preparation of heart necessary to
labor earnestly and faithfully for your own soul, and for the salvation of your
friends and neighbors, and all who come under your influence. Ever aim to so
live in the light that your influence can be sanctifying upon those with whom
you are associated in a business capacity or in common intercourse. There is
fullness in Jesus. You can obtain strength from Him which will qualify you to
walk even as He walked, but there must be no separation of affections from Him.
He requires the entire man, the soul, body, and spirit. When you do all on your
part which He requires, He will work for you, and bless and strengthen you by
His rich grace.”—2 Testimonies, pp. 155:03-156:0. “With
fasting and earnest prayer, with deep heart searching, stern self-examination,
lay bare the soul; let no act escape your critical examination. Then, with self
dead and your life hid with Christ in God, offer your humble petitions. If you
regard iniquity in your heart, the Lord will not hear you. If He had heard your
prayers, you would have been exalted. Satan has stood by, prepared to make the
most of the advantage he has gained."—2 Testimonies,
158:0. “There
is strength to be btained in of
God. He can help. He can give grace and heavenly wisdom. If you ask in faith,
you will receive; but you must watch unto prayer. Watch, pray, and work, should
be your watchword.”—2 Testimonies, 427:0. “He
permitted you to pass through real trials and feel privation and want, that you
might know how to exercise pity and sympathy, and tender love for the
unfortunate and oppressed, and for those borne down with want and passing
through trial and affliction. “While
you prayed in your affliction for peace in Christ, a cloud of darkness seemed to
blacken across your mind. The rest and peace did not come as you expected. At
times your faith seemed to be tested to the utmost. As you looked back to your
past life, you saw sorrow and disappointment; as you viewed the future, all was
uncertainty. The divine Hand led you wondrously to bring you to the cross and to
teach you that God was indeed a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him. Those
who ask aright will receive. He that seeketh in faith shall find. The experience
gained in the furnace of trial and affliction is worth more than all the
inconvenience and painful experience it costs. “The
prayers that you offered in your loneliness, in your weariness and trial, God
answered, not always according to your expectations, but for your good.”—3
Testimonies, 415:01-03. “The
simple prayers indited by the Holy Spirit will ascend through the gates ajar,
the open door which Christ has declared: I have opened, and no man can shut.
These prayers, mingled with the incense of the perfection of Christ, will ascend
as fragrance to the Father, and answers will come.”—6 Testimonies, p.
467:04. “God's
workers will meet with turmoil, discomfort, and weariness. At times, uncertain
and distracted, they are almost in despair. When this restless nervousness
comes, let them remember Christ's invitation: ‘Come ye yourselves apart, . .
and rest awhile.’ The Saviour ‘giveth power to the faint; and to them that
have no might He increaseth strength.’ Isa. 40:29. “Difficulties
will arise that will try your faith and patience. Face them bravely. Look on the
bright side. If the work is hindered, be sure that it is not your fault, and
then go forward, rejoicing in the Lord. Heaven is full of joy. It resounds with
the praises of Him who made so wonderful a sacrifice for the redemption of the
human race. Should not the church on earth be full of praise? Should not
Christians publish throughout the world the joy of serving Christ? Those who in
heaven join with the angelic choir in their anthem of praise must learn on earth
the song of heaven, the keynote of which is thanksgiving. “Never
let your courage fail. Never talk unbelief because appearances are against you.
As you work for the Master you will feel pressure for want of means, but the
Lord will hear and answer your petitions for help. Let your language be: ‘The
Lord God will help me; therefore shall I not be confounded: therefore have I set
my face like a flint, and I know that I shall not be ashamed.’ Isa. 50:7. “If
you make a mistake, turn your defeat into victory. The lessons that God sends
will always, if well learned, bring help in due time. Put your trust in God.
Pray much, and believe. Trusting, hoping, believing, holding fast the hand of
Infinite Power, you will be more than conquerors. “True
workers walk and work by faith. Sometimes they grow weary with watching the slow
advance of the work when the battle wages strong between the powers of good and
evil. But if they refuse to fail or be discouraged they will see the clouds
breaking away and the promise of deliverance fulfilling. Through the mist with
which Satan has surrounded them, they will see the shining of the bright beams
of the Sun of Righteousness. “Work
in faith, and leave results with God. Pray in faith, and the mystery of His
providence will bring its answer. At times it may seem that you cannot succeed.
But work and believe, putting into your efforts faith, hope, and courage. After
doing what you can, wait for the Lord, declaring His faithfulness, and He will
bring His word to pass. Wait, not in fretful anxiety, but in undaunted faith and
unshaken trust. “
‘If God be for us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but
delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all
things? . . Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or
distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? . . Nay,
in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us. For I
am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor
powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any
other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord.’ ”—7 Testimonies,
244:01-245:03. “mportant
lessons are presented to us in the experience of Elijah. When upon Mt. Carmel he
offered the prayer for rain, his faith was tested, but he persevered in making
known his request unto God. Six times he prayed earnestly, and yet there was no
sign that his petition was granted, but with a strong faith he urged his plea to
the throne of grace. Had he given up in discouragement at the sixth time, his
prayer would not have been answered, but he persevered till the answer came. We
have a God whose ear is not closed to our petitions; and if we prove
His word, He will honor our faith. He wants us to have all our interests
interwoven with His interests, and then He can safely bless us; for we shall not
then take glory to self when the blessing is ours, but shall render all the
praise to God. God does not always answer our prayers the first time we call
upon Him; for should He do this, we might take it for granted that we had a
right to all the blessings and favors He bestowed upon us. Instead of searching
our hearts to see if any evil was entertained by us, any sin indulged, we should
becomecareless, and fail to realize our dependence upon Him, and our need of His
help. “Elijah
humbled himself until he was in a condition where he would not take the glory to
himself. This is the condition upon which the Lord hears prayer, for then we
shall give the praise to Him. The custom of offering praise to men is one that
results in great evil. One praises another, and thus men are led to feel that
glory and honor belong to them. When you exalt man, you lay a snare for his
soul, and do just as Satan would have you. You should praise God with all your
heart, soul, might, mind, and strength; for God alone is worthy to be
glorified” (RH March 27, 1913). “Satan
seeks continually to block the way, so that the truth shall be bound about by
human devising; and those who have light and knowledge are in the greatest
danger unless they constantly consecrate themselves to God, humiliating self,
and realizing the peril of the times. “Heavenly
beings are appointed to answer the prayers of those who are working unselfishly
for the interests of the cause of God. The very highest angels in the heavenly
courts are appointed to work out the prayers which ascend to God for the
advancement of the cause of God. Each angel has his particular post of duty,
which he is not permitted to leave for any other place. If he should leave, the
powers of darkness would gain an advantage . . “Day
by day the conflict between good and evil is going on. Why is it that those who
have had many opportunities and advantages do not realize the intensity of this
work? They should be intelligent in regard to this. God is the Ruler. By His
supreme power He holds in check and controls earthly potentates. Through His
agencies He does the work which was ordained before the foundation of the world. “As
a people we do not understand as we should the great conflict going on between
invisible agencies, the controversy between loyal and disloyal angels. Evil
angels are constantly at work, planning their line of attack, controlling as . .
commanders, kings, and rulers, the disloyal human forces
I call upon the ministers of Christ to press home upon the understanding
of all who come within the reach of their voice, the truth of the ministration
of angels. Do not indulge in fanciful speculations. The written Word is our only
safety. We must pray as did Daniel, that we may be guarded by heavenly
intelligences. As ministering spirits angels are sent forth to minister to those
who shall be heirs of salvation. Pray, my brethren, pray as you have never
prayed before. We are not prepared for the Lord's coming. We need to make
thorough work for eternity (Letter 201, 1899).” —S.D.A. Bible Commentary,
Vol. 4, 1173:04-07. “In
the Word of God are represented two contending parties that influence and
control human agencies in our world. Constantly these parties are working with
every human being. Those who are under God's control and who are influenced by
the heavenly angels, will be able to discern the crafty workings of the unseen
powers of darkness. Those who desire to be in harmony with the heavenly agencies
should be intensely in earnest to do God's will. They must give no place
whatever to Satan and his angels. “But
unless we are constantly on guard, we shall be overcome by the enemy. Although a
solemn revelation of God's will concerning us has been revealed to all, yet a
knowledge of His will does not set aside the necessity of offering earnest
supplications to Him for help, and of diligently seeking to cooperate with Him
in answering the prayers offered. He accomplishes His purposes through human
instrumentalities (MS 95, 1903).”—6 Bible Commentary, 1119:1-2. “Satan
had accused Jacob before the angels of God, claiming the right to destroy him
because of his sin; he had moved upon Esau to march against him; and during the
patriarch's long night of wrestling, Satan endeavored to force upon him a sense
of his guilt, in order to discourage him, and break his hold upon God. When in
his distress Jacob laid hold of the Angel, and made supplication with tears, the
heavenly Messenger, in order to try his faith, also reminded him of his sin, and
endeavored to escape from him. But Jacob would not be turned away. He had
learned that God is merciful, and he cast himself upon His mercy. He pointed
back to his repentance for his sin, and pleaded for deliverance. As he reviewed
his life, he was driven almost to despair; but he held fast the Angel, and with
earnest, agonizing cries urged his petition until he prevailed. “Such
will be the experience of God's people in their final struggle with the powers
of evil. God will test their faith, their perseverance, their confidence in His
power to deliver them. Satan will endeavor to terrify them with the thought that
their cases are hopeless; that their sins have been too great to receive pardon.
They will have a deep sense of their shortcomings, and as they review their
lives their hopes will sink. But remembering the greatness of God's mercy, and
their own sincere repentance, they will plead His promises made through Christ
to helpless, repenting sinners. Their faith will not fail because their prayers
are not immediately answered. They will lay hold of the strength of God, as
Jacob laid hold of the Angel, and the language of their souls will be, ‘I will
not let Thee go, except Thou bless me.’ “Had
not Jacob previously repented of his sin in obtaining the birthright by fraud,
God could not have heard his prayer and mercifully preserved his life. So in the
time of trouble, if the people of God had unconfessed sins to appear before them
while tortured with fear and anguish, they would be overwhelmed; despair would
cut off their faith, and they could not have confidence to plead with God for
deliverance. But while they have a deep sense of their unworthiness, they will
have no concealed wrongs to reveal. Their sins will have been blotted out by the
atoning blood of Christ, and they cannot bring them to remembrance. “Satan
leads many to believe that God will overlook their unfaithfulness in the minor
affairs of life; but the Lord shows in His dealing with Jacob that He can in no
wise sanction or tolerate evil. All who endeavor to excuse or conceal their
sins, and permit them to remain upon the books of heaven, unconfessed and
unforgiven, will be overcome by Satan. The more exalted their profession, and
the more honorable the position which they hold, the more grievous is their
course in the sight of God, and the more certain the triumph of the great
adversary. “Yet
Jacob's history is an assurance that God will not cast off those who have been
betrayed into sin, but who have returned unto Him with true repentance. It was
by self-surrender and confiding faith that Jacob gained what he had failed to
gain by conflict in his own strength. God thus taught His servant that divine
power and grace alone could give him the blessing he craved. Thus it will be
with those who live in the last days. As dangers surround them, and despair
seizes upon the soul, they must depend solely upon the merits of the atonement.
We can do nothing of ourselves. In all our helpless unworthiness we must trust
in the merits of the crucified and risen Saviour. None will ever perish while
they do this. The long, black catalogue of our delinquencies is before the eye
of the Infinite. The register is complete; none of our offenses are forgotten.
But He who listened to the cries of His servants of old, will hear the prayer of
faith and pardon our transgressions. He has promised, and He will fulfill His
word. “Jacob
prevailed because he was persevering and determined. His experience testifies to
the power of importunate prayer. It is now that we are to learn this lesson of
prevailing prayer, of unyielding faith. The greatest victories to the church of
Christ or to the individual Christian are not those that are gained by talent or
education, by wealth or the favor of men. They are those victories that are
gained in the audience chamber with God, when earnest, agonizing faith lays hold
upon the mighty arm of power.” —Patriarchs and Prophets,
201:03-203:01. “He
who blessed the nobleman at Capernaum is just as desirous of blessing us. But
like the afflicted father, we are often led to seek Jesus by the desire for some
earthly good; and upon the granting of our request we rest our confidence in His
love. The Saviour longs to give us a greater blessing than we ask; and He delays
the answer to our request that He may show us the evil of our own hearts, and
our deep need of His grace. He desires us to renounce the selfishness that leads
us to seek Him. Confessing our helplessness and bitter need, we are to trust
ourselves wholly to His love. “The
nobleman wanted to see the fulfillment of his prayer before he should believe;
but he had to accept the word of Jesus, that his request was heard, and the
blessing granted. This lesson we also have to learn. Not because we see or feel
that God hears us, are we to believe. We are to trust in His promises. When we
come to Him in faith, every petition enters the heart of God. When we have asked
for His blessing, we should believe that we receive it, and thank Him that we
have received it. Then we are to go about our duties, assured that the blessing
will be realized when we need it most. When we have learned to do this, we shall
know that our prayers are answered. God will do for us ‘exceeding
abundantly,’ ‘according to the riches of His glory,’ and ‘the working of
His mighty power.’ [Eph. 3:20, 16; 1:19.]”—The Desire of Ages,
200:03-04. “In
some instances of healing, Jesus did not at once grant the blessing sought. But
in the case of leprosy, no sooner was the appeal made than it was granted. When
we pray for earthly blessings, the answer to our prayer may be delayed, or God
may give us something other than we ask, but not so when we ask for deliverance
from sin. It is His will to cleanse us from sin, to make us His children, and to
enable us to live a holy life. Christ ‘gave Himself for our sins, that He
might deliver us from this present evil world, according to the will of God and
our Father.’ And "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 hear
us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we desire of Him.
[Gal. 1:4; 1 Jn 5:14, 15.] ‘If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to
forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.’ [1 Jn
1:9.]”—The Desire of Ages, 266:02. “At
that time there was faith that brought answers to prayer—faith that had
respect to the recompense of reward. Like showers of rain upon the thirsty
earth, the Spirit of grace descended upon the earnest seekers. Those who
expected soon to stand face to face with their Redeemer felt a solemn joy that
was unutterable. The softening, subduing power of the Holy Spirit melted the
heart as His blessing was bestowed in rich measure upon the faithful, believing
ones. “Carefully
and solemnly those who received the message came up to the time when they hoped
to meet their Lord. Every morning they felt that it was their first duty to
secure the evidence of their acceptance with God. Their hearts were closely
united, and they prayed much with and for one another. They often met together
in secluded places to commune with God, and the voice of intercession ascended
to heaven from the fields and groves. The assurance of the Saviour's approval
was more necessary to them than their daily food; and if a cloud darkened their
minds, they did not rest until it was swept away. As they felt the witness of
pardoning grace, they longed to behold Him whom their souls loved.”—The
Great Controversy, 402:03-403:01. “
‘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 hear us, whatsoever
we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we desired of Him.' God has
appointed the angels that do His will to respond to the prayers of the meek of
the earth, and to guide His ministers with counsel and judgment. Heavenly
agencies are constantly seeking to impart grace and strength and counsel to
God's faithful children, that they may act their part in the work of
communicating light to the world. The wonderful sacrifice of Christ has made it
possible for every man to do a special work. When the worker receives wisdom
from the only true source, he will become a pure channel of light and blessing;
for he will receive his capability for service in rich currents of grace and
light from the throne of God.”—Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel
Workers, 484:02. “Some
have asked me, ‘Why should we have sanitariums? Why should we not, like
Christ, pray for the sick, that they may be healed miraculously?’ I have
answered, ‘Suppose we were able
to do this in all cases; how many would appreciate the healing? Would those who
were healed become health reformers, or continue to be health destroyers?’ "Jesus
Christ is the Great Healer, but He desires that by living in conformity with His
laws we may cooperate with Him in the recovery and the maintenance of health.
Combined with the work of healing there must be an imparting of knowledge of how
to resist temptations. Those who come to our sanitariums should be aroused to a
sense of their own responsibility to work in harmony with the God of truth. "We
cannot heal. We cannot change the diseased conditions of the body. But it is our
part, as medical missionaries, as workers together with God, to use the means
that He has provided. Then we should pray that God will bless these agencies. We
do believe in a God; we believe in a God who hears and answers prayer. He has
said, `Ask, and ye shall receive; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall
be opened unto you.' “—Medical Ministry,
13:1-3. “Many
have expected that God would keep them from sickness merely because they have
asked Him to do so. But God did not regard their prayers, because their faith
was not made perfect by works. God will not work a miracle to keep those from
sickness who have no care for themselves, but are continually violating the laws
of health and make no efforts to prevent disease. When we do all we can on our
part to have health, then may we expect that the blessed results will follow,
and we can ask God in faith to bless our efforts for the preservation of health.
He will then answer our prayer, if His name can be glorified thereby. But let
all understand that they have a work to do. God will not work in a miraculous
manner to preserve the health of persons who are taking a sure course to make
themselves sick, by their careless inattention to the laws of health. “Those
who will gratify their appetite, and then suffer because of their intemperance,
and take drugs to relieve them, may be assured that God will not interpose to
save health and life which are so recklessly periled. The cause has produced the
effect. Many, as their last resort, follow the directions in the word of God,
and request the prayers of the elders of the church for their restoration to
health. God does not see fit to answer prayers offered in behalf of such, for He
knows that if they should be restored to health, they would again sacrifice it
upon the altar of unhealthy appetite.”—Medical Ministry, 13:01-14:01. “Let
us study our Bibles, and teach the words of truth. Let us do as Christ's
apostles did; let us offer prayer for the sick, for there are many who cannot
have the advantages of our sanitariums. The Lord will remove infirmities in
answer to prayer. Gospel ministers should be able to present the subject of
health reform in its simplicity. If this phase of present truth is presented in
a clear, simple, Christlike manner, it will have an effect upon the people.
There will be a response from many hearts.—Letter 128, 1909.”—Medical
Ministry, 242:02. “It
is labor lost to teach people to look to God as a healer of their infirmities,
unless they are taught also to lay aside unhealthful practices. In order to
receive His blessing in answer to prayer, they must cease to do evil and learn
to do well. Their surroundings must be sanitary, their habits of life correct.
They must live in harmony with the law of God, both natural and spiritual. “Those
who desire prayer for their restoration to health, it should be made plain that
the violation of God's law, either natural or spiritual, is sin, and that in
order for them to receive His blessing, sin must be confessed and forsaken. “The
Scripture bids us, ‘Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for
another, that ye may be healed.’ James 5:16. To the one asking for prayer, let
thoughts like these be presented: `We cannot read the heart, or know the secrets
of your life. These are known only to yourself and to God. If you repent of your
sins, it is your duty to make confession of them.' Sin of a private character is
to be confessed to Christ, the only mediator between God and man. For ‘if any
man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.’ 1
John 2:1. Every sin is an offense against God and is to be confessed to Him
through Christ. Every open sin should be as openly confessed. Wrong done to a
fellow being should be made right with the one who has been offended. If any who
are seeking health have been guilty of evilspeaking, if they have sowed discord
in the home, the neighborhood, or the church, and have stirred up alienation and
dissension, if by any wrong practice they have led others into sin, these things
should be confessed before God and before those who have been offended. ‘If we
confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse
us from all unrighteousness.’ 1 Jn 1:9. “When
wrongs have been righted, we may present the needs of the sick to the Lord in
calm faith, as His Spirit may indicate. He knows each individual by name, and
cares for each as if there were not another upon the earth for whom He gave His
beloved Son. Because God's love is so great and so unfailing, the sick should be
encouraged to trust in Him and be cheerful. To be anxious about themselves tends
to cause weakness and disease. If they will rise above depression and gloom,
their prospect of recovery will be better; for `the eye of the Lord is upon
them' `that hope in His mercy.' Ps. 33:18. “In
prayer for the sick it should be remembered that ‘we know not what we should
pray for as we ought.’ Rom. 8:26. We do not know whether the blessing we
desire will be best or not. Therefore our prayers should include this thought:
‘Lord, thou knowest every secret of the soul. Thou art acquainted with these
persons. Jesus, their Advocate, gave His life for them. His love for them is
greater than ours can possibly be. If, therefore, it is for Thy glory and the
good of the afflicted ones, we ask, in the name of Jesus, that they may be
restored to health. If it be not Thy will that they may be restored, we ask that
Thy grace may comfort and Thy presence sustain them in their sufferings.’ “God
knows the end from the beginning. He is acquainted with the hearts of all men.
He reads every secret of the soul. He knows whether those for whom prayer is
offered would or would not be able to endure the trials that would come upon
them should they live. He knows whether their lives would be a blessing or a
curse to themselves and to the world. This is one reason why, while presenting
our petitions with earnestness, we should say, ‘Nevertheless not my will, but
Thine, be done.’ Luke 22:42. Jesus added these words of submission to the
wisdom and will of God when in the Garden of Gethsemane He pleaded, ‘O My
Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me.’ Matt. 26:39. And if
they were appropriate for Him, the Son of God, how much more are they becoming
on the lips of finite, erring mortals! “The
consistent course is to commit our desires to our all-wise heavenly Father, and
then, in perfect confidence, trust all to Him. We know that God hears us if we
ask according to His will. But to press our petitions without a submissive
spirit is not right; our prayers must take the form, not of command, but of
intercession. “There
are cases where God works decidedly by His divine power in the restoration of
health. But not all the sick are healed. Many are laid away to sleep in Jesus.
John on the Isle of Patmos was bidden to write: “Blessed are the dead which
die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from
their labors; and their works do follow them.” Rev. 14:13. From this we see
that if persons are not raised to health, they should not on this account be
judged as wanting in faith. “We
all desire immediate and direct answers to our prayers, and are tempted to
become discouraged when the answer is delayed or comes in an unlooked-for form.
But God is too wise and good to answer our prayers always at just the time and
in just the manner we desire. He will do more and better for us than to
accomplish all our wishes. And because we can trust His wisdom and love, we
should not ask Him to concede to our will, but should seek to enter into and
accomplish His purpose. Our desires and interests should be lost in His will.
These experiences that test faith are for our benefit. By them it is made
manifest whether our faith is true and sincere, resting on the word of God
alone, or whether depending on circumstances, it is uncertain and changeable.
Faith is strengthened by exercise. We must let patience have its perfect work,
remembering that there are precious promises in the Scriptures for those who
wait upon the Lord. “Not
all understand these principles. Many who seek the Lord's healing mercy think
that they must have a direct and immediate answer to their prayers or their
faith is defective. For this reason, those who are weakened by disease need to
be counseled wisely, that they may act with discretion. They should not
disregard their duty to the friends who may survive them, or neglect to employ
nature's agencies for the restoration of health. “Often
there is danger of error here. Believing that they will be healed in answer to
prayer, some fear to do anything that might seem to indicate a lack of faith.
But they should not neglect to set their affairs in order as they would desire
to do if they expected to be removed by death. Nor should they fear to utter
words of encouragement or counsel which at the parting hour they wish to speak
to their loved ones. “Those
who seek healing by prayer should not neglect to make use of the remedial
agencies within their reach. It is not a denial of faith to use such remedies as
God has provided to alleviate pain and to aid nature in her work of restoration.
It is no denial of faith to co-operate with God, and to place themselves in the
condition most favorable to recovery. God has put it in our power to obtain a
knowledge of the laws of life. This knowledge has been placed within our reach
for use. We should employ every facility for the restoration of health, taking
every advantage possible, working in harmony with natural laws. When we have
prayed for the recovery of the sick, we can work with all the more energy,
thanking God that we have the privilege of co-operating with Him, and asking His
blessing on the means which He Himself has provided. “We
have the sanction of the word of God for the use of remedial agencies. Hezekiah,
king of Israel, was sick, and a prophet of God brought him the message that he
should die. He cried unto the Lord, and the Lord heard His servant and sent him
a message that fifteen years should be added to his life. Now, one word from God
would have healed Hezekiah instantly; but special directions were given, ‘Let
them take a lump of figs, and lay it for a plaster upon the boil, and he shall
recover.’ Isa. 38:21. “On
one occasion Christ anointed the eyes of a blind man with clay and bade him,
‘Go, wash in the pool of Siloam . . He went his way therefore, and washed, and
came seeing.’ Jn 9:7. The cure could be wrought only by the power of the Great
Healer, yet Christ made use of the simple agencies of nature. While He did not
give countenance to drug medication, He sanctioned the use of simple and natural
remedies.”—Ministry of Healing,
227:4-232:1. “When
we have prayed for the recovery of the sick, whatever the outcome of the case,
let us not lose faith in God. If we are called upon to meet bereavement, let us
accept the bitter cup, remembering that a Father's hand holds it to our lips.
But should health be restored, it should not be forgotten that the recipient of
healing mercy is placed under renewed obligation to the Creator.”—The
Ministry of Healing, pp. 229:01-233:02. “One
of the surest hindrances to the recovery of the sick is the centering of
attention upon themselves. Many invalids feel that everyone should give them
sympathy and help, when what they need is to have their attention turned away
from themselves, to think of and care for others. “Often
prayer is solicited for the afflicted, the sorrowful, the discouraged; and this
is right. We should pray that God will shed light into the darkened mind and
comfort the sorrowful heart. But God answers prayer for those who place
themselves in the channel of His blessings. While we offer prayer for these
sorrowful ones, we should encourage them to try to help those more needy than
themselves. The darkness will be dispelled from their own hearts as they try to
help others. As we seek to comfort others with the comfort wherewith we are
comforted, the blessing comes back to us. “The
fifty-eight chapter of Isaiah is a prescription for maladies of the body and of
the soul. If we desire health and the true joy of life we must put into practice
the rules given in this scripture.”—The Ministry of Healing, 256:2-3. |