| "...Every
one that asketh
receiveth..."
-- Luke 11:10
When
our Lord
uttered these
immortal words
He gave to
every child of
God the
inalienable
right to pray.
He impressed
His disciples
with this fact
by asking them
some pertinent
questions:
"If a
son shall ask
bread of any of
you that is a
father, will he
give him a
stone? or if he
ask a fish,
will he for a
fish give him a
serpent? Or if
he shall ask an
egg, will he
offer him a
scorpion? If ye
then, being
evil, know how
to give good
gifts unto your
children: how
much more shall
your heavenly
Father give the
Holy Spirit to
them that ask
him?" --
v. 11-13.
If
the father
loves his son
it would be
utterly
inconsistent
with his nature
to give his
child a stone,
or a snake, or
a stinging
scorpion
instead of
bread. The
father's answer
to his son's
request will be
granted
according to
the measure of
his love for
his child. It
is the most
natural thing
in all the
world for a
father to
listen to the
requests of his
family. When
Jesus said,
"...Any of
you that is a
father ,"
he compares a
man's love for
his children to
God's love for
His children.
He asks us to
look up from
our earthly
fathers, and
calculate how
much more the
heavenly Father
will be moved
to give good
gifts to His
children. Jesus
is teaching us
to understand
that as much as
God's goodness
exceeds the
goodness of
mortal man, so
much greater is
our assurance
that He will
grant our
childlike
petitions.
Every
child of God
from the
youngest to the
oldest has a
right to ask
the Father for
the bread of
life. Every
child,
irrespective of
age, sex, or
race, can come
boldly to the
throne of
grace, and find
grace to help
in time of
need. There are
no
underprivileged
children in
God's family.
The crippled,
the weak, and
the sick
children have a
right to ask
the heavenly
Father for the
living bread
from heaven.
The
Saviour would
have us
perceive the
imperishable
truth that,
"...Every
one that asketh receiveth..."
It is utterly
unthinkable
that our loving
Father would
ignore our
earnest
petitions. He
will not remain
silent and
unmoved when
His own
children are
weeping before
Him in earnest
petitions.
A
missionary was
telling about
the sufferings
endured while a
prisoner during
the war. He
said that the
crying of his
starving family
caused him to
suffer more
than all the
cruel and
barbarous
treatment
received at the
hands of the
savage and
inhuman guards.
When we
understand how
this godly man
was moved by
the constant
crying of his
famishing
family, we can
comprehend how
our heavenly
Father can be
moved to answer
the unceasing
prayers of His
family. It was
not possible
for the
faithful
missionary to
grant the
urgent requests
of his
children, but
it is possible
for our
heavenly Father
to grant the
requests of His
children.
Jesus
teaches us that
prayer has a
human side and
a divine side.
The human side
is the asking,
and the divine
side is the
giving. The two
halves which
make up the
whole of prayer
are the asking
and the
receiving. Our
asking and the
Fathers'
answering
belong to each
other. Our
requests on
earth and the
Father's answer
in heaven are
meant for each
other. If we
believe that
the Father has
made an ample
provision for
the needs of
His children,
then we must
also believe
that He will
surely give
them all good
gifts according
to the promise.
Jesus
teaches us to
come to Him day
by day to
receive the
bread of life
to sustain us
in this world.
He wills day by
day to do for
us what we ask
in simple
faith.
When
the Master
said,
"...Every
one that asketh receiveth...,"
He stressed the
fact that we
are not to rest
without an
answer to our
petitions. He
is saying that
it is the
Father's will,
and the rule of
His house to
grant the
requests of His
believing
children.
When
no answer is
received we are
often disposed
to say that it
is not the will
of God to give
us the answer.
We will find it
much easier to
yield to our
own false
reasoning about
the answer to
prayer than it
is to shake off
our lethargy
and seek God
until the
answer is
obtained. There
are so many
persons who
rest content
without the
distinct
experience of
answered
prayer. This
distressing
fact reveals
the serious
deterioration
of Christian
life in these
last days.
These unhappy
souls pray
daily, they ask
many things,
and devoutly
hope that some
of their
prayers will be
answered. They
apparently do
not know that
it is the norm
of spiritual
life to receive
definite
answers to
prayer. They
obviously do
not know that
the heavenly
Father wills
day by day to
do for us what
we ask in
faith.
We
must take the
words of Jesus
just as they
were spoken. We
must not allow
human reasoning
to weaken the
force of His
teachings about
our asking and
receiving. We
owe it to
ourselves to
take sufficient
time while
praying, to
listen to His
voice, and
believe the
truth that
"Every one
that asketh receiveth."
We
should not make
our many
failures of the
past the
measure of our
faith for the
present. We
must hold fast
the assuring
fact that the
effectual
fervent prayer
of God's
obedient child
availeth much.
The
son's request
for bread is
based on his
relationship to
the father. It
is by virtue of
this
relationship
that the son
has the
inalienable
right to expect
his father to
answer his
requests. When
Jesus speaks of
the son asking
bread of his
father, He is
speaking of an
obedient son.
The son that
finds no
pleasure in
obedience to
his father and
presumes that
he can still
ask and receive
what he desires
will certainly
be
disappointed. A
son who loves
and honors his
father will
find it is the
father's good
pleasure to
answer his
daily requests.
Consistent
living on the
part of God's
people is the
condition for
obtaining the
answer to
prayer. God's
precepts
requiring
obedience in
our living, and
His promises
relating to our
praying are
inseparable.
We
can certainly
count on God's
fulfilling His
promise to
answer prayer
when we obey
His sovereign
will in all
things. We
should take
time to
meditate on the
tenderness and
love the
heavenly Father
has for His
obedient
children.
Much
of our
difficulty in
praying is
removed when we
think on the
happy
relationship
existing
between an
obedient child
and a loving
heavenly
Father. When He
sees His child
with sincere
purpose and
steady will
seeking
diligently in
everything to
be and live as
a child, then
our prayers
will prevail
with Him as the
prayer of an
obedient child.
It
requires
considerable
time to
comprehend
fully the
teachings of
Jesus regarding
the inherent
principles of
effectual
praying. If
God's people
will take
sufficient time
to meditate on
the essentials
of prevailing
prayer, they
will be
rewarded richly
for the hours
spent in the
school of
Christ. When
once we grasp
the gracious
truth contained
in the words of
Jesus, and take
a firm hold on
the promises
relating to
prayer, we will
then realize
the meaning of
His words,
"...Every
one that asketh
receiveth".
We firmly
believe that
the Master
stated the
truth when He
said,
"...Every
one that asketh receiveth..."
Nevertheless we
are confronted
frequently with
the startling
and
disconcerting
fact that we do
not always
receive
definite answer
to our prayers.
We find it
exceedingly
difficult to
reconcile these
disturbing
facts with the
explicit
statement of
Jesus regarding
the answer to
our prayers.
When
we consider the
Master's
teachings about
prayer, we must
not strive to
make them
conform to our
wishful
thinking
regarding the
answer to our
prayers. It is
possible for us
to set our
heart on
obtaining
something we
greatly desire
for our own
personal
gratification,
and then
express our
keen
disappointment
because the
request was not
granted.
The
answer to our
perplexing
questions about
prayer will be
found when we
study the
Master's words
about the son
asking for
bread. We are
fully aware
that the son
cannot live
without bread;
he must have it
or perish.
However, there
are many things
the son may ask
which are not
as important to
life as food.
He may ask his
father for
money, or fine
clothing, or
toys. The
father may
consider it
wise to give
his son these
good gifts; and
again he might
deem it best
for the son's
own good to
withhold these
things
requested; but
when the child
asks for food
it is a
different
matter of life,
because food is
a necessity.
There
are many good
gifts which our
heavenly Father
may deem it
wise to bestow
upon us, such
as good health,
prosperity, and
financial
security. If He
wills to
withhold these
things we must
submit to His
sovereign will
without
complaint.
Perfect health,
prosperity, and
earthly goods
are not
essential to
life in this
world. Our
relationship to
God does not
depend on these
creature
comforts. These
things cannot
impart to us
the moral
strength we
need to cope
with the trials
incident to
life in this
evil world. It
requires the
"Bread of
life" to
give the
spiritual
strength to
sustain us in
these last
days. We are
fully assured
that our Father
will give us
the living
bread from
heaven to keep
us strong in
faith,
undaunted in
courage, and
invincible in
hope.
The
grand climax of
our Lord's
discourse on
prayer was
reached when He
disclosed the
Father's
promise to give
the Holy Spirit
to His praying
children. He
would have us
understand that
our urgent
requests for
the bread from
heaven are
answered by the
Father's gift
of the Spirit.
He
is teaching us
that the Spirit
is given to the
children of God
for the express
purpose of
sustaining and
satisfying
life. Our
incessant
demands for
spiritual food
are supplied by
the indwelling
Spirit. Our
daily prayer
should be,
"Lord,
evermore give
us this
bread."
The answer from
heaven
is,
"...Every
one that asketh receiveth..."
|