“POWER IN PRAYER #4-REAL PRAYER BRINGS REAL ANSWERS”
MARK 11:24
INTRO: Real prayer is a serious concern, for we are speaking to the sovereign
Lord of all theuniverse, who is willing to move heaven and earth in
answer to sincere and reasonable prayer. Prayer is not a mechanical
duty, but a wonderful opportunity to develop a loving and caring
relationship with the most important Person in our lives. -- John
Bunyan in Pilgrim's Prayer Book, edited by Louis Gifford Parkhurst, Jr. Christianity Today, Vol. 30, no. 10.
Friends, what does prayer mean to you and I? Is it merely an empty
exercise or is it a earnest entreaty we offer to our God, Redeemer, and
friend? Is it a delight or is it a duty?
Charles Spurgeon wrote: “How many people there are who complain
that they do not enjoy prayer. They do not neglect it, for they dare not,
but they would neglect it if they dared, so far are they from finding
any pleasure in prayer...We spend the time alloted for prayer, but we
rise from our knees unrefreshed...There is no pouring out of our
needs to Him in the firm conviction that He will supply them...Many
Christians complain that they pray, not so much because it is a
blessed thing to be allowed to draw near to God, but because they
must pray, because it is their duty, because they feel that if they do
not, they will lose one of the sure evidences of their being Christians”
(Charles Spurgeon. The Power of Prayer in a Believer's Life. pp. 61-62).
Tonight, I want us to consider that REAL PRAYER BRINGS REAL
ANSWERS. If we want to make prayer REAL, if we want to make
prayer REWARDING, and if we make prayer REFRESHING we must
get back to REAL PRAYING. Brother Lawrence in Practicing The
Presence of God wrote: ”From the time when God became real to me, I
knew that communicating with him--two way communication--was
the most important thing in the world. To communicate with everyone
elseand be deaf and dumb to God is to turn our priorities upside
down, isn't it?” -- David Winter in Christian Classics in Modern English: Brother Lawrence's
Practicing the Presence of God. Christianity Today, Vol. 39, no. 13. I want us to note three
things these evening as we consider, REAL PRAYER BRINGS REAL
ANSWERS...
(1) THE ASKING
MARK 11:24a—“Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye
desire...”
A. THE BELIEVER'S PROVIDER—“Therefore I say unto you...”.Our
PROVIDER has unlimited POWER, unlimited RESOURCES, and unlimited
WISDOM. His Word promises—“But my God shall supply all your need
according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 4:19). He has
promised in Psalm 107:9—“For he satisfieth the longing soul, and filleth the
hungry soul with goodness.” All that we need we have in Jesus; we are
complete in Him...God's ability IS inexhaustible in supplying our needs. He
has exceeding and abundant supply, above anything we could think, ask, or
hope for. Heaven's storehouse is inexhaustible. (Oliver B. Greene. The Epistle of Paul The
Apostle to The Philippians. p. 130). It does not matter what our need is God can meet in
through His riches in glory by Christ Jesus!
B. THE BELIEVER'S PRIVILEGE—“What things soever ye desire...”.Charles
Spurgeon said, ”Unless there is a fullness and overflowing of desires, it is
not prayer. It may be something like prayer--the outward form or the bare
skeleton--but it is not the living thing, the all-prevailing, almighty thing
called prayer.” (Charles Spurgeon. The Power of Prayer in the Believer's Life. p. 62). Whatever
things you desire according to the perfect and revealed will of God. What a
privilege! But so often what a neglected privilege! Someone has said,
“Satan trembles when he sees The weakest saint upon his knees.” --
Hymnwriters William Cowper and John Newton.Leadership, Vol. 16, no. 1. I want you to notice the
worddesire. It is translated from a Greek word that means “to call for,
require, crave.” Two things are involved here:
- AN EARNESTNESS. According to the dictionary, earnestness means “having a intent direct in purpose; zealous.” (Funk & Wagnalls Standard Desk Dictionary. Volume 1, A-M. p. 200). Friend, does that describe your prayer life?
ILLUS: Three ministers were talking about prayer in general and the
appropriate and effective positions for prayer. As they were talking,
a telephone repairman was working on the phone system in the
background. One minister shared that he felt the key was in the
hands. He always held his hands together and pointed them upward
as a form of symbolic worship. The second suggested that real
prayerwas conducted on your knees. The third suggested that they
both had it wrong— the only position worth its salt was to pray
while stretched out flat on your face. By this time the phone man
couldn't stay out of the conversation any longer. He interjected, "I
found that the most powerful prayer I ever made was while I was
dangling upside down by my heels from a power pole, suspended
forty feet above the ground." --James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton:
Tyndale House Publishers, Inc, 1988), p. 418.
Sadly, many Christians are only earnest in prayer when they are in a similar situation as the telephone man. But God would have us to have earnestness in prayer at all times!
- AN EXPECTATION. When we have an expectation we are in the state of mind in which we believe that we will receive something. Jesus said in Matthew 21:22—“And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.”
ILLUS: At one time we had a 1956 station wagon that picked the most
inopportune times to refuse to start. My 4-year-old and I were about
to set off on an errand. Wanting to instill in him the need to trust
God for everything, I asked him to pray before we left. He closed his
eyes tightly and prayed, "Dear Lord, please help this piece of junk
start." -- Betty Traver, Great Bend, PA, Christian Reader, "Lite Fare."
I have many times felt like that 4 year-old. The things we desire we just need to ask God for.
(2) THE APPROACH
MARK 11:24b—“when ye pray, believe that ye receive them...”
A. THE ACTIVITY OF PRAYER—“when ye pray...”.This verse implies that we
shouldhave:
- SPECIFIC TIMES FOR PRAYER. Every believer should have set times throughout the day in which they approach the throne of grace. The psalmist said, “Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray, and cry aloud: and he shall hear my voice.” (Psalm 55:17). Sounds like a pretty good pattern to me. But not only this but we should always be in the spirit of prayer—“Pray without ceasing.” (1 Thessalonians 5:17). You are dependent on God for every good; without him ye can do nothing; feel that dependence at all times, and ye will always be in the spirit of prayer; and those who feel this spirit will, as frequently as possible, be found in the exercise of prayer. (Adam Clarke. Adam Clarke's Commentary On The Bible.e-Sword. Version 7.8.5. Copyright 2000-2007. Rick Meyers. All Rights Reserved Worldwide). The one concern of the devil is to keep Christians from praying. He fears nothing from prayerless studies, prayerless work, and prayerless religion. He laughs at our toil, mocks at our wisdom, but trembles when we pray. --Samuel Chadwick (1832-1917) (Edythe Draper, Draper's Book of Quotations for the Christian World (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1992). Entry #8985).
- SPECIAL TIMES OF PRAYER. There are times when we just have to stop what we are doing and pray. When life knocks you to your knees--well, that's the best position in which to pray, isn't it? -- Ethel Barrymore. Leadership, Vol. 16, no. 3.
B. THE AWARENESS IN PRAYER—“believe that ye receive them...”.Jesus said
that the things you desire when you pray you should “believe that you
receive them.” This means that you should believe that they are yours before
you receive them. Someone said, “Pray the largest prayers. You cannot
think a prayer so large that God in answering it, will not wish you had made
it larger. Pray not for crutches but for wings!” -- Phillips Brooks. Leadership,Vol. 12, no. 3.
We must expect GREAT THINGS from God because He is a GREAT GOD!
(3) THE ASSURANCE
MARK 11:24c—“...and ye shall have them.”
A. GOD'S PROMISES ARE FAITHFUL. When we pray according to the will of
God we are promised He will hear and answer us—“If ye shall ask any thing
in my name, I will do it.” (John 14:15). Our prayers are often motivated by
our own interests and desires. We like to hear that we can have anything.
But Jesus prayed with God’s interests in mind. When we pray, we should
express our desires, but we should want his will above ours. (Life Application Bible
Commentary: Mark. Copyright © 1994 by The Livingstone Corporation. Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. Wheaton,
Illinois. All rights reserved. Life Application is a registered trademark of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. Electronic
Edition STEP Files Copyright © 2002, Findex.com, Inc.).
B. GOD'S PROMISES ARE FRUITFUL. God will either give you what you ask,
orsomething far better. -- Robert M. McCheyne, Christian Reader, Vol. 32, no. 4. Prayer is the
key that unlocks all the storehouses of God's infinite grace and power. All
that God is, and all that God has, is at the disposal of prayer. --R. A. Torrey
(James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc, 1988), p. 425). The
question is, “do we believe that tonight?” We lie to God in prayer if we don't
rely on God after prayer. We must trust God He knows what we need but
desires for us to simply ask Him for our needs.
ILLUS: There is a story of a man who tried to weigh a prayer. He owned a little
grocerystore. It was the week before Christmas, shortly after World
War I. A tired-looking woman came into the store and asked for
enough food to make a Christmas dinner for the children. The grocer
asked her how much she could spend. "My husband did not come
back; he was killed in the War. And I have nothing to offer but a little
prayer," she answered. The storekeeper was not very sentimental nor
religious, so he said, half mockingly, "Write it on paper, and I will
weigh it." To his surprise, the woman took a piece of paper from her
pocket and handed it to the man, saying, "I wrote it during the night
while watching over my sick baby." The grocer took the piece of paper
before he could recover from his surprise and, because other
customers were watching and had heard his remarks, he placed the
unread prayer on the weight side of the old-fashioned scales. Then he
began to pile food on the other side; but to his amazement, the scale
would not go down. He became angry and flustered and finally said,
“Well, that's all the scale will hold. Here's a bag; you will have to put it
in yourself, I am busy." With trembling hands the woman filled the
bag, and through moist eyes expressed her gratitude and departed.
After that the store was empty of customers, the grocer examined the
scales. Yes, they were broken and they had become broken just in time
for God to answer the prayer of the woman. But as the years passed,
the grocer often wondered about the incident. Why did the woman
come at just the right time? Why had she already written the prayer in
such a way as to confuse the grocer so that he did not examine the
scales? The grocer is an old man now, but the weight of the paper still
lingers with him. He never saw the woman again, nor had he seen her
before that day. Yet he remembers her more than any of his
customers. And he treasures the slip of paper upon which the
woman's prayer had been written-simple words, but from a heart of
faith, "Please, Lord, give us this day our daily bread." (2000+ Bible Illustrations.
e- Sword. Version 7.8.5. Copyright 2000-2007. Rick Meyers. All Rights Reserved Worldwide).
CLOSING: REAL PRAYER BRINGS REAL ANSWERS. Friend, let me ask you
tonight, “Do you really know how to pray? If so, Do you offer
believingprayer when you pray?” Prayer is like a computer—you
can only get out of it what you put into it. True prayer is a way of
life, not just an emergency detour. (Croft M. Pentz, TheComplete Book of Zingers
(Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1990).
We have looked tonight at THE ASKING, THE APPROACH, and THE
ASSURANCE. The question tonight remains: “Do you really know
how to pray? If so, Do you offer believing prayer when you pray?”
Prepared by Brother Bryan L. Browning, Pastor of Beechmont Baptist Church, Beechmont, KY for Sunday Evening, February 18, 2007.