THE THRONE MATTERS TO GOD!
Reading Luke Ch. 18v1-8.
Preached By Ken Humphries,
Cookstown N.I.
INTRODUCTION:
Martyn Lloyd-Jones once wrote:
"Prayer is beyond any
question the highest activity of the human soul. Man is at
his highest when upon his knees he comes face to face with
God." (Studies in the Sermon on the Mount).
This from Dr. John MacArthur:
"The essence of prayer
is simply talking to God as you would to a beloved friend-without
pretence or flippancy. Yet it is in that very attitude toward
prayer so many believers have trouble.
Because communion with God
is so vital and prayer so effective in the fulfillment of
God's plan, the enemy attempts constantly to introduce errors
into our understanding of and commitment to prayer. Every
generation faces the necessity to reprioritise and purify
a corrupted or confused perception of prayer. For many, prayer
has been replaced with pragmatic action. Function overrides
fellowship with God; busyness crowds out communication. For
others, prayer lacks a sense of awe and respect. Their efforts
are flippant, disrespectful, and irreverent. Then there are
those who believe prayer is designed to make demands and claims
on God. They attempt to force him to do what they believe
he should do for them. Finally, for some prayer is nothing
more than a routine ritual.
You may hold prayer with the
utmost respect, yet you find your own practice lacks purpose
and vitality, so you dont spend time with God like you
know you should. While there many reasons Christians struggle
to pray, I believe there is one overriding factor." End
quote.
Dr. MacArthur then quotes Dr.
Martyn Lloyd-Jones. This is powerful!
"It is the highest activity
of the human soul, and therefore it is at the same time the
ultimate test of a man's true spiritual condition. There is
nothing tells the truth about us as Christian people so much
as our prayer life
Ultimately, therefore, a man discovers
the real condition of his spiritual life when he examines
himself in private, when he is alone with God
And have
we not all known what it is to find that, somehow, we have
less to say to God when we are alone than when we are in the
presence of others? It should not be so; but it often is.
So that it is when we have left the realm of activities and
outward dealings with other people, and are alone with God,
that we really know where we stand in a spiritual sense".
(Studies in the Sermon on the Mount)
It is a great problem with
us as a Christian body of people that we have so little to
say to our wonderful God; therefore we spend such little amounts
of time with him, or just dont bother taking time alone
with him at all.
My brothers and sisters, the
Throne, or prayer matters to God, it should therefore matter
to us.
Dr. Vance Havner quotes the
missionary Frazer!
"It is one of the most
subtle wiles of the foe to get us occupied with superficial
and surface concerns. For example, book selling, language
study, running mission stations, report writing, correspondence,
account keeping, building repairs, buying things, and even
reading etc. etc. etc. Although these are all very necessary
we can get tied up in trivial matters to the exclusion of
seeking the best God has for us. And of course the enemy is
delighted to see it so!" End quote.
A young pastor recently inducted
into his first church expressed similar sentiments. "I
am not a shepherd of the flock; I am a slave to inconsequential
details." End quote.
And my brothers and sisters,
it is the best God has for us we should be looking for, whatever
the cost.
Well pastor, how do we find
the best God has for us you reply!
Beloved I believe our text
gives a very clear answer to our question
Follow as we read together!
And he spake a parable unto
them to this end, that men ought always to pray, and not to
faint;
Saying, There was in a city
a judge, which feared not God, neither regarded man:
And there was a widow in that
city; and she came unto him, saying, Avenge me of mine adversary.
And he would not for a while:
but afterward he said within himself, Though I fear not God,
nor regard man;
Yet because this widow troubleth
me, I will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she weary
me.
And the Lord said, hear what
the unjust judge saith.
And shall not God avenge his
own elect, which cry day and night unto him, though he bear
long with them?
I tell you that he will avenge
them speedily. Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh, shall
he find faith on the earth?
Here Is Prayer That Persists!
"And he spake a parable unto them to this end, that men
ought always to pray, and not to faint;"
As artists give themselves
to their models, and poets to their classical pursuits, so
must we addict ourselves to prayer. End quote.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
As the dear Saviour instructs
his disciples here he is saying, if you would pray with impact
and effect you must display a persistence, a perseverance,
in prayer. Sadly, many of us who profess the name of Christ
as Saviour and Lord dont get serious about prayer until
a problem occurs in our own lives or in the life of a loved
one. Then we are inclined to pray intently, specifically,
and with a measure of persistence. But the Lord Jesus is instructing
his disciples here that that should be our attitude to prayer
at all times. The apostle Paul puts it like this in Ephesians
6v18.
"Praying always with all
prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto
with all perseverance and supplication for all saints;"
The Greek word translated "perseverance"
is from "proskartereo", a compound word made up
of "kartereo" ("to be steadfast" or "to
endure") and an added preposition that intensifies the
meaning. The verb means "to be courageously persistent,"
"to hold fast and not let go." It is used of Moses'
faithful endurance when he led the children of Israel out
of Egypt (Heb. 11v27).
To be devoted to prayer is
to earnestly, courageously, and persistently bring everything,
especially the needs of others, before God. Sensitivity to
the problems and needs of others, including other believers
who are facing trials and hardships, will lead us to pray
for them "night and day" as Paul did for Timothy
(2 Tim. 1v3). This from Dr. John MacArthur.
The Lord Jesus knew the power
of prayer. He knew that we would need power in prayer to live
fruitful lives for His Glory. So he gives us the story of
this Widow and the Unjust Judge.
Notice, how she keeps coming
again and again with her petition, she is not easily going
to give up with her request. Obviously she has an enemy who
is trying to get away from her what is rightfully hers. "Grant
me justice against my adversary," she said. But this
was a hot-headed, hardhearted man she was dealing with. He
had no fear of God and cared nothing about men. Those who
came before him came in fear and trembling unless they were
able to offer some bribe.
But this widow came, and kept
coming and would not stop coming until her petition was heard;
she would not easily give up. I believe beloved that is how
God would have us come. Remember Isaiah 62v6-7.
"I have set watchmen upon
thy walls, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace
day nor night: ye that make mention of the LORD, keep not
silence, and give him no rest, till he establish, and till
he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth."
Now thats the kind of
persistence our God appreciates.
In Isaiah 62 God's will is
to make his people a praise to his glory. Indeed this is always
God's will for his people at any time.
It certainly was His desire
for Israel. Isaiah 62v1.
"For Zion's sake I will
not keep silent, for Jerusalem's sake I will not remain quiet,
till her righteousness shines out like the dawn, her salvation
like a blazing torch."
It is evident for all of to
see that God's desire for Jerusalem and all Israel was that
they should show forth His glory through their daily living.
This is also God's will for
the church today. Ephesians 1v12.
"That we should be to
the praise of his glory, who first trusted Christ."
It is still God's desire for
the church today to be a praise to His glory. That is His
will for us. That is His will for the church. He desires that
we glorify Him through the church. So the people of God in
the Old Testament were called to pray to that end. We today
would be wise to do the same.
When we do so, we are praying
according to the will of God. God desires that His church
be a glorious church. He desires that through our good works
we might glorify Him. He desires for the church to bear fruit,
much fruit, fruit that remains, in order that He might be
glorified. He desires to see people saved, delivered, and
filled with His Spirit.
The key to prayer is praying
according to the will of God. For prayer to be effective,
it must be the kind of prayer that first seeks to discover
the will of God. Then we must commit ourselves to pray according
to that will. That kind of praying will be effective praying.
What is Gods will for
your life? What is Gods will for this church? Are you
taking the time to discover that will? Are you taking the
time to pray according to what God desires for His church?
And are you persistent in that
prayer? Isa. 62v7. It is God, who, reminds us through his
servant Isaiah, we are to give Him no rest until he make us
a praise in the earth. Ladies and gentlemen, that will take
persistent prayer.
"As it is the business
of tailors to make clothes and of cobblers to mend shoes,
so it is the business of Christians to pray." Martin
Luther.
Here Is Prayer That Is Precise!
"Avenge me of my adversary."
She had a very clear and precise
request in mind! She knew what she wanted and very clearly
presented her petition to the judge. She would make sure the
judge knew exactly what her request was.
The Apostle Paul presses us
to "devote yourselves to prayer, keeping alert in it"
Col. 4v2. He even went as far as warning the Ephesians in
6v18 to "be on the alert with all perseverance and petition"
as they prayed. Why? Well not only is there the command to
stay awake physically, but believers should be alert to what
they must be praying about. We sometimes pray such vague,
general prayers that are difficult for God to answer because
they do not really ask for anything specific. That's why precise
prayer is so important!
While its true, general praying
can be appropriate in certain instances, it is through His
answers to precise prayers that we see God put his love and
power on public display. The promise the Lord Jesus made was
very precise in
John 14v13-14.
"Whatever you ask in my
name, that will I do, that the father may be glorified in
the Son. If you ask me anything in my name, I will do it."
Peter learned that glorious
truth from his own failure to stay awake in the past when
he penned 1 Peter 4v7.
"Be of sound judgement
and sober spirit for the purpose of prayer."
Believers who have cultivated
the habit of prayer do so because of their specific, precise
concerns and desires of heart. It's when you are alert and
wide awake to the problems and needs of other believers you
can pray about them with meaning and sincerity of heart. But
when you do, then you can be on the look out for the answer
God sends, rejoicing when it comes, which in turn must lead
to praise and thanksgiving.
An intercessor means one who
is in such vital contact with God and with his fellowmen that
he is like a live wire closing the gap between the saving
power of God and the sinful men who have been cut off from
that power. Hannah Hurnard.
It is without doubt, in our
reading of God's Wonderful Word that we discover the real
preciseness of prayer.
Prayer releases God's power
Acts 1v14.
Prayer reveals God's secrets
Daniel 2v14.
Prayer replenishes God's church
Acts 4v32.
Prayer repels God's adversary
James 4v7.
Prayer reclaims God's ground
Zechariah 3v1-7.
Prayer renews God's people
Job 42v10.
Specific, or precise prayer
can revolutionise your own prayer life. When we start praying
specifically and precisely, God begins to encourage us with
specific, precise answers to our prayers which in turn gets
us excited about the wonderful power of prayer and strengthens
our faith in God. Its then we begin to believe with
a full heart and that cursed unbelief gets left far behind.
Its then, others become
infected and enthused by what is happening in our lives and
find a desire building on the inside of themselves for the
same kind of thing to happen. Dear folks, can you imagine
a church this size, and all of us with this kind of goal,
praying with specific prayers and seeing answer to those prayers.
What an amazing impact we would have on this town and surrounding
area.
Don't pray when you feel like
it. Have an appointment with the Lord and keep it. A man is
powerful on his knees. Corrie ten Boom.
3. Here Is Prayer That Is Passionate!
The greatest danger to persistent,
precise prayer is the habit of performance without passion.
Puritan pastor John Preston
captures the essence of this danger in these words:
"If it is performed in
a formal or customary and overly manner, you would be as good
to omit it altogether; for the Lord takes our prayers not
by number but by weight. When it is an outward picture, a
dead carcass of prayer, when there is no life, no fervency
in it, God does not regard it. Do not be deceived in this,
it is a very common deception. It may be a man's conscience
would be upon him, if he should omit it altogether. Therefore,
when he does something, his heart is satisfied, and so he
grows worse and worse. Therefore, consider that the very doing
of the duty is not that which the Lord heeds, but he will
have it so performed that the end may be obtained and that
the thing for which you pray may be effected.
If a man sends his servant
to go to such a place, it is not his going to and fro that
he regards, but he would have him to dispatch the business.
So it is in all other works. He does not care about the formality
of performance, but he would have the thing so done that it
be of use to him. If you send a servant to make a fire for
you, and he goes and lays some green wood together and puts
a few coals underneath, this is not to make a fire for you.
He must either get dry wood, or he must blow until it burns
and is fit for use.
So when your hearts are unfit,
when they are like green wood, when you come to warm them
and to quicken them by prayer to God, it may be you post over
this duty, and leave your hearts as cold and distempered as
they were before.
My beloved, this is not to
perform this duty. The duty is effectually performed when
your hearts are wrought upon by it, and when they are brought
to a better tune and temper than they were before.
If you find sinful lusts, your
business there is to work them out by prayer, to reason the
matter, to expostulate the thing before the Lord, and not
to give over until you have set all the wheels of your soul
right, until you have made your hearts perfect with God. And
if you find your hearts cleaving too much to the world, you
must wean them and take them off. If you find a deadness and
unaptness, an indisposition in you, you must lift up your
soul to the Lord and not give over until you are quickened.
And this is to perform the duty in such a manner as the Lord
accepts, otherwise it is hypocritical performance; for this
is hypocrisy, when a man is not willing to let the duty go
altogether, nor yet is willing to perform it fervently, and
in a quick and zealous manner.
He that omits it altogether
is a profane person, and he that performs it zealously, and
to purpose, is a holy man; but a hypocrite goes between both.
He would do something at it, but he will not do it thoroughly.
And, therefore, if you find you have carelessly performed
this duty from day to day, that you have performed it in a
negligent, perfunctory manner, know that it is a hypocritical
performance. Therefore when we spend so much time exhorting
you to a constant course in this duty, remember still that
you must perform it in such a manner that may have heat and
life in it, that it may be acceptable to God. End quote.
This widow was absolutely passionate
about her request. She cared with deep feeling what happened,
and she was for letting this judge know it.
"Grant me justice!"
she cried, "Grant me justice!" and although this
was a hot-headed, hardhearted man, she was determined to keep
on crying with a passionate cry. Remember the words of the
judge in v5.
"Yet because this widow
troubleth me, I will avenge her, lest by her continual coming
she weary me."
What was the result of such
passion? This judge, although unjust, finally gave in. It
would seem he most certainly would have given her justice
for a price, but she had no bribe, she could not pay him a
penny. He was without fear of God, so his conscience did not
bother him one little bit. He wasn't Jewish, so he would not
be disturbed about a poor Jewish widow. What could she do
for him? He had no respect for any other man, except for one
man, himself.
That of course is why he gave
in to this persistent, precise, passionate plea. He was worried
only about this widow "bothering" him "troubling"
him, he was concerned about her continual calling on him,
it was getting to him, it was troubling him, so rather than
having to listen to her again and again, he relented and granted
her request.
Now, dear folks, our God is
not like that. He encourages us to be persistent, precise
and passionate in our prayer requests, not in order to have
him give in to us but because that prayer request which comes
from the heart, in the eyes of the Lord, is seen by God as
serious business and when we get serious God gets serious.
We must never give up!
Jeremiah 33v3. "Call unto
me, and I will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty
things, which thou knowest not."
Dr. A.T.Pierson once said,
"there has never been a spiritual awakening in any country
or locality that did not begin in united prayer!"
Maybe just now youre
saying, well pastor, I'm just not very passionate about anything
in prayer. How can I become passionate?
I heard of a lawyer whose business
had gone to pieces because revival had come to town. He himself
was a Christian and while attending a revival meeting was
called upon to open in prayer. He prayed, "Lord, stir
up some strife amongst thy people, lest thy servant perish."
What moved him prompted him
to pray!
You see, we become passionate
when we catch God's vision. Proverbs 29v18.
"Where there is no vision,
the people perish."
Beloved, we desperately need
a vision of what God wants for our own lives, for our families,
for our church, and for our community. And the only way we
will catch that vision is to spend time alone with God. Sure
it is hard work but
it is worth it. As we call
upon God through the means of prayer, we link our minds with
the very mind of God.
An ordinary simple Christian
kneels down to say his prayers.... But if he is a Christian,
he knows that what is prompting him to pray is also God: God,
so to speak, inside him. But he also knows that all his real
knowledge of God comes through Christ, the man who was God-that
Christ is standing beside him, helping him to pray, praying
for him. You see what is happening? God is the thing to which
he is praying-the goal he is trying to reach. God is also
the thing inside him, which is pushing him on-the motive power.
God is also the road or bridge along which he is being pushed
to that goal. So that the whole threefold life of the three-personal
being is actually going on in that ordinary little bedroom
where an ordinary man is saying his prayers. C. S. Lewis.
Listen beloved, God has great
things planned for you, get into the mind of God and enjoy
the blessing of God, which makes rich.
Philippians 2v5. "Let
this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus."
Here Is Prayer That Is Prevailing!
The greatest desire of my life is to have power with God and
man, do you know, I can! God is not our enemy like this unjust
judge was to the poor widow woman, in fact the whole purpose
of that story is to show the difference between the unjust
judge and our Just and Holy God. Our God is loving, merciful,
kind, caring and a host of other adjectives I could use. He
has our interests at heart; the whole purpose of this story
being included in the cannon of Scripture is to encourage
us to call upon God and keep on calling in the Spirit until
he answers.
Someone has said, prayer may
not always get what we want but it will get for us what God
wants.
S.D.Gordon says, "the
greatest thing anyone can do for God and man is pray. It's
not the only thing, but it is the chief thing.
The great of this world today
are the people who pray. I do not mean those who talk about
prayer; nor those who say they believe in prayer; nor yet
those who can explain about prayer; but I mean those people
who take time to pray. End quote.
That of course is the test.
Will we like this dear widow keep on calling upon God or will
we easily give up when we dont get what we want when
we want.
The overriding thought in this
short passage of course, is faithfulness. Here is a dear lady
that will not cease to call even after she has called or requested
many times. She will continue with her cry to the unjust judge,
she will remain faithful to whatever has been left to her
charge, she will not give ground to the enemy who wants to
rob her of what is rightly hers.
V8 of our passage asks the
question, "When the son of man cometh, shall he find
faith on the earth?"
Beloved, if God's work is going
to be accomplished by God's people, it will be accomplished
by prayer and faith. If we enter a covenant of prayer with
God and by faith call continually on his Holy Name, that is
prevailing prayer and God always honours that kind of faithfulness.
Thats the kind of prayer God wants to answer. Thats
the kind of prayer that makes life exciting and expectant,
thats the kind of prayer that will change hearts, habits,
hurts, hostilities, homes, health and history.
Prayer is a rare gift, not
a popular, ready gift. Prayer is not the fruit of natural
talents; it is the product of faith, of holiness, of deeply
spiritual character. Men learn to pray as they learn to love.
Perfection in simplicity, in humility, in faith-these form
its chief ingredients. Novices in these graces are not adept
in prayer. It cannot be seized upon by untrained hands; graduates
in heaven's highest school of art can alone touch its finest
keys, raise its sweetest, highest notes. Fine material and
fine finish are requisite. Master workmen are required, for
mere journeymen cannot execute the work of prayer. E. M. Bounds.
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