Showing posts with label James 5. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James 5. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

Seeking the Lord’s Will



“Then you will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will hear you.  You will seek Me and find Me when you seek Me with all your heart.” -Jeremiah 29:12-13 (ESV).

Jeremiah foresaw a time when people would genuinely call upon the name of the Lord, turn to Him in dependence and faith, seek Him with the entire heart, and God will hear and answer.

We have gone through a period when America was challenged to “Pray the vote.”  No doubt, many earnestly prayed.  And when the results of the election were announced, many may have been greatly disappointed, wondering indeed if the Lord’s will had been done.

How can we go forward from this point, seeking still to seek God’s face and God’s will for our country?  James gave us a strong clue in James 4:15:  “Instead you ought to say, ‘If the Lord wills, we will do this or that.’”  We learn from history that when William Henry Harrison was elected president in 1840, he had great hopes for his leadership of our country.  On inauguration day, he delivered the longest speech of any presidential inaugural address before or since, lasting for one hour and forty-five minutes.  In the speech he gave detailed projections of what he hoped to accomplish in his tenure as president.  The day he delivered the speech was bitterly cold and he was not properly clad against the inclement weather.  Unfortunately, he contracted an infection that turned into pneumonia. A month later President Harrison died, not living to see the fulfillment of the dreams he had for his country.  “If the Lord wills”…is a stronger condition than we humans can comprehend or understand.  Man often plans and seeks to accomplish tasks he feels may be within the parameter of God’s will.  But sometimes the best-laid plans of mankind cannot be fulfilled.  God has an ultimate plan that will be worked out in His time and in His way.

In the meantime, what is left for believers to do?  Jeremiah had the right perspective.  Call upon the Lord.  Pray to Him.  Seek and find him.  Be so completely aligned with God that what we pray is a reflection of what God intends for the best answer for His people.  Is there a way we can know when we have done this?  Our prayers are surrounded by our genuine wish that God’s will be done.  Some serious problems still threaten the very stability of our beloved nation.  Even though laws have been passed that will allow abortion, same-sex marriage, and extravagant, above-budget spending and waste, these do not comply with God’s principles as set forth in His Word.  We cannot let up on our stand for what is right, nor can we fail to pray that these violations of God’s laws persist.  “The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working” (James 5:16).  We needed prayer before the election.  We need to continue faithfully in prayer.  We could change the words of the familiar spiritual to read:  “It’s my country, it’s my country, it’s my country, O Lord, standing in the need of prayer.”

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Requirements for Answered Prayer



“Come and hear, all you who fear God, and I will tell what He has done for my soul.  I cried to him with my mouth, and high praise was on my tongue. If I had cherished iniquity in my heart, the Lord would not have listened.  But truly God has listened; He has attended to the voice of my prayer.  Blessed be God, because He has not rejected my prayer or removed His steadfast love from me.” –Psalm 66:16-20 (ESV). “And He told them a parable to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart.” –Luke 18:1(ESV).  “The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working.” –James 5:16b (ESV).

November 6 marks the count-down date of the forty days of “Unite in Prayer” for America. Many prayers from many people have gone up to the  “Giver of every good and perfect gift.”  I trust that since we have become somewhat accustomed, with over a month’s emphasis of praying for God’s will to be done and for Him to give America another opportunity to live for and please Him, that we will not stop praying once we hear the results of this year’s election.  May we feel a keen responsibility to continue our earnest prayers, and at the same time a sense of commitment to seeking God’s face and asking for His guidance and blessings.  Much work lies ahead for our leaders and our citizens if we would right injustices and get America back from the brink of economic and moral degeneration.  We are all responsible for rebuilding America.  God is a “God of second chances” (which we need).

What are God’s requirements for our prayers to be answered?  The focal scriptures for today give us clues.  First is to fear God.  We recognize and acknowledge our God as Sovereign, Majestic, Omnipotent, Omniscient and Omnipresent.  He alone is worthy of reverence and honor.  Because of Who He is and what He does, we can give Him highest praise.  Then we must recognize that He will not cherish those who hold iniquity in their hearts, so we must approach Him after first repenting of our sins and cleansing our hearts.  If we are beset by resentment, anxiety and greed, or any other subtle and debilitating sin, God will not honor our prayers.  We approach Him, as the psalmist so aptly states, “with clean hands and a pure heart” (Psalm 24:4).  This cleansing should become a way of life for us, because as we pray daily we recognize our unworthiness in comparison to God’s holiness.  Only then are we in position for our prayers to be heard and for God to answer favorably.  How reassuring that God hears and answers His followers, and that His steadfast love surrounds and fills the believer!

Jesus, in teaching His disciples how to pray, gave them a parable that well illustrates what it means to “pray and not lose heart.”  Persistence in prayer was likened to the widow who kept going to the judge to plead for what she needed, and although the judge at first did not want to grant her plea, finally, because of her continual pleading, her request was granted.  Such persistence in prayer shows that we mean business with God and that we are willing to await His answer.  James writes a great truth about prayer.  We have probably memorized what he wrote from the King James Version: “The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much” (James 5:16).  In these ten words are bound up all the characteristics of earnest prayer:  coming from a righteous person and being fervent (intense, ardent, zealous), then it “avails much” (brings assistance, aid, profit, gain).  My plea is that we will be as fervent in praying or America following the election as we have been in the forty days leading up to it.  Let us measure our regular, daily praying by these standards of fearing God, cleansing ourselves of iniquity, being persistent, zealous and intense in our praying.  Alfred Lord Tennyson, English poet, wrote: “More things are wrought through prayer than this world dreams of.”

Prayer:  How earnest and ardent, Lord, have been these days of uniting in prayer.  Thank You for allowing us to know that we are not alone in approaching You, and that fervent prayer is heeded and answered by You.  Thank You, Lord.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.