“For, behold, he
prayeth.” Acts 9:11
Suggested Further
Reading: Colossians 4:2-12
Whenever a
Christian backslides, his wandering commences in his closet. I speak what I
have felt. I have often gone back from God—never so as to fall finally, I know,
but I have often lost that sweet savour of his love which I once enjoyed. I
have had to cry:
“What peaceful
hours I once enjoyed! How sweet their memory still!
But they have left an aching void, The world can never fill.”
But they have left an aching void, The world can never fill.”
I have gone up to
God’s house to preach, without either fire or energy; I have read the Bible,
and there has been no light upon it, I have tried to have communion with God,
but all has been a failure. Shall I tell you where that commenced? It commenced
in my closet. I had ceased, in a measure, to pray. Here I stand, and do confess
my faults; I do acknowledge that whenever I depart from God it is there it
begins. Oh Christians, would you be happy? Be much in prayer. Would you be
victorious? Be much in prayer.
“Restraining
prayer, we cease to fight; Prayer makes the Christian’s armour bright.”
Mrs Berry used to
say, “I would not be hired out of my closet for a thousand worlds.” Mr Jay
said, “If the twelve apostles were living near you, and you had access to them,
if this intercourse drew you from the closet, they would prove a real injury to
your souls.” Prayer is the ship which brings home the richest freight. It is
the soil which yields the most abundant harvest. Brother, when you rise in the
morning your business so presses, that with a hurried word or two, down you go
into the world, and at night, jaded and tired, you give God the fag end of the
day. The consequence is, that you have no communion with him.
For meditation: Jonah’s backsliding was accompanied by a total lack of prayer, even
when pagans were trying to pray (Jonah 1:5,6,14). God sometimes resorts to drastic measures
to bring the believer back to himself and to prayer (Jonah 2:1).
Sermon no. 16
25 March (1855)
25 March (1855)
C.H. Spurgeon
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