Daniel’s Prayer

The Prophet Daniel, Michelangelo Buonarroti

Daniel was reading Jeremiah and the inspired words he read brought him to his knees in prayer.

Now I read what Daniel, under the inspiration of God wrote, and I am brought to my knees in prayer.

God speaks through His Word, and I respond in prayer; and yet, some times, like Daniel, my response should be accompanied with fasting.

I read and I pray, I read and I see my sin and repent, I read and I find promises and I find rest.

We kept on reading at the family table the book of Daniel, my son knew I love this chapter and asked Dad if I could read it. I did, and I found in his prayer, my prayer.

Now therefore, O our God, listen to the prayer of your servant and to his pleas for mercy, and for your own sake, O Lord, make your face to shine upon your sanctuary, which is desolate. O my God, incline your ear and hear. Open your eyes and see our desolations, and the city that is called by your name. For we do not present our pleas before you because of our righteousness, but because of your great mercy.  O Lord, hear; O Lord, forgive. O Lord, pay attention and act. Delay not, for your own sake, O my God, because your city and your people are called by your name.” (Ch 9:16-20 ESV)

Jesus had not come yet, however, Daniel, through the Holy Spirit knew why he could present himself  before the Almighty God in prayer. It was not because of his own righteousness; he knew this would be impossible, but because of God’s  great mercy, because he had been called by God’s name. This was the ground on which he stood firmly before a Just and Righteous God.

We can come to God, to our Father, because of Jesus’ name; if He has called you by your name, if you have heard his voice, do not delay your coming to Him in prayer; find His voice in the Scriptures, pray, see your heart in the light of the Word of God, and repent of your sins. His mercies are new today, His grace never ends, He is delighted in hear us calling on His name.

While Daniel was still praying, the Lord sent an angel to assure him that his prayer had been answered, that he was greatly loved!

An angel will not come to us anymore. We have  now a greater assurance that our prayer has been heard, we have Jesus’ precious words:

“In that day you will ask nothing of me. Truly, truly, I say to you, whatever you ask of the Father in my name, he will give it to you. Until now you have asked nothing in my name. Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full.”         John 16: 23.24 ESV

“Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened. Or which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone?  Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent?  If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him!”     Matthew 7:7-10 ESV

“Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours”     Mark 11:24 ESV

  “Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son.  If you ask me anything in my name, I will do it.”     John 14: 13- 14 ESV

“If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.” John 15:7 ESV 

“You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give it to you.”      John 15:16 ESV

May you hear his voice today through the reading of His Word and fall on your knees in prayer, to find His grace and never ending mercy.

Take God’s Word with you, Praying God’s Promises @ Challies
Read it Very Much, a great article by George Müller, find it at Penned Pebbles.

A Prayer for Today -As We Travel-

Ortelius’s map of the world, from 1601

“Lord keep us in the way we should go, and let no evil thing befall us;
let us have a prosperous journey by the will of God, and with thy favour let
us be compassed wherever we go as with a shield.


Let us walk in your way safely, and let not our foot stumble or dash against a stone.


Direct our way in everything and enable us to order all our affairs  with discretion, and the Lord send us good speed, and shew kindness to us.


And the Lord watch between us when we are absent, the one from the other.”


Matthew Henry, A Method of Prayer

Thoughts On Prayer -and some Quotes-

 Today I am very happy and grateful to my friend Lisa, for being willing to write in this space. She is the kind of friend who is always encouraging me to live a godly life, a life of prayer.

About ten years ago I read a sermon by 18th century theologian Jonathan Edwards, whom many people consider one of the greatest minds America has ever had, called “Hypocrites Deficient in the Duty of Prayer”. Since my prayer life as a young mother of three was not consistent, I read attentively, questioning whether I was a hypocrite. Since then I have sought to become more faithful to my Lord in prayer. I have considered the words of those mature Christians whom I respect to help me focus on becoming more engaged in prayer. Over the past year I have begun to see that prayerlessness is really a lack of belief in my Lord Jesus and His Word. Do I really believe He hears me? Do I really believe the prayer of the righteous man has great power as it is working (James 5:16)? If I do, then I will pray. As Wayne Grudem says in Systematic Theology,“If we pray little, it is probably because we do not really believe that prayer accomplished that much at all.”

So, I often say, “Lord, I believe… help my unbelief.” (Mark 9:24)

Some quotes that have helped me:

“Your Father sees… what is done in secret… He will reward you” Matthew 6

“One essential thing to grow in grace is diligence in the use of private means of grace: private prayer private reading of the Scriptures, and private meditation and self-examination. Here are the roots of true Christianity. Wrong here, a man is wrong all the way through!
There is another thing which is absolutely essential:that is, regular and habitual communion with the Lord Jesus… which can only be carried on by faith, prayer and meditation. We must seek to have personal intimacy with the Lord Jesus, and to deal with Him as a man deals with a loving friend. We must realize what it is to turn to Him first in every need, to talk to Him about every difficulty, to consult Him about every step, to spread before Him all our sorrows, to get Him to share in all our joys, to do all as in His sight, and to go through every day learning on and looking to Him. “To me to live is Christ” Phil. 1:21″                 J.C. Ryle, Holiness (pgs. 110, 113)

“Prayer is the most important action any of us can take for the cause of Christ in this world”.                                                                                                                          Franklin Graham

“Prayer is not about getting God to do my bidding, but the shaping and bending of my will until it aligns with His”                                                                                                      Barbara Hughes, Disciplines of a Godly Woman

“Prayer – secret, fervent, believing prayer – lies at the root of all personal godliness” William Carey

“Are you a hypocrite? (Matt 6:5) One way to tell is to compare the amount of time you spend in private prayer to the amount you spend in public prayer. As D.A. Carson rightly observes: ‘The person who prays more in public than in private reveals he is less interested in God’s approval than human praise. Not piety, but a reputation for piety is his concern.” Philip Ryken, When You Pray

“If there are no set and disciplined times of Bible reading and meditation and memorization, the spontaneity and communion with God by His Word (as stated in Psalm 1) will dry up.You must have disciplined, regular meeting with God for prayer. Early-morning prayer is decisively important (Mark 1:35). Win that victory the night before. The discipline to rise early is not as difficult as going to bed early the night before”                   John Piper,When I Don’t Desire God, How to Fight for Joy

“She rises while it is yet night and provides food for her household… Proverbs 31:15 , in conjunction with John 6:27 : Do not labor for the that perishes, but for the foodthat endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man willgive to you….and John 4:34: My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work”

“Prayer is a weapon. Paul speaks of the “weapons we wield” in II Cor. 10:4-5 “They are not merely human, but divinely potent to demolish strongholds.” The source of my doubts about the potency of prayer is not from the Holy Spirit. It is from the unholy spirit, the Destroyer Himself, urging me to quit using the weapon he fears so intensely”.
Elisabeth Elliot, Keep A Quiet Heart

Finally, one of the most powerful biographies I’ve read has moved me to consider who Jesus is and how He meets us in prayer. This excert is taken both from his book and John Piper’s Sermon: You Will Be Eaten by Cannibals! Lessons from the Life of John G. Paton

Courage in the Cause of Missions2000 Bethlehem Conference for Pastors

The promise had been given precisely in the context of the Great Commission: “Go and make disciples of all nations . . . and Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” Matthew 28:19-20. More than any other promise, this one brought Jesus close and real to John Paton in all his dangers. After the measles epidemic that killed thousands on the islands, and for which the missionaries were blamed, he wrote: “During the crisis, I felt generally calm, and firm of soul, standing erect and with my whole weight on the promise, ‘Lo! I am with you always.’ Precious promise! How often I adore Jesus for it, and rejoice in it! Blessed be his name” (p. 154).

The power this promise had to make Christ real to Paton in hours of crisis was unlike any other Scripture or prayer:

Without that abiding consciousness of the presence and power of my dear Lord and Savior, nothing else in all the world could have preserved me from losing my reason and perishing miserably. In his words, “Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world,” became to me so real that it would not have startled me to behold Him, as Stephen did, gazing down upon the scene. I felt His supporting power. . . . It is the sober truth, and it comes back to me sweetly after 20 years, that I had my nearest and dearest glimpses of the face and smiles of my blessed Lord in those dread moments when musket, club, or spear was being leveled at my life. Oh the bliss of living and enduring, as seeing “Him who is invisible”! (p. 117)

One of the most powerful paragraphs in his Autobiography describes his experience of hiding in a tree, at the mercy of an unreliable chief, as hundreds of angry natives hunted him for his life. What he experienced there was the deepest source of Paton’s joy and courage. In fact, I would dare to say that to share this experience and call others to enjoy it was the reason that he wrote the story of his life. with the words, “What I write here is for the glory of God” (p. 2). That is true. But God gets glory when his Son is exalted. And his Son his exalted when we cherish him above all things. That is what this story is about.

Being entirely at the mercy of such doubtful and vacillating friends, I, though perplexed, felt it best to obey. I climbed into the tree and was left there alone in the bush. The hours I spent there live all before me as if it were but of yesterday. I heard the frequent discharging of muskets, and the yells of the Savages. Yet I sat there among the branches, as safe as in the arms of Jesus. Never, in all my sorrows, did my Lord draw nearer to me, and speak more soothingly in my soul, than when the moonlight flickered among those chestnut leaves, and the night air played on my throbbing brow, as I told all my heart to Jesus. Alone, yet not alone! If it be to glorify my God, I will not grudge to spend many nights alone in such a tree, to feel again my Savior’s spiritual presence, to enjoy His consoling fellowship. If thus thrown back upon your own soul, alone, all alone, in the midnight, in the bush, in the very embrace of death itself, have you a Friend that will not fail you then? (p. 200)

Lisa.

On Prayer and C.H Spurgeon

I have been reading Spurgeon; A New Biography by Arnold Dallimore, as a response to an invitation by Challies.

C.H. Spurgeon, by Robert Bucknell

It has been a great thing to read this book, because even though, I have always read Spurgeon’s sermons, this is the first time I am reading about his life.

If you have been following this blog, you know that we have been studying about prayer in our home during this summer, and reading this book has challenged my prayer life in so many ways.

Spurgeon’s childhood was full of memories of his mom praying for him. He knew his mom was praying for him at all times, and  she was a great influence in his spiritual life; now the question is, do my children know I am fervently praying for them?; am I doing so?

We, moms, need not to forget our duties before the Lord. He listens to our prayers, let’s come before the Throne of Grace and bring our children daily before the only One who can take care of their souls.

As he grew up, his life as a minister was  deeply rooted in a life of prayer. Dallimore says, “In view of the spiritual warfare in which the Christian is placed, he was concerned first of all that his people learn truly to pray”

Let us not forget to teach our children how to pray, praying will be an anchor to their souls when storms come; let us not forget to teach them the riches hidden in the prayer closet. Let us never start our day without a family prayer. We cannot call ourselves Christians if we do not live by prayer.

A minister once said of Spurgeon’s prayer life, “Prayer was the instinct of his soul and the atmosphere of his life. It was his ‘vital breath’ and ‘native air’. He sped on eagle’s wings into the heaven of God”. If we truly are on our way to Heaven, prayer should be our ‘vital breath’; either we live by prayer in communion with God, or we are fooling ourselves and are not on our way to Heaven.

Tomorrow my friend, Lisa, will be my guest blogger. Every time I sit and listen to her, my  heart is filled and she always encourages me to grow in my prayer life. She is a woman of prayer. I have stayed as a guest in her home and in there you can breath the ‘native air’ of the Christian.

On Prayer -From my Reading Corner-

 

I am reading a great book by John Bunyan, Prayer; and I  would like to share with you some of the lines that must be written down, and remembered, and lived.

“With God is plenty of grace, even as in a river there is plenty of water. 
A pond, a pool, a cistern, will hold much, but a river will hold more. 
From this throne {of grace} come rivers and streams of water of life, 
to satisfy those that come for life to the throne of God. 
Further, as by a river is showed what abundance of grace proceeds from God through Christ, 
so it shows the unsatiable thirst and desire of one that comes indeed aright to the throne of grace for mercy. 
Nothing but rivers will satisfy such a soul; 
ponds, pools, and cisterns, will do nothing…
They that are saved, are saved to receive abundance of grace; 
‘They which receive abundance of grace, and of the gift of righteousness, 
shall reign in life by One, 
Jesus Christ’-
Rom 5:7″

And he continues saying,

“What comes from this throne of grace is pure grace, 
and nothing else; 
clear grace, free grace, grace that is not mixed, 
nor need be mixed with works of righteousness which we have done; 
it is of itself sufficient to answer all our wants, 
to heal all our diseases, and to help us at a time of need. 
It is grace that chooses, 
it is grace that calls, 
it is grace that preserves, 
and it is grace that brings to glory: 
even the grace that like a river of water of life proceeds from this throne. 
And hence it is that, 
from first to last, 
we must cry, 
‘Grace, grace unto it!’ 
(Zec 4:7)”

The Secret of the Believers Boldness

Today I am so grateful and happy to have as a guest blogger, my friend Christina; you can find her at Heavenly Springs. Christina has a passion for Jesus and loves the body of Christ. 

I encourage you, grab your journal and be ready to jot down some notes! You will not regret it.

Christina at Heavenly Springs

 The Secret of the Believers Boldness

Among the many strategies that Satan uses to keep the saints from entering into the holy of holies is accusation. Revelation 12:10 depicts Satan as “the accuser of our brothers…who accuses them day and night before our God.”  In fact, the Greek word for devil is “diabolos” which means slanderer.  False accuser.

I can tell you from experience that a guilty and compromised conscience is no match for this kind of power. Many times I have been silenced in prayer by the “accuser’s” malice. Standing at my right hand, he reminds me of all that I am apart from Christ, which is totally and irreparably depraved!  I cannot argue!

Our fallen nature and sins make us so vulnerable to Satan’s accusations. But, there is a secret to the believers boldness in prayer!

Under the Old Covenant, priests were considered to be God’s mediators.  Their job was to bring men and women into the prescence of God. The only way to do this was to present a blood sacrfice. So, day after day, month after month, and year after the priests offered the blood of animals to atone for the sins of the people. But, at the cucifixion of Jesus, something happened that would forever change this pattern. The curtain of the Temple was rent in two and now, anyone could enter into the presence of God – but only through Jesus Christ, His Son. John MacArthur explains this well,

“In one perfect act of sacrifice, Jesus Christ accomplished what thousands upon thousands of sacrifices by a multitude of priests never accomplished.  He opened the way to God permanently, so that any man at any time by faith in Christ might enter into God’s presence.”

Did you get that?  Any man.  Any time. By faith in Christ. So now, I am learning, when Satan points an accusing finger at me, I point him to Christ.  No, I am not here of my own merit.  I don’t have any.  No, I haven’t any righteousness of my own either. I am guilty of many wicked and evil things, too many to count! But my righteousness is “that which comes through faith in Christ”. (Philippians 3:9). I am saved, not because of the righteous things I have done but because of his mercy. (Titus 3:5)

J.C. Ryle tells us in his book, “Old Paths” what the reason for our confidence is. He tells the secret! 

“Would you know the secret of the believer’s boldness in prayer? It is a marvel how a man that feels his sin so deeply as the believer does, can speak with the confidence the believer frequently does. How one that acknowledges he is “wretched, miserable, poor, blind, naked,” ruined, undone—who often does what he ought not to do, and leaves undone what he ought to do, and finds no spiritual health in him—how such a one as this can go before God with confidence, pour out his heart before Him freely, ask from Him what he requires day after day and not feel afraid—this is wonderful indeed. What is the secret of it? It is the intercession of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, whereby the true Christian knows his prayers are made acceptable, and received in the court of heaven.” 

 Christina

**************************

A little note…just so you know: I made a mistake and hit “publish” instead of “schedule”! This post should have appeared on Friday the 23th.