(I quoted A.B. Simpson in my last post. That quote was very good (which is why I used it!), but he had more to say about praying in the Spirit, which is also very good, and I wanted to share that as well.)
1. The Holy Spirit lays upon us the desire and burden of prayer. Sometimes we understand it; sometimes we do not. Sometimes it is a joyful consciousness of spiritual elevation; sometimes it is an unutterable and inarticulate groan. Sometimes it is a definite sense of need, a consciousness of personal defect, or a heart-searching sense of our own emptiness and failure. It is a blessed thing to “hunger and thirst after righteousness.” The sense of need is the shadow side of the blessing. Let us thank the Holy Spirit when He gives us the burden of prayer.
2. The Holy Spirit enables us to pray according to the will of God. He gives us direction in our prayers. He saves us from wasting our breath and asking at random. He illuminates our mind to understand the Scriptural foundations of prayer, and makes us understand the things that are agreeable to the will of God, enabling us to ask with confidence that it is His will, and that we have the petitions that we desired of Him.
3. The Holy Spirit gives us access into the presence of God. He creates for us the atmosphere of prayer. He gives us the sense of the Father’s presence. He leads us to the door of mercy and steadies our hand as we hold out the scepter of prayer, and reveals to us that inner world of divine things which none but he that feels it, knows.
4. The Holy Spirit enables us to pray in the name of Jesus. He shows us our redemption rights through the great Mediator, and coming in His name we can ask even as He, and humbly, yet confidently claim, “Father, I thank Thee that Thou hast heard me, and I know that Thou hearest Me always.”
5. The Holy Spirit enables us to pray in faith, “for He that cometh unto God, must believe that He is, and that He is the rewarder of those that diligently seek Him.”
He enables us when we pray to “believe that we receive the
things that we ask,” and to rest in the Master’s word, without anxiety or fear.
He witnesses to the heart the quiet assurance of acceptance and He sustains us
in the trial of our faith which follows, enabling us still to trust and not be
afraid.
6. The Holy Spirit enables us to pray the prayer of love, as well as the prayer of faith. The Holy Spirit leads us into the dignity and power of our holy priesthood, laying upon us the burdens of the Great High Priest, and permitting us to be partakers of “that which remaineth of the sufferings of Christ for His Body, the Church.” In this blessed ministry we are often made conscious of the needs of others, and permitted to hold up some suffering or tempted life in the hour of peril; and we shall find some day that many a life was saved, many a victory won, and many a blessing enjoyed through this hallowed ministry that reaches those we love by way of the throne, when we never could have reached them directly.
When we become wholly emancipated from our own selfish cares
and worries, and fully at leisure for the burdens of the Master, the Spirit is
glad to lay upon us the needs of the multitudes of God’s people, and the
burdens of the whole Church and Kingdom of Christ, so that it is possible to
have a ministry as wide as the world, and as high as that of our great High
Priest, before the Throne.
7. The Holy Spirit leads us into the spirit of communion, so that when we have nothing to ask we are held in the blessed silence and wordless fellowship in the bosom of God. This should become the very atmosphere of our being.
Finally, as we thus “pray in the Holy Spirit” we shall be enabled to “build ourselves up on our most holy faith,” we shall “keep ourselves in the love of God,” and we shall “look” in heavenly vision “for the mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.” And the benediction of this beautiful epistle shall be fulfilled in our lives. “Now unto Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy, To the only wise God our Savior, be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and forever. Amen.”
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