1854
Lecture XVI
The Primitive Prayer-Meeting
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Text.--Acts 1:14: "These all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication."
In the context we have an account of Christ's last interview with his disciples.
They had assembled at his request; he met them, "spoke to them of the things
pertaining to the kingdom of God;" commanded them not to depart from Jerusalem,
but to wait for the promise of the Father, assuring them that they "should be
baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence;" and then was taken up from
their sight. They returned to Jerusalem, went into an upper room, and there "all
continued with one accord in prayer and supplication." These, in brief, are
the circumstances of this wonderful prayer-meeting.
I propose to notice,
I. The object of this prayer-meeting;
II. Its characteristics;
III. Its results.
I. The object of this prayer-meeting.
The special object of this meeting was to pray for the outpouring of the Spirit upon
themselves and the world. It had been promised, even from Abraham, down the long
line of holy seers, that in connection with the advent of Christ, the Spirit should
be given. Christ reminded his disciples of this great promise and bade them tarry
in Jerusalem and wait for its fulfillment. He had given them their great commission,
to go forth into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature; but he would
have them plainly understand that they could do nothing without his Spirit, and therefore
they must by all means wait in Jerusalem till they had received this anointing of
the Father. That they might the better understand this baptism he referred to John's
mission and work, saying--"John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized
with the Holy Ghost, not many days hence." That baptism was only a type; this
was to be the very thing symbolized.
This meeting to pray for the descent of the Spirit continued not less than ten days.
From the Passover at which Christ suffered, he met with them on various occasions
during forty days; then ascended to heaven. The feast of Pentecost was, as its name
imports, just fifty days after the Passover. The interval from the ascension to the
Pentecost, ten days, was the duration of this remarkable prayer-meeting; for we are
told that when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were still "all with
one accord in one place."
II. Its characteristics.
You may think me censorious in having intimated that the ambition of leadership makes sects. I wish there was no truth in this intimation. But who does not know it to be but too sadly true!
III. Results.
In brief, these are soon told. Three thousand were converted under one short sermon.
The Holy Ghost fell on the disciples with great power, and from them the blessing
diffused itself on every hand to the thousands who believed. The little band found
themselves launched forth upon the greatest enterprise ever undertaken by mortals;
and withal, drawn into such relations of faith and sustaining strength towards God
and their ascended Savior as had never been realized on earth before. The conversion
of the world to Jesus had fairly begun and the mission of the Spirit was opened.
REMARKS.
This is doubtless to be taken as a model prayer-meeting--substantially, in its spirit
and leading circumstances, what a prayer-meeting ought to be. Why not? There is nothing
here that should not be in all prayer-meetings for objects of similar importance.
1. Yet who can fail to notice that most prayer-meetings are nearly the reverse of
this, in all their characteristic features? What do you see now in prayer-meetings
appointed to pray for the conversion of sinners? Only a little handful of Christians
present; the rest of the church pouring contempt on the very call for a meeting!
It is easy to see that this must be regarded by Christ as a real insult. A meeting
is called, yet but few have interest enough to attend! What would you think if, a
notice being given out for a meeting at our church to invite some distinguished personage
to come and visit us--say LaFayette, or Kossuth, or some one to whom the nation were
under the very greatest obligations; the call for a meeting is given out; it appears
in the daily papers; but when the hour arrives, only a very few are present! The
people do not come! Suppose this distinguished stranger is informed how thin this
meting is; will he come? Will he not deem the very call an insult? So when meetings
are appointed to invite the Lord Jesus, and almost none attend, will he come? Nay,
verily; why should he come? There is no unanimity in the invitation. The understanding
is they are not unanimous in inviting him to come. You will say, perhaps, that you
did not intend your absence to mean just that. You did not mean to say that you did
not want the Savior to come. You had your special reasons for being absent. You had
an excuse; but do you think such excuses would avail in the case of any distinguished
personage? Suppose the meeting had been called to invite General Washington; but
very few attend; yet they send on to him their excuses for non-attendance; they tell
him they were all very busy; some had sickness n their family, and some were taking
care of various home concerns; they really felt the highest respect for him, &c.,
&c. Would their apologies avail? Would it not be regarded as a downright insult
to ask so great a man to come among us, and yet in a called meeting to invite him,
have only a mere handful present?
Now does not this apply in the case of prayer to God? Indeed it does. The prayer-meeting
is specially called for the purpose of inviting him to come among us. It is important
to know who want him to come; how many they are; and how much they desire his coming.
The call of a meeting is the proper way to test and determine all these points. If
the result shows that but very few care enough about it to even appear at the meeting,
what can be expected but a failure in the great object of inducing him to make us
a visit? Suppose the meeting at the day of Pentecost and during those previous days
had been very thin, would the blessing have descended? Who can suppose it would?
We may have a prayer-meeting and urge the very strongest reasons for the descent
of God's Spirit; but what avails it--if we are only a small minority of those who
are in the church?
2. How much worse still is the case in our modern prayer-meeting if even those who
do attend are manifestly not by any means earnest in prayer! How often we see this
to be undoubtedly the case. They do not press their plea for a visitation of mercy
from on high. They do not struggle long and earnestly as those praying souls did
in the first great primitive prayer-meeting. These pleas and prayers are as different
from those as can well be imagined. Let no one wonder that these movements are so
unavailing!
3. Prayer is wont to be offered now with very little expectation. So great a lack
of expectation denotes lack of faith in God, and therefore must fail to please him.
4. People think they cannot take time for continuous prayer. To keep up a prayer-meeting
a whole week, is quite too much to think of! They have by no means brought their
views up to the point of praying till the blessing comes. They do not feel earnest
enough, nor are they sufficiently pressed with a sense of want to make this seem
a small thing compared with the greatness of the blessing sought. They think they
do well if they pray a little at one meeting per week, keep up one weekly meeting,
and spend even that mostly in something else than prayer. What can be expected from
such efforts?
5. Perhaps there is not unanimity enough, nor brotherly love enough to sustain even
one weekly prayer-meeting. This is the case in many churches and in many neighborhoods.
Is it so here in some portion of this great church?
6. Even where general prayer-meetings can be kept up, and are so, yet neighborhood
prayer-meetings fall through. Alienations of feeling arise among brethren and sisters;
bickerings, bad blood and bad words are there; they lose confidence in each other,
and cannot pray together! How awful! How different from the spirit of the day of
Pentecost! There, all the assembled brethren and sisters were of one heart and one
soul! The tears were scarcely dry on the cheek of the penitent Peter; Thomas had
not recovered from the deep mortification, shame and grief of his unbelief, yet even
these feelings did not stand in the way of the most entire union of heart and soul
in prayer for the great promised blessing.
7. Yet in how many churches you are astonished to find the prayer-meeting abandoned;
the hearts of brethren soured and alienated; confidence almost gone, and worse than
all the rest, few left to mourn over this deplorable state of Zion. You may find,
here and there, a brother or a sister mournfully asking, "What shall we do for
a prayer-meeting in our neighborhood? There is not brotherly love and confidence
enough here to sustain one." You would be astonished to know how often this
is the case. Sometimes a family prayer-meeting drops to pieces in the same way. Alienation
in some form arises; they lose confidence in each other's prayers, and interest in
each other's welfare; and, of course, they cease to pray with and for each other.
Under such influences, Christians are not interested in each other's prayers, and
are not led onward and edified by mutual prayer. Where alienation exists, and mutual
sympathy is lacking, there can be no union of heart in prayer, and no spiritual edification.
You have often noticed in a prayer-meeting that the brethren and sisters will be
greatly quickened and edified by one brother's prayer, and not at all by another's.
When one prays, it is most manifest that the hearts of all are moved; there is a
sighing, an uplifting of heart, a general response; but when another leads, you see
no such tokens of general sympathy. You can tell who can lead the hearts of the brethren
in real prayer. You will always notice that no one can do this unless they have confidence
in him, and unless they feel the deep pulsations of his heart moving upon their own.
Sometimes this is seen in the family. The head of the family prays, but all have
lost confidence in him, and are doing anything else and everything else but unite
in his words of prayer. Is it wonderful that such prayer avails nothing? Indeed,
the very expressions which such a man may use in prayer, will be interpreted as only
so much hypocrisy! Alas, the spirit of prayer cannot be there! The spirit of dissent,
and not the spirit of union, is there; they do not pray together, and cannot; they
are not united in prayer; a spirit of alienation exists, unexpressed, but deep; perhaps
their will is up about something. Even husband and wife do not pray together; they
are chafed in their feelings toward each other, and are indulging a state of mind
which forbids a spirit of mutual prayer. Often our prayer-meetings die out by reason
of little bickerings and heart-burnings.
Brethren and sisters, will you not look to this?
Often, when people stay away from meetings for prayer, they assign other than the
true and real reason. They do not say frankly, I stay away because I cannot hear
this or that brother pray. They profess to be too busy--too much and too urgently
occupied; but really they do not assign even to themselves the true reason--the very
thing which has kept them back from the meeting.
At the Pentecost meeting, they neglected all other business. Yet they were poor in
this world's goods, and had, no doubt, business enough to do; their women, also,
had enough to do; yet they were all there. But suppose it had been the case that
they felt their business to be too important to be dropped. Suppose they had said--"O,
it cannot be necessary for us all to go; we are so full of business, and so pressed
every way, and so fatigued withal;" do you believe that, making such excuses
for neglect of prayer, they could have had the blessing? If they could not fulfill
the condition, could they hope to receive the promise? If they would not meet the
demand made by the condition, obviously the way would not be open for Christ to fulfill
his promise. he could not grant them the blessing without virtually giving a bounty
to remissness and unfaithfulness.
The fact is, brethren, our modern prayer-meetings are too cold and too constrained.
Christians are not earnest in prayer. Their souls cannot become deeply burdened and
earnestly agonized in supplication; they do not thirst enough for spiritual blessings,
and have not the deep communion with God which is requisite for prevailing prayer.
You know what a burden is felt in a prayer-meeting when the heart is thoroughly broken;
when pride is abased, the soul humbled, and the entire energies are drawn out in
earnest supplication. But there are few such meetings for prayer now. There is a
lack of sustaining unanimity. It is a law of mind that union of heart sustains the
interest and power of prayer. Did you never observe how you can sustain another in
prayer, if you enter deeply into his sympathies? You uphold his faith and his fervor.
I have often thought that the practice common among the Methodists, is useful if
not abused. The responses that truly come from the heart serve to quicken and sustain
genuine prayer. The responses introduced in the service of the Church of England
are excellent, provided only that the heart be in them. I love to hear these sustaining
responses and to know that I have the sympathizing heart of those who profess to
be praying with me. Often our prayer-meetings are cold and profitless because there
is no liberty and no free utterance. The spirit of prayer is straitened, because
the natural expressions of deep feeling are repressed. Said an English Congregationalist,
"I do wish our people could learn of the Methodists how to have a prayer-meeting."
He felt the need of an unconstrained utterance and of a free expression of feeling.
Now I would not sanction heartless noise and vociferation; that is not prayer and
cannot help real prayer. There is a wide difference between that and a meeting in
which the heart had free scope, and the Spirit of God is not straitened, but ranges
with free scope and melting power. I have seen prayer-meetings in which manifestly
the whole congregation went forth before God in mighty prayer. Some of you have seen
such prayer. The hearts of the people were moved as the trees of the forest before
a mighty rushing wind. Words seem as if freightened with irrepressible emotion. You
can see that God is there. Everyone feels it. An awe of the Holy Presence pervades
each heart. And yet they are not afraid, but are drawn into sweet confidence and
most earnest pleading. Literally they seem to pour out their heats before him. This
is true prayer, and meets the idea of social praying. It is a union of hearts before
God's mercy-seat, the Spirit coming down to make intercession with their spirit with
groanings that cannot be uttered. Every prayer-meeting should bear this character,
modified only according to the type of those circumstances that call for prayer.
GLOSSARY
of easily misunderstood terms as defined by Mr. Finney himself.
Compiled by Katie Stewart
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