In all I have said I have implied that prayer
should be strenuously importunate. Observe, not petitionary merely, nor
concentrated, nor active alone, but importunate. For prayer is not only
meditation or communion. Nor ought it to be merely submissive in tone, as the
"quietist" ideal is. We need not begin with "Thy will be done" if we but end
with it. Remember the stress that Christ laid on importunity. Strenuous prayer
will help us to recover the masculine type of religion--and then our opponents
will at least respect us.
I would speak a little more fully on this matter
of importunity. It is very closely bound up with the reality both of prayer and
of religion. Prayer is not really a power till it is importunate. And it cannot
be importunate unless it is felt to have a real effect on the Will of God. I
may slip in here my conviction that far less of the disbelief in prayer is due
to a scientific view of nature's uniformity than to the slipshod kind of prayer
that men hear from us in public worship; it is often but journalese sent
heavenwards, or phrase-making to carry on. And I would further say that by
importunity something else is meant than passionate dictation and stormy
pertinacity--imposing our egoist will on God, and treating Him as a mysterious
but manageable power that we may coerce and exploit.
The deepening of the spiritual life is a subject
that frequently occupies the attention of religious conferences and of the soul
bent on self-improvement. But it is not certain that the great saints would
always recognize the ideal of some who are addicted to the use of the phrase.
The "deepening of the spiritual life" they would find associated with three
unhappy things.
1. They would recoil from a use of Scripture
prevalent to those circles, which is atomistic individualist, subjective, and
fantastic.
2. And what they would feel most foreign to their
own objective and penetrating minds might be the air of introspection and
self-measurement too often associated with the spiritual thus "deepened"--a
spiritual egoism.
3. And they would miss the note of judgment and
Redemption.
We should distinguish at the outset the
deepening of spiritual life from the quickening of spiritual
sensibility. Christ on the cross was surely deepened in spiritual
experience, but was not the essence of that dereliction, and the concomitant of
that deepening, the dulling of spiritual sensibility?
There are many plain obstacles to the deepening
of spiritual life, amid which I desire to name here only one; it is prayer
conceived merely, or chiefly, as submission, resignation, quietism. We say too
soon, "Thy will be done"; and too ready acceptance of a situation as His will
often means feebleness or sloth. It may be His will that we surmount His will.
It may be His higher will that we resist His lower. Prayer is an act of will
much more than of sentiment, and its triumph is more than acquiescence. Let us
submit when we must, but let us keep the submission in reserve rather than in
action, as a ground tone rather than the stole effort. Prayer with us has
largely ceased to be wrestling. But is that not the dominant scriptural idea?
It is not the sole idea, but is it not the dominant? And is not our subdued
note often but superinduced and unreal?
I venture to enlarge on this last head, by way of
meeting some who hesitate to speak of the power of prayer to alter God's will.
I offer two points:
I. Prayer may really change the will of God, or,
if not His will, His intention.
II. It may, like other human energies of godly
sort, take the form of resisting the will of God. Resisting His will may be
doing His will.
I. As to the first point. If this is not believed
the earnestness goes out of prayer. It becomes either a ritual, or a soliloquy
only overheard by God; just as thought with the will out of it degenerates into
dreaming or brooding, where we are more passive than active. Prayer is not
merely the meeting of two moods or two affections, the laying of the head on a
divine bosom in trust and surrender. That may have its place in religion, but
it is not the nerve and soul of prayer. Nor is it religious reverie. Prayer is
an encounter of wills--till one will or the other give way. It is not a
spiritual exercise merely, but in its maturity it is a cause acting on the
course of God's world.[7] It is, indeed, by
God's grace that prayer is a real cause, but such it is. And of course there
must be in us a faith corresponding to the grace. Of course also there is
always, behind all, the readiness to accept God's will without a murmur when it
is perfectly evident and final. "My grace is sufficient for thee." Yes, but
there is also the repeated effort to alter its form according to our sanctified
needs and desires. You will notice that in Paul's case the power to accept the
sufficiency of God's grace only came in the course of an importunate prayer
aiming to turn God's hand. Paul ended, rather than began, with "Thy will be
done." The peace of God is an end and not a beginning.
"Thy will be done" was no utterance of mere
resignation; thought it has mostly come to mean this in a Christianity which
tends to canonize the weak instead of strengthening them. As prayer it was a
piece of active cooperation with God's will. It was a positive part of it. It
is one thing to submit to a stronger will, it is another to be one with it. We
submit because we cannot resist it; but when we are one with it we cannot
succumb. It is not a power, but our power. But the natural will is not one with
God's; and so we come to use these words in a mere negative way, meaning that
we cease to resist. Our will does not accept God's, it just stops work. We give
in and lie down. But is that the sense of the words in the Lord's Prayer? Do
they mean that we have no objection to God's will being done? or that we do not
withstand any more? or even that we accept it gladly? Do they not mean
something far more positive--that we actively will God's will and aid it, that
it is the whole content of our own, that we put into it all the will that there
can be in prayer, which is at last the great will power of the race? It is our
heart's passion that God's will be done and His kingdom come. And can His
kingdom come otherwise than as it is a passion with us? Can His will be done?
God's will was not Christ's consent merely, nor His pleasure, but His meat and
drink, the source of His energy and the substance of His work.
Observe, nothing can alter God's grace, His will
in that sense, His large will and final purpose--our racial blessing, our
salvation, our redemption in Jesus Christ. But for that will He is an infinite
opportunist. His ways are very flexible. His intentions are amenable to us if
His will is changeless. The steps of His process are variable according to our
freedom and His.
We are living, let us say, in a careless way; and
God proposes a certain treatment of us according to our carelessness. But in
the exercise of our spiritual freedom we are by some means brought to pray. We
cease to be careless. We pray God to visit us as those who hear. Then He does
another thing. He acts differently, with a change caused by our freedom and our
change. The treatment for deafness is altered. God adopts another
treatment--perhaps for weakness. We have by prayer changed His action, and, so
far, His will (at any rate His intention) concerning us. As we pray, the
discipline for the prayerless is altered to that for the prayerful. We attain
the thing God did not mean to give us unless He had been affected by our
prayer. We change the conduct, if not the will, of God to us, the
Verhalten if not the Verhaltniss.
Again, we pray and pray, and no answer comes. The
boon does not arrive. Why? Perhaps we are not spiritually ready for it. It
would not be a real blessing. But the persistence, the importunity of faith, is
having a great effect on our spiritual nature. It ripens. A time comes when we
are ready for answer. We then present ourselves to God in a spiritual condition
which reasonably causes His to yield. The new spiritual state is not the answer
to our prayer, but it is its effect; and it is the condition which makes the
answer possible. It makes the prayer effectual. The gift can be a blessing now.
So God resists us no more. Importunity prevails, not as mere importunity (for
God is not bored into answer), but as the importunity of God's own elect, i.e.
as obedience, as a force of the Kingdom, as increased spiritual power, as real
moral action, bringing corresponding strength and fitness to receive. I have
often found that what I sought most I did not get at the right time, not till
it was too late, not till I had learned to do without it, till I had renounced
it in principle (though not in desire). Perhaps it had lost some of its zest by
the time it came, but it meant more as a gift and a trust. That was God's right
time--when I could have it as though I had it not. If it came, it came not to
gratify me, but to glorify Him and be a means of serving Him.
One recalls here that most pregnant saying of
Schopenhauer: "All is illusion--the hope or the thing hoped." If it is not true
for all it is true for very many. Either the hope is never fulfilled or else
its fulfilment disappoints. God gives the hoped for thing, but sends leanness
into the soul. The mother prays to have a son--and he breaks her heart, and
were better dead. Hope may lie to us, or the thing hoped may dash us. But
though He slay me I will trust. God does not fail. Amid the wreck of my little
world He is firm, and I in Him. I justify God in the ruins; in His good time I
shall arrive. More even than my hopes may go wrong. I may go wrong. But my
Redeemer liveth; and, great though God is as my Fulfiller, He is greater as my
Redeemer. He is great as my hope, but He is greater as my power. What is the
failure of my hope from Him compared with the failure of His hope in me? If He
continue to believe in me I may well believe in Him.
God's object with us is not to give just so many
things and withhold so many; it is to place us in the tissue of His kingdom.
His best answer to us is to raise us to the power of answering Him. The reason
why He does not answer our prayer is because we do not answer Him and His
prayer. And His prayer was, as though Christ did beseech us, "Be ye
reconciled." He would lift us to confident business with Him, to commerce of
loving wills. The painter wrestles with the sitter till he gives him back
himself, and there is a speaking likeness. So man with God, till God surrender
His secret. He gives or refuses things, therefore, with a view to that
communion alone, and on the whole. It is that spiritual personal end, and not
an iron necessity, that rules His course. Is there not a constant spiritual
interaction between God and man as free spiritual beings? How that can be is
one of the great philosophic problems. But the fact that it is is of the
essence of faith. It is the unity of our universe. Many systems try to explain
how human freedom and human action are consistent with God's omnipotence and
omniscience. None succeed. How secondary causes like man are compatible with
God as the Universal and Ultimate Cause is not rationally plain. But there is
no practical doubt that they are compatable. And so it is with the action of
man on God in prayer. We may perhaps, for the present, put it thus, that we
cannot change the will of God, which is grace, and which even Christ never
changed but only revealed or effected; but we can change the intention of God,
which is a manner of treatment, in the interest of grace, according to the
situation of the hour.
If we are guided by the Bible we have much ground
for this view of prayer. Does not Christ set more value upon importunity
than on submission? "Knock, and it shall be opened." I would refer also
not only to the parable of the unjust judge, but to the incident of the
Syrophenician woman, where her wit, faith, and importunity together did
actually change our Lord's intention and break His custom. There there is Paul
beseeching the Lord thrice for a boon; and urging us to be instant, insistent,
continual in prayer. We have Jacob wrestling. We have Abraham pleading, yea,
haggling, with God for Sodom. We have Moses interceding for Israel and asking
God to blot his name out of the book of life, if that were needful to save
Israel. We have Job facing God, withstanding Him, almost bearding Him, and
extracting revelation. And we have Christ's own struggle with the Father in
Gethsemane.
It is a wrestle on the greatest scale--all
manhood taxed as in some great war, or some great negotiation of State. And the
effect is exhaustion often. No, the result of true, prayer is not always
peace.
II. As to the second point. This wrestle is in a
certain sense a resisting of God. You cannot have wrestling otherwise; but you
may have Christian fatalism. It is not mere wrestling with ourselves, our
ignorance, our self-will. That is not prayer, but self-torment. Prayer is
wrestling with God. And it is better to fall thus into the hands of God than of
man--even than our own. It is a resistance that God loves. It is quite foreign
to the godless, self-willed defiant resistance. In love there is a kind of
resistance that enhances it. The resistance of love is a quite different thing
from the resistance of hostility. The yielding to one you love is very
different from capitulating to an enemy:
Two
constant lovers, being joined in one,
Yielding
unto each other yield to none -
i.e. to no foreign force, no force foreign to the love which makes them one.
So when God yields to prayer in the name of
Christ, to the prayer of faith and love, He yields to Himself who inspired it,
as He sware by Himself since none was greater. Christian prayer is the Spirit
praying in us. It is prayer in the solidarity of the Kingdom. It is a
continuation of Christ's prayer, which in Gethsemane was a wrestle, an sgwnia with the Father. But if so, it is God pleading
with God, God dealing with God--as the true atonement must be. And when God
yields it is not to an outside influence He yields, but to Himself.
Let me make it still more plain. When we resist
the will of God we may be resisting what God wills to be temporary and to be
resisted, what He wills to be intermediary and transcended. We resist because
God wills we should. We are not limiting God's will, any more than our moral
freedom limits it. That freedom is the image of His, and, in a sense, part of
His. We should defraud Him and His freedom if we did not exercise ours. So the
prayer which resists His dealing may be part of His will and its fulfilment.
Does God not will the existence of things for us
to resist, to grapple with? Do we ourselves not appoint problems and make
difficulties for those we teach, for the very purpose of their overcoming them?
We set questions to children of which we know the answer quite well. The real
answer to our will and purpose is not the solution but the grappling, the
wrestling. And we may properly give a reward not for the correct answer, but
for the hard and honest effort. That work is the prayer; and it has its reward
apart from the solution.
That is a principle of education with us. So it
may be with God. But I mean a good deal more by this than what is called the
reflex action of prayer. It that were all it would introduce an unreality into
prayer. We should be praying for exercise, not for action. It would be prayer
with a theological form, which yet expects no more than a psychological effect.
It would be a prayer which is not sure that God is really more interested in us
than we are in Him. But I mean that God's education has a lower stage for us
and a higher. He has a lower will and a higher, a prior and a posterior. And
the purpose of the lower will is that it be resisted and struggled through to
the higher. By God's will (let us say) you are born in a home where your
father's earnings are a few shillings a week, like many an English labourer. Is
it God's will that you acquiesce in that and never strive out of it? It is
God's will that you are there. Is it God's will that you should not resist
being there? Nay, it may be His will that you should wisely resist it, and
surmount His lower, His initial, will, which is there for the purpose. That is
to say, it is His will that you resist, antagonize, His will. And so it is with
the state of childhood altogether.
Again: Is disease God's will? We all believe it
often is--even if man is to blame for it. It may be, by God's will, the penalty
on human ignorance, negligence, or sin. But let us suppose there were only a
few cases where disease is God's will. It was so in the lower creatures, before
man lived, blundered, or sinned. Take only one such case. Is it God's will that
we should lie down and let the disease have its way? Why, a whole profession
exists to say no. Medicine exists as an antagonism to disease, even when you
can say that disease is God's will and His punishment of sin. A doctor will
tell you that resignation is one of his foes. He begins to grow hopeless if the
patient is so resigned from the outset as to make no effort, if there be no
will to live. Resistance to this ordinance of God's is the doctor's business
and the doctor's ally. And why? Because God ordained disease for the purpose of
being resisted; He ordained the resistance, that from the conflict man might
come out the stronger, and more full of resource and dominion over nature.
Again, take death. It is God's will. It is in the
very structure of man, in the divine economy. It is not the result of sin; it
was there before sin. Is it to be accepted without demur? Are doctors impious
who resist it? Are we sinning when we shrink from it? Does not the life of most
people consist in the effort to escape it, in the struggle for a living? So
also when we pray and wrestle for another's life, for our dear one's life.
"Sir, come down ere my child die." The man was impatient. How familiar we are
with his kind! "Do, please, leave your religious talk, which I don't
understand; get doing something; cure my child." But was that an impious
prayer? It was ignorant, practical, British, but not quite faithless. And it
was answered, as many a similar prayer has been. But, then, if death be God's
will, to resist it is to resist God's will. Well, it is His will that we
should. Christ, who always did God's will, resisted His own death, slipped away
from it often, till the hour came; and even then He prayed with all his might
against it when it seemed inevitable. "If it be possible, release Me." He was
ready to accept it, but only in the last resort, only if there was no other
way, only after every other means had been exhausted. To the end He cherished
the fading hope that there might be some other way. He went to death
voluntarily, freely, but--shall we say reluctantly?--resisting the most blessed
act of God's will that ever was performed in heaven or on earth; resisting, yet
sure to acquiesce when that was God's clear will.
The whole nature, indeed, is the will of God, and
the whole of grace is striving with nature. It is our nature to have certain
passions. That is God's will. But it is our calling of God to resist them as
much as to gratify them. There are there as God's will to be resisted as much
as indulged. The redemption from the natural man includes the resistance to it,
and the release of the soul from what God Himself appointed as its lower
stages--never as its dwelling place, and never its tomb. So far prayer is on
the lines of evolution.
Obedience is the chief end. But obedience is not
mere submission, mere resignation. It is not always acquiescence, even in
prayer. We obey God as much when we urge our suit, and make a real petition of
it, as when we accept His decision; as much when we try to change His will as
when we bow to it. The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence. There is a very
fine passage in Dante, Parad. xx. 94 (Longfellow):
Regnum
coelorum suffereth violence
From
fervent love, and from that living hope
That
overcometh the divine volition.
Not
in the way that man o'ercometh man;
We
conquer it because it will be conquered,
And,
conquered, conquers by benignity.
It is His will--His will of grace--that
prayer should prevail with Him and extract blessings. And how we love the grace
that so concedes them! The answer to prayer is not the complaisance of a
playful power lightly yielding to the playful egoism of His favorites. "Our
antagonist is our helper." To struggle with Him is one way of doing His will.
To resist is one way of saying, "Thy will be done." It was God's will that
Christ should deprecate the death God required. It pleased God as much as His
submission to death. But could it have been pleasing to Him that Christ should
pray so, if no prayer could ever possibly change God's will? Could Christ have
prayed so in that belief? Would faith ever inspire us to pray if the God of our
faith must be unmoved by prayers? The prayer that goes to an inflexible God,
however good He is, is prayer that rises more from human need than from God's
own revelation, or from Christian faith (where Christian prayer should rise).
It is His will, then, that we should pray against what seems His will, and
what, for the lower stage of our growth, is His will. And all this without any
unreality whatever.
Let us beware of a pietist fatalism which thins
the spiritual life, saps the vigour of character, makes humility mere
acquiescence, and piety only feminine, by banishing the will from prayer as
much as thought has been banished from it. "The curse of so much religion" (I
have quoted Meredith) "is that men cling to God with their weakness rather than
with their strength."
The popularity of much acquiescence is not
because it is holier, but because it is easier. And an easy gospel is the
consumption that attacks Christianity. It is the phthisis to faith.
Once come to think that we best say "Thy will be
done" when we acquiesce, when we resign, and not also when we struggle and
wrestle, and in time all effort will seem less pious than submission. And so we
fall into the ecclesiastical type of religion, drawn from an age whose first
virtue was submission to outward superiors. We shall come to canonize decorum
and subduedness in life and worship (as the Episcopal Church with its
monarchical ideas of religion has done). We shall think more of order than of
effort, more of law than of life, more of fashion than of faith, of good form
than of great power. But was subduedness the mark of the New Testament men? Our
religion may gain some beauty in this way, but it loses vigour. It may gain
style, but it loses power. It is good form, but mere aesthetic piety. It may
consecrate manners, but it improverishes the mind. It may regulate prayer by
the precepts of intelligence instead of the needs and faith of the soul. It may
feed certain pensive emotions, but it may emasculate will, secularize energy,
and empty character. And so we decline to a state of things in which we have no
shocking sins--yes, and no splendid souls; when all souls are dully correct, as
like as shillings, but as thin, and as cheap.
All our forms and views of religion have their
test in prayer. Lose the importunity of prayer, reduce it to soliloquy, or even
to colloquy, with God, lose the real conflict of will and will, lose the habit
of wrestling and the hope of prevailing with God, make it mere walking with God
in friendly talk; and, precious as that is, yet you tend to lose the reality of
prayer at last. In principle you make it mere conversation instead of the
soul's great action. You lose the food of character, the renewal of will. You
may have beautiful prayers--but as ineffectual as beauty so often is, and as
fleeting. And so in the end you lose the reality of religion. Redemption turns
down into mere revelation, faith to assent, and devotion to a phase of culture.
For you lose the power of the Cross and so of the soul.
Resist God, in the sense of rejecting God, and
you will not be able to resist any evil. But resist God in the sense of closing
with God, cling to Him with your strength, not your weakness only, with your
active and not only your passive faith, and He will give you strength. Cast
yourself into His arms not to be caressed but to wrestle with Him. He loves
that holy war. He may be too many for you, and lift you from your feet. But it
will be to lift you from earth, and set you in the heavenly places which are
their who fight the good fight and lay hold of God as their eternal life.
[7] This position is excluded by Schleiermacher's view of religion as absolute dependence, because that leaves room for no action of man on God. And it is one of the grave defects of so great a saint as Robertson.