Part
3 in a Series on Persistence
Seven times in a row, Elijah fell to his knees.
Grooves were worn into the boards upon which John
Wesley knelt.
John Hyde’s heart shifted from one side of his chest
into the other, so great was the intensity of his intercession.
Amidst a generation of people who are ‘too busy’ to
pray, stories like these seem more like fairy tales than real life accounts. We
can hardly find minutes, let alone hours, for prayer. So when I hear about men
who devoted significant time and energy into prayer, I can't help but wonder,
Why?
What made them pray like that? Why did they pray for
a thing over and over?
Were they afraid God hadn’t heard them? Did they have
nothing better to do with their time? Or is it that they knew something about
prayer that we, modern day Christians, have forgotten?
Elijah Prayed Like This:
At the end of 1 Kings
xviii, we find Elijah praying on the top of Mount Carmel.
He prayed that rain would
return to the land, but, when he raised his head, nothing had changed. I think most
of us know what that feels like.
How many times have we
prayed without answer? Asked without receiving?
We generally get
discouraged when that happens. Not Elijah. Elijah got back down on his knees
and prayed again.
Why? Why would he do
that?
·
Did he
think God hadn’t heard him?
This mountain prayer
session directly follows the contest between Elijah and the four hundred
prophets of Baal. God had just sent down fire from heaven at Elijah’s request,
consuming not only the sacrifice but the water and the stone altar besides.
Clearly, Elijah knew God was listening.
·
Did he
have nothing better to do than pray?
No, he didn’t. King Ahab
was feasting, all Israel was gathered together, and Elijah was the victorious
prophet who could have been celebrated among them. But Elijah didn’t consider
anything more important than prayer.
·
Did he
know something that we don’t?
Apparently. Because Elijah kept praying
long after most of us would have given up. He prayed though he was tired. Long
after we would have assumed that God just didn’t want to answer, long after we
would have given way to distraction, Elijah was still praying.
Seven
times he told his servant to ‘go again’ and look towards the sea.
Finally,
on “the seventh time, [the servant] said, “There is a cloud, as
small as a man’s hand, rising out of the sea!”
So
[Elijah] said, “Go up, say to Ahab, ‘Prepare your chariot, and
go down before the rain stops you.’ ”
Now it happened, in the meantime, that the sky became black with
clouds and wind, and there was a heavy rain.” (1 Kings xviii. 44 - 45)
Do you know what Elijah did?
He prayed again and again and again. He prayed seven times. Most importantly, he prayed until he prevailed.
In the Hebrew culture, the number seven symbolized
completion. Elijah prayed until he no longer needed to pray because it was done.
The Prophet persisted in prayer.
Can We?
It would be so easy to say that times have changed,
that we live in a different world. While things may be different in some ways,
I’m sure the Christians of old had their fair share of long and busy days as
well – Elijah included.
It would be so easy to say that people have
changed, that those Christians had something special that we don’t posses. Though
we may not have tasted this kind of prayer yet, James v.17 tells us it is
possible – for Elijah was just a man, with a nature like ours.
“Elijah was a
man with a nature like ours, he prayed fervently that it might not
rain, and for three years and six months it did not rain on the earth.” (James
v.17)
The verse says that Elijah prayed fervently. The
Greek word, translated fervently here, conveys the idea that Elijah prayed until
he prayed. He didn’t pray once, he prayed, and prayed, and prayed, and prayed, and prayed, and prayed.
Praying until he was praying earnestly. Praying until
he prevailed in prayer.
It took time. It took persistence. But it wasn’t
something that only Elijah could do.
Praying with Persistence
Elijah isn't the only example of persistent prayer in
the Bible. Scripture is filled with men and women who prayed until they
prevailed.
They knew something we seem to have missed: Prayer
takes Persistence.
In Luke xviii, Jesus told a parable about a widow who went
again and again to plead for justice from an unjust judge. Luke xviii.1 says
that Jesus told the people this parable ‘to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart.”
Notice that He didn’t
say that they should pray until they lost heart – as many of us do or have done.
Rather they were always to pray and not to lose heart. You could
say, that He told the parable so that they would learn to persist in prayer. This
is consistent with the lesson we find in the parable itself:
“In a certain city there was a judge
who neither feared God nor respected man. And there was a widow in
that city who kept coming to him and saying, ‘Give me justice against my
adversary.’ For a while he refused, but afterward
he said to himself, ‘Though I neither fear God nor respect man, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will give her
justice, so that she will not beat me down by her continual coming.’” And [Jesus] said, “Hear what the
unrighteous judge says. And will not God give
justice to His elect, who cry to Him day and night? Will He
delay long over them?” (Luke xviii. 2-7)
‘Will
not God give justice to His elect, who cry to Him day and night?’
This question that Jesus asked leads us to another question: Are God’s elect (which
would be us) crying to Him day and night?
D.L. Moody said, “Next to the wonder of seeing my Savior will be, I think, the
wonder that I made so little use of the power of prayer.”
In Christ
quiana
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