CHRIST’S PROMISE FOR SEEKING GOD BY PRAYER
Matthew 7:7-11
These statements from the lips of Christ are
simple and sublime. These are not words to hurriedly read through and forget.
They are words that open our eyes to heaven’s provision; and they disclose the
great storehouse from which all our needs for spirit, soul and body are
supplied. Learning from the Lord on prayer as declared in these verses and
living as He has taught,
practising the precepts without turning to the right hand or the left hand will bring the supernatural into our natural lives and open both the windows of heaven and the gate of heaven to us. These verses will make the present and the future much brighter than the past, however bright the past has been.
practising the precepts without turning to the right hand or the left hand will bring the supernatural into our natural lives and open both the windows of heaven and the gate of heaven to us. These verses will make the present and the future much brighter than the past, however bright the past has been.
Praying to God has been a common practice
since the creation of man. Both saints and sinners have always prayed. However,
prayer had become a ritual among the heathen and a religious duty among the
Israelites (Matthew 6:5-8). Christ, the Sun of Righteousness, the Light of the
world, now throws light on the great privilege of praying. He clears the way to
the Father and removes all misconception concerning prayer. He lifts us up from
the dark lane of beggars pleading for crumbs to the blessed presence of the
Father, confidently asking for promised blessings. He has taken away the seat
and the place of an intermediary and He beckons us to come directly to the
Father. He gives each of us a special place in the family and now we can all
ask, seek and knock.
1. ALL-EMBRACING PROMISES TO SEEKERS OF GOD WHO PRAY
Matthew
7:7,8; 2 Chronicles 7:14; Jeremiah 29:11-13; Ezra 8:21-23;
2 Chronicles 20:1-4,14-24;
Daniel 9:3,4,20-22; Psalms 34:10-19; 69:32-36; 77:1-12; Zechariah 8:21-23.
“Seek,
and ye shall find. He that seeketh findeth.” Seeking is used in the
sense of praying as the Scriptures quoted above show. Praying in ignorance is
like seeking for a precious, hidden object in the dark. We must turn on the
light so we can see clearly while we seek diligently (Luke 15:8,9). Ignorance
of the promises of God, the Fatherhood of the merciful and loving God, the
faithfulness of God as Father, the relationship of sonship to the heavenly
Father, keep us from seeking with faith that cannot be denied (Romans 9:31,32).
God’s promises for all true children of God who pray to Him, seeking His face,
are all-encompassing. The promises are many and varied; they provide for both
our natural and spiritual needs. Our common needs as well as special or
peculiar needs are all provided for. Early in life or late in life, when we are
young or when we are growing old, even at death when changing our earthly
address to an eternal residence, appropriate promises abound. In company or in
solitude, in the family or in widowhood, sick or healthy, weak or strong, in
adversity or prosperity, in all situations or circumstances, God’s promises are
ours to experience. Circumstances should not embitter our lives when God is our
Father and He has thought of all things we would ever need in our pilgrimage
until we see Him face to face in heaven. Read the Bible and see the promises.
Note the conditions attached to the promises. Keep those conditions as patients
keep to the doctor’s prescription. Believe God as much as you believe a loving,
faithful, earthly father. In fact, you ought to believe God more than any human
friend or father. Trust God implicitly without any shadow of doubt. Seek and
you will find; pray and God will answer.
2. ALL-CONSUMING PERIL FOR NOT SEEKING GOD IN PRAYER
2
Chronicles 16:7-13; 1 Samuel 28:3-8; 1 Chronicles 10:13,14; 2 Kings 1:2-4;
Isaiah
8:19,20; 31:1-3; Jeremiah 10:21;2 Chronicles 25:14-16,20; 33:9-13;
1
Chronicles 15:12-14.
All
men feel their insufficiency and see the need to ask for help at different
times in their lives. Being ignorant of who the true God is and what He has
made adequate provision for, unbelievers seek and pray to gods who “have
mouths, but they speak not: eyes have they, but they see not: They have hands,
but they handle not: feet have they, but they walk not: neither speak they
through their throat” (Psalm 115:4-8). Others sell themselves,
spirit, soul and body, to Satan through a covenant. They “seek unto them
that have familiar spirits, and unto wizards”; they seek a “hiding
place” in a “refuge of lies” (Isaiah 28:15-20; 8:19,20;
47:11-15). Even sinners and unbelievers who seek help, healing, power,
protection, prosperity and any other thing from evil spirits and Satan are
severely judged and punished for doing so (Deuteronomy 18:9-12). Our seeking of
any blessing must be from only the true God, the God of heaven, the Father of
our Lord, Jesus Christ and our Father. It dishonours God when any child of God
forsakes Him and looks up to Satan or Satan’s messengers for help. It exalts
the power of Satan above that of God. Such a person who belittles God in his
heart and by his action magnifies Satan is worse than an atheist. The danger
and damnation of such a person is a million times greater than the pain or the
problem he is trying to overcome.
3. ALL-INCLUSIVE PROSPERITY FOR SEEKERS OF GOD IN PRAYER
Matthew
7:7,8; 1 Chronicles 16:11-29; Job 5:8,9; 8:5-7; Psalm 63:1-5; Lamentations 3:22-25;
Isaiah 55:6-13; Hosea 5:15; 6:3; 10:12; Luke 11:9-13.
Prosperity
is a desirable thing if it is all-inclusive. Those who are rich in gold but who
are not rich in grace, godliness and goodness cannot have complete happiness
and fulfilment. “Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest
prosper and be in health, even as thy soul prospereth” (3 John 2). That
is true prosperity and that is what the Lord has promised and provided. This is
what we can seek with great, unshakeable assurance. A life that is rich in
faith and faithfulness will be fruitful, fulfilled, full and flourishing. His
soul will not know the plight of spiritual famine and his body will not
experience the pain of economic drought. As he abounds in the fruit of the
Spirit, so will he have abundant fruit in the work of his hand. Those who pray
and seek God with the whole heart will not seek Him in vain. “I said not
unto the seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain” (Isaiah 45:19). All who truly seek the
Lord “shall be abundantly
satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou shalt make them drink of the
river of thy pleasures” (Psalm 36:8). The provision of God is so
abundant and inexhaustible that none of us ought to lack spiritually and in any
area of our lives. We can be holy, healthy and happy now and throughout our
lives. “Seek, and ye shall find”.
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