A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, July 25, 1875, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
When he had considered the thing, he came to the house of Mary the mother of John, whose surname was Mark; where many were gathered together praying. [Ac 12:12]
1. It was a great wonder that the infant church of Christ was not destroyed. Truly, she was like a lone lamb in the midst of furious wolves, without either earthly power, or prestige, or patronage to protect her, yet, as though she had a charmed life, she escaped from the hosts of her cruel foes. If this child had not been something more than others she would have been slain like the innocents at Bethlehem: but being born of heaven she escaped the fury of the destroyer. It is worth while asking, however, — with what weapons did this church protect herself? for we may very wisely use the same. She was preserved in her utmost danger from overwhelming destruction; what was her defence? Where did she find her shield and buckler? The answer is, — in prayer: “many were gathered together praying.” Whatever may be the danger of the times, and each age has its own unique hazard, we may rest in calm assurance that our defence is from God, and we may avail ourselves of that defence in the same manner as the early church did, namely, by abounding in prayer. However poisonous the viper, prayer can extract its fangs; however fierce the lion, prayer can break its teeth; however terrible the fire, prayer can quench the violence of the flame. But this is not all: the newborn church not only escaped, but it multiplied: from being as a grain of mustard seed, when it could all assemble in the upper room, it has now become a great tree; lo, it covers the nations, and the birds of the air in flocks find shelter in its branches. Where did this wondrous increase come from? What made it grow? Outward circumstances were unfavourable to its progress; upon what nourishment has it been fed? What means were taken with this tender shoot, that has been so speedily developed? for, whatever means were used of old, we may wisely use them today also to strengthen the things which remain and are ready to die, and to develop what is hopeful in our midst. The answer is — the fact that on all occasions “many were gathered together praying.” While praying the Spirit of God came down upon them; while praying the Spirit often separated this man and that for special work, while praying their hearts grew warm with inward fire; while praying their tongues were untied, and they went out to speak to the people; and while praying the Lord opened to them the treasures of his grace. By prayer they were protected, and by prayer they grew; and if our churches are to live and grow they must be watered from the very same source. “Let us pray,” is one of the most necessary of watchwords which I can suggest to Christian men and women, for if we will only pray, prayer will fill up the pools in the valley of Baca, yes, and open to us all the channels of that river of God which is full of water, whose streams make glad the city of our God.
2. We have heard a great deal of talk in certain sections of the church about going back to primitive times, and they are introducing to us all kinds of superstitious inventions, under the guise of the customs of the early church. The plea is cunningly chosen, for primitive practices have great weight with true Christians; but the weak point of the argument is that unfortunately what they call the early church is not early enough. If we must have the early church held up as a model, let us have the earliest church of all; if we are to have Fathers, let us go back to Apostolic Fathers; and if we are to have ritual, and rule, and ceremonies, modelled on strict precedent, let us go back to the original precedent recorded in the Holy Scriptures. We, who are called Baptists, do not have the slightest objection to going back in everything to the apostolic habit and practice; we reverence the real primitive method, and desire to follow the customs of the true early church; and if we could see every ordinance restored to the exact mode in which it was practised by the saints immediately after the ascension of our Lord, and during apostolic times, we would clap our hands with delight. It is a consummation devoutly to be wished for. To see the early church alive again would cause us sincere satisfaction. Especially upon this point would we imitate the early church, we would have it said of us — “Many were gathered together praying.” May we have much prayer, much household prayer, much believing prayer, much prevalent prayer, and then we shall obtain great blessings from the Lord.
3. I. This morning my earnest desire is to stir up the church of Jesus Christ to increased prayerfulness, and I have taken this text since it furnishes me with one or two points of great interest and full of practical suggestions. The first is this, LET US NOTICE THE IMPORTANCE WHICH THE EARLY CHURCH ATTRIBUTED TO PRAYER, and to prayer meetings. Let this be a lesson to us.
4. As soon as we begin to read in the Acts, and continually as we read on in that record, we notice that meetings for prayer had become a standing institution in the church. We read nothing about masses, but we read about prayer meetings. We hear nothing about church festivals, but we often read much about meeting together for prayer. It is said that Peter considered the thing: I imagine that he thoroughly considered it, and thought “Where shall I go?” and he remembered that it was prayer meeting night down at John Mark’s mother’s house, and he would go there, because he felt that there he should find true brethren. In those days they did things by plan and order, according to that text, “Let all things be done decently and in order,” and I have no doubt that it had been duly arranged that the meeting should be held that evening at the house of John Mark’s mother, and therefore Peter went there, and found, as he probably expected, that there was a prayer meeting going on. They did not meet to hear a sermon. It is most proper that we should very frequently assemble for that purpose, but this was distinctly a meeting where “many were gathered together praying.” Praying was the business at hand. I do not know that they even had an address, though some will come to the prayer meeting if the pastor is present to speak; but you see James, who is generally thought to have been the pastor of the church at Jerusalem, was not there, for Peter said, “Go show these things to James,” and most probably none of the other apostles were there, because Peter added, “and to the brethren,” and I suppose by that he meant the brethren of the apostolic college. The eminent speaking brethren seem to have been all away, and perhaps no one expounded or exhorted that night, nor was there any need, for they were all too much engrossed in the common intercession. The meeting was convened for praying, and this, I say, was a regular institution of the Christian church, and ought always to be kept up. There should be meetings wholly devoted to prayer, and there is a serious flaw in the arrangements of a church when such gatherings are omitted or placed in a secondary position. These prayer meetings should focus on their object, and their great attraction should be prayer itself. An address if you like, a few burning words to stir up prayer if you like, but if you cannot have them, do not look upon speech making as at all necessary. Let it be a standing ordinance in the church that at certain times and occasions many shall meet together to pray, and supplication shall be their sole object. The private Christian will read, and hear, and meditate, but none of these can be a substitute for prayer: the same truth holds good upon the larger scale, the church should listen to her teachers, and receive edification from gospel ordinances, but she must also pray; nothing can compensate for the neglect of devotion.
5. It appears, however, that while prayer meetings were a regular institution, the prayer was sometimes made special, for we read that prayer was made without ceasing by the church to God “for him,” that is, for Peter. It greatly adds to the interest, and not a little to the fervency of prayer when there is some great object to pray for. The brethren would have prayed if Peter had been out of prison, but seeing that he was in prison, and likely to be put to death, it was announced that the prayer meeting would especially be to pray for Peter, so that the Lord would deliver his servant, or give him grace to die triumphantly; and this special subject gave enthusiasm to the assembly. Yes, they prayed fervently, for I find the marginal reading of the fifth verse runs like this, “Instant and earnest prayer was made by the church for him.” They prized the man, for they saw what wonders God had performed by his ministry, and they could not let him die if prayer would save him. When they thought of Peter, and how his bleeding head might be exhibited to the populace the next morning, they prayed heart and soul, and each succeeding speaker threw more and more fervency into his pleading. The united cry went up to heaven, “Lord, spare Peter”; I think I can hear their sobs and cries even now. May God grant that our churches may often turn their regular prayer meetings into gatherings with a special object, for then they will become more real. Why not pray for a certain missionary, or some chosen district, or class of people, or order of agencies? We should do well to turn the grand artillery of supplication against some special point on the enemy’s walls.
6. It is clear that these friends fully believed that there was power in prayer; for, Peter being in prison, they did not meet together to arrange a plan for getting him out. Some wise brother might have suggested the bribing of the guards, and another might have suggested something else; but they were finished with planning, and betook themselves to praying. I do not find that they met to petition Herod. It would have been of no avail to ask that monster to relent: they might as well request a wolf to release a lamb which he has seized. No, the petitions were to Herod’s Lord and Master, to the great invisible God. It looked as if they could do nothing, but they felt they could do everything by prayer. They thought little of the fact that sixteen soldiers had him in their custody. What are sixteen guards? If there had been sixteen thousand soldiers these believing men and women would still have prayed Peter out. They believed in God, that he would do wonders; they believed in prayer, that it had an influence with God, and that the Lord listened to the believing petitions of his servants. They met together for prayer in no dubious mood. They knew what they were doing, and had no question concerning the power which lay in supplication. Oh, let it never be insinuated in the Christian church that prayer is a good thing and a useful exercise for ourselves, but that it would be superstition to suppose that it affects the mind of God. Those who say this have foolishly thought to please us by allowing us their scientific toleration to go on with our devotions, but do they think we are idiots, that we should continue asking for what we knew we would not receive; that we would keep on praying if it would be of no more use than whistling to the winds? They must think us devoid of reason if they imagine that we shall be able to keep up prayer as a pious exercise if we once concede that it can have no result with God. As surely as any law of nature can be ascertained and proven, we know both by observation and experience that God assuredly hears prayer; and, instead of its being a doubtful agency, we maintain prayer to be the most potent and unfailing force beneath the skies. We say in the proverb, “man proposes but God disposes,” and here is the power of prayer, that it does not dally with the proposer but goes at once to the Disposer, and deals with the First Cause. Prayer moves that arm which moves all other things. Oh brethren, may we gather power in prayer by having faith in it. Let us not say, “What can prayer do?” but “What can it not do?” for all things are possible for him who believes. No wonder prayer meetings flag, if faith in prayer is weak; and no wonder if conversions and revivals are scarce where intercession is neglected.
7. In the next place, we notice that this prayer in the early church was industriously continued. As soon as Herod had put Peter into prison the church began to pray. Herod took care that the guards should be sufficient in number to keep good watch over his victim, but the saints of God set their watches too. Just as in times of war, when two armies lie near each other they both place their sentries, so in this case Herod had his sentries of the night to keep the watch, and the church had its sentries too. Prayer was made by the church without ceasing: as soon as one little company were compelled to separate to go to their daily labour, they were relieved by another company, and when some were forced to take rest in sleep, others were ready to take up the blessed work of supplication. Thus both sides were on the alert, and the guards were changed both by day and by night. It was not hard to foresee which side would win the victory, for truly unless the Lord keeps the city the watchman watches in vain; and when, instead of helping to keep the castle, God sends angels to open doors and gates, then we may be sure that the watchmen will watch in vain, or fall into a dead slumber. Continually, therefore, the people of God pleaded at his mercy seat; relays of petitioners appeared before the throne. Some mercies are not given to us except in answer to importunate prayer. There are blessings which, like ripe fruit, drop into your hand the moment you touch the bough; but there are others which require you to shake the tree again and again, until you make it rock with the vehemence of your exercise, for only then will the fruit fall down. My brethren, we must cultivate importunity in prayer. While the sun is shining and when the sun has gone down, prayer should still be kept up and fed with fresh fuel, so that it burns fiercely, and flames on high like a beacon fire blazing towards heaven.
8. I would gladly pause here a for minute, and urge my dear brethren to attach as much importance to prayer as the early church did. You cannot think too much of it. Believing prayer, dictated by the Spirit, and presented through Jesus Christ, is today the power of the church, and we cannot do without it. Some look at her active agencies, and prize them, but they suppose that prayer might be dispensed with. You have seen the threshing machine going along the country road from farm to farm: in front there is a huge, black engine which toils along the road, and then behind you see the machine which actually does the threshing. A novice might say, “I will hire the threshing machine, but I do not want your engine; that is an expensive affair, which consumes coal, and makes smoke; I do not require it. I will have the machine which actually does the work, but I do not want the engine.” Such a remark would be absurd, for of what use would the machine be to you if the motive power were gone? Prayer in the church is the steam engine which makes the wheels revolve, and really does the work, and therefore we cannot do without it. Suppose a foreman were employed by some great builder, and sent out to manage distant construction projects. He has to pay the men their weekly wages, and he is very diligent in doing so; he neglects none of his duty towards the men, but he forgets to communicate with headquarters, he neither writes to his employer, nor goes to the bank for cash to go on with. Is this wise? When the next payday comes around, I am afraid he will find that, however diligent he may have been towards the men, he will be in a queer position, for he will have no money to hand out, because he has forgotten to apply to headquarters. Now, brethren, the minister does, as it were, distribute the portions to the people, but if he does not apply to his Master to get them he will have nothing to distribute. Never separate the connection between your soul and God. Keep up a constant communication with heaven, or your communications with earth will be of little value. To cease from prayer is to stop the vital stream upon which all your energy is dependent; you may go on preaching and teaching, and giving away tracts, and whatever you like, but nothing can possibly come of it when the power of Almighty God has ceased to be with you.
9. So much on our first point. May the Holy Spirit use it and arouse the churches to unanimous, intense, importunate intercession.
10. II. Next we notice THE NUMBER ASSEMBLED, which is a rebuke to some present here.
11. The text says, “Many were gathered together praying.” Someone said the other day concerning prayer meetings, that two or three thousand people had no more power in prayer than two or three. I think that is a grave mistake in many ways; but clearly so in reference to each other; for have you never noticed that when many meet together praying, warmth of desire and glow of earnestness are greatly increased? Perhaps two or three might have been all dull, but out of a larger number someone at least is a warm hearted brother, and sets all the rest on fire. Have you not observed how the requests of one will lead another on to ask for even greater things? how one Christian brother suggests to another to increase his petition, and so the petitions grow by the mingling of heart with heart, and the communion of spirit with spirit? Besides, faith is a cumulative force. “According to your faith let it be done to you” is true for one, for two, for twenty, for twenty thousand; and twenty thousand times the force will be the result of twenty thousand times the faith. Rest assured that while two or three have power with God in their measure, too or three hundred have even more. If great results are to come they will be accompanied by the prayers of many; indeed, the brightest days of all will never come except by the unanimous prayer of the entire church, for as soon as Zion travails — not one or two in her midst, but the whole church travails — then she shall bring forth her children. Therefore I do earnestly pray brethren to make the numbers gathered in prayer as great as they can be. Of course, if we come together listlessly, if each heart is cold and dead, there is only so much more coldness and deadness; but taking for granted that each one comes in the spirit of prayer, the gathering of numbers is like adding firebrand to firebrand, and piling on the burning coals, and we are likely to have a heat like that of coals of juniper, which have a most vehement flame.
12. Now this is not a very common occurrence, and why is it that so many prayer meetings are so poorly attended? I know some places in London where they talk about giving up the prayer meeting, where instead of two services during the week they have compassion on their poor overworked minister, and only wish him to hold forth for a few minutes at a kind of mongrel service, half prayer meeting and half lecture. Poor dear things, they cannot manage to get out to worship more than once in the week, they are so much occupied. This is not in poor churches, but in respectable churches. Gentlemen who do not get home from the City and have their dinner until seven o’clock, cannot be expected to go out to a prayer meeting, who would have the barbarity to suggest such a thing! They work so extremely hard all the day, so much harder than any of the working men, that they say, “Please have me excused.” Churches in the suburbs, as a general rule, have miserable prayer meetings, because of the unfortunate circumstances of the members who happen to be burdened with so much riches that they cannot meet for prayer as poor people do. Some of you who have your delightful villas are very careful of your health, and never venture out into the evening air for prayer meetings, though I rather suspect that your parties and soirées are still kept up. I do not say this with particular reference to anyone, unless it happens to refer to him, and if it does refer to him the reference is very special. After all, dear friends, this is a personal matter. It is of no use my standing here or you sitting there and complaining that so few come to the prayer meeting: how are we to increase the number? I would suggest to you a way of increasing it, namely, by coming yourself. You may be aware, perhaps, that one and one make two, and that another one will make three, so that by increases by ones we shall gradually get up to thousands. The largest numbers are made up of units; so that the practical point of it all is, if choice blessings are to be gained by numbers coming together for prayer, the way for me to increase the number is to go there myself, and if I can induce a friend to go also, so much the better.
13. I have a very high opinion of the early church, but I am not sure that quite so many would have been gathered together that night if it had not been that Peter was in prison. They said to each other, “Peter is in prison, and in danger of his life, let us go to the prayer meeting and plead for him.” Did you ever know a minister who was often laid aside by illness and always found his people prayed better when he was ill? Did it never strike you that one reason for his being afflicted was God’s desire to stir the hearts of his people to intercede for him? Their prayers are better than his preaching; and so his Lord says to him, “I can do without you; I will put you on the bed of pain and make the people pray.” Now, I have an opinion that the best way for these people really to do good for their pastor is to pray that they may be kept in a right condition, and may not need his sickness as a stimulus to prayer. If churches become slack in prayer, those whom they most value may be laid aside, or even taken away by death, and then they will cry to God in the bitterness of their souls. Could we not do without such flogging? Some horses need to be reminded now and then with a little touch of the whip; if they did not need the lash they would not get it; and so it may be with us, that we need church trials to keep us up to the mark in prayer, and if we need them we shall have them; but if we are alive and earnest in prayer, it may be that Peter will not get into prison, and some other trying things will not happen besides.
14. III. The third thing in my text is THE PLACE OF ASSEMBLY. That we will dwell upon this morning as a suggestion. “The house of Mary, the mother of John, whose surname was Mark.”
15. This was a prayer meeting
held in a private house, and I want to urge upon my
brethren here to consecrate their houses by frequently
using them for prayer meetings. This would have an
advantage about it: it would avoid all savour of
superstition. There still lingers among people the
notion that buildings may be consecrated and rendered
holy. Well, it is so babyish an idea, that I should have
hoped the manliness of this generation, let alone
anything else, would have given up the notion. How can
it be that inside four brick walls there should be more
holiness than outside, or that prayer offered in some
particular place should be more acceptable than prayer
offered anywhere else? Behold, today, God hears prayer
wherever there is a true heart.
Where’er we seek him, he is found
And every place is hallow’d ground.
Meetings for prayer, held at the house of the mother of Mark, at your mother’s house, at your brother’s house, at your own house, will do much to be a plain protest against the superstition which reverences holy places. There was an appropriateness in their meeting in this particular house, the house of Mark’s mother, for that family stood in a very dear relationship to Peter. Do you know who Mark was, in reference to Peter? If you turn to Peter’s first epistle, you will read, “Marcus, my son.” [1Pe 5:13] Ah, I am sure Mark would pray for Peter, because Peter was his spiritual father. I should not wonder that Mark and his mother were both converted on the day of Pentecost, when Peter preached that famous sermon. Anyway, Mark was converted under Peter, and so both he and his mother often invited Peter to their house, and when he was imprisoned they had the special prayer meetings at their house, because they loved him greatly. There is sure to be prayer for the pastor in the house where the pastor has been blessed to the family. He need not be afraid that his own sons and daughters in the faith will be sure to pray for him.
16. These meetings had a good effect upon Mrs. Mark’s house. She, herself, no doubt, had a blessing, but her son Mark obtained particular favour from the Lord. Naturally he was not all we should like him to have been, for though his uncle Barnabas was very fond of him, Paul, who was a very good judge, could not put up with his instability, but he obtained so great a blessing from the Lord that he became, according to the unanimous tradition of the church, the writer of the Gospel of Mark. He might have been a very weak and useless Christian if it had not been that the prayer meetings at his mother’s house warmed his heart, and he might never have used his graphic pen for the Lord had not the conversation of the good people who came to his house instructed him concerning the facts, which he later recorded in the precious gospel which bears his name. The house received a blessing, and so will you, too, if your house shall be opened for special prayer every now and then. I urge upon the followers of Jesus Christ to use their own houses more frequently than they do now for holy purposes. How greatly might the Sunday Schools in London be extended if all the better instructed gathered together Bible classes in their own houses, and taught them during the Sabbath day; and what a multitude of prayers would go up to heaven if Christians who have suitable rooms would frequently call together their brethren and neighbours to offer prayer. Many an hour is wasted in idle talk, many an evening frittered away in foolish amusements, degrading to Christians, when the time might be occupied in exercises calculated to bring down untold blessings upon the family and upon the church.
17. Prayer meetings at private houses are very useful, because friends who would be afraid to pray before a large assembly, and others who if they did so would be very much restricted in language, are able to feel free and easy in a smaller group in a private home. Sometimes, too, the social element is consecrated by God to promote a greater warmth and fervour, so that prayer will often burn in the family when perhaps it might have declined in the public assembly. I never knew the little church of which I was pastor before I came here to be in such a happy condition as when the members took it into their heads to hold prayer meetings in their own homes. I have sometimes myself attended six or seven in an evening, running from one to another just to look in on them, finding twelve in a kitchen, ten or a dozen in a parlour, two or three met together in a little room. We saw a great work of grace then; the biggest sinners in the parish felt the power of the gospel, the old saints warmed up and began to believe in young people being converted, and we were all alive by reason of the abundance of prayer. Brethren, we must have the same abundance of prayer; do pray that we may have it. We have been distinguished as a church for prayerfulness, and I am jealous with a godly jealousy lest we should go back in any degree, and I do affectionately suggest to you with much earnestness of heart that we should try to increase the number of the places where many shall be met together praying. I do not know where the mother of John Mark is this morning, but I hope she will start a prayer meeting in her large room. She is well to do, I believe, because her brother Barnabas had land, and sold it, and I suppose she had property also; we will use her drawing room. If a poorer friend has a smaller and poorer room, we shall be glad for the use of it, for it will be more suitable for people of another class to go to. Perhaps they would not like to go to Mrs. Mark’s drawing room, but they will come to your kitchen. All kinds will have an opportunity of praying when all kinds of rooms are dedicated to prayer.
18. IV. I have a little to say about THE TIME OF THIS PRAYER MEETING.
19. It was held in the dead of night. I suppose they prayed all through the night. They could say, “We have been waiting, we have been waiting, all the night long.” After midnight the angel set Peter free. Peter went to the house, and they had not gone to bed, but many were met together praying. Now, concerning the time for prayer meetings, let me say this. If it happens to be an inconvenient hour, and I should think the dead of night was rather inconvenient, nevertheless go. Better to hold prayer meetings at twelve o’clock at night than not at all; better that we should be accused, as the Christians were of old, of holding secret meetings under the shadow of night, rather than not to meet together for prayer.
20. But there is another lesson. The dead of the night was chosen because it was the most suitable hour, since they could not safely meet in the day because of the Jews. It becomes those who appoint the times for prayer meetings to select as good an hour as they can, a quiet hour, a leisure hour, an hour suited to the habits of the people. Still let us remember that whatever hour is appointed, if we come together with true hearts, it will be an acceptable hour. Better still, it would be well if there could be meetings for prayer at all hours. Then every hour would be an acceptable hour, and if one happened to be unseasonable, another would be convenient, and all classes of believers could thus meet together at some time or other to pour out their hearts in prayer to God. Oh, brethren, if your business will not let you meet in the middle of the day, meet in the middle of the night; if you cannot come together for prayer at the times that are generally appointed, then have prayer meetings at such times as will suit yourselves; but do let there be a unanimous resolve throughout the whole church of Christ, that much prayer shall be presented to the Most High.
21. V. Notice, in the last place, THE SUCCESS OF THE PRAYER MEETINGS AS AN ENCOURAGEMENT TO US.
22. They prayed, and they were heard at once. The answer came so speedily that they themselves were surprised. It has sometimes been said that they did not expect Peter to be set free, and that their astonishment was the result of unbelief; perhaps so; but I doubt it, for you must remember that their prayer did set Peter free, and therefore it does not look as if it could have been unbelieving prayer. I trace their surprise to another cause. I think they expected that God would somehow or other deliver Peter, but they did not think he would deliver him in the dead of the night. They very likely had thought in their own minds that something would happen the next day, and so their surprise arose, not from the fact that Peter was free so much as from his being out of the dungeon at that particular time, and in that particular manner, for I cannot judge that to have been an unbelieving prayer which really did win the day with the God of heaven. Dear friends, the Lord Jesus waits to give us great blessings in answer to prayer. He can send us surprises quite as great as those which astonished the assembly at midnight. We may pray for some sinner, and while we are still praying we may hear him cry, “What must I do to be saved?” We may offer our prayers for the sleeping church, and while we pray it may be answered. True, the church still sleeps; she has had a slap on the side recently, but has not yet girded herself and come out of the prison house of her coldness and conventionality; but if we continue in prayer we may see with astonishment the church rouse herself from sleep and come forth to liberty. We cannot tell what will happen, prayer operates in so many ways, but it will operate, and we shall assuredly have our reward.
23. I selected this topic just
now for this reason. The American evangelists who have
been so useful in this great city have gone from us, and
the great assemblies which they gathered are no more.
There must have been many converted: I can only believe
that many thousands have received the Lord Jesus Christ,
and I have no sympathy whatever with the remarks of
those who affirm that our friends have not touched the
lowest class of society. I believe they have touched
every class of society. At any rate their business was
to preach the gospel to every creature, and they have
done so with great impartiality and earnestness. If the
poorest did not go it was not because they were not
welcome. But they did go; I am an eyewitness to it. I
know that many who went nowhere before did attend the
Bow and Camberwell Halls, and the fact that the
congregation looked respectable by no means proves that
they were not from the working classes; for what working
man is there among us who does not try to dress as
neatly as he can when he goes to a place of worship?
There are plenty of friends here who work hard for their
daily bread, but looking around they all seem by their
dress to be well to do. No one has a right to judge that
because a man does not come to worship in rags he cannot
therefore belong to the lower portion of the working
class, for it is not the habit of the working men of
London to go to places of worship in their every day
clothes or in rags. I saw with my own eyes that
multitudes assembled there were of that class which did
not habitually hear the gospel. I am sure that good was
done, and I do not care who objects. The practical point
is — What is to be done now? We must keep up this work.
And how? Not by those large assemblies, but by all the
churches being revived all around, and the numbers in
all the places of worship becoming more numerous, and at
the same time becoming more prayerful. Let us pray
now. We need prayer to train the converts, to keep
God’s people warm now that they are warm, and to make
them even more so. What wonders we have obtained in the
Tabernacle in answer to prayer! We began this work with
a little handful of Christian men. I remember the first
Monday night after I came to London; there was a small
audience on the Sunday, but thank God there was almost
as many at the prayer meeting as on the Sunday; and I
thought, “This is all right; these people can pray.”
They did pray, and as we increased in prayer we
increased in numbers. Sometimes, at prayer meetings, my
heart was almost ready to burst for joy because of the
mighty supplication that was offered. We wanted to build
this great house: we were poor enough, but we prayed for
it, and prayer built it. Praying gave us everything we
have. Praying brings us all manner of supplies,
spiritual and temporal. Whatever I am in the church of
God today I owe, under God’s blessing, to your prayers.
As long as your prayers sustain me, I shall not flag nor
fail, but if your prayers are gone then my power is
gone, for the Spirit of God is gone, and what can I do?
All through the church of God the true progress is in
proportion to the prayer. I do not care about the talent
of the speaker; I am glad if he has talent; I do not
care about the wealth of the congregation, though I am
glad if they have wealth; but I do care beyond
everything else for the deep, real, earnest prayer, the
rising up of the souls of Christians to God, and the
bringing down of the blessing upon men from God; and if
this were the last word I had to address to this
congregation, I would say to you, dear brethren, abound
in prayer, multiply the petitions that you raise, and
increase the fervour with which you present them to God.
When my venerable predecessor, Dr. Rippon, was growing
old, this was one of the things everyone noticed about
him, that he always prayed earnestly for his successors.
He did not know who they might be, but his prayer was,
that God would bless the church and his successors in
years to come, and I have heard old Christians say that
our present prosperity might be traced to Dr. Rippon’s
prayers. Oh, let us pray. I believe we have had a
revival very much in answer to the multitudinous fervent
prayers that were raised here and elsewhere; and now
that God is beginning to bless the church in answer to
prayer, if she restrains her hand she will be like that
king of old, who had the arrows and the bow put into his
hands, and shot once or twice, whereas, if he had shot
many times, God would have destroyed Syria before him,
and established his people. Take down your quivers full
of desires, and grasp the mighty bow of faith. Now shoot
again and again the arrow of the Lord’s deliverance, and
God will give us multitudes of converts all over London,
and throughout the world. “Prove me now by this,” says
the Lord of Hosts, “and see if I do not open the windows
of heaven and pour you out a blessing that you shall not
have room enough to receive it.” May God bless you, for
Christ’s sake.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon —
Ac 12:1-19]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Public Worship, Prayer Meetings —
Prayer For Our Country” 1009]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Public Worship, Prayer Meetings —
The Throne Of Grace” 978]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Public Worship, Prayer Meetings —
Peace At The Mercy Seat” 1000]
Public Worship, Prayer Meetings
1009 — Prayer For Our Country
1 Shine, mighty God, on Britain shine,
With beams of heavenly grace;
Reveal thy power through all our coasts,
And show thy smiling face.
2 Amidst our isle, exalted high,
Do thou our glory stand,
And, like a wall of guardian fire,
Surround this favour’d land.
3 When shall thy name from shore to shore,
Sound all the earth abroad;
And distant nations know and love
Their Saviour and their God?
4 Sing to the Lord, ye distant lands,
Sing loud, with solemn voice;
While British tongues exalt his praise,
And British hearts rejoice.
5 Earth shall obey her Maker’s will,
And yield a full increase;
Our God will crown his chosen isle
With fruitfulness and peace.
6 God, the Redeemer, scatters round
His choicest favours here;
While the creation’s utmost bound
Shall see, adore, and fear.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Public Worship, Prayer Meetings
978 — The Throne Of Grace
1 Behold the throne of grace!
The promise calls me near,
There Jesus shows a smiling face,
And waits to answer prayer.
2 That rich atoning blood,
Which sprinkled round I see,
Provides for those who come to God
An all-prevailing plea.
3 My soul, ask what thou wilt,
Thou canst not be too bold;
Since his own blood for thee he spilt,
What else can he withhold?
4 Beyond thy utmost wants
His love and power can bless;
To praying souls he always grants
More than they can express.
5 Thine image, Lord, bestow,
Thy presence and thy love;
I ask to serve thee here below,
And reign with thee above.
6 Teach me to live by faith,
Conform my will to thine;
Let me victorious be in death,
And then in glory shine.
John Newton, 1779.
Public Worship, Prayer Meetings
1000 — Peace At The Mercy Seat
1 From every stormy wind that blows,
From every swelling tide of woes,
There is a calm, a safe retreat;
‘Tis found beneath the mercy-seat.
2 There is a place where Jesus sheds
The oil of gladness o’er our heads!
A place, than all beside more sweet,
It is the blood-stain’d mercy-seat.
3 There is a spot spirits blend,
Where friend holds fellowship with friend;
Though sunder’d far, by faith we meet
Around our common mercy-seat.
4 Ah, whither could we flee for aid,
When tempted, desolate, dismay’d:
Or how the hosts of hell defeat,
Had suffering saints no mercy-seat?
5 There, there, on eagle-wings we soar,
And time and sense seem all no more,
And heaven comes down our souls to greet,
And glory crowns the mercy-seat.
6 Oh let my hands forget their skill,
My tongue be silent, cold, and still,
This bounding heart forget to beat,
If I forget the mercy-seat!
Hugh Stowell, 1832, a.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2013/08/09/special-prayer-meeting