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Octavius Winslow

Luke 22:32

Luke 22:32
Octavius Winslow June, 3 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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June, 3 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about Jesus interceding for us?

The Bible teaches that Jesus continually intercedes for His people, ensuring their faith will not fail (Luke 22:32).

In Luke 22:32, Jesus says to Peter, 'I have prayed for you that your faith fail not.' This powerful truth highlights the intercessory role of Christ, assuring believers that their faith is maintained not by their own strength, but by the active prayers of their High Priest. Jesus anticipates our struggles and trials, praying specifically for us before we face them. This divine intercession provides believers with a source of comfort and strength in times of trial, reminding us that we have a Savior who cares deeply for our spiritual well-being.

Luke 22:32

Why is Jesus’ prayer for our faith important for Christians?

Jesus' prayer for our faith is crucial because it reassures us that He supports and strengthens our faith throughout our trials (Luke 22:32).

The significance of Jesus' prayer for our faith lies in its assurance that we are not left to navigate life's trials alone. In Luke 22:32, Jesus reveals that He specifically prays for His followers when they face temptation and hardship. This intercession demonstrates His deep love and commitment to preserving our faith despite the inevitable challenges we encounter. Rather than seeking our complete exemption from trials, Christ understands that such experiences are intended to refine us and draw us closer to Him. As He prays for us, we can have confidence that our faith, while tested, is also being upheld by His grace.

Luke 22:32

How do we know that faith is preserved through trials?

We know faith is preserved through trials because Jesus actively prays for us, ensuring our faith will not fail (Luke 22:32).

The preservation of faith through trials is a central theme in Christian theology, fully supported by the prayer of Jesus in Luke 22:32. Jesus’ assurance to Peter reveals that our faith does not hinge solely on our own efforts, but is sustained by His continuous intercession. When we experience trials, it is crucial to remember that our High Priest is praying for us, rooting for our perseverance. Such confidence allows us to embrace challenges as necessary instruments of growth. This process, although painful, serves a divine purpose, aligning us more closely with Christ. Thus, we can trust that we have the strength to endure because of the unceasing prayers of our Lord.

Luke 22:32

“I have prayed for you that your faith fail not.”

— Luke 22:32

The Lord as its Shepherd goes before His flock. He precedes it every step, not only to map its path, but also to provide for all the circumstances, the most trivial and minute, of its history. To Him nothing can be unforeseen, from Him nothing can be concealed. No event can surprise Him, no contingency can thwart Him, no difficulty can embarrass Him. The entire history of the individual saint of God, from his earliest to his latest breath, is written in His book, when as yet it had no existence, as minutely and as accurately as though it were a record of the past. In anticipation of each developed circumstance, of each temptation and trial, difficulty and need, Jesus prays for His people "I have prayed." It would seem as if the sorrow had reached His heart before it touched our own; as if the assault had fallen upon Him before it fell upon us; and that, knowing what would transpire, seeing in what critical and painful circumstances His child would be placed, He anticipates his case by especial intercession on his behalf: "I have prayed for you." Can the mind of the tried believer repose upon a truth more sustaining and soothing than this? It had been a glorious unfolding of the love of Jesus, to know that when the sifting came, when faith was actually tried, that then Jesus prayed for the sufferer. But to be assured that before a dart was winged, or a shock was felt, or even a suspicion was awakened that the tempter was approaching, and that danger was near, Jesus, robed in His priestly garments, and bearing the golden censer in His hand, had entered within the veil to make especial intercession for that trial of faith- oh, it is a view of His love, which to the mind of the tempted believer would seem to overtop and outshine all others! And for what does Jesus pray? That the temptation might not come? that faith may not be tried? Oh no! He does not ask the Father in behalf of His people, for their entire exemption from temptation and trial. Full well does He know that if conformed to Him, their Head, they must through much tribulation enter the kingdom. Pure and sinless though He was, needing no sifting and no refining, He yet passed through each process as if there were in Him the chaff to scatter, and the alloy to consume. How much more needful does Jesus see that His people, in whom there is such an admixture of the precious with the vile, so much indwelling sin, so much powerful corruption perpetually seeking to destroy indwelling grace, should not be exempted from the process which, painful though it be, is absolutely needful and eternally good! But Jesus prays that in the actual trial of faith it might not fail. Now, why, is it, O believing soul, that your tried faith has not failed? Why, have you passed through the sifting with not one precious grain fallen to the ground? Because your great High Priest prayed for you before the trial, and prayed for you in the trial, and has not ceased to pray for you since the trial. All upholding grace, all restraining grace, all restoring grace, all establishing grace, has been meted out to you through the channel of your Lord's perpetual and ever-prevalent intercession. Oh, how should this truth endear the Savior to your heart! With what holy contrition should it fill your spirit, and with what sweet affection should it constrain your soul to a simple and an unreserved surrender to God!

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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