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Octavius Winslow

Evening Thoughts — April 11

Octavius Winslow April, 11 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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April, 11 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about prayer?

The Bible teaches that prayer is a sacred act of approaching God, facilitated by the Spirit and through Jesus.

Prayer is a profound and spiritual act where the soul engages directly with a holy God. John 16:23 emphasizes that whatever we ask the Father in Jesus' name will be granted, highlighting the importance of Christ as our mediator. The act of prayer expresses our dependence on God, acknowledging our needs and our poverty without Him. Through prayer, we communicate our desires and needs, recognizing that we have nothing in ourselves and rely solely on God for all our needs. It's through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit that we are enabled to pray, signifying a deep connection with God that encompasses the essence of our faith.

John 16:23

How do we know prayer is effective?

Prayer is effective because it is grounded in the divine appointment of Jesus as our intercessor and the Spirit as our helper.

The effectiveness of prayer is rooted in God's gracious provision for us to approach Him through Jesus Christ. In John 16:23, Jesus assures us that our requests made in His name will be heard, affirming His role as our mediator between God and man. The Spirit's role in prayer cannot be overlooked; He stirs in our hearts the desire to pray, guiding us in our petitions and groaning alongside us when we do not know what to pray (Romans 8:26-27). Through the work of the Son and the Spirit, our prayers ascend to the throne of grace, enabling us to experience God's presence and responses.

John 16:23, Romans 8:26-27

Why is the concept of a throne of grace important for Christians?

The throne of grace symbolizes God's mercy and accessibility for all believers, emphasizing His readiness to hear and help us.

The throne of grace is significant for Christians because it represents the abundance of God's mercy available to all who come to Him in faith. It serves as a meeting place where the needy and burdened find refuge, underscoring that no one is turned away regardless of their past or present circumstances. By appointing Jesus as the 'new and living way' to approach this throne, God ensures that we have free access through Christ's sacrifice. This doctrine highlights the love and grace of God, affirming that through prayer, we engage in personal communion with Him, experiencing His grace and help in our time of need (Hebrews 4:16).

Hebrews 4:16

Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatever you shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. John 16:23

THAT God should have erected in this lower world a throne of grace, a mercy-seat, around which may gather, in clustering and welcome multitudes, the helpless, the burdened, the friendless, the vile, the guilty, the deeply necessitous—that no poor comer, be his poverty never so great, his burden never so heavy, or his case never so desperate, should meet with the refusal of a hearing or a welcome, does greatly develop and magnify the riches of His grace, His wisdom, and His love to sinners. What a God our God must be, thus to have appointed a meeting-place, an audience-chamber, for those upon whom all other doors were closed! But more than this,

That He should have appointed Jesus the door of approach to that throne—should have given His only-begotten and well-beloved Son to be the "new and living way" of access, thus removing all obstruction in the path of the soul's coming, both on the part of Himself, and on the part of the sinner; that the door should be a crucified Savior—the wounds of the Son of God—that through blood, and that blood the blood of the incarnate Deity, the guilty should approach—wonder, O heavens, and be astonished, O earth! Shall we say even more than this? For there is a yet lower depth in this love and condescension of God—that He should have sent His Spirit into the heart, the Author of prayer, inditing the petition—breathing in the soul—implanting the desire—convincing of the existing necessity—unfolding the character of God—working faith in the heart—and drawing it up to God through Jesus—seems the very perfection of His wisdom, benevolence, and grace.

It must be acknowledged by the spiritual mind that all true prayer is of the inditing of the Spirit—that He is the Author of all real approach of the soul to God. And yet how perpetually we need to be reminded of this! Prayer is one of the most spiritual employments that can possibly engage the mind. It is that holy act of the soul which brings it immediately in contact with a holy God. It has more directly to do with the "high and lofty One" than any other exercise. It is that state of mind, too, that most deeply acknowledges its dependence on God. Prayer is the expression of want—it is the desire of need, the acknowledgment of poverty—the language of dependence—the breathing of a soul that has nothing in itself, but hangs on God for all it needs. It must therefore be a highly spiritual and holy exercise. But still more so will this appear, if we consider that true prayer is the breathing of the life of God in the soul of man. It is the Spirit dwelling and breathing in him. It is the new nature pouring out its vital principle, and that into the ear of God where it came. It is the cry of the feeble child turning to the Father it loves, and in all its conscious weakness, dependence, and need, pouring out the yearnings of its full heart into the bosom where dwells nothing but love. In a word, it is God and the creature meeting and blending, in one act of blessed, holy, and eternal fellowship.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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