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Octavius Winslow

Daniel 9:13, 14

Daniel 9:13, 14
Octavius Winslow October, 5 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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October, 5 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about prayer and backsliding?

The Bible indicates that neglecting prayer is the first step towards backsliding, as demonstrated in Daniel 9:13-14.

In Daniel 9:13-14, we learn that the failure to pray before God is a significant precursor to spiritual backsliding. This neglect leads the individual away from God's truth and into iniquity. Prayer acts as the lifeline that keeps the believer close to God; therefore, when it is restrained, a distance begins to form, which can spiral into a complete departure from God. The scripture underscores the importance of maintaining a consistent prayer life to avoid these consequences.

Daniel 9:13-14

How do we know that God desires communication through prayer?

God invites His people to acquaint themselves with Him through prayer, as stated in His word.

The invitation in scripture to 'Acquaint now yourself with God, and be at peace' signifies God's desire for intimate communication with His people through prayer. This relationship fosters deeper knowledge of His holy and loving character, resulting in increased trust and love. As believers engage in prayer, they develop a profound connection to God, which is essential for spiritual health and closeness to Him.

Job 22:21

Why is avoiding prayer important for Christians?

Avoiding prayer can lead to spiritual decline and further disconnection from God.

The neglect of prayer constitutes a critical warning for Christians. When believers cease to pray, they risk misinterpreting God's corrective dealings, interpreting them harshly rather than as acts of love and faithfulness. This misinterpretation fosters negativity towards God and can disable the positive effects of His dealings in their life. Hence, it's vital for believers to guard against any decline in their prayer life to remain grounded in their faith and maintain a proper understanding of God’s character.

Daniel 9:13-14, Job 22:21

How does God respond to a believer's neglect of prayer?

God may use trials and afflictions to awaken a believer's desire for prayer.

God is attentive to the spiritual state of His children and often employs trials to call them back to a life of prayer. In moments of distress or affliction, believers may find themselves returning to God, realizing their dependence on Him. It is through these difficulties that the desire for communion with God is rekindled, illustrating His love and commitment to restoring the wandering soul. Afflictions act as a means of grace, drawing believers closer to their Heavenly Father.

Daniel 9:13-14

“Yet made we not our prayer before the Lord our God, that we might turn from our iniquities, and understand your truth. Therefore has the Lord watched upon the evil, and brought it upon us: for the Lord our God is righteous in all his works which he does.”

— Daniel 9:13, 14

All backsliding has its commencement in the neglect of prayer: it may date its beginning at the throne of grace. The restraining of prayer before God was the first step in departure; and the first step taken, and not immediately retraced, was quickly succeeded by others. Reader, do you tremble at the possibility of ever becoming a backslider? do you dread the thought of wounding Jesus, then restrain not prayer before God; vigilantly guard against the first symptom of declension in this holy exercise, or if that symptom has already appeared, haste you to the dear Physician, who alone has power to arrest its progress, and heal your soul.

A distant walk from God will super-induce distant thoughts of God, and this is no light consequence of the soul's declension in the spirit and habit of prayer. If the simple axiom be true, that the more intimate we become with any object, the better we are prepared to judge of its nature and properties, we may apply it with peculiar appropriateness to our acquaintance with God. The encouraging invitation of His word is, "Acquaint now yourself with God, and be at peace." Now, it is this acquaintance with God that brings us into the knowledge of His character as a holy, loving, and faithful God; and it is this knowledge of His character that begets love and confidence in the soul towards Him. The more we know of God, the more we love Him: the more we try Him, the more we confide in Him. Let the spiritual reader, then, conceive what dire effects must result from a distant walk with God. When He appears in His corrective dealings, how will those dealings be interpreted in the distant walk of the soul? As of a covenant God? as of a loving Father? No, far from it. They will receive a harsh and unkind interpretation, and this will neutralize their effect: for in order to reap the proper fruit of the Lord's dealings with the soul, it is necessary that they should be viewed in the light of His faithfulness and love. The moment they are otherwise interpreted, the soul starts off from God, and wraps itself up in gloomy and repulsive views of His character, and government, and dealings. But this will assuredly follow from a distant walk. Oh guard against a declension in prayer; let there be no distance between God and your soul!

Do not forget that the season of trial and of bereavement is often the sanctified occasion of a revival of prayer in the soul. The Lord has marked your wanderings, He has had His eye upon the declension of your soul. That voice, always so pleasant to His ear, has ceased to call upon Him; and now He would recover you; He would hear that voice again, and how will He effect it? He causes you to "pass under the rod," sends some sore trial, lays on you some weighty cross, brings trouble and sorrow into your soul, and then you cry unto Him, and do besiege the mercy-seat. Oh how eagerly is God sought, how attractive and how precious does the throne of grace become, when the soul is thus led into deep waters of trial! No longer silent, no longer dumb, the believer calls upon God, pleads with "strong crying and tears," wrestles and agonizes, and thus the slumbering spirit of prayer is stirred up and revived in the soul. Oh sweet affliction, oh precious discipline, that brings back the wandering soul to a closer and a holier walk with God!

Again we exhort the believer—guard against the least declension in prayer; let the first unfavorable symptom that appears alarm you, go to the Lord in your worst frames; stay not from Him until you get a good one. Satan's grand argument to keep a soul from prayer is—"Go not with that cold and insensible frame; go not with that hard and sinful heart; stay until you are more fit to approach God!" and listening to this specious reasoning, many poor, distressed, burdened, longing souls have been kept from the throne of grace, and consequently from all comfort and consolation. But the gospel says—"Go in your very worst frames;" Christ says—"Come just as you are;" and every promise and every example but encourages the soul to repair to the cross, whatever be its frame or condition.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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