E. M. Bounds on Prayer: 31 Powerful Insights to Strengthen Your Prayer Life (LARGE PRINT)
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Some of the most incredible, hard-hitting, and revealing words on prayer came from the pen of E.M. Bounds. Of the 11 books he wrote, 9 are centered on this topic. For over a cent
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E. M. Bounds on Prayer - Godlipress Team
1
WHAT IS PRAYER?
"You will make your prayer to him, and he will hear you"
Job 22:27
Prayer is a serious service due to God, an adoration, worship, an approach to God for our request, presenting our desire, the expression of our need for Him, who supplies all needs, and who satisfies all desires; who, as a Father, finds His greatest pleasure in meeting the needs and granting the desires of His children. Prayer is the child’s request, not to the air nor the world, but the Father. Prayer is the outstretched arms of the child for the Father’s help. Prayer is the child’s cry calling to the Father’s ear, the Father’s heart, and to the Father’s ability, which the Father hears, feels, and wants to relieve. Prayer is seeking God’s greatest good, which will not come if we do not pray.
Everywhere we are told that it is more important and urgent that people pray than those who are skilled in the homiletic didactics of prayer. It is a thing of the heart, not of the schools. It is more feeling than words. Praying is the best school in which to learn to pray. Prayer is the best dictionary to define the art and nature of praying.
Prayer is not just a habit performed by custom and memory, something that must be done, with its value placed on how well and perfect its performance is. Prayer is not a duty to fulfill an obligation and to quiet the conscience. Prayer is not just a privilege, a sacred indulgence to be taken advantage of when we want with no serious loss if we forget or neglect it.
Prayer is a passionate and believing cry to God for some specific thing. God’s rule is to answer by giving the specific thing asked for. It may come with other gifts and graces. Strength, serenity, sweetness, and faith may come as the bearers of the gifts. But even they come because God hears and answers prayer.
Prayer is not an invention of man, an imaginative relief. Prayer is no boring, dead performance, but is God’s enabling act for man—living and life-giving, joy and joy-giving. Prayer is the contact of a living soul with God. In prayer, God bends to kiss us, bless us, and help us in everything that He has planned or we will need. Prayer fills our emptiness with God’s fullness. It fills man’s poverty with God’s riches. It puts away our weakness with God’s strength. It removes our smallness with God’s greatness. Prayer is God’s plan to supply our great and continuous need with God’s great and continuous abundance.
Prayer has to do with the entire person. Prayer takes in a person in their whole being, mind, soul, and body. It takes a whole person to pray, and prayer affects the entire person in its results. As the whole nature of a person enters into prayer, so everything that belongs to them benefits from it. The whole person must be given to God in praying. The largest results from praying come to those who give themselves, all of themselves, all that belongs to themselves, to God. This is the secret of full consecration, and this is a condition for successful praying—the type that brings the largest fruits.
It is our business to pray, and it takes courageous people to do it. It is a godly business to pray, and it takes godly people to do it. And it is godly people who give themselves entirely over to prayer. Prayer is far-reaching in its influence and its effects. It is an intense, important business to deal with God and His plans and purposes, and it takes whole-hearted people to do it. No half-hearted, half-brained, half-spirited effort will do for this serious, important, heavenly business. The whole heart, the whole brain, the whole spirit, must be in prayer.
Praying is no small, insignificant task. While children should be taught to pray when they are young, praying is no child’s task. Prayer demands our whole nature. Prayer engages all the powers of our moral and spiritual nature. This explains Jesus’ praying as described in Hebrews 5:7:
"In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence."
As the entire person is active in true, sincere, effective praying, the entire person, soul, mind, and body, receive the benefits of prayer.
Daily Reflection
Understanding what prayer is—and also what it is not—is a good place to start. In this first reading, we find a number of striking and clear definitions of prayer. Bounds wants to make sure that we are not confused.
Take the time to draw up two lists. Prayer Is and Prayer Is Not. Go through the reading and allocate Bounds’ definitions to the appropriate lists.
What is your own definition of prayer?
What do you understand by the assertion that praying is the best school in which to learn to pray
?
Looking at Hebrews 5:7 as an example of prayer, how much of your own praying is like this? Why?
2
HOW OFTEN SHOULD WE PRAY?
"They ought always to pray and not lose heart"
Luke 18:1
Jesus said these words to emphasize to His followers the urgency and the importance of prayer, and to set them an example that they were far too slow to copy.
The ‘always’ speaks for itself. Prayer is not a meaningless function or duty to be squeezed into the busy day, and we are not obeying our Lord’s command when we are content with a few minutes on our knees in the morning rush or late at night when we are tired. God is always listening; His ear is attentive to the cry of His child, but we can never get to know Him if we use prayer like we use the phone—for a few words of rushed conversation. Intimacy requires development. We can never know God as it is our privilege to know Him by brief, disjointed requests for personal favors and nothing more.
That is not the way to communicate with our King. The goal of prayer is the ear of God, a goal that can only be reached by patience and continuous waiting on Him, pouring out our hearts to Him and allowing Him to speak to us. This is the only way we can expect to know Him, and as we come to know Him better, we will spend more time in His presence and find that it is a constant and growing joy.
‘Always’ does not mean that we neglect the ordinary duties of life. It means the heart is in intimate contact with God and never out of conscious touch with the Father; it is always going out to Him in loving communion, and as soon as the mind is finished with other tasks, it naturally returns to God like a bird to its nest. What a beautiful concept of prayer if we look at it in this light, if we see it as a constant fellowship, an unbroken audience with the King. Then prayer is not a duty we must perform, but rather a privilege to be enjoyed, a rare delight that is always revealing some new beauty.
When we open our eyes in the morning, our thoughts instantly go up to heaven. For many Christians, the morning hours are the most precious part of the day, because they provide the opportunity for the fellowship that sets the day’s program. And what better introduction to the unending glory and wonder of a new day than to spend it alone with God? It is said that Mr. Moody, at a time when no other place was available, kept his morning quiet time in the coal shed, pouring out his heart to God and finding in his precious Bible a true feast of fat things.
But we do not pray ‘always’—that is the trouble with so many of us. We need to pray much more than we do and much longer than we do.
In Romans 12:12, we have the words, "Be constant in prayer. This is the same word used for the prayer of the disciples that ushered in Pentecost with all the blessings of the Holy Spirit. In Colossians 4:2, Paul repeats the word,
Continue steadfastly in prayer." The word in its background and root means strong, the