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Tag: Prayer

Come Up to Carmel

Come Up to Carmel

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“Hear me, O LORD, hear me.” (1 Kings 18:37)
“Elijah was a man with a nature like ours, and he prayed earnestly that it would not rain; and it did not rain on the land for three years and six months. And he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth produced its fruit” (James 5:17, 18).
He got under a juniper tree, as you and I have often done; he complained and murmured, as we have often done; was unbelieving, as we have often been. But that was not the case when he really got into touch with God. Though “a man subject to like passions as we are,” “he prayed praying.” It is sublime in the original–not “earnestly,” but “he prayed in prayer.” He kept on praying.
What is the lesson here?
You must keep praying.
Come up on the top of Carmel, and see that remarkable parable of Faith and Sight.
It was not the descent of the fire that now was necessary, but the descent of the flood; and the man that can command the fire can command the flood by the same means and methods. We are told that he bowed himself to the ground with his face between his knees; that is, shutting out all sights and sounds. He was putting himself in a position where, beneath his mantle, he could neither see nor hear what was going forward.
He said to his servant, “Go and take an observation.” He went and came back, and said–how sublimely brief! one word–“Nothing!”
What do we do under such circumstances? We say, “It is just as I expected!” and we give up praying.
Did Elijah?
No, he said, “Go again.”
His servant again came back and said, “Nothing!”
“Go again.”
“Nothing!”
By and by he came back, and said, “There is a little cloud like a man’s hand.” A man’s hand-like cloud had been raised in supplication, and presently down came the rain; and Ahab had not time to get back to the gate of Samaria with all his fast steeds.
This is a parable of Faith and Sight–faith shutting itself up with God; sight taking observations and seeing nothing; faith going right on, and “praying in prayer,” with utterly hopeless reports from sight.
Do you know how to pray that way, how to pray prevailingly?
Let sight give as discouraging reports as it may, but pay no attention to these.
The living God is still in the heavens and even to delay is part of His goodness.
“Go out and stand on the mountain in the presence of the LORD, for the LORD is about to pass by” (1 Kings 19:11).
(PR)