Quiet Talks on Prayer by S. D. (Samuel Dickey) Gordon
page 49 of 174 (28%)
page 49 of 174 (28%)
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"Well," some one will object, "now you're cutting us all out, are you not? Are we not all conscious of a sinful something inside here that has to be fought, and held under all the while?" It certainly seems to be true that the nearer a man gets to God the more keenly conscious he is of a sinful tendency within even while having continual victory. But plainly enough what the Book means here is this:--if I am holding something in my life that the Master does not like, if I am failing to obey when His voice has spoken, that to me is sin. It may be wrong in itself. It may _not_ be wrong in itself. It may not be wrong for another. Sometimes it is not the thing involved but the One involved that makes the issue. If that faithful quiet inner voice has spoken and I know what the Master would prefer and I fail to keep in line, that to me is sin. Then prayer is useless; sheer waste of breath. Aye, worse, it is deceptive. For I am apt to say or think, "Well, I am not as good as you, or you, but then I am not so bad; _I pray._" And the truth is because I have broken with God the praying--saying words in that form--is utterly worthless. You see _sin is slapping God in the face_. It may be polished, cultured sin. Sin seems capable of taking quite a high polish. Or it may be the common gutter stuff. A man is not concerned about the grain of a club that strikes him a blow. How can He and I talk together if I have done that, and stick to it--not even apologized. And of what good is an apology if the offense is being repeated. And if we cannot talk together of course working together is out of the question. And prayer is working together with God. Prayer is _pulling with God_ in His plan for a world. Shall we not put out the thing that is wrong? or put in the thing the Master wants in? For _Jesus'_ sake? Aye for _men's_ sake: poor befooled men's sake who are being kept out and away because God cannot get at them |
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