
By E. M. Bounds
| PRAYER-EQUIPMENT FOR PREACHERS 
 -- Samuel Chadwick ALMOST the last words uttered by our Lord before 
His ascension to heaven, were those addressed to the eleven disciples, words 
which, really, were spoken to, and having directly to do with, preachers, words 
which indicate very clearly the needed fitness which these men must have to 
preach the Gospel, beginning at Jerusalem: "But tarry ye in the city of 
Jerusalem," says Jesus, "till ye be endued with power from on high." Two things 
are very clearly set forth in these urgent directions. First, the power of the 
Holy Ghost for which they must tarry. This was to be received after their 
conversion, an indispensable requisite, equipping them for the great task set 
before them. Secondly, the "promise of the Father," this "power from on high," 
would come to them after they had waited in earnest, continuous prayer. A 
reference to Acts 1:14 will reveal that these same men, with the women, 
"continued with one accord in prayer and supplication," and so continued until 
the Day of Pentecost, when the power from on high descended upon 
them. This "power from on high," as important to those early preachers as 
it is to present-day preachers, was not the force of a mighty intellect, holding 
in its grasp great truths, flooding them with light, and forming them into 
verbal shapeliness and beauty. Nor was it the acquisition of great learning, or 
the result of an address, faultless and complete by rule of rhetoric. None of 
these things. Nor was this spiritual power held then, nor is it held now, in the 
keeping of any earthly sources of power. The effect and energy of all human 
forces are essentially different in source and character, and do not at all 
result from this "power from on high." The transmission of such power is 
directly from God, a bestowal, in rich measure, of the force and energy which 
pertains only to God, and which is transmitted to His messengers only in answer 
to a longing, wrestling attitude of his soul before his Master, conscious of his 
own impotency and seeking the omnipotency of the Lord he serves, in order more 
fully to understand the given Word and to preach the same to his 
fellow-men. The "power from on high" may be found in combination with all 
sources of human power, but is not to be confounded with them, is not dependent 
upon them, and must never be superseded by them. Whatever of human gift, talent 
or force a preacher may possess it is not to be made paramount, or even 
conspicuous. It must be hidden, lost, overshadowed by this " power from on 
high." The forces of intellect and culture may all be present, but without this 
inward, heaven-given power, all spiritual effort is vain and unsuccessful. Even 
when lacking the other equipment but having this "power from on high," a 
preacher cannot but succeed. It is the one essential, all-important vital force 
which a messenger of God must possess to give wings to his message, to put life 
into his preaching, and to enable him to speak the Word with acceptance and 
power. A word is necessary here. Distinctions need to be kept in mind. We 
must think clearly upon this question. "Power from on high " means "the unction 
of the Holy One" resting on and abiding in the preacher. This is not so much a 
power which bears witness to a man being the child of God as it is a preparation 
for delivering the Word to others. Unction must be distinguished from pathos. 
Pathos may exist in a sermon while unction is entirely absent. So also, may 
unction be present and pathos absent. Both may exist together; but they are not 
to be confused, nor be made to appear to be the same thing. Pathos promotes 
emotion, tender feeling, sometimes tears. Quite often it results from the 
relation of an affecting incident, or when the tender side is peculiarly 
appealed to. But pathos is neither the direct nor indirect result of the Holy 
Spirit resting upon the preacher as he preaches. But unction is. Here we are 
given the evidence of the workings of an undefinable agency in the preacher, 
which results directly from the presence of this "power from on high," deep, 
conscious, life-giving and carrying, giving power and point to the preached 
Word. It is the element in a sermon which arouses, stirs, convicts and moves the 
souls of sinners and saints. This is what the preacher requires, the great 
equipment for which he should wait and pray. This "unction of the Holy One" 
delivers from dryness, saves from superficiality, and gives authority to 
preaching. It is the one quality which distinguishes the preacher of the Gospel 
from other men who speak in public; it is that which makes a sermon unique, 
unlike the deliverance of any other public speaker. Prayer is the 
language of a man burdened with a sense of need. It is the voice of the beggar, 
conscious of his poverty, asking of another the things he needs. It is not only 
the language of lack, but of felt lack, of lack consciously realized. "Blessed 
are the poor in spirit," means not only that the fact of poverty of spirit 
brings the blessing, but also that poverty of spirit is realized, known and 
acknowledged. Prayer is the language of those who need something - something 
which they, themselves, cannot supply but which God has promised them, and for 
which they ask. In the end, "poor praying and prayerlessness amount to the same 
thing, for poor praying proceeds from a lack of the sense of need, while 
prayerlessness has its origin in the same soil. Not to pray is not only to 
declare there is nothing needed, but to admit to a nonrealization of that need. 
This is what aggravates the sin of prayerlessness. It represents an attempt at 
instituting an independence of God, a self-sufficient ruling of God out of the 
life. It is a declaration made to God that we do not need Him, and hence do not 
pray to Him. This is the state in which the Holy Spirit, in His messages 
to the Seven Churches in Asia, found the Laodicean Church and " the Laodiccan 
state " has come to stand for one in which God is ruled out, expelled from the 
life, put out of the pulpit. The entire condemnation of this Church is summed up 
in one expression: "Because thou sayest, I have need of nothing," the most 
alarming state into which a person, or church or preacher can come. Trusting in 
its riches, in its social position, in things outward and material, the Church 
at Laodicea omitted God, leaving Him out of their church plans and church work, 
and declared, by their acts and by their omission of prayer, "I have need of 
nothing." No wonder the self-satisfied declaration brought forth its sentence of 
punishment - " Because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue 
thee out of my mouth." The idea conveyed is that such a backslidden state of 
heart is as repulsive to God as an emetic is to the human stomach, and as the 
stomach expels that which is objectionable, so Almighty God threatens to "spue 
out of His mouth" these people who were in such a religious condition so 
repulsive to Him. All of it was traceable to a prayerless state of heart, for no 
one can read this word of the Spirit to this Laodicean Church and not see that 
the very core of their sin was prayerlessness. How could a Church, given to 
prayer, openly and vauntingly declare, "I have need of nothing" in the face of 
the Spirit's assertion that it needed everything, "Thou knowest not that thou 
art wretched, and poor, and miserable, and blind, and naked"? In addition to 
their sin of self-sufficiency and of independence of God, the Laodiceans were 
spiritually blind. Oh, what dullness of sight, what blindness of soul! These 
people were prayerless, and knew not the import of such prayerlessness. They 
lacked everything which goes to make up spiritual life, and force, and 
self-denying piety, and vainly supposed themselves to need nothing but material 
wealth, thus making temporal possessions a substitute for spiritual wealth, 
leaving God entirely out of their activities, relying upon human and material 
resources to do the work only possible to the divine and supernatural, and 
secured alone by prayer. Nor let it be forgotten that this letter (in 
common with the other six letters) was primarily addressed to the preacher in 
charge of the church. All this strengthens the impression that the "angel of the 
church" himself was in this lukewarm state. He himself was living a prayerless 
life, relying upon things other than God, practically saying, "I have need of 
nothing." For these words are the natural expression of the spirit of him who 
does not pray, who does not care for God, and who does not feel the need of Him 
in his life, in his work and in his preaching. Furthermore, the words of the 
Spirit seem to indicate that the "angel of the church" at Laodicea was 
indirectly responsible for this sad condition into which the Laodicean Church 
had fallen. May not this sort of a church be found in modern times? Is it not 
likely that we could discover some preachers of modern times who fall under a 
similar condemnation to that passed upon the "angel of the church of" 
Laodicea? Preachers of the present age excel those of the past in many, 
possibly in all, human elements of success. They are well abreast of the age in 
learning, research, and intellectual vigour. But these things neither insure 
"power from on high" nor guarantee a live, thriving religious experience, or 
righteous life. These purely human gifts do not bring with them an insight into 
the deep things of God, or strong faith in the Scriptures, or an intense loyalty 
to God's divine revelation. The presence of these earthly talents even in the 
most commanding and impressive form, and richest measure do not in the least 
abate the necessity for the added endowment of the Holy Spirit. Herein lies the 
great danger menacing the pulpit of to-day. All around us we see a tendency to 
substitute human gifts and worldly attainments for that supernatural, inward 
power which comes from on high in answer to earnest prayer. In many instances 
modern preaching seems to fail in the very thing which should create and 
distinguish true preaching, which is essential to its being, and which alone can 
make of it a divine and powerfully aggressive agency. It lacks in short, "the 
power from on high" which alone can make it a living thing. It fails to become 
the channel through which God's saving power can be made to appeal to men's 
consciences and hearts. Quite often, modern preaching fails at this vital 
point, for lack of exercising a potent influence which disturbs men in their 
sleep of security, and awakens them to a sense of need and of peril. There is a 
growing need of an appeal which will quicken and arouse the conscience from its 
ignoble stupor and give it a sense of wrong-doing and a corresponding sense of 
repentance. There is need of a message which searches into the secret places of 
man's being, dividing, as it were, the joints and the marrow, and laying bare 
the mysterious depths before himself and his God. Much of our present day 
preaching is lacking in that quality which infuses new blood into the heart and 
veins of faith, that arms it with courage and skill for the battle with the 
powers of darkness, and secures it a victory over the forces of the world. Such 
high and noble ends can never be accomplished by human qualifications, nor can 
these great results be secured by a pulpit clothed only with the human elements 
of power, however gracious, comfortable, and helpful they may be. The Holy 
Spirit is needed. He alone can equip the ministry for its difficult and 
responsible work in and out of the pulpit. Oh, that the present-day ministry may 
come to see that its one great need is an enduement of "power from on high," and 
that this one need can be secured only by the use of God's appointed means of 
grace - the ministry of prayer. Prayer is needed by the preacher in order 
that his personal relations with God may be maintained and that because there is 
no difference between him and any other kind of a man in so far as his personal 
salvation is concerned. This he must work out "with fear and trembling," just as 
all other men must do. Thus prayer is of vast importance to the preacher in 
order that he may possess a growing religious experience, and be enabled to live 
such a life that his character and conduct will back up his preaching and give 
force to his message. A man must have prayer in his pulpit work, for no minister 
can preach effectively without prayer. He also has use for prayer in praying for 
others. Paul was a notable example of a preacher who constantly prayed for those 
to whom he ministered. But we come, now, to another sphere of prayer, 
that of the people praying for the preacher. "Brethren, pray for us." This is 
the cry which Paul set in motion, and which has been the cry of spiritually 
minded preachers - those who know God aid who know that value of prayer - in all 
succeeding ages. No condition of success or the reverse of it must abate the 
cry. No degree of culture, no abundance of talents, must cause that cry to 
cease. The learned preacher, as well as the unlearned, has equal need to call 
out to the people they serve, "Withal, praying also for us." Such a cry voices 
the felt need of a preacher's heart who feels the need there is for sympathies 
of a people to be in harmony with its minister: It is but the expression of the 
inner soul of a preacher who feels his insufficiency for the tremendous 
responsibilities of the pulpit, who realizes his weakness and his need of the 
divine unction, and who throws himself upon the prayers of his congregation, and 
calls out to them, "Praying always with all prayer and supplication, in the 
Spirit, and for me, that utterance may be given me." It is the cry of deep felt 
want in the heart of the preacher who feels he must have this prayer made 
specifically for him that he may do his work in God's own way. When this 
request to a people to pray for the preacher is cold, formal and official, it 
freezes instead of fructifies. To be ignorant of the necessity for the cry, is 
to be ignorant of the sources of spiritual success. To fail to stress the cry, 
and to fail to have responses to it, is to sap the sources of spiritual life. 
Preachers must sound out the cry to the Church of God. Saints everywhere and of 
every kind, and of every faith speedily respond and pray for the preacher. The 
imperative need of the work demands it. "Pray for us," is the natural cry of the 
hearts of God's called men - faithful preachers of the Word. Saintly praying in 
the early Church helped apostolic preaching mightily, and rescued apostolic men 
from many dire straits. It can do the same thing to-day. It can open doors for 
apostolic labours, and apostolic lips to utter bravely and truly the Gospel 
message. Apostolic movements wait their ordering from prayer, and avenues long 
closed are opened to apostolic entrance by and through the power of prayer. The 
messenger receives his message and is schooled as to how to carry and deliver 
the message by prayer. The forerunner of the Gospel, and that which prepares the 
way, is prayer; not only by the praying of the messenger himself, but by the 
praying of the Church of God. Writing along this line in his Second 
Epistle to the Thessalonians, Paul is first general in his request and says, 
"Brethren, pray for us." Then he becomes more minute and particular: "Finally, 
brethren, pray for us," he goes on, "that the word of the Lord may have free 
course and be glorified, even as it is with you. And that we may be delivered 
from unreasonable and wicked men; for all men have not faith." The Revised 
Version has for "free course " the word "run." "The Word" means doctrine, and 
the idea conveyed is that this doctrine of the Gospel is rapidly propagated, a 
metaphor taken from the running of a race, and is an exhortation to exert one's 
self, to strive hard, to expend strength. Thus the prayer for the spread of the 
Gospel gives the same energy to the Word of the Lord, as the greatest outlay of 
strength gives success to the racer. Prayer in the pew gives the preached Word 
energy, facility, and success. Preaching without the backing of mighty praying 
is as limp and worthless an effort as can be imagined. Prayerlessness in the pew 
is a serious hindrance to the running of the Word of the Lord. The 
preaching of the Word of the Lord fails to run and be glorified from many 
causes. The difficulty may lie with the preacher himself, should his outward 
conduct be out of harmony with the rule of the Scriptures and his own 
profession. The Word lived must be in accord with the Word delivered; the life 
must be in harmony with the sermon. The preacher's spirit and behaviour out of 
the pulpit must run parallel with the Word of the Lord spoken in the pulpit. 
Otherwise, a man is an obstacle to the success of his own message. Again, the 
Word of the Lord may fail to run, may be seriously encumbered and crippled by 
the inconsistent lives of those who are the hearers thereof. Bad living in the 
pew will seriously cripple the Word of the Lord, as attempts to run on its 
appointed course. Unrighteous lives among the laity heavily weights down the 
Word of the Lord and hampers the work of the ministry. Yet prayer will remove 
this burden which seriously handicaps the preached Word. It will tend to do this 
in a direct way, or in an indirect manner. For just as you set laymen to 
praying, for the preacher or even for themselves, it awakens conscience, stirs 
the heart , and tends to correct evil ways and to promote good living. No man 
will pray long and continue in sin. Praying breaks up bad living while bad 
living breaks down prayer. Praying goes into bankruptcy when a man goes to 
sinning. To obey the cry of the preacher, "Brethren, pray for us," sets men to 
doing that which will induce right living in them, and will tend to break them 
away from sin. So it comes about that it is worth no little to get the laity to 
pray for the ministry. Prayer helps the preacher, is an aid to the sermon, 
assists the hearer and promotes right living in the pew. Prayer also 
moves him who prays for the preacher and for the Word of the Lord, to use all 
his influence to remove any hindrance to that Word which he may see, and which 
lies in his power to remove. But prayer reaches the preacher directly. God hears 
the praying of a church for its minister. Prayer for the preached Word is a 
direct aid to it. Prayer for the preacher gives wings to the Gospel, as well as 
feet. Prayer makes the Word of the Lord go forward strongly and rapidly. It 
takes the shackles off of the message, and gives it a chance to run straight to 
the hearts of sinners and saints, alike. It opens the way, clears the track, 
furnishes a free course. The failure of many a preacher may be found just here. 
He was hampered, hindered, crippled by a prayerless church. Non-praying 
officials stood in the way of the Word preached, and became veritable stumbling 
blocks in the way of the Word, definitely preventing its reaching the hearts of 
the unsaved. Unbelief and prayerlessness go together. It is written of 
our Lord in Matthew's Gospel that when He entered into His own country, "he did 
not many mighty works there because of their unbelief." Mark puts it a little 
differently, but giving out the same idea: "And he could there do no mighty 
work, save that he laid his hands upon a few sick folks and healed them. And he 
marveled because of their unbelief." Unquestionably the unbelief of that people 
hindered our Lord in His gracious work and tied His hands. And if that be true, 
it requires no undue straining of the Scriptures when we say that the unbelief 
and prayerlessness of a church can tie the hands of its preacher, and prevent 
him from doing many great works in the salvation of souls and in edifying 
saints. Prayerlessness, therefore, as it concerns the preacher is a very serious 
matter. If it exists in the preacher himself, then he ties his own hands and 
makes the Word as preached by him ineffective and void. If prayerless men be 
found in the pew, then it hurts the preacher, robs him of an invaluable help, 
and interferes seriously with the success of his work. How great the need of a 
praying church to help on the preaching of the Word of the Lord! Both pew and 
pulpit are jointly concerned in this preaching business. It is a copartnership. 
The two go hand in hand. One must help the other, one can hinder the other. Both 
must work in perfect accord or serious damage will result, and God's plan 
concerning the preacher and the preached Word be defeated. | |
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