-
Persistence In Prayer Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 19, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: We fail in prayer as we do in every other area of life, and we are often frustrated, but Jesus says that we are to never give up, but keep trying and keep learning. Persistence will make you a winner in the long run.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- Next
A fisherman's experiment is described in a tract. It tells of how he
caught a large black bass and instead of putting it in the frying pan he
put it in a glass tank. Each morning he would bring a minnow to the
tank and drop it in. The bass would make a dash for the minnow and
soon finish him off for breakfast. After a number of days of this he
placed a glass partition in the tank, and then dropped the minnow in
the side opposite from the bass. The big fish made his usual lunge but
bumped his nose against the glass. He did not give up easily, however,
but kept ramming the glass over and over again. Finally the blows
were too much and he ceased to try. After a few days of this
separation the partition was removed. The minnow and the bass
swam freely together. The minnow was now available for food but the
bass made no attempt to get it. Frustration had conditioned it to
accept failure, and it just gave up.
The same thing happens with people. When Lord Chamberlain
was asked why so many people failed he responded, "Because they
come to the point where they stop." Like the bass they get their nose
bumped against obstacles so often that they just quit. They give up,
lose heart, and do not have the courage to go on trying. This is a
primary cause for the high casualty rate in the battle of light against
darkness. Prayer is a basic weapon in this battle, and believers are
often disappointed in prayer at sometime. You've prayed and prayed
and it seems to do no good, and so you begin to wonder what is the use
of it. Some even conclude that it is no use, and so, like the bass, they
let their disappointments bring them to a state where they no longer
try. Jalouddin Rumi, and Eastern poet describes the process:
He prayed, but to his prayer no answer came,
And choked within him sank his ardor's flame.
No more he prayed, no more the knee he bent,
While round him darkened doubt and discontent.
I prayed he said but no one heard my prayer,
Long disappointment has induced despair.
Jesus knew that this could happen even to his own disciples, and
that is why He sought to prepare them for what was coming. He had
just been telling them about the trials ahead for Himself, and the
judgment to come. He told of the indifference of the people on the day
of Noah, and again in Sodom before its destruction. He said that
history will repeat itself and God's judgment will again fall on man.
Meanwhile life for His followers will not be a bed of roses. That is why
He tells them this parable. The unique thing about this parable is that
its purpose of clearly stated so that none can miss it. There is no
mystery at all, for as one has said, "The key hangs at the door." It
was told to the end that his own should keep on praying an never lose
heart. It is told to prevent Christians from becoming discouraged and
giving up on prayer.
Jesus would not bother to tell such a parable and have it recorded
for all generations if it did not deal with a very real and serious
danger. You do not tell your children about the danger of playing
with radium because you know they are not going to be playing with
any, but you do warn them of the danger of fire because you know it is
likely they will have the opportunity at some point. So also Jesus does
not waste inspiration on the impossible or improbable, but deals only
with the probable, likely and certain.
He knows that prayer will often seem like a fruitless weapon on
the battlefield of life, and that His disciples may often feel like
relegating it to the museum of religious relics, and seek more effective
methods of combating the enemy. He knew this and that is why He
told this parable. He wanted to stir them up to press on and not lose
heart, and to stick to their guns and persist in prayer at all times, and
under all circumstances. This is the stated purpose of the parable.
How then does Jesus accomplish this end? He does so by following a
simple but effective method of teaching involving three steps.
I. A CONTEMPORARY ILLUSTRATION.
In verse 2 Jesus draws a verbal picture of a typical situation in His
day, which is not really much different than what we have today. Here
was a public servant who had to be pressured into doing any serving of
the public. He was self-sufficient intellectual who neither feared God