WHATSOEVER YE WILL
If Ye Abide in Me, and My Words Abide in You, Ask Whatsoever
Ye Will, and it Shall be Done Unto You—John 15:7
THE WHOLE
PLACE of the branch in the vine is one of unceasing prayer. Without
intermission it is ever calling: "O my vine, send the sap I need to bear
Thy fruit." And its prayers are never unanswered: it asks what it needs,
what it will, and it is done.
The healthy life of the believer in
Christ is equally one of unceasing prayer. Consciously or unconsciously, he
lives in continual dependence. The Word of his Lord, "You can do
nothing," has taught him that not more unbroken than the continuance of
the branch in the vine, must be his asking and receiving. The promise of our
text gives us infinite boldness: "Ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be
done unto you."
The promise is given in direct
connection with fruit-bearing. Limit it to yourself and your own needs, and you
rob it of its power; you rob yourself of the power of appropriating it. Christ
was sending these disciples out, and they were ready to give their life for the
world; to them He gave the disposal of the treasures of Heaven. Their prayers
would bring the Spirit and the power they needed for their work.
The promise is given in direct
connection with the coming of the Spirit. The Spirit is not mentioned in the
parable, just as little as the sap of the vine is mentioned. But both are meant
all through. In the chapter preceding the parable, our Lord had spoken of the
Holy Spirit, in connection with their inner life, being in them, and revealing
Himself within them (14:15-23).
In the next chapter He speaks of the Holy Spirit in connection with their work,
coming to them, convincing the world, and glorifying Him (16:7-14).
To avail ourselves of the unlimited prayer promises, we must be men who are
filled with the Spirit, and wholly given up to the work and glory of Jesus. The
Spirit will lead us into the truth of its meaning and the certainty of its
fulfillment.
Let us realize that we can only
fulfill our calling to bear much fruit, by praying much. In Christ are hid all
the treasures men around us need; in Him all God's children are blessed with
all spiritual blessings; He is full of grace and truth. But it needs prayer,
much prayer, strong believing prayer, to bring these blessings down. And let us
equally remember that we cannot appropriate the promise without a life given up
for men. Many try to take the promise, and then look round for what they can
ask. This is not the way; but the very opposite. Get the heart burdened with
the need of souls, and the command to save them, and the power will come to
claim the promise.
Let us claim it as one of the
revelations of our wonderful life in the Vine: He tells us that if we ask in
His name, in virtue of our union with Him, whatsoever it be, it will be done to
us. Souls are perishing because there is too little prayer. God's children are
feeble because there is too little prayer. We bear so little fruit because
there is so little prayer. The faith of this promise would make us strong to
pray; let us not rest till it has entered into our very heart, and drawn us in
the power of Christ to continue and labor and strive in prayer until the
blessing comes in power. To be a branch means not only bearing fruit on earth,
but power in prayer to bring down blessing from Heaven. Abiding fully means praying
much.
Ask what ye will. O my Lord, why is it that our hearts are so little able to
accept these words in their divine simplicity? Oh, give me to see that we need
nothing less than this promise to overcome the powers of the world and Satan!
Teach us to pray in the faith of this Thy promise.
The True
Vine. Andrew Murray
Dear Annie,
ReplyDeleteThis post gives me a lot to prayerfully contemplate. I especially like that it focuses on making prayer an important, on-going part of our daily life. Debbie Seiling http://bible-passages.blogspot.com and http://christian-overeaters.blogspot.com