The
Power of Prayer
by Clarice Bowman and George Harper
Introduction
The Power of Prayer
Chapter
One
Prayer and My Life
Chapter
Two.
Preparing to Grow in Our Prayer Life
Chapter
Three. Discovering
What Prayer Means
Chapter Four.
A Rainbow of Moods in Prayer
Chapter Five.
Overcoming Difficulties
Chapter Six.
Aids in Achieving "Disciples' Disciplines"
Chapter Seven.
Prayer Changes Things and Persons
Chapter Eight.
Toward a Fellowship of Power
.
Chapter 8
Toward
a Fellowship of Power
The current of power can only flow through a circuit which
is complete. Life is not lived between people only. Life is not lived between
God and me only.
However friendly and kind and helpful we are to each
other, our fellowship will lack timelessness, unless we are related to God.
If I try to keep my relation with God, and then fail to
live its spirit of fellowship with others, I become the end of a process that
should go on. Life must be lived in a fellowship that includes God, others, and
me. My life is grounded in God; I build relationships with others on that
ground. Power comes to me from God; I share that power with others. I am lost in
God's love; I love others as He would love through me. Others must ground
themselves in God, too, else there is no common meeting-place for our spirits.
When more than one of us has the same life center, we
become parts of a unit. No word is adequate to describe what happens. The word
"Fellowship" is perhaps closest, but the greatness and warmth of the
new experience of togetherness is too great for any word.
We vaguely suspected before that there could be such a
fellowship of sharing and love. Here it is, and we are surprised to find
ourselves in it. These were the bonds that knit the early Christians together in
a fellowship of power that enabled their small group to overbalance the rest of
the world.
Life is changed for us. Our personal relations begin to
line up in a changed way. Certain acquaintances slip into the background, as we
see that our relations with them have always been near the surface of life. We
may have shared years of comradeship and common adventures, but now we know that
down deep we have never been together in that place where God's power of love
flows. They, too, will need to become God-centered in order to understand the
real life we find. We long for them to have this new life. We sorrow over their
dimness of vision. We feel for them what Jesus must have felt for His family and
friends. Yet the fellowship of power is necessarily reserved for those who live
the new life; power comes from a uniting purpose that binds together in a life
experience beyond ourselves.
While some acquaintances move away from the center of our
new relationships, others move in. They may not have been considered as special
friends before. Suddenly we know them - really know them to the depths - because
they are in the same fellowship.
A new sense of values changes our religious opinions. Some
things we have counted valuable are seen to be worthless. We see some to be
self-seeking, agitated, half-committed persons, working feverishly to cover up
the fact that poise and peace of new life has not come to them. We see others
giving themselves without reserve yet seemingly unwearied. We see ourselves,
gripped by good intentions and very busy. Fast motion has kept us out of focus
so that the love of God has had no chance, to "take." Now our hearts
leap with the joy of discovery; and we are welcomed by those who patiently
understand, into the fellowship of the power of love.
Those who observed the Christian community of the first
century exclaimed, "See how these Christians love one another!" (Tertullian,
160-220). The fellowship of power has always astonished those who stood outside.
In the early church, the concrete expression of love through the sharing of
goods was only the outcropping of a profoundly deeper sharing of new life.
Through history, various upsurges of real fellowship in
God have appeared: in the early church, in the beginnings of the order of St.
Francis, in the group of early Friends [Quakers], in the early days of the
Evangelical movement. In addition, there have been thousands of small
fellowships-of-power across the centuries: wherever a handful of people centered
in the love of God have lifted the life of their nameless community nearer
heaven. History books do not recount these group experiences, but we cannot
guess how much we owe to them today.
Man alone cannot create such a fellowship. We find God,
give ourselves completely to Him as Jesus suggests. Then we find ourselves in
the fellowship. As we increase in Him, we increase in the fellowship - the more
powerfully as we have more of His life in us. The term "communion of
saints" describes it. Paul saw the whole fellowship to be "the body of
Christ" (1 Cor. 12:27).
Ideally, the entire church should be - could be - a
Fellowship of Power. Actually, there has always had to be a Fellowship within
the fellowship of the church.
In such a Fellowship, things are different. God's way
cannot be forced into the mold of our little prejudices and social customs. In
the Fellowship, the walls of racial differences are down, because they could
never exist. National, cultural, economic, educational differences are all
leveled. The Fellowship is not exclusive, not a society for "holier-than-thou's."
Each person determines for himself whether he will belong, by his relationships
first to God, and then with others.
The depth of the Fellowship is not measured by man-made
social groupings. One may experience a deeper kinship with another member of the
Fellowship who is of another race, than with one of his own racial acquaintances
who refuses to enter. Here all men are on one basis: they are sons of God,
living in His love, blessed with His presence, in brotherhood with each other.
The scholar and the man of no formal education speak of the same experience, and
know the same truths.
Members may hold to different theologies or systems of
thought, but their hearts may glow with the same love. That is what counts, and
upon that basis we find fellowship. Church boundaries are overleaped.
Methodists, Lutherans, Roman Catholics, Pentecostal Holiness - yes, and Jews and
Christians together - all may be in the same Fellowship [from a human
perspective, but Our Father may not agree totally with our authors about this!
He requires us to worship Him "in Spirit and in Truth". Remember that
"Thy word is truth." And Jesus said "I am the truth, the way and
the life!"].
Such a Fellowship extends past boundaries of place and
time. Kinship may be felt with those who lived in this fellowship centuries ago.
We read with new appreciation the testimonies of the saints and seers,
astonished, perhaps, to find how similar are experiences they describe to ours.
We read the Scriptures (not merely as pious exercise or from a sense of duty),
but because we wish to meet on this new basis the great souls of that day who
were finding God and being found by Him. Minor differences of opinion about
informational points in the text seem insignificant. We are trying to know the
writers who lived this life with such power.
Great devotional literature becomes more meaningful.
Brother Lawrence becomes brother Lawrence. Augustine becomes a friend through
his "Confessions." The practical admonitions and whimsicalities of
Thomas À. Kempis in his "Imitation" are not "old stuff,"
but life speaking to life. The saints of the past and spiritual leaders of today
- like E. Stanley Jones, Glenn Clark, Kirby Page, Frank Laubach, Albert Day,
Rufus Jones, Thomas Kelley, etc. - speak a common language because they describe
in various ways a common experience: a Fellowship of Power.
The ground of this Fellowship through the ages is in God.
Lives surrendered to Him (as the mystics say, "drowned" in Him) know
one another in Him. When a person is wholly surrendered to God, no one can touch
him without touching God also, observed Meister Eckhart of the 14th century.
Like mountains rooted in the same earth, persons in the Fellowship of Power are
related to one another through Him.
This fellowship is deeper than democracy. It is more than
good-group-living together. It is more than a method of getting along with each
other. God rules. Each person listens for His voice, seeks to follow His will.
Political structures and systems change with the times, but this fellowship in
God is eternal. Differences in national organization or creed cannot hold back
this power.
Is this fellowship merely a general, universal fellowship
with no local loyalties, no particular groups? No! There is the wide general
fellowship, transcending space and time as well as man-made differences of
language, etc. But within it there are opportunities for forming small,
close-knit special fellowships of persons who can meet together often and carry
a special concern for each other and for others.
Families
Families are our most intimate and constant relationships.
They are the ones who love us best and whom we love best. The old practice of
"family worship" is not as widespread as it used to be. Families need
more than horizontal relationships: ties of blood that bind them
person-to-person. They need a divine relationship, which will give new meaning
and depth to all their days.
The family, because of these close-knit ties, can be the
natural channel for a fellowship of power. Even after one or two periods of
deep-felt prayer together, a family may grow into a new experience of one-ness.
New joys are experienced in family fellowship in other realms - in fun, in work
together, in purposes shared.
Rufus Jones describes his earliest memories of family
worship at the farm home. There were cattle to be fed; breakfast was to be
prepared; a thousand chores needed to be done. Yet here sat his family in quiet
serenity for what seemed to him a long time. Soon he realized that they
considered the Worship of God more important than any of these things. Even
though as a child he could not fathom all the reasons why, he caught the
contagion of their conviction.
Best friends
Next in our circles of intimate relationships come our
best friends, those who understand us most. A student on campus may get to the
place where he wants to share his prayer life with his room-mate or best friend.
At first there may be a bit of embarrassment, but probably that room-mate or
friend was eager for help once the door was opened.
One young couple, who had established a meaningful prayer
life together, asked to have the Lord's Supper administered to them at the
communion table alone, just before their marriage. Surely such a relationship
founded upon the "depth-dimension" of prayer should last an eternity,
as a fellowship-of-power.
Prayer-circles
An intimate group of a few persons find a spiritual
kinship; share a spiritual preaching. "Where two or three are gathered
together, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt. 18:20). The number may be
8 or 10. Here is a little group whose members are in living touch with one
another through the common ground of Him who underlies each individual life
separately. There is a divine fellowship there, a "plus" added to
their relationships.
When they gather, they may pray or seek guidance silently
together, or read from some stimulating materials of devotions or discuss
information about world conditions. The may speak or sing or keep silence as
they feel moved to do. Theirs is not an "organization" with committees
"to get up programs." Rather, in free informality and friendliness,
they seek God and deeper fellowship through Him with each other. To be sure,
they may make plans for their gathering-times; yet always whatever plans they
make are subject to the "tides of the spirit."
How often does such a group meet? The number of times of
getting together is not necessarily the index of a group's strength. How often
they can meet, and how much they share depends upon how much time they have;
what the conditions are; and a number of ordinary factors.
There come times when words only hinder ... when only in
divine silence do we share and understand. "All friendships short of this
are incomplete. All personal relations which lie only in time are open-ended and
unfinished." Kelly.
Sometimes those outside tend to criticize members of a
prayer-circle as being exclusive. No sincere God-seekers intend to be exclusive;
it is their whole-hearted wish that as many as will join them. Those willing to
undertake definite disciplines for growing spiritually, and for becoming a
fellowship of power are few - too few.
The law Jesus spoke about individuals, holds true of
groups also: that "whoso will save his life shall lose it" (Matt.
16:25). Only as a prayer-circle becomes more concerned for God's will and for
others, than for itself as a group, will it have vitality as a leaven in a
campus or church or community or world.
John Wesley used the idea of a fellowship-of-power in his
"class meeting." Members met in small groups weekly, reporting and
testifying to each other, and seeking guidance together for the coming week.
Farther back than that, the little groups that Paul set on
fire "turned the world upside down" (Acts 17:6). As Muriel Lester
suggests, "It was through the fellowship of the catacombs that the early
Christians achieved the courage of the coliseum."
Youth groups in the Church
Youth groups in the church, often called "youth
fellowships" may; or may not be, fellowships of power.
But where a few individuals within a group take their
prayer life seriously, and seek God unreservedly, and try to practice Jesus' law
of love in all their relationships, something soon happens in the group. A
spiritual momentum begins to be felt. Prayer-time in their group worship takes
on new depth and sincerity. There is direct carry-over into the stream of the
group's actions and program. Its recreation takes on new zest, its service
action is more wisely planned and more eagerly done.
The ideal is for a normal healthy youth fellowship in a
church to become like a prayer-circle, in that:
- its members practice Christian brotherhood with each
other.
- there is freedom for sharing of thought, and no one is
made to feel silly or embarrassed to discuss the deeper things of the spiritual
life together.
- organization and program routines are kept subordinate
to the deeper needs of the youth.
- there is clear purpose in all plans and activities, a
purpose constantly examined in the light of the teachings and life of Jesus.
What are some steps an adventurous group may take?
First, they need to become interested in worship
and prayer - so much so that they will give it some thought.
Second, those who plan for worship in the group need to
awaken to the sacredness of their responsibility! Let them pray before they
plan. Let them realize that the group is depending upon them for guidance, in
entering into the presence of God. Let them think of their part as
"leaders", as not central, but from the sidelines; they are merely
helpers to usher the group towards God.
Meaningless routines need to be ruthlessly cut. Never sing
a hymn or read a poem, or do anything that does not have a definite purpose in
helping a group worship God. Let prayer take a more central place: the climax,
the high moment when the soul meets with God and finds fellowship to affect his
life.
Materials for use in worship should be selected with
utmost care. Ready-manufactured "programs" or "services"
should be shunned, lest the group use them mechanically and fail to experience
worship.
Third, customs such as having "opening"
devotionals preceding discussion before the group is ready to worship, need to
be re-thought. Let worship take place whenever in the course of a meeting the
group has reached the place where it can worship in spirit and in truth.
Fourth, plans for worship in the group should anticipate a
movement of the spirits of the worshippers Godward. It is not enough to
assemble materials developing a theme; the sequence should help the youth
"move" toward God. For example,
First, center upon God ... Take time to become aware of
Him.
Lead the youth to that act of will by which they affirm
that consciousness of God's presence, and willingness to be led by Him.
Second, with as much of a "God's-eye point of
view" as possible, center upon the needs of persons, upon human
relationships, upon the job ahead.
Third, the answer: self-giving. Perhaps at times, a deep
awareness of places where we are failing; a consideration of the task, and
prayer for strength of will and hand to follow through.
For worship and prayer to be meaningful and life-changing
in a group as for an individual takes time. It also takes careful,
prayerful preparation that is God-centered, not centered in the group itself, or
in materials, or any human factor.
Pentecost comes again
When groups pray in two-dimensional fellowship, the same
conditions are fulfilled as existed at Pentecost when, according to the story in
the Acts 2,
"These all continued with one accord in prayer and
supplication... When the day of Pentecost was come, they were all with one
accord in one place... And they, continuing daily with one accord in the
temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with
gladness and singleness of heart."
Can it be that God's love is constantly ready, eager to
break through, but is hindered except where the circuit is completed: fellowship
of man with Him, of man with man through Him?
Why cannot all our relationships be made to pass through
Him? The goal of all our living ought to be just that. Yet do we, as Christians,
even expect to arrive at such a goal? But, starting from where we are, from our
end of the relationships, we can begin and do our part. We can be hopeful,
meeting each person with a silent prayer of love, doing all we can to make the
relationship between us a "circuit" for divine love.
"The total effect, in a living Church, would be
sufficient intersection of these bonds to form a supporting, carrying network
of love for the whole of mankind." Kelly
The Christian brave of all the past are about us as a
cloud of witnesses, a timeless Fellowship of Power. We join, with them, in
prayer to the same God ... the same God who helped Peter grow from a wishy-washy
opportunist into an unflinching Rock ... the same God who confronted Saul, the
persecutor, and made him Paul, the Apostle ... the same God who led Judson,
Slessor and early modern missionaries to the lands where darkness waited for
light ... the same God who works with all who give themselves to His way upon
earth today.
Fellowship stretches ahead. Our searching spirits seek out
the saints of today and tomorrow, illumined, God-directed souls who will someday
bring to more perfect fruition the work we are trying to do so crudely today.
When all on earth actually share this Kingdom of Heaven within us, the
Fellowship of Power will be complete, and the Kingdom of God will be on earth as
it is in Heaven. And "there shall in no wise enter into it (the beloved
community) any thing that defileth ... or maketh a lie .... They shall not hurt
nor destroy in all my holy mountain; for the earth shall be full of the
knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea" (Rev. 21, 22; Isa.
11)
Top of
Page Chapter
8
Matthew 6:9-15 "Pray,
then, in this way: `Our Father who is in heaven, Hallowed be Your name.
`Your kingdom come. Your will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
`Give us this day our daily bread. `And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors. `And do not lead us into temptation, but
deliver us from evil. For Yours is the kingdom and the power
and the glory forever. Amen. "For if you forgive others
for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you.
"But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will
not forgive your transgressions. (New American
Standard)
Matthew 6:9-15Matthew 6:9-15 With
a God like this loving you, you can pray very simply. Like this: Our Father in
heaven, Reveal who you are. Set the world right; Do what's best - as above, so
below. Keep us alive with three square meals. Keep us forgiven with you and
forgiving others. Keep us safe from ourselves and the Devil. You're in charge!
You can do anything you want! You're ablaze in beauty! Yes. Yes. Yes. "In
prayer there is a connection between what God does and what you do. You can't
get forgiveness from God, for instance, without also forgiving others. If you
refuse to do your part, you cut yourself off from God's part. (The
Message)
Matthew 6:9-15-
"And then, when you pray, don't be like the play-actors. They love
to stand and pray in the synagogues and at street-corners so that people may see
them at it. Believe me, they have had all the reward they are going to get. But
when you pray, go into your own room, shut your door and pray to your Father
privately. Your Father who sees all private things will reward you. And when you
pray don't rattle off long prayers like the pagans who think they will be heard
because they use so many words. Don't be like them. After all, God, who is your
Father, knows your needs before you ask him. Pray then like this - 'Our Heavenly
Father, may your name be honored; May your kingdom come, and your will be done
on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day the bread we need, Forgive us what
we owe to you, as we have also forgiven those who owe anything to us. Keep us
clear of temptation, and save us from evil'.
For if you forgive other people their failures, your Heavenly Father will also
forgive you. But if you will not forgive other people, neither will your
Heavenly Father forgive you your failures." (J.
B. Phillips Translation)
Matthew 6:9-15 After
this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy
name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. Give us
this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the
kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen. For if ye forgive men
their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: But if ye forgive
not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your
trespasses. (King
James)
Now to Him who is able to keep
you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless
with great joy, to the only God our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be
glory, majesty, dominion and authority, before all time and now and forever.
Amen. Jude 1:24-25

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