A House Of Prayer For All Nations
by Chip Brogden
"And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and
bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the money changers, and
the seats of them that sold doves, and He said unto them, 'It is written,
"My house shall be called a house of prayer"; but you have made it a "den of
thieves"'(Matthew 21:12,13)."
Jesus makes reference to two passages of Scripture in this text. The first
is Isaiah 56:7:
"Them will I bring to My holy hill and give them joy in My house of prayer;
their offerings and sacrifices shall be accepted on My altar there; My
temple shall be called a house of prayer for every nation (Jerusalem
Bible)."
Originally, the promise was for the nation of Israel, but ultimately, it was
fulfilled in the Church. The temple of God in Jerusalem never allowed
itself to be a house of prayer for "all nations"; only Jews were permitted
to enter (Acts 21:28). Archeologists have found markers around the boundary
of the Temple grounds bearing this inscription: "Any foreigner who ignores
the warning and goes beyond this point shall have no one but himself to
blame for the death which shall be his penalty." So the passage in Isaiah
was never fulfilled in Israel, but it is fulfilled in the Church, as a holy
nation of priests (I Peter 2:9).
Jesus also alludes to Jeremiah 7:11: "Is this house, which is called by My
Name, become a den of robbers in your eyes?" The physical temple came to
represent something other than the purpose for which it was created. Thus,
the Lord Jesus, in word and in deed, demonstrates that He no longer
considers the physical temple as His House, but calls it a "den of thieves",
thus establishing a new House, built upon the foundation of Himself (Matthew
16:18).
Today we know that the Body of Christ is the Temple of God (I Peter 2:5,6).
As such, the Church stands on the earth before God and on behalf of men.
One of its tasks is to be a house of prayer for all nations. This means the
Church is a place where people of all nations may find fellowship with God,
and it also means that the Church is a place where prayer is offered up to
God on behalf of all nations. It is this second meaning that we want to
focus our attention on.
THE EXECUTIVE PRIVILEGE OF THE CHURCH
Prayer is based on communion and fellowship with God. That is the
foundation for all prayer, supplication, intercession, and thanksgiving. We
cannot really pray if we do not have a relationship with God to base our
praying on. This is what sets the Church apart from many religions that
treat prayer as an impersonal formality which one must perform in a
ceremonial, detached way. Our prayer is so much more than that, but at the
same time, it goes beyond communion and fellowship. It includes communing
with God, but also includes discerning what He wants, agreeing with it,
calling it forth, and submitting ourselves to it (this is the key) IN
ADVANCE of its fulfillment. In fact, being able to know what the Lord wants
and what He is doing is one of the privileges of being a friend of God (John
15:15; Genesis 18:17; Exodus 33:11a).
God has decided that He will not act apart from the prayers of the saints.
We know that apart from Him, we CAN DO NOTHING. We also need to know that
apart from us, God WILL DO NOTHING. So He bids us to pray, "Thy Kingdom
come, Thy Will be done, on earth as it is in heaven (Matthew 6:10)." God is
concerned for the earth, and calls upon the Church to join together with Him
in bringing His Will to pass. Towards what end are we praying? That God's
Kingdom and God's Will would be manifest in the earth. In heaven, God's
Will and God's Kingdom are already established (Psalm 119:89). Even though
God has placed everything beneath the feet of Jesus Christ, here, in the
earth, we do not yet see all things submitted to Him (Hebrews 2:8). There
is a chasm that exists between God's stated purpose of "all things in
Christ" and life on earth as we see it today.
Today, Scripture acknowledges, we do not YET see all things submitted to
Him. I must say I find that word "YET" terribly exciting! That word "YET"
means that something is in store for everything that remains unsubmitted to
the Lord Jesus Christ. The presence of the word "YET" means its
manifestation is inevitable, and the futility of resistance is illustrated
for us in Psalm 2:
"Why do the heathen rage, and the people [nations] imagine a vain thing?"
(v.1)
The "vain thing" is the mistaken belief that the nations of the world can somehow
escape the inevitable fulfillment of "all things in Christ". David clearly
sees Christ as ruling the nations with a rod of iron. Again, this is a
future fulfillment, but this sheds new light on what is means to "bridge the
gap" in prayer. It is not merely bridging the gap between God and man. In
a very real sense, the Church is the means through which the gap between
God's Will and Earth's Reality is brought into alignment, until Christ has
the manifest preeminence over all things (Colossians 1:15-18). In that day,
WE WILL SEE all things submitted to Him. Can we begin to imagine what that
will look like, and what it will take to bring the nations of the world to
that point?
A word of caution: we should distance ourselves from the idea that this can
be achieved simply by electing Christians to the highest offices of each
nation. Such thinking is erroneous. The Church is not going to take over
the earth, but will inherit the earth, by way of meekness and submission to
Christ as All in All, and not by seizing earthly power or government (Psalm 37).
"We do not YET see all things submitted to Him; BUT we see Jesus." We do
not live by what we see, but we live by faith. It would be a mistake to
assume that just because one does not YET see all things submitted to Christ
that He then must not really be Lord of all. This costly mistake will be the
undoing of the multitudes. We are not pretending to see something that does
not really exist - yes, we agree that we do not YET see all things submitted
to Him, things are bad, and will probably get worse; BUT we do see JESUS,
and for the Christian who seeks first the Kingdom of God, that revelation is
sufficient. You may see every fact to the contrary and argue against Him,
but we see Who He is by revelation, and by revelation we know that what we
see happening in the unsubmitted earth today will be set in order when
Christ and His Kingdom are manifest in all of creation.
The Church is meant to represent to the earth what the preeminence of Christ
means, and remains on the earth as the vehicle through which God may find
expression for His Purpose. Hence, Christians are not immediately carried
off to heaven when they are saved. Instead, we remain on the earth as salt
and as light (Matthew 5:13,14), the salt being a preservative, and the light
being a witness to the Truth. What Truth? That Jesus Christ is Lord, not
just in heaven, but in earth, for:
"[God] raised Him from the dead, and set Him at His own right hand in the
heavenly places, far above all principality, and power, and might, and
dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in
that which is to come: and hath put all things under His feet, and have Him
to be the Head over all things to the Church, which is His Body, the fulness
of Him that filleth all in all (Ephesians 1:20-23)."
When we see this, when we order our prayers around this, and when we live
our lives in such a way that shows we believe it and demonstrate the reality
of it EVEN THOUGH WE DO NOT "YET" SEE IT, then we are properly bearing the
Testimony of Jesus in the earth.
SOME CONSIDERATIONS TO BE MADE
Someone might ask if God wants His Kingdom to come and His Will to be done,
why does He not just do it? Why do we have to pray for it to be done in
order for it to happen?
There are many questions along these lines that could be asked. For
example, the Lord says we should pray for our daily bread (Matthew 6:11).
But if the Lord loves us and promises to supply our needs, why must we ask
Him every day for our bread? Again, the Lord says, "Ask, and you will
receive. Seek, and you will find. Knock, and the door will be opened
(Matthew 7:7)." We might wonder why, if God knows what we need already, is
it necessary for us to ask Him? If He wants us to find something, why does
He not just reveal it to us - why do we have to seek it? If it is His Will
for a door to be opened, why do we have to knock?
The Lord tells His disciples, "The harvest truly is great, but the laborers
are few. Pray ye therefore to the Lord of the harvest, that He would send
forth laborers into His harvest (Luke 10:2)." If the Lord knows that more
workers are needed, why does He not just send in more workers? Why would He
wait until we ask Him to do something before He does it?
We believe the answer to these questions is based upon the fact that God
wishes to do nothing apart from the Church. This is in contrast to a kind
of attitude that passively accepts whatever happens and just believes that
everything will take care of itself. This sounds like faith, but it is
really not. It is a subtle form of laziness. We cannot really have true
faith until we have prayed, and prayer is active dependence, not passive
dependence. Passive dependence will say, "We can never know or understand
God's mysterious ways, so we just leave it up to Him to do as He sees fit.
Whatever will be, will be. We will just make the best of whatever happens."
This will open the door for all kinds of unnecessary satanic affliction.
This is not faith.
A similar kind of passivity says, "If it is meant to be, it will be. If God
means for me to do a certain thing, then everything will line up the way it
should. And if God does not mean for me to do it, then no matter what I do,
I will be unable to perform it. So there is no great need to pray." If
this were the case then daily bread would automatically come to us, and
doors would automatically open, and workers would automatically go forth
into the harvest. And If these things happened of their own accord,
regardless of whether we prayed or not, then everything Jesus taught us
about prayer is superfluous. Jesus taught us to always pray, and not quit
(Luke 18:1).
The truth is that God HAS revealed His Will to us, the Spirit WILL make His
Mind known to us if we ask, and we are thus instructed to cooperate with God
by praying specifically for His Will and for His Kingdom to be accomplished.
The fact that God has promised to provide us with daily bread, open doors,
and workers for the harvest is intended to inspire us to ask for these
things to be done and to give us a basis upon which we may reasonably expect
God to bring it to pass. Prayer brings us to a place where we can know and
trust God, and can become acquainted with His ways. It also enables us to
learn what it means to overcome, and to share in His glory. He wants us to
come to Him, to know Him, and to agree with Him through prayer so that He
may perform His Will. Beloved, it takes more faith to pray than it does to
remain passive.
Many things are left undone, not because God does not desire to do them, but
because we have not joined with Him in cooperative prayer; hence, prayer is
the most vital work of the Church, more important than preaching,
witnessing, or gathering together. Apart from prayer, nothing happens, and
if there is to be any measure of success or blessing in the Church it will
be because someone, somewhere, has prayed. Concerning the critical nature
of prayer, Watchman Nee says, "If anyone will rise up and devote himself to
the work of prayer exclusively, how excellent that will be. God is waiting
for such ones to work together with Him so as to enable Him to finish His
work. Some Christians may ask why the Lord does not save more sinners, why
He does not cause every believer to overcome. I sincerely believe that He
would undoubtedly do such works if people would only pray."
By the same principle, many things which should not be permitted are indeed
permitted, not because God would necessarily want them to occur, but because
the Church has allowed it to be so. We ask why God would allow such and
such. We should ask ourselves why we would allow such and such, and why we
have not prayed as we ought. We represent Heaven's Will on earth, and if
that Will is not executed, the reason lies with us. Now it is impossible to
judge each particular thing and determine why it was permitted or why it was
not permitted. We are not trying to blame anyone for anything. We do want
to stress that it is the responsibility of the Church to bind and to loose
what heaven would have bound or loosed (Matthew 18:18,19). Some things are
unavoidable, but through prayer, the Church can lessen the negative impact
such events would otherwise have. Many things ARE avoidable if we pray
about them in advance.
THE WORK OF PRAYER
Before we can really be effectual in prayer there is a lot of preliminary
work IN PRAYER to be done. Eventually one realizes that we literally have to
pray about prayer. We have to fight just to secure a place and a time to be
alone with God. We are not talking about communion and fellowship, for this
can and should be done throughout the day as we attend to our
responsibilities. But there is a specific time and place and appointment we
must have with God that must, by its very nature, cancel out and override
whatever else we may be doing at the moment. If we are not diligent to "pray
about praying" then we will find ourselves going along for several days and
then realizing that we have not really prayed in awhile.
Then we must pray about HOW to pray, and this represents another battle. All
the praying in the world will do no good if we are not praying correctly,
that is, according to the WORD, according to how Jesus TEACHES us to pray
(Luke 11:1-4). If we are not praying according to His WILL, our prayers are
in vain. I recently asked a sister what she wants, and she replied, "I do
not know what I want, because I do not know what God wants." This is very
wise, and God will be sure to reveal His Will to a person with this
perspective.
Thus, prayer is more than making requests to God, it is waiting before God
to discover what requests ought to be made. This is what it means to "watch
and pray." In order to learn HOW to pray, it will take a few good seasons
of learning how to watch, wait, and listen for the prompting of the Holy
Spirit, Who will help us pray according to the Mind of God (Romans 8:27).
Watching and praying go together, and the one who cannot watch cannot pray.
Next, there is the battle to know, discern, perceive, intuit, and fathom
God's Will: His overriding, all-inclusive purpose for all creation; His
desire and goal for the Church; and His individual direction for each one of
us as individual disciples and followers of Jesus. That is quite a range of
things, and we should not expect to understand it all in one day or in one
week. But if we will seek Him and His Will in all things then He will begin
to give us insight into them, because truly He works "all things together
for good according to His Purpose." And what exactly IS His purpose? The
preeminence of Christ. And how does that factor in this matter, and that
matter, this thing, and that thing? THAT is precisely what He wants to show
us as we pray.
Finally, there is the struggle to submit one's self to the revealed Will of
God once we know what it is, and this is by far the most intense part of the
battle. Everything hinges on this. David fasted and prayed for his child,
laying upon the ground for seven days and nights. But once the child died,
the Will of God was no longer a question mark over the matter, it was a
period. How did David respond? Was he disappointed? Angry? Bitter? No -
he was SUBMITTED. As soon as he heard the child was dead, he arose from the
ground, bathed, changed his clothes, went into the house of God to WORSHIP,
returned home and broke the fast by eating a meal (II Samuel 12:20). When
questioned, his response was, in effect, when I did not know God's Will, I
prayed and fasted; but now that I know it, why should I keep pleading with
God to do what is contrary to His Will?
When we reach this stage of prayer it is time for surrender, not striving.
Then it is proper to say, "I will accept whatever happens now." We cannot
say that if we have not yet prayed, but if we HAVE prayed then there is
nothing else TO say. I suggest that the greater part of David's seven day
fast was spent coming to terms with God's Will. Only a man so surrendered
could have remained so serene.
THE CROSS IS CENTRAL TO THE WORK OF PRAYER
Precisely how does a human being, with all their feelings and emotions,
relegate his (or her) natural sense, ignore what his eyes and ears tell him,
and really get into a place in God where he can pray in cooperation with
God's Will? What we have called "taking up the Cross" is now about to hit
home for many of us who have held it as a mere doctrine, but not an
experience. For only someone dead to himself can do it, and this is exactly
what the Cross is meant to accomplish in the life of the Christian. The
very struggle itself is necessary, not too unlike the baby bird which must
struggle with its own shell before it can be free of it. We see this
pointedly illustrated in the Garden of Gethsemane by Christ Himself, when He
prayed:
"Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me; yet not My will, but
Your Will be done (Matthew 26:39)."
His sweat mingled with His tears, and He wrestled with Himself three times
before He could settle the issue, but once it was settled, He gave no
resistance, and within a few hours everything was accomplished. Oh! That is
where we are lacking today! How long will we kick and struggle against the
pricks? How long will we argue and complain against God and resist His
dealings with us? If we have to die in order to truly live, let us be about
the business of dying! If we must be crucified in order to have Resurrection
Life, then let us just submit to it and get it over with!
Some very telling features are found in this passage and in the ones related
to it. We see at once that there is a thing called God's Will, and there is
a thing called My Will. If this was true of Jesus, believe me when I say it
is abundantly true of us. Forget about the devil for a moment, this issue of
God's Will versus My Will is one hundred thousand times more intense than
any fight with some devil or demon. God's Will and My Will are not always in
agreement, and that is going to be a problem for God and for me until it is
resolved. How can I represent His Kingdom in the earth and talk about His
preeminence over all creation if He does not have the preeminence in my own
life?
HENCE THE PURPOSE OF PRAYER: to get aligned with the Mind, Will, Heart,
Desire, Purpose, and Aim of God Himself. It is a fight and a struggle just
to get to Gethsemane. It is a battle to get your brethren to stay awake with
you for even one hour; and it is an all-out war to "pray thrice" or ten
times or twenty times or one hundred times, as the case may be, until you
have gotten the victory over yourself, and come away soaked with the blood,
sweat, and tears of that early morning wrestling. But once the outcome is
decided in God's favor, what awesome power and Life one receives, to drink
that Cup that looked so impossible before, and to go forth bearing the Cross
in the strength and power of God Himself, to do whatever He requires!
Admittedly, the kind of prayer we are calling the Church to will require a
great deal of self-denial and work, more work than most of us are accustomed
to, and for that reason the majority of people who read this will give it up
as too laborious. Like the disciples who fell asleep, some simply cannot
stay awake (literally or figuratively) to watch and pray for any length of
time. This is due in part to the "lazy man's" way of praying that we have
been taught and have followed for so long. Now we are not talking about how
many hours per day you should spend in prayer. You can be effectual and
fervent for twenty minutes per day, and you can be totally ineffectual and
half-hearted for several hours straight. Which fulfills God's purpose? We
need to work on the quality of our intercessions first and foremost, and
then we can work on the quantity of them.
Thus, a serious call to prayer and fasting involves something more than an
occasional prayer meeting, an hour-long prayer vigil, or an occasional
skipped meal or two. It is a call, not to the world in general, but to the
Church, for it is the Call of the Cross all over again: to give no place to
the flesh, even in prayer; to subjugate all that pertains to the natural
man; to get aligned with something larger and bigger than myself; to get
one's own house in order; to bring a message of warning AND mercy to the
unsubmitted earth; to prepare the way for the preeminence of Christ, and to
demonstrate that preeminence to the rest of the world. Towards this End, we
pray that the Lord will raise up more of the saints to represent His
interests as the House of Prayer for All Nations.
F O R F U R T H E R S T U D Y
|
|