Page 329 - This Day With God (1979)

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Things Wrought by Prayer, November 2
Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith.
Hebrews 10:22
.
There can be no true prayer without true faith. “Without faith it is impos-
sible to please him” (
Hebrews 11:6
). Prayer and faith are the arms by which
the soul hangs upon the neck of infinite love, and grasps the hand of infinite
power. God does not recognize dumb children, as far as experience in His
truth is concerned. Faith is an active, working power. The newborn faith in
Christ is revealed by prayer and praise. Prayer is a relief and a comfort to
the troubled soul. The sincere, humble suppliant at the throne of grace may
know that he is communing with God, through the divinely appointed means,
and that it is his privilege to understand what God is to the believing soul.
We must have a realization of our needs. We must hunger and thirst after life
in Christ and through Christ. Then we shall come to Him in humility and
sincerity, and He will give us the faith that works by love and purifies the
soul....
Christ gave Himself willingly and cheerfully to the carrying out the will
of God. “He ...became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross”
(
Philippians 2:8
). In view of all that He has done, should we feel it a hardship
to deny ourselves? Shall we draw back from being partakers of Christ’s
sufferings? His death ought to stir every fiber of our beings, making us
willing to consecrate to His work all that we have and are.
As we think of what He has done for us, our hearts should be filled with
gratitude and love, and we should renounce all selfishness and sin. What duty
could the heart refuse to perform, under the constraining influence of the love
of God and Christ? “I am crucified with Christ,” the apostle Paul declared:
“nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I
now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and
gave himself for me” (
Galatians 2:20
).
Let us relate ourselves to God in self-denying, self-sacrificing obedience.
Faith in Christ always leads to willing, cheerful obedience. He died to redeem
us from all iniquity, and to purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of
good works. There is to be perfect conformity, in thought, word, and deed,
to the will of God. Heaven is only for those who have purified their souls
through obedience to the truth.—
Letter 301, November 2, 1904
, to Elder and
Mrs. S. N. Haskell.
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