Prayer and Practice Must Be United, January 8
            
            
              I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the
            
            
              same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing.
            
            
              John 15:5
            
            
              .
            
            
              Wonderful opportunities are opened before the human agent to understand the
            
            
              unsearchable riches of the wisdom of God. In this work, which nothing less than
            
            
              divine power can accomplish, nothing can be perfected without the cooperation of
            
            
              the human agent. Then the divine and the human are blended, as in the life of the
            
            
              Son of God....
            
            
              The sincere Christian, in his [acceptance] of grace, feels that his success is
            
            
              wholly dependent upon Christ. Here is the Source of divine energy. He urges
            
            
              no claim founded on his own merit; he has no faithfulness to present to heaven.
            
            
              He feels his own weakness and inefficiency, and is convinced that he must be
            
            
              transformed in character. Self-abasement, and self-renunciation reveal that the
            
            
              soul has beheld Jesus. The heart made penitent by the Spirit of Christ will act
            
            
              from principle. He is a partaker of the divine nature.... In his daily walk and
            
            
              conversation he represents the character of Christ....
            
            
              What will it profit [us] to cherish pride of spirit, and pray for humility? What
            
            
              will it profit to seek eagerly the friendship and applause of the world, and pray
            
            
              for heavenly affections? What will it profit to indulge in passionate temper and
            
            
              un-Christlike words, and then ask for the meekness of Christ? This is not watching
            
            
              unto prayer. In the lack of that faith that works by love and purifies the soul lies
            
            
              the secret of unanswered prayer.... I tell you in the name of the Lord: if the church
            
            
              will arise in the strength of God to meet her responsibilities, consecrating to God
            
            
              every power, the Spirit of the Lord will be poured out in rich abundance....
            
            
              Some who profess to be Christians need a genuine conversion. They desire to
            
            
              be accepted of God; they pray in a casual way that they may be accepted, and yet
            
            
              through their desire for gain, their worldliness and selfishness, their robbery of
            
            
              God, they shut themselves away from Him. His curse is hanging over them for
            
            
              their selfishness and worldly lusts. Their prayers will be wholly in vain unless
            
            
              they comply with the condition specified in the Word of God....
            
            
              The uncertain experience of many professed Christians—sinning and repenting
            
            
              and continuing in the same dwarfed spiritual condition—is the result of worldliness
            
            
              and unholiness of life. The saving grace of Christ is designed for everyday life.
            
            
              Christ came not to save man in his sins, but from his sins. The principles of
            
            
              truth, abiding in the heart, will sanctify the life.—
            
            
              Manuscript 35, January 8, 1893
            
            
              ,
            
            
              “Publishing Work.”
            
            
              [23]
            
            
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