Biblia

A DEFINITE CHALLENGE FOR DEFINITE PRAYER.

A DEFINITE CHALLENGE FOR DEFINITE PRAYER.

NO. 3537

PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9TH, 1916

DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

“And Jesus answered and said unto him, What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” — Mark 10:51.

No doubt our Lord’s disciples imagined that he was going up to Jerusalem to take unto himself the kingdom. They hoped that they should be partakers of that earthly grandeur which they had fondly pictured would glitter around the person of the Son of David. When, therefore, the blind man ventured to cry out clamorously to him, whom they esteemed to be a great King, they thought it daring intrusion. Who was the son of Timaeus that he should say, “Thou Son of David, have mercy on me”? They were all anxious to hush the voice of misery in the presence of so much majesty. But our Lord Jesus Christ did not spurn the blind man’s prayer as intrusive or impertinent. He was not angry with him. He did not even pass on without taking any notice. What he did was to stand still, and command the man to be brought to him.

May we not draw some comfort from the thought that our prayers never are intrusions? Whenever we go before God in deep distress, he is always ready to hearken to our cry. Whatever grand purpose or momentous project engage his mind, he will be surely attentive to the longings of his needy suppliants. Though our Lord Jesus Christ is at this moment King of kings and Lord of lords, and inconceivably glorious, though hosts of angels count it their highest delight to do his bidding, yet he bears in heaven the same heart towards sinners which he had on earth. Amidst the thunders of the everlasting hallelujahs, he can detect the sighs of the prisoners, the plaints of the sufferers, and the groans of the contrite. He will halt to give heed to the requests of blind beggars and, in his pity, he will relieve their distress. Should not this encourage those of you who are seeking him? Whatever Satan may suggest to the contrary take this passage of God’s Word for cheer. He did hear the blind man’s cry when he was upon earth, and he will hear you now that he is in heaven. And you, backsliding child of God, difficult as you may find it to pray, if enabled to vent your griefs, your sighs shall be heard, your tears shall be seen, and you shall certainly have an audience from him who delighteth in mercy. There are times even with those who live nearest to God when they fall into despondencies, and imagine that their voice is shut out from heaven’s gate, but it is not so. When I cannot come to God as a saint, what a mercy it is that I may come to him as a sinner! And if I have lost all my evidences, what a blessing it is that I need not stop to find them, that I may go to the mercy-seat without any!

“Just as I am without one plea,
But that his blood was shed for me.”

When, reduced to the utmost beggary as to internal grace, I find myself naked, and poor, and miserable, I may still hear God saying to me, “I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, and white raiment that thou mayest be clothed.” In our worst estate, prayer is still efficacious. Long as we live, let us pray. Until ye hear the bolts of perdition fast closed upon you, and ye are shut up in hell, doubt not the right of petition, or the prevalence of your earnest plea. There is an ear to hear in heaven so long as there is a heart to plead on earth.

Let this first impression be riveted on your minds, and you will, I trust, be prepared for three further reflections which I now wish to introduce to you. Our Lord, before he healed the blind man, said to him, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” Hence I infer that: —

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I. It Is Important A Seeking Sinner Should Know What It Is That He Really Wants, And Sometimes Christ Delays To Give Salvation Until Men Are Brought More Clearly To Understand What Is Comprehended In That Inestimable Blessing.

A large proportion of those persons who express a certain desire to be saved have no Scriptural idea whatever of what being saved is. I am afraid that many who profess to have found salvation are really the victims of religious excitement, greatly moved by the exhortations they have heard, yet little or in no degree enlightened as to the fundamental truths on which a good hope is based.

The most current idea, of course, is that to be saved means to be delivered from going down into the pit, from enduring the sentence of everlasting perdition. That it does comprise that we grant you, though that is far from being its sole intent. This is a result of salvation, though it is not the essence of salvation as it is discovered to the souls of the redeemed. Men are saved, blessed be God, many years before the time of death, and conscious of being saved too. In some respects they are as thoroughly and perfectly saved as they will be when they get to heaven. Salvation is not postponed till the day of judgment, when thou shalt have deliverance from hell; it may be enjoyed here on earth when thy sins are forgiven, and thou art redeemed from the present evil world.

Or it may be that you have a vague impression that salvation consists in the pardon of your sins. This is true, but it does not compass all the truth. When thou sayest, “I would have my sins forgiven,” dost thou know what sin is? Hast thou ever had any clear view of what it really means? We use certain terms and common words often, I fear, without a corresponding thought in our minds. Know, then, that thou hast broken God’s law, both by omitting to do what thou shouldest have done, and by doing that which thou shouldst not have done. Those ten commands which thou wilt find in the twentieth chapter of Exodus are like so many looking-glasses, in which thou canst see what thou hast done, and what thou hast not done; what crimes they are which cry out against thee before the judgment throne of God, which will certainly drag thee down to hell unless thou be delivered from the dread penalty. Consider, too, the heavy weight, as well as the grievous guilt, of sin. Hast thou felt the load and burden of sin?” A stone is heavy and the sand weighty,” saith Solomon; but, ah! what specific gravity will compare with sin! Well might David groan beneath the load, “Mine iniquities are gone over mine head; as a heavy burden, they are too heavy for me.”

All the burdens that may devolve upon you through the toils of life, the calamities of the world, or the visitations of Providence, cannot equal the load of sin, for this is a burden that oppresses the conscience, crushes the heart, and paralyses every faculty of the soul. “The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity, but a wounded spirit, who can bear?” A conscience stricken with a sense of sin will readily interpret that wounded spirit which is not bearable for a man. Were that terrible incubus to rest long upon him, his spirit would fail utterly before the Lord. If mercy did not come speedily to their rescue, men might soon lose their wits, and become frantic, despondency leading to despair, and despair to insanity. Oh! how venomous the poison of sin, when the arrows stick fast and fester! Hast thou known what sin is? If not, I am afraid thy prayer will be unmeaning as that of James and John, to whom it was said, “Ye know not what ye ask.” Have you ever had an idea, when asking for the forgiveness of sin, what sin really deserves? what kind of recompense it justly demands? Let it always be remembered by us that every sin we have committed exposes us to the wrath of God — a wrath that is represented by terrible pictures in God’s Word, as a flame that is never quenched, a fire that never ceases to burn. In order to deliver us from this penalty, it was absolutely necessary that someone else should bear this punishment on our behalf. I do not think that we intelligently ask for the pardon of sin unless we have some view of the crucified Savior, the slaughtered Lamb, who stood in our room and stead, and put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. Ah! seeking soul, if thou knowest the weight of sin, and if thou knowest that Christ carried it, then canst thou say, “Lord, I would have my sins forgiven,” in answer to the question, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?”

And yet salvation includes more than deliverance from hell and a free pardon; for it emancipates the soul from its dominant power. Those among us who are saved from the guilt of sin are abundantly conscious that we are not fully released from the power of sin in our own breasts. Loved ones who have passed beyond the stars, and see God’s face without a veil between, are saved, completely saved, from indwelling sin, but none of us here enjoy that blessed emancipation, though there be some who boast a perfection it were hard to prove; but, alas! they slightly prejudice their profession by their pride. Still, salvation, from the despotic power of sin, must be achieved, and in a high degree it must be compassed, by all believers, or they shall never see God’s face with acceptance. Brethren, we must have our reigning sins subdued. Know ye not that no drunkard, or whoremonger, or covetous person that is an idolater, can have any inheritance in the Kingdom of God? These sins must be cut off; they must be slain and overcome. And so far as any other sins are concerned, they must be no longer citizens of the heart. You must look upon them as intruders and aliens that are to be driven out, like the Canaanites out of the land of promise. Mortify, therefore, your members; subdue your lusts, overcome your corruptions. “But,” the man replies, “how can I do this?” A most fitting question! Thou canst not do it, but Christ says, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” His power is equal to every emergency. There is no sin too strong for Christ. During his sojourn on earth, there was no devil that he could not cast out, so there is no sin which he cannot eject and eradicate. A legion of devils fled at the fiat of our Lord. Doubt not that, legions of furious lusts and fiery tempers can be overcome by the faith that pleads his prevailing name. Brethren, let us never sit down content with small degrees of sanctification. Reason not with yourselves as though ye could never get beyond your present dwarfed stature. Others have outgrown it. There have been men far more distinguished for piety, and humility, and every grace, than we are. The attainments to which the Master has led them are accessible to all saints under the same guidance, through the same divine power. Let us aspire to holiness. Let us follow after it with fresh ardor. Be not satisfied merely to live, but seek to grow; be not content to remain babes, taking your portion of milk, but seek to be strong men who shall enjoy the strong meat of the Word of God.

Now I believe there are hundreds of persons who have no desire to be saved, and would rather not be saved, if this is what salvation means. Why, man, if you are saved, you will be saved from those pleasurable sins in which now you are wont to revel. Some of when you get a holiday, following the inclinations of a corrupt heart and a vicious taste, hie you off to haunts where birds of your own feather congregate. Should you be saved, you will seek far different society. The company you now love you will then hate, and the pleasures you enjoy so much now will become as detestable as they were delightful to you. When you say, “Lord, save me,” do you mean, “Lord, save me from being what I am; Lord, I have been a drunkard, make me sober; I have been unchaste, make me pure; I have been dishonest, make me upright; I have been deceitful, make me to speak the truth to my neighbor; I have been violating thy statutes, make me mindful of thy Word; I have been thine enemy, Lord, make me thy friend; I have made my belly my god, now do thou be my God; I desire to be reconciled to thee, so that thy will shall be my will, thy service my delight, and thy way the path which I shall choose”? Do you mean that? If any man says honestly, “I do desire to be saved from sin,” I do not think you will long have such a desire ungratified; but the Lord Jesus will say, “Thy faith hath made thee whole.” he can and he will save you, if that is what you mean.

As for you good Christian people who are seeking the conversion of sinners, try to go about it in Christ’s oven way. It is right for you to exhort them to believe in Christ. I like to hear you sing: —

“There is life in a look at the fortified One.”

but do recollect that a man must have some understanding, both of what sin is, and of what the Savior is, before he can believe, for “faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God,” Endeavour, therefore, to instruct persons in the gospel. Merely to exhort them to believe; simply to cry, “Believe, believe, believe!” is of little worth, however earnest a man may be in raising that cry, for the sinner naturally enquires, “What is it that I have to believe? On whom am I to believe? For what reason am I to believe? Why do I need to believe?” So, go about your work of soul-winning in the power of the Holy Spirit. Go about it intelligently, under standing that, as Jesus Christ would not open the blind man’s eyes till he had first made him state, not for Christ’s information, but for the man’s own cogniscence, what it was that he wanted, and made him say, “Lord, that I may receive my sight,” so must you endeavor, when you tell out the gospel, to let men know what their need of that gospel is, give them not merely the expostulations, the admonitions, and the exhortations of the gospel, but give them its instructions likewise. Or else you go and bid them come, and there is no feast; you invite them to the waters, but you do not tell them what the waters are. Let it be with you, then, henceforth to instruct sinners in the way of the Lord. As David says, “Then will I teach transgressors thy ways, and sinners shall be converted unto thee.” We will leave that first homily, and proceed to a second. Our text clearly indicates to us all: —

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II. The Great Necessity Of Praying With A Direct Object.

This poor man was not allowed to pray in general. “Thou Son of David, have mercy upon me”; a very proper prayer, and a very blessed prayer, but certainly it was a very wide prayer. So he was encouraged to be more specific in his request. “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee? Thou askest for mercy; what form of mercy dost thou need? In what particular shape shall the bountiful hand dispense the mercy to thee?” The blind man at once replies, “Lord, that I may receive my sight!” He hits the mark with precision. It is sight he wants, and for sight he asks. This is the right way for believers to pray. I wish we had more of it in our prayer meetings; I do not find fault, for we have had blessed seasons of prayer here; but rest assured that those are the lest prayers in all respects, if they be earnest and sincere, which go most directly to the point. You know there is a way of praying in the closet, and praying in the family, in which you do not ask for anything. You say a great many good things, introduce much of your own experience, review the doctrines of grace very thoughtfully, but you do not ask for anything in particular. Such prayer is always uninteresting to listen to, and I think it must be rather tedious to those who offer it. A negro, who was noted for his great earnestness in prayer, was once asked how it was that, whenever he prayed, he seemed to be so earnest, and he said, “Because I always have an errand when I go to the King; I always have an errand; I go to him knowing that I want something, and I ask him for it, and I stop till he gives it to me; and if he does not give it to me, I ask him again and again, for I know what I am at.” Of what avail were it to keep on going in and out of a banker’s door all day if you have no business to transact, and nothing to get? but it is quite different when you go up to the counter with your cheque and receive in return the golden sovereigns. It would be very uninteresting to wait upon Her Majesty every morning and evening with an address which merely said, “Your Majesty’s attached and most loyal subject,” if you never asked for anything. Yet how much prayer of that kind is addressed to heaven; sheet lightning prayer — not the forked flash that does the work; like shooting arrows up at the moon, instead of imitating David, when he said, “In the morning will direct my prayer unto thee.” He looked at the target, marked the bull’s-eye, then drew the bow; and after he had shot the arrow he adds, “And will look up” — as if to see whether the arrow really went to the mark, whether the prayer had sped with God so that a gracious answer would be given. Should we not sometimes, when alone, and about to pray, sit down a little while to consider what we are about to ask? Should we not often pray better if we recollected that the preparation of the heart in man, as well as the answer of the tongue, is from the Lord, and that the preparation of the heart precedes the answer of the tongue? In offering our sacrifices to God, this helter-skelter ill becomes us, Not with heedless step should we rush into His presence. The decorum which is due to a king’s court might admonish us of the reverence due to the King of kings. Although we enjoy the privileged familiarity which permits us to say “Our Father,” as dear children of the Lord of heaven and earth, let us never forget the humility that becomes us, the profound obeisance we owe as subjects of the great King. Tenderly he asks; devoutly may we answer, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?”

Now, dear friends, let me challenge a plain answer to a plain question. As you are sitting here in this house, what is your desire before the Lord? Let your conscience make such a reply that, when you get home, you may intelligently, in the closing prayer of the day, approach the Lord for what you want. What is the upper-most desire of your soul? Perhaps with some it is that some besetting sin may he overcome. “Oh!” say you, “what would I give could I hut get rid of that bad temper of mine! It is my daily cross, and I do not want to harbour it.” “Ah!” says another, “I am so unbelieving, a little trouble soon casts me down; oh! that I could get rid of my unbelief!” Well now, very likely, dear friends, the sin you ought to pray against is one you are not striving against. Were I to come to you in the aisle, and take you by the button-hole, and tell you what your principal sin is, you would feel very vexed with me, for we are apt to resent the faithfulness of those who tell us of our faults. To touch the tender place makes the nerves tingle, and it seems like wilful torture. When somebody complains of something which our conscience does not endorse, we take it kindly, and accept their good intentions, thinking that had they known us better they would have esteemed us more highly; but if they really touch the sores where most they smart, we do not admire their treatment. The flush we feel — the blush we fain would hide. Yet cloak not now the vice which an Omniscient God discerns. Let this be a time of heart-searching. Say now, “Lord, is my sin covetousness?” That is a sin which never yet did I hear a man confess. A Roman Catholic priest, who had heard the confessions of some two thousand persons, said he had heard men confess heinous iniquities of every kind, even murder and adultery, but that he never had heard any man confess covetousness. This is a crime they christen and call it by another name. A covetous man thinks he is prudent; he is just laying by a little money for a rainy day. His greed, he tells you, is not to gratify himself, but a generous impulse to provide for his family; for their wives and their children, they would have us believe, that they waste their strength and wither their souls. Nevertheless, their fortune is their fallacy. To grip and to grasp, to have and to hold, is their desire so long as they live, and late enough they commonly leave it before they devise to their dear ones the possessions they can no longer retain. Alas! we are often wicked enough to try to make our affection an excuse for our avarice. Let us come to the point honestly. When we are dealing with our sin let us confess it with all its iniquity and its heinousness. Do not dissemble by accepting a small share in a public company. David, when he wanted full discharge, said, “Deliver me from blood-guiltiness.” He acknowledged the atrocity when he sought the atonement — ”Forgive my blood-guiltiness” — as one who saw his crime in the light of its consequence, not as one who attempted to palliate it with vain excuses. “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee in that matter?”

If thou best no particular sin to confess — if that is not thy uppermost anxiety at this time — what, then, is thy petition? What want hast thou to be supplied? Is it some great want? Hast thou numerous little wants? They may all be told to God. Get a clear idea of what it is that thou really dost need that he should do for thee, knowing that, whatsoever thy necessities may be, there is the promise, “My God shall supply all your need” — not some of it, but “all your need”; not he may do it, but he shall do it; not you will have to supply it yourselves, but he will supply it; “My God shall supply all your need.” Think, therefore, what your want is, and then go to God. Is there any choice blessing. that you desire? Get a clear idea of the blessing before you pray for it. What form of blessing would you wish to have? Oh! if I might have my choice, it would be heavenly-mindedness. Oh! if a man could but get that, he need not make much account of where he lived, nor what he had to eat, nor how much he slept, nor how much he suffered, for a heavenly mind is heaven. The mind makes its own heaven here below, and up above. Though, doubtless, heaven has a locality — yet it is much more a state than a place. Oh! for more heavenly-mindedness! What is it thou wouldest have? Communion with Christ? Love to souls? A broken heart? True humility? I may say of all these things, “The land is before thee, that thou mayest go forward and possess it; ask what thou wilt, and it shall be done unto thee.”

What promise is there that thou wouldest wish to have fulfilled to thee to-night? It is a good exercise to sit down before evening prayer, and look out the promise that seems most suitable, or to ask the Lord to look it out for you, and apply it to your soul. Take this promise, if so be there is disease next door, “Lord, thou hast said, ’Thousands shall fall at thy side, and tens of thousands at thy right hand, but it shall not come nigh thee.’ Lord, fulfill that promise now.” Art thou startled by a noise at dead of the night, then quote this promise, “Thou shalt not be afraid of the terror by, night.” Perhaps it is shortness of provision that troubles you. Then here is another promise, “Thy bread shall be given thee, and thy water shall be sure.” When you lost a key the other day, and could not open the drawer, what did you do? You sent out for a locksmith, and in he came with a whole bundle of old rusty keys. What for? Why, he looked out one that fitted the lock of your drawer, and opened it for you at once. Now many people’s Bibles are just like that bundle of rusty keys. There is always a key in the Bible that will fit the wards in the lock of your necessities, if you would but seek till you find it. But sometimes we are in distress, as Christian and Hopeful were in Doubting Castle, and we have to say, as Christian did, “What a fool am I to lie rotting in this stinking dungeon, when I have a key in my bosom that I am persuaded would open every lock in Doubting Castle!” Search out the promises, then, and go before God with a distinct answer to the question, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” “Lord, I would have that promise fulfilled, or that grace bestowed, or that want supplied, or that sin forgiven.”

So, dear friends, in intercessory prayer, it is very necessary, I think, in order to keep up our own interest in it, that we should have distinct objects. I do not find that I can pray for all mankind anything like so fervently as I can pray for my own children. I do not find that I can pray for the nation as well as I can for London. When I pray for London, I seek to do it earnestly. It behoves us to pray for all men, according to Scripture. All sorts of men are to be included in our supplications. I must, however, confess that I am most fervent in prayer when I pray for this congregation, and that because I have the most vivid thought of this people, and the clearest idea of their present requirements. If you want to pray for any particular person, or any special object, the better you understand the case you have in hand, the warmer and livelier your pleading will be. There are people in this chapel who have asked me to pray for them. Well, I have tried to do so, and I hope the Lord heard my prayer. But since I have known more of them, and found out where they live, and who they were, I can pray for them with more freedom than I could before. They were a sort of abstraction to me once; I have a definite acquaintance with them now. How easily you remember anything that is tied to something else, or linked by association with a place. Thus you recollect a transaction that occurred to you in the City of London. Every time that you go by the Bank, just at one spot, you say, “I met so-and-so just here the day before he died.” You will never forget it, but you think of it every time you go by. Or perhaps at the corner of a road in the country, just by a hand-post, such and such a thing happened to you, and the site of land revokes the circumstance. Thus we recollect. our friends in prayer when we get a knowledge of them, call them up before our mind’s eye, and knit, ail it were, the* secret interests with what we have seen of them when we have talked to them. and been interested in their trials. Some good people have prayed for others by name. Well, you cannot do that if you have a long list, and happen to be a busy man; still, it is good to pray for others by name, if you can. I like those prayers, even in public, in which men do pray for others with some distinctness. Oh! what time we waste when we go beating round the bush! We know individuals who pray for their minister with a circumlocution that distracts the listener. They travel round and round a circle, instead of going at once to the point. A man hardly likes to say, “Lord, save my wife.” He prefers talking about “those who are dear to us in the ties of consanguinity, and her who is the partner of our being.” Yes, that sounds pretty, very pretty indeed, but would it not be as well if you said at once, “Lord, convert my, wife”? There is one brother here who does pray in that way at the prayer-meetings, and who uses those very words. When pleading with God, do let us come straight to the mark, knowing what we are at ourselves, and, therefore, stating our case plainly in answer to the question, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” May the Lord teach us to pray in this distinct manner! Time fails us; therefore, we will only mention a third point. Our Lord Jesus Christ, in asking this question of the blind man, makes: —

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III. No Reservation. But Throws Open The Plenitude Of His Heart, And The Boundlessness Of His Power.

“What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” is tantamount to saying, “Whatever it is I will do it; I can do it. Only tell me what you want.” There is no bound to the Savior’s ability. Nor does he put a limit on the suppliant’s leave to command the favor he desires. It was not then for the blind man to say, “Lord, if thou wilt.” He has the opportunity of procuring any boon he solicits. Mark, brethren, it is no question of “can” with regard to Christ; the question is, what do you desire? Now, sinner, observe the Lord Jesus Christ did not stop to enquire about this man’s blindness, whether he had been blind from his birth, or whether he had been affected with a cataract or amaurosis, or any other form of ocular disease. He just said, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” No species of ophthalmia could baffle him. In any form, or at any stage, it was possible for him to cure it. The Lord Jesus Christ speaks to thee. He says to thee to-day, “Whosoever will, let him come and take of the water of life freely.” He does not say anything as to whether thou hast been moral or immoral, whether thou hast been profane or religious, but simply, “What wilt thou that I should do unto thee?” Thy blackest sins will disappear the moment the scarlet of the blood touches them. Thy foulest crimes shall melt like snow as soon as the thaw begins. Thou canst not have sinned thyself beyond the reach of the long arm of Christ, nor can the weight of thy sin be too heavy for the back of Christ, the great Sin-bearer, to bear. Whatever shine iniquities, though they be red like scarlet, they shall be as wool; though they be as crimson, they shall be whiter than snow. Some of us would have no hope if we did not know that Christ will save the chief of sinners. We should long since have sunk into remorse and despair if we had not seen it written in letters of gold, “Him that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out.” You know John Bunyan’s hint about that text. He says, “Who is this man? Who is this ’him that cometh’? Why, any ’him that cometh’ in all the world, be he who he may, he will in no wise, under no pretext, for no reason, and in no way, ever cast out.” If thou comest to Christ, he will keep his word. He cannot be a liar. He must be as good as his own declaration. If thou comest to him, he will not cast thee out. What wilt thou that he should do unto thee?

Oh! believer, hast thou a desire upon thy soul, hast thou a longing in thy heart, then Christ does not say that he will give thee this mercy, if it be possible, but he is able to do for you exceeding abundantly above what you ask or even think. I hear that text still quoted by some of my brethren, “Above all that we can ask or even think.” I beg their pardon; that is not a faithful quotation of Scripture. It says, “Above all that we ask or think” — above all that we do ask. God can open a man’s mouth as wide as his mercies, and he can make us ask for anything, but he generally does for us above all that we ask or think. Never keep thy mouth closed because thou thinkest the mercy to be too great. “He that spared not his own Son, but freely delivered him up for us all, how shall he not also, with him, freely give us all things?” Do not stint thyself. Enlarge thy desire. Open thy mouth wide, and he will fill it. He gives thee carte blanche; sue for what thou wilt. He puts it before thee, “Delight thyself also in the Lord, and he will give thee the desire of thy heart.” So may it be to us, according to our faith, and his shall be the glory. Amen.