Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Crying Unto Jesus
A look at Jesus and the
Syro-Phonecian woman's request.
Crying
Unto Jesus
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
"Behold,
a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts, and cried unto Him"
(Matt. 15:22, KJV).
In
this prayer the Syro-Phoenician woman cried with intense feeling. Would
it not have been more modest for her to speak gently to this
soul-redeeming Savior, who hears before we pray, than to cry or shout?
Was Christ so hard to be entreated? The disciples afterward complained
of her crying after them, but there were reasons for her loud praying
that are applicable to us.
First,
need cannot blush. The pinching necessity of the saints is not bound by
the law of modesty. Hunger cannot be ashamed. "I mourn in my
complaint," says David, "and make a noise" (Ps. 55:2).
"Like a crane or a swallow, so did I chatter," says Hezekiah:
"I did mourn as a dove" (Isa. 38:14).
Second,
fervor is a heavenly ingredient in prayer, even though God hears prayer
only as offered in Christ and not because of its warmth. An arrow drawn
with full strength has a speedier issue. Therefore, the prayers of the
saints are called their crying: "Out of the depths have I
cried" (Ps. 130:1). Jesus, our pattern for prayer, offered up
prayers and supplications with "strong crying and tears" (Heb.
5:7).
Third,
intense prayers prevail and are answered. "This poor man cried, and
the Lord heard him, and saved him out of all his troubles" (Ps.
34:6). The cry adds wings to the prayer as a swift courier speeds his
message of life and death to the king during a time of war.
Fourth,
there is a sort of violence offered to God in fervent prayer. "I
will not let thee go," said Jacob to his Lord (Gen. 32:26). When
Moses was wrestling in prayer for the people, God answered, "Now
therefore let me alone" (Exod. 32:10). There is strength and
muscles in such prayers, and by such prayers "the king is held in
the galleries" (Song of Sol. 7:5).
All
these are good reasons for urgent prayer, but we must consider some of
the hindrances that keep poor sinners from this kind of praying. These
will be stated in the form of objections:
If
prayers must be fervent, and even loud, what must become of me, who am
often so confounded that I cannot utter one word? In God's reckoning,
groans are taken as prayer, "For he hath looked down from the
height of his sanctuary . . . to hear the groaning of the prisoner"
(Ps. 102:19-20). And when the Spirit intercedes, it is with
"groanings which cannot be uttered" (Rom. 8:26 ). Faith sighs
to heaven, and Christ receives sighs into His censer for prayer. Words
are but the body, the outside of prayer, while sighs are nearer the
heart.
I
have not so much as a voice. Yes, but there are other voices besides
those that are articulate. For example, there is a voice in tears:
"The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping" (Ps. 6:8). A
baby has no prayers for the breast, but a mother can interpret his
weeping.
Even
weeping is often more than I can render. Intensity of feeling frequently
moves one to tears, but tears are not an indispensable sign of grief.
Hezekiah could only chatter and moan (Isa. 38:14). Sorrow does not
always travel the same beaten road. Weeping is but the outward casing of
sorrow, and there is often the most sorrow where there is the least
weeping.
All
my ways of expressing prayer are imperfect. In God's book, a look toward
heaven or an uplifting of the eyes is set down as prayer: "In the
morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up" (Ps.
5:3). What is prayer but a pouring out of the soul to God? Faith will
find another outlet if one be stopped. Feeling breaks out in looks when
voice is lacking, just as smoke pours out of the windows when the door
is shut. Dying Stephen looked up to heaven by the window of the soul to
give notice that a poor friend was on his way, and that was prayer
enough. If I were ready to sink into hell, I should wish no more than to
send one longing look to heaven. There are many love-looks of saints
lying in the bosom of Christ.
My
heart is so hard, that I have no praying disposition. Then pray that you
may pray. If an overwhelmed heart refuses to come, go and tell Christ,
beseeching Him to come and fetch the heart to Himself. It is Christ's
eye directed to hard hearts that melts them. Although this is the lowest
degree of prayer, it is of no importance to the essence of sincere
praying as long as the soul expresses itself, whether in words, groans,
sighs, looks, or tears. Prayer is an outpouring of soul to God, and the
very exercise brings along with it the needful affections.
What
should be done with incoherent utterance? Broken petitions are set down
in Scripture as prayer (Pss. 6:3; 109:4; 116:3). The causes of this
incoherency in prayer are various. Sometimes it arises, not from haste
or unbelief, but from intensity of emotion. Love and longing have
eagles' wings and fly where language would only creep like a
snail.
It
is not every part of a poor petitioner's supplication that belongs to
the supplication. Out of fear, the poor man may speak broken words that
cannot be understood by the prince. However, nonsense in prayer--when
sorrow, blackness, and a dark, overwhelmed spirit dictate the words--is
well received by God.
Prayer
is often in the womb of a sigh: "Lord, thou hast heard the desire
of the humble" (Ps. 10:17, emphasis added). When others cannot know
what a groan means, God knows because His Spirit made the sigh. He first
makes prayer as an Intercessor and then hears it as God.
But
is all my crying in prayer the result of the Spirit? The flesh may come
in and join in prayer, and some things may be said in haste, not in
faith, as in that prayer "Hath God forgotten to be gracious?"
(Ps. 77:9). However, Christ washes sinners in His blood. He rejects
those things that are wrong, but He washes their prayers and causes the
Father to accept them. Thus, we should fervently lay our hearts before
God.
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