A sermon (No. 1469) delivered on Lord’s-Day morning, April 20th, 1879, by C. H. SpurgeonAt the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington
“In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.”—Philippians 4:6.
ACCORDING TO THE TEXT, we are both by prayer and supplication to make
known our requests unto God. If any distinction be intended here, I
suppose that by prayer is meant the general act of devotion and the
mention of our usual needs; and by supplication I think would be
intended our distinct entreaties and special petitions. We are to offer
the general prayer common to all the saints, and we are to add thereto
the special and definite petitions which are peculiar to ourselves. We
are to worship in prayer, for God is to be adored by all his saints, and
then we are to beseech his favours for ourselves, according to the
words of the text, letting our requests be made known unto God. Do not
forget this second form of worship. There is a good deal of generalizing
in prayer, and God forbid that we should say a word against it, so far
as it is sincere worship, but we want to have more of specific, definite
pleading with God, asking him for such-and-such things, with a clear
knowledge of what we ask. You will hear prayers at prayer-meetings, in
which everything is asked in general but nothing in particular, and yet
the reality and heartiness of prayer will often be best manifested by
the putting up of requests for distinct blessings. See how Abraham, when
he went to worship the Lord, did not merely adore him, and in general
pray for his glory, but on a special occasion he pleaded concerning the
promised heir, at another time he cried, “O that Ishmael might live
before thee,” and on one special occasion he interceded for Sodom.
Elijah, when on the top of Carmel, did not pray for all the blessings of
providence in general, but for rain, for rain there and then. He knew
what he was driving at, kept to his point, and prevailed. So, my beloved
friends, we have many wants which are so pressing as to be very
distinct and definite, and we ought to have just so many clearly defined
petitions which we offer unto God by way of supplication, and for the
divine answers to these we are bound to watch with eager expectancy, so
that when we receive them we may magnify the Lord. Continue at Sharper Iron
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