The Holy Spirit’s Intercession
“Likewise the Spirit also helps our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself makes intercession for us with groans which cannot be uttered. And He that searches the hearts knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because He makes intercession for the saints according to the will of God.”
Romans 8:26, 27
THE Apostle Paul was writing to a tried and afflicted people and one of his objectives was to remind them of the rivers of comfort which were flowing near at hand. He first of all stirred up their pure minds by way of remembrance as to their sonship, for he says, “as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.” They were, therefore, encouraged to take part and lot with Christ, the elder Brother, with whom they had become joint heirs. And they were exhorted to suffer with Him that they might afterwards be glorified with Him. All that they endured came from a Father’s hand and this should comfort them. A thousand sources of joy are opened in that one blessing of adoption. Blessed is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have been begotten into the family of Grace!
When Paul had alluded to that consoling subject, he turned to the next ground of comfort, namely, that we are to be sustained under present trial by hope. There is an amazing glory in reserve for us and though as yet we cannot enter upon it, but in harmony with the whole creation must continue to groan and travail, yet the hope itself should minister strength to us and enable us to bear patiently “these light afflictions, which are but for a moment.” This, also, is a Truth of God full of sacred refreshment–Hope sees a crown in reserve, mansions in readiness and Jesus, Himself, preparing a place for us–and by the rapturous sight she sustains the soul under the sorrows of the hour! Hope is the grand anchor by whose means we ride out the present storm.
The Apostle then turns to a third source of comfort, namely, the abiding of the Holy Spirit in and with the Lord’s people. He uses the word, “likewise,” to intimate that in the same manner as hope sustains the soul, so does the Holy Spirit strengthen us under trial. Hope operates spiritually upon our spiritual faculties and so does the Holy Spirit, in some mysterious way, Divinely operate upon the new-born faculties of the Believer so that he is sustained under his infirmities. In His light shall we see light–I pray, therefore, that we may be helped of the Spirit while we consider His mysterious operations–that we may not fall into error or miss precious Truths of God through blindness of heart.
The text speaks of “our infirmities,” or as many translators put it in the singular–of “our infirmity”–by this is intended our affliction and the weakness which trouble discovers in us. The Holy Spirit helps us to bear the infirmity of our body and of our mind. He helps us to bear our cross, whether it is physical pain, mental depression, spiritual conflict, slander, poverty, or persecution. He helps our infirmity–and with a Helper so Divinely strong, we need not fear for the result! God’s Grace will be sufficient for us! His strength will be made perfect in weakness! I think, dear Friends, you will all admit that if a man can pray, his trouble is at once lightened. When we feel that we have power with God and can obtain anything we ask for at His hands, then our difficulties cease to oppress us.
We take our burden to our heavenly Father and tell Him in the accents of childlike confidence and we come away quite content to bear whatever His holy will may lay upon us. Prayer is a great outlet for grief–it draws up the sluices and abates the swelling flood which, otherwise, might be too strong for us. We bathe our wounds in the lotion of prayer and the pain is lulled, the fever is removed. But the worst of it is that in certain conditions of heart we cannot pray. We may be brought into such perturbation of mind and perplexity of heart that we do not know how to pray. We see the Mercy Seat and we perceive that God will hear us. We have no doubt about that, for we know that we are His own favored children and yet we hardly know what to desire.
We fall into such heaviness of spirit and entanglement of thought that the one remedy of prayer, which we have always found to be unfailing, appears to be taken from us. Here, then, in the nick of time, as a very present help in time of trouble, comes in the Holy Spirit! He draws near to teach us how to pray and in this way He helps our infirmity, relieves our suffering and enables us to bear the heavy burden without fainting under the load. At this time our subjects for consideration shall be, first, the help which the Holy Spirit gives. Secondly, the prayers which He inspires. And thirdly, the success which such prayers are certain to obtain.
- First, then, let us consider THE HELP WHICH THE HOLY SPIRIT GIVES. The help which the Holy Spirit renders to us meets the weakness which we deplore. As I have already said, if in time of trouble a man can pray, his burden loses its weight. If the Believer can take anything and everything to God, then he learns to glory in infirmity and to rejoice in tribulation. But sometimes we are in such confusion of mind that we know not what we should pray for as we ought to. In a measure, through our ignorance, we never know what we should pray for until we are taught of the Spirit of God, but there are times when this beclouding of the soul is dense, indeed, and we do not even know what would help us out of our trouble if we could obtain it.
We see the disease, but the name of the medicine is not known to us. We look over the many things which we might ask for of the Lord and we feel that each of them would be helpful, but none of them would precisely meet our case. For spiritual blessings which we know to be according to the Divine will, we could ask with confidence, but perhaps these would not meet our peculiar circumstances. There are other things for which we are allowed to ask, but we scarcely know whether, if we had them, they would really serve our turn and we also feel a diffidence as to praying for them. In praying for temporal things, we plead with measured voices, always referring our petition for revision to the will of the Lord.
Moses prayed that he might enter Canaan, but God denied him. The man that was healed asked our Lord that he might be with Him, but he received the answer,“ Go home to your friends.” We pray on such matters with this reserve, “Nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will.” At times this very spirit of resignation appears to increase our mental difficulty, for we do not wish to ask for anything that would be contrary to the mind of God and yet we must ask for something! We are reduced to such straits that we must pray, but what shall be the particular subject of prayer we cannot, for a while, make out. Even when ignorance and perplexity are removed, we know not what we should pray for “as we ought.”
When we know the matter of prayer, yet we fail to pray in a right manner. We ask, but we are afraid that we shall not have, because we do not exercise the thought, or the faith which we judge to be essential to prayer. We cannot, at times, command even the earnestness which is the life of supplication. A torpor steals over us, our heart is chilled, our hands are numbed and we cannot wrestle with the angel. We know what to pray for as to objects, but we do not know what to pray for “as we ought.” It is the manner of the prayer which perplexes us, even when the matter is decided upon! How can I pray? My mind wanders. I chatter like a crane. I roar like a beast in pain. I moan in the brokenness of my heart, but oh, my God, I know not what it is my inmost spirit needs, or if I know it, I know not how to frame my petition aright before You! I know not how to open my lips in Your majestic Presence–I am so troubled that I cannot speak! My spiritual distress robs me of the power to pour out my heart before my God!
Now, Beloved, it is in such a plight as this that the Holy Spirit aids us with His Divine help and hence He is “a very present help in time of trouble.” Coming to our aid in our bewilderment, He instructs us. This is one of His frequent operations upon the mind of the Believer–“He shall teach you all things.” He instructs us as to our need and as to the promises of God which refer to that need. He shows us where our deficiencies are; what our sins are and what our necessities are. He sheds a light upon our condition and makes us feel our helplessness, sinfulness and dire poverty very deeply. And then He casts the same light upon the promises of the Word and lays home to our heart that very text which was intended to meet the occasion–the precise promise which was framed with foresight of our present distress!
In that light He makes the promise shine in all its truthfulness, certainty, sweetness and suitability so that we, poor trembling sons of men, dare take that Word into our mouth which first came out of God’s mouth and then come with it as an argument and plead it before the Throne of the heavenly Grace. Our prevalence in prayer lies in the plea, “Lord, do as You have said.” How greatly we ought to value the Holy Spirit because when we are in the dark He gives us light! And when our perplexed spirit is so befogged and beclouded that it cannot see its own need and cannot find out the appropriate promise in the Scriptures, the Spirit of God comes in and teaches us all things and brings all things to our remembrance whatever our Lord has told us. He guides us in prayer and thus He helps our infirmity.
But the blessed Spirit does more than this! He will often direct the mind to the special subject of prayer. He dwells within us as a Counselor and points out to us what it is we should seek at the hands of God. We do not know why it is so, but we sometimes find our minds carried as by a strong undercurrent into a particular line of prayer for some one definite objective. It is not merely that our judgment leads us in that direction, though usually the Spirit of God acts upon us by enlightening our judgment, but we often feel an unaccountable and irresistible desire rising again and again within our heart and this so presses upon us that we not only utter the desire before God at our ordinary times for prayer, but we feel it crying in our hearts all day long–almost to the supplanting of all other considerations.
At such times we should thank God for direction and give our desire a clear road–the Holy Spirit is granting us inward direction as to how we should order our petitions before the Throne of Grace and we may now reckon upon good success in our pleading. Such guidance will the Spirit give to each of you if you will ask Him to illuminate you. He will guide you both negatively and positively. Negatively, He will forbid you to pray for such-and-such a thing, even as Paul essayed to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit would not allow him. And, on the other hand, He will cause you to hear a cry within your soul which shall guide your petitions, even as He made Paul hear the cry from Macedonia, saying, “Come over and help us.” The Spirit teaches wisely, as no other teacher can. Those who obey His prompting shall not walk in darkness. He leads the spiritual eyes to take good and steady aim at the very center of the target and thus we hit the mark in our pleading.
Nor is this all, for the Spirit of God is not sent merely to guide and help our devotion, but He Himself “makes intercession for us” according to the will of God. By this expression it cannot be meant that the Holy Spirit ever groans or personally prays, but that He excites intense desire and creates unutterable groans in us and these are ascribed to Him. Even as Solomon built the temple because he superintended and ordained all, yet I know not that he ever fashioned a timber or prepared a stone, so does the Holy Spirit pray and plead within us by leading us to pray and plead. This He does by awakening our desires. The Holy Spirit has a wonderful power over renewed hearts–as much power as the skillful minstrel has over the strings among which he lays his accustomed hand.
The influences of the Holy Spirit, at times, pass through the soul like winds through an Aeolian harp, creating and inspiring sweet notes of gratitude and tones of desire to which we should have been strangers if it had not been for His Divine visitation. He knows how to create in our spirit hunger and thirst for good things. He can awaken us from our spiritual lethargy. He can warm us out of our lukewarmness. He can enable us, when we are on our knees, to rise above the ordinary routine of prayer into that victorious importunity against which nothing can stand! He can lay certain desires so pressingly upon our hearts that we can never rest till they are fulfilled! He can make the zeal for God’s house to eat us up and the passion for God’s Glory to be like a fire within our bones–this is one part of that process by which, in inspiring our prayers, He helps our infirmity. He is a true Advocate and most effectual Comforter. Blessed be His name!
The Holy Spirit also Divinely operates in the strengthening of the faith of Believers. That faith is at first of His creating and afterwards it is of His sustaining and increasing. And oh, Brothers and Sisters, have you not often felt your faith rise in proportion to your trials? Have you not, like Noah’s ark, mounted towards Heaven as the flood deepened around you? You have felt as sure about the promise as you felt about the trial! The affliction was, as it were, in your very bones, but the promise was also in your very heart. You could not doubt the affliction, for you smarted under it, but you might almost as soon have doubted that you were afflicted as have doubted the Divine Help, for your confidence was firm and unmoved! The greatest faith is only what God has a right to expect from us, yet we never exhibit it except as the Holy Spirit strengthens our confidence and opens up before us the Covenant with all its seals and securities.
He it is that leads our soul to cry, “Though my house is not so with God, yet has He made with me an Everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure.” Blessed be the Divine Spirit, then, that since faith is essential to prevailing prayer, He helps us in supplication by increasing our faith! Without faith, prayer cannot go anywhere, for he that wavers is like a wave of the sea driven and tossed by the wind and such an one may not expect anything of the Lord! Happy are we when the Holy Spirit removes our wavering and enables us, like Abraham, to believe without staggering, knowing full well that He who has promised is able, also, to perform!
By three figures I will endeavor to describe the work of the Spirit of God in this matter, though they all fall short and, indeed, all that I can say must fall infinitely short of the Glory of His work. The actual mode of His working upon the mind we may not attempt to explain–it remains a mystery and it would be an unholy intrusion to attempt to remove the veil. There is no difficulty in our believing that as one human mind operates upon another mind, so does the Holy Spirit influence our spirits. We are forced to use words if we would influence our fellow men, but the Spirit of God can operate upon the human mind more directly and communicate with it in silence. Into that matter, however, we will not dive lest we intrude where our knowledge would be drowned by our presumption.
My illustrations do not touch the mystery, but set forth the Grace. The Holy Spirit acts to His people somewhat as a prompter to a reciter. A man has to deliver a piece which he has learned, but his memory is treacherous and, therefore, somewhere out of sight there is a prompter so that when the speaker is at a loss and might use a wrong word, a whisper is heard which suggests the right one. When the speaker has almost lost the thread of his discourse, he turns his ear and the prompter gives him the catch-word and aids his memory. If I may be allowed the simile, I would say that this represents, in part, the work of the Spirit of God in us–suggesting to us the right desire and bringing all things to our remembrance whatever Christ has told us.
In prayer we should often come to a dead stand, but He incites, suggests and inspires–and so we go onward. In prayer we might grow weary, but the Comforter encourages and refreshes us with cheering thoughts. When, indeed, we are, in our bewilderment, almost driven to give up prayer, the whisper of His love drops a live coal from off the Altar into our soul and our hearts glow with greater ardor than before! Regard the Holy Spirit as your Prompter and let your ears be opened to His voice. But He is much more than this. Let me attempt a second simile–He is as an Advocate to one in peril at law. Suppose that a poor man had a great lawsuit touching his whole estate and he was forced, personally, to go into court and plead his own cause and speak up for his rights. If he were an uneducated man, he would be in a poor plight. An adversary in the court might plead against him and overthrow him, for he could not answer him. This poor man knows very little about the law and is quite unable to meet his cunning opponent.
Now, suppose one who was perfect in the law should take up his cause warmly and come and live with him and use all his knowledge so as to prepare his case for him, draw up his petitions for him and fill his mouth with arguments–would not that be a grand relief? This counselor would suggest the line of pleading, arrange the arguments and put them into right courtly language. When the poor man was baffled by a question asked in court, he would run home and ask his adviser and he would tell him exactly how to meet the objector. Suppose, too, that when he had to plead with the judge, this advocate at home should teach him how to behave and what to urge and encourage him to hope that he would prevail–would not this be a great gift?
Who would be the pleader in such a case? The poor client would plead, but still, when he won the suit, he would trace it all to the advocate who lived at home and gave him counsel. Indeed, it would be the advocate pleading for him, even while he pleaded himself! This is an instructive emblem of a great fact. Within this narrow house of my body, this tenement of clay, if I am a true Believer, there dwells the Holy Spirit and when I desire to pray I may ask Him what I should pray for as I ought and He will help me! He will write the prayers which I ought to offer upon the tablets of my heart and I shall see them there and so I shall be taught how to plead! It will be the Spirit’s own self pleading in me and by me and through me before the Throne of Grace! What a happy man, in his lawsuit, would such a poor man be! And how happy are you and I that we have the Holy Spirit to be our Counselor!
Yet one more illustration. It is that of a father aiding his boy. Suppose it to is a time of war, centuries back. Old English warfare was then conducted by bowmen, to a great extent. Here is a youth who is to be initiated in the art of archery and, therefore, he carries a bow. It is a strong bow and, therefore, very hard to draw–indeed, it requires more strength than the urchin can summon to bend it. See how his father teaches him. “Put your right hand here, my Boy, and place your left hand so. Now pull”–and as the youth pulls, his father’s hands are on his hands and the bow is drawn! The lad draws the bow, yes, but it is quite as much his father, too.
We cannot draw the bow of prayer alone. Sometimes a bow of steel is not broken by our hands, for we cannot even bend it. And then the Holy Spirit puts His mighty hand over ours and covers our weakness so that we draw, and lo, what splendid drawing of the bow it then is! The bow bends so easily we wonder how! Away flies the arrow and it pierces the very center of the target, for He who gives the strength, directs the aim! We rejoice to think that we have won the day, but it was His secret might that made us strong and to Him be the glory of it! Thus have I tried to set forth the cheering fact that the Spirit helps the people of God.
II. Our second subject is THE PRAYER WHICH THE HOLY SPIRIT INSPIRES, or that part of prayer which is especially and peculiarly the work of the Spirit of God. The text says, “The Spirit itself makes intercession for us with groans which cannot be uttered.” It is not the Spirit that groans, but we that groan, but as I have shown you, the Spirit excites the emotion which causes us to groan. It is clear then the prayers which are indited in us by the Spirit of God are those which arise from our inmost soul. A man’s heart is moved when he groans. A groan is a matter about which there is no hypocrisy. A groan comes not from the lips, but from the heart. A groan, then, is a part of prayer which we owe to the Holy Spirit and the same is true of all the prayer which wells up from the deep fountains of our inner life.
The Prophet cried, “My heart, my heart, I am pained at my very heart: my heart makes a noise in me.” This deep ground-swell of desire, this tidal motion of the life-floods is caused by the Holy Spirit. His work is never superficial, but always deep and inward. Such prayers will rise within us when the mind is far too troubled to let us speak. We know not what we should pray for as we ought and then it is that we groan, or utter some other inarticulate sound. Hezekiah said, “like a crane or a swallow did I chatter.” The Psalmist said, “I am so troubled that I cannot speak.” In another place he said, “I am feeble and sorely broken: I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart.” But he added, “Lord, all my desire is before You and my groaning is not hid from You.”
The sighs of the prisoner surely come up into the ears of the Lord. There is real prayer in these “groans that cannot be uttered.” It is the power of the Holy Spirit in us which creates all real prayer, even that which takes the form of a groan because the mind is incapable, by reason of its bewilderment and grief, of clothing its emotion in words. I pray you never think lightly of the supplications of your anguish. Rather judge that such prayers are like Jabez, of whom it is written, “He was more honorable than his brethren because his mother bore him with sorrow.” That which is thrown up from the depth of the soul, when it is stirred with a terrible tempest, is more precious than pearl or coral, for it is the intercession of the Holy Spirit!
These prayers are sometimes “groans that cannot be uttered” because they concern such great things that they cannot be spoken. I need, my Lord! I need, I need; I cannot tell you what I need, but I seem to need all things! If it were some little thing, my narrow capacity could comprehend and describe it, but I need all Covenant blessings! You know what I have need of before I ask You and though I cannot go into each item of my need, I know it to be very great and such as I, myself, can never estimate. I groan, for I can do no more! Prayers which are the offspring of great desires, sublime aspirations and elevated designs are surely the work of the Holy Spirit and their power within a man is frequently so great that he cannot find expression for them! Words fail and even the sighs which try to embody them cannot be uttered.
But it may be, Beloved, that we groan because we are conscious of the littleness of our desires and the narrowness of our faith. The trial, too, may seem too mean to pray about. I have known what it is to feel as if I could not pray about a certain matter and yet I have been obliged to groan about it. A thorn in the flesh may be as painful a thing as a sword in the bones and yet we may go and beseech the Lord thrice about it and, getting no answer, we may feel that we know not what to pray for as we ought–and so it makes us groan. Yes, and with that natural groan there may go up an unutterable groaning of the Holy Spirit! Beloved, what a different view of prayer God has from that which men think to be the correct one! You may haveseen very beautiful prayers in print and you may have heard very charming compositions from the pulpit, but I trust you have not fallen in love with them. Judge these things rightly. I pray you never think well of fine prayers, for before the thrice holy God it ill becomes a sinful suppliant to play the orator! We heard of a certain clergyman who was said to have given forth “the finest prayer ever offered to a Boston audience.” Just so! The Boston audience received the prayer and there it ended! We need the mind of the Spirit in prayer and not the mind of the flesh! The tail feathers of pride should be pulled out of our prayers, for they need only the wing feathers of faith–the peacock feathers of poetical expression are out of place before the Throne of God.
“Dear me, what remarkably beautiful language he uses in prayer!” “What an intellectual treat his prayers are!” Yes, yes. But God looks at the heart. To Him fine language is as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal–while a groan has music in it! We do not like groans–our ears are much too delicate to tolerate such dreary sounds–but not so the great Father of Spirits. A Methodist Brother cries, “Amen,” and you say, “I cannot bear such Methodistic noise!” No, but if it comes from the man’s heart, God can bear it! When you get upstairs into your chamber this evening to pray and find you cannot pray, but have to moan, “Lord, I am too full of anguish and too perplexed to pray. Hear the voice of my roaring.” Though you reach to nothing else, you will be really praying!
When, like David, we can say, “I opened my mouth and panted,” we are by no means in an ill state of mind. All fine language in prayer and especially all intoning or performing of prayers must be abhorrent to God! It is little short of profanity to offer solemn supplication to God after the manner called, “intoning.” The sighing of a true heart is infinitely more acceptable, for it is the work of the Spirit of God! We may say of the prayers which the Holy Spirit works in us that they are prayers of knowledge. Notice our difficulty is that we know not what we should pray for–but the Holy Spirit knows and, therefore, He helps us by enabling us to pray intelligently, knowing what we are asking for, so far as this knowledge is necessary to valid prayer.
The text speaks of the “mind of the Spirit.” What a mind that must be! The mind of that Spirit who arranged all the order which now pervades this earth! There was once chaos and confusion, but the Holy Spirit brooded over all and His mind is the originator of that beautiful arrangement which we so admire in the visible creation! What a mind His must be! The Holy Spirit’s mind is seen in our intercessions when, under His sacred influence, we order our case before the Lord and plead with holy wisdom for things convenient and necessary. What wise and admirable desires must those be which the Spirit of Wisdom, Himself, works in us!
Moreover, the Holy Spirit’s intercession creates prayers offered in a proper manner. I showed you that the difficulty is that we know not what we should pray for “as we ought,” and the Spirit meets that difficulty by making intercession for us in a right manner. The Holy Spirit works in us humility, earnestness, intensity, importunity, faith, resignation and all else that is acceptable to God in our supplications. We know not how to mingle these sacred spices in the incense of prayer. We, if left to ourselves, at our very best get too much of one ingredient or another and spoil the sacred compound. But the Holy Spirit’s intercessions have in them such a blessed blending of all that is good that they come up as a sweet perfume before the Lord!
Spirit-taught prayers are offered as they ought to be. They are His own intercession in some respects, for we read that the Holy Spirit not only helps us to intercede but, “makes intercession.” It is twice over declared in our text that He makes intercession for us and the meaning of this I tried to show when I described a father as putting his hands upon his child’s hands. This is something more than helping us to pray, something more than encouraging us or directing us–but I venture no further except to say that He puts such force of His own mind into our poor weak thoughts and desires and hopes that He, Himself, makes intercession for us, working in us to will and to pray according to His good pleasure!
I want you to notice, however, that these intercessions of the Holy Spirit are only in the saints. “He makes intercession for us” and, “He makes intercession for the saints.” Does He do nothing for sinners, then? Yes, He quickens sinners into spiritual life and He strives with them to overcome their sinfulness and turn them into the right way. But in the saints He works with us and enables us to pray after His mind and according to the will of God! His intercession is not in or for the unregenerate. O, unbelievers you must first be made saints or you cannot feel the Spirit’s intercession within you! What need we have to go to Christ for the blessing of the Holy Spirit which is peculiar to the children of God and can only be ours by faith in Christ Jesus!
“To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God.” And to the sons of God, alone, comes the Spirit of adoption and all His helping Grace. Unless we are the sons of God, the Holy Spirit’s indwelling shall not be ours–we are shut out from the intercession of the Holy Spirit. Yes, and from the intercession of Jesus, too, for He has said, “I pray not for the world, but for them which You have given Me.” Thus I have tried to show you the kind of prayer which the Spirit inspires.
III. Our third and last point is THE SURE SUCCESS OF ALL SUCH PRAYERS. All the prayers which the Spirit of God inspires in us must succeed, because, first, there is a meaning in them which God reads and approves. When the Spirit of God writes a prayer upon a man’s heart, the man himself may be in such a state of mind that he does not altogether know what it is! His interpretation of it is a groan and that is all. Perhaps he does not even get so far as that in expressing the mind of the Spirit, but he feels groans which he cannot utter. He cannot find a door of utterance for his inward grief.
Yet our heavenly Father, who looks immediately upon the heart, reads what the Spirit of God has indited there and does not need even our groans to explain the meaning! He reads the heart itself–“He knows,” says the text, “what is the mind of the Spirit.” The Spirit is one with the Father and the Father knows what the Spirit means! The desires which the Spirit prompts may be too spiritual for such babes in Grace as we are actually to describe or to express and yet they are within us. We feel desires for things that we should never have thought of if He had not made us long for them. We have aspirations for blessings which as to the understanding of them are still above us, yet the Spirit writes the desire on the renewed mind and the Father sees it!
Now that which God reads in the heart and approves of, for the word, “to know,” in this case includes approval as well as the mere act of Omniscience–what God sees and approves of in the heart must succeed. Did not Jesus say, “Your heavenly Father knows that you have need of these things before you ask them”? Did He not tell us this as an encouragement to believe that we shall receive all necessary blessings? So it is with those prayers which are all broken up, wet with tears and discordant with sighs and inarticulate expressions and heaving of the bosom and sobbing of the heart and anguish and bitterness of spirit–our gracious Lord reads them as a man reads a book and they are written in a character which He fully understands!
To give a simple example–if I were to come into your house, I might find there a little child that cannot yet speak plainly. It cries for something and it makes very odd and objectionable noises, combined with signs and movements which are almost meaningless to a stranger. But his mother understands him and attends to his little pleas. A mother can translate baby talk. She comprehends incomprehensible noises! Even so does our Father in Heaven know all about our poor baby talk, for our prayers are not much better. He knows and comprehends the cries and moans and sighs and chattering of His bewildered children! Yes, a tender mother knows her child’s needs before the child knows what it needs. Perhaps the little one stutters, stammers and cannot get its words out–but the mother senses what he would say and understands the meaning. Even so we know concerning our great Father–
“He knows the thoughts we mean to speak,
Before from our opening lips they break.”
Rejoice in this because the prayers of the Spirit are known and understood of God and, therefore, they will be sure to reach Him!
The next argument for making us sure that they will reach Him is this–they are “the mind of the Spirit.” God the Ever-Blessed is One and there can be no division between the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. These Divine Persons always work together and there is a common desire for the Glory of each blessed Person of the Divine Unity and, therefore, it cannot be conceived, without profanity, that anything could be the mind of the Holy Spirit and not be the mind of the Father and the mind of the Son! The mind of God is one and harmonious! If, therefore, the Holy Spirit dwells in you and He moves you to any desire, then His mind is in your prayer and it is not possible that the eternal Father should reject your petitions. That prayer which came from Heaven will certainly go back to Heaven! If the Holy Spirit prompts it, the Father must and will accept it, for it is not possible that He should put a slight upon the Ever-Blessed and adorable Spirit.
But one more word and that closes the argument, namely, that the work of the Spirit in the heart is not only the mind of the Spirit which God knows, but it is also according to the will or mind of God, for He never makes intercession in us other than is consistent with the Divine will. Now, the Divine will or mind may be viewed two ways. First, there is the will declared in the proclamations of holiness by the Ten Commandments. The Spirit of God never prompts us to ask for anything that is unholy or inconsistent with the precepts of the Lord. Then secondly, there is the secret mind of God, the will of His eternal predestination and decree of which we know nothing. But we do know this–that the Spirit of God never prompts us to ask anything which is contrary to the eternal purpose of God.
Reflect for a moment–the Holy Spirit knows all the purposes of God and when they are about to be fulfilled, He moves the children of God to pray about them and so their prayers keep touch and tally with the Divine decrees. Oh would you not pray confidently if you knew that your prayer corresponded with the sealed book of destiny? We may safely entreat the Lord to do what He has, Himself, ordained to do! A carnal man draws the inference that if God has ordained an event we need not pray about it, but faith obediently draws the inference that the God who secretly ordained to give the blessing has openly commanded that we should pray for it and, therefore, faith obediently prays!
Coming events cast their shadows before them and when God is about to bless His people, His coming favor casts the shadow of prayer over the Church. When He is about to favor an individual, He casts the shadow of hopeful expectation over His soul! Our prayers–let men laugh at them as they will and say there is no power in them–are the indicators of the movement of the wheels of Providence! Believing supplications are forecasts of the future! He who prays in faith is like the Seer of old–he sees that which is yet to be–his holy expectancy, like a telescope, brings distant objects near to him and things not seen as yet are visible to him! He is bold to declare that he has the petition which he has asked of God and he, therefore, begins to rejoice and to praise God before the blessing has actually arrived! So it is–prayer prompted by the Holy Spirit is the footfall of the Divine decree.
I conclude by saying, my dear Hearers, see the absolute necessity of the Holy Spirit, for if the saints know not what they should pray for as they ought–if consecrated men and women, with Christ suffering in them, still feel their need of the instruction of the Holy Spirit–how much more do you who are not saints and have never given yourselves up to God, require Divine teaching! Oh, that you would know and feel your dependence upon the Holy Spirit that He may prompt you this day to look to Jesus Christ for salvation! It is through the once crucified but now ascended Redeemer that this gift of the Spirit, this promise of the Father is shed abroad upon men! May He who comes from Jesus lead you to Jesus.
And, then, O you people of God, let this last thought abide with you–what condescension is this that this Divine Person should dwell in you forever and that He should be with you to help your prayers! Listen to me for a moment. If I read in the Scriptures that in the most heroic acts of faith, God the Holy Spirit, helps His people, I can understand it. If I read that in the sweetest music of their songs, when they worship best and chant their loftiest strains before the Most High God, the Spirit helps them, I can understand it. And even if I hear that in their wrestling prayers and prevalent intercessions God, the Holy Spirit helps them, I can understand it. But I bow with reverent amazement–my heart sinking into the dust with adoration–when I reflect that God, the Holy Spirit, helps us when we cannot speak but only groan!
Yes, and when we cannot even utter our groans He does not only help us but He claims as His own particular creation the “groans that cannot be uttered”! This is condescension, indeed! In deigning to help us in the grief that cannot even vent itself in groans He proves Himself to be a true Comforter! O God, my God! You have not forsaken me! You are not far from me, nor from the voice of my roaring. You did, for awhile, leave Your Firstborn when He was made a curse for us, so that He cried in agony, “Why have You forsaken Me?” But You will not leave one of the “many brethren” for whom He died–Your Spirit shall be with them and when they cannot so much as groan, He will make intercession for them with groans that cannot be uttered!
God bless you, my beloved Brothers and Sisters, and may you feel the Spirit of the Lord thus working in you and with you. Amen and amen.