CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I | Praying Saints of the Old Testaments | [ 13] |
| II | Praying Saints of the Old Testaments (continued) | [ 21] |
| III | Abraham, the Man of Prayer | [ 29] |
| IV | Moses, the Mighty Intercessor | [ 33] |
| V | Elijah, the Praying Prophet | [ 42] |
| VI | Hezekiah, the Praying King | [ 54] |
| VII | Ezra, the Praying Reformer | [ 66] |
| VIII | Nehemiah, the Praying Builder | [ 72] |
| IX | Samuel, the Child of Prayer | [ 80] |
| X | Daniel, the Praying Captive | [ 89] |
| XI | Faith of Sinners in Prayer | [ 97] |
| XII | Paul, the Teacher of Prayer | [ 107] |
| XIII | Paul and His Praying | [ 121] |
| XIV | Paul and His Praying (continued) | [ 131] |
| XV | Paul and His Requests for Prayer | [ 142] |
| XVI | Paul and His Requests for Prayer (continued) | [ 150] |
PRAYER AND PRAYING MEN
PRAYER AND PRAYING
MEN
CHAPTER I
PRAYING SAINTS OF THE OLD TESTAMENTS
The Holy Spirit will give to the praying saint the brightness of an immortal hope, the music of a deathless song, in His baptism and communion with the heart. He will give sweeter and more enlarged visions of heaven until the taste for other things will pall, and other visions will grow dim and distant. He will put notes of other worlds in human hearts until all earth’s music is discord and songless.—Rev. E. M. Bounds.
Old Testament history is filled with accounts of praying saints. The leaders of Israel in those early days were noted for their praying habits. Prayer is the one thing which stands out prominently in their lives.
To begin with, note the incident in Joshua, 10th chapter, where the very heavenly bodies were made subject to prayer. A prolonged battle was on between the Israelites and their enemies, and when night was rapidly coming on, and it was discovered that a few more hours of daylight were needful to ensure victory for the Lord’s hosts, Joshua, that sturdy man of God, stepped into the breach, with prayer. The sun was too rapidly declining in the west for God’s people to reap the full fruits of a noted victory, and Joshua, seeing how much depended upon the occasion, cried out in the sight and in the hearing of Israel, “Sun, stand thou still upon Gideon, and thou moon in the Valley of Ajalon.” And the sun actually stood still and the moon stopped on her course at the command of this praying man of God, till the Lord’s people had avenged themselves upon the Lord’s enemies.
Jacob was not a strict pattern of righteousness, prior to his all-night praying. Yet he was a man of prayer and believed in the God of prayer. So we find him swift to call upon God in prayer when he was in trouble. He was fleeing from home fearing Esau, on his way to the home of Laban, a kinsman. As night came on, he lighted on a certain place to refresh himself with sleep, and as he slept he had a wonderful dream in which he saw the angels of God ascending and descending on a ladder which stretched from earth to heaven. It was no wonder when he awoke he was constrained to exclaim, “Surely the Lord is in this place and I knew it not.”
Then it was he entered into a very definite covenant with Almighty God, and in prayer vowed a vow unto the Lord, saying, “If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat and raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father’s house in peace; and shall the Lord be my God, and this stone which I have set for a pillar shall be God’s house; and of all that thou shalt give me, I will surely give one-tenth unto thee.”