Prayer
for the Lord's Return
D. M. Panton
I.-THE HOLY SPIRIT.
First we
learn what is the mind of the Holy Spirit. "The Spirit and the Bride say, 'Come'
" (Rev. xxii. 17). It is (as far as I know)
the only recorded prayer of the Holy Spirit: He who prays "with groanings which
cannot be uttered" (Rom viii.26), when they are uttered, their summary is
"Come." The significance of this is
extraordinary. The Spirit has a myriad ways of
affecting the world for good, yet His prayer is, "Come;" He knows perfectly all
evolution, all progress, all revival, all Gospel advance, yet His prayer is,
"Come;" He knows the inexhaustible resources, the unrevealed powers, the most
secret plans of God, yet His prayer is, "Come." The Holy Spirit knows no
solution to the problem of the universe except the Second Advent of Christ and it is His
own supreme prayer; thus, the fuller we are of the Spirit of God, the surer we are to pray
His prayer.
II. --OUR SAVIOUR.
Next we learn the mind of our Lord. He says: "When ye pray, say, 'Thy Kingdom
come'" (Matt. vi. 10). "This, more than
ever in these last days, ought to be the first and last of the Church's prayers, for all
that she desires for Herself, for the world, and for her Lord Himself, is comprised in
this " (Dr. H. Bonar). We are apt to see men
to the exclusion of mankind. When we pray for the Kingdom, we plead for thirty generations
against one, for God will amputate a single generation-and that, only after countless
pleadings in grace and judgment-to save an entire race. It
is the most practical of all possible prayers, for there is no other way whereby the
world's political and social salvation can be wrought, and God's love for the world at
last fulfilled. "There is no remedy," as
Lord Shaftesburry, who wrought more social amelioration for his generation than any other
man, said, "for all this mass of misery, but in the return of our Lord Jesus Christ. Why do we not plead for it every time we hear the clock
strike?" "The Lord Himself," in the words of Canon Simpson, "would
never have bidden us pray, 'Thy Kingdom come,' if those seasons, which no man knows, were
so irrevocably fixed that our efforts could not hasten, or our sins retard, the wheels of
His chariot." If the Jewish disciple, by praying that his flight may not be on the
Sabbath or in winter (Matt. xxiv. 20), can
so modify the date of, that flight as to change not only the day of the week but even the
season of the year, much more is it in the power of the Church to "HASTEN the coming
of the day of God"(2 Pet. iii. 12,
marg.).
Next we learn the mind of the Apostles. Jesus says, "Yea, I come
quickly." "Amen," cries John; I accept the doctrine, I hold fast the
promise, I rejoice in the speed. "Come, Lord Jesus" (Rev. xxii. 20). It is the last prayer from an apostle's lips; it is the
last and crowning prayer of the Bible; it is the last prayer of the last Apostle of the
Lamb; the whole canon of inspiration closes with a direct appeal to Christ to come. " There may be many years of hard work before the
consummation, but the signs are to me so encouraging that I would not be unbelieving if I
saw the wing of the apocalyptic angel spread for its last triumphant flight in this day's
sunset. O you dead Churches, wake up! 0 Christ,
descend! Scarred temple, take the crown! Bruised hand, take the sceptre! Wounded foot, step the
throne! Thine is the Kingdom!" (Dr. Talmage). It is John's last prayer, and happy shall we be if,
falling asleep, it is the last prayer upon our lips also.
IV. -THE
CHURCH.
Next we learn the mind of the
Apostolic Church."The Spirit and the Bride say, 'Come'" (Rev. xxii, 17). In all sections of the Church, this prayer has never ceased
down all the ages; yet only when John wrote did the Bride, as a whole, thus pray. "Surely I come quickly," says Sir Robert
Anderson, "are Christ's last recorded words, but their fulfillment awaits the
response of His people, 'Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.' There is not a Church in Christendom
that would corporately pray that prayer today." Foreseeing this, how impressive it is
that the Holy Spirit immediately adds, "And he that heareth"-he who has the
hearing ear because he has the overcoming life-"let him say, 'Come.'" IT IS A
PRAYER PUT UPON OUR LIPS BY DIVINE COMMAND; that is, when corporate praying fails,
infinitely more urgent becomes the individual prayer; and even if the corporate prayer
continues, God is not content unless each adds his own "Come."* Therefore every
interpretation of prophecy which excludes this prayer as wrong or inappropriate or
inopportune is self-condemned; every argument which silences it blocks the praying of the
Holy Spirit through us; and every shrinking from it in our own heart is a work of the
flesh. Hardly had our Lord reached the threshold of
the House of the Father than He shouted back, "Surely I come quickly," nor does
the Church enter into the rapture of her hopes until she brings herself to respond,
"Amen, even so, come, Lord Jesus" (Dr. Seiss).
V. --OURSELVES.
Next we learn our own need. All
holy and scriptural desire is legitimate fuel for prayer; and it is our peril so to be
concerned with the doctrine of the Advent that we forget the prayer. In twenty-four volumes of the "Quarterly Journal of
Prophecy " (1894 to 1873) there is not a single article on prayer for the Coming. Is it nothing to us that our Lord wishes to come back? Why is coming quickly if it is not the speed of desire?
"Many Christians do not realise that the Lord is waiting until He is invited
by His own to return. We may need to be urged; He does not " (W. Lincoln). And if
our conscience cows us with the danger at the judgment Seat of a soul only partially
ready, let us meet that real difficulty by daily offering a simultaneous prayer-that we
may be made so deeply prepared in life and character as to be able to see Him in fulness
of joy. It is a self-purifying prayer.+ Let us
learn to say in the golden words of the old Puritan, Baxter: "Hasten, 0 my Saviour,
the time of Thy return ! Delay not, lest the living give up their hopes; delay not, lest
earth should grow like hell and Thy Church be
* " This word to the hearer will remain in full
force even after the watchful of the Church or the whole Church are borne away. Jesus' coming is, to Israel also, the great point of
hope." -Govett.
+ I John iii. 3. Be it also remembered that the rapture, the first act of God's response, may precipitate life in the very souls unsaved on whose behalf our anxiety might make us hesitate to pray the prayer.
VI. --OUR
HEARTS.
Next
we learn the language of the fully sanctified heart. A
whole book of the Bible is reserved as an embodiment of the heart-cry for each other of
the Bride and the Bridegroom. The waiting Bride
suddenly cries, "The voice of my Beloved! Behold, He cometh, leaping upon the
mountains, like a gazelle, or a young hart" (Song of Songs ii. 8)-the two loveliest
and swiftest creatures of the mountains. And He
replies, "Arise [resurrection], my love, my fair one, and come away [rapture]. For lo, the winter is past, and the time of the singing
of birds is come; 0 my dove [see Is. Ix. 8], that art in the clefts of the rock, in the
covert of the steep place"-on the precipitous summit of the Parousia. And then she cries back in words that end the Song:
"Make haste, my Beloved, and be Thou like to a gazelle or a young hart "-for
swiftness-" upon the mountains of spices." In the words of McCheyne; "The day of eternity is breaking in the east. Oh, brethren, do you know what it is to long for Himself
to cry, 'Make haste,' my Beloved? As a friend once
wrote me, "I always feel when one sings Miss Havergal's beautiful hymn 'Thou art
coming, 0 my Saviour,' that I want to prostrate myself on the earth and weep for sheer
joy!"
VII.-THE
CREATION.
Finally,
we learn the unconscious mind of the world. "The whole creation groaneth and
travaileth in pain," waiting "for the revealing of the sons of God " (Rom.
viii. 19). "Can you say, 'More than they that
wait for the morning, my soul waiteth for Thee?' '
Does your heart leap, when you think that the Christ, ever present, is drawing near to
us?All the signs of the times, intellectual and social the rottenness of much of our life
-- the abounding luxury, the, "Hideous vice that flaunts unblamed or unabashed before
us. All these things cry out to Him, whose ear is not deaf-even if our voice does not join
in the cry-and beseech Him to come!" (Dr. Alexander
Maclaren). For all the creation needs are met only
by the Advent. "In this prayer is summed up
all that the Christian heart can desire-the destruction of the power of Satan, the
deliverance of the creature from the bondage of corruption, the banishment of sin and
sorrow from the individual heart and from the world' the restoration of all things' the
establishment of the kingdom of righteousness, the beholding by Jesus in fulness of the
travail of His soul, and the bestowment upon Him in completeness of His promised reward. Let each member of the Church militant unite with the
Apostle in the longing cry, "Amen. Come, Lord Jesus" (Dr. E. R. Craven). Bishop J. C. Ryle says: "'Come, Lord Jesus!' should
be our daily prayer." Shall we not make a compact together that, so long as breath
lasts, we will, without a single day's intermission, pray, "EVEN SO, COME, LORD
JESUS" ?
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