
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
http://www.maywoodbaptistchurch.org/flighttraining/0014%20Experiments%20in%20Prayer.mp3
Special Thanks for this episode:
Spiritual Classics: Selected Readings on the Twelve Spiritual Disciplines. Edited by Richard Foster and Emilie Griffin. 2000.
Agnes Sanford. The Healing Light. 1947.
Music used under Creative Commons, adapted from:
Only Knows, by Broke for Free https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Broke_For_Free/Layers/Only_Knows
Shownotes:
Thoughts from Agnes Sanford in The Healing Light
“Four simple steps into prayer
The second step is to turn it on, by some such prayer as this “Heavenly Father, please increase in me at this time Your life-giving power.” Or if we do not know this outside life as our Heavenly Father, we can simply say “Whoever you are — whatever you are — come into me now!”
The third step is to believe that this power is coming into use and to accept it by faith. No matter how much we ask for something it becomes ours only as we accept it and give thanks for it. “Thank You,” we can say, “that Your life is now coming into me and increasing life in my spirit and in my mind and in my body.”
And the fourth step is to observe the operations of that light and life. In order to do so, we must decide on some tangible thing that we wish accomplished by that power, so that we can know without question whether our experiment succeeded or failed.
Many Christians are afraid to do this. A woman once told me that she asked God to send her two pairs of rubbers for her sons, to protect their feet from rain and slush. That night, she said, the ground froze over solid and for two days the boys walked to school dry-shod. Upon the third day another woman gave her two pairs of rubbers for her sons.
The value of specific requests
If the rubbers weren’t forthcoming, he implied — there was no God. But if he had turned on an electric light and it had failed to shine, he would not have said, “There is no electricity!” He would have said, “There is something wrong with this lamp.”
Let us understand then that if our experiment fails it is not due to a lack in God, but to a natural and understandable lack in ourselves. What scientist would be discouraged if his first experiment failed? Since we intend with His help to heal our short-comings, to repair our wiring, we need not fear to test His power by prayer.
A pair of rubbers might not be the simplest objective, nor a new coat, nor a larger home. We might be mistaken concerning our need of these things. Moreover, the attaining of such things in prayer involves the swaying of more minds than ours, and is rather difficult for a first experiment. Let us choose one of the very simplest of prayer-experiments, remembering always that it must be tangible; that is, it must be something that we can put the finger on and say either “This has been done,” or “This has not been done.”
How strange it is that people who fear to do this do not hesitate to pray for the most difficult objectives of all, such as the peace of the world or the salvation of their souls! If they have so little confidence in prayer that they do not dare to test their powers of contacting God by praying for an easy thing, it is probable that their cosmic intercessions are of little force. If everyone who prayed for the peace of the world had enough prayer-power to accomplish the healing of a head cold, this would be a different world within twenty-four hours.
An objective that is simple and personal
There is no great mystery concerning the will of God, in so far as it applies to our small selves. God’s will is written into His nature, and the nature of God is love. Therefore, when we pray in accordance with the law of love, we are praying in accordance with the will of God.”
>Jake’s story about computer
5
22 ratings
http://www.maywoodbaptistchurch.org/flighttraining/0014%20Experiments%20in%20Prayer.mp3
Special Thanks for this episode:
Spiritual Classics: Selected Readings on the Twelve Spiritual Disciplines. Edited by Richard Foster and Emilie Griffin. 2000.
Agnes Sanford. The Healing Light. 1947.
Music used under Creative Commons, adapted from:
Only Knows, by Broke for Free https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Broke_For_Free/Layers/Only_Knows
Shownotes:
Thoughts from Agnes Sanford in The Healing Light
“Four simple steps into prayer
The second step is to turn it on, by some such prayer as this “Heavenly Father, please increase in me at this time Your life-giving power.” Or if we do not know this outside life as our Heavenly Father, we can simply say “Whoever you are — whatever you are — come into me now!”
The third step is to believe that this power is coming into use and to accept it by faith. No matter how much we ask for something it becomes ours only as we accept it and give thanks for it. “Thank You,” we can say, “that Your life is now coming into me and increasing life in my spirit and in my mind and in my body.”
And the fourth step is to observe the operations of that light and life. In order to do so, we must decide on some tangible thing that we wish accomplished by that power, so that we can know without question whether our experiment succeeded or failed.
Many Christians are afraid to do this. A woman once told me that she asked God to send her two pairs of rubbers for her sons, to protect their feet from rain and slush. That night, she said, the ground froze over solid and for two days the boys walked to school dry-shod. Upon the third day another woman gave her two pairs of rubbers for her sons.
The value of specific requests
If the rubbers weren’t forthcoming, he implied — there was no God. But if he had turned on an electric light and it had failed to shine, he would not have said, “There is no electricity!” He would have said, “There is something wrong with this lamp.”
Let us understand then that if our experiment fails it is not due to a lack in God, but to a natural and understandable lack in ourselves. What scientist would be discouraged if his first experiment failed? Since we intend with His help to heal our short-comings, to repair our wiring, we need not fear to test His power by prayer.
A pair of rubbers might not be the simplest objective, nor a new coat, nor a larger home. We might be mistaken concerning our need of these things. Moreover, the attaining of such things in prayer involves the swaying of more minds than ours, and is rather difficult for a first experiment. Let us choose one of the very simplest of prayer-experiments, remembering always that it must be tangible; that is, it must be something that we can put the finger on and say either “This has been done,” or “This has not been done.”
How strange it is that people who fear to do this do not hesitate to pray for the most difficult objectives of all, such as the peace of the world or the salvation of their souls! If they have so little confidence in prayer that they do not dare to test their powers of contacting God by praying for an easy thing, it is probable that their cosmic intercessions are of little force. If everyone who prayed for the peace of the world had enough prayer-power to accomplish the healing of a head cold, this would be a different world within twenty-four hours.
An objective that is simple and personal
There is no great mystery concerning the will of God, in so far as it applies to our small selves. God’s will is written into His nature, and the nature of God is love. Therefore, when we pray in accordance with the law of love, we are praying in accordance with the will of God.”
>Jake’s story about computer