Of Prayer
John Calvin
1.
FROM the previous part of the work we clearly see how completely
destitute man is of all good, how devoid of every means of procuring his own
salvation. Hence, if he would obtain succour in his necessity, he must go beyond
himself, and procure it in some other quarter. It has farther been shown that
the Lord kindly and spontaneously manifests himself in Christ, in whom he offers
all happiness for our misery, all abundance for our want, opening up the
treasures of heaven to us, so that we may turn with full faith to his beloved
Son, depend upon him with full expectation, rest in him, and cleave to him with
full hope. This, indeed, is that secret and hidden philosophy which cannot be
learned by syllogisms: a philosophy thoroughly understood by those whose eyes
God has so opened as to see light in his light (Ps. 36:9). But after we have
learned by faith to know that whatever is necessary for us or defective in us is
supplied in God and in our Lord Jesus Christ, in whom it hath pleased the Father
that all fulness should dwell, that we may thence draw as from an inexhaustible
fountain, it remains for us to seek and in prayer implore of him what we have
learned to be in him. To know God as the sovereign disposer of all good,
inviting us to present our requests, and yet not to approach or ask of him, were
so far from availing us, that it were just as if one told of a treasure were to
allow it to remain buried in the ground. Hence the Apostle, to show that a faith
unaccompanied with prayer to God cannot be genuine, states this to be the order:
As faith springs from the Gospel, so by faith our hearts are framed to call upon
the name of God (Rom. 10:14). And this is the very thing which he had expressed
some time before, viz., that the Spirit of adoption, which seals the
testimony of the Gospel on our hearts, gives us courage to make our requests
known unto God, calls forth groanings which cannot be uttered, and enables us to
cry, Abba, Father (Rom. 8:26). This last point, as we have hitherto only touched
upon it slightly in passing, must now be treated more fully.
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