August
10
Psalm
116:4
Then called I upon the name of the LORD;
O LORD, I beseech thee,
deliver my soul.
The
prayer of faith is generally short, and always to the point.
It
takes the soul and places it before God, and its real state and true character.
It
pleads with Him for what is really needed, what must be had.
The
believer often needs deliverance, and faith cries to God for it.
His
language is, “O Lord, I beseech thee, deliver my soul from doubts and fears,
which continually beset me;
from
a spirit of bondage, which would daily entangle me;
from
Satan who worries, harasses, and hinders me;
from
the sin which so easily beset me;
from
men who would injure or mislead me;
from
my own feelings, which daily burden me.”
Thus
the Lord is acknowledged as the great Deliverer;
our
own inability is practically confessed;
it
is evident our trials and troubles are sanctified; the legitimate tendency of grace
is discovered by the earnestness, simplicity, importunity, and success of our
prayers.
Be
this our daily cry until deliverance be no longer needed;
for
our God says, “Call upon me in the day of trouble, I will deliver thee.”
He
who delivered thee once, will deliver thee unto the end.
Oh,
for that tenderness of heart
Which
bows before the Lord,
Acknowledges
how just Thou art,
And
trembles at Thy word!
Savior,
to me in pity give
The
pledge Thou wilt at last receive.
James
Smith
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