Rom 8:26 Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.
Rom 8:27 And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God.
This
is the deep mystery of prayer.
This is the delicate divine mechanism
which words cannot interpret, and which theology cannot explain, but
which the humblest believer knows even when he does not understand.
Oh,
the burdens that we love to bear and cannot understand!
Oh, the
inarticulate out-reachings of our hearts for things we cannot
comprehend!
And yet we know they are an echo from the throne and a
whisper from the heart of God.
It is often a groan rather than a song, a
burden rather than a buoyant wing.
But it is a blessed burden, and it
is a groan whose undertone is praise and unutterable joy.
It is "a
groaning which cannot be uttered."
We could not ourselves express it
always, and sometimes we do not understand any more than that God is
praying in us, for something that needs His touch and that He
understands.
And so we can just pour out the fullness
of our heart, the burden of our spirit, the sorrow that crushes us, and
know that He hears, He loves, He understands, He receives;
And He
separates from our prayer all that is imperfect, ignorant and wrong, and
presents the rest, with the incense of the great High Priest, before
the throne on high;
And our prayer is heard, accepted and answered in
His name.
~A. B. Simpson~
It is not necessary to be
always speaking to God or always hearing from God, to have communion
with Him; there is an inarticulate fellowship more sweet than words.
The
little child can sit all day long beside its busy mother and, although
few words are spoken on either side, and both are busy, the one at his
absorbing play, the other at her engrossing work, yet both are in
perfect fellowship.
He knows that she is there, and she knows that he is
all right.
So the saint and the Saviour can go on for hours in the
silent fellowship of love, and he be busy about the most common things,
and yet conscious that every little thing he does is touched with the
complexion of His presence, and the sense of His approval and blessing.
And
then, when pressed with burdens and troubles too complicated to put
into words and too mysterious to tell or understand, how sweet it is to
fall back into His blessed arms, and just sob out the sorrow that we
cannot speak!
~Selected~
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