Table Charismata Matters

Thursday, September 26, 2019

True Prayer—True Power! by Charles Haddon Spurgeon


A classic sermons by Charles Haddon Spurgeon on prayer. Highly Recommended! The following are various sources for the sermon in both audio and text formats.







The sermon in text format:

http://archive.spurgeon.org/sermons/0328.php

https://www.spurgeon.org/resource-library/sermons/true-prayer-true-power#flipbook/

https://www.reformedreader.org/spurgeon/1860-09.htm


See also the following blogpost where I've collected some quotations on divine healing. Some of the quotations are from Charles H. Spurgeon where he addresses divine spiritual healing, divine physical healing or both.

Quotes on Divine [Physical] Healing





Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Continually Asking for and being Filled with the Holy Spirit


 "Be Filled With The Holy Spirit" Eph 5:18 - Wayne Grudem


The following is an excerpt from chapter 13 of E.M. Bounds' book The Reality of Prayer.

............The whole lesson culminates in asking for the Holy Spirit as the great objective point of all praying. In the direction in the Sermon on the Mount, we have the very plain and definite promise, “If ye, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father in Heaven give good things to them that ask him?” In Luke we have “good things” substituted by “the Holy Spirit.” All good is comprehended in the Holy Spirit and He is the sum and climax of all good things.
How complex, confusing and involved is many a human direction about obtaining the gift of the Holy Spirit as the abiding Comforter, our Sanctifier and the one who empowers us! How simple and direct is our Lord’s direction—ASK! This is plain and direct. Ask with urgency, ask without fainting. Ask, seek, knock, till He comes. Your Heavenly Father will surely send Him if you ask for Him. Wait in the Lord for the Holy Spirit. It is the child waiting, asking, urging and praying perseveringly for the Father’s greatest gift and for the child’s greatest need, the Holy Spirit.
How are we to obtain the Holy Spirit so freely promised to those who seek Him believingly? Wait, press, and persevere with all the calmness and with all the ardour of a faith which knows no fear, which allows no doubt, a faith which staggers not at the promise through unbelief, a faith which in its darkest and most depressed hours against hope believes in hope, which is brightened by hope and strengthened by hope, and which is saved by hope.
Wait and pray—here is the key which unlocks every castle of despair, and which opens’ every treasure-store of God. It is the simplicity of the child’s asking of the Father, who gives with a largeness, liberality, and cheerfulness, infinitely above everything ever known to earthly parents. Ask for the Holy Spirit—seek for the Holy Spirit—knock for the Holy Spirit. He is the Father’s greatest gift for the child’s greatest need.
In these three words, “ask,” “seek” and “knock,” given us by Christ, we have the repetition of the advancing steps of insistency and effort. He is laying Himself out in command and promise in the strongest way, showing us that if we will lay ourselves out in prayer and will persevere, rising to higher and stronger attitudes and sinking to deeper depths of intensity and effort, that the answer must inevitibly come. So that it is true the stars would fail to shine before the asking, the seeking and the knocking would fail to obtain what is needed and desired.
There is no elect company here, only the election of undismayed, importunate, never-fainting effort in prayer: “For to him that knocketh, it shall be opened.” Nothing can be stronger than this declaration assuring us of the answer unless it be the promise upon which it is based, “And I say unto you, ask and it shall be given you.”



Some free online books on the Holy Spirit Here.