The Wonders of Prayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 451 pages of information about The Wonders of Prayer.

The Wonders of Prayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 451 pages of information about The Wonders of Prayer.

The results of his experience were blessed indeed, as he said, “I never realized before how closely the Lord is connected with all my interests, and how he helps me in all my business plans.  Things happen constantly which show me constantly that some one who knows more than I is benefiting me—­protecting me.  Bad debts have been paid which I did not expect.  Errand boys, just getting into sly and bad habits, have been discovered ere their thefts had proceeded far.  As I needed competent help in my business, it has come just as it was wanted.  When customers were failing, somehow their debts to me were paid, although they failed to pay others.  A severe fire came to my office and apparently seemed to have swept all my valuables away.  But it was stopped at just the right moment, and not one thing valuable was lost.  The insurance companies paid me enough to replace every damage, and the office was renewed better than before.  The Lord sends me business enough to pay for my debts, yet others are dull. I cannot tell why it is, except that I always pray for my business, and ask the Lord to bless it for the good of others, and that the means which come from it may be used for his cause.  When I stop giving, business stops coming.  When I stop praying specially for it, perplexities arise.  As long as I pray for it, it all moves easily, and I have no care or trouble.  The Lord is my Banker, my Helper, my Insurer, my Deliverer, my Patron, and my Blessed Savior of temporal things as well as spiritual.”

GIVE AND IT SHALL BE GIVEN.

“‘Cheerful giving,’ writes an aged minister, ’is what enriches the giver and brings down a blessing from above.  A poor clergyman attended one of Zion’s festivals in a distant city.  The railroad company supplied him with a return ticket, and though many of his brethren would secure treasures from the book-stores, but a solitary twenty-five cent scrip was in his possession, and he would need that to pay for refreshment on his way home.  It was the last day of the feast.  Mention, again and again, was made of the widow’s mite, or poor men’s gifts, and, as the boxes were passed, he felt sad that, in his deep poverty, he could not cast in a single penny.  As the assembly was dismissed, it was announced that collectors would stand at the door to gather up the fragments which ought to be in the Lord’s treasury.  With slow steps this good man passed down and put that last money he possessed into the waiting box.

“In a few moments, a gentleman of the city invited him to his, table to dine, with quite a number of the dignitaries of the church.  During the repast, the host was called from the table for a little time.  At the conclusion of a pleasant entertainment, the poor minister was taken one side and an envelope put into his hands, with this remark:  ’I was called from the table by a man who has long owed me a small debt, which I thought was lost a long time since, and I cannot think what it was paid to-day for, except that I might give it to you.’  The envelope contained twenty-five dollars.  When the books are opened, that rich steward will see how his money was used, and thank God, who put it into his heart to dispose of it thus.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Wonders of Prayer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.