The Hidden Power Of Prayer And Fasting Order Printed Copy
- Author: Mahesh Chavda
- Size: 801KB | 127 pages
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About the Book
"The Hidden Power of Prayer and Fasting" by Mahesh Chavda explores the spiritual disciplines of prayer and fasting and how they can unleash the supernatural power of God in believers' lives. Chavda shares personal testimonies and practical insights to guide readers in experiencing breakthroughs, healing, and spiritual growth through these practices. The book emphasizes the importance of developing a lifestyle of prayer and fasting to draw closer to God and see His power manifest in extraordinary ways.
Robert Murray McCheyne
Robert Murray MâCheyne (1813-43) was widely regarded as one of the most saintly and able young ministers of his day. Entering Edinburgh University in 1827, he gained prizes in all the classes he attended. In 1831 he commenced his divinity studies under Thomas Chalmers at the Edinburgh Divinity Hall. MâCheyneâs early interests were modern languages, poetry, and gymnastics. The death of his older brother David in July 1831 made a deep impression on him spiritually. His reading soon after of Dicksonâs Sum of Saving Knowledge brought him into a new relationship of peace and acceptance with God.
In July 1835 MâCheyne was licensed by the Presbytery of Annan, and in November became assistant to John Bonar at Larbert and Dunipace. In November 1836 he was ordained to the new charge of St Peterâs, Dundee, a largely industrial parish which did not help his delicate health.
MâCheyneâs gifts as a preacher and as a godly man brought him increasing popularity. The Communion seasons at St Peterâs were especially noted for the sense of Godâs presence and power.
MâCheyne took an active interest in the wider concerns of the Church. In 1837 he became Secretary to the Association for Church Extension in the county of Forfar. This work was dear to MâCheyneâs heart. First and foremost he saw himself as an evangelist. He was grieved by the spiritual deadness in many of the parishes in Scotland and considered giving up his charge if the Church would set him apart as an evangelist. Writing to a friend in Ireland he revealed where his loyalties lay in the controversy that was then overtaking the Church: âYou donât know what Moderatism is. It is a plant that our Heavenly Father never planted, and I trust it is now to be rooted out.â
Towards the close of 1838 MâCheyne was advised to take a lengthy break from his parish work in Dundee because of ill-health. During this time it was suggested to him by Robert S. Candlish that he consider going to Israel to make a personal enquiry on behalf of the Churchâs Mission to Israel. Along with Alexander Keith and Andrew Bonar, MâCheyne set out for Israel (Palestine). The details of their visit were recorded and subsequently published in the Narrative of a Mission of Enquiry to the Jews from the Church of Scotland, in 1819. This did much to stimulate interest in Jewish Mission, and led to pioneer work among Jews in parts of Europe, most notably Hungary.
MâCheyne returned to St Peterâs to find that the work had flourished in his absence under the ministry of William Chalmers Burns. MâCheyne exercised a remarkably fruitful ministry in Dundee while in constant demand to minister in other places. Just prior to his death (in a typhus epidemic) he had been preparing his congregation for the coming disruption in the Church of Scotland, which he thought inevitable after the Claim of Right had been refused.
[Ian Hamilton in Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology. See also Andrew Bonarâs Robert Murray MâCheyne, and the same authorâs influential Memoir and Remains of Robert Murray MâCheyne, both published by the Trust. There is a short biography of MâCheyne in Marcus L. Loaneâs They Were Pilgrims (Banner of Truth, 2006).]
do not fear to leave this world
Perhaps you will feel the same discomfort I felt overhearing saints of old speak of death. âHe who does not prepare for death is more than an ordinary fool. He is a madman,â began Charles Spurgeon. âAgreed,â said the good Doctor Martyn Lloyd-Jones. Men seem to ignore the plain fact that âthe moment you come into this world you are beginning to go out of it.â But this fact need not spell doom and gloom for the Christian, Spurgeon responded. âThe best moment of a Christianâs life is his last one, because it is the one that is nearest heaven.â âI concur fully,â Richard Sibbes chimed in. âDeath is not now the death of me, but death will be the death of my misery, the death of my sins; it will be the death of my corruptions. But death will be my birthday in regard of happiness.â âWhen Christ calls me home,â Adoniram Judson added, âI shall go with the gladness of a boy bounding away from school.â âMay I also interject?â asked Calvin. âWe may positively state that nobody has made any progress in the school of Christ, unless he cheerfully looks forward towards the day of his death, and towards the day of the final resurrection.â âThis strikes me as true,â said Thomas Brooks. âIt is no credit to your heavenly Father for you to be loath to go home.â âAnd why should we hesitate?â Samuel Bolton questioned. It is the âprivilege of saints, that they shall not die until the best time, not until when, if they were but rightly informed, they would desire to die.â âExactly.â For the child of God, âdeath is the funeral of all our sorrows,â reasoned Thomas Watson. âDeath will set a true saint out of the gunshot and free him from sin and trouble.â âIndeed,â John Bunyan added, âdeath is but a passage out of a prison into a palace.â As I listened, I overheard the most disquieting questions. âHas this world been so kind to you that you would leave it with regret?â C.S. Lewis posed. âIf we really believe that home is elsewhere and that this life is a âwandering to find home,â why should we not look forward to the arrival?â âHear! Hear!â exclaimed William Gurnall. âLet thy hope of heaven master thy fear of death. Why shouldest thou be afraid to die, who hopest to live by dying?â âI am packed, sealed, and waiting for the post,â cried John Newton. âWho would live always in such a world as this?â Even snippets of their prayers issued a subtle rebuke. I could not help but hear one George Whitefield plead, âLord, keep me from a sinful and too eager desire after death. I desire not to be impatient. I wish quietly to wait till my blessed change comes.â This proved the final blow. These men anticipated death, viewed an early departure as a âpromotion.â I lowered my gaze. I rarely think this way, rarely feel this way. Do I really believe in heaven? Do I really love my Lord? Snuggled in This Life My squeamishness, flipping through an anthology of Christian quotes, helped me realize that my discipleship has slanted too American, too shortsighted, too this-worldly. âAre you packed and ready to go?â Well, I was hoping to set sail several decades from now, so â âHas this world been so kind to you that you would leave it with regret?â Well, I wouldnât give it a ten-star rating, but it certainly hasnât been half that bad (yet). So yeah, maybe â âNobody has made any progress in the school of Christ, unless he cheerfully looks forward towards the day of his death, and towards the day of the final resurrection.â Well, thatâs intense. âIt is no credit to your heavenly Father for you to be loath to go home.â I see â worthy point. No credit to Jesus either, I imagine. âThese men daily lived awake to the truths I daily profess to believe.â These men daily lived awake to the truths I daily profess to believe; they inhabited them, longing to fly away and be with Christ. Although they loved families, enjoyed things of earth, and did good in this world, they nevertheless were unafraid to dive headfirst into those cold waters of death at the first moment their Master allowed. They believed, with Paul, that âto depart and be with Christ . . . is far betterâ (Philippians 1:23). I discovered then just how snuggled by the fireside I had become in this world. A place I too readily felt to be home . Epitaphs of Exiles My heart can live too much here , too little there . âMy life is hidden with Christ,â I must remind myself (Colossians 3:3). As this world seeks to entice my affections to linger in its marketplace, I desire to be more of a heavenly disciple. And if you love Jesus but think too little of the life to come, I know you will agree. Oh, that this might be a true inscription over our graves, and all the more since we live after the coming of Christ, and the down payment of the Spirit: These all died in faith, not having received the things promised, but having seen them and greeted them from afar, and having acknowledged that they were strangers and exiles on the earth. For people who speak thus make it clear that they are seeking a homeland. If they had been thinking of that land from which they had gone out, they would have had opportunity to return. But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared for them a city. (Hebrews 11:13â16) Abraham, by faith, left his home in Mesopotamia, not even knowing where God was leading him (Hebrews 11:8). He lived in the promised land before he could call it home, dwelling there as a foreigner. Isaac and Jacob, heirs with Abraham of Godâs promise, lived in tents of temporality; their home was not yet  (Hebrews 11:9). âOnce God saved them, they refused to unpack their hopes again in this world.â Abrahamâs eyes were elsewhere. âHe was looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is Godâ (Hebrews 11:10). And he and his sons bore the heavenly insignia in their speech: they acknowledged, to anyone who cared to know, that they would live and die on this earth as exiles  and sojourners  (Genesis 23:4; 47:9). Once God saved them, they refused to unpack their hopes again in this world. The land far-off â big as Godâs promise, sure as Godâs word â held their allegiance. They made it clear that they sought a homeland not built by human hands. As the world tried to tempt them back, the bait remained on the hook. Better to live in a tent in this world with a heavenly city before them than to dwell in the tottering kingdoms of men. They desired a better country, a heavenly one. And God is not ashamed to be called âthe God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacobâ (Exodus 3:6). He is not ashamed in the least to be the one they so hoped in, for he has prepared for them a city . Still at Sea So, is your mind mainly set on this world or the next? This world is not our home, precious saint. We are not yet in our element. We fling open the window and send our dove about this earth, finding that it returns to us having found no homeland within this watery grave. But this world will be drained soon enough. The swells of judgment shall intensify and then subside. The new heavens and new earth shall arrive, and our Mighty Dove shall descend with a sword in his mouth for his enemies and an olive branch for us. Until then, keep waiting, keep hoping, keep acknowledging, keep living in tents, longing for that moment when we can bound away from this world as the Father calls us home.