Chapter XI

Answered Prayers

CHAPTER XI.

ANSWERED PRAYERS.

In the fifteenth chapter of John and the seventh verse, we find who have their prayers answered—" If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you." Now in the fourth chapter of James, in the third verse, we find some spoken of whose prayers were not answered: "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss." There are a great many prayers not answered because there is not the right motive; we have not complied with the Word of God; we ask amiss. It is a good thing that our prayers are not answered when we ask amiss.

If our prayers are not answered, it may be that we have prayed without the right motive; or that we have not prayed according to the Scriptures. So let us not be discouraged, or give up praying, although our prayers are not answered in the way we want them.

A man once went to George Muller and said he wanted him to pray for a certain thing. The man stated that he had asked God a great many times to grant him his request, but He had not seen fit to do it. Mr. Muller took out his note-book, and showed the man the name of a person for whom, he said, he had prayed for twenty-four years. The prayer, Mr. Muller added, was not answered yet; but the Lord had given him assurance that that person was going to be converted, and his faith rested there.

We sometimes find that our prayers are answered right away while we are praying; at other times the answer is delayed . But especially when men pray for mercy, how quickly the answer comes! Look at Paul, when he cried, "O Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" The answer came at once. Then the publican who went up to the temple to pray—he got an immediate answer. The thief on the cross prayed, "Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy Kingdom!" and the answer came immediately—then and there. There are many cases of a similar kind in the Bible, but there are also others who prayed long and often. The Lord delights in hearing His children make their requests known unto Him—telling their troubles all out to Him; and then we should wait for His time. We do not know when that is.

There was a mother in Connecticut who had a son in the army, and it almost broke her heart when he left, because he was not a Christian. Day after day she lifted up her voice in prayer for her boy. She afterward learned that he had been taken to the hospital, and there died, but she could not find out anything about how he had died. Years passed, and one day a friend came to see some member of the family on business. There was a picture of the soldier boy upon the wall. He looked at it, and said, "Did you know that young man?" The mother said, "That young man was my son. He died in the late war." The man replied, "I knew him very well; he was in my company." The mother then asked, "Do you know any

thing about his end?" The man said, "I was in the hospital, and he died a most peaceful death, triumphant in the faith." The mother had given up hope of ever hearing of her boy; but before she went hence she had the satisfaction of knowing that her prayers had prevailed with God.

I think we shall find a great many of our prayers that we thought unanswered answered when we get to heaven. If it is the true prayer of faith, God will not disappoint us. Let us not doubt God . On one occasion, at a meeting I attended, a gentleman pointed out an individual and said, "Do you see that man over there? That is one of the leaders of an infidel club." I sat down beside him, when the infidel said, "I am not a Christian. You have been humbugging these people long enough, and making some of these old women believe that you get answers to prayer. Try it on me." I prayed, and when I got up, the infidel said with a good deal of sarcasm, "I am not converted God has not answered your prayer!" I said, "But you may be converted yet." Some time afterwards I received a letter from a friend, stating that he had been converted and was at work in the meetings.

Jeremiah prayed, and said: "Ah, Lord God! Behold Thou hast made the heaven and the earth by Thy great power and stretched-out Arm, and there is nothing too hard for Thee." Nothing is too hard for God; that is a good thing to take for a motto. I believe this is a time of great blessing in the world, and we may expect great things. While the blessing is falling all around, let us arise and share in it. God has said, "Call unto Me, and I will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not." Now let us «all on the Lord; and let us pray that it may be dona lor Christ's sake—not our own.

At a Christian convention a number of years ago, a leading man got up and spoke—his subject being "For Christ's Sake"—and he threw new light upon that passage. I had never seen it in that way before. When the war broke out the gentleman's only son had enlisted, and he never saw a company of soldiers but his heart went right out after them. They started a Soldiers' Home in the city where that gentleman lived, and he gladly went on the committee, and acted as President. Some time afterward he said to his wife, "I have given so much time to these soldiers that I have neglected my business," and he went down to his office with the fixed determination that he would not be disturbed by any soldiers that day. The door opened soon after, and he saw a soldier entering. He never minded him, but kept on writing; and the poor fellow stood for some time. At last the soldier put down an old soiled piece of paper on which there was writing. The gentleman observed that it was the handwriting of his son, and he seized the letter at once and read it. It was something to this effect: "Dear father, this young man belongs to my company. He has lost his health in defense of his country, and he is on his way home to his mother to die. Treat him kindly for Charlie's sake." The gentleman at once dropped his work and took the soldier to his house, where he was kindly cared for until he was able to be sent home to his mother; then he took him to the station, and sent him home with a, "God bless you, for Charlie's-sake!"

Let our prayers, then, be for Christ's sake. If we want our sons and daughters converted, let us pray that it be done for Christ's sake. If that is the motive, our prayers will be answered. If God gave up Christ for the world, what will He not give us? If He gave Christ to the murderers and blasphemers, and the rebels of a world lying in wickedness and sin, what would He not give to those who go to Him for Christ's sake? Let our prayer be that God may advance His work, not for our glory—not for our sake—but for the sake of His beloved Son whom He hath sent .

So let us remember that when we pray we ought to expect an answer. Let us be looking for it I remember at the close of a meeting in one of our Southern cities near the close of the war, a man came up to me weeping and trembling. I thought something I had said had aroused him, and I began to question him as to what it was. I found, however, that he could not tell a word of what I had said. "My friend," said I, "what is the trouble?" He put his hand into his pocket, and brought out a letter, all soiled, as if his tears had fallen on it. "I got that letter, "he said, "from my sister last night . She tells me that every night she goes on her knees and prays to God for me. I think I am the worst man in all the Army of the Cumberland. I have been perfectly wretched to-day." That sister was six hundred miles away, but she had brought her brother to his knees in answer to her earnest, believing prayer. It was a hard case, but God heard and answered the prayer of this Godly sister, so that the man was as clay in the hands of the potter. He was soon brought into the Kingdom of God—all through his sister's prayers.

I went off some thirty miles to another place, where I told this story. A young man, a lieutenant in the army, sprang to his feet and said, "That reminds me of the last letter I got from my mother. She told me that every night as the sun went down she prayed for me. She begged of me, when I got her letter, to go away alone, and yield myself to God. I put the letter in my pocket, thinking there would be plenty of time." He went on to say that the next news that came from home was that that mother was gone. He went out into the woods alone, and cried to his mother's God to have mercy upon him. As he stood in the meeting with his face shining, that lieutenant said: "My mother's prayers are answered; and my only regret is that she did not live to know it; but I will meet her by-and-by." So, though we may not live to see the answer to our prayers, if we cry mightily to God, the answer will come.

In Scotland, a good many years ago, there lived a man with his wife and three children—two girls and a boy. He was in the habit of getting drunk, and thus losing his situation. At last, he said he would take Johnnie, and go off to America, where he would be away from his old associates, and where he could commence life over again. He took the little fellow, seven years old, and went away. Soon after he arrived in America, he went into a saloon and got drunk. He got separated from his boy in the streets, and he has never been seen by his friends since. The little fellow was placed in an institution, and afterward apprenticed in Massachusetts. After he had been there some time, he became discontented, and went off to sea; finally, he came to Chicago to work on the lakes. He had been a roving spirit, had gone over sea and land, and now he was in Chicago. When the vessel came into port, one time, he was invited to a Gospel meeting. The joyful sound of the Gospel reached him, and he became a Christian.

After he had been a Christian a little while, he became very anxious to find his mother. He wrote to different places in Scotland, but could not find out where she was. One day he read in the Psalms—"No good thing will He withhold from them that walk uprightly." He closed his Bible, got down on his knees, and said: "O God, I have been trying to walk uprightly for months past; help me to find my mother." It came into his mind to write back to the place in Massachusetts from which he had run away "years before. It turned out that a letter from Scotland had been waiting for him there for seven years. He wrote at once to the place in Scotland, and found that his mother was still living; the answer came back immediately. I would like you to have seen him when he got that letter. He brought it to me; and the tears flowed so that he could scarcely read it. His sister had written on behalf of the mother; she had been so overcome by the tidings of her long-lost boy that she could not write.

The sister said that all the nineteen years he had been away, his mother had prayed to God day and night that he might be saved, and that she might live to know what had become of him, and see him once more. Now, said the sister, she was so overjoyed, not only that he was alive, but that he had become a Christian. It was not long before the mother and sisters came out to Chicago to meet him.

I mention this incident to show how God answers prayer. This mother cried to God for nineteen long years. It must have seemed to her sometimes as though God did not mean to give her the desire of her heart; but she kept praying, and at last the answer came.

The following personal testimony was publicly given at one of our meetings lately held in London, and may serve to help and encourage readers of these pages.

A PRAYER-MEETING TESTIMONY.

"I want you to understand, my friends, that what I state is not what I did, but what God did . God only could have done it! I had given it up as a bad job, long before. But it is of God's great mercy that I am standing here to-night, to tell you that Christ is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God through Him.

"The reading of those 'requests' [for the salvation of inebriates] touched me very deeply indeed. They seemed to be an echo of many a request for prayer which has been made for me. And, from my knowledge of society generally, and of human nature, I know that in a very great number of families there is need of some such request .

"Therefore if what I may tell you will cheer any Christian heart, encourage any Godly father and mother to go on praying for their sons, or assist any man or woman who has felt himself or herself beyond the reach of hope, I shall thank God for it.

"I had very good opportunities. My parents lovedthe Lord Jesus, and did their best to train me up in the right path; and for some time I thought myself that I should be a Christian. But I got away from Christ, and turned further and further away from God and all good influences.

"It was at a public school where I first learned to drink. Many a time at seventeen I drank to excess, but I had an amount of self-respect that kept me from going thoroughly to the bad till I was about twentythree; but from then till I was twenty-six, I went steadily down hill. At Cambridge I went on further and further in drinking, until I lost all self-respect, and voluntarily chose the worst of companions.

"I strayed further and further from God, until my friends, those who were Christians and those who were not, considered, and told me that there was very little hope for me. I had been pleaded with by all sorts of people, but I 'hated reproof.' I hated everything that savored of religion, and I sneered at every bit of good advice, or any kind word offered me in that way.

"My father and mother both died without seeing me brought to the Lord. They prayed for me all the time they lived, and at the very last my mother asked me if I would not follow her to be with her in heaven. To quiet and soothe her, I said I would. But I did not mean it; and I thought, when she had passed away, that she knew now my real feelings. After her death I went from bad to worse, and plunged deeper and deeper into vice. Drink got a stronger hold of me, and I went lower and lower down. I was never 'in the gutter,' in the acceptation in which that term is generally understood; but I was as low in my soul as any man who lives in one of the common lodging-houses.

"I went from Cambridge first to a town in the north, where I was articled to a solicitor; and then to London. While I was in the north, Messrs. Moody and Sankey came to the town I lived in; and an aunt of mine, who was still praying for me after my mother's death, came and said to me, 'I have a favor to ask of you.' She had been very kind to me, and I knew what she wanted. She said, 'It is to go and hear Messrs. Moody and Sankey.' 'Very good,' I said; 'it is a bargain. I will go and hear the men; but you are never to ask me again. You will promise that?' 'Yes,' she said, 'I do.' I went, and kept, as I thought, most religiously my share of the bargain.

"I waited until the sermon was over, and I saw Mr. Moody coming down from the pulpit. Earnest prayer had been offered for me, and there had been an understanding between my aunt and him that the sermon should apply to me, and that he would come and speak to me immediately afterward. We met Mr. Moody in the aisle, and I thought that I had done a very clever thing when I walked round my aunt, before Mr. Moody could address me, and out of the building.

"I wandered further from God after that; and I do not think that I bent my knees in prayer for between two and three years. I went to London, and things grew worse and worse. At times I tried to pull up. I made any number of resolutions. I promised myself and my friends not to touch the drink. I kept my resolutions for some days, and, on one occasion, for six months; but the temptation came with stronger force than ever, and swept me further and further from the pathway of virtue. When in London I neglected my business and everything I ought to have done, and sank deeper into sin.

"One of my boon companions said to me, 'If you don't pull up, you will kill yourself.' 'How is that?' I asked . 'You are killing yourself, for you can't drink so much as you used to.' 'Well,' I replied, 'I can't help it, then.' I got to such a state that I did not think there was any possible help for me.

"The recital of these things pains me; and as I relate them, God forbid that I should feel anything but shame. I am telling you these things because we have a Savior; and if the Lord Jesus Christ saved even me, He is able also to save you.

"Affairs went on in this manner until, at last, I lost all control over myself.

"I had been drinking and playing billiards one day, and in the evening I returned to my lodgings. I thought that I would sit there awhile, and then go out again, as usual. Before going out, I began to think, and the thought struck me, 'How will all this end?' 'Oh,' I thought to myself, 'what is the use of that? I know how it will end—in my eternal destruction, body and soul 1' I felt I was killing myself—my body; and I knew too well what would be the result to my soul. I thought it impossible for me to be saved. But the thought came to me very strongly, 'Is there any way of escape?' 'No,' I said; 'I have made any number of resolutions. I have done all I could to keep clear of drink, but I can't. It is impossible.'

"Just at that moment the words came into my mind, from God's own Word—words that I had not remembered since I was a boy: 'With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.' And then I saw, in a flash, that what I had just admitted, as I had done hundreds of times before, to be an impossibility, was the one thing that God had pledged Himself to do, if I would go to Him. All the difficulties came up in my way—my companions, my surroundings of all sorts, and my temptations; but I just looked up and thought, 'It is possible with God.'

"I went down on my knees there and then, in my room, and began to ask God to do the impossible. As soon as I prayed to Him, with very stammering utterance—I had not prayed for nearly three years—I thought, 'Now, then, God will help me.' I took hold of His truth, I don't know how. It was nine days before I knew how, and before I had any assurance, or peace and rest, to my soul. I got up, there and then, with the hope that God would save me. I took it to be the truth, and I ultimately proved it; for which I praise God.

"I thought the best thing I could do would be to go and get somebody to talk to me about my soul, and tell me how to be saved; for I was a perfect heathen, though I had been brought up so well. I went out and hunted about London; and it shows how little I knew of religious people and places of worship, that I could not find a Wesleyan chapel. My mother and father were Wesleyans, and I thought I would find a place belonging to their denomination; but I could not. I searched an hour and a half; and that night I was in the most titter, abject misery of body and sold any man can think of or conceive.

"I came home to my lodgings and went upstairs, and thought to myself, 'I will not go to bed till I am saved.' But I was so ill from drinking—I had not had my usual amount of food in the evening; and the reaction was so tremendous, that I felt I must go to bed (although I dared not), or I should be in a very serious condition in the morning.

"I knew how I should be in the morning, thinking, 'what a fool I was last night!' when I would wake up moderately fresh, and go off to drink again, as I had often done. But again I thought, 'God can do the impossible. He will do that which I cannot do myself.' And I prayed to the Lord to let me wake up in much the same condition as that in which I went to bed, feeling the weight of my sins and my misery. Then I went to sleep. The first thing in the morning, as soon as I remembered where I was, I thought, 'Has the conviction left me?' No; I was more miserable than before, and—it seemed strange, though it was natural—I got up, and thanked the Lord because He had kept me anxious about my soul.

"Have you ever felt like that? Perhaps after some meeting or conversation with some Christian, or reading the Word of God, you have gone to your room miserable and 'almost persuaded.'

"I went on for eight or nine days seeking the Lord. On the Saturday morning I had to go and tell the clerks. That was hard. I did it with the tears running down my cheeks. A man does not like to cry before other men. Anyway, I told them I wanted to become, and meant to become, a Christian. The Lord helped me with that promise, 'With God all things are possible.'

"A sceptic dropped his head, and said nothing. Another fellow, with whom I played billiards, said, 41 wish I had the pluck to say so myself!' My words were received in a different way from what I thought they would be. But the very man who had told me that I was killing myself with drink, spent an hour and a half trying to get me to drink, saying, that I'had the blues, and was oat of sorts; and that a glass of brandy or whisky would do me good.' He tried to get me to drink; and I turned upon him at last, and said, 'You remember what you said to me; I am trying to get away from drink, and not to touch it again.' When I think of that I am reminded of the words of God Himself: 'The tender mercies of the wicked are cruel.'

"And now the Lord drew me on until the little thread became a cable, by which my soul could swing. He drew me nearer; until I found that He was my Savior. Truly He is 'able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by Him.'

"I must not forget to tell you that I went down before God in my misery, my helplessness, and my sin, and owned to Him that it was impossible that I should be saved; that it was impossible for me to keep clear of drink; but from that night to this moment, I have never had the slightest desire for drink.

"It was a hard struggle indeed to give up smoking. But God in His great wisdom, knew that I must have come to grief if I had to fight single-handed against the overwhelming desire I had for drink; and He took that desire, too, clean away. From that day to this the Lord has kept me away from drink, and made me hate it most bitterly. I simply said that I had not any strength; nor have I now; but it is the Lord Jesus who 1 is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by Him.'

"If there is any one hearing me who has given up all hope, come to the Savior! That is His name, for 'He shall save His people from their sins.' Wherever I have gone, since then, T have found Him to be my Savior. God forbid that I should glory! It would be glorying in my shame. It is to my shame that I speak thus of myself; but oh, the Savior is able to save, and He will save!

"Christian friends, continue to pray. You may go to heaven before your sons are brought home. My parents did; and my sisters prayed for me for years and years. But now I can help others on their way to Zion. Praise the Lord for all His mercy to me!

"Remember, 'with God all things are possible.' And then you may say like St. Paul, 'I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.'"

"O soul most desolate, look up! For thee
One faithful voice doth promise sure relief.
Whate'er thy sin, whate'er thy sorrow be,
Tell all to Jesus. He looketh where
The weary-hearted weep, and draweth near
To listen fondly to the half-formed prayer,
Or read the silent pleading of a tear.
Lose not thy privilege, O silent soul;
Pour out thy sorrow at thy Savior's feet.
What outcast spurns the hand that gives the dole?
Oh, let Him hear thy voice; to Him thy voice is sweet."

A.S.

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Notes and Suggestions for Bible Readings. Twenty first thousand. Compiled by S. R. Briggs and J. H. Elliott. Large l2mo, 262 pages, with complete index, cloth, fine, $1.00; flexible cloth, traveler's edition, 75 cents; cheap edition, paper covers, 50 cents.

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Giving a plan of Bible reading, with fifty verses definitely assigned for each day, the Bible being arranged with much labor in the order of its events. The entire symbolism of the Bible also explained concisely and clearly. 100 hints upon Bible markings and Bible readings are added.

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The Work of Preaching Christ. By Bishop Charles Pettitt Mcilvaine. A revised edition of an important little work. Paper covers, 15 cents.

The Prayer Meeting and Its Improvement. By Rev. Lewis O. Thompson, with introduction by Rev. A. E. Kittredge, D. D. Sixth edition, revised. i2mo, 256 pp., $1.25.

A valuable, because a very suggestive book.—S. S. Times.

* * * This is so good a book that we wish we could afford to give a copy of it to every young minister. Revive your prayer meetings and the churches will be revived. Mr. Thompson says some capital things in a telling manner, and, as his pages are full of Are and gunpowder, we hope certain old, worn-out things among us will be exploded, and good things set on Are. A brother who has this book handy will be helped to lead lively meetings, conducting them in varied ways, and expatiating on different topics, so as to keep up freshness and avoid monotony and dullness.—O. H. Spurgeun.

Revivals; Their Place and Power. By Rev. Herrick Johnson, D.

D. Cloth, flexible, 25 cents.

An admirable diseusBion of the subject.—Interior,

We know of no publication that covers the ground so briefly and

satisf actorily.—'Baltimore Presbyterian.

Dr. Johnson's experience has qualified him to speak upon this

subject.—Independent.

Chicago: 'jr. k. Revell, Us * m Madison sr.

To the Work! To the Work! By D. L. Moody. Exhortations to Christians. Paper covers, 30 cents; cloth, gilt dies, 60 cents.

This new work by Mr. Moody is in the line of his most successful efforts, that of stirring Christians to active, personal, aggressive work for the Master. Mr. Moody has frequently been heard to say that it was much better to set 100 men to work than to do the work of 100 men. This little volume will, we confidently believe, be a means of inspiring not hundreds but thousands to more efficient effort in Christian life.

HELPS FOR ENQUIRERS.

Life, Warfare and Victory. By Maj. D. W. Whittle. 124 pp., cloth, neat, 60 cents; paper, 30 cents.

This book has been prepared in the midst of evangelistic work, to meet the wish often expressed to the writer—that instruction given in Bible readings to young converts might be made available for their more careful study and permanent use.—Extract from Preface.

The Way to Cod and How to Find It. By D. L.moody. Fiftyfifth thousand. A book for the inquirer and Christian worker. Cloth, rich black and gold stamp, 60 cents; paper, tinted covers, 30 cents.

Very earnest and powerful, abounding in apt illustrations, striking thoughts, and helpful, encouraging words. This book is written in the same plain, simple and pointed style that lends such force to his spoken words. The volume should find many readers. Those that buy it will not be disappointed.—Baptist National.

The way of salvation is made as clear as simple language and forcible, pertinent illustration can make it. In two features it is equal to anything that Mr. Moody has produced—in close adherence to the Word of God, and in profound earnestness—while in simplicity, directness of appeal and originality it is superior. It is a great matter to send such a work, so full of Christ, all over the churches, where it may, by the work of the Spirit, arrest the careless and move the ungodly.—iMtlteran Observer.

The Way and the Word. By D. L. Moody. Forty-fifth thousand. Paper, 15 cents; cloth, 25 cents.

This little work contains a very clear statement on the important subject Regeneration, to which is added Mr, Moody's valuable hints on Bible reading. Mr. Moody has used this book by the thousand, placing them in the hands of young converts at the close of his meetings.

Crace and Truth Under Twelve Different Aspects. By W.

P. Mackay, M. A. Forty-eighth thousand of American edition. The English edition has reached a sale of over two hundred thousand, besides being translated into German, Spanish, Swedish, Arabic, Italian, Dutch, Gaelic and Welsh. l2mo, 282 pp., paper, 35 cents; cloth, fine, 75 cents.

Mr. D. L. Moody says of this work: I know of no book in print better adapted to aid in the work of him who would be a winner of souls, or to place in the hands of the unconverted.

CHICAGO: F. H. HE FELL, U8 * 160 MADISON ST.

My Inquiry Meeting; or, Plain Truths for Anxious Souls. By Rob Ert Boyd, D. D. Being the experience of a pastor during manyears of personal dealing with anxious and careless souls. 64 pp 15 cents.

For simplicity, clearness and, force of statement, we have met with nothing that equals this little volume. We can think of no better service a pastor could render to Sunday-school teachers,,and other guides of souls, than to secure their reading of these paxes. Nor cculd inquirers have any better help in their search for truth.— The Interior.

Clad Tidings. By Robert Boyd, D. D. A book for inquirers. I2mo, 100 pp., cloth, neat, 50 cents; cheap edition, for circulation, 25 cents.

This book has been used largely in connection with the great revival meetings both in Great Britain and this land.

The Soul and Its Difficulties. By H. W. Soltau. Paper, 108 pp., 8 cents.

HOW to be Saved; or, the Sinner Directed to the Saviour. By J. H. Brookes, D. D. 120 pp., paper cover, 25 cents; cloth, 50 cents.

Cod's Way of Salvation. By Alexander Marshall. A brief statement of the Way of Life, with answers to popular objections. Each brief page complete in itself, and containing a sermon in a nutshell. 48 pages and covers, 5 cents. Per hundred, $2.50.

Doubts Removed. By C/EsaR Malan, D. D. Paper covers, 5 cents; per dozen, 50 cents.

It contains the clearest statements and illustrations on the subject treated we have ever read.

Welcome to Jesus. By Rev. C. II. Spurgeon. A scries of 4 page tracts, with first page in attractive illuminated designs, etc. Four different series, each containing 32 assorted. Price per package, 25 cents. Four different packets issued, Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4.

POPULAR WORKS FOR ALL CLASSES.

Prevailing Prayer: What Hinders It? By D. L.moody. Cloth uniform with To the Work! Heaven, etc. Cloth, 60 cents; paper covers, 30 cents.

An earnest and solemn work, full of helpful hints on the aids and hindrances to prevailing prayer.

This great subject has been the theme of apostles and prophets, and of all good men in all ages of the world; and my desire in sending forth this little volume is to encourage God's children to seek by prayer "to move the arm that moves the world."—Extract from Preface.

Full Assurance Of Faith. Being some Thoughts on Christian Confidence. By D. L. MOODY. Paper Covers, 15 cts.; cloth, 25cts.

CHICAGO: F. H. REVELL, US 6b ISO MADISON ST.

Heaven; Where It Is; Its Inhabitants; and How to Get There. By D. L. Moody. Eighty-eighth thousand. Tinted covers, 30 cents; cloth, 60 cents.

While adapted to the humble capacity, it will command the attention of the mature and thoughtful.—National Presbyterian.

Mr. Moody's unfaltering faith and rugged enthusiasm are manifested on every page.—Christian Advocate.

Eminently scriptural, earnest and impressive, will be welcomed by thousands.—Zion s Herald.

Characterized by his apt, homely illustrations and not a few pithy anecdotes, such as few can equal.—The Advance.

Twelve Select Sermons. By D. L. Moody. 110th thousand. This volume contains those special sermons, which have appeared to be most useful, and under which there have been the greatest results. Paper covers, 30 cents; cloth, neat, 60 cents.

Carefully revised by Mr. Moody, they present a volume of choice and striking addresses, sure to command a large sale.

With the effect of these addresses when spoken, the whole land is acquainted, and now that they are written, they will tend to keep in force the impressions they have already made.—Methodist.

Mr. Moody's happy style, abounding in striking anecdote and illustration, make it a most readable and convincing volume.—The Watchman.

Full of earnest enthusiasm which characterizes everything Mr. Moody does, and will be read with interest.—Detroit Free Press.

Daniel, the Prophet. An amplification and extension of Mr. Moody's various lectures on the Life of Daniel. Paper covers, 20 cents; cloth, 40 cents.

A small book, but big as regards the truth it contains. Every worker in the Lord's vineyard would be helped by reading it.—Bailway Signal.

Birth-Day Memorial Text-Book. A handsome little volume with a short text for every day in the year, with blank space opposite for autographs. Especially attractive for children. 32mo, cloth, black and gold stamp, 25 cents; per dozen, $2.50.

The Practice of the Presence of Cod. By "Brother LawRence." Being a small collection of remarkable letters and conversations of a monk. 64 pp., 24mo, paper cover, 10 cents; per dozen, 75 cents.

Envelope Series of Tracts. By H. W. S., from "The Christian's
Secret of a Happy Life," comprising the following:
How to Enter into the Life. Faith: What it is.

Difficulties Concerning Consecration. Is God in Everything?
Difficulties Concerning Guidance. The Joy of Obedience.
Difficulties Concerning Faith. Practical Results.

Sold only in packets of one dozen copies. May be had either assorted or all of the same kind. Price, per packet, 20 cents.

They will form an excellent collection of tracts for distribution by those who wish their friends to share the "Life that is hid with Christ."

CHICAGO: F. H. BEVELL, 148 <* 150 MADISON ST.

POPULAR WORKS FOR ALL CLASSES.

The Scarlet Line. A most suggestive tract upon Joshua II and VI, showing the close connection between the type of the Old Testament and the Antitype of the New. 36 pp. and cover, 5 cents; per hundred, $3.00.

Word8 of Worth, from the Chicago Christian Convention. A verbatim report of the addresses before the Convention of October, 1882. l2mo, 134 pp., paper, 25 cents.

The addresses by such men as Rev. Marcus Hainsford, Kev. Charles Spurgeon, Dr. W. P. Mackay, Kev. A. T. Pierson, D. D. and others, will be welcomed by many.

The Ministry of Healing; or, Miracles of Cure in all Ages. By Rev. A. J. Gordon, D. D. Third edition, i2mo, fine cloth, 250 pp., $1.25.

Proofs of the practice of healing by the prayer of faith gathered from all ages, with well attested instances from Augustine, Luther, Baxter, Bengel, Irving, Erskine, Christlieb and others. ,

The history of the doctrine as held by Waldenses, Moravians, Covenanters, Huguenots, Friends, Baptists, Methodists, etc. A full account of the recent exercise of the ministry of healing through faith, by Dorothea Trudell, Samuel Zeller, Pastor Blumhardt, Pastor Eein, Pastor Stockmayer, Dr. Cullis, and others. With all this is joined an extended examination of the subject in the light of Scripture, Church history, theology and experience.

In Christ; or, The Believer's Union with His Lord. By Rev. A. J. Gordon, D. D. i2mo, fine cloth, 210 pages, $1.00.

We do not remember 6ince Thomas a Kempis a hook so thoroughly imbued with great personal love to Christ. It is e vidently the happy result of hours of high communion with him.—Boston Courier.

The Two-Fold Life; or Christ's Work for Us, and Christ's Work in Us. By Rev. A. J. Gordon, D. D. l2mo, fine cloth, 285 pages, $1.25.

This is a powerful and timely defence of Christian doctrine, experience and practice; of experience resulting from sound doctrine, and of practice resulting from heart-felt experience. It is not controversial, but a living testimony to the renovating power of the faith once delivered to the saints. * * * Its perusal will amply repay the reader who wishes to become a full-grown Christian.—C. H. Spurgeon.

Grace and Clory. Sermons for the Life that Now Is and That which Is to Come. By Rev. A. J. Gordon, D. D. i2mo, tine cloth,

355 pages. *'-50.

Here we have power without sensationalism; calm thought, living and earnest, expressed in forcible language; the doctrine orthodox, evangelical, practical. We shall be surprised if these discourses are not reprinted by an English house.—C. H. Spurgeon.

Abundant Crace. By W. P. Mackay, M. A., author of Grace and Truth. With preface by Rev. J. H. Brooks, D. D., and brief biographical sketch of the late author. 250 pages, fine beveled cloth, $1.00. ■ *^

The Holy Life. A book for Christians seeking the "Rest of Faith." By Rev. Evan H. Hopkins. Fifth thousand. i8mo, 115 pp., cloth, beveled edge, 60 cents. .

CHICAOO: F. H. BEVELL, US dt ISO MADISON ST.

The Christian's Secret of a Happy Life. By Hannah WhitAll Smith; author of The Open Secret." Revised edition from entirely new plates. i2mo, 240 pp., paper 50 cents; cloth, 75 cents; cloth, gilt, $1.00.

A book we unhesitatingly recommend. We have not for years read a book with more delight and protit.—Southwestern Christian Advocate.

We are delighted with the book. It reaches the very core of Christian experience.—Baptist Weekly.

Worthy of universal circulation.—Christian Union.

The Open Secret. By Hannah Whitall Smith, author of "Christian's Secret of a Happy Life," etc. 320 pp., cloth, $1.00.

That the author of this work has a faculty of presenting the "Secret Things" that are revealed in the Word of God is apparent to all who have read the exceedingly popular work "The Christian's Secret of a Happy Life." and such will not be disappointed in expecting to find in this new volume a fulless and sweetness in the unfolding of God's Word, inits application to the practical daily duties of christian living.

Walking Worthy of Cod. A reprint from the works of Rev. John Flavell, with an introduction by (and published at the request of) Maj. D. W. Whittle. A valuable book for circulation—an incentive to Christian living. Square, i6mo, 43 pp., 15 cents.

Cems from Northfield. A Record of the best thoughts exchanged at the Conference for Bible study, convened at Northfield, by D. L. Moody. i2mo, 116 pp., cloth, $1.00.

The thoughts and expositions of Scripture which are presented in this volume are of rare practical value.—Herald ana Presbyter.

Recollections of Henry Moorehouse, Evangelist. By George

C. Needham. 240 pp., i5mo, cloth, beveled, $1.00.

Mr. Moorehouse, the young English evangelist, was well-known throughout this country, and the volume is the most interesting biographical sketch of this remarkable man—a real inspiration.

Christians of every name gathered about him: and ministers with long years of successful work, and young converts just entering the field alike sat at his feet to study the Word. * * * I hope that the story of his life will lead many who have not come under his personal influence to a more thorough study of God's word.—D.L.Moody.

Plain Talks About the Theatre. By Rev. Herrick Johnson,

D. D. Fifth thousand. 84 pp., cloth, 50 cents; paper, 20 cents.

Probably the modern theatre never received such a raking Are. Zitm's Herald.

As crushing as a charge of cavalry, and as convincing as logic can make truth. A terrific indictment of the theatre— The Advance.

May Christian's Dance? By Rev. J. H. Brookes, D. D. 144pp., l6mo., cloth, 50 cents; paper covers, 25 cents.

An able and wholesome consideration of the question from a Christian point of view.—Zion's Hei ald.

CHICAGO: F. H. REVELL. US <t 150 MADISON ST.