Sermon 1860. "Behold, He Prays"

(No. 1860)

A SERMON DELIVERED ON LORD'S-DAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 20, 1885,

BY C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

"Inquire in the house of Judas for one called Saul, of Tarsus, for, behold, he prays." Acts 9:11.

THESE words are the hallmark of genuine conversion. "Behold, he prays" is a surer witness of a man's conversion than, "Behold,he sings," or, "Behold, he reads the Scripture," or, "Behold, he preaches." These things may be admirably done by men whoare not regenerate! But if, in God's sense of the term, a man really prays, we may know for sure that he has passed from deathunto life. True prayer is a sure evidence of spiritual quickening-the Holy Spirit has put spiritual life into the heart ofthe man who prays, for prayer is the breath of heavenly life. Prayer is the outcome of that sense of need which arises fromthe new life-a man would not pray to God if he did not feel that he had urgent need of blessings which only the Lord can bestow.While expressing his sense of need and appealing to God for help, the praying man gives evidence of being at peace with hisLord and cured of his natural alienation. He who prays, trusts, and thus reveals the faith which saves. Some forms of prayerdisplay great faith, but all real prayer is the working of faith, either little or great. Will a man cry to God for mercyif he does not believe in Him? Will he plead at the Mercy Seat if he does not expect to obtain his desire? Thus, dear Friends,prayer of the true kind is a voucher for the existence of spiritual life in its consciousness of need, in its turning towardsGod and in its faith in Him.

Prayer is the autograph of the Holy Spirit upon the renewed heart. Prayer is also an admirable form of communion with Godand, as the carnal mind can have no fellowship with God, it becomes the token of regeneration, the evidence of adoption! Hethat prays has some knowledge of God, some acquaintance with the great Invisible. The habit of private prayer and the constantpractice of heart fellowship with the Most High are the surest indicators of the work of the Holy Spirit upon the heart. Whenit can be said of a man, "Behold, he prays," the seal of the great King is upon him! He bears the endorsement of the Searcherof hearts. Hence the Lord gave to Ananias this sure indication that Saul of Tarsus was a converted man, by saying to him,"Behold, he prays."

In Saul's case, this indication was very specially remarkable. "Behold, he prays" had a peculiar meaning in relation to thisconversed Pharisee. I shall have to show you this at length. It was thought a great wonder that king Saul, of the Old Testament,prophesied. So unexpected and amazing was the event that it became a proverb-"Is Saul also among the Prophets?" But it wasan equal marvel when this more modern Saul was seen to pray! Is Saul of Tarsus among those who pray to Jesus for mercy? TheLord from Heaven, Himself, mentions it as a prodigy! He points to it as a thing to be beheld and wondered at, for He saysto His servant Ananias, "Behold, he prays."

I. We will begin our discourse with the following observation-This expression concerning Saul of Tarsus is remarkable, forIT IMPLIES THAT HE HAD NEVER BEFORE PRAYED. "Behold, he prays" could hardly be spoken of one who had been accustomed to prayin former days.

This is very striking, for Saul was a Pharisee and, therefore, a man who habitually repeated prayers. Pharisees boasted ofthe regularity, number and length of their prayers. Perhaps there had never been a day in Saul's life from the time in whichhe was conscious in which he had not gone through his prayers. Many devout Jews spent nine hours a day in prayer, for theyoccupied an hour in actual supplication and sat still for an hour before and an hour after prayer-and this was done threetimes a day! Pharisees offered prayer not only in the Temple and in the synagogue, but even at the corners of the streetswhere they could be seen of men. Whatever the quality of their praying might be, there was plenty of it in quantity. If anyfact was in public evidence so that nobody could deny it, it was that Saul of Tarsus had been much

in prayer and, therefore, it is the more striking that the Lord, Himself, should say to Ananias concerning this constantlydevout Pharisee, "Behold, he prays."

Behold how the Lord revises the judgements of men! In the opinion of all who knew Saul of Tarsus, the disciple of Gamaliel,he was much given to prayer. But He who searches the hearts and knew Saul well-and knew truthfully what prayer is-here declaresthat now, at last, Paul begins to pray! Despite all his former superfluity of ostentatious devotion, Saul, all his life, hadnever prayed at all! What his friends would have put down as a great mass of prayer, the Lord here makes nothing of! Untilthe first broken-hearted confession of sin came from the poor blinded persecutor of Jesus, the Lord considered that he hadnever prayed! I want to push this fact home upon some who are present with us, this morning. I mean those who, in a formalmanner, have always prayed and yet have never spiritually prayed. Your mother taught you a form of prayer-you repeated thisform all through your childhood and your youth. At this moment you are most regular in bowing the knees, both morning andevening, and yet no single prayer may ever have risen from your heart to the heart of God!

You go constantly to your place of worship; you are diligently observant of every Christian ordinance; you join in the responses,or you bow your head and listen in silence to the extemporary utterance of your minister and, therefore, you suppose thatyou pray-and yet it may be a vain supposition! If anyone were to say that you had not prayed, you would be very angry! Andyet it is possible that such a statement would be strictly true. How much I long that today, for the first time, you may inreal earnest cry unto the Lord God and cause Him to bear witness that now, indeed, you pray! You will then think little ofall your heartless repetitions of prayers and you will cry to God for the Holy Spirit who helps our infirmities, since weknow not what we should pray for as we ought.

I have told you that the Pharisees were noted for their prayers and, therefore, it seems the more amazing that the Lord shouldannounce that Saul of Tarsus had now begun to pray. Yet it was so-he was now offering his first real prayer. That prayer ofthe Pharisee which we read just now from the 18th Chapter of Luke was meant for prayer, but there is not a particle of prayerin it! He did not ask for anything. He did not confess a necessity, nor plead a promise. He did not seek mercy, nor mentionpropitiation. His formal thanksgiving was stained with proud self-esteem and it was more the boast of vanity than the requestof humility! Much of what is called prayer is the husk and not the kernel of prayer. Suppose you take the best form that wasever written and you go through that in the most orderly style-you may do that and continue to do it throughout a life of70 years-and yet you may never have sought God in real earnest!

If you prefer to compose your own prayers, you may do so throughout life and you may make prayers which shall be excellentin language. You may even make a new one every morning and every evening-and yet there may not have been a single atom oftrue supplication in the whole round of pious effusions! What if your first prayer has yet to be prayed? What a solemn suggestionto you who have been nursed in the lap of piety and wrapped in the garments of religion! I do not wonder that it cuts youto the quick. This heart-searching enquiry ought not to be thrust aside as if it did not concern you. Unless your heart speaksto God; unless your soul comes into spiritual contact with the great Father of Spirits, your form of prayer, whether it isliturgical or extemporaneous, is of little worth! God is not the God of the dead, but of the living-and this applies to prayersas well as men-

"God abhors the sacrifice Where not the heart is found."

One sentence of true heart-pleading, such as, "God be merciful to me, a sinner," is worth volumes of mere lip-service!

Real prayer must be spiritual and Saul's prayers had not been such before. Words are but the body of devotion-the confessionof sin, the longing for mercy, the groaning for Grace-these are the soul and spirit of prayer! A man may have repeated thechoicest words and these may have been the outward embodiment of true prayer because his heart went with them-but, on theother hand, he may have used equally select expressions and may not have prayed at all-for there may have been in him no stirringof the heart towards God. A man may utter no words whatever. He may sit in absolute silence and he may be praying most effectually.Moses cried aloud when he said not a word and Hannah was heard in the Temple when she made no sound, but only her lips moved!I reckon that those prayers which cannot be expressed in language are often the most deep and fervent. When desires are soweighty that they burden our words and even crush them down, then are they most prevalent with God. There is power in thatsolemn silence which is "frost of the mouth, but

thaw of the mind," when the soul flows with strong current in a deep and hidden bed till it reaches the heart of God and prevailswith Him.

Anyway, that prayer which is not spiritual is not reckoned of the Lord to be prayer at all, for "God is a Spirit: and theythat worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth." You may, if you like, praise God with organs, as the English do,or you may pray to God with windmills, as the Tartars do-the things are very much alike, as I believe- but your praising andyour praying will not be measured by the heaving of the bellows, nor by the revolution of the sails. They will be measuredonly by the heart work which was in them. If the spirit does not commune with God, there has been no prayer. There may havebeen music and oratory, but there has been no prayer if the spiritual nature has not spoken with the Father of Spirits. Notice,then, that we only begin to pray when we begin to live spiritual lives.

Next to this, Saul had never prayed a single right prayer of the kind which the Lord can accept. Saul, up to then, had notknown the Lord Jesus and, therefore, he did not know the way of access to the Father through His Son, whom He has appointedMediator. Saul knew the letter of the Truth of God according to the Ceremonial Law, but he did not know the spirit of it asit is embodied in Jesus. He had been going about to establish his own righteousness, but he had not submitted himself to therighteousness of Christ and, therefore, in his prayers he had not been traversing the road which led to the heart of God.If a man, using his rifle at Wimbledon in a contest for a prize, were told, "It is not that target on the right, but thisupon the left which must be aimed at," if he would continue to shoot towards the right, even though he should make a center,yet he would not have scored! Inasmuch as that was not the target appointed in the competition, his best shots would countfor nothing.

When a man does not pray in the Lord's appointed way, nor through Jesus Christ, nor in dependence upon the Holy Spirit, hedoes not pray at all! However fine his prayer, it is only a splendid sin. If you employ a servant to do a work and he obstinatelypersists in doing another thing, he will not earn his wages. However industriously he works at what you have never set himto do, he will receive nothing at your hands. So if you pray to God in a way which God has never ordained; if you refuse touse the name which He has appointed; if you neglect the cultivation of that holy and humble spirit which the Lord will, alone,accept, you may pray till your tongue cleaves to the roof of your mouth, but in God's judgement you have not prayed at alland you will not receive anything of the Lord!

It is certain, too, that Saul of Tarsus had never made mention of the name of Jesus in his prayers and, therefore, God reckonedthat he had not prayed. Saul had heard of Jesus, but he had rejected His claims and hated His people. Our heavenly Fathernever turns a deaf ear to the name of Jesus when it is honestly pleaded. But He will not hear us if we despise that ever-blessedname. There is no other name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved! There is no other name by which we canhopefully approach the Mercy Seat! Saul had rejected that name and had come in his own name and, therefore, he had not prayedat all. Suppose a king should make a rule that every petition that was presented to him should bear a certain stamp whichhis representative would freely put upon it? Then if a man neglected or refused to have his petition thus endorsed, he couldnot wonder if his petitions were treated as impertinences and returned unanswered! Virtually, such a man has sent in no petition,whatever, since he has declined to comply with the regulation without which no petition can be received! Friends, let us seeto it that we most humbly and heartily, in our prayers, plead the precious blood of the Lord Jesus Christ, for the force ofprayer lies mainly in our pleading the name and work of the well-beloved Son of God! We must set ourselves on one side andhide ourselves behind the Lord Jesus-for we and our prayers can only be accepted in the Beloved, through the Person, the merit,the sacrifice, the ever-living intercession of the Lord Jesus Christ! If we have not prayed in the name of Jesus, we havenot prayed at all!

Furthermore, I should like you to notice that real prayer cannot come from men whose characters are contrary to the mind ofGod. He whose character contradicts his prayer has not prayed. His life has effectually pleaded against his lips. Saul ofTarsus was opposed to the Son of God-how could he be in favor with God? He did not believe the Gospel, though the seal ofGod was on it-how, then, could God receive his prayer? How shall the Lord listen to us if we will not listen to Him? How shallGod accept us if we will not accept His Son? If we set ourselves in opposition to His Gospel, do we not shut the door of mercyin our own faces? While we pretend to be knocking at Heaven's gate, we are turning the key against ourselves! Saul had beenmore than an opposer, he had become a persecutor-can persecutors enjoy the favor of God? Can we hope for God's blessing whilewe are cursing God's people? How can a persecutor pray?

Saul of Tarsus was evidently full of hate and cruelty-how could he pray? Love is the element of the children of God! "Everyonethat loves is born of God"-but Saul had conceived such an intense disgust against the followers of the Crucified, that hehauled them to prison and voted for their death! Brothers and Sisters, we have no right to persecute any man for his religionor his irreligion-whether he is Catholic, Jew, Muslim, or Infidel, we must do nothing wrong towards him, nor rob him of anyof his rights, however erroneous his views may be. We are bound to be just and right towards all men as men, whatever theirreligions convictions, or irreligious notions. Injustice is no friend to the Truth of God! We must not fight God's battleswith the weapons of ill will. For us to hate those who are in error and talk of them with contempt or wish them ill, or dothem wrong is not according to the Spirit of Christ. You cannot cast out Satan by Satan, nor correct error by violence, norovercome hate by hate. The conquering weapon of the Christian is love and if Paul had sought to overthrow what he thoughtto be an error by love, although he had been mistaken, he would not have been so guilty.

Whoever they might be, whether righteous or wicked, men or women, he would compel them to blaspheme the name of Jesus, whomhe judged to be an impostor. He sought to domineer over their consciences and to oppress them for their beliefs. How, then,can God hear his prayer? If you have the spirit of hate in you, it nullifies your devotions and makes your prayer to be noprayer. In love lies the essence of prayer and prayer ought to be the flower and crown of love. If I go through the worldhating my fellow men because they differ from me. If I am determined to force my own doctrines upon others with an iron hand,I cannot lift that hand in prayer! A malicious heart pollutes the sacrifice which it offers. When I come before God in prayer,I may be offending Him when I dream that I am pleasing Him. Friend, if you are living an ungodly life, I do not care how regularlyyou bend your knees in seeming devotion, there is nothing in it! If you are not living as a Christian should, your prayersprove nothing-your matins and your vespers, your family prayers and your Prayer Meetings are the mimicry of prayer and nothingmore.

You may have been baptized and you may have frequented the Lord's Table, but it is all mockery-the caricature of godlinessand nothing more-unless you strive after holiness and labor to conform your life to the will of God. God will hear us whenwe hear Him-He will do our will when we do His will. But persistence in known sin and especially indulgence in enmity andhatred are so destructive to prayer, that till we are free from them, we do not pray! Be at peace with all men, or talk notof prayer! Lay aside all opposition to the Gospel of the Lord Jesus or you can no more pray than a fiend of the Pit!

Yet again-Saul, with all his prayers, had never truly prayed because humility was absent from his devotions. What a test thisis! Saul had gone about the world feeling that he was a righteous man. Did he not wear texts of Scripture between his eyes?What a pious man he was! Had he not broad borders on his garments-borders of blue? What a saint he was! Did he not fast thricein the week and pay tithes of mint and anise and cummin? There was not a better man in all the dominions of Caesar than thisSaul, in his own judgment! When he prayed, there was a high flavor of self-righteousness in his religious exercise and thismade them disgusting to the Most High. The Lord delights in humble and contrite spirits, but the proud, He knows afar off.There was no confession of sin, no crying for mercy through a propi-tiation-his prayer was the expression of thankfulnessthat Saul of Tarsus was a Hebrew of the Hebrews, as touching the Law, blameless!

In the courts above, where outward appearances are nothing and God looks at the heart, his pious harangues were not reckonedto be prayers at all. If you feel quite content with your own prayers, permit me to suggest that you do not pray, for fewwho pray aright are ever content with their own petitions. Those who dream themselves to belong to the Good-Enough familywill find themselves bad enough and the Too-Goods will find themselves shut out of Heaven! If you have a righteousness madeout of your prayers, throw it to the dogs! Self-righteousness is a leaven which the Lord commands us to put away, for He abhorsit and considers that it pollutes His Passover. If you pray as a deserving person, pleading your own good deeds, there issuch a lie at the bottom of your prayers that you have not prayed at all!

I say again this makes terrible work of a great many persons who have been brought up in outward religion. Dear Friend, benot vexed or angry if this should seem to come home to you. If before your eyes the whole heap upon your threshing floor shouldbe blown away like chaff, thank God that it has been blown away so soon, while there is time to gather the true wheat! Itis better for you to make the sad discovery now, than to make it when you come to die, or to wake up in another world wherethere will be no hope of rectifying the error! Let this thought come to every professor of

religion this morning-that you may have been a praying man or woman for years, you may have come, like Saul of Tarsus, tothe fullness of your age and have abounded in the appearance of devotion-and yet you may have to pray to God for the firsttime!

II. This brings me to my second reflection, and that is, IT IS IMPLIED IN THE TEXT THAT IT WAS A REMARKABLE THING FOR SUCHA PERSON TO NOW PRAY. It is put with an ecce, a mark of admiration, "Behold,

he prays!" It is a very difficult thing, a very marvelous thing, for a man to truly pray who has been, all his lifetime, prayingin a false way! It is a miracle of Grace to bring a proud Pharisee to plead for mercy like a penitent publican! It is nothalf so wonderful that an irreligious man should begin to pray as that a vainglorious professor should begin to pray. Themost remarkable conversion that could take place here, today, would not be that of Elymas, the sorcerer, but of Saul, thePharisee! The most remarkable conversion in the Apostolic age was that of a man who, from his youth up, had been plunged inself-righteousness and in the self-content which comes of attention to ritual, ceremony and the form of godliness. "Beholdhe prays."

It is hard for him to pray because he is a person who has been a formalist for a long time. He is so rooted in the habit offormal devotion and so contented with it that it is extremely difficult to bring him to attend to spiritual things. The letterkills in more senses than one-and the man so killed has no life for the things of the spirit. If he goes up to his chamberat the hour of prayer, he runs along the old trams without the least feeling and heart. He repeats the words, but he mightas well be reading an unknown language. The tendency is to say the same thing over and over again till the lips move mechanicallyand the soul is in a deep slumber. The Bible is read, but the mind is dozing. The sermon is heard, but the heart is wandering.Where is the good of this? Yet how hard it is to get men out of it! It is easier to attend a thousand "masses," or to go tochurch every day in the week, than to offer one true prayer!

It is very difficult for you who are rich in nominal devotion to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. It is hard to get the robe ofChrist's righteousness upon that man's back who believes that his own coat is as good as it needs to be-he has worn his ownrags so long that they cling to him! He is too proud to beg, for he has lived so long like a gentleman on his own income.He has been rich and increased in goods so long-and in need of nothing-that he has grown so used to his way of external andsuperficial religion, that you cannot get him, without a miracle of Grace, to seek after that which is deep and true.

Again, self-righteousness is a very great hindrance to coming to Christ in prayer. In Christ's day, the publicans and harlotsentered the Kingdom before the Pharisees who were self-righteous! It is a great thing to conquer sinful self, but it is agreater thing to overcome righteous self. The man who is downright bad and feels it, asks for mercy, but these people arebad at heart and do not feel it and, therefore, they will not seek the Lord. They think that they have done everything theyought to have done-wrapping themselves about in their shoddy righteousness, they imagine themselves to be quite fit to enterinto the royal feast without putting on the wedding garment of the king's providing! It costs a self-righteous man a greateffort to stoop to prayer. If he did but know that his righteousness is only a part of his filthiness, he would change hisnote. The Scripture says, "All our righteousnesses are as filthy rags." When we see them to be such, we are glad to be ridof them, for they are loathsome in themselves and the foul disease of pride poisons every thread!

The man that has been accustomed to pray without his heart and to be pious without being converted is very hard to be madeto pray because he is prejudiced against the way of Grace. He has made up his mind that he will not see the Light of God becausehe believes in his own light. You talk to him about salvation by Grace, redemption by the precious blood and justificationby faith, alone, but he cannot stand such themes-they may suit the wicked, but he is of another breed! He is overshadowedwith the glory of himself and, therefore, he cannot see the Glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. The habit of superficialexternal religion once formed is as hard to break as for the Ethiopian to change his skin. A man hugs his self-righteousnessas he hugs his life. Skin for skin, yes, all that a man has, will he give for his legal life, the life of

self.

Besides, a self-righteous man knows that everybody thinks him to be right and, therefore, he cannot demean himself by suchprayers and confessions as might suit a common sinner. If you talk to him about being converted, why, dear Sir, he needs noconversion! He was born good! He has always been a Christian! He needs no change-you don't know what a fine gentleman he is!He never cries in the bitterness of his soul, "God be merciful to me, a sinner." Why should he? His mother and father wereextremely good people and he was born again at the baptismal font and has since been confirmed!

What more do you need? Washed in the blood of Jesus? Well, perhaps he needs this as others do, but there is no special sinin him, nothing, certainly, for which he could be condemned. Persons who are of this order are seldom brought to pray. Theymay be called reprobate silver, for the Lord has rejected them. If ever such as these are saved, it will astonish men andangels-and the Lord Himself will cry, "Behold, he prays."

Even religious intensity and fervor may become a hindrance to a man's conversion when that ardor is for a false faith. Theearnest formalist is encased in steel and the arrows of the Gospel glance off him. Some worship every nail of the church doorand every tile of the chancel. If such a thing as a priest should cross the road, they are ready to kiss the ground he treadsupon! How can these be brought to the simplicity of the faith? Among Dissenters are there not persons who are obstinate fortrifles, conservative for old methods, inflexible with habit, ferocious for externals and yet devoid of spiritual life? Thosewho have none of the inward and spiritual Grace are often the more fierce for the outward and visible sign. The man who hasno money is a great stickler for a respectable appearance, the fact being that if he does not keep that up, he will soon bein the Gazette. A sincerely gracious Christian is tempted, rather, to think too little of externals than too much of them.He sets the highest value upon the inner life and faith in the Lord Jesus. I say again, Brothers and Sisters, it is such awonderful thing that the externally-religious man ever should begin to pray in earnest that it is recorded as a wonder! "Behold,he prays."

See what was needed in Saul's case to make him pray-the Lord Jesus must, Himself, appear and bring him to his knees! Nothingless than a Light shining from Heaven could show him his vileness! Oh that such a Light would break upon all self-righteoussouls! The proud man must fall to the earth, cast down from his high places! Until he lies low, he will still glory in hisflesh. He must be struck with blindness, that he may be ready to accept the sight of faith. Three days he must neither eatnor drink, to wean him from earth and make him feed on the Bread of Heaven. Great must be the agony of his spirit, for hethat has been so intensely self-righteous cannot be brought to Christ without a wrench. He that has rested in himself so completelyand so long needs to be torn up by the roots before he will quit his carnal confidences. It takes, as it were, a special interpositionof Grace to bring a religious professor to pray in spirit and in truth!

III. And now I want you to notice, in the third place, that albeit it was a great wonder that Saul prayed, yet IT IS DIVINELYDECREED IN THE TEXT THAT HE DID.

One would have liked to have heard Saul of Tarsus pray. Look at him now! This fine, good man! How humble, how lowly he is!His prayer began with a full and grievous confession of sin. He offered neither excuse nor extenuation. He looked to Him whomhe had pierced and mourned for Him. He acknowledged that he was the chief of sinners-"Because I persecuted the Church of God."The only thing he could say by way of apology was, "I did it ignorantly, in unbelief." Look at him there, alone in his chamber,with his eyes opened and yet blinded, He weeps, cries, groans and humbles himself before the Lord. Indeed, he prays! The otherday, as he rode along to Damascus, everybody looked upon him as a saint, but now by his own confession, he is a sinner ofthe blackest sort! Listen how he defames himself! He repents in dust and ashes! He prays for mercy. He begs to be forgivenhis scarlet sins. He acknowledges that if he were sent to Hell, it would be no more than just, but he begs that for the Savior'ssake, he may be spared and permitted to see the Light of God's Countenance. I think I hear him making this sad confession.Behold, he now prays!

Now you will find him acknowledging his great need. "Why," he says, "Lord, I need everything! It is not one thing that I amdevoid of, but everything is gone that is worth having. I need a new heart and a right spirit. I need the Truth of God inthe hidden parts and that, in the inward parts, I may be made to know wisdom." He had nothing to boast of-he had turned froma boastful millionaire into a beggar! He would cry, "Lord, give me my sight again, but specially grant me my spiritual sight.Take away the scales from my heart as well as from my eyes! Help me to see Jesus as my Savior! Help me to live to His Glory,as before I have lived to persecute Him." He prayed this time-and none could doubt it!

I think I can see mingled with that prayer the lowliest adoration. How he would worship Jesus of Nazareth as his God now thathe was conquered by Him! How he would cry, "My Lord, my Lord, have I been persecuting You? Are You the Messiah whom all the12 tribes expected, and have I rejected You? Did I sit to see Your servant, Stephen, stoned, and keep the garments of thosethat stoned him, and I have been breathing out threats against You, my Lord?" Surely the deep homage of his chastened spiritmust have come up sweetly before the exalted Lord as Saul bowed himself in the dust before Him and said again and again, "Godforbid that I should glory, except in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ." "Behold, he prays!"

Consider what pleas he had. Did it ever strike you how Saul must have pleaded? Pleading is the truest and strongest part ofprayer. Now, how did Saul of Tarsus plead? Assuredly he urged the promise, "Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteousman his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him, and to our God, for He will abundantlypardon." He knew the Old Testament Scriptures better than we do and he would be sure to use them in his prayer. I hear himcrying, "O Lord, You have said, 'Come, now, and let us reason together, says the Lord; though your sins are as scarlet, theyshall be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool.'" Surely, he also went over that 51stPsalm, every bit of it-it suited him exactly. "Deliver me from blood-guiltiness, O God, God of my salvation: and my tongueshall sing aloud of Your righteousness."

Do you not think that when he had gone over those promises, he would then plead the types of the Ceremonial Law concerningChrist? How the 53rd of Isaiah must have flashed in his mind! He was blinded, but what a light must have flamed up in hisspirit as he saw the Man of sorrows, the acquaintance of grief, and heard the Prophet say, "Surely He has borne our griefs,and carried our sorrows. . .The chastisement of our peace was upon Him." How Saul would begin to cry to Jesus, "Oh, Son ofGod, be my Scapegoat, be my Sin Offering, be my morning and evening Sacrifice! Be to me the blood of sprinkling and the PaschalLamb!" Knowing, as he did, all the types of the Jewish Law, he must have found them rich in comfort, now that, in beholdingJesus, he had found the Key of them all!

And, Beloved, all this must have been steeped in a wonderful fervor. If we could have stood outside the door and listened,we should have understood why the Lord said, "Behold, he prays." Before, you might have heard him repeating words, but nowhe uttered groans, cries, sobs and tears! Before, you might have said to yourself, "He is saying his prayers," but this timeit was as when a man wrestles for his life and is in bitterness for his only son! All previous prayer was sham, but this wasreal! All the rest was but a performance, but now he did real business with the Most High! "Behold, he prays." Now he is areal Israel, and lo, he comes off more than conqueror through Him that has taught him to pray!

IV. Lastly, we see that as soon as he did pray, IT WAS EVIDENT THAT THE LORD ACCEPTED HIS PRAYER.

How do I know this from the text, "Behold, he prays"? Well, I know it from the text, first, because here is God bearing witnessthat he did pray. Might not the Lord stand in a Prayer Meeting and hear a dozen of us talk our piece and never say, "Behold,he prays"? But if a voice from Heaven were to say concerning someone, "Behold, he prays," we would know that the man was acceptedof the Lord. So it was with Saul. The first time he prayed, God heard him. Try it, my Friend, try it! If this is your firstprayer this morning, breathe it to God with humble faith and He will hear you!

We know that God had accepted this first prayer, for He was about to answer it. He had Ananias in readiness to go and comfortthe poor blinded penitent. God is about to answer your prayer, my dear Brother, this morning, if you have cried to Him. Perhapsthe man is present in the Tabernacle who will speak to you before you leave these walls, or somebody will soon call to tellyou the way of peace more perfectly. If now you quit the way of self-righteousness and formal devotion and begin to cry outfor the living God, that God will meet you!

Moreover, we are sure that God accepted this first prayer because He called attention to it by a, "Behold." It is as if Godsaid to angels, to men, to everybody-"Behold, he prays." We have heard of the seven wonders of the world and of other marvelsconcerning which men cry, "Behold," but that which strikes God most is a praying man, a sinner praying! God does not say,"Behold Herod on his throne," or, "Behold Caesar in his palace," but He does say, "Behold, he prays," as if He would makethe praying man the center of observation, the focus of regard! "Behold, he prays." The heart of God is delighted with trueprayer. The arch-enemy notices true prayer and trembles when a man falls on his knees. And God would have all His saints onearth and His saints in Heaven look down upon a man in prayer. To the great Father's heart, it is a prodigal returning! Hecries, "Behold, he prays," but He means, "Behold, he is coming home! Behold, he seeks his Father's face! Behold, I have foundMy son which I had lost!" Prayer is God's delight, God's admiration!

Beloved, has this ever been the case with you, that you could draw the attention of the great God to yourself? I am afraidthere are many of whom it would have to be said, "Behold, he never prays!" What a sight upon earth-a man created by his Makerwho never worships his Creator-a man who is daily fed by God's bounty, but never worships Him! Sir, you are a monster, youare a creature among men most loathsome! A man that lives without prayer ought not to live!

It is a wonder that the earth does not open her mouth and swallow up such a wretch! And yet when he does pray, God makes awonder of it!

It is his first prayer this morning. I see him-the sermon is over and he has reached home. He has gone up to his room. Heis afraid somebody will come in and disturb him-he is turning the key. He is kneeling by the side of that bed on which hehas slept so often without prayer and he cries, "O God, I do not know what to say, but be merciful to me, a sinner, and forgivemy sins!" I hear the rustling wings of angels as they gather around the sacred spot! Soon they fly upward crying, "Behold,he prays!" Years shall pass on with you, young man, and you shall come to middle life and be exposed to sharp temptation-whatwill you do then? Good spirits watch you, fearing lest you should go astray, and devils watch for your halting. You will thenremember that day in the middle of September when you first prayed-and you will say to yourself, "I will again cry unto God,as I have often done." You go upstairs and say, "Lord, many days have passed since first I cried to You and I have not ceasedto cry, but now I am in special trouble. I beseech You, deliver me!" God will help you. The great wheel of Providence willrevolve for you. Meanwhile, both angels and devils have spied you out-the angels sing and the devils mutter, "Behold, he prays."

A few years have passed. The young man has grown old and the time is come that he must die. He has gone up to the same roomfor the last time and there are those about him who weep and watch. Mark the sweet serenity of the departing soul! He is lookinginto eternity without fear. He knows whom he has believed and he is ready to depart. What is he doing in his expiring moments?"Behold, he prays." Prayer, which has long been his vital breath and native air, is now-

"His watchword at the gates of death- He enters Heaven with prayer!" Demons that gather about our last hour shall flee awayas bats fly out of a cavern scared by a torch! They shall flee when they hear the voice, "Behold, he prays." The shining onesshall gladly meet the soul that is on Jordan's bank when they hear the voice, "Behold, he prays." They shall meet the prayingspirit on the other side of the river and shall smile while the prayer of earth melts into the praise of Heaven! Soon shallwe be forever with the Lord! God grant it may be so, for His name's sake. Amen.