Chrysostom
Beloved Servant
You ask for prayer, and that is good, but have you made your own supplication with urgency and tears? For God hears the prayer of the one who prays, not merely of those who ask for prayers while they themselves sleep. Why do you go to others when the Lord Himself stands ready to hear you? The request ought to come from those who have the need, that the miracle may be free from suspicion. Do not place yourself in a situation to need others’ prayers without your own zeal. Paul did not say, “What need have I of prayer,” even though he labored more than all, and yet you say by your inaction, “Pray for me,” while neglecting your own watchfulness? The weapon is in your hands, but a warrior must wield it.
Prayer is a great weapon, an impregnable wall, a tower unshaken. Yet we need both our own part and God’s part if we are to be truly helped. You have a need, as you say. Then rise up early, make God propitious by your own persistent supplication, and go forth to your daily fight with that armor. Do not think rare cases excuse neglect, some have cast out demons without fasting, but the one living luxuriously cannot be delivered from such madness. Fasting implants strictness and fights against incorporeal powers, but it must be joined with your own prayer first. Have you laid hold of this weapon, or do you only ask others to lift it for you?
If your need is pressing, then pour it out yourself before the throne of grace. The Lord taught His disciples to have confidence in prayer, saying they would do greater things through faith and supplication. But He did not command them to rely solely on the prayers of others while they remained idle. I do not forbid you to seek the prayers of the saints, far from it, but it is when we ourselves are on the alert that such help profits us. Exalt not yourself by thinking you have no need to pray, yet neither humble yourself by forsaking your own duty. Prayer without your own earnest works will not avail; works without prayer are lifeless. Present yourself, then, together with your need, and let thanksgiving already rise in your heart, for the Giver knows what you require before you ask.
Prayer is a great weapon, an impregnable wall, a tower unshaken. Yet we need both our own part and God’s part if we are to be truly helped. You have a need, as you say. Then rise up early, make God propitious by your own persistent supplication, and go forth to your daily fight with that armor. Do not think rare cases excuse neglect, some have cast out demons without fasting, but the one living luxuriously cannot be delivered from such madness. Fasting implants strictness and fights against incorporeal powers, but it must be joined with your own prayer first. Have you laid hold of this weapon, or do you only ask others to lift it for you?
If your need is pressing, then pour it out yourself before the throne of grace. The Lord taught His disciples to have confidence in prayer, saying they would do greater things through faith and supplication. But He did not command them to rely solely on the prayers of others while they remained idle. I do not forbid you to seek the prayers of the saints, far from it, but it is when we ourselves are on the alert that such help profits us. Exalt not yourself by thinking you have no need to pray, yet neither humble yourself by forsaking your own duty. Prayer without your own earnest works will not avail; works without prayer are lifeless. Present yourself, then, together with your need, and let thanksgiving already rise in your heart, for the Giver knows what you require before you ask.
