20. For where two or three are gathered together in my name--or "unto
my name."
there am I in the midst of them--On this passage--so full of sublime
encouragement to Christian union in action and prayer--observe, first,
the connection in which it stands. Our Lord had been speaking of church
meetings before which the obstinate perversity of a brother was in the
last resort to be brought, and whose decision was to be final--such
honor does the Lord of the Church put upon its lawful assemblies. But
not these assemblies only does He deign to countenance and honor. For
even two uniting to bring any matter before Him shall find that they are
not alone, for My Father is with them, says Jesus. Next, observe the
premium here put upon union in prayer. As this cannot exist with
fewer than two, so by letting it down so low as that number, He gives
the utmost conceivable encouragement to union in this exercise. But what
kind of union? Not an agreement merely to pray in concert, but to pray
for some definite thing. "As touching anything which they shall
ask," says our Lord--anything they shall agree to ask in concert. At
the same time, it is plain He had certain things at that moment in His
eye, as most fitting and needful subjects for such concerted prayer.
The Twelve had been "falling out by the way" about the miserable
question of precedence in their Master's kingdom, and this, as it
stirred their corruptions, had given rise--or at least was in danger of
giving rise--to "offenses" perilous to their souls. The Lord Himself
had been directing them how to deal with one another about such matters.
"But now shows He unto them a more excellent way." Let them bring all
such matters--yea, and everything whatsoever by which either their own
loving relationship to each other, or the good of His kingdom at large,
might be affected--to their Father in heaven; and if they be but agreed
in petitioning Him about that thing, it shall be done for them of His
Father which is in heaven. But further, it is not merely union in prayer
for the same thing--for that might be with very jarring ideas of the
thing to be desired--but it is to symphonious prayer, the prayer by
kindred spirits, members of one family, servants of one Lord,
constrained by the same love, fighting under one banner, cheered by
assurances of the same victory; a living and loving union, whose voice
in the divine ear is as the sound of many waters. Accordingly, what they
ask "on earth" is done for them, says Jesus, "of My Father which is
in heaven." Not for nothing does He say, "of
MY
FATHER"--not "YOUR
FATHER"; as is evident from what follows: "For where two or three are
gathered together unto My name"--the "My" is emphatic, "there am I in the midst of them." As His name would prove
a spell to draw together
many clusters of His dear disciples, so if there should be but two or
three, that will attract Himself down into the midst of them; and
related as He is to both the parties, the petitioners and the
Petitioned--to the one on earth by the tie of His assumed flesh, and to
the other in heaven by the tie of His eternal Spirit--their symphonious
prayers on earth would thrill upward through Him to heaven, be carried
by Him into the holiest of all, and so reach the Throne. Thus will He be
the living Conductor of the prayer upward, and the answer downward.
JFB.
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