From Oswald Chambers' devotional My Utmost
for His Highest:
"How much more shall your Father which
is in heaven give good things to them that ask Him?" — Matthew 7:11
"Jesus is laying down rules of conduct
for those who have His Spirit. By the simple argument of these verses He urges
us to keep our minds filled with the notion of God’s control behind everything,
which means that the disciple must maintain an attitude of perfect trust and an
eagerness to ask and to seek.
"Notion your mind with the idea that
God is there. If once the mind is notioned along that line, then when you are
in difficulties it is as easy as breathing to remember--Why, my Father knows
all about it! It is not an effort, it comes naturally when perplexities press.
Before, you used to go to this person and that, but now the notion of the
Divine control is forming so powerfully in you that you go to God about it.
Jesus is laying down the rules of conduct for those who have His Spirit, and it
works on this principle--God is my Father, He loves me, I shall never think of
anything He will forget, why should I worry?
"There are times, says Jesus, when God
cannot lift the darkness from you, but trust Him. God will appear like an
unkind friend, but He is not; He will appear like an unnatural Father, but He
is not; He will appear like an unjust judge, but He is not. Keep the notion of
the mind of God behind all things strong and growing. Nothing happens in any
particular unless God’s will is behind it, therefore you can rest in perfect
confidence in Him. Prayer is not only asking, but an attitude of mind which
produces the atmosphere in which asking is perfectly natural. 'Ask, and it
shall be given you.'"
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