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Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol III:
Tertullian: Part III: Of the Power of Prayer.

Early Church Fathers  Index     

Chapter XXIX.—Of the Power of Prayer.

For what has God, who exacts it ever denied 8945 to prayer coming from “spirit and truth?”  How mighty specimens of its efficacy do we read, and hear, and believe! Old-world prayer, indeed, used to free from fires, 8946 and from beasts, 8947 and from famine; 8948 and yet it had not (then) received its form from Christ. But how far more amply operative is Christian prayer! It does not station the angel of dew p. 691 in mid-fires, 8949 nor muzzle lions, nor transfer to the hungry the rustics’ bread; 8950 it has no delegated grace to avert any sense of suffering; 8951 but it supplies the suffering, and the feeling, and the grieving, with endurance: it amplifies grace by virtue, that faith may know what she obtains from the Lord, understanding what—for God’s name’s sake—she suffers. But in days gone by, withal prayer used to call down 8952 plagues, scatter the armies of foes, withhold the wholesome influences of the showers. Now, however, the prayer of righteousness averts all God’s anger, keeps bivouac on behalf of personal enemies, makes supplication on behalf of persecutors. Is it wonder if it knows how to extort the rains of heaven 8953 —(prayer) which was once able to procure its fires8954 Prayer is alone that which vanquishes 8955 God. But Christ has willed that it be operative for no evil: He had conferred on it all its virtue in the cause of good.  And so it knows nothing save how to recall the souls of the departed from the very path of death, to transform the weak, to restore the sick, to purge the possessed, to open prison-bars, to loose the bonds of the innocent. Likewise it washes away faults, repels temptations, extinguishes persecutions, consoles the faint-spirited, cheers the high-spirited, escorts travellers, appeases waves, makes robbers stand aghast, nourishes the poor, governs the rich, upraises the fallen, arrests the falling, confirms the standing. Prayer is the wall of faith: her arms and missiles 8956 against the foe who keeps watch over us on all sides. And, so never walk we unarmed. By day, be we mindful of Station; by night, of vigil. Under the arms of prayer guard we the standard of our General; await we in prayer the angel’s trump. 8957 The angels, likewise, all pray; every creature prays; cattle and wild beasts pray and bend their knees; and when they issue from their layers and lairs, 8958 they look up heavenward with no idle mouth, making their breath vibrate 8959 after their own manner. Nay, the birds too, rising out of the nest, upraise themselves heavenward, and, instead of hands, expand the cross of their wings, and say somewhat to seem like prayer. 8960 What more then, touching the office of prayer? Even the Lord Himself prayed; to whom be honour and virtue unto the ages of the ages!


Footnotes

690:8945

Routh would read, “What will God deny?”

690:8946

Dan. iii.

690:8947

Dan. vi.

690:8948

1 Kings 18:0, Jas. 5:17, Jas. 18:0.

691:8949

i.e. “the angel who preserved in the furnace the three youths besprinkled, as it were, with dewy shower” (Muratori quoted by Oehler).  [Apocrypha, The Song, etc., verses 26, 27.]

691:8950

2 Kings iv. 42-44.

691:8951

i.e. in brief, its miraculous operations, as they are called, are suspended in these ways.

691:8952

Or, “inflict.”

691:8953

See Apolog. c. 5 (Oehler).

691:8954

See 2 Kings i.

691:8955

[A reference to Jacob’s wrestling. Also, probably, to Matt. xi. 12.]

691:8956

Or, “her armour defensive and offensive.”

691:8957

1 Cor. 15:52, 1 Thess. 4:16.

691:8958

Or, “pens and dens.”

691:8959

As if in prayer.

691:8960

This beautiful passage should be supplemented by a similar one from St. Bernard: “Nonne et aviculas levat, non onerat pennarum numerositas ipsa? Tolle eas, et reliquum corpus pondere suo fertur ad ima. Sic disciplinam Christi, sic suave jugum, sic onus leve, quo deponimus, eo deprimimur ipsi:  quia portat potius quam portatur.” Epistola, ccclxxxv. Bernardi Opp. Tom. i. p. 691. Ed. (Mabillon.) Gaume, Paris, 1839. Bearing the cross uplifts the Christian.]


Next: Ad Martyras.

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