This article is from Issue 6, Called to Praise
By Lettie Cowman
“Let us offer the
sacrifice of praise
to God…..
The fruit of our lips.”
(Hebrews 13:15)
Many homes display the model, Prayer Changes Things, and great blessing has resulted from the simple statement. We are all aware that prayer does change things. We know, also, that many times the enemy has not been moved one inch from a stronghold, although we have persisted in prayer for days, months — yes, often years.
Prayer asks. Praise takes, or obtains the answer. I’m sure that some who read these lines may say, ‘I, too, have prayed and prayed, but I do not feel like praising God. Praise when my heart is bleeding and torn? Praise when the pressure is greatest? Praise when walking through the valley of the Shadow with one I loved better than my own life? How can I praise God at such a time?
In Psalms 107:22 we find these words: “sacrifice… the sacrifice of thanksgiving.” What is a sacrifice? It is an offering to God. A sacrifice of thanksgiving is to praise God when you do not feel like it; when you are depressed and despondent; when your life is covered with thick clouds and midnight darkness. While we are admonished to pray without ceasing, are we not also commanded to Rejoice Evermore? When should I praise God? When I feel happy and when everything is moving along smoothly? When there is no trial crossing my pathway? It would be no sacrifice to praise God at such a time as this. Sacrifice hurts! It costs!
A missionary in dark China was living a defeated life. Everything about him seemed to be touched with sadness. Although he prayed many months for victory over depression and discouragement, no answer came. His life remained quite the same. He determined to leave his post and go to an interior station where he could be quiet and spend long hours in prayer till victory was assured. Upon reaching the place, he was entertained in the home of a fellow missionary.
On the wall of his bedroom hung this motto: Try Thanksgiving. The two words gripped his heart, and he thought within himself, ‘Have I been praying all these months and have not been praising?’ He stopped and began to praise God and was greatly uplifted. Instead of hiding away to agonize in prayer, he returned immediately to his waiting native converts to tell them that praise changes things.
Are you waiting, waiting, yearning for God to answer your prayer? He is waiting to answer. Try Thanksgiving. Rejoice in the lord always, and again I say rejoice.”
— From a book entitled Handfuls of Purpose
by Mrs. Charles Cowman.
Taken from Life on the Altar Publication
Issue 6 Autumn 2022
