Bible Commentary

Matthew 14:23

The Pulpit Commentary on Matthew 14:23

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The soothing power of prayer.

Earnest effort should be made to realize the strain, and excitement, and fatigue, and distress of that day to Christ. In some senses it was the very hardest day of his active ministry. Appraise carefully the spiritual, and even physical, influence of the following things.

1. Anxiety concerning the excitement of his disciples because the devils had been subject to them on their first mission.

2. Distress on hearing of the violent death of John.

3. Effort to put personal feeling aside in order to teach and heal the crowds who gathered at his landing place.

4. The spiritual strain of expending miraculous force in multiplying the few loaves.

5. Excitement at the dangerous intentions of the people to make him king.

6. Annoyance at his disciples when they would take part with the people.

7. Necessity for acting promptly and vigorously in checking the beginnings of mischief.

8. Pain to find his disciples still imprisoned in material conceptions of him and of his mission. Surely when all was over, the disciples were on the lake, and the last lingerer of the crowd well out of sight, Jesus must have been utterly exhausted, and needed some soothing, healing balm. Where could he get it? He knew. He shows us the place of soothing. It is the place of prayer.

I. PRAYER SOOTHES BY ENABLING US TO CAST OUR CARE ON GOD. The simple soothing mission of prayer is not often dwelt on. It is too much treated as a means of getting something. Its best blessings may be said to be the good things it does for us, rather than the good things it obtains for us. Prayer allays excitement. Prayer soothes the worried. Prayer quiets the restless. Prayer stills our atmospheres. And all because it just means telling God. If we begin to tell excitedly we soon fall into the deep peace which his presence and sympathy always breathe.

II. PRAYER SOOTHES BY ASSURING US THAT GOD CARES FOR US. And that, of necessity, means the mastery of the circumstances that trouble us. We are in the midst of difficulties, and they worry; they seem to be masterful. We go to God in prayer, and feel that he is in the midst of them, ruling and overruling; and we are calmed and rested. There are no real difficulties. "Greater is he who is for us than all who can be against us."—R.T.

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