New book with Evangelical Press (UK) |
I
was so blessed in writing this concise biography of Augustus Toplady. Visit my TOPLADY web page featuring other readings and more on my new book AUGUSTUS TOPLADY, Debtor to Mercy Alone, now available with Evangelical Press. After you read the Introduction posted there, listen to an audio excerpt from chapter 4. Read an excerpt below on this post from the chapter that picks up right after the audio.
"I vividly recall the sweetness and joy of Toplady's diary when I
first read it more than twenty years ago now. Douglas Bond has ably
captured the man and his faith in this brief biography. Warmly
recommended!" Michael Haykin, Professor of Church History, Southern Seminary.
You can order a signed copy of the book at my webstore, www.bondbooks.net, or you can order a hard copy or Kindle edition at TOPLADY.
You can order a signed copy of the book at my webstore, www.bondbooks.net, or you can order a hard copy or Kindle edition at TOPLADY.
5
A Praying Life
“My
God, I want the inwrought prayer,” cried Toplady, “the prayer of the
heart, wrought in the soul by the Holy Ghost.” So much of the recorded
praying of Toplady reflects just that, praying from the lips of a man
who is filled with the Holy Spirit, whose prayers are being sanctified
by the immediate presence of the God to whom he is praying. Thankfully
for us, Toplady developed the habit of copying down his prayers probably
as he prayed them. But there is nothing of the pompous Pharisee
strutting in prayer to be seen or heard by men. His prayers are the kind
of Psalm-like communing with God every Christian desires.
DISTRACTION AND WANDERING IN PRAYER
But
let’s face it, communing with God, the activity that occupied so much
of Toplady’s days and hours, is profoundly foreign to most of us. When
we do get around to quieting our hearts and falling to our knees in
prayer, one distraction after another begins its assault on our
receiving consciousness. A text message warbles in our pocket. The
telephone rings, and we strain to recognize the voice leaving a message.
The computer intones the audio signal that a new email has just
arrived. We wonder who it’s from. An aid vehicle roars by, siren
blaring. A sleepy child crawls onto our back for a cuddle. The hotpot
clicks off and we begin hastily rifling out our petitions so as to get
the tea steeping while the water is at its hottest. Tea is always better
when the water is at its hottest.
If
me manage to negotiate the minefield of information technology and
toddlers, and we actually get around to praying for real needs, we may
find ourselves—often long minutes later—musing on how those parents
could have let their son or daughter get involved with the wrong crowd
in the first place. Clearly they messed up. If only they had raised
their children the way we have raised ours. And when we finally shake
our self free of those thoughts, and return shamefaced again to
confession and asking for still more forgiveness, there’s the particular
problem men have with praying. We men think we can take care of things,
solve the problem. We don’t like stopping and asking for help. We can
handle this. We’re men. It’s what we do.
When
we attempt to get down to the serious business of praying, at best we
are too hasty, and at worst we may actually be taking the Lord’s name in
vain and compounding our sinning. It is for these reasons that
Toplady’s praying is so valuable for distracted moderns. Though many of
our 21st century distractions would have been completely
foreign to Toplady, we should not fool ourselves. He was a man subject
to many of the same challenges we face with prayer. “Was afflicted with wandering in private prayer. Lord, melt down my icy heart, and grant me to wait upon thee.”
How often would Toplady’s confession not be an accurate description of
our praying life? And like you and me, this would not be the last time
he would have reason to long for greater constancy in prayer. In a diary
entry dated Monday, December 14, 1767, he reminds us that neglecting
prayer has direct consequences:
Before
I came out of my chamber today, I was too hasty and short in private
prayer. My conscience told me so at the time; and yet, such was my
ingratitude and my folly, that I nevertheless restrained prayer before
God. In the course of the day, I had great reason to repent of my first
sin, by being permitted to fall into another.
It
is just, O Lord, that thou shouldest withdraw thy presence from one who
waited so carelessly on thee. May I never more, on any pretext
whatever, rob thee (or rather, deprive my own soul) of thy due worship;
but make all things else give way to communion with thee!
HONEST SELF-ABASEMENT
In a culture destroying itself with the cult of self-esteem, Toplady often prayed in a way that sounds foreign to our ears:
Who
am I, O Lord? The weakest and vilest of all thy called ones: not only
the least of saints, but the chiefest of sinners. But though a sinner,
yet sanctified, in part, by the Holy Ghost given unto me. I should wrong
the work of His grace upon my heart, were I to deny my regeneration:
but, Lord, I wish for a nearer conformity to thy image.
So
unaccustomed are we to hearing someone speak of himself as “the weakest
and vilest of all thy called ones,” we might be tempted to dismiss
Toplady’s self-deprecation as false humility, an elaborate charade...
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