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Prevailing Prayer: What Hinders It?

Chapter 15: Pardon.
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About This Book

A series of devotional addresses examines the nature and practice of prayer, diagnosing common hindrances and outlining habits that lead to prevailing prayer. Drawing on biblical examples and pastoral experience, the speaker emphasizes the twin means of grace—Scripture and prayer—and treats practical themes such as adoration, confession, restitution, thanksgiving, forgiveness, unity, faith, petition, submission, and the reality of answered prayer. The tone is exhortatory and practical, urging repentance, reliance on faith, and scripturally grounded petitions while illustrating how sincere, persevering prayer has produced spiritual renewal and tangible deliverance.

Pardon.


“Now, oh joy! my sins are pardoned!
Now I can and do believe!
All I have, and am, and shall be,
To my precious Lord I give;
He roused my deathly slumbers,
He dispersed my soul’s dark night;
Whispered peace, and drew me to Him
Made Himself my chief delight.
“Let the babe forget its mother,
Let the bridegroom slight his bride;
True to him, I’ll love none other,
Cleaving closely to His side.
Jesus, hear my soul’s confession;
Weak am I, but strength is Thine;
On Thine arms for strength and succor,
Calmly may my soul recline!”
Albert Midlane.