Isaiah 62:1-12 · Zion’s New Name
Praying With Bloody Knuckles
Isaiah 62:1-12, Isaiah 61:1-11
Sermon
by William L. Self
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My wife was conducting a prayer workshop recently and a member of the group told her this true story. She had grown up in London and her pastor walked from his home to the church every day. Along the way he had to pass through some rough sections of town, and as he passed one particular bar there was always the same man loitering outside, very drunk and very loudmouthed. The pastor was really angry at the wasted life and annoyed by the obnoxious taunts of the man. He started praying for the man every time he saw him. This went on for years. Finally, one day this man appeared in the pastor's study and said, "They say you have been praying for me every day and I want to know why you would bother to pray for a man like me." The pastor was able to witness to the man and lead him to Christ! What if he had given up hope and stopped praying? We have neglected the power of intercessory prayer in our lives and in the lives of others. In our selfish desire to have it all and get it all we have forgotten to give it all.

The writer of our text declared in 62:5 that he will not be kept silent but will pester and intercede with God until Jerusalem has experienced a salvation that can be seen as clearly as a bright and burning torch. He is an insistent soul. Like the fifth century ascetic Simeon Stylites, he wants to "batter the gates of heaven with storms of prayer." He is frustrated by God's delay in rebuilding Jerusalem's glory as he had promised. To him, God appears stuck concerning his promise, so the prophet constantly reminds him. Jesus praised importunity and intercession in prayer, but we have neglected both. He prayed for the children (Matthew 19:13), the sick (Mark 7:34), the disciples (Luke 22:31), and his enemies (Luke 23:34). He also prayed for laborers (Luke 10:2) and for all of those who follow him (John 17:20). As Charles Spurgeon reminds us, "Some mercies are not given to us except in answer to importunate prayer. There are blessings which, like ripe fruit, drop into your hand the moment you touch the bough. But there are others which require you to shake the tree again and again, until you make it rock with the vehemence of your exercise, for only then will the fruit fall down." Spurgeon further says, "God will bless Elijah and send rain on Israel, but Elijah must pray for it. If the chosen nation is to prosper, Samuel must plead for it. If the Jews are to be delivered, Daniel must intercede. God will bless Paul, and the nations shall be converted through him, but Paul must pray. Pray he did without ceasing, his epistles show that he expected nothing except by asking for it."

This kind of praying has been called praying with "bloody knuckles." That is, praying with an intensity that opens the door to the needed request and focuses the one praying on the desired result in more than a casual way. In fact, real intercession may achieve its results, but if habitually practiced it has noticeable results in the one who prays. We cannot know the depth of spiritual energy caught in these words. After Job prayed for his friends, the Lord made him prosperous again (Job 42:10). Paul reminds us to pray without ceasing. The writer's love for Jerusalem and for his God created this intense concern in him. He knew that the happiness and welfare of his family, friends, and larger community depended upon his praying. In fact, intercession is nothing more than love on its knees. When John Knox cried, "God, give me Scotland or I die!" he was praying intensely out of profound love. The apostle Paul, often misunderstood in our day, interceded for the churches out of a heart of love. "Unceasingly I make intercession for you always in my prayers" (Romans 1:9). This rugged missionary was an intercessor of the highest magnitude. (You may wish to note Romans 10:1, 1 Thessalonians 3:13, Colossians 1:10.) The finest book on prayer I know is the classic by Harry Emerson Fosdick, The Meaning of Prayer. In this work he describes intercession and importunity as dominant desire. He widens the circle of prayer to make it, not the words we utter in public meetings, but rather the total focus of our lives.

Our lives always achieve what we pray for when viewed this way, whether the focus is good or evil. As Fosdick says, "Lot wanted Sodom and got it. Judas desired thirty pieces and obtained them. The Bible is full of answered prayers that ruined men." Again and again in history we see the old truth come true: "He gave them their request, but sent leanness into their souls!" (Psalm 106:15). Also, prayer as dominant desire or "bloody knuckles" praying has greatly influenced the kingdom. Paul, William Carey, and David Livingstone were willing to sacrifice everything to achieve their spiritual ends. This type of praying is not prayer called in to eke out what is lacking in an otherwise contented life, but rather it is life-centering. Bloody knuckles praying is serious business.1 In the parables on importunity Jesus focuses on persistence. He wants us, he says, to pray and not lose heart. Our day needs to hear this. We pray in a rather casual way once or twice and give up if nothing happens quickly. It is like turning on a light switch and if the light does not come on we immediately say that we did not believe in electricity anyway.2

An out-of-date word that best describes this need is supplication. "Supplication means to ask with earnestness, with intensity, with perseverance. It is a declaration that we are deadly serious about this prayer business. We are going to keep at it and not give up."3

John Calvin writes, "We must repeat the same supplications not twice or three times only, but as often as we have need, a hundred and a thousand times ... we must never be weary in waiting for God's help." As God builds stamina and grit into our spirituality, we today must learn to burn the eternal flame of prayer on the altar of devotion.4 This flies in the face of the cardinal virtue of the secular culture -- license. Any type of commitment seems to restrict our freedom. We want to go, do, and be whatever the moment makes us desire. This coupled with our aversion to commitment of any kind leads to a certain spiritual atrophy. We want a church to be there for us, but we forget that the church is us! We want others to pay the price spiritually and in other ways so that we can reap the harvest of their labors.

The need of the Christian community today is not larger buildings or smoother organizations. We already reflect the corporate culture around us. Our need is not for slicker programs or more brilliant strategies. We also have vast bureaucracies of specialists at our disposal and still we limp along. Our need is for intercessors who will pray with bloody knuckles for the spirit of the living God to fall on his people. We have enough programs and professionals. We are rich in resources and literature. Our need is for intercessors -- bloody knuckle intercessors.

It is not a theory but a fact empirically demonstrable that if in any community a large number of people, earnest Christians, unite in unselfish praying for a revival of religious interest, that revival is sure to come.5 What are you trying to accomplish that cannot be achieved without a direct intervention from God? "You shall be a crown of beauty ... and a royal diadem. Zion is very precious to the Lord. He awaits to bless his people. They are his glory" (Isaiah 62:3). I am convinced that the Lord loves us and cares more about our concerns than we do. On his timetable he invades our troubles and issues with supernatural power.

In a few days we will start a new year, a new century. We are all carrying into that century the baggage of prior years, the small victories and larger defeats. The scars of past struggles haunt us. This fresh start into a new century gives us an opportunity to pray with bloody knuckles. These past defeats, this residue of scar tissue must be abandoned, and the power that broke through at Bethlehem in the person of Jesus must be called to new challenges in the new century. There are people and situations that can only be rescued by God's intervention, and we must not give up on praying for them. "When a mother prays for her wayward son, no words can make clear the vivid reality of her supplications. Her love pours itself out in insistent demand that her boy must not be lost. She is sure of his value, with which no outward thing is worthy to be compared, and of his possibilities, which no sin of his can ever make her doubt. She will not give him up. She follows him through his abandonment down to the gates of death; and if she loses him through death into the mystery beyond, she still prays on in secret, with intercessions which she may not dare to utter, that wherever in the moral universe he may be, God will reclaim him. As one considers such an experience of vicarious praying, he sees that it is not merely resignation to the will of God; it is urgent assertion of a great desire. She does not really think that she is persuading God to be good to her son, for the courage in her prayer is due to her certain faith that God also must wish that boy to be recovered from his sin. She rather is taking on her heart the same burden that God has on his; she is joining her demand with the divine desire. In this system of personal life which makes up the moral universe, she is taking her place alongside God in an urgent, creative outpouring of sacrificial love."6

Exodus 28:29 gives us an insight into continual intercession and our need for it as practiced by Israel. Every part of the elaborately prescribed dress of the high priest was significant. The breastplate was composed of folded cloth in which there were lodged twelve precious stones in four rows of three, each stone containing the name of one of the tribes. When the priest entered the Holy of Holies he bore on his body the twelve tribes. His very presence at the place of worship was an intercession for the people. He bore on himself, carried in his heart, his profound love and constant intercession for the people. This was a responsibility for the High Priest and a blessing for the people. These people were on his heart. None were excluded from Dan to Beersheba, from the Jordan to the Mediterranean. So it is with us. Our circle of acquaintances should be carried in our heart -- always before the Lord in our prayers. We must lay hold on God with bloody knuckles to be carried along with him in his desires for all humankind.


1. Harry Emerson Fosdick, The Meaning of Prayer (New York: Associated Press, 1915), p. 190.

2. Richard J. Foster, Prayer: Finding the Heart's True Home (San Francisco: Harper, 1992), p. 197.

3. Foster, p. 197.

4. Foster, p. 197.

5. Fosdick, p. 190.

6. Fosdick, p. 191.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Defining Moments, by William L. Self