James O. Frasier - Prayer Makes History
Some of God's most precious servants have gone through life
hidden and unnoticed. Forgotten and ignored by the religious masses, they thrive in
obscurity and solitude. Their humble lives seem to sweetly sing those neglected lines of
Charles Wesley's hymn, "Keep us little and unknown, Prized and loved by God
alone." William Jay, the English preacher wrote, "Many who are great in the
sight of the Lord are living in cottages and hovels, and are scarcely known..."
James O. Fraser, of the China Inland Mission, was one of those choice servants of God who
was content to labor in almost total obscurity. This gifted man was a preacher, linguist,
musical genius and engineer. He came to the Yunnan Province of China in 1910 with a heart
longing for the souls of the forgotten Lisu tribal people. As Fraser gave himself to the
work of reaching the Lisu, he became somewhat forgotten. For years he lived alone, hidden
behind the great mountain ranges of China's far west. Few people really knew James Fraser.
There was an air of mystery about this talented man who had chosen a primitive pioneers
life over the applause of a English concert hall. Some said that it was absolutely wrong
for Fraser to waste and bury his gifts on the mission field. Yet, Mr. Fraser was greatly
used of God through prayer and loving labor to turn multitudes of Lisu from their slavery
of demon-worship to Jesus Christ. After mastering the difficult Lisu language, he
developed his own "Fraser Script" and translated the Scriptures into the tribal
dialect. By 1916 there was a real move of the Spirit among the Lisu, resulting in sixty
thousand baptisms within only two years. The Lisu church continued to grow and eventually
became one of the largest tribal Christian bodies in the world.
J. O. Fraser's success was not the result of his impressive talents or giant intellect.
Mr. Fraser succeeded where others often fail, because he had learned how to touch God
through prayer. Isolated and hidden away behind the mountains, he was compelled to seek
God for his every need. "To know the real Fraser one needed to hear him in prayer.
Prayer was the very breath of life to him, and in prayer he seemed to slip from time into
eternity." For many of us prayer is not a first choice, but a last resort. Fraser had
learned out of sheer necessity to pray fervently and continuously. "Frequently the
mountainside would witness the piercing, importunate pleadings of this man who counted his
prayer-time not by minutes but by hours." Fraser was not a man who merely said
prayers, he TRAVAILED in prayer. He knew the spiritual necessity of wrestling and
agonizing in prayer. He writes, "How much of our prayer is of the quality we find in
Hannah's bitterness of soul, 'when she prayed unto the Lord?' How many times have we ever
'WEPT SORE' before the Lord? We have prayed much perhaps, but our longings have not been
deep compared with hers. We have spent much time upon our knees, it may be, without our
hearts going out in agony of desire. But real supplication is the child of heartfelt
desire, and cannot prevail without it; a desire not of earth nor issuing from our own
sinful hearts, but wrought into us by God Himself. Oh for such desires. Oh for Hannah's
earnestness, not in myself only but in all who are joining in prayer for these poor
heathen aborigines."
To our shame, some of the most basic spiritual disciplines of our godly forefathers have
become strange and unfamiliar to many of us. One of the most effective weapons of the
praying saints of old was the discipline of, "praying through." J. O. Fraser
both encouraged and practiced this powerful reality. Upon this subject Mr. Fraser writes,
"We must be prepared for serious warfare, 'and having done all, to stand,' we must
fight through, and then stand victorious on the battlefield. Is not this another secret of
many unanswered prayers, that they are not fought through? If the result is not seen as
soon as expected, Christians are apt to lose heart, and if it is still longer delayed, to
abandon it altogether. You know the name they give to places in England when the building
(or whatever it is) is abandoned, when only half of it is completed - So and so's 'Folly'.
I wonder whether some of our prayers do not deserve the same stigma. Luke 14: 28-30
applies to prayers as well as towers. We must count the cost before praying the prayer of
faith. We must be willing to pay the price. We must mean business. We must set ourselves
to 'see things through' (Eph. 6:18, 'In all perseverance')." Wrestling with demonic
spirits is a daily reality of spiritual survival. Spiritual warfare is not learned in our
leisure time, but is thrust upon us as we begin to threaten the kingdom of darkness. In
1913-1914, James Fraser went through a time of deep spiritual oppression that forced him
to deal with issues many would rather ignore. As Fraser reached out to the spiritually
blinded Lisu, he became the object of an intense demonic attack. He found himself slipping
into a paralyzing depression and despair. He soon began to question even the very
foundations of his faith in God. "Deeply were the foundations shaken in those days
and nights of conflict, until Fraser realized that behind it all were 'powers of
darkness', seeking to overwhelm him. He had dared to invade Satan's kingdom, undisputed
for ages. At first, vengeance had fallen on the Lisu inquirers, an easy prey. Now, he was
himself attacked, and it was war to the death, spiritually."
Fraser was greatly helped in this spiritual struggle by the timely arrival of a magazine
produced by Jessie Penn-Lewis called The Overcomer. "What it showed me," Fraser
writes, "was that deliverance from the power of the evil one comes through definite
resistance on the ground of The Cross. I am an engineer and believe in things working. I
want to see them work. I had found that much of the spiritual teaching one hears does not
seem to work. My apprehension at any rate of other aspects of truth had broken down. The
passive side of leaving everything to the Lord Jesus as our life, while blessedly true,
was not all that was needed just then. Definite resistance on the ground of The Cross was
what brought me light. For I found that it worked. I felt like a man perishing of thirst,
to whom some beautiful, clear, cold water had begun to flow. People will tell you, after a
helpful meeting perhaps, that such and such a truth is the secret of victory. No: we need
different truth at different times. 'Look to the Lord,' some will say. 'Resist the devil,'
is also Scripture (James 4:7) and I found it worked! That cloud of depression dispersed. I
found that I could have victory in the spiritual realm whenever I wanted it. The Lord
Himself resisted the devil vocally: 'Get thee behind me, Satan!' I, in humble dependence
on Him, did the same. I talked to Satan at that time, using the promises of Scripture as
weapons. And they worked. Right then, the terrible oppression began to pass away."
Toward the end of James Fraser's life, he found himself in another kind of spiritual
conflict. He began to feel increasingly dissatisfied with what many considered successful
ministry. He recognized like never before the tremendous need for true revival on the
field and at home. His heart now longed for a powerful visitation of the glory of God.
When God creates a fresh desire within us, we can always be confident that He is getting
ready to move. While on furlough, Fraser's longings were confirmed through the opportunity
to hear the missionary-revivalist Jonathan Goforth. Mrs. J. O. Fraser describes this
important event in Fraser's life. "As the old man of God stood up to preach, an
overwhelming sense of the presence of God filled the room, and as he spoke we were all but
melted under the power of his words, for Goforth had been endued with a divine unction
from God Himself and it was unmistakable. Fraser had heard before of the great revivals
Goforth had witnessed in his work in China, but to hear him speak was unforgettable and
left a deep burden on his soul. The big question on his mind was whether we were working
with the power God had promised us."
Again Mrs. Fraser writes of her husband's new burden, "He saw the teeming millions of
unreached Chinese and the tiny handful of missionaries, but great as was the need for more
missionaries there was an even greater need, that those of us who were out there should be
endued with far greater power. Somehow Fraser was burdened because the Church both at home
and abroad seemed to be making so little real impact on the world. He spent hours in
prayer wondering whether we need to turn again to the apostles for our examples and
Pentecost for our power." It was now the early 1930's, and Fraser was not alone in
his desire for revival. The cry for revival was now rising from the hearts of many
missionaries and Chinese Christians alike. Suddenly God broke forth, raising up His hidden
vessels to usher in a powerful revival in northern China. It was here Fraser found some
kindred spirits in the revival laborers, Andrew Gih and John Sung of the Bethel Band. They
enjoyed powerful times of prayer together that often lasted into the early hours of the
morning. Mr. Fraser described this time as his happiest experience in China. These were
the glory days of the Shantung revival with Bertha Smith and Marie Monsen. Anna
Christiansen of C. I. M. and Watchmen Nee of "The Little Flock" were also
reaping revival fruit at this time. Regardless who the minister was, the message was
essentially the same: the exposing of secret sin, a call to thorough repentance, the need
for restitution and the hope of total victory through the Blood and the power of the Holy
Spirit.
"The Kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and the VIOLENT take it by force."
Matthew 11:12. James Fraser's life was a living example of this verse. Like Fraser, we
must cloth ourselves in humility as we run to wage war in the fight of faith. Our prayers
must go beyond mere sentimental and religious rhetoric. What we need is the violent groans
and cries of travailing prayer! We must learn how to be violent in prayer with both Satan
and our own sinful PRIDE. King Jesus is searching for a people who will be subject to Him
in all holiness and humility, and yet stand in bold faith against the powers of darkness.
(James 4:7). Humility apart from courageous faith becomes despair, and faith apart from
broken humility becomes presumption. True revival VICTORY will finally come when the poor
in spirit learn how to walk in the authority and power of the Spirit.
References Used:
Behind The Ranges: Fraser of Lisuland by
Mrs. Howard Taylor
Mountain Rain by Ellen Fraser Crossman
A Memoir of J. O. Fraser by Mrs. J. O. Fraser
God Reigns In China by Leslie
Lyall
From: A Revival Source
Center
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