Both in public and in private worship, it is our privilege to bow on our knees before the Lord when we offer our petitions to Him. Jesus, our example, “kneeled down, and prayed.”Luke 22:41. Of His disciples it is recorded that they, too, “kneeled down, and prayed.”Acts 9:40, 20:36, 21:5. Paul declared, “I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.”Ephesians 3:14, 15. In confessing before God the sins of Israel, Ezra “knelt.”Ezra 9:5. Daniel “kneeled upon his knees three times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his God.”Daniel 6:10.
(MYP 251.1)
True reverence for God is inspired by a sense of His infinite greatness and a realization of His presence. With this sense of the Unseen, every heart should be deeply impressed. The hour and place of prayer are sacred, because God is there; and as reverence is manifested in attitude and demeanor, the feeling that inspires it will be deepened. “Holy and reverend is His name,”(Psalm 111:9) the psalmist declares. Angels, when they speak that name, veil their faces. With what reverence, then, should we, who are fallen and sinful, take it upon our lips!
(MYP 251.2)
Well would it be for old and young to ponder those words of Scripture that show how the place marked by God’s special presence should be regarded. “Put off thy shoes from off thy feet,” He commanded Moses at the burning bush, “for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground.”Exodus 3:5. Jacob, after beholding the vision of the angels, exclaimed, “The Lord is in this place; and I knew it not....”(Genesis 28:16)—Gospel Workers, 178, 179.
(MYP 251.3)