Jerry Steingard
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God's presence intensified (fullness)
God's purposes accelerated (fulfilment)
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Winkie Pratney (1994:8,9) suggests we try this little survey
with Christians: How many of you know we need a revival? How many
of you want a revival? How many of you know what a revival is?
How many of you have ever experienced a true revival?
Most would raise their hands to the first two questions. In fact,
according to George Gallup, Jr., in the eighties, 80% of U.S.A.
wanted a revival - including the lost! But very few would have
an idea as to what a genuine revival really is, let alone ever
experienced one.
It is imperative at this time in history that we get a better
handle on this thing called revival. Hopefully this paper (used
as seminar notes on the subject) can be of some help in this need
for understanding by responding to the following six questions:
1. What is revival?
2. Why is revival needed?
3. When has revival occurred before?
4. Should we expect to see revival again soon?
5. What hinders revival?
6. How can we promote revival?
1. What is revival?
The term revival is not technically found in the Bible. Neither
is Trinity for that matter, yet both concepts are found throughout
the Bible.
Various forms of the verb revive are frequently used as well as
such words as restore, renew, awaken, and refresh, for example:
Psalm 85:6 - 'Will you not revive us again that your people may
rejoice in you' (prayer request).
Isaiah 57:15 - 'I revive the spirit of the humble and revive the
heart of the contrite' (promise of God).
The theme of revival is described at times in such terms as an
outpouring of the Spirit (like rain or fire falling or wind blowing),
the renewing of God's mighty deeds (Habakkuk 3:2), the glory of
the Lord returning to his temple (Malachi 3:1), God healing the
land (2 Chronicles 7:14) and the time of God's visitation with
his manifest presence (Micah 7:4; Luke 19:44).
(a) Definitions and descriptions of revival
* To revive is 'to live again' (1 Kings 17:22; 2 Kings 13:21).
* 'When God comes down [Isaiah 64:1,2], God's Word comes home
[Nehemiah 8-9; Acts 2:37], God's purity comes through, God's people
come alive [Acts 2, overflow of joy and vitality], and outsiders
come in' [Acts 2:41, 47; 1 Corinthians 14:25 'God is really among
you'] (J. I. Packer, Keep in Step with the Spirit, 1984:244-245;
Scriptures added).
* 'The inrush of the Spirit into a body that threatens to become
a corpse' (D. M. Panton, cited in The Day of Thy Power, Arthur
Wallis 1956:46).
* 'Revival is man retiring into the background because God has
taken the field. It is the Lord making bare his holy arm and working
in extraordinary power on saint and sinner' (Wallis 1956:20).
* 'Revival is divine military strategy; first to counteract spiritual
decline, and then to create spiritual momentum' (Wallis 1956:45).
* 'Revival is like a rocket ship that gets us back up into the
orbit of New Testament Christianity' (Charles Simpson, sermon
27 May 1994).
* God's kingly presence intensified (fullness), God's kingdom
purposes accelerated (fulfillment); (based on David Bryant, Concerts
of Prayer, 1984:72-91, 169).
(b) Characteristics of revival
“It is a more comprehensive unveiling of King Jesus to His
church, with dramatic repercussions. Shaken from our apathy and
fears, we are launched afresh into Kingdom work on all fronts…We’re
waking up to all Christ wants to be for his church. It’s
like the beginning of a brand new day” (Bryant, Hope at
Hand, p 52).
“This revelation of the King and his manifest presence and
power restored once more among his subjects is delightfully portrayed
by C. S. Lewis in his children’s books, The Chronicles of
Narnia. The Lion known as Aslan has been absent from his kingdom.
The White Witch has made Narnia a place where “it is always
winter but never Christmas”. With rumours surfacing that
Aslan is on the move in the land, Mr. Beaver recites this prophecy:
“Wrong will be right, when Aslan comes in sight, At the
sound of his roar, sorrows will be no more, And when he bares
his teeth, winter meets its death, And when he shakes his mane,
we shall have spring again” (The Lion, The Witch, and The
Wardrobe, p. 74,5 cited in Hope at Hand, p 77).
Revival is usually comprised of two stages: internal revival or
'renewal' (the church is set on fire and prodigals begin to come
home) followed by external revival (conversion of those outside
on a mass scale).
'True revival is marked by widespread repentance both within the
church and among unbelievers' (John Wimber, Equipping the Saints
magazine, Fall,1994:4).
This repentance is the result of God coming in power, revealing
his holiness and our sinfulness. One comes into the agonising
grip of a holy God and is brought under awesome conviction. This
manifested presence of God creates a divine 'radiation zone'.
Here are two examples:
During the 1859 revival, no town in Ulster was more deeply stirred
than Coleraine. A schoolboy in class became so troubled about
his soul that the schoolmaster sent him home. An older boy, a
Christian, went with him and before they had gone far, led him
to Christ. Returning at once to school, this new convert testified
to his teacher: 'Oh, I am so happy! I have the Lord Jesus in my
heart.' These artless words had an astonishing effect; boy after
boy rose and silently left the room. Going outside the teacher
found these boys all on their knees, ranged along the wall of
the playground. Very soon their silent prayer became a bitter
cry; it was heard by another class inside and pierced their hearts.
They fell on their knees, and their cry for mercy was heard in
turn by a girls' class above. In a few moments, the whole school
was on their knees! Neighbours and passers-by came flocking in
and all as they crossed the threshold came under the same convicting
power. 'Every room was filled with men, women, and children seeking
God' ...
During the same 1859 revival in America, ships entered a definite
zone of heavenly influence as they drew near port. Ship after
ship arrived with the same talk of sudden conviction and conversion.
A captain and an entire crew of thirty men found Christ at sea
and arrived at port rejoicing. This overwhelming sense of God
bringing deep conviction of sin is perhaps the outstanding feature
of true revival. Its manifestation is not always the same; to
cleansed hearts it is heaven; to convicted hearts it is hell (Winkie
Pratney 1994:24-25).
2. Why is revival needed?
Throughout biblical history and church history the hearts of God's
people perpetually cool off and harden towards him, creating the
need for revival. Nehemiah 9:25-28 (see also Judges 2:6-16 &
Chapters 3,4 etc) describes this cycle or pattern of spiritual
decline and renewal which involves six stages (Richard Lovelace,
Dynamics of Spiritual Life, 1979:62-80):
1. God's people are alive and in love with him.
2. Spiritual decline - hearts are subtly cooling off.
3. Hearts of stone.
4. The Lord disciplines those he loves (for example, Israelites
were taken into exile).
5. Cry for mercy - intercession and repentance.
6. God pours out his Spirit and revives his people.
Where in this cycle is the church in this country today?
3. When has Revival occurred before? (snapshots of the past)
The Bible records at least a dozen revivals within its history
(Quest For Renewal, Walter C. Kaiser Jr., 1986:12-13) and many
movements of renewal and revival took place prior to and including
the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century and the Puritan
and Pietist movements of the 17th century. Here I will focus upon
the major revivals of Europe and North America of the last 250
years.
Note that the intensity of a revival may last only a few years,
but the effects are felt in the church and society for decades
to come. The First Awakening (1727-80)
1727-80 (approximate dates) in Germany: Count Zinzendorf and the
Moravians, with unity, prayer (their 24 hour prayer vigil lasted
over 100 years!), and missions. Their motto was 'To win for the
Lamb that was slain the reward of his suffering.'
1734-60 in North America's 13 colonies: Jonathan Edwards and George
Whitefield, with prayer and preaching.
1740-80 in Great Britain: John and Charles Wesley and George Whitefield
with outdoor preaching and class meetings (home cells).
Revival brought many social reforms including the abolition of
slavery in Great Britain. Some historians believe this revival
saved England from a bloody revolution like the one in France.
Then came a gradual spiritual slide. By 1794 moral conditions
had reached their worst. For example, John Marshall, Chief Justice
of the U. S. Supreme Court, a concerned believer, wrote his assessment
to Methodist Bishop Madison of Virginia stating, 'The church is
too far gone to ever be redeemed'. The famous agnostic Voltaire
declared, 'Christianity will be forgotten in 30 years'. Later
Voltaire's home became the headquarters for the Geneva Bible Society
(Mary Stewart Relfe, Cure of All Ills, 1988:26).
The Second Awakening (1792-1842)
1792 in England: William Carey, 'Father of the modern missionary
movement' took as his motto, 'Expect great things from God, attempt
great things for God.'
By about 1800 revival fires were burning once again in the U.
S. A. In the East, Timothy Dwight was used in the college setting.
On the Western frontier, James McGready, Barton Stone and Peter
Cartwright gave leadership.
In 1821 Charles Finney, a lawyer, was converted and became an
evangelist and social reformer. This revival was characterized
by evangelistic camp meetings, social reforms and missions. Finney's
ministry overlapped the second and third awakenings.
The Third Awakening (1857-59)
1857 in North America: Called 'the Prayer Revival' it began when
Dr Walter and Phoebe Palmer from New York City went to Hamilton,
Ontario in early October. Revival broke out, then went south of
the border.
Jeremiah Lamphier, a business man, began noon prayer meetings
in New York City in September 1857. Within 6 months, up to 10,000
business men were praying daily for revival.
J. Edwin Orr states that 'revival went up the Hudson and down
the Mohawk. The Baptists had so many people to baptise they could
not get them in the churches. They went down to the river, cut
a square hole in the ice and baptised them. When Baptists do that,
they really are on fire!' (Relfe 1988:48). The revival spread
from New York to Philadelphia and throughout the country. The
emphasis was on prayer.
Revival spread to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland as well.
The fruit of this revival was 2 million converts (1 million within
the church, 1 million from without) and in the following years
slavery was abolished, and there were reforms in prisons, labour,
education, and medical care.
Fourth Awakening (1904-7)
1904-5 in Wales: Youth and children featured in the Welsh revival.
The key leader was Evan Roberts, aged 26 (and his brother Dan,
aged 20, and his sister Mary, aged 16). Leaders came from around
the world and were humbled to see how God used teens and children.
Evan and others were not eloquent preachers but good followers
of the Holy Spirit.
Their motto was 'Bend the church and save the world'. Evan Roberts'
vision of seeing 100,000 converted in Wales was fulfilled in less
than one year. People got converted just reading about the revival
in the newspapers!
Crime dropped off to the point where many courtrooms and jails
were empty and judges and police had very little to do. Horses
in the coal mines were accustomed to obeying commands that involved
yelling and cursing. Since the vast majority of miners were converted,
the horses were confused with commands that were humane and wholesome,
so the horses needed retraining!
Prior to the revival Wales was in a frenzy over their favourite
sport, soccer. With the revival, the stadiums stood empty. No-one
preached against soccer. The players and fans had simply become
so captivated with the Lord that they were no longer interested
in the game (Rick Joyner, The World Aflame, 1993:51).
The fire spread throughout Great Britain, Scandinavia, Europe,
Africa, India, Korea, as well as the U.S.A. The pastors of Atlantic
City, New Jersey, reported only 50 adults not converted in a population
of 50,000! The First Baptist Church in Paducoh, Kentucky, had
1,000 converts in two months and the elderly pastor, Dr J. J.
Cheek, died of exhaustion (Nate Krupp, The Church Triumphant,
1988:22).
In California, Bartleman, Seymore, and Smale were impacted by
the reports and booklets on the revival in Wales in 1905 as well
as from letters of encouragement from Evan Roberts. In April of
1906 the Azusa Street Revival erupted, under the leadership of
William Seymour, a one-eyed black man. Daily meetings ran for
about three years in a run-down “barn” on Azusa Street
(which means “blessed miracle”) in the slums of Los
Angeles. This grew into the great Pentecostal Revival that saw
5 million converts from 1905-7 and continues to impact millions
of lives to this day.
Twentieth century
The twentieth century has been called by some 'The Century of
the Holy Spirit'. Although we have not witnessed a major revival
since the turn of the century, since 1947 God has been bringing
smaller-scaled revivals and renewal movements such as:
1947-53 - the Latter Rain movement in western Canada and the U.S.A.
as well as the Healing Revival
1949 - Hebrides Islands, Scotland.
Here is a wonderful example of how a revival causes a geographical
area to become a divine 'radiation zone' of conviction and repentance.
Duncan Campbell, en evangelist, came to the Island of Lewis in
the Hebrides Islands. On the first night of his arrival, he preached
in a church building. When he left the building at 11 p.m. he
found 600 gathered outside, 100 from the nearby dance hall, the
other 500 who had been awakened, got out of bed, and felt compelled
to walk to this place. Campbell preached the gospel to them till
4 a.m., at which time he was requested to come to the police station
where 400 people were gathered, baffled as to why they were there.
On his way to the station he came across other people along the
road who were crying out to God for mercy! Revival continued for
3 years with 75% of the converts coming to Jesus outside of church
buildings (Nate Krupp 1988:26-7).
The 1960s and 1970s saw the emergence of the charismatic renewal
movement, including the Jesus Movement of the early 1970s.
The 1980s and 1990s saw the 'Third Wave' movement' or the 'signs
and wonders' movement and the 'prophetic' movement. Peter Wagner
describes three waves of the Holy Spirit in this century, each
continuing to be used by God: the Pentecostal movement, the charismatic
movement (largely in the Catholic Church and mainline Protestant
churches), and the 'Third Wave' movement which is primarily impacting
the evangelical churches.
On January 20, 1994, a powerful outpouring of the Holy Spirit
broke out in Canada at the Toronto Airport Vineyard Church (later
called Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship), lead by John and
Carol Arnott, when Randy Clark of St. Louis, came for what was
to be only four days of meetings. This renewal/revival has spread
throughout the world with many other revival hot spots (throughout
USA, England, etc) bringing refreshing, joy, conversions, healings
of body, heart, and relationships, as well as renewed boldness
and passion for Jesus and his Kingdom.
Father’s Day, 1995, Pensacola, Florida. with the Brownsville
Assembly with evangelist Steve Hill & pastor John Kilpatrick
4. Should we expect to see revival again soon?
YES!
Many 'third world' countries in Africa, and Central and South
America, as well as China and Korea, have been experiencing revival
fires for a number of years.
Why should we expect to see revival again soon?
a. Biblical texts that create such expectation include:
Numbers 14:21- “Surely as I live, all the earth will be
filled with the glory of the Lord”
Habakkuk 2:14 - 'for the earth will be filled with the knowledge
of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.' (Reinhard
Bonnke, evangelist in Africa, says, 'not one spot stays dry at
the bottom of the sea.')
Joel 2:23 - 'He sends you abundant showers, both autumn (early)
and spring (latter) rains.' Early rains soften the ground, making
it suitable for ploughing and sowing. With the approach of harvest,
heavy rain (latter) returns to swell and mature grain and fruit
in preparation for the time of reaping. Pentecost marked the beginning
of former rains. After the Reformation, outpourings became more
distinct and significant. Latter rain is in preparation for the
day of harvest.
Joel 2:28, 31 - 'I will pour out my Spirit on all people ... before
the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord.'
Haggai 2:6-9 – “The glory of this present house will
be greater than the glory of the former house”
Acts 2 - Pentecost, a partial fulfillment of Joel.
Acts 3:19,20 - 'repent, turn to God… so that times of refreshing
may come from the Lord and that he may send the Christ…”
(promise of revival before Christ returns).
John 14:12 - 'anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been
doing. He will do even greater things than these' (miraculous
works). Not fulfilled yet!
John 17 - In his priestly prayer, Jesus prays for Christian unity.
This prayer has not been fulfilled yet. Of all the prayers the
Father answers, would not his Son's be answered? Rick Joyner says,
' Jesus is coming back for a bride, not a harem.'
Romans 11- Paul is prophesying a far-reaching revival that will
usher in the conversion of the Jews.
Ephesians 5:26,27 - Jesus is preparing the bride to be presented
to himself as pure, holy, radiant and passionate (John 17:26-
“in order that the love you (Father) have for me may be
in them”)
b. Based on previous patterns, revival usually occurs in a day
of deep moral and spiritual bankruptcy. 'Before a great awakening,
there must come a rude awakening' (Mario Murillo, Critical Mass,
1985:11). The worst of times, in other words, precipitates the
best of times. Who could deny the desperate need for a mighty
revival in our day? Global trends of famine, earthquakes, poverty,
pollution, war, crime, abortion, drug abuse, massive economic
instability, and such like, stare us in the face. Billy Graham
declares: “I See storms of apocalyptic proportions on the
horizon. God is beginning to get our attention”. Nate Krupp
(1988:34) argues that 'we are at a point in history where it is
either world revival or world destruction.'
c. Church historians, theologians and church leaders are predicting
it. Many leaders have discerned that God is up to something big!
He's preparing new wineskins for the new wine, a fireplace for
the fire, and barns for the harvest. Many even say that previous
revivals are but a rehearsal for the big ones to come. 'Our study
of awakening movements only turns up what appear to be rehearsals
for some final revelation of the full splendour of God's kingdom...
It is hard to believe that God will not grant the church some
greater experience of wholeness and vitality than has yet appeared
in the stumbling record of her history' (Lovelace 1979:425).
d. Many prophets of our day in unison are expecting it in the
1990s and beyond. These include Mike Bickle, Paul Cain, Rick Joyner,
Bob Jones, and John Paul Jackson.
e. The growing emphasis on prayer. Prayer mobilization today is
unprecedented in history. Examples include men's prayer movements
such as Promise Keepers, women's intercessory groups, youth in
schools, March for Jesus, '10-40 Window' prayer project, city
wide pastors' prayer fellowships, neighbourhood prayer walking,
all night watches, houses of prayer and so on. According to David
Barrett, leading demographer of Christianity worldwide, 170 million
Christians are regularly praying for revival and world evangelization.
Of this number, 20 million believe that praying and interceding
to this end is their primary calling! Peter Wagner has said “the
current prayer movement around the world is totally out of control!”
History demonstrates that revival is always preceded by a groundswell
of prayer.
Combine this prayer momentum with the fact of about two or three
hundred thousand Christians are martyred each year ( “the
blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church” Tertulliun),
“then the Holy Spirit of God must be sowing for a massive
harvest!” (David Bryant, Hope at Hand, pp31, 123)
f. It's God's heart to bring revival. He longs to renew, restore,
awaken us, and redeem humanity much more than we want him to.
God is committed to renew his Bride and see the nations come to
himself. 'Ask of me and I will make the nations your inheritance'
(Psalm 2:8).
5. What hinders Revival?
( I am indebted to Dr. John White for his book, When the Spirit
Comes With Power, and will quote him often in this section)
“From a safe distance of several hundred years or several
thousand miles, revival clearly looks invigorating. What could
be more glamorous than a mighty work of God in our midst, renewing
thousands and converting tens of thousands… But if we find
ourselves in the midst of revival, rather than being invigorated,
we may be filled with skepticism, disgust, anger, or even fear...
The irony of revivals is that they are so longed for in times
of barrenness, but they are commonly opposed and feared when they
arrive. ... The hostility in never to the idea of revival, which
is ardently prayed for, but to God's answer to our prayers and
the unexpected form it may take (White 1988:34, 39).
For example: fear of Pentecostalism at the turn of the century
produced many verbal abuses. “One leader called Pentecostals
the “rulers of spiritual Sodom”, their tongues “this
Satanic gibberish” and their services “the climax
of demonworship”…Another leader referred to Pentecostals
as “the last vomit of Satan” (White, pp. 40, 41).
Why does revival produce all this opposition?
'We grow angry when we are scared. We fear what we cannot understand'
(White 1988:41).
a. Fear of change and losing control
We are creatures of habit (as in nostalgia, traditionalism); changes
unsettle us. We fear the unknown, the unfamiliar, and the unpredictable.
“We carry with us an affinity toward the status quo (instead
of the Kingdom of God)…our predisposition is not to move
out. Rather it is to retreat and “hold the fort” til
Jesus comes (David Bryant, Hope at Hand, p. 109).
b. Fear of emotions
“We should be scared of emotionalism, the artificial manipulation
of emotion, but emotion itself comes from seeing, from understanding.
When the Holy Spirit awakens people, he seems to cause them to
perceive truth more vividly ... people see their sin as stinking
cancer that will kill them and see the mercy of the Saviour with
the eyes of those who have been snatched from a horrible death”
(White 1988:51).
Jonathan Edwards called emotions 'holy affections' and said they
are essential for spiritual life. A hard heart (heart of stone)
is an unaffected heart, a heart not moved by divine truth and
revelation.
“Since when is the Spirit’s work limited to our minds
and our wills but not our hearts? Why is it that so many of us
evangelicals are so afraid of feelings? What has happened to us?
Why must our theology and the expression of our faith be devoid
of emotion? (Charles Swindoll, Flying Closer to the Flame, p.
154). “There should be a lot of room in our theology for
feelings of loss and tears, just as there is room for lighthearted,
joyous feelings and great laughter. The Spirit of God prompts
both. I have been concerned for years that too many so-called
mature evangelical Christians have little room in their lives
for either? (Swindoll, p. 157). “Church gatherings that
restrain Spirit-led emotions can become dull and routine, perfunctory,
lacking excitement, encouragement and enlightenment. God gave
you a mind, use it to know Him better…God gave you a will,
use it to obey Him…And God gave you emotions. Don’t
be afraid of them. Let them out. Allow your heart to show through.
Exercise your emotions! If we refuse to open up, to allow the
full prism of His love and truth to shine through our lives, we
will miss much of the colour life has to offer” (Swindoll,
p. 173).
Ezra 3:13 states “No-one could distinguish the sound of
the shouts of joy from the sound of weeping, because the people
made so much noise” (NIV) Both joy and tears were simultaneously
and freely displayed.
c. Fear of bizarre behaviour
Examples of unusual behaviour in revivals include shaking, jerking,
falling, weeping, screaming, laughing, prophesying and being 'drunk
in the Spirit'.
Three questions should be asked:
i. Has it happened among the people of God before (the biblical
and historical precedence)?
ii. What is the fruit of it?
iii. How do we explain these phenomena?
i. Has it happened before?
Yes, these phenomena of bizarre behaviour have happened among
God's people during heightened spiritual activity. In his book,
Revival, Martyn Lloyd-Jones points out that “it comes nearer
to being the rule in revival that phenomena begin to manifest
themselves - phenomena such as these ... people are in agony of
soul and groaning ... sometimes people are so convicted and feel
the power of the Spirit to such an extent that they faint and
fall to the ground. Sometimes there are even convulsions, physical
convulsions. And sometimes people seem to fall into a state of
unconsciousness, into a kind of trance, and many remain like that
for hours (Revival, 1987:110-111).
There are also certain mental phenomena... You will find this
phenomena of prophecy, this ability to foretell the future, frequently
present (1987:135).
Martyn Lloyd-Jones goes onto say that 'these phenomena are not
essential to revival ... yet it is true to say that, on the whole,
they do tend to be present when there is a revival (1987:134).
John White's research has brought him to the same conclusion.
biblical examples: (note: these are descriptive, not prescriptive
texts)
falling down (whether voluntary or involuntary) or shaking:
1. 1 Samuel 10:11 - Saul was in a trance, prophesying when the
Spirit came upon him (also 1 Samuel 19:23-24).
2. 2 Chronicles 5:13-14 - The glory of the Lord filled the temple
so the priests were unable to stand to minister.
3. Ezekiel 1:28; 3:23; 43:4; 44:4 - Ezekiel fell face down before
the glory of the Lord.
4. Daniel 8:17-18 - Daniel collapsed and sank into a deep sleep
during a vision and an angelic visitation (also Daniel 10:7-11
- no strength left; on the ground trembling).
5. Matthew 17:6; Luke 9:32 - On the Mount of Transfiguration the
disciples fell face down to the ground, but also became heavy
with sleep.
6. John 18:6 - When the soldiers came to arrest Jesus they fell
to the ground when Jesus said, "I am he".
7. Matthew 28:4 - On the morning of Jesus' resurrection the guards
at the tomb 'shook and became like dead men'.
8. Acts 2 - At the Day of Pentecost the place shook, they spoke
in strange tongues, and they behaved like being drunk. Peter responded
(Acts 2:15) that 'they are not drunk as you suppose'. Paul makes
a comparison between being drunk with wine and being filled with
the Spirit (Ephesians 5:18).
9. Acts 9 - Saul on the road to Damascus fell to the ground, blinded
by the glory. Later, in a trance-like condition he had a vision
(2 Corinthians 12).
10. Revelation 1:17 - The apostle John said, 'When I saw him I
fell at his feet as though dead.'
Joy, laughter:
Ps. 16:11 “You will fill me with joy in your presence”
NIV Ps. 126:2 “Our mouths were filled with laughter, our
tongues with songs of joy” Isa 51:11 “gladness and
joy will overtake them” (what would that look and sound
like?) Acts 13:52 “filled with joy and with the Holy Spirit”
At the Day of Pentecost, the outpouring of the Spirit created
quite a commotion and drew a crowd. Some jokingly concluded that
they were drunk. Although not explicitly stated, there is a reasonable
inference that the phenomenon of drunkenness may have been taking
place. Peter describes God having poured out “what you see
and hear” (Acts 2:33) “There was something to be seen
as well as heard” (Derek Morphew, Renewal Apologetics article,
p. 12).
Not only in Scripture do we find that frail human bodies are affected
by the manifest presence of God, but most revivals in history
have had physical and emotional manifestations of the Holy Spirit.
Some examples:
Jonathan Edwards, the great leader of the First Awakening of the
1730s and 1740s in New England wrote to a friend saying, 'many
of the young people and children appeared to be overcome with
a sense of the greatness and glory of divine things ... and many
others at the same time were overcome with distress about their
sinful and miserable state and condition; so that the whole room
was full of nothing but outcries, faintings and such like. ...
many were overpowered and continued there for some hours (Stacy
1842:546 in DeArteaga 1992:39-40).
His wife, Sarah Edwards, documented her experiences of joy and
drunkenness in the Spirit for 17 consecutive days, beginning January
19, 1742. She was “very aware of His nearness to me and
my dearness to Him” (Guy Chevreau, Catch The Fire, pp. 75-85)..
John Wesley and George Whitefield spoke of the strange physical
phenomena that took place in their meetings in England as well.
Wesley describes in his Journal:
Monday, Jan. 1, 1739 - Mr Hall, Kinchin, Ingham, Whitfield, Lane,
with about sixty of our brethren. About three in the morning,
as we were continuing instant in prayer, the power of God came
mightily upon us, insomuch that many cried out for exceeding joy,
and many fell to the ground. As soon as we were recovered a little
from that awe and amazement at the presence of his Majesty, we
broke out with one voice, 'We praise Thee, O God; we acknowledge
Thee to be the Lord' (Francis MacNutt, Overcome by the Spirit,
1990:98).
Following the two events of John Wesley's Aldersgate experience,
May 24, 1738, and this January 1, 1739 encounter, the supernatural
element in his ministry became more pronounced. For fourteen years
it was hardly there; for the next fifty it was (MacNutt 1990:98).
MacNutt (1990: 104) tells us that early in George Whitefield's
career, when he was working with Wesley in England and people
started to fall, Whitefield decided to register a protest by letter:
'I cannot think it right in you to give so much encouragement
to these convulsions which people have been thrown into in your
ministry.' Ironically enough, when Whitefield came to confront
Wesley in person he found himself reprimanded by reality, for
when he, Whitefield, was preaching the next day, 'four persons
sunk down close to him, almost in the same moment. One of them
lay without sense or motion. A second trembled exceedingly. The
third has strong convulsions all over his body, but made no noise,
unless by groans. The fourth, equally convulsed, called upon God,
with strong cries and tears. From this time,' Wesley writes, 'I
trust we shall all suffer God to carry on his own work in the
way that pleaseth him.' (Wesley’s Journal, July 7, 1739).
'By the time he journeyed to America, Whitefield's preaching was
ordinarily accompanied by people toppling over: Some were struck
pale as death, others were wringing their hands, others lying
on the ground, other sinking into the arms of their friends' (Dallimore,
George Whitfield, 1980:392-3, cited in MacNutt 1990:104).
Bishop Francis Ashbury, appointed by Wesley in 1771 as a missionary
to the colonies, was a very disciplined man who insisted on meetings
being conducted in a proper fashion, yet his meetings were characterised
by shouting, falling, crying, and the 'jerks' (MacNutt 1990:107).
At the Cane Ridge camp meetings of 1801, which featured mostly
Presbyterian preachers, one observer reported that
“The noise was like a roar of Niagara. The vast sea of human
beings seemed to be agitated as if by a storm... Some of the people
were singing, others praying, some crying for mercy in the most
piteous accents... While witnessing these scenes, a peculiarly-strange
sensation, such as I had never felt before, came over me. My heart
beat tumultuously, my knees trembled, my lip quivered, and I felt
as though I must fall to the ground... Soon after, I left and
went into the woods, and there I strove to rally and man up my
courage...
After some time I returned... At one time I saw at least five
hundred, swept down in a moment as if a battery of a thousand
guns had been opened upon them, and then immediately followed
shrieks and shouts that rent the very heavens (Charles Johnson,
The Frontier Camp Meeting, 1955:64-5; cited in MacNutt 1990:109).
Peter Cartwright, one of the prominent camp meeting evangelists
in the Kentucky area, spoke of the phenomena of the 'jerks': '...
no matter whether they were saints or sinners, they would be taken
under a warm song or sermon and seized with a convulsive jerking
all over, which they could not by any possibility avoid, and the
more they resisted the more they jerked... The first jerk or so,
you would see their fine bonnets, caps and combs fly; and so sudden
would be the jerking of the head that their loose hair would crack
almost as loud as a wagoner's whip' (Cartwright Autobiography
of Peter Cartwright, pp.17-18).
Charles Finney, at the village schoolhouse near Antwerp, New York,
describes the phenomena of falling under the awesome power of
God's presence and conviction: 'An awful solemnity seemed to settle
upon the people; the congregation began to fall from their seats
in every direction and cry for mercy. If I had a sword in each
hand, I could not have cut them down as fast as they fell. I was
obliged to stop preaching' (cited in Pratney 1994:24).
In the early days of the Salvation Army, many experienced what
they called the “glory fits”.
One report described the Azusa Street revival resembling “a
forest of fallen trees”. Parham, Seymour’s previous
mentor came to visit Azusa and was horrified with the mixing of
the races and the allowance for the strange manifestations (Pratney,
p. 130).
Oh, and don’t forget the Quakers and Shakers. Where do you
think they got their nicknames?
Yes, cases of physical phenomena have been observed throughout
the ages during most spiritual awakenings.
ii. What is the fruit of all this?
Jonathan Edwards wrote a treatise in 1741 called The Distinguishing
Marks of a Work of the Spirit of God. Edwards asked his readers
to assess the awakening by looking past the enthusiastic behaviour
and seeing the ultimate spiritual fruit. He argued that the authenticity
of God's hand in the revival was demonstrated by five 'sure, distinguishing,
Scripture evidences'. It
1. raises the esteem of Jesus in the community;
2. works against the kingdom of Satan;
3. stimulates a greater regard for the Holy Scriptures;
4. is marked by a spirit of truth;
5. manifests a renewed love for God and people (Edwards 1971,
1984:109-115).
In his concluding section, Edwards exhorted his readers not to
oppose the Spirit of God in the revival for this is to commit
the unpardonable sin of Matthew 12:22-32. Edwards' warning went
unheeded by and large. By 1742 a majority of the New England clergy
had come to the conclusion that the Great Awakening was merely
an epidemic of emotionalism and what was needed was a return to
sound theology. Rev. Charles Chauncey of Boston became the brilliant
champion against the revival. He effectively articulated all the
doubts, fears and criticisms of the revival. His books became
best sellers and ensured the defeat of the Awakening. 'When Whitefield
arrived in 1744 practically all the pulpits were closed to him,
and the wind had gone out of the Awakening' (DeArteaga 1992:52).
It's worth noting the fruit at the end of the lives of these two
prominent figures, Edwards and Chauncey. In 1757, Edwards became
president of Princeton, but when he arrived in the area there
was a threat of a smallpox outbreak. To set an example, he was
quick to volunteer to take the experimental vaccine. He became
ill and died. Chauncey became one of the founding theologians
of Unitarianism which discarded the Trinity and advocated universal
salvation. Chauncey is no longer considered a hero who saved the
people from emotionalism. He is now 'seen as a religious bureaucrat
who defended the status quo without comprehending the deeper issues
of revival' (DeArteaga 1992:54).
iii. How do we explain these phenomena?
We must recognize the element of mystery in God's dealings with
us. We should hold explanations tentatively and humbly.
Some explain it as the work of Satan. However, Martyn Lloyd-Jones
questions, 'Why should the Devil suddenly start dong this kind
of thing? Here is the Church in a period of dryness, and of drought,
so why should the Devil suddenly do something which calls attention
to religion and the Lord Jesus Christ? The very results of revival,
I would have thought, completely exclude the possibility of this
being the action of the Devil... [see Luke 11:14-18]. If this
is the work of the Devil, well then the Devil is an unutterable
fool. He is dividing his own kingdom; he is increasing the Kingdom
of God... There is nothing which is so ridiculous as this suggestion
that this is the work of the Devil' (Lloyd-Jones 1987:141-2).
What is the true explanation?
When God sovereignly visits an individual or group of human beings,
his manifest presence and power often affects their bodies in
some way. John White (p 23) states, 'God is, of course, present
everywhere. But there seems to be times when he is, as it were,
more present - or shall we say more intensely present. He seems
to draw aside one or two layers of a curtain that protects us
from Him, exposing our fragility to the awesome energies of his
being.'
Jonathan Edwars states: “We are all ready to own that no
man can see God and live…therefore, it is not at all strange
that God should sometimes give His saints such foretastes of heaven,
as to diminish their bodily strength.” (Works II, pp. 261,263).
Martyn Lloyd-Jones (pp 145-6) tells us that 'we must never forget
that the Holy Spirit affects the whole person... You see, man
is body, soul, and spirit, and you cannot divide these... Man
reacts as a whole. And it is just folly to expect that he can
react in the realm of the spiritual without anything at all happening
to the rest of him, to the soul, and to the body... these phenomena
are indications of the fact that some very powerful stimulus is
in operation. Something is happening which is so powerful that
the very physical frame is involved.'
Lloyd-Jones also argues that such strange phenomena are a means
that God uses to get our attention (1987:145). God is shaking
us to wake us up (Ephesians 5:14).
God is also humbling us! 'God often offends the mind to reveal
the heart.' (Paul Cain). God wants to know if we are willing to
play the fool for His glory!
Both John White and Martyn Lloyd-Jones conclude that although
a small portion of such strange behaviour would be of the flesh
(the person's own need for acceptance and attention) or a demonic
manifestation, the bulk of such activity in revival originates
from the power and glory of God.
We should not be fixated (either fascinated or offended by) on
the manifestations, but on the person of the Lord Jesus Christ!
4. Fear of disorder
Charles Spurgeon, the great Baptist preacher, declared that 'revival
is a season of glorious disorder' (Relfe 1988:8).
Martyn Lloyd Jones (1987:103) points out that 'always in a revival
there is what somebody once called a divine disorder. Some are
groaning and agonizing under conviction, others praising God for
the great salvation. And all this leads to crowded and prolonged
meetings. Time seems to be forgotten. People seem to have entered
into eternity. A meeting may start at six-thirty in the evening,
and it may not end until daybreak the next morning with nobody
aware of the passing of the hours.'
We don't like it when meetings get messy and unpredictable. It
is embarrassing and offensive to most of us. But John White (1988:35)
reminds us that 'revival is war, and war is never tidy. It is
an intensifying of the age-old conflict between Christ and the
powers of darkness.'
John Wimber (1985:31) offers this analogy: 'When warm and cold
fronts collide, violence ensues: thunder and lightning, rain or
snow - even tornadoes or hurricanes. There is conflict, and a
resulting release of power. It is disorderly, messy - difficult
to control.'
Understandably we prefer peace, decency, and order. We say, 'God
is a God of order' but we must realize that to bring in order
is sometimes a disorderly process... Chaos and darkness flee but
they create a ruckus as they leave (White 1988:44). See Luke 8:26-39,
Mark 1:21-26).
Edwards was so convinced of this disorderly process as part of
the work of God's Spirit that he cried, 'If God is pleased to
convince the consciences of persons, so that they cannot avoid
great outward manifestations, even to interrupting and breaking
off those public means they were attending, I do not think this
is confusion or an unhappy interruption, any more than if a company
should meet on a field to pray for rain, and should be broken
off from their exercise by a plentiful shower. Would to God that
all the public assemblies in the land were broken off from their
public exercises with such confusion as this next Sabbath day
(Edwards, Distinguishing Marks,p 127).
Proverbs 14:4 – ox in the barn make a mess but only way
to get a harvest!
“Some have argued that the manifestations cannot be of God
because they seem to involve a loss of self-control (a fruit of
the Spirit, Gal 4:23). Paul is concerned with moral character.
We are to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives (Titus
2:5, 12). When people fall under the power of the Spirit and experience
brokenness, repentance, healing and joy, the fruit is often godly
self-control” (Revival, The Real Thing, paper by Don Williams,
p. 30).
Again, John White (1988:45) argues that 'if we insist that revival
must be "decent and orderly" (as we define those terms)
we automatically blind ourselves to most revivals. Like the dwarfs
in C. S. Lewis' children's story The Last Battle, we may spit
out heavenly food, for to us it looks like, smells like, tastes
like dung and straw.'
Question: Am I missing the burning bush for trying to keep the
lawn cut?
5. Fear of controversy
We all shy away from controversy. However, the fact remains, 'renewal
has always been controversial and will always be controversial.
We must be ready for it” (George Mallone, Canadian Revival,
It’s Our Turn, 1985:42).
Jonathan Edwards said, 'It is probable that many of those who
are thus waiting, know not for what they are waiting. If they
wait to see a work of God without difficulties and stumbling blocks,
it will be like the fools waiting at the riverside to have the
water all run by. A work of God without stumbling blocks is never
to be expected' (Works Vol 2:273).
John Wesley prayed, 'Lord send us revival without its defects
but if this is not possible, send revival, defects and all (Bartleman,
Azusa Street,p 45).
If we find a revival that is not spoken against, we had better
look again to ensure that it is a revival... No one would pretend
to claim that every revival burns with a smokeless flame (Arthur
Wallis 1956:26).
Remember, wherever Jesus or the apostle Paul went there was confrontation.
Riots and controversy occurred. Luther, Wesley, Whitefield and
Edwards were extremely controversial characters in their day -
some kicked out of their churches! But once the dust settled centuries
later, they have come to be highly revered and seen as fighters
for orthodox Christianity.
Chuck Swindoll advises us not to live life so cautiously and safely,
“You can abstain from tea, coffee, and all other stimulants,
eat health food, avoid night life, avoid involvement in other
people’s problems, stay away from controversies so no-one
takes offence, and still break your neck in the bathtub and serve
you right”! (his sermon July 18/93)
-Further objections and concerns that many may find themselves
struggling with are included here. I am indebted to Bill Jackson
of Champaign, Illinois Vineyard for his unpublished paper of April,
1994, called 'What in the world is happening to us?' for the following
section extracted from this paper with his permission.
1. It's hard to understand
A. Our presupposition: If it were God, I would understand it.
...
B. All through the Bible, God revealed himself in ways that were
hard to understand.
1. God's chosen people for the most part misunderstood Jesus.
Pharisees said he was in league with Beelzebub, which was a term
for the devil.
2. The disciples didn't understand the mission of Jesus until
the Holy Spirit came (Acts 2).
3. The Jews as a whole never understood that God's heart was for
all the nations. Even the disciples were shocked that God would
offer the gospel to the Gentiles, law free. They muse in amazement
in Acts 11:18, 'So then God has granted even the Gentiles repentance
unto life!'
4. Historically, God has moved in ways that are hard to understand.
The classic example of this is martyrdom. Martyrdom has always
been an explosive key to church growth. One of the early church
fathers, Tertullian, said, 'The blood of the martyrs is the seed
of the church'.
2. It makes me afraid
A. Our presupposition: If it were God, I wouldn't be afraid.
B. Visitations produce fear throughout the Bible.
1. Lightning, thunder, and smoke on Mt. Sinai (Exodus 19).
2. Daniel in Chapter 10 had a great vision: 'I had no strength
left, my face turned deathly pale, and I was helpless.' The angel,
Gabriel, had to say, 'Don't be afraid,' because he was terrified.
3. Great fear seized the whole church in Acts 5 when Ananias and
Sapphira dropped dead through a prophetic word when they lied
to the Holy Spirit.
C. Note: This fear is not the same fear as that which comes from
Satan. 2 Timothy 1:7 says that God has not given us a spirit of
fear. The devil's fear robs us of faith and hope and renders us
incapable of love. There is, however, a godly fear that the Bible
says is the beginning of wisdom (Proverbs 9:10). It is this kind
of fear that is produced by divine visitations. It results in
a more godly life.
D. How could a visitation of a holy God on sinful people not produce
fear?
1. How could our finite minds expect to understand the infinite
ways of God? He is completely beyond us and holy.
2. Fear is caused by:
a) the holiness of God coming in contact with our sinfulness.
b) our anti-supernatural world view. Since we have no supernatural
category in our western world view, when we encounter the supernatural
we encounter the fear of the unknown. It causes the psychological
state known as cognitive dissonance. We receive data that does
not fit and it causes feelings of insecurity.
3. It causes division
A. Our presupposition: If it were God, there would be no division.
B. There are two kinds of division:
1. When the kingdom of light clashes with the kingdom of darkness,
it causes godly division. Jesus said he had not come to bring
peace but a sword. 'A man's enemies will be the members of his
own household' (Matthew 10:36).
2. Backbiting, slander, and rebellion are ungodly because they
cause the kingdom to be divided against itself.
C. Godly division is thoroughly biblical:
1. Korah was judged for his rebellion against Moses (Numbers 11).
2. Jesus caused division wherever he went.
3. The inclusion of Gentiles in the church caused division (Acts
15).
D. Godly division is thoroughly historical:
1. The Great Awakening broke out in New Jersey in 1725 and was
violently opposed by more traditional churches.
2. G. Campbell Morgan called the Pentecostal Movement 'the last
vomit of Satan'.
3. Leaders in the previous move of God often persecute the present
one.
4. God over-rides my faculties
A. Our presupposition: God is always a gentleman and would never
force anything upon us.
B. The Bible seems to say something else:
1. God is God and he does what he wants. In Isaiah, God says,
'I say my purpose will stand and I will do all that I please"
(46:11).
2. God over-rode Balaam in Numbers 23 and caused Balaam to prophesy
against his will.
3. God over-rode Saul and his men in 1 Samuel 19, and caused them
to prophecy instead of killing David.
4. Jesus blinded Paul on the road to Damascus against his will.
5. God's killing of Ananias and Sapphira is the ultimate over-ride.
6. Far from treating us gently, God has promised his people persecution.
5. It causes me to be the centre of attention
A. Our presupposition: If it were God, he would not do it publicly.
B. Quite to the contrary, God often uses the person to be the
message:
1. In Ezekiel 4-5, Ezekiel is told by God to lie on his side,
naked, to shave his head and beard. God made him the centre of
attention because he, himself, was the message.
2. Jeremiah was told to smash a jar in Jeremiah 18-19 to draw
attention to his message.
3. Hosea was told to marry a prostitute as a message to the nation
of Israel.
4. Ananias and Sapphira can be used as yet another example because
their dead bodies were the message.
5. Stephen was 'glowing' when he was killed.
6. It doesn't happen to me
A. Our presupposition: When God moves, the same things happen
to everyone.
B. Biblical perspective:
1. It's simply not true that some people seem to be 'favoured'
while others are not. God's love is for the whole world. Under
his sovereignty he treats everyone in a way that is beneficial
for them. God ultimately determines what is best for us.
2. Jesus healed only one man at the pool of Bethesda despite the
fact that there were many sick present (John 5). This in no way
meant that God loved the man who was healed more than the ones
who weren't. Jesus said that he only did what he saw the Father
doing and the father was somehow loving all those at the pool
that day.
7. A final caution
A. It's okay to have questions about what is happening but we
must try to be honest about the motive behind our questions. What
causes the questions?
1. If it's because of your personality, that's okay. But let's
not let our personalities keep us from being touched by God during
this season of divine visitation.
2. If it's because you are a 'noble Berean' (Acts 17:10-11), that's
to be commended.
a) Search for the truth diligently.
b) When you find it, press in.
3. If it's because you are afraid:
a) Ask God why.
b) Don't run. If this is God, then you would be turning your back
on him.
B. After the crucifixion, the disciples had questions too. The
Jesus who walked with two of them on the road to Emmaus and opened
their minds so they could understand the Scriptures is the same
Jesus who walks in our midst by the person of the Holy Spirit
(Luke 24:13-35). He will open our minds as well (Jackson 1994).
----------
My conclusion:
Today we need the fire of God. Some are afraid of wildfire but
there are always enough 'wet blankets' around to dampen it.
On the Day of Pentecost, the crowd responded to the supernatural
manifestations of the spirit in three ways: some were amazed,
some perplexed, and others mocked. Each generation has been no
different.
Walter C. Kaiser, Jr. (1986:25) urges us to study past revivals
because 'once we know how the Lord has acted in the past, we should
be better prepared to accept the special working of God when it
arrives... Every one of our preconceptions and built-in limitations
concerning what God can or cannot do or what he is likely or not
likely to do in exact detail must be jettisoned.'
In other words, don't put God in a box. Let God be God! He is
the Great I Am, not the Great I Was! His thoughts are not our
thoughts and his ways are not our ways (Isaiah 55). We should
expect to have difficulty understanding and agreeing with the
way God does things at times.
We are wise to take the advice of Martyn Lloyd-Jones: 'we must
be careful in these matters... What do we know of the Spirit falling
on people? What do we know about these great manifestations of
the Holy Spirit? We need to be very careful lest we be found fighting
against God, lest we be guilty of quenching the Spirit of God'
(White 1988:13).
6. How can we promote revival?
Taking a survey on the street, a reporter asked a hurried pedestrian,
'Sir, do you know the two greatest problems in the world today?'
The man responded, 'I don't know and I don't care.' Without missing
a beat, the reporter declared, 'You got them both!' (ignorance
and apathy).
We can overcome ignorance and apathy concerning revival. How can
we promote revival?
1. We need to care
We need to care that God works in our nation. Note that Nehemiah
had a cushy job as a cupbearer to the king but left to rebuild
the walls.
2. We need to get informed
We need to get the big picture!
Read the Bible. Read biographies of leaders of past revivals.
Go where the fire is, such as conferences and places where God
is moving powerfully, and get first-hand exposure and experience.
It is irresponsible to criticize that which you know nothing about.
Slander is a sin.
3. Cultivate daily intimacy with the Lord
This is what John Wimber calls 'developing a personal history
with God'. Develop personal disciplines that cultivate a passion
for Jesus such as prayer, fasting, Bible study, worship and obedience
in the small things.
Jack Deere (1993:201) urges us to pray the following prayer on
a daily basis: 'Father, grant me power from the Holy Spirit to
love the Son of God like You love him (John 17:26).
Don't despise the day of small beginnings. Learn to hear God's
voice and catch his heart. Get spiritually prepared so that when
God's zero hour strikes, you're fit for action.
4. Intercessory prayer
Note these Scriptures and quotes:
2 Chronicles 7:14 - 'If my people... will humble themselves and
pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I
will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and will heal
their land.'
Isaiah 62:6-7 - 'You who call on the Lord, give yourselves no
rest, and give him no rest till...'
Isaiah 64:1 - 'Oh,that you would rend the heavens and come down.'
'God does nothing but in answer to prayer' (Wesley).
'Prayer is not overcoming God's reluctance; it is laying hold
of his highest willingness' (Luther).
'Prayer is rebellion against the status quo' (David Wells).
'Prayer humbles us as needy and exalts God as worthy' (John Piper).
'Give me Scotland or I die' (John Knox).
'There has never been a spiritual awakening in any country or
locality that did not begin in united prayer' (A. T. Pierson in
Bryant 1984:40).
'When God has something very great to accomplish for his Church,
it is his will that there should precede it, the extraordinary
prayers of his people' (Edwards, Works 1:426).
Some argue that revival is sovereign and you can't do anything
to make it happen, while others say you can pray and bring it
about. I heartily agree with Mike Bickle when he states that “God
initiates, man responds, then God responds to our response. In
this hour the Lord is stirring the church to be united, aggressive,
and persistent in prayer for Him to act and move again. It is
vital, however, that while praying and asking God for the breakthroughs
of His power, we must not stop obeying our Lord’s command
to evangelize the lost, heal the sick, minister to the poor and
plant new churches, in the power of the Holy Spirit both home
and abroad. It is not “either/or” but rather “both/and”.
5. Be willing to pay the price
“
In the time preceding revival, when coldness, apathy and complacency
seem to abound, the Holy Spirit comes to “disturb this sleep
of death”. He produces at first a spiritual restlessness,
though it may be only in the hearts of a few. They cannot be satisfied
with a holding operation, with the maintaining of the status quo.
They sense in their hearts that God must have some better thing
for His people. This dissatisfaction becomes a thirst, a thirst
for God to manifest Himself, for His power and glory to be displayed.
Believers begin to view with growing concern their own spiritual
ineffectiveness and the taunting of the world. The more they examine
the pages of the New Testament and the lives of those whom God
has used, the more convinced they become that they themselves,
and the church of which they form a part, are living a Christianity
which is sub-standard.
This dissatisfaction is further fed as they read of the mighty
things that happened in days gone by through the outpouring of
the Spirit. They hear of what God is doing today in other parts
of the world. “If He is still in the business, why is He
not working like that here? And where are all the signs and the
wonders, the healings and the miracles that the early Christians
accepted as normal, and that have so often recurred in times of
revival? There is a sensing that the “no miracles today”
theory is a clumsy attempt to cover up our own unbelief and spiritual
deficiency” (Arthur Wallis, Rain From Heaven, pp 110,111).
Are you willing to be childlike again? Are you willing to receive
a divine 'baptism of desperation', a 'holy dissatisfaction' that
puts your reputation, dignity and personal peace at risk?
“The Lord still only lavishes His grace and glory on those
who admit they are poor. The “poor in spirit” are
recipients of the Kingdom (Matt. 5:3); the ones willing to admit
“I don’t have it all”…Such priority is
something I dare never outgrow. The minute I ever believe that
the depth of riches I’ve come to know in Christ are a bank
account, securing me from the constant need of a simple, teachable
heart and a childlike, seeking soul, I’ve become duped by
false definaitions of maturity, discernment or knowledge.”
(Jack W. Hayfor, Stanced Before Almightiness, article responding
to the Toronto Blessings, 1995).
We need to have the courage to be honest with God and say with
Oswald Chambers, author of My Utmost for His Highest, 'If what
I have is all the Christianity there is, then the things is a
fraud' (Brown 1991:28).
We must force a crisis in our lives... when our very being aches
with desire for his visitation, when we are consumed with hunger
for his reality, when we radically cut back on other activities
in order to seek his face, then we are ripe for transformation
(Brown 1991:29).
A.W.Tozer writes: “Acute desire must be present or there
will be no manifestation of Christ to his people. He waits to
be wanted” (The Pursuit of God, p. 17).
We need to surrender our puny agendas, our need for security,
safety and comfort zones. As Hebrews 11 tells us, we are not to
shrink back and displease the Lord but to become risk-takers in
this adventure of participating in the Kingdom of God.
“Christians ought to be old friends with risk and when a
church or an individual Christian builds a wall of safety, something
very basic to the Christian faith has been violated... Christians
ought to be the most gutsy people on the face of the earth”
(Stephen Brown, If God is in Charge, 1983:113-114).
“We must have more confidence in God's ability to lead us
than in Satan's ability to deceive us (Jack Deere, Surprised by
the Power of the Spirit, 1993:215; see also Luke 11:11-13).
Arthur Wallis (1956:10) says, 'If you would make the greatest
success of your life, try to discover what God is doing in your
time and fling yourself into the accomplishment of his purpose
and will.'
We, like Peter in the boat during a storm, need to hear Jesus'
words, 'Do not be afraid,' and his invitation to 'come' and walk
on water with him.
God's gracious disposition is always toward revival and he only
looks to see if there is a people, a generation who dares enough
and cares enough to pay the price. 'Now is the time to sanctify
ourselves for tomorrow God will do wonders among us' (Joshua 3:5).
“While the church is being brought to maturity, and the
final great harvest is being gathered in, world conditions will
continue to deteriorate. The trends we now see in society pointing
towards its final disintegration will not be reversed by the outpourings
of the Spirit. Distress for the nations and tribulation for the
church is predicted by the Spirit for the time of the end. But
growing darkness will only make the light shining from God’s
people seem all the brighter. God will conclude this age as He
commenced it. Great power and glory in the church, great victories
over Satan, but in the context of great persecution and opposition.
But the difference will be that what was then confined to one
small corner of the globe will in the end be world-wide. I believe
that the greatest chapters of the church’s long history
have yet to be written, and that it will be said of the generation
that brings back the King, “This was their finest hour”
(Arthur Wallis, Rain From Heaven, p. 124).
References
Scripture quotations from the New International Version of the
Bible (1973, 1978, 1984).
Bartleman, Frank (1980) Azusa Street. Logos International
Brown, Michael (1991) Whatever Happened to the Power of God? Destiny
Image.
Brown, Stephen (1983) If God is in Charge. Nelson.
Bryant, David (1984) With Concerts of Prayer. Regal.
Bryant, David (1995) The Hope at Hand, Baker
Cartwright, Peter (1956) Autobiography of Peter Cartwright. Abingdon.
Chevreau, Guy (1994) Catch the Fire, Harper Collins
DeArteaga, William (1992) Quenching the Spirit. Creation House.
Deere, Jack (1993) Surprised by the Power of the Spirit. Zondervan.
Dallimore, Arnold (1980) George Whitefield. Vol. 2. Crossway.
Edwards, Jonathan (1974, 1992 reprinted) Works of Jonathan Edwards,
Vols 1 & 2.
Banner of Truth.
Edwards, Jonathan (1741, 1984) The Distinguishing Marks of a Work
of the Spirit of God. Banner of Truth.
Hayford, Jack (1995) Stanced before Almightiness, article
Jackson, Bill (1994) 'What in the World is Happening to Us?' Unpublished
paper.
Johnson, Charles (1955) The Frontier Camp Meeting. Methodist University
Press.
Joyner, Rick (1993) The World Aflame. Morningstar.
Kaiser Jr., Walter C. (1986) Quest for Renewal (Revival in the
Old Testament). Moody.
Krupp, Nate (1984, 1988) The Triumphant Church. Destiny Image.
Lewis, C. S. (1950,74,75) The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe,
Collier Books
Lloyd-Jones, Martyn (1987) Revival. Crossway.
Lovelace, Richard (1979) Dynamics of Spiritual Life. InterVarsity.
MacNutt, Francis (1990) Overcome by the Spirit. Chosen.
Mallone, George (1985) Canadian Revival: It's Our Turn. Welch.
Murillo, Mario (1985) Critical Mass. Anthony Douglas.
Morphew, Derek (May 1995) Renewal Apologetics, paper
Orr, J. Edwin (1949) The Second Evangelical Awakening, Marshall
Morgan
Packer, J. I. (1984) Keep in Step with the Spirit. Revell.
Pratney, Winkie (1994) Revival. Huntingdon House.
Relfe, Mary Stewart (1988) Cure of All Ills. League of Prayer.
Riss, Richard (1988) Survey of 20th Century Revival Movements
in North America, Hendrickson
Swindoll, Chrarles (1993) Flying Closer to the Flame, Word
Tozer, A. W. (1948) The Pursuit of God, Christian Pub.
Wallis, Arthur (1956) In the Day of Thy Power. Cityhill.
Wallis, Arthur (1979) Rain from Heaven. Hodder & Stoughton.
White, John (1988) When the Spirit Comes with Power. InterVarsity.
Williams, Don (1995) Revival, The Real Thing, position paper by
author, P.O. Box 1302, La Jolla, CA 92038
Wimber, John (1985) Power Evangelism. Hodder & Stoughton.
Wimber, John (1994) Equipping the Saints, Fall Quarter. 1. What
is revival?
2. Why is revival needed?
3. When has revival occurred before?
4. Should we expect to see revival again soon?
5. What hinders revival?
6. How can we promote revival?
1. What is revival?
The term revival is not technically found in the Bible.
Neither is Trinity for that matter, yet both concepts are
found throughout the Bible.
Various forms of the verb revive are frequently used
as well as such words as restore, renew, awaken, and refresh,
for example:
Psalm 85:6 - 'Will you not revive us again that your
people may rejoice in you' (prayer request).
Isaiah 57:15 - 'I revive the spirit of the humble and
revive the heart of the contrite' (promise of God).
The theme of revival is described at times in such terms as
an outpouring of the Spirit (like rain or fire falling or wind
blowing), the renewing of God's mighty deeds (Habakkuk 3:2), the
glory of the Lord returning to his temple (Malachi 3:1), God healing
the land (2 Chronicles 7:14) and the time of God's visitation
with his manifest presence (Micah 7:4; Luke 19:44).
(a) Definitions and descriptions of revival
* To revive is 'to live again' (1 Kings 17:22; 2 Kings 13:21).
* 'When God comes down [Isaiah 64:1,2], God's Word comes home
[Nehemiah 8-9; Acts 2:37], God's purity comes through, God's people
come alive [Acts 2, overflow of joy and vitality], and outsiders
come in' [Acts 2:41, 47; 1 Corinthians 14:25 'God is really among
you'] (Packer 1984:244-245; Scriptures added).
* 'The inrush of the Spirit into a body that threatens to become
a corpse' (D. M. Panton, cited in Wallis 1956:46).
* 'Revival is man retiring into the background because God has
taken the field. It is the Lord making bare his holy arm and working
in extraordinary power on saint and sinner' (Wallis 1956:20).
* 'Revival is divine military strategy; first to counteract
spiritual decline, and then to create spiritual momentum' (Wallis
1956:45).
* 'Revival is like a rocket ship that gets us back up into the
orbit of New Testament Christianity' (Charles Simpson, sermon
27 May 1994).
* God's presence intensified (fullness), God's purposes accelerated
(fulfilment); (based on Bryant 1984:72-91, 169).
(b) Characteristics of revival
Revival is usually comprised of two stages: internal revival
or 'renewal' (the church is set on fire and prodigals begin to
come home) followed by external revival (conversion of those outside
on a mass scale).
'True revival is marked by widespread repentance both within
the church and among unbelievers' (Wimber 1994:4).
This repentance is the result of God coming in power, revealing
his holiness and our sinfulness. One comes into the agonising
grip of a holy God and is brought under awesome conviction. This
manifested presence of God creates a divine 'radiation zone'.
Here are two examples:
During the 1859 revival, no town in Ulster was more deeply stirred
than Coleraine. A schoolboy in class became so troubled about
his soul that the schoolmaster sent him home. An older boy, a
Christian, went with him and before they had gone far, led him
to Christ. Returning at once to school, this new convert testified
to his teacher: 'Oh, I am so happy! I have the Lord Jesus in my
heart.' These artless words had an astonishing effect; boy after
boy rose and silently left the room. Going outside the teacher
found these boys all on their knees, ranged along the wall of
the playground. Very soon their silent prayer became a bitter
cry; it was heard by another class inside and pierced their hearts.
They fell on their knees, and their cry for mercy was heard in
turn by a girls' class above. In a few moments, the whole school
was on their knees! Neighbours and passers-by came flocking in
and all as they crossed the threshold came under the same convicting
power. 'Every room was filled with men, women, and children seeking
God' ...
During the same 1859 revival in America, ships entered a definite
zone of heavenly influence as they drew near port. Ship after
ship arrived with the same talk of sudden conviction and conversion.
A captain and an entire crew of thirty men found Christ at sea
and arrived at port rejoicing. This overwhelming sense of God
bringing deep conviction of sin is perhaps the outstanding feature
of true revival. Its manifestation is not always the same; to
cleansed hearts it is heaven; to convicted hearts it is hell (Pratney
1994:24-25).
2. Why is revival needed?
Throughout biblical history and church history the hearts of
God's people perpetually cool off and harden towards him, creating
the need for revival. Nehemiah 9:25-28 describes this cycle or
pattern of spiritual decline and renewal which involves six stages
(Lovelace 1979:62-80):
1. God's people are alive and in love with him.
2. Spiritual decline - hearts are subtly cooling off.
3. Hearts of stone.
4. The Lord disciplines those he loves (for example, Israelites
were taken into exile).
5. Cry for mercy - intercession and repentance.
6. God pours out his Spirit and revives his people.
Where in this cycle is the church in this country today?
3. When has revival occurred before?
The Bible records at least a dozen revivals within its history
(Kaiser 1986:12-13) and many movements of renewal and revival
took place prior to and including the Protestant Reformation of
the 16th century and the Puritan and Pietist movements of the
17th century. Here I will focus upon the major revivals of Europe
and North America of the last 250 years.
Note that the intensity of a revival may last only a few years,
but the effects are felt in the church and society for decades
to come.
The First Awakening (1727-80)
1727-80 (approximate dates) in Germany: Count Zinzendorf and
the Moravians, with unity, prayer (their 24 hour prayer vigil
lasted over 100 years!), and missions. Their motto was 'To win
for the Lamb that was slain the reward of his suffering.'
1734-60 in North America's 13 colonies: Jonathan Edwards and
George Whitefield, with prayer and preaching.
1740-80 in Great Britain: John and Charles Wesley and George
Whitefield with outdoor preaching and class meetings (home cells).
Revival brought many social reforms including the abolition
of slavery in Great Britain. Some historians believe this revival
saved England from a bloody revolution like the one in France.
Then came a gradual spiritual slide. By 1794 moral conditions
had reached their worst. For example, John Marshall, Chief Justice
of the U. S. Supreme Court, a concerned believer, wrote his assessment
to Methodist Bishop Madison of Virginia stating, 'The church is
too far gone to ever be redeemed'. The famous agnostic Voltaire
declared, 'Christianity will be forgotten in 30 years'. Later
Voltaire's home became the headquarters for the Geneva Bible Society
(Relfe 1988:26).
The Second Awakening (1792-1842)
1792 in England: William Carey, 'Father of the modern missionary
movement' took as his motto, 'Expect great things from God, attempt
great thing for God.'
By about 1800 revival fires were burning once again in the U.
S. A. In the East, Timothy Dwight was used in the college setting.
On the Western frontier, James McGready, Barton Stone and Peter
Cartwright gave leadership.
In 1821 Charles Finney, a lawyer, was converted and became an
evangelist and social reformer. This revival was characterised
by evangelistic camp meetings, social reforms and missions. Finney's
ministry overlapped the second and third awakenings.
The Third Awakening (1857-59)
1857 in North America: Called 'the Prayer Revival' it began
when Dr Walter and Phoebe Palmer from New York City went to Hamilton,
Ontario in early October. Revival broke out, then went south of
the border.
Jeremiah Lanphier, a business man, began noon prayer meetings
in New York City in September 1857. Within 6 months, up to 10,000
business men were praying daily for revival.
J. Edwin Orr states that 'revival went up the Hudson and down
the Mohawk. The Baptists had so many people to baptise they could
not get them in the churches. They went down to the river, cut
a square hole in the ice and baptised them. When Baptists do that,
they really are on fire!' (Relfe 1988:48). The revival spread
from New York to Philadelphia and throughout the country. The
emphasis was on prayer.
Revival spread to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland as well.
The fruit of this revival was 2 million converts (1 million
within the church, 1 million from without) and in the following
years slavery was abolished, and there were reforms in prisons,
labour, education, and medical care.
Fourth Awakening (1904-7)
1904-5 in Wales: Youth and children featured in the Welsh revival.
The key leader was Evan Roberts, aged 26 (and his brother Dan,
aged 20, and his sister Mary, aged 16). Leaders came from around
the world and were humbled to see how God used teens and children.
Evan and others were not eloquent preachers but good followers
of the Holy Spirit.
Their motto was 'Bend the church and save the world'. Evan Roberts'
vision of seeing 100,000 converted in Wales was fulfilled in less
than one year. People got converted just reading about the revival
in the newspapers!
Crime dropped off to the point where many courtrooms and jails
were empty and judges and police had very little to do. Horses
in the coal mines were accustomed to obeying commands that involved
yelling and cursing. Since the vast majority of miners were converted,
the horses were confused with commands that were humane and wholesome,
so the horses needed retraining!
Prior to the revival Wales was in a frenzy over their favourite
sport, soccer. With the revival, the stadiums stood empty. No-one
preached against soccer. The players and fans had simply become
so captivated with the Lord that they were no longer interested
in the game (Joyner 1993:51).
The fire spread throughout Great Britain, Scandinavia, Europe,
Africa, India, Korea, as well as the U.S.A. The pastors of Atlantic
City, New Jersey, reported only 50 adults not converted in a population
of 50,000! The First Baptist Church in Paducoh, Kentucky, had
1,000 converts in two months and the elderly pastor, Dr J. J.
Cheek, died of exhaustion (Krupp 1988:22).
In California, Bartleman, Seymore, and Smale were impacted by
the reports and booklets on the revival in Wales in 1905 as well
as from letters of encouragement from Evan Roberts. Shortly thereafter
the Azusa Street Revival erupted into the great Pentecostal Revival
that saw 5 million converts from 1905-7 and continues to impact
millions of lives to this day.
Twentieth century
The twentieth century has been called by some 'The Century of
the Holy Spirit'. Although we have not witnessed a major revival
since the turn of the century, since 1947 God has been bringing
smaller scaled revivals and renewal movements such as:
1947-53 - the Latter Rain movement in western Canada and the
U.S.A.
1949 - Hebrides Islands, Scotland.
Here is a wonderful example of how a revival causes a geographical
area to become a divine 'radiation zone' of conviction and repentance.
Duncan Campbell, en evangelist, came to the Island of Lewis
in the Hebrides Islands. On the first night of his arrival, he
preached in a church building. When he left the building at 11
p.m. he found 600 gathered outside, 100 from the nearby dance
hall, the other 500 who had been awakened, got out of bed, and
felt compelled to walk to this place. Campbell preached the gospel
to them till 4 a.m., at which time he was requested to come to
the police station where 400 people were gathered, baffled as
to why they were there. On his way to the station he came across
other people along the road who were crying out to God for mercy!
Revival continued for 3 years with 75% of the converts coming
to Jesus outside of church buildings (Krupp 1988:26-7).
The 1960s and 1970s saw the emergence of the charismatic renewal
movement, including the Jesus Movement of the early 1970s.
The 1980s and 1990s saw the 'Third Wave' movement' or the 'signs
and wonders' movement and the 'prophetic' movement. Peter Wagner
describes three waves of the Holy Spirit in this century, each
continuing to be used by God: the Pentecostal movement, the charismatic
movement (largely in the Catholic Church and mainline Protestant
churches), and the 'Third Wave' movement which is primarily impacting
the evangelical churches.
4. Should we expect to see revival again soon?
YES!
Many 'third world' countries in Africa, and Central and South
America, as well as China and Korea, have been experiencing revival
fires for a number of years.
Why should we expect to see revival again soon?
a. Biblical texts that create such expectation include:
Habakkuk 2:14 - 'for the earth will be filled with the knowledge
of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.' (Reinhard
Bonnke, evangelist in Africa, says, 'not one spot stays dry at
the bottom of the sea.')
Joel 2:23 - 'He sends you abundant showers, both autumn (early)
and spring (latter) rains.' Early rains soften the ground, making
it suitable for ploughing and sowing. With the approach of harvest,
heavy rain (latter) returns to swell and mature grain and fruit
in preparation for the time of reaping. Pentecost marked the beginning
of former rains. After the Reformation, outpourings became more
distinct and significant. Latter rain is in preparation for the
day of harvest.
Joel 2:28, 31 - 'I will pour out my Spirit on all people ...
before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord.'
Acts 2 - Pentecost, a partial fulfilment of Joel.
Acts 3:19,20 - 'repent, turn to God, .....
John 14:12 - 'will do what I have been doing. He will do even
greater things than these' (miracles). Not fulfilled yet!
John 17 - In his priestly prayer, Jesus prays for Christian
unity. This prayer has not been fulfilled yet. Of all the prayers
the Father answers, would not his Son's be answered? Rick Joyner
says, ' Jesus is coming back for a bride, not a harem.'
Ephesians 5:26,27 - Jesus is preparing the bride to be presented
to himself as pure, holy and radiant.
b. Based on previous patterns, revival usually occurs
in a day of deep moral and spiritual bankruptcy. 'Before a great
awakening, there must come a rude awakening' (Murillo 1985:11).
The worst of times, in other words, precipitates the best of times.
Who could deny the desperate need for a mighty revival in our
day? Famine, poverty, pollution, war, crime, abortion, drug abuse,
massive economic instability, and such like, stare us in the face.
Nate Krupp (1988:34) argues that 'we are at a point in history
where it is either world revival or world destruction.'
c. Church historians, theologians and church leaders are
predicting it. Many leaders have discerned that God is up
to something big! He's preparing new wineskins for the new wine,
a fireplace for the fire, and barns for the harvest. Many even
say that previous revivals are but a rehearsal for the big ones
to come. 'Our study of awakening movements only turns up what
appear to be rehearsals for some final revelation of the full
splendour of God's kingdom... It is hard to believe that God will
not grant the church some greater experience of wholeness and
vitality than has yet appeared in the stumbling record of her
history' (Lovelace 1979:425).
d. Many prophets of our day in unison are expecting it
in the 1990s and beyond. These include Mike Bickle, Paul Cain,
Rick Joyner, and John Paul Jackson.
e. The growing emphasis on prayer. Prayer mobilisation
today is unprecedented in history. Examples include men's prayer
movements, women's intercessory groups, youth in schools, Marches
for Jesus, '10-40 Window' prayer project, city wide pastors' prayer
fellowships, and so on. History demonstrates that revival is always
preceded by a groundswell of prayer.
f. It's God's heart to bring revival. He longs to renew,
restore, awaken us, and redeem humanity much more than we want
him to. God is committed to renew his people and see the nations
come to himself. 'Ask of me and I will make the nations your inheritance'
(Psalm 2:8).
5. What hinders revival?
Don't be a 'fire-fighter' or a 'wet blanket'.
From a safe distance of several hundred years or several thousand
miles, revival clearly looks invigorating. What could be more
glamorous than a mighty work of God in our midst, renewing thousands
and converting tens of thousands. ... But if we find ourselves
in the midst of revival, rather than being invigorated, we may
be filled with scepticism, disgust, anger, or even fear...
The irony of revivals is that they are so longed for in times
of barrenness, but they are commonly opposed and feared when they
arrive. ... The hostility in never to the idea of revival, which
is ardently prayed for, but to God's answer to our prayers and
the unexpected form it may take (White 1988:34, 39).
Why does revival produce all this opposition?
'We grow angry when we are scared. We fear what we cannot understand'
(White 1988:41).
a. Fear of change and losing control
We are creatures of habit (as in nostalgia, traditionalism);
changes unsettle us. We fear the unknown, the unfamiliar, and
the unpredictable.
b. Fear of emotions
We should be scared of emotionalism, the artificial manipulation
of emotion, but emotion itself comes from seeing, from understanding.
When the Holy Spirit awakens people, he seems to cause them to
perceive truth more vividly ... people see their sin as stinking
cancer that will kill them and see the mercy of the Saviour with
the eyes of those who have been snatched from a horrible death
(White 1988:51).
Jonathan Edwards called emotions 'holy affections' and said
they are essential for spiritual life. A hear heart (heart of
stone) is an unaffected heart, a heart not moved by divine truth
and revelation.
c. Fear of bizarre behaviour
Examples of unusual behaviour in revivals include shaking, jerking,
falling, weeping, screaming, laughing, prophesying and being 'drunk
in the spirit'.
Three questions must be asked about this:
i. Has it happened among the people of God before (the biblical
and historical precedence)?
ii. What is the fruit of it?
iii. How do we explain these phenomena?
i. Has it happened before?
Yes, these phenomena of bizarre behaviour have happened among
God's people during heightened spiritual activity. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
points out that
it comes nearer to being the rule in revival that phenomena
begin to manifest themselves - phenomena such as these ... people
are in agony of soul and groaning ... sometimes people are so
convicted and feel the power of the Spirit to such an extent that
they faint and fall to the ground. Sometimes there are even convulsions,
physical convulsions. And sometimes people seem to fall into a
state of unconsciousness, into a kind of trance, and many remain
like that for hours (1987:110-111).
There are also certain mental phenomena... You will find this
phenomena of prophecy, this ability to foretell the future, frequently
present (1987:135).
Martyn Lloyd-Jones goes onto say that 'these phenomena are not
essential to revival ... yet it is true to say that, on the whole,
they do tend to be present when there is a revival (1987:134).
John White's research has brought him to the same conclusion.
Note these biblical examples:
1. 1 Samuel 10:11 - Saul was in a trance, prophesying when the
Spirit came upon him (also 1 Samuel 19:23-24).
2. 2 Chronicles 5:13-14 - The glory of the Lord filled the temple
so the priests were unable to stand to minister.
3. Ezekiel 1:28; 3:23; 43:4; 44:4 - Ezekiel fell face down before
the glory of the Lord.
4. Daniel 8:17-18 - Daniel collapsed and sank into a deep sleep
during a vision and an angelic visitation (also Daniel 10:7-11
- no strength left; on the ground trembling).
5. Matthew 17:6; Luke 9:32 - On the Mount of Transfiguration
the disciples fell face down to the ground, but also became heavy
with sleep.
6. John 18:6 - When the soldiers came to arrest Jesus they fell
to the ground when Jesus said, "I am he".
7. Matthew 28:4 - On the morning of Jesus' resurrection the
guards at the tomb 'shook and became like dead men'.
8. Acts 2 - At the Day of Pentecost the place shook, they spoke
in strange tongues, and they behaved like being drunk. Peter responded
(Acts 2:15) that 'they are not drunk as you suppose'. Paul makes
a comparison between being drunk with wine and being filled with
the Spirit (Ephesians 5:18).
9. Acts 9 - Saul on the road to Damascus fell to the ground,
blinded by the glory. Later, in a trance-like condition he had
a vision (2 Corinthians 12).
10. Revelation 1:17 - The apostle John said, 'When I saw him
I fell at his feet as though dead.'
Not only in Scripture do we find that frail human bodies are
affected by the manifest presence of God, but most revivals
in history have had physical and emotional manifestations
of the Holy Spirit. Some examples:
1. Jonathan Edwards, the great leader of the First Awakening
of the 1730s and 1740s in New England wrote to a friend saying,
'many of the young people and children appeared to be overcome
with a sense of the greatness and glory of divine things ... and
many others at the same time were overcome with distress about
their sinful and miserable state and condition; so that the whole
room was full of nothing but outcries, faintings and such like.
... many were overpowered and continued there for some hours (Stacy
1842:546 in DeArteaga 1992:39-40).
2. John Wesley and George Whitefield spoke of the strange physical
phenomena that took place in their meetings in England as well.
Wesley describes in his Journal:
Monday, Jan. 1, 1739 - Mr Hall, Kinchin, Ingham, Whitfield,
Lane, with about sixty of our brethren. About three in the morning,
as we were continuing instant in prayer, the power of God came
mightily upon us, insomuch that many cried out for exceeding joy,
and many fell to the ground. As soon as we were recovered a little
from that awe and amazement at the presence of his Majesty, we
broke out with one voice, 'We praise Thee, O God; we acknowledge
Thee to be the Lord' (MacNutt 1990:98).
Following the two events of John Wesley's Aldersgate experience,
May 24, 1738, and this January 1, 1739 encounter, the supernatural
element in his ministry became more pronounced. For fourteen years
it was hardly there; for the next fifty it was (MacNutt 1990:98).
3. MacNutt (1990: 104) tells us that early in George Whitefield's
career,
when he was working with Wesley in England and people started
to fall, Whitefield decided to register a protest by letter: 'I
cannot think it right in you to give so much encouragement to
these convulsions which people have been thrown into in your ministry.'
Ironically enough, when Whitefield came to confront Wesley in
person he found himself reprimanded by reality, for when he, Whitefield,
was preaching the next day, 'four persons sunk down close to him,
almost in the same moment. One of them lay without sense or motion.
A second trembled exceedingly. The third has strong convulsions
all over his body, but made no noise, unless by groans. The fourth,
equally convulsed, called upon God, with strong cries and tears.
From this time,' Wesley writes, 'I trust we shall all suffer God
to carry on his own work in the way that pleaseth him.'
'By the time he journeyed to America, Whitefield's preaching
was ordinarily accompanied by people toppling over:
Some were struck pale as death, others were wringing their hands,
others lying on the ground, other sinking into the arms of their
friends' (Dallimore 1980:392-3, cited in MacNutt 1990:104).
4. Bishop Francis Ashbury, appointed by Wesley in 1771 as a
missionary to the colonies, was a very disciplined man who insisted
on meetings being conducted in a proper fashion, yet his meetings
were characterised by shouting, falling, crying, and the 'jerks'
(MacNutt 1990:107).
5. At the Cane Ridge camp meetings of 1801, which featured mostly
Presbyterian preachers, one observer reported that
The vast sea of human beings seemed to be agitated as if by
a storm... Some of the people were singing, others praying, some
crying for mercy in the most piteous accents... While witnessing
these scenes, a peculiarly-strange sensation, such as I had never
felt before, came over me. My heart beat tumultuously, my knees
trembled, my lip quivered, and I felt as though I must fall to
the ground... Soon after, I left and went into the woods, and
there I strove to rally and man up my courage...
After some time I returned... At one time I saw at least five
hundred, swept down in a moment as if a battery of a thousand
guns had been opened upon them, and then immediately followed
shrieks and shouts that rent the very heavens (Johnson 1955:64-5;
MacNutt 1990:109).
6. Peter Cartwright, one of the prominent camp meeting evangelists
in the Kentucky area, spoke of the phenomena of the 'jerks': '...
no matter whether they were saints or sinners, they would be taken
under a warm song or sermon and seized with a convulsive jerking
all over, which they could not by any possibility avoid, and the
more they resisted the more they jerked... The first jerk or so,
you would see their fine bonnets, caps and combs fly; and so sudden
would be the jerking of the head that their loose hair would crack
almost as loud as a wagoner's whip' (Cartwright 1956:17-18).
7. Charles Finney, at the village schoolhouse near Antwerp,
New York, describes the phenomena of falling under the awesome
power of God's presence and conviction: 'An awful solemnity seemed
to settle upon the people; the congregation began to fall from
their seats in every direction and cry for mercy. If I had a sword
in each hand, I could not have cut them down as fast as they fell.
I was obliged to stop preaching' (cited in Pratney 1994:24).
8. Note how the Quakers and Shakers got their nicknames!
Yes, cases of physical phenomena have been observed throughout
the ages whenever there has been heightened spiritual activity.
ii. What is the fruit of all this?
Jonathan Edwards wrote a treatise in 1741 called The Distinguishing
Marks of a Work of the Spirit of God. Edwards asked his readers
to assess the awakening by looking past the enthusiastic behaviour
and seeing the ultimate spiritual fruit. He argued that the authenticity
of God's hand in the revival was demonstrated by five 'sure, distinguishing,
Scripture evidences'. It
1. raises the esteem of Jesus in the community;
2. works against the kingdom of Satan;
3. stimulates a greater regard for the Holy Scriptures;
4. is marked by a spirit of truth;
5. manifests a renewed love for God and people (Edwards 1971,
1984:109-115).
In his concluding section, Edwards exhorted his readers not
to oppose the Spirit of God in the revival for this is to commit
the unpardonable sin of Matthew 12:22-32. Edwards' warning went
unheeded by and large. By 1742 a majority of the New England clergy
had come to the conclusion that the Great Awakening was merely
an epidemic of emotionalism and what was needed was a return to
sound theology. Rev. Charles Chauncey of Boston became the brilliant
champion against the revival. He effectively articulated all the
doubts, fears and criticisms of the revival. His books became
best sellers and ensured the defeat of the Awakening. 'When Whitefield
arrived in 1744 practically all the pulpits were closed to him,
and the wind had gone out of the Awakening' (DeArteaga 1992:52).
It's worth noting the fruit at the end of the lives of these
two prominent figures, Edwards and Chauncey. In 1757, Edwards
became president of Princeton, but when he arrived in the area
there was a threat of a smallpox outbreak. To set an example,
he was quick to volunteer to take the experimental vaccine. He
became ill and died. Chauncey became one of the founding theologians
of Unitarianism which discarded the Trinity and advocated universal
salvation. Chauncey is no longer considered a hero who saved the
people from emotionalism. He is now 'seen as a religious bureaucrat
who defended the status quo without comprehending the deeper issues
of revival' (DeArteaga 1992:54).
iii. How do we explain these phenomena?
We must recognise the element of mystery in God's dealings with
us. We should hold explanations tentatively and humbly.
Some explain it as the work of Satan. However, Martyn Lloyd-Jones
questions, 'Why should the Devil suddenly start dong this kind
of thing? Here is the Church in a period of dryness, and of drought,
so why should the Devil suddenly do something which calls attention
to religion and the Lord Jesus Christ? The very results of revival,
I would have thought, completely exclude the possibility of this
being the action of the Devil... [see Luke 11:14-18]. If this
is the work of the Devil, well then the Devil is an unutterable
fool. He is dividing his own kingdom; he is increasing the Kingdom
of God... There is nothing which is so ridiculous as this suggestion
that this is the work of the Devil' (Lloyd-Jones 1987:141-2).
What is the true explanation?
When God sovereignly visits an individual or group of human
beings, his manifest presence and power often affects their bodies
in some way. John White (1988:23) states, 'God is, of course,
present everywhere. But there seems to be times when he is, as
it were, more present - or shall we say more intensely present.
He seems to draw aside one or two layers of a curtain that protects
us from Him, exposing our fragility to the awesome energies of
his being.'
Martyn Lloyd-Jones (1987:145-6) tells us that 'we must never
forget that the Holy Spirit affects the whole person... You see,
man is body, soul, and spirit, and you cannot divide these...
Man reacts as a whole. And it is just folly to expect that he
can react in the realm of the spiritual without anything at all
happening to the rest of him, to the soul, and to the body...
these phenomena are indications of the fact that some very powerful
stimulus is in operation. Something is happening which is so powerful
that the very physical frame is involved.'
Lloyd-Jones also argues that such strange phenomena are a means
that God uses to get our attention (1987:145). God is shaking
us to wake us up (Ephesians 5:14).
God is also humbling us! Paul Cain says, 'God often offends
the mind to reveal the heart.'
Both John White and Martyn Lloyd-Jones conclude that although
a small portion of such strange behaviour would be of the flesh
(the person's own need for acceptance and attention) or a demonic
manifestation, the bulk of such activity in revival originates
from the power and glory of God.
We should not be fixated on the manifestations, but on the person
of the Lord Jesus Christ!
4. Fear of disorder
Charles Spurgeon, the great Baptist preacher, declared that
'revival is a season of glorious disorder' (Relfe 1988:8).
Martyn Lloyd Jones (1987:103) points out that 'always in a revival
there is what somebody once called a divine disorder. Some are
groaning and agonising under conviction, others praising God for
the great salvation. And all this leads to crowded and prolonged
meetings. Time seems to be forgotten. People seem to have entered
into eternity. A meeting may start at six-thirty in the evening,
and it may not end until daybreak the next morning with nobody
aware of the passing of the hours.'
We don't like it when meetings get messy and unpredictable.
It is embarrassing and offensive to most of us. But John White
(1988:35) reminds us that 'revival is war, and war is never tidy.
It is an intensifying of the age-old conflict between Christ and
the powers of darkness.'
John Wimber (1985:31) offers this analogy: 'When warm and cold
fronts collide, violence ensues: thunder and lightning, rain or
snow - even tornadoes or hurricanes. There is conflict, and a
resulting release of power. It is disorderly, messy - difficult
to control.'
Understandably we prefer peace, decency, and order. We say,
'God is a God of order' but we must realise that to bring in order
is sometimes a disorderly process... Chaos and darkness flee but
they create a ruckus as they leave (White 1988:44).
Edwards was so convinced of this disorderly process as part
of the work of God's Spirit that he cried, 'Would to God that
all the public assemblies in the land were broken off from their
public exercises with such confusion as this next Sabbath day
(1741, 1984:127).
Again, John White (1988:45) argues that 'if we insist that revival
must be "decent and orderly" (as we define those terms)
we automatically blind ourselves to most revivals. Like the dwarfs
in C. S. Lewis' children's story The Last Battle, we may
spit out heavenly food, for to us it looks like, smells like,
tastes like dung and straw.'
Question: Am I missing the burning bush for trying to keep the
lawn cut?
5. Fear of controversy
We all shy away from controversy. However, the fact remains,
'renewal has always been controversial and will always be controversial.
We must be ready for it (Mallone 1985:42).
Jonathan Edwards said, 'a work of God without stumbling blocks
is never to be expected' (Works 2:273).
John Wesley prayed, 'Lord send us revival without its defects
but if this is not possible, send revival, defects and all (Bartleman
1980:45).
If we find a revival that is not spoken against, we had better
look again to ensure that it is a revival... No one would pretend
to claim that every revival burns with a smokeless flame (Wallis
1956:26).
Remember, wherever Jesus or the apostle Paul went there was
confrontation. Riots and controversy occurred. Luther, Wesley,
Whitefield and Edwards were extremely controversial characters
in their day - some kicked out of their churches! But once the
dust settled centuries later, they have come to be highly revered
and seen as fighters for orthodox Christianity.
----------
My conclusion to this section:
Today we need the fire of God. Some are afraid of wildfire but
there are always enough 'wet blankets' around to dampen it.
On the Day of Pentecost, the crowd responded to the supernatural
manifestations of the spirit in three ways: some were amazed,
some perplexed, and others mocked. Each generation has been no
different.
Walter C. Kaiser, Jr. (1986:25) urges us to study past revivals
because 'once we know how the Lord has acted in the past, we should
be better prepared to accept the special working of God when it
arrives... Every one of our preconceptions and built-in limitations
concerning what God can or cannot do or what he is likely or not
likely to do in exact detail must be jettisoned.'
In other words, don't put God in a box. Let God be God! He is
the Great I Am, not the Great I Was! His thoughts are not our
thoughts and his ways are not our ways (Isaiah 55). We should
expect to have difficulty understanding and agreeing with the
way God does things at times!
We are wise to take the advice of Martyn Lloyd-Jones: 'we must
be careful in these matters... What do we know of the Spirit falling
on people? What do we know about these great manifestations of
the Holy Spirit? We need to be very careful lest we be found fighting
against God, lest we be guilty of quenching the Spirit of God'
(White 1988:13).
6. How can we promote revival?
Taking a survey on the street, a reporter asked a hurried pedestrian,
'Sir, do you know the two greatest problems in the world today?'
The man responded, 'I don't know and I don't care.' Without missing
a beat, the reporter declared, 'You got them both!' (ignorance
and apathy).
We can overcome ignorance and apathy concerning revival. How
can we promote revival?
1. We need to care
We need to care that God works in our nation. Note that Nehemiah
had a cushy job as a cupbearer to the king but left to rebuild
the walls.
2. We need to get informed
We need to get the big picture!
Read the Bible. Read biographies of leaders of past revivals.
Go where the fire is, such as conferences and places where God
is moving powerfully, and get first-hand exposure and experience.
It is irresponsible to criticise that which you know nothing about.
Slander is sin.
3. Cultivate daily intimacy with the Lord
This is what John Wimber calls 'developing a personal history
with God'. Develop personal disciplines that cultivate a passion
for Jesus such as prayer, fasting, Bible study, worship and obedience
in the small things.
Jack Deere (1993:201) urges us to pray the following prayer
on a daily basis: 'Father, grant me power from the Holy Spirit
to love the Son of God like You love him (John 17:26).
Don't despise the day of small beginnings. Learn to hear God's
voice and catch his heart. Get spiritually prepared so that when
God's zero hour strikes, you're fit for action.
4. Intercessory prayer
Note these Scriptures and quotes, and many like them:
2 Chronicles 7:14 - 'If my people... will humble themselves
and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then
I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and will heal
their land.'
Isaiah 62:6-7 - 'You who call on the Lord, give yourselves no
rest, and give him no rest till...'
Isaiah 64:1 - 'Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come
down.'
'God does nothing but in answer to prayer' (Wesley).
'Prayer is not overcoming God's reluctance; it is laying hold
of his highest willingness' (Luther).
'Prayer is rebellion against the status quo' (David Wells).
'Prayer humbles us as needy and exalts God as worthy' (John
Piper).
'Give me Scotland or I die' (John Knox).
'There has never been a spiritual awakening in any country or
locality that did not begin in united prayer' (A. T. Pierson in
Bryant 1984:40).
'When God has something very great to accomplish for his Church,
it is his will that there should precede it, the extraordinary
prayers of his people' (Edwards, Works 1:426).
Some argue that revival is sovereign and you can't do anything
to make it happen, while others say you can pray and bring it
about. I believe God initiates the prayer that precedes a revival;
and in this hour he is stirring the church to be united, aggressive,
and persistent in prayer for God to act and move again.
5. Be willing to pay the price
Are you willing to receive a divine 'baptism of desperation',
a 'holy dissatisfaction' that puts your reputation, dignity and
personal peace at risk?
We need to have the courage to be honest with God and say with
Oswald Chambers, author of My Utmost for His Highest, 'If
what I have is all the Christianity there is, then the things
is a fraud' (Brown 1991:28).
We must force a crisis in our lives... when our very being aches
with desire for his visitation, when we are consumed with hunger
for his reality, when we radically cut back on other activities
in order to seek his face, then we are ripe for transformation
(Brown 1991:29).
We need to surrender our puny agendas, our need for security,
safety and comfort zones. As Hebrews 11 tells us, we are not to
shrink back and displease the Lord but to become risk-takers in
this adventure of participating in the Kingdom of God.
Christians ought to be old friends with risk and when a church
or an individual Christian builds a wall of safety, something
very basic to the Christian faith has been violated... Christians
ought to be the most gutsy people on the face of the earth (Brown
1983:113-114).
We must have more confidence in God's ability to lead us than
in Satan's ability to deceive us (Deere 1993:215; see also Luke
11:11-13).
Arthur Wallis (1956:10) says, 'If you would make the greatest
success of your life, try to discover what God is doing in your
time and fling yourself into the accomplishment of his purpose
and will.'
We, like Peter in the boat during a storm, need to hear Jesus'
words, 'Do not be afraid,' and his invitation to 'come' and walk
on water with him.
God's gracious disposition is always toward revival and he only
looks to see if there is a people, a generation who dares enough
and cares enough to pay the price. 'Now is the time to sanctify
ourselves for tomorrow God will do wonders among us' (Joshua 3:5).
References
Scripture quotations from the New International Version
of the Bible (1973, 1978, 1984).
Bartleman, Frank (1980) Azusa Street. Logos.
Brown, Michael (1991) Whatever Happened to the Power of God?
Destiny Image.
Brown, Stephen (1983) If God is in Charge. Nelson.
Bryant, David (1984) With Concerts of Prayer. Regal.
Cartwright, Peter (1956) Autobiography of Peter Cartwright.
Abingdon.
DeArteaga, William (1992) Quenching the Spirit. Creation
House.
Deere, Jack (1993) Surprised by the Power of the Spirit.
Zondervan.
Dallimore, Arnold (1980) George Whitefield. Vol. 2. Crossway.
Edwards, Jonathan (1974, 1992 reprinted) Works of Jonathan
Edwards, Vols 1 & 2.
Banner of Truth.
Edwards, Jonathan (1741, 1984) The Distinguishing Marks of
a Work of the Spirit of God.
Banner of Truth.
Jackson, Bill (1994) 'What in the World is Happening to Us?'
Unpublished paper.
Johnson, Charles (1955) The Frontier Camp Meeting. Methodist
University Press.
Joyner, Rick (1993) The World Aflame. Morningstar.
Kaiser Jr., Walter C. (1986) Quest for Renewal (Revival in
the Old Testament). Moody.
Krupp, Nate (1984, 1988) The Triumphant Church. Destiny
Image.
Lloyd-Jones, Martyn (1987) Revival. Crossway.
Lovelace, Richard (1979) Dynamics of Spiritual Life. InterVarsity.
MacNutt, Francis (1990) Overcome by the Spirit. Chosen.
Mallone, George (1985) Canadian Revival: It's Our Turn.
Welch.
Murillo, Mario (1985) Critical Mass. Anthony Douglas.
Packer, J. I. (1984) Keep in Step with the Spirit. Revell.
Pratney, Winkie (1994) Revival. Huntingdon House.
Relfe, Mary Stewart (1988) Cure of All Ills. League of
Prayer.
Wallis, Arthur (1956) In the Day of Thy Power. Cityhill.
Wallis, Arthur (1979) Rain from Heaven. Hodder &
Stoughton.
White, John (1988) When the Spirit Comes with Power. InterVarsity.
Wimber, John (1985) Power Evangelism. Hodder & Stoughton.
Wimber, John (1994) Equipping the Saints, Fall Quarter.
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