Revivals
are among the charter rights of the church. They are the evidences of
its divinity, the tokens of God's presence, the witness of his power.
The frequency and power of these extraordinary seasons of grace are
the tests and preservers of the vital force in the church. The church
which is not visited by these seasons is as sterile in all spiritual
products as a desert, and is not and cannot meet the designs of God's
church. Such churches may have all the show and parade of life, but
it is only a painted life.
The revival element belongs
to the individual, as well as to the church, life. The preacher whose
experience is not marked by these inflows of great grace may question
with anxious scrutiny whether he is in grace. The preacher whose ministry
does not over and over again find its climax of success and power in
these gracious visitations of God may well doubt the genuineness of
his call, or be disquieted as to its continuance.
Revivals are not simply
the reclamation of a backslidden church. They do secure this end, but
they do not find their highest end in this important result. They are
to invigorate and mature by one mighty act the feeble saints; they also
pass on to sublimer regions of faith and experience the advanced ones
of God's elect. They are the fresh baptisms-the more powerful consecration
of a waiting, willing, working church to a profounder willingness, and
a mightier ability for a mightier work. These revivals are the pitched
battles and the decisive victories for God, when the slain of the Lord
is many, and his triumph glorious.
There are counterfeit revivals
well executed, well calculated to deceive the most wary. These are deceptive
and superficial, with many pleasant, entertaining, delusive features,
entirely lacking in the offensive features which distinguish the genuine
ones. The pain of penitence, the shame of guilt, the sorrow and humiliation
of sin, the fear of hell-these marks of the genuine are lacking in the
counterfeit. The test of a genuine revival is found in its staying qualities.
The counterfeit is but a winter spurt, as evanescent and fitful as the
morning cloud or early dew-both soon gone-and the sun but the hotter
for the mockery of the cloud and because of the fleeting dew. These
surface revivals do more harm than good, like a surface thaw in midwinter
which only increases the hardness and roughness of tomorrow's freeze.
The genuine revival goes to the bottom of things; the sword is not swaddled
in cotton, nor festooned with flowers, but pierces to the dividing asunder
of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow.
A genuine revival marks
an era in the life of the church. It plants the germs of the great spiritual
principles which grow and mature through all the changing seasons that
follow. Revival seasons are favoring seasons, when the tides of salvation
are at their flood, when all the waves and winds move heavenward...days
of emancipation and return and rapture. The church needs revivals; it
cannot live, it cannot do its work without them. Revivals which will
lift it above the sands of worldliness that shallow the current and
impede the sailing. Revivals which will radicate the great spiritual
principles, which are worn threadbare in many a church. It is true that
in the most thorough work some will fall away, but when the work is
genuine and far-reaching, as it ought to be, the waste will scarcely
be felt in the presence of the good that remains.
The first element, in a
revival whose effects will stay, is that the revival spring from within
the church, the native outgrowth of the spiritual condition of the church.
The so-called revivals do not spring from the repentance, faith, and
prayers of the church, but are induced by foreign and outside forces.
Many of the religious movements of the day have no foundation in the
travailing throes of the church. By outside pressure, the presence and
reputation of an evangelist, of imported singers and imported songs,
an interest is awakened, a passing impression made, but these are quite
different from the concern aroused by the presence of God and the mighty
power of his almighty Spirit. In the manufactured revival there is an
interest which does not deepen into conviction, which is not subdued
into awe, which cannot be molded into prayer, nor agitated by fears.
There is the utter absence of the spirit of prayer; neither has the
spirit of repentance any place; lightness and frivolity reign; tears
are strange and unwelcome visitors. The church-members, instead of being
on their knees in intercession, or mingling their wrestling cries with
the wrestling penitents, or joining in rapturous praise with their rapturous
deliverance, are simply spectators of a pleasing entertainment, in which
they have but a momentary interest, the results of which, viewed from
a spiritual stand-point, are far below zero. A revival means a burdened
church and a burdened pastor and burdened penitents.
The revival whose results
are gracious and abiding must spring from the spiritual contact of pastor
and church with God. A season of fasting and prayer of deep humiliation
and confession are the conditions from which a genuine and powerful
work springs.
The nature of the preaching
is of the first importance. Its character will grade the converts and
measure the depth of the work. The word of God in its purity and strength
must be given. The law of God in its spiritual demands must arouse the
conscience, and pierce and lay bare the heart. If there ever is a time
for sentimental anecdotes, for the exercise of wit, if the preacher
is ever justified in pausing to soften the sympathies or inflame the
fancy, it is not at this period.
The object must not be
to increase the impulses, or move on the surface, or work on tender
emotions, but to convict the conscience, search out the sinner and expose
his sins, to alarm the guilty soul, and intensify the faith and effort
of the believer. The word of God is the imperishable and vitalizing
seed. The Spirit of God is the quickening energy that is to be let loose.
The word of God is the sword of the Spirit. The sword must be unsheathed,
and cut with both edges.
The spirit of prayer must
be the one evident and prevailing spirit. The spirit of prayer is but
the spirit of faith, the spirit of reverence, the spirit of supplies,
of grace, and mercy and is increased. This spirit holds in its keeping
the success of the word and power of the Holy Spirit; as the spirit
of prayer fail these fail. If the spirit of prayer is absent or is quenched,
God is not in the assembly. He comes and stays only in the cloud of
glory formed by the incense of a church whose flame of prayer is ascending
to him. All genuine revivals are simply God coming with great grace
to his Church. The revival that springs from heart contact of the church
with God, which is directed and intensified by the pure preaching of
the pure word of God, and in which, and through which, prayer, mighty
prayer, prevails, will be a revival that will stay in its coming.
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