Most verses used to promote revival are taken from the Old Testament directed to Israel in a certain historical context and they are pulled out of that context and applied to the church because the name revival appears somewhere in the verse. Many of the verses that they use have to do with a personal revival of an individual having his life right with the Lord, have nothing to do with revival meetings. I have to say that from where we stand as a church, and our doctrinal position, our understanding of the scripture in a literal, historical, grammatical method of interpretation the scriptural evidence offered involves a misuse of scripture. There is consistently a blurring of the distinction between Israel and the church. So revivals are primarily promoted by those who are not dispensational in their theology who do not recognize the distinction between the nation Israel and the church.
Featuring a sermon puts it on the front page of the site and is the most effective way to bring this sermon to the attention of thousands including all mobile platforms + newsletter.
Text-Featuring a sermon is a less expensive way to bring this sermon to the attention of thousands on the right bar with optional newsletter inclusion. As low as $30/day.
Revival of Evil Part 1of 2 Be thankful for great sermons like this from Dr. Rugh and others! ¶ from an e-mail I received ¶ Start of quotation ¶ "Peter Cartwright (September 1, 1785 - September 25, 1872), an American Methodist missionary who helped to start the Second Great Awakening, describing the spiritual abuses seen at what is called the Cane Ridge Revival (1801).]" ¶ There were many other strange and wild exercises into which the subjects of this revival fell; such, for instance, as what was called the running, jumping, barking exercise. The Methodist preachers generally preached against this extravagant wildness. I did it uniformly in my little ministrations, and sometimes gave great offense; but I feared no consequences when I felt my awful responsibilities to God. From these wild exercises, another great evil arose from the heated and wild imaginations of some. They professed to fall into trances and see visions; they would fall at meetings and sometimes at home, and lay apparently powerless and motionless for days, sometimes for a week at a time, without food or drink; and when they came to, they professed to have seen heaven and hell.
Jim Lincoln (8/25/2015)
from Nebraska
Revival of Evil part 2 of 2 Part 2 of 2¶ This was the most troublesome delusion of all; it made such an appeal to the ignorance, superstition, and credulity of the people, even saint as well as sinner. I watched this matter with a vigilant eye. If I opposed it, I would have to meet the clamor of the multitude; and if any one opposed it, these very visionists would single him out, and denounce the dreadful judgments of God against him. They would even set the very day that God was to burn the world....They would prophesy, that if any one did oppose them, God would send fire down from heaven and consume him, like the blasphemous Shakers. They would proclaim that they could heal all manner of diseases, and raise the dead....They professed to have converse with spirits of the dead in heaven and hell, like the modern spirit rappers. Such a state of things I never saw before, and I hope in God I shall never see again. ¶I pondered well the whole matter in view of my responsibilities, searched the Bible for the true fulfillment of promise and prophecy, prayed to God for light and Divine aid, and proclaimed open war against these delusions. ¶ end of quotation. ¶ Proto-pentecostalism had an earlier start than I thought. :'(
In the fall of 1969, Gil began a full-time teaching ministry as Senior Pastor of Indian Hills Community Church. He also earned his Ph.D. from the California Graduate School of Theology. The focus of Pastor Rugh’s ministry is systematic, verse-by-verse teaching of the Bible. As a...