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At the present time, the national
debt of the United States exceeds one trillion dollars. That's
the amount that the government owes the people. One million
times a million. But when President James Buchanan
delivered his inaugural address in 1857, he declared that our
present financial condition is without parallel in history.
No nation has ever before been embarrassed from too large a
surplus in its treasury. He proposed paying off the national
debt entirely. Times were good. Profits were
predicting a prolific harvest and editorials were captioning
a good time coming. And yet 32 weeks later, every
bank in the United States went broke. Now about that time, the Protestant
churches boasted a membership of about 4 million. Between 1857
and 1859, there occurred a revival and an awakening in the United
States which added fully a million members out of a population of
30 million. It was the most wholesome awakening
of all time. The Episcopal Bishop McElvain
of Ohio stated, It is a work so extensive, so remarkable in
its rise, progress and influence, I have no doubt whence it cometh,
it is the Lord's doing. And so said all contemporaries,
except those whose philosophy rejected evangelism. That was
not only the opinion of the moment. D.L. Moody died in 1899. After a lifetime of service he
declared, I would like before I go hence to see the whole Church
of God quickened as it was in 57 and a wave going from Maine
to California that will sweep thousands into the kingdom of
God. It seems fair to deduce that in 40 years of winning men
to Christ, Moody had seen nothing to compare with the outpouring
of the Holy Spirit in 1858 when he served his apprenticeship.
Moody did not say, I would like to see the whole Church of God
quickly as it was in 1893. That was his best year in evangelism.
But the year 1858 was the greatest of his experience. Professor
Perry Miller of Harvard made no profession of faith. In a
book published after his death, he called the 1858 revival the
event of the century. However, Professor William McLaughlin
of Brown University named it a religious excitement organized
by panic-stricken businessmen that scarcely deserved to rank
as an awakening. However, he used as a definition
of an awakening, a deliberate, organized, conscious effort by
members of a society to construct a more satisfying culture. Could
you imagine applying such a definition to the meeting of the apostles
in the upper room at Pentecost? Evangelicals also called it a
businessman's revival. But they attribute it to a prayer
meeting started at the time of the bank panic by a lame man
called Jeremiah Lanphier. It was attended only by half
a dozen men out of a population of a million. And then it overflowed
into thousands of prayer meetings, followed by a great revival. I've had to challenge both interpretations,
the secular one and the evangelical one. Now for a dozen years religious
life in the United States was in decline. Almost every denomination
was losing members or not keeping up with the birth rate. What
were the reasons given? Some people had lost faith in
spiritual things because of unhappy disillusionment that vexed the
followers of William Miller, who had predicted Christ's return
and reign in 1844. Other people were making money
very easily and very easily forgetting God. But most seriously, the
slavery contention divided some denominations and many congregations. Some time before the revival,
the Reverend William Arthur, a British Methodist, preached
a series of powerful messages in Ohio and soon afterwards published
them as the Tongue of Fire. Arthur carried his readers back
to Pentecost seeking a revival of its power and appealing for
prevailing prayer. His book concludes with a most
remarkable prayer to God the Holy Spirit. Descend upon all
the churches. Renew Pentecost in this our age. Baptize thy people generally
again with tongues of fire. Crown this century with a revival
of pure religion greater than that of the last century, greater
than that of the first, and greater than any demonstration of the
Spirit ever yet, vise versa, to man. Evangelicals of all denominations
read this book, and many there were, after a couple of years,
who asserted that this extraordinary prayer had been answered. Now,
until today, there's been general agreement that the 1857-58 revival
began in the United States in early 1858, although it was preceded
by a movement of prayer of the humblest origins. What is not
commonly known is that long before that bank panic, there was a
concert of prayer. The Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians,
Lutherans, Episcopalians, and others participating. Fulton
Street was only one of thousands of gatherings praying for an
outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the churches of the United
States and Canada. Denominations were officially
committed to prayer for revival and already engaged in it. Take
an example. The Presbyterian General Assembly
quoted one Presbytery after another. We would, upon our bended knees,
offer the prayer for Bacchus, O Lord, revive thy work. and
then they summed it up by saying next to a state of actual revival
is the sense of its need and the struggle to obtain it at
any sacrifice of treasure, toil or time. We trust that it is
not distant when this state of general revival shall be ours.
We mentioned the theory that we owe this revival to the bank
panic but Canada was utterly untouched by the bank panic.
The people there were praying for revival. Revivals began in
the Atlantic provinces and in Ontario. About a week before
that bank panic, an extraordinary revival broke out in Hamilton,
Ontario. Walter and Phoebe Palmer, well-known
Methodists, who had been up speaking in summer camp meetings, lost
their baggage and stayed over in Hamilton unexpectedly. The
ministers arranged special meetings for them on very short notice.
Very few attended the first meeting. But there arose such an awakening
that the mayor of the town, business leaders, and common people repented.
And this revival in Canada continued through 1858, 59, and 60. Now, the South of the United
States producing cotton was very little affected by the bank panic.
If we were to ask the question, what community in the South was
least affected? We'd have to answer the black
slaves. They didn't have a dime in the
bank. Revival began breaking out in the fall of 1857 in Virginia
and the Carolinas among the slaves. At that time blacks met in the
same churches with the whites. Sometimes they occupied a gallery
or some separate section. But the churches proved to be
too small. So in Virginia the great warehouses were filled
with black inquirers. One of the most remarkable revivals
of modern times occurred during the fall of 57 in Beaufort, South
Carolina, where in 15 weeks a pastor baptized 428 believers, of whom
422 were black, making it the world's largest Baptist church.
A truly remarkable revival occurred in Anson Street Presbyterian
Church in Charleston, South Carolina, where 48 black members outnumbered
the dozen white. The minister was Dr. John Gerardo,
an outstanding theologian who could have had any church he
wanted in South Carolina. He started a prayer meeting entreating
God to send revival. It constantly increased until
the sanctuary was filled. He was urged by his officers
to commence preaching, but he declined, waiting, he said, for
the outpouring of the Spirit. Then one evening, while leading
the petitioners in prayer, he received a sensation as if a
surge of electric power had struck his head and diffused itself
throughout his whole body. For a little while, he stood
speechless under the strange physical feeling. He stood up,
then he sat down again. He was confused. There was nothing
in the Presbyterian order of service to account for this.
Then he said, the Holy Spirit has come. We will begin preaching
tomorrow evening." So he closed the service with a hymn, dismissed
the congregation, came down from the pulpit, but no one left the
house. Then he realized the situation. The Holy Spirit had come not
only to him, but had taken possession of the hearts of the people.
He immediately began exhorting them to accept the gospel. They
began to sob softly like the falling of rain, then with deeper
emotion to weep bitterly or to rejoice loudly according to circumstance.
It was midnight before he could dismiss the meeting. In the greatest
event of his ministry, I'm quoting him, he preached to crowds of
1,500 to 2,000 night and day for eight weeks, and converts
in great numbers, white and black, joined the churches of Charleston.
Now throughout the fall of 1857, intercessors multiplied throughout
the country. Some conventions were far-reaching.
The ministers and elders of four Presbyterian synods met in Pittsburgh
December 1st to pray for revival. Baptist churches in New York
launched united prayer meetings so did other denominations. Not
only so but Baptist, Methodist, Congregations, Presbyterian,
Lutherans and Episcopalians reported local revivals in state after
state. Some as far away as Texas and
Iowa. Now in February of 1858 Fulton
Street and other businessmen's prayer meetings overflowed. Horace
Greeley, the editor who said, go west, young men, sent one
of his reporters around the prayer meetings to count how many men
were actually praying at noon. In an hour, the man with horse
and buggy could reach only 12 meetings, but he announced 6,100
men at prayer. In the evenings, the churches
were crowded every night to hear the word. and soon converts were
coming in at the rate of 10,000 a week. Newspapers gave headlines
to the reports of revival. Along the Hudson and the Mohawk,
revival stirred the population in town after town. In several
places, the Baptists had so many candidates for believers' baptism
that they broke the ice on the river and immersed the candidates
in icy water. And when Baptists do that, they
really are on fire. Revival was underway in New England.
It started in concerts of prayer. It spread all over Boston. Finney was preaching at Park
Street Church and said it was too general to keep any account
of the number of converts. New England's church bells rang
three times a day to call people to prayer. In Newark, New Jersey,
2,785 of the city's 70,000 people were converted in a couple of
months, according to reports the most mature of the people. In Pennsylvania, there were great
revivals in 1857, but six weeks or so after the financial crash,
a businessmen's prayer meeting was started in Philadelphia.
Only a dozen men came out of a population of half a million.
But on the 3rd of February of 1858, the intercessors repaired
to an ante room in James Hall, a great theater downtown, where
the attendance has picked up to 3,000 a day. Then the attendance was so great,
it overflowed. The hymn written by George Duffield,
Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus, was written there and sung for
the first time by those men. In Washington, the nation's capital,
there were five daily prayer meetings. 5,000 people attended
the one in the Academy of Music. However, Charles Finney, strange
to say, reported that the only part of the country not affected
by the revival was the South. because they were addicted to
their peculiar institution of slavery. But this is not true. I can document the revival from
Richmond, Virginia around to Waco, Texas. The mayor of Chattanooga
called for Thanksgiving in February, not November, to celebrate the
coming of the millennium. He thought the millennium had
come. The revival swept Ohio and all the western states. The
movement crossed the Alleghenies again in March 1858, crowded
all the halls and churches all the way to Omaha. In Ohio, 200
towns reported 12,000 converts in a couple of months. Was it
lasting? Between 1853 and 57, Methodist
churches in Ohio were losing membership annually. But in 1858,
they gained 12 percent. Michigan Baptist won 168 in four
years, but in 1858, 2,539. Chicago had a population of 100,000,
and yet they had 2,000 men meeting each noon for prayer. And the
churches were conducting two and three and four meetings a
day. Trinity Episcopal Church had 121 members in 1857. They
built a new church for 1,400 in 1860. A concerned shoe salesman offered
to teach Sunday school class. But he was told that they had
12 teachers and only 16 pupils. So he went out to the streets
and rounded up 17 urchins and started classes and founded a
huge Sunday school. That was the beginning of the
life ministry of Dwight Lyman Moody. The news of the awakening
back east reached California in hundreds of thousands of affectionate
letters. And this caused a flocking of
Christians to prayer meetings in the churches and other gathering
places. The California Times reported
extraordinary interest in religion. And two months later, daily prayer
meetings in San Francisco were continuing with unabated zeal.
The results were rather disappointing in the southern part of California,
where there was very little Anglo population. Before the close
of 1857, there was a remarkable awakening among seamen in New
York and all the other ports. The seamen's friend recorded
an outpouring of the spirit in almost every seamen's battle
around the coasts. There was an extraordinary revival
of religion in the United States Navy, and dozens of army volunteer
regiments marched to church services. Firemen in the bigger cities
were somewhat of a problem because they often would battle each
other and fight the police and civilians, as well as dousing
flames. They made a great effort to reach firemen in all the great
cities, and many, many were converted. In American colleges in New England,
the Middle Atlantic States, and the South and the West was scarcely
an exception. There was a great student awakening.
The work at Yale found no parallel in the whole history of that
institution. In most places the majority of
students profess conversion and there was a vast increase of
candidates for the ministry reported by the seminaries. Now this 1858
revival was received by great enthusiasm by the secular press.
They testified of great changes for good in every place. With
few exceptions, the 1857-58 awakening was supported by every Protestant
denomination, including the Lutherans and the Episcopalians, although
a minority in each objected. These meetings were commended
for their quietness and restraint, and they gained goodwill of citizens
in every place. Looking back, none of the objections
raised about extravagances in previous movements were even
mentioned in connection with the 1857-58 revival. Looking forward, there were manifested
no signs and wonders, except extraordinary conversions. No
gifts of tongues or healing, but many, many calls to service.
Besides a million church members reinvigorated in the movement,
a million converts were added to the membership of major Protestant
denominations. The total number of church members
was four million, and in the two years it became five million.
Until now, only estimates of the total in gathering have been
published. I've examined the statistics of 80% of the Protestant
churches and have reached the incomplete figure of 1,001,379
added to the churches in two years. Beyond all else, it was
a layman's movement in which laymen of every sort of church
affiliation gladly undertook both normal and exceptional responsibility. Now, despite the outbreak of
the bloodiest, most homicidal war in the world between Napoleon's
time and World War One, the American Civil War, the awakening continued
effective in the armies of both North and South. In the civilian
population of the North, after a national repentance in 1863,
it revived the churches in distressing days and solaced many anguished
people. In the South, civilian fervor,
strong at first, waned by 1864. But in the wartime 60s, fervent
and united prayer continued, with significant seasons of refreshing
reported, especially in the theaters of war. 150,000 Confederate soldiers were converted
in the Army of Northern Virginia. But I can document revivals also
in the Union Army. In a little town called Ringgold
in Georgia, They marched 150 converts down to the river to
be baptized according to preference, some by immersion, some by pouring,
and some by sprinkling. And then 400 took communion,
and that evening Major General Howard preached the gospel. 86
more soldiers were converted. Major Howard was killed at the
Battle of Kennesaw Mountain a month later, but that revival was in
Ringgold, Georgia in the army of General Sherman. invading
Georgia. The evangelists were four young
laymen from Illinois, Reynolds, Nichols, Bliss, and D.L. Moody, 1863, ten years before
he became famous. Not only was there a great effect
upon the Negro population both north and south, churches gaining
so much strength in numbers, but there were gracious outpourings
of the Spirit in West Indian communities before the end of
1858. In 1860, a remarkable awakening began in a Moravian church and
spread all over Jamaica. Chapels were once again packed
and widespread conversions followed. The small beginnings of missionary
churches were reported in Brazil in 1859, and at this time was
also an enterprise pioneered in Mexico. And following 1858,
American Missionary Society expanded ministries in Asia and Africa. Among the products of the revival
were John Clough, a Baptist converted in Iowa, who maintained the ministry
of prayer and became a key figure in a movement in India baptizing
9,606 in three days, 2,222 in one day. Now this revival became worldwide. But its effect in the United
States was very significant. Let me give an example. In Kalamazoo
all the denominations united in a public prayer meeting. At
the very first meeting, a request was read out. A praying wife
asked the prayers of this meeting for her unconverted husband.
All at once, a muscular man stood up and said, I'm that man. I have a praying wife. This request
must be for me. I want you to pray for me. He
was a blacksmith. He was convergent then and there. Just as soon as he took a seat,
another man arose, ignoring his predecessor. And he said with
tears, I'm that man, I have a praying wife, she prays for me and now
she's asking you to pray for me. I'm sure I'm that man, I
want you to pray for me. He was a lawyer and he was converted.
Half a dozen convicted husbands were converted in the first five
minutes. In times of evangelism, the evangelist
seeks a sinner. In times of revival, the sinners
come chasing after the Lord. There's that difference. One
of the significant things was the number of conversions among
the black slaves in the South. I didn't know that there was
an army of liberation in training in the South planning an insurrection
in 1857. They were going to march on Atlanta.
A hundred thousand drilled men. But so great was the revival
that the leader of that underground movement apparently was converted
and decided that a higher power was going to intervene in the
struggle for liberty. So he called off the insurrection.
Supposing it had not been called off, what would have happened?
The South was well prepared. They would have slaughtered the
blacks. There'd been a lot of innocent
blood shed. There'd been reprisals taken.
And so the insurrection was called off. It was almost as if the
Almighty told the black slaves, slavery is a sin and it demands
a blood atonement. Actually, there were 600,000
white soldiers lost their lives in the Civil War. But the blacks
weren't to blame for this, and they were told to remain quiet,
which they did. Had there been a slaughter of
the blacks in the south, perhaps they would have turned their
back on Christianity. And you'd have seen a situation somewhat
like Haiti where they have voodoo or Brazil where they have Candomblé
and Macumba and the other African cults. Now this revival continued
for 40 years. It didn't continue as an exciting
revival for 40 years. But D.L. Moody, for example,
extended the revival by his ministry for 40 years. Not only that,
but the denominations took up evangelism and made it the usual
practice of their meetings. Most churches planned evangelistic
campaigns and most churches united in evangelistic efforts to reach
a whole city for Christ. It not only recruited candidates
for the ministry, For instance, Union Theological Seminary had
the largest class in its history. The same was true of other theological
seminaries, but it recruited quite a number of missionaries
for the foreign field. And following this revival, following
the Civil War, there was a great expansion of missionary endeavor
throughout the whole world. The revival continued in Canada
also for a matter of three or four years, and continued on
in the following decades. You could say that the Moody
years, Moody began ministering in 1858 and continued till 1899. 41 years represent the extent
of that revival. But that's another subject we
can talk about somewhat later. It has been complained that there
was not much social effect due to that Great Awakening. Actually,
there was a great social ministry chiefly for soldiers and prisoners
of war and those dislocated by the war. But in the meantime
a revival broke out in Britain and there the new social developments
occurred. Home missions in the Salvation
Army were extended in the evangelistic social outreach of the awakening
worldwide. And then after the war was over
these new developments were brought across the Atlantic to take root
in United States. Every great awakening has its
social impact. Sometimes it takes some years
before it's truly felt. But books have been written on
the social impact of the 1859 revival in Britain. And nearly
all of those social developments were paralleled by similar developments
in the United States. It's interesting also that out
of that British revival came the rise of the China Inland
Mission. through Hudson Taylor, who was busy working in the revival
in London. That was the first of the interdenominational
faith missions. Now how are we to account for
this great awakening of 1858? I think it can be summed up in
one way, and that is, it was preceded by prayer. The bank
panic had some influence on people, but it was not the cause of the
revival. The revival movement especially in its prayer concerts,
had started before the Bank Panic and continued all the way through
until it ran its course, and then produced one of the greatest
awaitings of all time. The denominations were one in
brotherly love. Everyone committed upon the extraordinary
fraternal good feeling at that time. It was one of the most
Cooperative periods of Christian history when the denominations
work together as one man. What lessons can we learn from
it? Although things have changed and many other features of Christian
work have arisen, I think we could say this is the most wholesome
revival in American history and we ought to pray that the same
sort of thing may happen again. God grant it.
The Awakening of 1858 in America
Series History of Revival
| Sermon ID | 102702212857 |
| Duration | 28:14 |
| Date | |
| Category | Classic Audio |
| Language | English |
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