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2 Journeys Ministry with Pastor
Andy Davis. Biblical teaching to guide you to spiritual maturity. On Christmas Day, 1904, Dr. G.
Campbell Morgan, pastor of Westminster Chapel in London, stunned his
congregation with a highly unusual sermon. His usual approach was
expository preaching, moving through passages of Scripture
in a careful and systematic way. Instead, on that particular Christmas
Day, he spoke of a powerful revival that was going on in those days
in Wales, 1904. Because he was a very careful
man, he had not been willing to take the news of the revival
secondhand, so he traveled to Wales to see for himself. And
when he returned, he spoke of what he had experienced personally.
He said, I say to you today, beloved, without any hesitation,
that this whole thing is of God. that it is a visitation in which
God is making men conscious of himself without any human agency,
end quote. So, what was going on in Wales? Well, God had poured out the
power of the Holy Spirit on his people in direct answer to prayer.
Dr. Morgan said this, if you and
I could stand above Wales, looking at it, you would see fire breaking
out here and there and yonder and somewhere else without any
collusion or prearrangement. It is a divine visitation in
which God, let me say this reverently, in which God is saying to us,
see what I can do without the things you're depending on. See
what I can do in answer to a praying people. See what I can do through
the simplest who are ready to fall in line and depend wholly
and absolutely upon me. The main human agent for the
Welsh revival of 1904 was a coal miner, a man named Evan Roberts. He'd been raised in a God-fearing
home and had come to a deep faith in Christ as a young boy. At
the age of 12, he had entered the coal mines, as did many Welsh
boys. But during his breaks in the
coal mine and in the evenings, he fervently studied his Bible.
He began praying for revival to come to Wales. And he prayed,
listen to this, daily for revival for 13 years. Every single day. Think about that. 13 years of
daily prayer for revival before it ever came. And it wasn't just
this one man, Evan Roberts, who was praying. God actually raised
up small groups of praying saints who prayed daily for revival
for a year and a half before it finally came. Effective, fervent
prayer. was essential to the preparation
for the Welsh revival. One person wrote this. If you'd
be asked why the fire of God fell on Wales, the answer is
simple. Fire falls where it is likely to catch and spread. As
one has said, Wales provided the necessary tinder. Here were
thousands of believers unknown to each other. in small towns
and villages and great cities, crying out to God day after day
for the fire of God to fall. Well, this was not merely a little
talk with Jesus, but it was daily agonizing intercession. End quote. The end result of that outpouring
of the spirit was the salvation of thousands of people. Approximately
70,000 people came to saving faith in Jesus Christ in just
the first two months of the Welsh revival. And over 100,000 over
the two years that the holy fires burned in Wales. So why am I
beginning this sermon this way? You may have noticed the scripture
reading was unusually brief. Did you notice? Thought you did. Well, the reason is that I am
deeply desirous of seeing a revival here in Durham, not just in our
church, but in all of the excellent churches in this region. I would
love to see something like that happen in Durham and in Raleigh
and Chapel Hill. Today we're focusing on just
this one verse in Acts and using it as a gateway to discuss a
phenomena that has been a powerful theme in the history of the Christian
church over 20 centuries, and that is the theme of revival.
Look again at this one verse, Acts 4 31. After they prayed,
the place where they were meeting was shaken and they were all
filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God boldly. Now this one moment recorded
for us in Acts 4 speaks volumes for it seems like a mini Pentecost
or like a replay of the day of Pentecost, a minor reenactment
of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit of God on the gathered
church that happened that first day as recorded in Acts 2. With
it happening again in Acts 4, it seems like a timeless lesson
is being taught here on the recurring of Pentecost from time to time
and empowering of the church by fresh effusions of the Spirit's
power. Now when I was in seminary years
ago, I read a very significant book by the famed Welsh preacher,
Dr. David Martin Lloyd-Jones, G. Campbell Morgan's successor
there at Westminster Chapel. The book was called Joy Unspeakable,
and in it he argued for this very thing. He called it the
baptism of the spirit. but he said it's not a once for
all occasion, but it's something that God has done again and again
in the history of the church, resulting in deep holiness in
the part of the church and great power in evangelism. He argues
based on the text we're looking at today, Acts 4.31. saying every revival of religion,
I say, is really a repetition of what happened on the day of
Pentecost. It's really almost incredible
that people should go on saying that what happened at Pentecost
was once and for all. I emphasize this because this
above everything else is what we need today. Oh, is there any
tragedy comparable to the failure of the church to recognize that
this is her need, this is her only hope, end quote. Now Lloyd-Jones
at that time was giving a series of messages on revival in 1959
on the 100th anniversary of another great revival that swept Great
Britain in 1859. His consistent point in a series
of sermons that he gave at that time was the church really doesn't
change and neither does the world. The basic issues are always the
same. Man and his sin, the gospel is the power of God for salvation. The church in a weakened, almost
helpless state, unable to meet the challenges of its day. Knowing
the truth, doing some good ministries, but unable to make any significant
progress. Then suddenly, the power of God
is poured out from on high, the church is revived, it moves out
in power, and many in the world are saved and transformed genuinely.
He would also say that revivals follow a course. At some point,
the power is dissipated. The church returns to a weakened
state, needing the power of God to be poured out again from on
high. So what is revival? What does that
mean? Well, here I think we have to
begin by distinguishing between the ordinary work of the Spirit
and the extraordinary work of the Spirit. The ordinary work
of the Holy Spirit of God involves His ongoing work in the world,
going ahead of the church, preparing sinners to eventually receive
Christ, as well as His ongoing work in existing Christians in
the church, convicting them of their sins, sanctifying them,
assuring them, growing them toward Christ-like maturity, filling
them with His power to witness day after day, and many other
such ministries, ordinary ministries of the Holy Spirit of God. And
the ordinary converting work of the Spirit is happening every
single day on planet Earth, winning individual sinners to faith in
Christ. By the ordinary work of the Spirit, for example, in
Christian families, the next generation of Christians are
even now being raised up in the gospel, hearing the gospel proclaimed
accurately and with converting power, and Christian children
are children in Christian families are coming to faith in Christ.
So also the ordinary work of the Spirit going on in good Bible
preaching churches all over the world is seeing fruit. This is
the ordinary activity of the Spirit and it is powerful and
effective. The ordinary work of the Spirit
is sufficient to do the vast majority of the spread of the
gospel over the last 20 centuries. Revival is an extraordinary work
of the Spirit. So this would be my definition
of revival. Revival is an extraordinary work of the Holy Spirit through
an encounter with God, resulting in a deep work of holiness in
the people of God, boldness in evangelistic proclamation, and
significant numbers of conversions among outsiders. So that would
be my definition. An extraordinary work of the
Holy Spirit of God through an encounter with God, resulting
in a deep work of holiness in the people of God, boldness in
evangelistic proclamation, and then significant numbers of conversions
among outsiders. There are many other definitions.
Earl Cairns says revival is the work of the Holy Spirit in restoring
the people of God to a more vital spiritual life, witness and work
by prayer and the word after repentance in crisis for their
spiritual decline. J.I. Packer says it's God's quickening
visitation of his people, touching their hearts and deepening his
work of grace in their lives. Robert Coleman said revival is
the awakening or quickening of God's people to their true nature
and purpose. Now Lloyd-Jones says very plainly and powerfully,
revival is something God does to us. Something God does to
us. It's often spoken of as being
poured out from above or from on high. It's not man-made, it's
not contrived. Charles Finney, the lawyer turned
evangelist who led the second great awakening in the middle
of the 19th century, had this to say, a revival is not a miracle,
nor is it dependent on a miracle in any sense. A revival is purely
philosophical result of the right use of the constituted means.
as much as any other effect produced by the application of means,
end quote. He wrote a book called The New
Measures, and he studied the science of revival. He was almost
like a scientist of these Christian things. It's like, you know,
how you, in the laboratory, observe certain phenomenon, and then
you get certain repeated patterns, and then you know if you do it
that same way every time you get the same results. That's
the essence of science, the scientific method. He applied that to religion. I don't know if you can tell,
I couldn't disagree more. I hope you know when I'm giving a bad
quote or a negative quote that that's not what I think. Closer
to home, in Southern Baptist Church, although this is fading,
I think, from the SBC culture, revival is an event scheduled
in the life of the church, but out of the ordinary pattern,
consisting of evangelistic preaching, usually from a guest revivalist
preacher, And unusual meetings, like a series of meetings during
that week, it's a revival and you can schedule, you can put
it on your calendar and then everybody or people, many people
come to that. Again, that's a faulty definition
of revival based on the revivalism that came after the second great
awakening and Finney and that whole man-centered approach to
revival. It's not what I'm talking about
today. Not at all. Revival is a miracle. It is something
God does to his people. But it does have certain tendencies
and patterns. And one of the most common is
prevailing, heartfelt, passionate, spirit-saturated, scripture-informed
prayer that precedes it every time. And we see that in the
text that we're looking at today in Acts 4.31. It's an encounter
with the living God in answer to prayer. Look again at verse
31. After they prayed, the place
where they were meeting was shaken. What does that mean? It's a supernatural display of
the presence of God at a prayer meeting. Earlier on the day of Pentecost,
it was this, Acts 2, 2 and 3. Suddenly, A sound like the blowing
of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where
they were sitting. They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire
that separated and came to rest on each of them. A supernatural
encounter with the living God. I picture in my mind that moment
when Elijah was in his contest with the prophets of Baal on
Mount Carmel, you remember that, and the contest was each of these
competing religions were to set up an altar with an animal, a
dead animal on the altar, and then the prophets of Baal would
cry out to Baal, and Elijah would cry out to Yahweh, the true God,
and the God that answered by fire from heaven, he was the
true God. And it was terrible because the people at that time
When Elijah called them before that miracle happened, called
on them to worship the true God and make a decision, or worship
Baal, but not keep going between the two opinions, you know, limping
between this religion and that religion, syncretism it's called,
mixing religion of Yahweh and religion of Baal, mixing them
together. He said, how long will you halt or limp between two
opinions? If the Lord is God, then follow him. If Baal is God,
then follow him. But the people remained silent, sinfully silent. And then prophets of Baal carry
on for hours and nothing happens. But then it's Elijah's time.
And he tells them to pour water on it and more water and more
water and swimming in water. And then he prays a simple prayer
and fire falls from heaven. Fire falls from heaven on the
sacrifice and burned it up, vaporized it, including the stones. And
when that happened, then all the people fell on their faces
and said, the Lord, he is God. The Lord, he is God. That's a
picture of revival to me. Example from church history,
happened with the first great awakening. John Wesley writes
about it, January 1st, New Year's Day, 1734. Journal entry, he
wrote, Mr. Hall Ingham Whitfield, that's
George Whitfield, Hutching, and my brother Charles, Charles Wesley,
were present at our love feast in Fetter Lane with about 60
of our brethren at about three in the morning as we were continuing
instant in prayer. Now stop right there. Three in
the morning, 60 people together for prayer. I would contend the
revival's already started at that point, but anyway, Sixty
together, continuing in prayer, the power of God came mightily
upon us, insomuch that many cried out for exulting joy, and many
fell to the ground. And as soon as we recovered a
little from the awe and amazement at the presence of God's majesty,
we broke out with one voice, we praise Thee, O God, we acknowledge
Thee to be the Lord. Doesn't that seem a lot like
Acts 4.31 there? Gather to pray, and the room
is shaken with the presence of God, and they worship Him. So
it's an overpowering sense of the presence of God. That's what Lloyd-Jones said, an overpowering
sense of awe and majesty at the presence of God, the consuming
fire. The absolute purity and holiness
of God comes upon the minds and hearts of the people with transfixing
power. Concerning the Welsh revival
of 1904, Lloyd-Jones said, if one were asked to describe in
a word the outstanding feature of those days, one would unhesitatingly
reply that it was a universal, inescapable sense of the presence
of God. The Lord had come down. A sense
of the Lord's presence was everywhere. It pervaded, nay, it created
a spiritual atmosphere. A Scotsman who went through a
revival in his day, William Guthrie, said this, it is a glorious manifestation
of God into the soul, shedding abroad God's love in the heart.
It is a thing better felt than spoken of. It is no audible voice,
but it is a ray of glory, filling the soul with God as he is life,
light, love, and liberty. Corresponding to that audible
voice saying, oh man, greatly beloved. Putting a man in a transport, This is such a glance of glory
that it may be called the first fruits of our heavenly inheritance. For it is a present and sensible
discovery of the Holy God, almost conforming him unto his likeness,
so swallowing him up that he forgets all things except the
present manifestation. Oh, how glorious is this manifestation
of the Spirit. Faith here rises to so full an
assurance that it resolves completely into the sensible presence of
God. It's like one of the first days
of heaven just experienced here on earth. Jonathan Edwards had a personal
experience in 1737 in the woods in which he had a vision, he
said, of the exalted, glorified Christ in heaven that filled
him with such an ardency of soul as if he were emptied and annihilated
and swallowed up in a sea of glory, kept him swimming in tears,
he thinks, for about an hour on the ground there of the forest.
One hour, swimming in a sense of the presence of Christ. His
wife, Sarah Edwards, had an experience another time, one night, in which
she was almost lifted up out of herself and hovering halfway
between earth and heaven like a dust speck in a beam of light
filled with a sense of pure pleasure, she said, greater than all the
pleasures she had ever experienced in her lifetime put together.
One moment was like that. The central sense being God's
overwhelming love for her personally in Christ. D.L. Moody. He had been a Christian,
a minister in charge of a mission. He was seeing people converted,
but he wanted more. He said, I began to cry as never
before for a greater blessing from God. The hunger increased.
I really felt that I did not want to live any longer. I kept
crying out all the time that God would fill me with his spirit. Well, one day in the city of
New York, oh, what a day. I cannot describe it. I seldom
talk about it. It is almost too sacred an experience
to name. Paul had an experience of which
he never spoke for 14 years. I can only say God revealed himself
to me and I had such an overpowering experience of his love that I
had to ask him to stay his hand. I couldn't take anymore. So that's what revival is. It's
an encounter with the living God, a direct experience of the
spirit of God, unlike anything that these people had ever experienced
before or would ever experience again. Now is an experience like
this described in scripture? It is. Probably the best for
me is in Ephesians chapter three verses 17 through 19. And there
Paul prays for the Ephesian Christians and not only for them but for
all Christians. I pray that you being rooted and established
in love may have power together with all the saints to grasp
how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ. And
that you would know that love that surpasses knowledge that
you would be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. It's like layer upon layer upon
layer of phrase that he's praying for them. That you would be strengthened
in your inner being. That Christ would dwell in you
by faith and that you would have a sense of the dimensions of
Christ's love for you. like the universe, how wide and
long and high and deep, that you would have a sense of that
love. And that you would, he said, know a love that surpasses
knowledge. It's like it breaks language.
I can't put it into words. I can't capture in words what
it feels like to be loved like that by Christ. And the end result
of that is that Christ then has done his mediatorial work of
bringing God to you and you to God. He came to bring us to God. And that you would be filled
with all the fullness that is God. Now to him who is able to do
immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine according to his
power that is at work within us. To him be glory in the church
and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, both now and
forever, amen. That's the end of Ephesians three.
I think that captures it. Now, this encounter with God
changes everything for the people who go through it. Don't you
imagine it would? The Apostle Paul was caught up
to paradise, heard inexpressible things. Don't you think if that
were you, you'd be different the next day? I mean, your doctrine
isn't changed, you're not the same, but it just, it feels different,
doesn't it? Now, central to this experience
is a yearning for holiness that comes on the people of God. So
the revival is you're taking people already alive, but they've
drifted, they've faded, they're weaker. It's not talking about
non-Christians. There's an effect on non-Christians
down the road, but it starts with the people of God. And they
are renewed or brought alive again. That's what revival is.
They were alive, but now they are energized. And it starts
with a yearning for holiness among the people of God, but
that also happens with non-Christians when they come to the preaching
services as well. It happens on both sides. There's
a sense of the holiness of God. When God appeared to Job in a
whirlwind and dressed him down like no man has ever been dressed
down before by Almighty God, such as, where were you when
I laid the foundations of the earth? You remember all that.
He has an encounter with God. And what does he say? He says,
my ears have heard of you, but now my eyes have seen you. Therefore
I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes. That happens. There's a sense of innate sinfulness
in the presence of God. Or Isaiah had a vision of the
pre-incarnate Christ seated on a throne, high and exalted. And
what did he say is, woe is me, I'm ruined, I'm devastated, I'm
destroyed, for I'm a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people
of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the Lord
Almighty. Do you remember when Jesus enabled Peter to catch
that huge catch of fish, remember, at the beginning of their relationship,
remember that? And Jesus had told him, put out,
he said, we worked hard all night, didn't catch anything. He says,
go out again, remember that? And he comes back with, catch
so big that the nets were breaking? Do you remember what Peter did?
He fell down in his presence and said, go away from me, I'm
a sinful man. You're in the presence of the
holy God. Or I think about Jesus' parable
of the Pharisee and the tax collector. And the tax collector stood at
a distance, he would not even look up to heaven, but beat his
breast and said, God have mercy on me, a sinner. Lloyd-Jones
said this, men and women feel that they're vile and unclean
and utterly unworthy. They feel their utter helplessness
to face such a God. They acutely realize that they
have never done anything good at all. They fall prostrate and
cast themselves upon the love and mercy and compassion of God.
Ian Murray said, all awakenings begin with a return of a profound
conviction of sin. From attitudes of indifference,
or of cold religious formality, many are suddenly brought by
the hearing of the truth to a concern and a distress so strong that
it may even be accompanied by temporary physical collapse.
The phenomenon of hearers falling prostrate during a service or
crying out in anguish is not uncommon at the outset of revivals. And sinners find relief only
in Jesus Christ. Conviction of sin can last in
some hearts for days, even weeks at a time during these revivals.
Along with this, they have a clear sense of the love of God for
sinners in the cross of Jesus Christ. At last, they're seeing
it clearly. Perhaps they believed it theoretically,
but now they feel God's love for them acutely in Christ. It
suddenly becomes very real to them. and they feel acutely this
truth in Galatians 2.20, I have been crucified with Christ and
I no longer live but Christ lives in me and the life I now live
in the body I live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and
gave himself for me. Feel that. Jesus died for me. He drank my cup. He took away
my sin, my wrath has been atoned for. And I am loved, deeply,
perfectly, infinitely loved. And with that comes an overwhelming
desire to share that truth of lost people. It just pours out. The individual feels that and
now they want to share it with others. It becomes the one thing
that absorbs them. If they meet anyone, they talk
about it at once. Everybody's talking about it.
It's the main topic of conversation. The thing absorbs all their interest.
Their minds start casting about to lost people around them, lost
family members, neighbors, people in the community who are on their
way to hell. They lose any fear whatsoever of talking to them
about Christ. So consumed are they with a sense
of the power of the Holy Spirit and the truth of the gospel.
Now, as all this is going on, the people, the Christian people,
have an overwhelming desire to worship together. They want to
get together. They can't get enough of being together. Lloyd-Jones
said this, you will find that when God sends revival, you do
not have to exhort people to come together to worship and
to praise and to consider the word. They insist on it. They
come night after night for it. They may stay for hours, even
until the early hours of the morning for it. They will go
on night after night for months, exactly as happened here at the
beginning in the book of Acts. They meet daily. They couldn't
keep away from one another. Of course not. This incredible
marvelous thing has happened. This joy of the Lord has come
upon them and they wanted to get together with the other Christians
and thank Him for it. They want to pray together. They
want to ask Him to spread it to others, to extend it to others.
If this happens to the church, the world outside will be astonished
as it always has been in every period of revival and reawakening.
This is what is needed, not resorting to doubtful worldly methods.
to try and gather crowds, trick them, bring them together. No,
not at all. What we need is this inward urge,
this constraint of the spirit, this coming together of people
who are sharing in the same glorious experience, end quote. Jonathan
Edwards at the first Great Awakening said this, the work soon made
a glorious alteration in the town of Northampton, Massachusetts. So that in the spring and summer
following, it seemed that the town, Northampton, was full of
the presence of God. It never was so full of love,
nor so full of joy, and yet so full of distress as it was then. There were remarkable tokens
of God's presence in almost every house. It was a time of joy and
families on account of salvation being brought to them. Parents
were rejoicing over their children as if they were newborn. Husbands
rejoicing over their wives, wives over their husbands because God
had worked transformingly in them. The doings of God were
then seen in the sanctuary. God's day was a delight. His
tabernacles were amiable. Our public assemblies were then
beautiful. The congregation was alive in
God's service. Everyone earnestly intent on
public worship. Every hearer eager to drink in
the words of the minister as they came from his mouth. The
assembly in general were from time to time in tears while the
word was being preached. Some weeping with sorrow and
distress, but others weeping with joy and love. Others with
pity and concern for the souls of their lost neighbors, end
quote. So, along with all this, of course, is the powerful preaching
of the gospel. We see it in our text, look at
verse 31 again. After they prayed, the place
where they're meeting was shaken and they were all filled with
the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God boldly. Look two
verses later at verse 33. With great power, the apostles
continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus and much grace
was upon them all. That's preaching, that's the
proclamation of the gospel going out powerfully, clearly, boldly.
People are hearing it. Jonathan Edwards, George Whitfield,
they were known as great revival preachers, incredibly effective
in the pulpit, but they were not alone. There were many others
that were gifted at different times and in different eras when
the spirit pours out, captures a man, puts him in the pulpit,
and he preaches with incredible power. Robert Murray McShane
simply had to enter his pulpit, and before he had opened his
mouth, people began to weep and were convicted of sin. And why? because he was immersed in the
word of God and in the spirit of God, and the spirit was going
ahead of him, like plowing the work, getting it ready. They
wanted to hear, they were ready to repent. During the revival
in Wales in 1859, there was a man named David Morgan. He went to
a revival meeting, was deeply moved by the Holy Spirit. And
he said this, I went to bed that night as usual, David Morgan,
but when I woke up the next morning, I realized I had become a different
man. I felt like I was a lion. I felt great power. Then David
Morgan began to preach the gospel with incredible power over the
next two years. Then one day, it was gone as
quickly as it had come. He said to a friend, one night
I went to bed with this power that had accompanied me for two
years. I woke up the next morning and found I was David Morgan
once again. And he continued to be the original David Morgan
until he died about 15 years later. It was the power of the
Holy Spirit poured out on his preaching during that period
of revival. Now that coal miner I mentioned,
Evan Roberts, the human instrument in the Welsh revival of 1904,
was not a brilliant speaker or preacher. And yet his audiences
were captivated. They were spellbound by his words.
What was the secret of the spell he wields over that audience?
Is it learning? Is it eloquence? Nothing of the
kind. The secret of his power is that he is full of faith and
love and zeal and the Holy Spirit. So the result of this kind of
clear proclamation of the gospel of Jesus Christ is a vast harvest
of souls, big numbers, lots of people brought into the kingdom. Edwards in the Great Awakening
said, a great and earnest concern about the great things of religion
and the internal world become universal in all parts of the
town and among all persons of all degrees and ages. People
in that community talked of nothing else. I'm talking about the unchurched
people. All of the talk except that of
spiritual and eternal things, said Edwards, was soon thrown
by. All the conversation in all companies
and upon all occasions was upon these things only, unless so
much as was necessary for people carrying on their ordinary secular
business. They seemed to follow their worldly business more as
a part of their duty than any disposition they had to it. The
temptation for them now seemed to lie, on that hand, to neglect
their worldly business too much and to immerse themselves entirely
in discussing things of the gospel. in the 1904 Welsh revival. Quote,
the scene was almost indescribable. Tear upon tear of men and women
filled every inch of space where the preaching meetings were being
held. Those who could not gain admittance stood outside and
listened at the doors. Others rushed to the windows
where almost every word was audible. When at seven o'clock the service
began, quite 2,000 people must have been present. The enthusiasm
was unbounded. Women sang and shouted till the
perspiration ran down their faces and men jumped up one after another
to testify. you Dr. Morgan, G. Campbell Morgan,
said about the Welsh revival, I can tell you no more except
that I personally stood there for three solid hours wedged
in so entirely that I could not physically lift my hands at all.
If you could but have seen these men, evidently coal miners with
the blue seam that told of their work on their faces, clean and
beautiful. Beautiful, did I say? Many of
them were lit with heaven's own light. They were radiant with
a light that was never on sea or land. Today it is awakened,
and I see that look on many a face, and I know that men did not see
men such as Evan Roberts while preaching, but they saw the face
of God, and they saw eternity. I left that evening after having
been in that meeting for three hours, and at 10.30, it swept
on, packed as it was, until an early hour next morning. Song,
prayer, testimony, conversion, confession of sin by leading
church members publicly, and the putting of it away. Well,
all the while, no human leader, no one indicating the next thing
to do, no one checking the spontaneous movement. Power of God. And a vast harvest of souls comes
into the kingdom. In the first great awakening
in New England, 50,000 new church members were added to congregational
churches in five years. That's when the population of
New England was only 1.5 million. Of course, I could not resist
the temptation to do the multiplication for our day. You know who I am. If such proportions happened
in the USA today, it would be 11.7 million new church members.
Almost 12 million people converted. And I can guarantee if that were
happening with genuine conversions, it would be all that could be
discussed in America. In the revival of 1857 to 59,
half a million souls joined the church in those three years.
Lloyd-Jones says those half a million were tested, catechized, and
trained before being admitted into churches. That's a solid
half million genuine converts. In Ulster, in the UK, during
that same time, 1857 to 1859, it was 100,000. And society... was transformed as a result of
the revival. Things changed in society because
of these genuine conversions and the ardency that they had.
In the Welsh revival, quote, it was plainly evident now to
everybody that God had answered the agonizing prayers of his
people and had sent mighty spiritual upheaval. A sense of the Lord's
presence was everywhere. His presence was felt in the
homes, on the streets, in the mines, factories and schools,
even in the drinking saloons. the drinking saloons. So great
was his presence, felt that even in the places of amusement and
carousal, they became places of holy awe. Many were the instances
of men entering taverns, ordering drinks, and then walking away
from the drinks and leaving them untouched. Wales up to that time
was in the grip of football fever, I think we call it soccer. when
tens of thousands of working class men thought and talked
of only one thing. They gambled also in the result
of soccer games. Now the famous players themselves
got converted and joined in open air street meetings to testify
to the glorious things the Lord Jesus had done for them. Many
of the teams were disbanded as the players got converted and
the stadiums were now empty. So this is my unusual sermon.
I mean, ordinarily, like G. Campbell Morgan, I go sequentially
through texts of the Bible, et cetera, but in the 27 years I've
been here, I don't think we've ever had a prayer meeting in
which I've not read Acts 431. I was always hoping it would happen
to us that time. Still do. And now, in the ordinary
sequence of preaching, I come to a chance to preach on Acts
41. I may never get a chance to preach on it from this pulpit
again. So what are the applications for us? Well, the same every
week. I talk about the ordinary working of the spirit, the same
every week. I wanna be certain that not one of you leaves this
place unconverted. For you, you didn't come to hear
a sermon on revival, you came to hear that Jesus Christ died
for your sins and if you repent and believe in him, you don't
have to go to hell, you will go to heaven forgiven of your
sins and all you need to do is trust in him and believe in him
and that will be yours. But for the church, for the rest
of the church, I would love to see God pour out his spirit on
us, wouldn't you? Wouldn't you? So what are we
gonna do about it? Well, we're gonna pray. And so
we already decided to suspend Wednesday night teaching time
on December 5th and have a chance to pray. And so you can come
to that December 4th, sorry, first Wednesday evening, December
4th, 6.30 to 7.30, right here. and ask the Lord to pour out
his spirit on us. And then we're also going to
have four early morning prayer times in January for four weeks,
starting on January 8th, a week after New Year's Day, 6.30 to
7.30 in the mornings, or maybe 6.30 to whenever, you know what
I mean. If the Lord pours out his spirit and you decide not
to go to work that day or whatever else you had planned. but that
the place where we're meeting and praying would be shaken and
we'd all be filled with the Holy Spirit and speak the word of
God boldly in Durham, Raleigh, and Chapel Hill. And not just
our church, but Summit Church and all the other churches in
the area that the Lord would work in them as well. And that
we would see a vast harvest of souls. One last thing, I'm about
to start teaching BFL class called Jesus on Prayer. And there's
one thing that Jesus taught on prayer, there's a lot of things
I could quote, but I just wanna finish with this quote. So I say to you, ask and it will
be given to you. Seek and you will find. Knock
and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives,
he who seeks finds. And to him who knocks, the door
will be opened. Which of you fathers, if his
son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead? Or if he
asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? If you then, though
you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children,
how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit
to those who ask him. Close with me in prayer. Father, we thank you for the
chance that we've had to look at this incredible historical
verse capturing a moment in time when the Spirit shook a room
full of praying people. And all of the people in that
room were filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of
God boldly. Father, we pray that you would do in our time what
we've heard that you've done in past times. In this sermon,
I've quoted from at least seven or eight different revivals that
have happened across the centuries, and many, many, many others have
happened. God, do it in our midst for your glory and for the salvation
of many eternal souls. In your name we pray, Lord Jesus,
amen. Stay motivated to grow to spiritual maturity by accessing
free biblical content at twojourneys.org. Help others in their spiritual
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The Spirit's Power in Revival
Series Acts
| Sermon ID | 1124241711552957 |
| Duration | 41:58 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Acts 4:31 |
| Language | English |
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