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One reaction we get from people
who hear about these great times of revival in the past is, why
don't the things happen like that today? Did you know that in Cuba, which
is the problem child of the Americas, a great movement of revival began
in 1950? In Santiago de Cuba, in the east,
an evangelist came to hold two weeks of meetings. Soon there were 15,000 gathering
each night, and a mighty wave of revival began sweeping all
over Cuba. In Banez, a very small place,
10,000 people were gathered on the North Shore. great meetings
outdoors everywhere, there wasn't a church or a theater able to
accommodate the multitudes. In Hogan, a church of 2,400 was
born in less than three weeks, and an offering of $9,000 was
made by poor converts, even just enough to purchase a disused
shoe factory, which they used as a sanctuary. In 1951, another evangelist from
Phoenix, Arizona, began with great overflowing crowds in Havana. And the work accomplished was
reported as something that several missionaries couldn't have done
in a lifetime. One of the leaders, H.C. Ball,
insisted that all the churches in Cuba were enjoying the benefits
of this revival, which had strong Pentecostal charismatic overtones. Now, as I said to you before,
there have been many great awakenings without all these accompanying
signs, but in Cuba it had these overtones. For instance, the
Episcopalians increased 3,700, Presbyterians 3,200, Methodists
8,000, the Baptists 14,710. And by the end of the fifties,
there were 264,927 evangelical Christians in the Cuban population. Now
that of course would include only active church members. During the first two years of
the awakening, There were prophetic messages
with regularity that the revival would flow like waters from an
artesian well all over the island, but that trouble with the government
would put a stop to this great flow of living water. In 1952,
Batista set up his dictatorship and began to suppress the churches.
Many Christians were stoned, some were killed, others lost
their homes just because they didn't support Batista. But then
of course what happened was they thought they were going to be
delivered by Castro. And of course when Castro took
over, he eased all the missionaries out. Yet the work of God has
continued. You must not assume that under
a communist dictatorship the work of God stops. It does not. But it seems to be rather interesting
that God sends revival like that before trouble comes. Not always
the case. Now I could talk to you about
revival in other parts of the Caribbean, but there wouldn't
be time. Perhaps I may give you something
of a personal testimony of the great revival in Brazil that
began in 1951. Now in 1951, I had a strong urge
to go to South America. My wife wasn't too happy about
it. We've been married 44 years. I'm sure I've been out of the
country more than 22 of the 44. A missionary in the field has
his wife with him. Sometimes they have to send their children
home to school. But in this particular case, I've had these long separations
for the sake of the gospel. My wife said, you're just restless. I said, no, I feel I must go.
So I gave her all the money I had. I didn't have a salary. I didn't
have much money, but I gave it to her. And I started off for
San Diego. I preached for Youth for Christ.
They gave me a thank offering. Went across to Tijuana and flew
on the Mexican Airlines down to Mexico and on down to San
Jose in Costa Rica. There I ran out of money. When
I arrived there, Kenneth Strachan, a very famous Latin American
missionary, said, you couldn't have come at a better time. They've
just moved the language school from Colombia, because of the
Civil War, to Costa Rica. And so I had a week of meetings
with American students of every denomination, and we saw a revival
among those students. My big problem was, how do I
go on from here? I went to Pan American on Saturday
morning and I said, I want to fly on Monday right across the
top of South America, across to Trinidad. I think the fare
at that time was about $239, something like that. I didn't
have it. They said, because you're not
Costa Rican, you must pay in American dollars. Where was I
to get the money? I was told also you must get
your ticket before 12 o'clock noon because the plane leaves
at 5 o'clock in the morning and their new office is open on Monday
morning. I was walking up and down outside
Pan American office when a jeep pulled up and there was Kenneth
Strachan with the president of the student body. We've been
looking for you. I said well here I am, I'm down to talk about
my travel. They said, you know, we took
up an offering behind your back and we didn't have time to bank
it or give you a check, so we just brought it here in American
dollars. I said, how much? It was 29 cents
more than I needed. Maybe I shouldn't have done it,
but I blurted out, I said, what an answer to prayer it was. Kenneth
struck and said look I have an air credit card you take my card
and buy your ticket right around back to South to around South
America back to Los Angeles. I said no thank you I'm not going
to borrow money to do it. The Lord can provide. What have
you got to eat? They always feed you meals on
the plane. And so I traveled on down. Went
to Brazil, spoke in the cathedral In Rio, one minister got up and
said, it's interesting to hear these great revivals in other
countries in other centuries, but we don't expect such a revival
in Brazil, where Protestants are a minority. I got up again,
I said, I'm from Ireland, and in Ireland the Protestants are
a minority, but we have seen great revivals in Ireland. We
went to Sao Paulo, and after I left, got back to Los Angeles,
I found that 81 churches had started weekly prayer meetings
for a revival in Brazil. So I said to my wife, let's go
down there for a year. She said, what about the children's
schooling? I said, we'll find a place. So
we went down. You say, how was it provided
for? I got a letter from the Presbyterian Church of Brazil
through the Presbyterian Church of the United States of America,
asking me to go down and help the Presbyterians celebrate their
centenary. Now I'm a Baptist minister. Why
did they want me to come? Well, they said that 1959 would
be the 100th anniversary of the first missionaries to Brazil.
They thought the best way to prepare for it was tell them
what to do to pray for revival. I wrote and said, well, I'll
come if you invite the Baptists and the Methodists and the other
denominations to join. When I got back down there, I was disappointed. The commission told me, we don't
want you to preach. I don't understand. They said,
Brazil is very nationalistic. There are more than 50 million
of us here. The people say, if this man wants to talk to us,
why didn't he learn our language? He said, you couldn't learn in
time, but most pastors and theological students speak some English,
and you can lecture to them. I was disappointed. On Friday,
the secretary of the commission called me and said, I want you
to come and preach for me on Sunday night. He said, I have
an interpreter for you. He said, I've been so busy writing
letters on your behalf, I don't have a message for my congregation.
I went down there, an Englishman interpreted for me, he was married
to a Brazilian lady, and in the vestibule, or rather in the pastor's
vestry, four of us were praying, when the Lord told me, don't
speak on revival, speak on the way of salvation. I know when
the Lord speaks, so I decide to do this. I spoke on Romans
10, verses 8-13, with special stress on if you confess with
your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that
God raised from the dead, you will be saved. I spoke on who must
decide, why we must decide, how we decide, what we decide, where
and when we decide, and I made it as plain as I could make it. There were 310 people in the
meeting. You say, how would you know? There were 300 seats filled
and 10 people standing. At the end I said, if there's
anyone here for the first time in his life wants to declare
his faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, let him stand up. To my amazement,
more than a hundred stood. I said to my interpreter, did
they understand me? He shook his head. So I said,
now please sit down again. Look, I'm not calling for, I'm
not calling for rededications. Oh, if you want to dedicate your
life to the Lord, do that, but this is for people who must confess
with their mouth that Jesus is Lord to be saved. Now would you
stand? Again a hundred stood. I said
to the pastor, did they understand? He shook his head. I was told
afterwards that the average pastor in Brazil was delighted if he
could report ten conversions in a year. And here was a hundred
people standing. I was going to explain it again
when an American friend of mine in the meeting said on a hoarse
whisper, do something. I said, alright, if you really
mean this, will you go to the social hall where My friend,
Rev. Bonares de Ribeiro, and my colleague,
William Dunlap, will talk to you. And 103 professed conversion
that night. One-third the audience. We just
stayed on for 11 weeks. Only we had to move to bigger
and bigger places, and finally our biggest meeting in Sao Paulo
was in the Pacaembu Stadium. The revival had begun. Went to
place called Campinas, and there we saw the churches fill at six
o'clock in the morning for prayer. The biggest church in town was
Presbyterian, and it was just packed out. Went from there to
Belo Horizonte, started in a tiny little Methodist church, so small,
it was like an upstairs room, and the stairs came right up
into the middle of the room. But we had to move from there
to the big auditorium of the Secretariat of Health, and then
out to the open air. Then we went to a town called
Governador Valadares. The churches were excited about
the revival that was coming. They'd been bickering among themselves.
Brazilians are very competitive and individualistic. But they
decided they'd meet in a sports field. I felt sorry for people
standing for five hours at least. By the way, all the meetings
lasted till midnight. We closed always at midnight. I said, no
meetings after midnight. But then the churches were filled
at six in the morning again. So I said, tomorrow night we're
going to have benches here. I want the Presbyterians and
the Baptists and the Methodists and the Pentecostals to bring
their pews. Nobody had ever done that before,
but they had emergency meetings and they said, well, oh servant
of God, the servant of God has asked us, we must do what he
says. There were Presbyterian pews and Baptist pews and Methodist
pews. The Pentecostal pews squeaked a little, but otherwise there's
no difference. But then, guess what happened? The believers
came and sat in the pews. I said, no, no, that's not for
believers. This is for our visitors. If any believer wants to sit
during the meeting, let him bring his own chair. Next night, supposing you were
a Brazilian, never darned a church door, and you're walking home
from your work, and you meet 2,000 people coming along the
street, each with a kitchen chair over his head, looking through
the bars. What would you do? The next place we went to was a college
town called Presidente Soares. There we saw the streets packed
from wall to wall, so the buses couldn't run. Brazilians are
very easy going, they enjoy any interruption of the routine.
Young people sat on the roofs of the buses. I had to go and
speak to the people outside this great auditorium as well as inside
and a lot of them kneeled in the street and crossed themselves.
Four churches packed from about ten till midnight. Then they
came back to the auditorium for a prayer service. That was revival. I had to fly over the great Sierras
there to the state of the Spirit of Santo. When I arrived in Cachoeiro
I was met by six ministers. Now, they had difficulty arranging
a place where any season had begun, and they said, where are
we going to have the crowds when the revival comes? They knew
a revival was coming, they prayed for it. Somebody said, well,
let's take the Gloria Theater, Teatro Gloria. The pastor of
the First Baptist Church said, my church is bigger than the
theater. They said, well, we don't want it really in the church
to get everyone to come, but all right, let's use your church.
He said, my church would be full of Baptists. What are you going
to do with the Methodists and Presbyterians and others? They said maybe we should try
the open air, later we may be drowned out the first night.
A circus had come to town. So the six ministers went to
see the manager of the circus. Now in America you go straight
to business, you say look you're a busy man and so am I, let's
go right to the point. Could we do thus and so? Not in Brazil. You ask first of all about the
senora and the children and you drink coffee and then you all
mention the business by accident, you know. as if it weren't too
important. They said, how is the circus going? It's very poorly. Oh, what's the trouble? Well,
our lion is old, he can roar but he can't bite, and the clowns
are on strike, the monkeys have dysentery, and people are just
not responding. They said, how much money are
you making? He said, I'm losing money. Well, how much would you
need to make to break even? He mentioned so many thousand
cruzeros. They said, could we rent the circus for that? He
said, what would your reverences want with a circus? Oh, we don't
want the circus, we want your big top. You get the lion fitted
with false teeth or whatever he needs, and have the medical
attention for the monkeys, and just give us the men to work
the lights. Now the arena was filled with church pews. The
amphitheater was very primitive. You walked on a plank and sat
on a plank higher up, left your feet dangling. I waited five
nights before I gave any kind of invitation. I couldn't give
a belligram invitation. They couldn't walk forward. You
had a captive audience. So I just said, if anyone wants
to declare his faith in Christ for the first time, let him stand
up. The first man to stand up forgot he wasn't standing on
anything. He just disappeared away into the depths. There was a great roar of laughter
and I thought, oh, they've spoiled my meeting. But no, the Brazilians
are very humorous. That was the talk of the town.
Next night, the crowd was bigger than ever. And there was the
Catholic priest, in his cassock and girdle and sandals, concert
head, listening very intently. We offered him a seat, but he
didn't want to compromise his position. But he went back and
told the people at Mass, I have been to hear the Irish Evangelist.
He said, No é protestante, é cristão. He's a Christian. because I preached
Jesus Christ and didn't attack his denomination. We had maybe
one third of all the converts were professed or nominal Roman
Catholics. By the way, before we started, I said to the minister,
are we all here? Yes. Six churches? Yes. I said, you're Baptist and Presbyterian
and Methodist? I said, isn't there any Pentecostal
church here? He said, we don't count the Pentecostals. As I move, we adjourn the meeting
until our Pentecostal brother comes. They hadn't much choice. They got a taxi and went looking
for him. They arrived outside the pastor's house. His wife
was quite surprised to see six competing ministers, you know.
What did you want him for? They said, we want him. He's
praying with the sick. He's going to visit congregation.
Where will we find him? Well, you'll find his bicycle
outside some house. That's all I can tell you. When
they told him, we want you, leave your bicycle, we don't want your
bicycle, just you. He didn't know if he was going to be taken
for a ride. He came back and he sat in the middle and the
other three in each side, and all the believers were there,
so we went ahead. Oh, we had meetings like that all over Brazil. The great city of Bahia, downtown,
there are nine churches, old, old churches with gold ornaments
and so forth. We started in the open air in
the great Praça by 5,000 people. Do you know that there are more
Protestant Brazilian ministers than Brazilian Roman Catholic
priests? Nearly all the priests in Brazil
are foreign missionaries from Spain and Portugal and Holland
and Germany and the United States and so forth. These were Italian
Franciscans and they ran from one church to another. They were
affronted by us having a meeting there in the town Praça. So they
started to ring their bells to drown us out. Oh, it was a cacophony
of sound, all the bells ringing at once. And I didn't like it,
but the Brazilians didn't seem to mind. They just turned the
microphone, the loudspeaker louder, and it almost became like an
artillery duel. On Wednesday, in the diario,
the daily, there was an editorial apologizing to me. It said, do
these Italian Franciscans realize the best protection His Holiness
the Pope has in Rome is not the Italian police, but the United
States Army. How then dare they insult a chaplain
of the United States Air Force of our sister republic to the
north? That's me. We urge all Brazilians who feel
an indignation at such a breach of hospitality to attend these
meetings. Take bus 11A to the college gates and there you'll
find the crowds. There we had the crowds again. Now you might say, what was the
result? We lost track of the converts, we just couldn't keep
track. The Bible societies of Brazil,
British and foreign, American Bible Society of Brazil said
it was a year of triumph, the largest distribution of scripture
in the century-old history of Bible distribution in Brazil. They mentioned in their annual
report, in a nationwide evangelistic crusade that crossed denominational
lines and drew the interest of the multitudes, a special evangelistic
team went from center to center calling for repentance and dedication
to Christ. Time and time again the largest
auditoriums could not seat the thousands who came to hear the
gospel, and hundreds upon hundreds came forward accepting Christ
as Savior. Some there were who compared this movement with the
great nationwide revivals that laid the foundation for Protestant
growth in the United States. And there was a strong feeling
that 1952 had been a crucial hour of victory in the winning
of Brazil to Christ. The churches in Brazil are multiplying
about ten times as fast as the population, and there's a population
explosion. I won't say more about that moment,
but we took a little vacation down in Argentina to get away
from the crowds. We couldn't go anywhere without being mobbed
by friends. We went down to Buenos Aires
and spoke in several Bible schools, and they wanted us to come there
next. I said, no, I feel I ought to
go to Africa. The Lord will send someone. An evangelist from California
went down, a novice. Tommy Hicks was his name. He
was so much of a novice that he asked the stewardess on the
plane, he said, there's a name in my mind, I wonder does it
mean anything? It keeps repeating itself in
my mind. And the stewardess, the Argentinian girl, said, what
is it, sir? He said, does the name Peron mean anything to you?
She thought she was being put on. She said, you mean our president. Oh, he says, that's your president's
name. Well, he says, the Lord has told me to go and see him.
So he went to see him. Now he was there for a campaign
for the Christian Missionary Alliance and the Assemblage of
God. And they had taken a little auditorium seating, I think,
500. He said, I want a stadium. So we went to see Peron. Of course,
Peron wouldn't see him. He turned him over to the minister
of cults. While he was talking to the Minister of Cults, in
came a man limping. And he said, what's the matter?
Oh, he said, my leg is so swollen. He said, nobody... He said, I've
tried everything. Even Jesus Christ couldn't help
me. Tommy Hicks couldn't understand Spanish, but he said, what did
he say about Jesus Christ? He said, well, he said Jesus
Christ couldn't help him. Tommy Hicks got down on his knees,
put his hand around the man's leg and prayed for him and it
was healed. It was Peron's bodyguard. He went back to tell the president.
So Peron said, what can I do for you, my boy? He said, I want
a stadium. Do you know that the attendance
at the meetings was 100,000 a night for 60 nights? And it shook Argentina. Now,
when I said Tommy Hicks was a novice, he was a novice. I heard him
declare there were three million conversions. So we asked, how
did you count? Well, he said there were six
million who attended the meetings and I used to give an invitation
and many wanted to be Christians, about half of them raised their
hands every night, so that would make three million. That was
very naive. Because Latin Americans will
raise their hands for any invitation you give them. If you want to
love Jesus more, of course they want to love Jesus more. I said,
any other count? Well, about 100,000 took decision
cards. But if you're piling out of a
stadium and somebody's handing out cards, you take one. But
one of my students made a research into the movement. He found that
more than 18,000, not 3 million, but more than 18,000 had joined
the church. It's the biggest number in the history of Argentina.
It shook Argentina. But it just shows you how the
Lord uses people. Tommy Hicks was a novice in that
sense, but the Lord used him because of his simple faith.
Now there are many other things we could say about times of revival
in Latin America. There was a great revival that
began in Ecuador. Guayaquil. among four square
missionaries. It's too long a story to tell,
perhaps I could, maybe I'll be invited back again, so maybe
I could tell you about other great revivals. I'd like to talk
to you about the Indonesian revival, but revived in India, but there
isn't time tonight. But this is a testimony of what
happens in our own lifetime. Power of revival. Everywhere
the churches are increasing, it's through the outpouring of
the Holy Spirit in times of revival And it is also interdenominational. God doesn't read labels when
he sends a revival. He sends a revival to those who
pray in simple faith, trusting him to answer their prayers. God grant we may see another
great time of revival throughout the world.
Movements in Latin America (video) by J. Edwin Orr - brought by Peter-John Parisis
Series J. Edwin Orr
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| Sermon ID | 5310863841 |
| Duration | 25:39 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Language | English |
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