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During the bicentennial year,
I heard a friend of mine on television say, it's about time people realize
that this republic was founded by men of God and men of prayer.
I said to my wife, that's only half true. There were men of
God and men of prayer in the revolution. There were some who
were not. Who could call Tom Paine a man
of God? He died in disgrace. On the other
hand, Thomas Jefferson was a great man. But he didn't believe in
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. When he wrote the
Declaration of Independence, he didn't mention God. And the
religious people ganged up on him and said, you must mention
God. So he worked it in. We hold these truths to be self-evident
that all men are created equal. They're endowed by their creator
with certain rights. And he spoke of nature's God.
One of the heroes of the Revolutionary War was General Charles Lee.
And he said, let's tear down all the churches. They stand
in the way of progress. On the other hand, they say that
George Washington was a man of prayer. I understand his prayer
life reached a climax at Valley Forge. He needed to pray there,
all right. There were evangelicals and there
were freethinkers working together for the independence of this
country. But what most people don't know is that in the wake
of the Revolutionary War, there was a moral slump unparalleled. Drunkenness was epidemic. Out
of a population of 5 million, 300,000 were confirmed drunkards. They were burying 15,000 of them
a year. They even had a whiskey rebellion.
Just as Abbie Hoffman said not so long ago, every American has
the right to grow his own marijuana in his backyard, these men said
every American has the right to distill his own whiskey, and
they wouldn't pay revenue. And George Washington had to
call out the National Guard of four states to put down the armed
rebellion to overthrow the government of the country. Profanity was the most shocking
kind. Immorality was rampant. with
venereal disease and illegitimacy and the like. Women were afraid
to go out for fear of assault. Bank robberies had become an
altogether daily occurrence. What about the colleges, the
hope of the nation, the young leaders of the future? They took
a poll at Harvard and discovered not one believer in the whole
student body. At Princeton, a much more evangelical
place, They also took a poll and discovered only two believers
and only five that didn't belong to the filthy speech movement
of that day. What were the churches doing?
The largest denomination was the congregational. Take a typical
example, the Reverend Samuel Shepard of Lennox, Massachusetts,
announced that he hadn't taken a single young person into fellowship
in 16 years. He said prospects were altogether
melancholy. It was as if he was chaplain
to an old people's home dying off. The Presbyterians met in
General Assembly and their main topic was to discuss the gross
immorality of the country. The most aggressive were the
Methodists and they were losing 4,000 members a year. The Baptists said they had their
worst winter. The Lutherans were so languishing they discussed
amalgamating with the Episcopalians who were even worse off. They
thought they would prop each other up. Samuel Provost, Bishop
of New York, quit functioning. He had confirmed no one for so
long he decided he was out of work. John Marshall was Chief
Justice of the United States and he wrote to the Bishop of
Virginia, Bishop Madison, he said, the Church is too far gone
ever to be redeemed. Voltaire said in 30 years time,
Christianity will be forgotten. We went through a siege in this
country in the 1970s, 60s and 70s, but nobody suggested the
church was going to be wiped out. But in those days the churches
were in deadly fear. Young people had been turned
away and the churches were dying off. This may sound like the
hysteria of the moment But Kenneth Scott Lantourette, the great
church historian, said, it seemed as if Christianity were about
to be ushered out of the affairs of men. Why? In the American Union of States,
possibly the result of the war, in wartime, especially war fought
on your own territory, there's always a moral slump. But then came the French Revolution.
And the French Revolution was anti-Christian. They crowned
a prostitute goddess of reason in Notre Dame Cathedral. Practically
every church in France was closed. And the French were subscribing
millions of dollars to enlighten young Americans. Now how did this state of affairs
come to be changed? It came through a movement of
prayer. I must backtrack a little bit. A group of Scottish ministers
published a plea for prayer for revival. A copy was sent to Jonathan
Edwards, the great American theologian. Jonathan Edwards had seen the
revival of 1734 in Massachusetts, and then he had seen the great
movement I spoke about under Whitefield in 1740. This warmed
his heart. He was so moved he wrote a response. His response got longer than
a letter, it became a book. The title of the book, if my
memory serves me correctly, was as follows. a humble attempt
to promote explicit agreement and visible union of all God's
people in extraordinary prayer for the revival of religion and
the extension of Christ's kingdom according to scriptural promise
and prophecies concerning the last time." That was the title, not the book
itself. Nowadays, titles are scarcely
related to content. If you want to study the weather,
Meteorology, you do not read Gone with the Wind. It has nothing
to do with that. But in those days, the title
told you what was in the book. Now in case you missed the force
of it, a humble attempt, that was New England modesty, to promote
explicit agreement and visible union of all God's people in
extraordinary prayer. That's what's so often missing
from our ventures, some of you may remember Key 73, when they
had a great evangelistic drive all over the United States. But
they took the attitude, you Southern Baptists don't need to work with
the Missouri Lutherans, do your own thing, but do it at the same
time. You Pentecostals and you Presbyterians don't work together,
just do your own thing and perhaps we shall secure a great awakening.
There wasn't an explicit agreement and visible union in extraordinary
prayer. You may say, well, what do you
mean by extraordinary prayer? Well, what is ordinary prayer?
Do you pray before you eat? That's ordinary prayer. Do you pray in church? That's
ordinary prayer. But when people pray all night,
or get up at six in the morning to pray, or give up the lunch
time to pray, that is extraordinary prayer. And that's what John
Edwards pleaded for. After he died, a Scottish minister
called John Erskine published the two books, the Scottish one
and the American one together. He sent a copy to Mr. Baptist,
Dr. John Ryland, editor of the Baptist
Register in Bristol, in England. John Ryland didn't want to throw
away a book on prayer, so he sent He had two copies, one to
Andrew Fuller and the other to John Sutcliffe. They were men of prayer. Fuller
took leave of absence and travelled the length and breadth of Britain,
urging the Baptists to set aside one day a month to pray for revival.
Sutcliffe, for domestic reasons, didn't travel, but he had a very
lively layman in his congregation called William Carey, afterwards
the great missionary. And between them they started
what they called the Union of Prayer. They got every church
to set aside one day a month to pray for a spiritual awakening.
Then the Congregationalists joined them. Then the Methodist Societies. And then Evangelicals of the
Church of England and the Church of Scotland, until Britain was
interlaced with a network of prayer meetings. This was seven
years before the French Revolution. John Wesley, still preaching
in his eighties, died in 1791. And the revival began in 1792.
It started in Yorkshire, in the industrial heart of Britain.
And it started in prayer meetings. Not so much in preaching services,
but in prayer meetings. However, I don't want to wear
you with details about the British aspect of the revival, but I've
told you of the terrible conditions in this country at that time. The first sign of the coming
movement was 1792. In Boston, where First Baptist
Church had a series of meetings in the midst of a very cold winter,
amidst blizzards and the like. So many converts were added to
First and Second Baptist Churches. Now you know, of course, Boston
at that time was a congregational city. But the Congregationalists
had been turning to Unitarianism. In fact, only one Congregational
Church in the whole of Boston remained untouched, and that
was the Old South Church. But this little touch of revival
did something to encourage people. Then, about 1794, Isaac Bacchus,
a godly New England minister, sent out a letter addressed to
every Christian denomination in the United States, saying
that they ought to set aside time to pray, because their back
was to the wall. It was well received. The Presbyterian
Synods of New Jersey and Pennsylvania adopted it. Bishop Asbury adopted
it for the Methodists. The Baptist Associations, the
Congregational Associations, all the other denominations,
one after the other, adopted this until the United States
was interlaced with a network of prayer meetings, praying that
God would intervene in national affairs. The revival began towards
1796. By 1798 it was general. Churches crowded out. Now the
young people had been alienated from the churches but so great
was the power of God that young people would be convicted of
sin on the dance floor in the tavern and then leave and go
and seek spiritual counsel. This happened all over New England.
And by the way, I noticed in every report it says, without
extravagant outcry or ranting. Now, there was a reason for that.
In the wake of the former revival, there was a man called Davenport
who simply tried to exploit all the emotionalism of the previous
revival. And so these ministers were careful
to say it was a deep, solemn work of grace without any extravagance
of feeling. I told you that in Lennox, Massachusetts,
The pastor hadn't taken anyone in to membership for sixteen
years, but he said the showers of blessing began to fall, and
then they took in five times as many people as any previous
year in the history of the church. The revival spread to New York
and Philadelphia, and then smaller towns. The western parts of New
York, among the settlers, had the most startling displays of
excitement. Now the population of the United
States was largely east of the Alleghenies at that time, three
quarters of the population. And this was a deep, deep movement. Some pastors in New Jersey hit
on the idea of having Aaron and Her societies. That's a novel
idea. You remember the story of Moses
praying and while he held up his hands, Israel prevailed over
Amalek? But when his arms got tired, then Aaron and Her came
and propped up his arms. These pastors got the praying
people of the congregation to pray for them while they preached.
The result was multitudes of conversions. I forgot to mention
to you that the worst conditions in the United States at that
time were in Kentucky and Tennessee. A committee of Congress discovered
that there hadn't been more than one court of justice held in
five years in Kentucky. The decent people formed vigilante
regiments and fought the outlaws in a pitched battle and lost.
So that Kentucky and Tennessee were like Sodom and Gomorrah
to the Christians. Peter Cartwright, the Methodist
evangelist, said that when his father settled in Logan County,
Kentucky, it was known as Rogue's Harbor. If anyone committed a
murder in Massachusetts or a robbery in Rhode Island, all he'd do
is get across the mountains and nobody could lay a finger on
him. Now there was a Scotch-Irish Presbyterian minister called
James McGrady, whose chief claim to fame seemed to be that he
was so ugly he attracted attention. People would stop in the street
and say, did you see that face? What does he do? They'd say he's
a preacher. Then they reacted, they said a man with a handicap
like that really must have something to say. So they'd come to hear
him preach. They said his voice was tremulous,
his gestures were coarse, and it was altogether unprepossessing. He followed the immigrants over
the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky and settled in Rose Harbor. He
had three little box-like Presbyterian churches. He said the winter
of 1799 for the most part was weeping and mourning with the
people of God. But he was such a man of prayer,
he not only promoted the concert of prayer one day a month that
all the churches were doing, but he asked his people, will
you pray for me when the sun sets on Saturday for half an
hour, and when the sun rises on Sunday for half an hour. It
was heartbreaking work, but in 1800 there came a deluge of blessing. 17,000 people showed up for a communion
service. Lots of them were not converted, so they had preaching
before that. Then they had meetings as large
as 25,000. This was the beginning of the great camp meeting movement.
I said that in the eastern parts of the states there were no extravagances,
but in the western parts there were. There were people, for
instance, who would scream under conviction, some who would faint,
some who would tremble, some who trembled so much they jerked. I read about all these things,
but one thing I couldn't understand was the reports that I'd heard
of barking. Now I have seen people who trembled. I saw a schoolboy tremble when
he thought he was going to be expelled. I saw a soldier faint
when he thought he was going to be shot. And a court-martial.
As far as Dancing for Joy is concerned, just look at the giveaway
programs on TV and you'll see people dancing for joy. These
things you can understand. But why should anyone bark? But I decided to try and research
this. I read a book by F. M. Davenport
which said—it was called Primitive Traits in Religious Revivals—it
said there was barking on the frontier, but it was not too
common. I looked for a footnote to see where he got this. He
didn't have any footnote. He didn't say where it happened.
Then, forty years later, Professor Alice Tyler, University of Minnesota,
wrote a book called Freedom's Ferment, in which he said there
was barking on the frontier and it was altogether too common. I looked for a footnote, it cited
Davenport, but he didn't say that. Then a Catholic writer,
Francis Xavier Curran, wrote a book, I've forgotten the title,
in which he said there was barking on the frontier and it was disgraceful.
I looked for footnotes, Davenport and Tyler. So I thought, well, let's go
back, that's what an historian does, go back to books written
at the time, to see what they said then. I got David Benedict's
History of the Baptists, a huge tome. He knew how many Baptists
there were in Islington and London, how many Baptists there were
in Hogs Hollow and Tennessee. He wrote to them all, got all
their statistics and wrote this great Encyclopedia of Baptists.
So I could hardly wait to turn to the Revival in Kentucky, 1800,
and there it said, The Baptists did not bark. But it said the Presbyterians
did. Then I got the writings of Barton
Stone, one of the founders of the disciples of Christ. He was
there. He said there was no barking. There were some people, you know,
like a child sobbing. Sobbing like this, grunting while
they sobbed, he said that was the nearest thing to barking.
But you see, American humor is always exaggeration. British
humor is always understatement. But in America we always tell
tall stories, and the stories told all over the United States
in our seminaries, that that's the way Christians carry on.
I raised this matter at the Conference
of Faith and History to 300 historians at Capital University in Ohio,
they fell on me like a ton of bricks. They said, oh, you're
spoiling good fun. But it simply was not true. Now
this revival spread from Kentucky, Tennessee to the Carolinas, into
Georgia. It swept the whole of the United
States. You say, well, what good did it do? It did untold good. Now, of course, This was a country
being settled in those days. At that time, Great Britain was
the industrial workshop of the world. And they had problems
we were to face later. But it was out of this revival
that came the abolition of the slave trade. William Wilberforce
went into Parliament to stand for God and righteousness. The
result was the abolition of the slave trade. You have read or
seen that film Roots. It's not exaggerated. The conditions
on the slave ships were so terrible that 50% of the slaves never
reached the plantations. And it was interesting that while
Britain was fighting Napoleon, they passed this law. And then
they used the Royal Navy, which was the strongest military force
on earth at the end of that war, to hump-dug the slave traders
on the high seas. Actually, the number of deaths
went up for a while. You might say, why? If a Portuguese
slave trader running from Angola to Brazil saw a British warship
on the horizon in those days of sail, they said, it'll be
five hours before they overtake us. Clean the decks. And they
threw them overboard to the sharks. So the death rate went up for
a while. But at the end of the war, Britain made treaties with
each country, including the United States. No more slave trading. that came out of the Revival.
Most Americans don't think much of George III, but I was interested
to notice that Prince Charles on television the other day said
we regard him as a good king. He blundered in his American
policy, but he was very good in England. He heard that a single
teacher was teaching a school of 800 boys. I wonder if there's
a Sunday school teacher here who has 8 boys. What's your problem? They've got a very short attention
span, to say the least. You have to control them. The
king thought, how could one teacher run a school of 800 boys? He
got his coach, and coachmen went down to visit the school on Borough
Road in London. Joseph Lancaster was a man, he
was a Quaker, and this was in the Revival. The king said, my
good man, how do you maintain order? And Lancaster said, by
the same principle, that thy majesty's army is kept in order
by the chain of command. What he had done was to take
a dozen boys off the streets. At that time, people were working
a 16-hour day. They had no time for their children.
The children were vandals running the streets, wild. He said to
the boys, I'll teach you to read and write. They said, what good
would it do us? He said, then you'll get a job.
And he persuaded the dozen. After teaching them for a year,
he said, now if I teach you next year, second year, would you
teach first year? And then when they got to third
year, he taught third year, they taught second year, and second
year taught first year. You say, would that work? Just take a
fourteen year old boy and put him in charge of some cub scouts
ten years of age. Will he exercise authority? Of
course he will. And that was the beginning of
what they called monitorial education. Out of it came popular education.
Up to that time, education was only for the wealthy and the
privileged. That came out of the revival. Out of that came the abolition
of the use of women and coal mines to drag the coal like beasts
of burden. Out of that came so many things.
For instance, a little Welsh girl during the revival walked
30 miles on her bare feet to try and buy a Bible. She got
there, they're all sold. She returned in tears. Thomas
Charles, one of the leaders of the revival in Wales, was so
concerned he took his carriage and went up to London to beg
people to print Bibles. Nobody seemed willing to do it,
so he formed his own committee and it was called the British
and Foreign Bible Society, the first of the Bible Societies.
That came out of the revival. Remember I said that in the colleges
conditions were bad? At Williams College in Massachusetts
they had a mock commune to make fun of Jesus Christ. Christians
were so few on campus in those revolutionary days that they
kept their minutes in code and met in secret like a communist
cell. A group of them who were revived met under a haystack
sheltering from the rain and promised God they'd go anywhere
in the world He would send them. You say, well that happens at
Forrest's home, that happens at Lutzer Kent's. In those days
there were no missionary societies to take them. These young men
finished their studies and then went down to Boston to the headquarters
of their denomination and asked to be sent overseas as missionaries. Someone said, who do they think
they are? Another man said, we don't have
money to do it. One man said, if God has spoken to these young
men, I think we should help them. So they formed a committee called
the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. That was
the first American missionary society. The first missionary
they sent out was Adoniram Judson. He went to India, then to Burma. On his way to Calcutta, he became
convinced of Baptist principles and asked William Carey to baptize
him in Calcutta. Rather embarrassing to go out
as a congregational missionary and become a Baptist on the field.
So he sent some of his friends back to raise money and out of
that came the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. One
denomination after another, all the missionary societies of the
denominations came out of that revival. There were so many other
things that were done that all you could say was The place had
been completely transformed. George Baxter from Philadelphia
went up to Kentucky, that place which had been so wicked in its
ways, and he said, I have never come across such a moral community
in all my life. The whole of the young United
States was changed. Young people were converted on
the frontier, went back to these colleges where they were having
religious revivals right along And there they trained for the
ministry, went out as missionaries or became pastors of home churches.
And the young United States became a comparatively Christian country.
Most important, its leading edge, the frontier, was Christianized
as it moved west. In 1860, of 180 colleges in the
Middle West, 144 had been started by evangelists and revivalists. It all came
out of that revival. Now some people may say, how
long did the revival of 1792 continue? Some say for fifty
years. Unbroken revival. Sometimes,
of course, the tide goes out and it has to come in again.
But in this case, 1830, there came another revival that strengthened the work. But
that's another story. All I'm trying to tell you is
this. The Great Awakening of 1792 came about because in Britain
they formed a union of prayer, and because in America they formed
what they called the Concert of Prayer. Prayer is the least
of what we can do to bring about a spiritual awakening in our
time. May God grant it. Amen.
The Awakening of 1792 Onward - Video - by J. Edwin Orr - brought by Peter-John Parisis
Series J. Edwin Orr
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| Sermon ID | 7108108280 |
| Duration | 28:12 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Language | English |
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