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In my last talk to you, I told
you about the wonderful awakening in Wales at the beginning of
this century. Now supposing you heard that
in Nova Scotia the churches were packed, thousands of people being converted,
all days and nights of prayer. Supposing you found that crime
had almost been wiped out, what would you do here? you'd pray,
oh God, do the same thing in California. So that's actually
what happened in 1905. When the news came of the Welsh
revival, people began to pray all over this country. Now I
told you that at the beginning of the century, most of the big
denominations had their own program of events. The Methodists of
the twentieth-century forward movement. They were going to
win two million souls to Christ, and they raised twenty million
dollars to do it. They said, with a better knowledge of how
to work, a great religious awakening might be secured at the opening
of the twentieth century. The Baptists, North and South,
were working in the same way. The Presbyterians, likewise. The great evangelist of that
time was Wilbur Chapman, a Presbyterian. And all over the United States,
people were keyed up for blessing in the twentieth century. But
nothing much came of these human efforts until news came of the
Welsh Revival. Even the high church Episcopalians
were stirred up. They talked about the Welsh Revival
brought about by the strong breath of God's Holy Spirit. And they
asked, how long will it be till it comes to the United States?
The Baptist said, let's cease talking about revivalism and
let's get on our knees and pray for revival. And a Southern Baptist
magazine said, will the revival be repeated in this country?
To answer the question, we are, as usual, doing the inconsistent
thing. We read that the Welsh revival
grew out of prayer and has no machinery. And now we set to
work to get all our machinery going. The Methodists also said their
evidence is of the coming of a general religious revival from
border to border. Presbyterians said all the country
seems to be on the lookout for a great outpouring of the Holy
Spirit. The revival began in Pennsylvania.
It began in a town called Wiltsbury. in December of 1904 in a Welsh
church, a small church of Welsh emigrants where the people all
spoke Welsh and therefore preferred to worship God in their own language.
The Reverend J.D. Roberts reported 123 converts
in that tiny little church, most of them men. Then the revival
spread to Scranton and then town after town. The revival broke
out in Newcastle, in Pittsburgh, The leading Baptist periodical
in Pennsylvania devoted the whole issue in March 1905 to describe
the revival in Pennsylvania. By early spring, the Methodists
in Philadelphia alone were claiming 10,000 converts. They had 6,101 on probation. That means new converts who had
to wait six months before they were admitted to membership. The young people's societies
of Christian endeavor increased ten percent. Some societies increasing
from ten percent to three hundred percent. On the coast of New
Jersey, such a revived Atlantic city, they said not more than
fifty unconverted people remained in a population of sixty thousand. In November of 1905, a great
awakening in Newark, New Jersey, they said in which Pentecost
was literally repeated during the height of the revival with
its strange spectacle of spacious churches, crowded overflowing,
and great processions marching through the streets. In 1904, in Schenectady, New
York State, the local ministerial association heard of the revival
in Wales. They thought, what can we do?
They said they didn't have any special evangelist in Wales,
so let's just start meetings. So they took Emanuel Baptist
Church for afternoons, packed out with women, and the biggest
church in town was the State Street Methodist Church, packed
with 1,200 nightly. Sometimes we had 800 and 1,100
waited behind in after-meetings. I've read the Schenectady Papers.
You know, in a smaller town they have an obituary column that
tells, especially elderly people, look to see who among their friends
has just passed away. The Schenectady Gazette ran a
column entitled, Yesterday's Conversions. If you want to know
who was converted, that's where you looked. In Troy, New York, it was said
no such unanimous and spontaneous movement had been known in the
city for a generation. It began in January, the week
of prayer, held in the Second Presbyterian Church. but it developed
into a revival of church members of 6 Baptists, 10 Methodists,
7 Presbyterians, 1 Christian, 1 Congregation, and 1 Episcopal
Church. The revival spread all over. When the revival reached
Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church, New York City, it produced a
site never before duplicated. Before 2,200 packing the church,
364 were received into membership on the 2nd of February. 286 were
on probation, that means new converts. 217 of them adults,
134 of them men, 60 were heads of families. When the cleansing
wave reached Brooklyn, the Baptist temple, 500 people waited behind
for counsel for salvation. What about New England? Here's
what the Baptist said as the news continues to come from the
churches. The conviction is confirmed that additions to the churches
in New England during the month of April were larger than during
any one month for many, many years. great revival in every part of
New England. What about the South? The Atlanta
newspapers reported that nearly a thousand businessmen had united
into session for an outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Then, with
a unanimity unprecedented, stores, factories and offices closed
in the middle of the day for prayer. The Supreme Court of
Georgia adjourned. Even saloons and places of amusement
closed their doors to enable patrons to go to United Prayer
Meetings. An awakening began in Louisville.
The great Methodist Henry Clay Morrison of Asbury College said,
The whole city is breathing a spiritual atmosphere. Everywhere, in shop
and store, in the mill and on the street, salvation is the
one topic of conversation. In Danville, Kentucky, First
of February 1905, all employers and employees attended prayer
meetings in a body. They said, Danville's day of
blessing has come. Paducah, Kentucky, an awakening
described by the Southern Baptists as a great Pentecostal revival
within our own bounds. The word Pentecostal was a small
p in that particular case. The movement swept the city from
November 1905 until March 1906. One church, First Baptist, received
into membership more than a thousand new members. Its pastor, Dr. J. J. Cheek, an old man, died
of overwork, and the Southern Baptist said a glorious ending
to a devoted ministry. I'll be seventy in my next birthday.
But the Lord said, you've only got one more year left and you'll
lead a thousand to Christ, I would say, amen. What a way to go. Now you say, well, what kind
of movement was it? Who was the evangelist? No evangelist. Just everybody was an evangelist.
Here's a typical report from a Southern Baptist pastor in
Tennessee. Last month we held revival services. I failed to
get anyone to assist me. Why? Because everyone was so
busy on their own. So I had to do the preaching
myself. We had a great meeting. There were 60 conversions and
the church was greatly built up in a great outpouring of the
Spirit and a great engathering of souls. The revival went over Florida
like a tidal wave. The leader was an evangelist
called Mordecai Hamm. By the way, it was under Mordecai
Hamm later that Billy Graham was converted in Charlotte, North
Carolina. Revival began in the northeast
corner of Texas, in the Piney Woods, in a town called Paris. The pastors were concerned over
the fact that on Sunday night there were more people in the
theater than in church. So the Baptists and Congregationalists,
Methodists and Presbyterians and others got together in united
prayer meetings and a great movement began. The revival reached Houston,
not so big then, but a fair-sized town. A tidal wave of spirituality
rolled through the city. Not only crowded the churches,
but closed all the gambling dens. The revival swept Dallas Waco,
the chancellor of Waco, of Baylor University in Waco, told me that
was the year that so many students went from Baylor to the mission
field. Kansas City, the Southern Baptist
Convention met, and it says, it's manifest to all that's come
by an awakening in interest in the subject of evangelistic work.
There's an atmosphere of evangelism. Now, the revival spread into
Ohio. Then into Michigan, it began
with lessons from the Welsh Revival. Then the Methodists in Saginaw
said, we're in the midst of a most gracious religious awakening,
unlike anything seen in these parts for many a year. The unction
of the Spirit outpoured. There are many gracious revivals
in the Albany district, that's over on the other side of Michigan,
a thousand conversions in Albany, eleven hundred in Lansing, five
hundred in Big Rapids, and then the editors said, we can't keep
track of them all. In Owasso, the whole town awakened
to Scola, the church filled with Pentecostal power for five weeks.
In Grand Rapids, one church received a hundred and eighteen on probation,
and the pastor said the revival certainly has hit this city.
In Lansing, the Methodists claimed seven hundred conversions, of
whom Listen, 740 joined the churches. 740 out of 700. Nowadays, it's
the other way around to say so many went
forward, but only 250 joined the churches. They said, this
is not guesswork. Actually, the 700 that were converted
collected another 40 on the way to the meeting. In the spring, the churches are
still responding to the thrill of a vigorous Thoroughgoing Revival
triumph. I won't wear you the details.
When the Revival reached Indiana, it swept Indianapolis. It was
reported as a great day for the Baptists, but the Methodists
said it was a great day for the Methodists. What happened in Chicago? All
the pastors got together in Chicago, in the Loop, to discuss what
to do when the Revival came. The plan in Chicago was to urge
pastors to hold their own meetings in their own churches and help
each other as the needs suggest. But they had a central prayer
meeting for ministers, and there they shared views. A determined
effort, they said, has been made to reach the unsaved, and this
is succeeding. Hundreds have already been baptized in the
different churches. It has become commonplace in our ministerial
gatherings for a pastor to rise and say, My church has never
known such a blessing of salvation as we are now having. The revival
in Dixon, Illinois, was described as a cyclone. It hit the Baptist,
Christian, Congregational, Evangelical, Lutheran, Methodist and Presbyterian
churches. The evangelist was an obscure
man called Billy Sunday. This helped make him well-known.
In Burlington, Iowa, every store and factory closes operation
between 10 and 11 to permit all employees to attend services
of prayer for revival of religion. Great revival swept Louisville,
St. Louis. Redwood Falls, Minnesota,
the awakening brought out 600 men, women, and children, although
the temperature was 22 degrees below zero. In Denver, the movement
began on the 4th of January. On the 20th of January, the mayor
of Denver called for a day of prayer. At 10 o'clock in the
morning, all cooperating churches were filled. At 1130 almost every
store was closed at the mayor's request, and four theaters downtown
were crowded for prayer at noon. 12,000 attended these services
of intercession. The Colorado legislature closed,
all schools were closed. Months later they said Denver
never had a winter like it. I knew a man who was in that
movement. They had a great simultaneous movement in Los Angeles. A hundred
churches cooperated. Los Angeles was not a big place
in those days. Perhaps 100,000. The aggregate
attendance at the evangelistic meetings down time was in excess
of 180,000. 4,264 inquires registered. 787 were children. I was speaking at Temple Baptist
Church, Pershing Square, and the pastor said to me, I never
heard of that movement. I said, why don't you look up
the records? So he went to the deacon and kept the church's
records, and he came back and said, you know, we took in five
hundred in one month. I said, the pastor's name was
Burdett. He said, that's right, this is Burdett Hall. This is
our smaller hall here. Great Revival in Redlands and
Pomona. There's a report published called
Portland's Pentecost. For three hours a day, business
was practically suspended. From the crowds in the great
department stores to the humblest clerk, from bank presidents to
boot blanks, all abandoned money-making for soul-saving. More than 200
major stores signed an agreement to close between 11 and 2. And
the same thing happened in Seattle. I was associate pastor for some
time with Oswald Smith in the Great People's Church in Toronto.
I said to him, what did you know about the great revival of 1905
in Canada? He said, I never heard of it.
I said, come on, it swept Canada from coast to coast. I can tell
you the great revival in Nova Scotia, I can tell you the revival
in the Skeena River in British Columbia. In Winnipeg, First
Baptist Church had two thousand people standing in the snow waiting
to get in. He said, I never heard of it. I said, what year were you converted?
He said, 1905. I didn't know anything about
this, but you can understand how I felt when I read in The
Methodist Christian Advocate, a great revival is sweeping the
United States. Its power is felt in every nook
and corner of our broad land. The Holy Spirit is convincing
the people of sin, of righteousness and of judgment to come. There
is manifest a new degree of spiritual power in the churches. Pastors
are crying out to God for help, and not a few of them are gratified
to find the help right at hand. In the Baptist magazine it said,
Tidings of a Revival come from every side. There is a quickening
of spiritual impulse and life in the churches and in our educational
institutions. I don't want to wear you with
all the details, but I got a hold of the Baptist reports. and found
everywhere blessing. Like Ohio, the cause never looked
better. Michigan, the number of baptisms,
significant. Indiana, hopeful conditions.
Illinois, more promising than for a dozen years. In Iowa, as I said, one of the major emphasis
was education, there wasn't so much revival. In Wisconsin, the
baptists were growing in influence. These are just baptist reports.
For as the Methodists said, there's a stir in our Methodist camp.
In 1903, that was the end of the Great Crusade, we made very
little gain in membership. In 1904, the net gain was 32,000. In 1905, it's not less than 60,000.
It had doubled that one year. Great revival in other parts.
The Congregationalists were stirred. Among them, people like Washington
Gladden, the disciples of Christ, the Lutherans. One Lutheran magazine
reported that the revival wave seems to have crossed the seas
and been breaking on our shores. From widely separated points
come tidings of great spiritual awakenings." Well, I did collect some statistics. At that time, about a million
immigrants were coming to the United States every year, most
of them Roman Catholics. And yet the increase in Protestant
churches was far greater than that of the Roman Catholic Church. A Methodist editor said, The
Spirit of God has been graciously poured out in many places in
our country, but not more anywhere than in our colleges. Kenneth
Scott Lantourette said when he was a student at Yale in 1905,
One quarter of all the students were enrolled in prayer meetings
and Bible study. I live next door to UCLA. 36,000 students. Do you think that 9,000 are enrolled
in prayer meetings? No. What about the effects of this? The revival continued in 1905,
1906, and just after the San Francisco earthquake, which by
the way also at the same time was a devastating earthquake
in Valparaiso, Chile. Just after the earthquake came
the remarkable outpouring in Azusa Street, the beginning of
the Pentecostal movement. The strange thing is this, until
I published this book of mine about 1973, most Pentecostal
leaders didn't know that Azusa Street was preceded by a nationwide
revival. They thought Azusa Street was
just a little thing on its own. Well, sure, it was something
that spread. They began with about 120. But
that year, about a million people have been converted in the United
States. So people don't always know the background. The social impact was quite strong. Here's what they said in one
great report. We find evidence of a revival
of righteousness In the popular and pulpit protest against sharp
practice and double-dealing, indignation against swindling,
oppressive corporations, dishonest officials in banks and trust
companies, public wrath against political scandals, and the successful
overflow of many such. Here's what someone said. Fancy
someone in Wales saying, we must have an ethical revival first.
We must enter upon a crusade against profanity, obscenity,
prize-fighting. We must close up the saloons,
make kindling wood of the gambling tables, and raid the brothels
before we have a revival." No, he said, all these infamies vanish
before the Spirit's baptism like bats and owls before the light
of day. Any of you have ever been in
the Middle West and find your car covered with ice? You have
to take a scraper and scrape and scrape to get the ice off
so that you can see. Yet sometimes if you wait just
one hour, the sun melts the whole thing off. You don't have to
work that way. The revival in Schenectady, which
I mentioned, meant stronger and better citizens, brighter and
happier homes, a cleaner city life, and the strengthening of
all the churches and other agencies for good. Here is what was reported
from Philadelphia. We are in the excitement and
enjoyment of a great civic righteousness revival. To a delegation of businessmen
at the City Hall on June 1st, our Mayor John Weaver said, The
hand of the Lord is in it. So apparently, in different parts,
in Cincinnati for example, civic reform followed the spiritual
revival. It seemed to have prompted from
the wave of reform that swept over the country. The Methodists
in their quarterly journal said, throughout the Republic there
are signs of the revival of the public conscience, which in many
states and cities has broken party lines, rejected machine-made
candidates, and elected governors, senators, assemblymen, mayors,
and county attorneys of recognized honesty and independence, the
first fruits of a new zeal for the living Christ, as the Lord
of all human activity, social, industrial, commercial, and political. I wish that happened today. I
spoke at the Rose Bowl on Saturday when I said that George Gallup
had declared that the number of people in the United States
who claimed to be born again had risen from 46 percent to
53 percent. Some people started to applaud,
and I scoffed and said, I don't believe it. I don't believe that
53 percent of people in the United States are born again. If they
were, this would be a different country. Whereas the Wall Street Journal
said this must be the first awakening that has had no effect upon the
morals of the nation. We ought to be ashamed to say
that. And I think one of the reasons
for it is that they don't preach repentance. They just try to
enlist people. The only evidence of the new
birth is the new life. And if a man's not living a new
life, I wonder if he's had a new birth. Now, this revival was
part of the wave that swept the world before World War I. Why
was it forgotten? Well, I think there are reasons. First of all, Great Britain lost
a million men in World War I. The French lost more than the
British. The Germans lost more than the French. The Russians
lost more than the Germans. It was a blood-letting unprecedented
trauma for the human race. Perhaps that's why people forgot
what went before. But I suppose there are other reasons.
What we called in those days modernism began, undercutting
the gospel. On top of that, we found a new
science. of psychology, based largely
on what was taught by Sigmund Freud, who spoke of God as an
illusion. I know there are good Christian
psychologists today, but the Freudian movement was anti-Christian,
and that had a dominant say. But it's interesting that the
light that was set ablaze in 1904-1905 continued. You might say, what was the relationship
between this new movement of Pentecostalism and the general
revival? Well, they were both unstructured,
there's no doubt about that. For instance, anyone coming into
this meeting tonight wouldn't have said it was a very structured
meeting. That's my warning. I'm learning to preach to time.
But the meetings were sort of informal, led by the Spirit,
That was true of the general revival, the Welsh revival period,
and also of Pentecostalism. The main difference was that
the Pentecostal movement laid stress upon especially two aspects,
two gifts of the Spirit, healing and speaking in tongues. Whereas
the general movement was interdenominational, and the particular movement grew
out of that. It led to a revival in Brazil.
revival in Chile, revival in Mexico, and this is part of the
revival all around the world. What's the lesson? The lesson is prayer. What we need
to do is to pray. We need to proclaim God's word. We can't organize revival, but
we can prepare by prayer for what God is going to do. Amen.
The Awakening of 1905 in North America by J. Edwin Orr
Series J. Edwin Orr
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| Sermon ID | 78081456440 |
| Duration | 27:37 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Language | English |
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