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It's no secret what God can do,
what he's done for others, he'll do for you. What he's done before,
he can do again. That's what I want to talk about
tonight. Now you can understand that this
was the year 1999. Everyone would be having a special program or
project for the next century. And in 1899 that was the case. For instance, the Methodists
decided they were going to evangelize the whole of the United States.
They raised $20 million, they said they were going to win 2
million people to Christ. And they also added, with the
knowledge that it was a nationwide movement, they believed they
could secure an awakening at the beginning of the 20th century.
But it didn't come that way. One Methodist said, God wait
until we got our project out of the way before he sent revival. The same was true of the Baptists.
They had Baptist advance. The Presbyterians were engaged
in a great evangelistic crusade. But from a spiritual point of
view, there are all nights of prayer at Moody Bible Institute.
Over in England at the Keswick Convention, they had special
prayer for revival in the 20th century. In the Nilgiri Hills
in India, the missionaries and nationals were praying for revival
in India. The same sort of movement in Korea, at a place called Wonsan. In Melbourne there were 10,000
people in prayer circles praying for revival in the 20th century. So you could say that it came
about in answer to prayer. Now, the worldwide awakening
of the early 20th century came at the end of 40 years of evangelical
advance. Those were the days of Moody.
Those were the days of success. Now, in Wesley's day, the revival
came after a long night of infidelity. But it was different. This was
more like a blaze of glory at the end of the 19th century. It was perhaps the most extensive
evangelical awakening of all time. It affected revived Anglicans
and Baptists, Congregationalists, Disciples, Lutherans, Methodists,
Presbyterians, Reformed. It spread throughout all of Europe
and North America, Australasia and Africa. And on the mission
fields, more than five million people were converted to God
in the two years of the greatest excitement of the revival. And
in the wake of the revival, there arose the Pentecostal denominations. Dr. Martin Lloyd-Jones died earlier
this year, the famous Welsh preacher, whose church was Westminster
Chapel in Buckingham Palace Road. He said to me once, if you want
to find out something about the Welsh Revival and its beginnings,
get the records of the church at Newquay in Cardigan, which
I did. The pastor was a man called Joseph
Jenkins. He was what they call a Keswick
man. Most Americans don't understand,
they've heard the word Keswick, sometimes they pronounce it Keswick,
but it's Keswick. By the way, this was the first
year that Keswick ever had a Pentecostal ordained minister speak there,
Chuck Smith. But the Keswick movement was
committed to holy living. You know that the Wesleyans,
the Methodists, believe in a crisis of commitment, whereas the Presbyterians
and Baptists believe in growth and grace. Cassius emphasized
a crisis with a view to a process. In other words, you get to the
place where you say, Lord, you can have all of me, and then
you go on grace. So they combine both emphases.
Joseph Jenkins said to his young people one Sunday morning, What
does Jesus Christ mean to you? They were embarrassed. Now they
were decent young people, they always began their meetings with
prayer and singing They loved to get around the piano or organ
and sing Welsh hymns They would give little testimonies, generally
recitations if you know what I mean But this was their Christian
social club It just so happened they were church young people
They went on picnics together, that's where boy met girl and
so forth Then there was a silence And when Joseph Jennings asked
a second time, a young fellow spoke up and said, Jesus Christ
is the hope of the world. He said, no, no, I don't mean
that. What does he mean to you? A girl called Flory Evans, who
had only been converted three weeks, spoke up in first love
and said, I love the Lord Jesus with all my heart. And it was
so sincere, there was a sense of the presence of God in that
little meeting. Joseph Jenkins formed the young people into
a team. He went around preaching and used them for testimony.
And Mrs. Jessie Penn Lewis, a famous woman
Christian in Wales, wrote to the Life of Faith, a magazine
in London, and said, there's a cloud no bigger than a man's
hand, arising in Wales. Now, the outstanding evangelist
of Wales at that time was a Presbyterian called Seth Joshua. His son,
Dr. Peter Joshua, is retired, living
in Port Bynemy, around the California coast. Seth Joshua went to that
church for a week of meetings, organized in the usual way. Thought
there was such power. I have read his diary, you'll
find it in the National Archives of Wales, 19th of September. I tried to close the meeting
several times last night, but it went on without human control. Peter Joshua said his father
would say, now young people, it's three minutes to twelve.
Tomorrow's another day. So let's have a benediction and
you can go home and then have the benediction. There'd be a
slight pause and then someone would say, let us pray, and they'd
start again. When he said, now young people,
it's after twelve, tomorrow's another day, someone said, today
is tomorrow, this is tomorrow now. Seth Joshua went from there,
got the best campaign he'd ever had in his life up to that time,
but he hadn't seen anything yet, and he went to Newcastle Emblem
College where there was a young coal miner, 26 years of age,
studying for the ministry. His name was Evan Roberts. I
knew Evan Roberts well, but of course not in 1904. I'm not that
old. Evan Roberts was a very spiritual
young man. not Sunday school, but he worked
in a coal mine I tried to find out what he did on Sunday he
went to church twice, he went to Bible class in the Sunday
school he went to a prayer meeting on Monday, he went to a mission
meeting on Tuesday, the midweek service on Wednesday on Thursday
he attended a temperance meeting and on Friday they had class
meetings I couldn't find out from his diaries what he did
on Saturday night But I think I know, in those days, in the
homes of the poor, on Saturday night each member of the family
had the right to use the kitchen where there was a fire burning,
to use the old galvanized iron tub for a bath. That's when they
performed their ablutions. You see, before World War I there
weren't many bathrooms. Do you know that there wasn't
a bathroom in Buckingham Palace in Queen Victoria's day? You
say, what did they do? They used perfume. Perfume. When Evan Roberts heard of the
moving of the spirit in UK, his heart was moved. The students
petitioned the principal of the college to close down classes
for a week and let them all go to the next meetings being held
by Seth Joshua. And Principal Phillips said,
you'll learn more in one week of revival than a year of theological
study. so he closed down. The meetings
in the evening in Blaenanes were crowded, but in the morning at
ten o'clock not many people. In those days young mothers didn't
have babysitters, people at work or school couldn't get away,
so just the students and some nice old ladies at ten o'clock
in the morning. But the nice old ladies were
often the powerhouse of the church. I was in that meeting that Seth
Joshua prayed in Welsh, O our glib knee, O Lord, bend us. And Evan Roberts went forward
with tears and brokenness and prayed, O God, bend me. This was the beginning of the
public phase of the awakening. Evan Roberts was so stirred up,
he said to his roommate Sidney Evans, do you think God could
give us a hundred thousand souls? That sounded like big talk. But
within 5 months there were 100,000 Welsh people converted from outside
the churches Not counting all those converted in the churches
He took his savings out to pay his way He said I was so filled
with the Spirit I was willing to pay God for the privilege
of preaching When he went to Principal Phillips
he said, I can't concentrate on my studies, I keep hearing
a voice that says you must go home and speak to the young people. Mr. Phillips, is that the voice
of the spirit or the voice of the devil? And Principal Phillips
said, the devil never gives orders like that. You can have a week
off. When he arrived home his parents
said, why aren't you studying? Are you in trouble? No. Well,
why have you come home? Well, I've come to speak to the
young people. I said, we were in church on Sunday, there was
no announcement made. He said, the pastor doesn't know
yet. And what would you do if your pastor of a church, a young
fellow, just two months in Bible school came back and said, I've
come to preach. The pastor was anxious not to hurt his feelings,
but not to hurt the congregation's feelings either. So he said,
how about Monday night? So Evan Roberts went Monday night,
he didn't ask to speak to the prayer meeting, But he simply
said, our young brother Evan Roberts feels he has a word for
you if you care to wait. 17 people waited. No doubt they
all knew him and didn't want to see him stand there alone.
But he got up and said, I have a message for you from God. You
must confess any known sin to God and put any wrong to man
right. You must put away any doubtful
habit. You must obey the Spirit promptly.
You must confess your faith in Christ publicly." And by ten
o'clock, all seventeen had responded. The pastor was so pleased, he
said, will you speak at the mission service tomorrow night? He spoke
at the midweek service on Wednesday. They converted the temperance
meeting into a general meeting, and on Friday they brought all
the classes together for a general meeting. On Sunday, some visiting
clergyman came to preach by appointment, so Evan Roberts sat in the pew
with his family. But the people got up on Sunday
evening and said, we want to hear Evan Roberts again. And
the pastor said, if I make it right with the principal, could
you stay another week? It was in the middle of that second
week, which was rather hard and tough, that the break came. Now
you might say, what do you mean the break? I've read the Welsh
newspapers of the period. There were little snippets of
church news. Like the Reverend Peter Jones has just been appointed
chaplain to the Bishop of St. David's. That was very interesting
to the Episcopalians, but not earth-shaking if you know what
I mean. Then there were items like Mowbray Methodist Church
has had a very interesting rummage sale. Then suddenly a headline,
great crowds of people drawn to Lochor. That was Evan Roberts'
home town. They said for some days now a
young man named Evan Roberts has been causing great surprise
in the Moriah Church. He said the main road between
Swansea and Plymouth on which the church is situated was packed
from wall to wall. People trying to get into the church. Shopkeepers
were closing early to find a place. Steel workers and miners were
coming in their dungarees. Now the news was out. The Western
Mail sent down a reporter to report on this. He said it was
a most unusual meeting. The meeting, he said, had no
structure. It seemed to just go on. They
didn't close till 4.25 in the morning. And even then people
seemed unwilling to go home. And then a very British remark. He said, I felt that this was
no ordinary gathering. This was reported in the newspaper
and I suppose every praying woman in Wales started to pray. On
Saturday every grocery store in that Industrial Valley was
empty of groceries, people coming to meetings, and on Sunday every
church filled. And then the revival broke like
a flood, like the breaking of a great dam all over Wales. The same week that the blessing
came with Evan Roberts in South Wales, in North Wales a Baptist
preacher, R.B. Jones, was preaching when the
praying of the people drowned out his preaching. and the revival
is sweeping Wales. Now you immediately think, then
Evan Roberts became the Billy Graham of Wales. Nothing of the
sort. Billy Graham is an evangelist.
Evan Roberts was like a prophet, a revivalist, speaking to the
church. He wouldn't even announce where
he was having meetings. He went to one place, they weren't
expecting him, but they were delighted to see him. He got
up in the pulpit and he said one word in Welsh, three words
in English, Gwelym, let us pray. That was all they ever heard
him say, because immediately all 1800 people began to pray. On another occasion he stood
up and said, how many of you believe the promises of God?
There's a great roar of Amen. Would you agree, he said, that
a promise made by the Lord Jesus is especially precious? Yes. Do you know one that says where
two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst?
Yes. Do we have two or three here
tonight? A great roar of laughter, there are nearly three thousand. Is Jesus here? Yes. I ask you,
is Jesus here? Do you believe it? Yes! Then
he said, you don't need me. He put on his hat and coat and
went to another meeting. The impact of that revival was
astounding. As I said, a hundred thousand
people from outside the churches were added to the memberships.
not counting maybe 100,000 more who were converted who were already
members. When a man is a member of a church
and gets converted, he doesn't resign and join again. So it
doesn't show in statistics. Perhaps a quarter of a million
people converted in five months. But of the 100,000 that joined
the churches, it's interesting that five years later, a critic
wrote a book to debunk the revival. And his major criticism was that
after five years, Only 75,000 still stood. Only 75,000. But did that mean that 25,000
converts drifted away? Not necessarily so. First of all, Wales is a very
poor country and people are always emigrating to Canada, to Pennsylvania,
to Australia and so forth, or going to Liverpool in England
to look for a job or to Birmingham. But second, factor was perhaps
some of the old members couldn't take the new life. They were
the ones that left. In the third place, J.P. Morgan
sort of gave the game away, he said many were lost to the mission
halls and to the Pentecostals. What a way to be lost. This social impact was equally
powerful. Judges were presented with white
gloves, not a case to try. Now, if a man commits a murder
in Los Angeles, it may be a year before he comes to trial, the
calendar so crowded. But in those British courts,
the chairman will get up and say, Your Honor, there are no
cases to try. No murders, no robberies, no
rapes, no embezzlements, nothing. And often the judge was presented
with white gloves, a symbol of no cases to try. They had emergency
meetings in the district councils to discuss what to do with the
police now that they were unemployed. Some had an affirmative program.
They said, well, respect them for what they want to do, although
they haven't anything to do, so let's just continue to pay
them their salaries. All of a sudden we're wasting
money. They call in a sergeant to the police on one occasion.
What do you do with your time? Before the revival there are
two main jobs, one was to prevent crime, the other to control crowds
at football games, at market days, that sort of thing. Since
the revival there's practically no crime, so we just go with
the crowds. A consular said, what do you
mean? Police spend their time directing traffic to meetings?
No, no. We have 17 police in our station.
But we've got three good quartets. If any church wants a quartet
to sing, they just notify the police. Drunkenness was cut in half.
Have the figures for the county of Glamorgan, in which Cardiff
is situated. Cut down from 10,000 arrests
a year to 5,000. within a year. But there are
a lot of bankruptcies. You say, how could a revival
cause a bankruptcy? Nearly all taverns couldn't sell
their booze. I came across a case in North
Wales, a place in Anglesey, where a policeman was on duty outside
a courtroom when he heard a burst of singing in the courtroom.
So strange to hear people singing in a courtroom, he rushed in.
He found a prisoner had broken down and confessed he was a sinner
Asked this advocate not to defend him anymore The judge took his
gavel and said, I adjourn the court Now young man, may I speak
to you not as a judge but as a Christian He told him, you
have sinned against society but I want to tell you first how
to get right with God And the young man accepted Christ there
And the jury burst into one of those great Welsh hymns and a police van out of his base
to the choir now about seven years ago I read
three articles in a leading Welsh newspaper attacking that revival
of seventy years before I felt my blood pressure rise they said
Evan Roberts was an immoral man there were whispers of the many
women in his life that his preaching was so aphrodisiac that people
poured into the graveyards and when the women became pregnant
they blamed it on nightingales and it's said that an historian
said that the Welsh Revival had raised the illegitimate birth
rate I wrote to the editor and I said you haven't heard the
last of this I went over it at my own expense and I challenged
him I said give me the name of the historian who said that the
illegitimate birth rate went up turned out to be a Baptist
minister, so I called him up, I said, I'm a Baptist minister,
I'd like to ask you some questions. Did you say that? He admitted
he did. He said, my mother told me that. How did your mother
know? Well, she knew a girl had got in trouble. I said, in meetings? Oh no, oh no, he said. This,
you know, the excitement of the times, perhaps some girl was
careless. I said, look, for every girl that was careless of the
rain, maybe a thousand girls quit fooling around because of
the revival. But that wouldn't show in statistics.
I said, you've got a point there. I had an idea. I went up to London,
and I went to Somerset House, got the births, deaths, marriages,
there's a whole section of illegitimate births, county by county, city
by city. I found that in Radnor, Radnorshire,
The illegitimate birth rate dropped 44% in one year. In Meredithshire,
44%. In Glamorgan, only 8%. But in
every county in Wales it dropped. You can't argue with anecdotes.
But here are the statistics. We had a great rally in Cardiff
in the biggest church there. Hundreds turned away. And the
Lord Mayor was there with his regalia. I felt like Samson with
the jawbone of an ass. I slew a thousand, I can tell
you. And I enjoyed it. You know, there are even slowdowns
in the coal mines. You say, you mean a revival costs
a strike? Not a strike, it's a slowdown. So many Welsh coal
miners were converted and stopped using bad language that the horses
that drive the trucks in the mines couldn't understand what
they were saying. And transportation slowed down until they learned
the language of Canaan. That's the Welsh revival. Some
people say, well, why didn't it last? Well, the excitement
couldn't last forever, could it? When I asked a pastor in
Swansea, my unpleasant church, how long did the Welsh Revival
have effect here? Well, he said, we were bringing
in extra chairs for 20 years. That's fair enough. But of course,
since then, World War II. When I was in Wales in the 1930s,
I used to say, and many were converted to the Welsh Revival,
practically everyone over the age of 50 raised his hand. Well,
why not under 50? Because they weren't alive then.
You see, our generation has passed away. But the Welsh Revival swept Britain. Do you know that in Nuneaton
they were running special excursions on the railway to the prayer
meetings? In Scotland and Motherwell, near
Glasgow, the streets were packed from wall to wall, and after
the excitement died down, seven churches and four public halls
filled every night for months. The same revival broke out in
Northern Ireland, in Lurgan, first among the Methodists, spread
to the Presbyterians. The same revival broke out in
Norway, so powerful was that revival in Norway under Albert
Lunder, whom I also knew. that the Norwegian Parliament
passed special legislation to allow Lutheran laymen to conduct
Holy Communion, the clergy couldn't keep up with the number of converts.
When the Revival reached Denmark, the daily home mission of the
Lutheran Church said, there hasn't been a winter like it since Christianity
came to the Vikings. It broke out in Sweden. One of
the leaders was Prince Oskar Bernadotte, brother of the king
with whom I prayed way back in those years, in the thirties.
The Revival swept Finland, it broke out in Germany, it broke
out in France. I met some men from Silesia in
Czechoslovakia, the Revival broke out there, in the Welsh mining
area. And recently in Belgium, the
Revival broke out in Charleroi. And this Belgian who was driving
me said, there are more Christians in Charleroi than any other part
of Belgium. That's where the Revival was most powerful. The
Revival broke out in India. Have you ever heard of Amy Carmichael
who has written some choice missionary books? Lovely books. She was
Anglican. And she describes it. Now you
know of course the Anglicans have a liturgical service. There's
a time to stand, a time to kneel, a time to recite the Lord's Prayer,
a time to recite the Creed. It's an ordered service. And
this, to quote Amy Carmichael's diary, on October 20th, as a
little girl said in the orphanage, Jesus came to Donover. Or should
he have been there before? But this time he came in such
power, it's no wonder it struck the child as a new coming. Now
the Anglican service was going on according to the prayer book,
when the one leading it, not named, was overcome. Then some
people began to cry out. A teenage boy got up and tried
to pray broke down, somebody else tried to pray broke down.
Soon the whole upper half of the church were on their faces
on the floor. Men and women, boys and girls,
oblivious of all others, said the sound was like the sound
of the wind in the trees or the ocean on the beach. This was
the visitation of the Holy Spirit. And she said for the next two
weeks, actually she said for the next fortnight, we were like
the apostles who gave themselves daily to the ministration of
the word and to prayer. I'd read that verse so many times,
I didn't realize what it meant until I saw it amplified in history. The apostles in the day of Pentecost
were so busy they were like doctors in an epidemic, playing with
people and giving them the word. And that's what happened when
the revival reached India. Do you know that in the next
ten years Christians increased sixteen times as fast as the
Hindus? Ten years. A great revival in
every part of India. The same revival was felt in China and Korea. One thing I must say in passing,
I had a little letter or a phone call once from a very famous
Pentecostal scholar and he said, I understood that speaking in
tongues came from Wales to Azusa Street in Los Angeles. I said,
I thought it was the other way around. Oh no, I heard that some
people spoke Welsh that had never spoken Welsh before. I said,
oh yes, those were people whose mother were Welsh and father
were English, but if you speak in a language that you know,
you're not speaking in tongues. Well, he said, when did this
feeding in tongues begin? Well, I said, it began on the
23rd of December, 1907, two years later, in the home of a man called
Thomas Maddox Jeffreys, in a place called Roncluid, in the Ebble
Vale, about 8.30 in the evening. Beyond that, I couldn't specify. Next time I talk to you, I'll
tell you about how the same revival swept the United States, because
in the wake of that revival, The Pentecostal denominations
are those.
Wales Revival - The Awakening of 1904 in Wales - by J. Edwin Orr
Series J. Edwin Orr
Prayer call for Revival
First Tuesday of every month we are calling for all to PRAY for a world-wide revival and great awakening bringing at least 1 billion permanent real salvations. Pray that this will last for years. Pray, Fast, Pray like Elijah, wrestle like Jacob....do what you can....but please pray with us for God to do this.
Please email us if you plan on praying with us. We can send out an email to all who desire to have a reminder the day before each month (let us know you desire the reminder email).
Will you pray with us? Think of it....check out the Video and/or Audio called, 'The Role of Prayer in Spiritual Awakening' by J. Edwin Orr...for encouragement and ideas.
Please remember to close your prayers in 'Jesus' name'.
PJ
| Sermon ID | 93071622592 |
| Duration | 29:18 |
| Date | |
| Category | Classic Audio |
| Language | English |
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