THE NEED OF A GENERAL REVIVAL
If we are to pray aright in such a
time as this, much of our prayer should be for a general revival. If
there was ever a time in which there was need to cry unto God in the
words of the Psalmist, "Wilt Thou not revive us again, that Thy
people may rejoice in Thee?" (Ps. 85:6) it is this day in which we
live. It is surely time for the Lord to work, for men have made void
His law (Ps. 199:126). The voice of the Lord given in the written
Word is set at naught both by the world and the church. Such a time
is not a time for discouragement--the man who believes in God and
believes in the Bible can never be discouraged; but it is a time for
Jehovah Himself to step in and work. The intelligent Christian, the
wide-awake watchman on the walls of Zion, may well cry with the
Psalmist of old, "It is time for Jehovah to work, for they have made
void Thy law." (Ps. 119:126, Am.R.V.)
The great need of the day is a general revival.
Let us consider first of all what a general revival is.
A revival is a time of quickening or impartation of life. As God
alone can give life, a revival is a time when God visits His people
and by the power of His Spirit imparts new life to them, and through
them imparts life to sinners dead in trespasses and sins. We have
religious excitements gotten up by the cunning methods and hypnotic
influence of the mere professional evangelist; but these are not
revivals and are not needed. They are the devil's imitations of a
revival. NEW LIFE FROM GOD--that is a revival. A general revival is
a time when this new life from God is not confined to scattered
localities, but is general throughout Christendom and the earth.
The reason why a general revival is needed is that spiritual dearth
and desolation and death is general. It is not confined to any one
country, though it may be more manifest in some countries than in
others. It is found in foreign mission fields as well as in home
fields. We have had local revivals. The life-giving Spirit of God
has breathed upon this minister and that, this church and that, this
community and that; but we need, we sorely need, a revival that
shall be widespread and general.
Let us look for a few moments at the results of a revival. These
results are apparent in ministers, in the church and in the unsaved.
- 1. The results of a revival in
a minister are:
- (1) The minister has a new
love for souls. We ministers as a rule have no such love for
souls as we ought to have, no such love for souls as Jesus had,
no such love for souls as Paul had. But when God visits His
people the hearts of ministers are greatly burdened for the
unsaved. They go out in great longing for the salvation of their
fellow men. They forget their ambition to preach great sermons
and for fame, and simply long to see men brought to Christ.
- (2) When true revivals come
ministers get a new love for God's Word and a new faith in God's
Word. They fling to the winds their doubts and criticisms of the
Bible and of the creeds, and go to preaching the Bible and
especially Christ crucified. Revivals make ministers who are
loose in their doctrines orthodox. A genuine wide- sweeping
revival would do more to turn things upside down and thus get
them right side up than all the heresy trials ever instituted.
- (3) Revivals bring to
ministers new liberty and power in preaching. It is no week-long
grind to prepare a sermon, and no nerve-consuming effort to
preach it after it has been prepared. Preaching is a joy and a
refreshment, and there is power in it in times of revival.
- 2. The results of a revival on
Christians generally are as marked as its results upon the
ministry.
- (1) In times of revival
Christians come out from the world and live separated lives.
Christians who have been dallying with the world, who have been
playing cards and dancing and going to the theater and indulging
in similar follies, give them up. These things are found to be
incompatible with increasing life and light.
- (2) In times of revival
Christians get a new spirit of prayer. Prayer-meetings are no
longer a duty, but become the necessity of a hungry, importunate
heart. Private prayer is followed with new zest. The voice of
earnest prayer to God is heard day and night. People no longer
ask, "Does God answer prayer?" They know He does, and besiege
the throne of grace day and night.
- (3) In times of revival
Christians go to work for lost souls. They do not go to meeting
simply to enjoy themselves and get blessed. They go to meeting
to watch for souls and to bring them to Christ. They talk to men
on the street and in the stores and in their homes. The cross of
Christ, salvation, heaven and hell become the subjects of
constant conversation. Politics and the weather and new bonnets
and the latest novels are forgotten.
- (4) In times of revival
Christians have new joy in Christ. Life is joy, and new life is
new joy. Revival days are glad days, days of heaven on earth.
- (5) In times of revival
Christians get a new love for the Word of God. They want to
study it day and night. Revivals are bad for saloons and
theaters, but they are good for bookstores and Bible agencies.
- 3. But revivals also have a
decided influence on the unsaved world.
- (1) First of all, they bring
deep conviction of sin. Jesus said that when the Spirit was come
He would convince the world of sin (Jn. 16:7,8). Now we have
seen that a revival is a coming of the Holy Spirit, and
therefore there must be a new conviction of sin, and there
always is. If you see something men call a revival, and there is
no conviction of sin, you may know at once that it is bogus. It
is a sure mark.
- (2) Revivals bring also
conversion and regeneration. When God refreshes His people, He
always converts sinners also. The first result of Pentecost was
new life and power to the one hundred and twenty disciples in
the upper room; the second result was three thousand conversions
in a single day. It is always so. I am constantly reading of
revivals here and there, where Christians were greatly helped
but there were no conversions. I have my doubts about that kind.
If Christians are truly refreshed, they will get after the
unsaved by prayer and testimony and persuasion, and there will
be conversions.
WHY A GENERAL REVIVAL IS NEEDED
We see what a general revival is, and what it does; let us now face
the question why it is needed at the present time.
I think that the mere description of what it is and what it does
shows that it is needed, sorely needed, but let us look at some
specific conditions that exist to-day that show the need of it. In
showing these conditions one is likely to be called a pessimist. If
facing the facts is to be called a pessimist, I am willing to be
called a pessimist. If in order to be an optimist one must shut his
eyes and call black white, and error truth, and sin righteousness,
and death life, I don't want to be called an optimist. But I am an
optimist all the same. Pointing out the real condition will lead to
a better condition.
- 1. Look first at the ministry.
- (1) Many of us who are
professedly orthodox ministers are practically infidels. That is
plain speech, but it is also indisputable fact. There is no
essential difference between the teachings of Tom Paine and Bob
Ingersoll and the teachings of some of our theological
professors. The latter are not so blunt and honest about it;
they phrase it in more elegant and studied sentences; but it
means the same. Much of the so-called new learning and higher
criticism is simply Tom Paine infidelity sugar-coated. Prof.
Howard Osgood, who is a real scholar and not a mere echo of
German infidelity, once read a statement of some positions, and
asked if they did not fairly represent the scholarly criticism
of to-day, and when it was agreed that they did, he startled his
audience by saying:
- "I am reading from Tom
Paine's `Age of Reason.'"
There is little new in the higher criticism. Our future
ministers oftentimes are being educated under infidel
professors, and being immature boys when they enter the college
or seminary, they naturally come out infidels in many cases, and
then go forth to poison the church.
- (2) Even when our ministers
are orthodox--as thank God so very many are!--they are
oftentimes not men of prayer. How many modern ministers know
what it is to wrestle in prayer, to spend a good share of a
night in prayer? I do not know how many, but I do know that many
do not.
- (3) Many of us who are
ministers have no love for souls. How many preach because they
MUST preach, because they feel that men every where are
perishing, and by preaching they hope to save some? And how many
follow up their preaching as Paul did, by beseeching men
everywhere to be reconciled to God?
- Perhaps enough has been said
about us ministers; but it is evident that a revival is needed
for our sake or some of us will have to stand before God
overwhelmed with confusion in an awful day of reckoning that is
surely coming.
- 2. Look now at the church:
- (1) Look at the doctrinal
state of the church. It is bad enough. Many do not believe in
the whole Bible. The book of Genesis is a myth, Jonah is an
allegory, and even the miracles of the Son of God are
questioned. The doctrine of prayer is old-fashioned, and the
work of the Holy Spirit is sneered at. Conversion is
unnecessary, and hell is no longer believed in. Then look at the
fads and errors that have sprung up out of this loss of faith,
Christian Science, Unitarianism, Spiritualism, Universalism,
Babism, Metaphysical Healing, etc., etc., a perfect pandemonium
of doctrines of devils.
- (2) Look at the spiritual
state of the church. Worldliness is rampant among church
members. Many church members are just as eager as any in the
rush to get rich. They use the methods of the world in the
accumulation of wealth, and they hold just as fast to it as any
when they have gotten it.
- Prayerlessness abounds among
church members on every hand. Some one has said that Christians
on the average do not spend more than five minutes a day in
prayer.
Neglect of the Word of God goes hand in hand with neglect of
prayer to God. Very many Christians spend twice as much time
every day wallowing through the more of the daily papers as they
do bathing in the cleansing laver of God's Holy Word. How many
Christians average an hour a day spent in Bible study?
Along with neglect of prayer and neglect of the Word of God goes
a lack of generosity. The churches are rapidly increasing in
wealth, but the treasuries of the missionary societies are
empty. Christians do not average a dollar a year for foreign
missions. It is simply appalling.
Then there is the increasing disregard for the Lord's Day. It is
fast becoming a day of worldly pleasure, instead of a day of
holy service. The Sunday newspaper with its inane twaddle and
filthy scandal takes the place of the Bible; and visiting and
golf and bicycle, the place of the Sunday-school and church
service.
Christians mingle with the world in all forms of questionable
amusements. The young man and young woman who does not believe
in dancing with its rank immodesties, the card table with its
drift toward gambling, and the theater with its ever-increasing
appeal to lewdness, is counted an old fogy.
Then how small a proportion of our membership has really entered
into fellowship with Jesus Christ in His burden for souls!
Enough has been said of the spiritual state of the church.
- 3. Now look at the state of the
world.
- (1) Note how few conversions
there are. The Methodist church, which has led the way in
aggressive work has actually lost more members than it has
gained the last year. Here and there a church has a large number
of accessions upon confession of faith, but these churches are
rare exceptions; and where there are such accessions, in how few
cases are the conversions deep, thorough and satisfactory.
- (2) There is lack of
conviction of sin. Seldom are men overwhelmed with a sense of
their awful guilt in trampling under foot the Son of God. Sin is
regarded as a "misfortune" or as "infirmity," or even as "good
in the making"; seldom as enormous wrong against a holy God.
- (3) Unbelief is rampant. Many
regard it as a mark of intellectual superiority to reject the
Bible, and even faith in God and immortality. It is about the
only mark of intellectual superiority many possess, and perhaps
that is the reason they cling to it so tenaciously.
- (4) Hand in hand with this
widespread infidelity goes gross immorality, as has always been
the case. Infidelity and immorality are Siamese twins. They
always exist and always grow and always fatten together. This
prevailing immorality is found everywhere.
- Look at the legalized
adultery that we call divorce. Men marry one wife after another,
and are still admitted into good society; and women do likewise.
There are thousands of supposedly respectable men in America
living with other men's wives, and thousands of supposedly
respectable women living with other women's husbands.
This immorality is found in the theater. The theater at its best
is bad enough, but now "Sapphos," and the "Degenerates," and all
the unspeakable vile accessories of the stage rule the day, and
the women who debauch themselves by appearing in such plays are
defended in the newspapers and welcomed by supposedly
respectable people.
Much of our literature is rotten, but decent people will read
books as bad as "Trilby" because it is the rage. Art is
oftentimes a mere covering for shameless indecency. Women are
induced to cast modesty to the winds that the artist may perfect
his art and defile his morals.
Greed for money has become a mania with rich and poor. The
multi-millionaire will often sell his soul and trample the
rights of his fellow men under foot in the mad hope of becoming
a billionaire, and the laboring man will often commit murder to
increase the power of the union and keep up wages. Wars are
waged and men shot down like dogs to improve commerce, and to
gain political prestige for unprincipled politicians who parade
as statesmen.
The licentiousness of the day lifts its serpent head everywhere.
You see it in the newspapers, you see it on the bill- boards,
you see it on the advertisements of cigars, shoes, bicycles,
patent medicines, corsets and everything else. You see it on the
streets at night. You see it just outside the church door. You
find it not only in the awful cesspools set apart for it in the
great cities, but it is crowding further and further up our
business streets and into the residence portions of our cities.
Alas! now and then you find it, if you look sharp, in supposedly
respectable homes; indeed it will be borne to your ears by the
confessions of broken- hearted men and women. The moral
condition of the world in our day is disgusting, sickening,
appalling.
We need a revival, deep, widespread, general, in the power of
the Holy Ghost. It is either a general revival or the
dissolution of the church, of the home, of the state. A revival,
new life from God, is the cure, and the only cure. That will
stem the awful tide of immorality and unbelief. Mere argument
will not do it; but a sign from heaven, a new outpouring of the
Spirit of God, It was not discussion but the breath of God that
relegated Tom Paine, Voltaire, Volney and other of the old
infidels to the limbo of forgetfulness; and we need a new breath
from God to send the Wellhausens and the Kuenens and the Grafs
and the parrots they have trained to occupy chairs and pulpits
in England and America to keep them company. I believe that
breath from God is coming.
The great need of to-day is a general revival. The need is
clear. It admits of no honest difference of opinion. What then
shall we do? Pray. Take up the Psalmist's prayer, "Revive us
again, that Thy people may rejoice in Thee." Take up Ezekiel's
prayer, "Come from the four winds, O breath (breath of God), and
breathe upon these slain that they may live." Hark, I hear a
noise! Behold a shaking! I can almost feel the breeze upon my
cheek. I can almost see the great living army rising to their
feet. Shall we not pray and pray and pray and pray, till the
Spirit comes, and God revives His people?
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