A Call to Extraordinary Prayer for Revival
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Erroll Hulse
Concerning fervent, persevering prayer, the prophet Isaiah writes,
"I have posted watchmen on your walls, O Jerusalem; they will never
be silent day or night. You who call on the LORD, give yourselves no
rest, and give Him no rest, until He establishes Jerusalem and makes her
a praise of the earth." (Isa. 62:6-7) Revival is a reality about
which we must give ourselves no rest, and the Lord no rest, until He
comes and makes His church the praise of all the earth.
The Desperate Need. Throughout history, the church has been
revived and enlarged through outpourings of the Spirit. Jonathan
Edwards, a leader in the First Great Awakening, writes: "It may be
observed that, from the fall of man to our day, the work of redemption
in its effect has mainly been carried on by remarkable pourings out of
the Spirit of God . . . at special seasons of mercy." Without
periodic, extraordinary visitations of God, the church inevitably
degenerates.
Nearly a century has passed since the church has experienced
widespread revival. Although the gospel has advanced into more places
and nations than ever before, the church faces defeat in many ways.
Glowing statistics can never measure the spiritual climate of the
church.
In our generation we have increasingly suffered from spiritual
lethargy and powerlessness. There is a high percentage of weak and
lukewarm Christians in western churches who evidence little interest in
growing in grace and knowledge. The church may be bustling with activity
and at the same time be infiltrated and permeated with the world's
thinking and doing. It is sometimes the case that our bright forms of
worship camouflage a dead spiritual condition.
Today the church world-wide is struggling. The impact of our churches
upon the spiritual state of the world has, with all too few exceptions,
been minimal. The missionary effort among us is feeble. The enemies of
the gospel are winning the day in almost every area of the world.
Our paramount need is for heaven-sent revivals of the kind that have
adorned the history of the church. Nothing less than the powerful work
of the Holy Spirit on a massive scale will meet the desperate spiritual
poverty of our age, and remove the gross darkness that covers the
nations. Only the manifestation of God in the midst of His people can
give the church victory, making her the "praise of the earth."
The Divine Means. What should we emphasize in such spiritually
degenerated circumstances? Prayer! This is the principal means of grace
to be employed by the Lord's people. Prayer occupies a primary place in
the advance of all the Lord's work, and especially in the quest for
revival.
Jonathan Edwards comments that when God has something very great to
accomplish for His church, it is His will that there should precede it
the extraordinary prayers of His people, quoting from Ezekiel 36:37
"I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel, to do
this for them." In Zechariah 12:10 it is revealed that, when God is
about to accomplish great things for His church, He will begin by a
remarkable pouring out of "the Spirit of grace and
supplication." It is the invariable constitution of the kingdom of
heaven that blessings of great magnitude are not imparted except to
prayers of the deepest urgency.
History demonstrates this principal. The common precursor to revivals
has been prevailing prayer. Pentecost, which was the first Christian
revival, followed ten days of intense prayer characterized by
whole-hearted unity (Acts 1:14, 2:1-4).
Before the Second Great Awakening (late 1850s), Jeremiah Lamphier
called a prayer meeting in downtown New York. Within six months 10,000
businessmen were praying for revival, and within two years about
2,000,000 people were added to the churches.
The same pattern is found before the 1859 revival in Ulster, Ireland.
James McQuilkin and three others began to meet in a school house every
week for prayer and Bible study. They kept themselves warm with armfuls
of peat gathered on the way to the school house every Friday evening.
While peat warmed their bodies, the Spirit kindled the fire in their
hearts. By the end of 1858, the participants at the prayer meeting had
grown to fifty. Intercession without distraction to other subjects was
made for an outpouring of the Holy Spirit on themselves and the country.
Their prayers and possibly many more were wonderfully answered in 1859
when an estimated 100,000 were added to the churches in Ulster.
These accounts and many others illustrate prayer as the genesis of
revival. The beginning of a time of revival invariably has been marked
by quickening of the ordinary prayer meetings, resulting in new
vitality, more participation, more sense of the presence of the Holy
Spirit, and more unction in intercession.
Therefore, in times of special need and of the church's weakness,
there is a biblical and historical warrant to resort to extraordinary
prayer for revival. Isn't spiritual apathy and powerlessness in the
church today a crisis which calls for urgent prayer?
We must recognize, however, that prayer is a spiritual gift,
something that cannot be created artificially or regimented. We are not
to think that we can organize prayer as if we are in control. The very
ability to pray with unction and faith is given by the Holy Spirit, and
although that activity largely precedes revival, prayer also is an
integral part of revival.
Faithful Servants. While there are times when our prayers may
be general or even unutterable groans, it is also important to be
specific. Praying for spiritual awakening must be informed, by using
resources such as Operation World, by Patrick Johnstone. Prayer
meetings for revival should be fueled with relevant up-to-date
information for intelligent petitions. We should not confine our
intercessions to our own church or denomination or nation, but should
intercede for world-wide spiritual awakening.
Our prayers are real only if we live them. As we earnestly seek God
for revival, we must not forsake the essential tasks of the church:
preaching the truth, evangelism and a vital interest in and support for
missions. We must pray for revival in the context of faithful work. (I
Cor. 15:58) It is those who labor hard in evangelism who are able to
pray most fervently for spiritual awakening.
The absence of revival is no excuse to discontinue our active
evangelistic and missionary endeavors. The notion that nothing
worthwhile can be done until revival comes can lead to the worst kind of
lethargy. Jesus promises to be with us in our efforts until the end of
the world, revival or no revival! All prayer for revival must be
accompanied by faithfulness in fulfilling the commission, which is
binding upon us all, to reach everyone as effectively as we can with the
gospel.
Do Not Keep Silent. Let the desperate need for revival the
impoverished spiritual condition of the church, the darkness in the
world permeate our souls. May we profoundly realize the prevailing
power of prayer. Let our fervent desires and longings for the
manifestation of Christ's kingdom overflow in extraordinary
intercession, with cries for special mercy. Jonathan Edwards wrote,
"there is no way that Christians in a private capacity can do so
much to promote the work of God and advance the kingdom of Christ, as by
prayer."
We must not expect revival to come easily and quickly. Do not be
discouraged if the results are not immediate; revival is God's
prerogative. As God has been pleased to specially manifest His glory in
the past and in the present in some countries, may we be inspired to
persevere in crying, "O LORD, will you revive us again, that your
people may rejoice in you." (Ps. 85 6)
When the vision of Christ's- glory, demonstrated in the salvation of
souls, becomes an intense desire in our hearts, that is especially the
time when we must pray with fervor for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit
in revival. "For Zion's sake I will not keep silent, and for
Jerusalem's sake I will not keep quiet, until her righteousness goes
forth like brightness, and her salvation like a torch that is
burning." (Isa. 62:1) I implore you to be one who, in our desperate
day, urgently and persistently seeks the Lord in extraordinary prayer
for widespread spiritual awakening, that God's glory would be magnified
in His church and in all the earth.
Erroll Hulse is editor of Reformation Today and lives in
Leeds, England. He is author of numerous books, including a book on
revival entitled Give Him No Rest (EP, 1991). He travels
internationally speaking in churches and conferences, encouraging
doctrinal recovery and prayer for awakenings. |