Cycles of Revival
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Richard Owen Roberts
A very helpful way to come
to grips with the Biblical teaching on revival is to
approach it from the standpoint of the cycles of
history.
In your imagination,
picture a very long line that begins with the
creation of man in the Book of Genesis and continues
on until the end of the present age, sometime in our
unknown future. Let us call this imaginary line the
norm. A cycle of history consists of crossing this
line twice: once going down and a second time going
up.
The cycles in the Old
Testament. Consider this question, "At the time
of his creation, was man above or below this
imaginary line?" Every indication is that prior to
his fall man enjoyed a relationship of great beauty
and intimacy with God which was vastly above the
normal relationship of man with God in subsequent
times. But Eve sinned and Adam joined her. Suddenly
their intimacy with God was lost and their
relationship plunged below the line. From that point
in Genesis until the close of Malachi it is possible
to trace numerous cycles in which God's people
experienced a return to God and a still later
departure from Him.
The Book of Judges provides
tremendous help in understanding these cycles.
Please note the pattern as established in chapter
two. Stage One: The people served the Lord
all the days of Joshua and all the days of the
elders who survived Joshua (vs. 7). Stage Two:
When Joshua died (vs. 8), the sons of Israel did
evil in the sight of the Lord, serving the Baals and
forsaking the Lord, the God of their fathers (vss.
11-13). Stage Three: The anger of the Lord
burned against Israel, and He brought them under
righteous judgement, delivering them into the hands
of their enemies. Wherever they went the hand of the
Lord was against them for evil and they were
severely distressed (vss. 14-17). Stage Four:
When the judgment was so heavy and the oppression so
great that they could no longer handle it, they
groaned under the=burden and cried unto the Lord
(vs. 18b). Stage Five: When the cry unto God
was of great anguish and from their hearts, God
raised up a judge who delivered them from the hands
of their enemies (vs. 18a): and the people again
served the Lord their God and enjoyed a season of
rest. But then the cycle started all over again, for
when that judge died, they turned their backs on God
and acted more corruptly than their fathers in
following other gods to serve them and bow down to
them (vs. 19). Thus, once more the anger of the Lord
burned against Israel (vss. 20-21).
With a little care you can
see this cycle clearly repeated seven times in the
next fourteen chapters:
Under Othniel (3:1-11);
Under Ehud (3:12-31);
Under Deborah (4:1-5:31);
Under Gideon (6:1-8:35);
Under Abimelech (9:1-57);
Under Jepthah (10:6-12:7); and
Under Sampson (13:1-16:31).
In addition to these seven,
there were several other cycles during this period
which are not so distinctly delineated.
Similar patterns appear
throughout the other historical books of the Bible
from First Samuel to Nehemiah, enabling us to say
that there are many full cycles of history in the
Old Testament. But what about the New Testament?
The cross-over and peak
in the New Testament. Some, who are aware that
the subject of revival is so much more prominent in
the Old Testament than in the New, have concluded
that revival is indeed an Old Testament phenomena
and not something to be found in the New Testament
nor to be looked for in this present age of grace.
This error of interpretation can be easily exposed
by examining the question, "How many full cycles
exist in the New Testament?"
We begin by asking, "Where
does the New Testament begin, above or below the
norm?" We know that the New Testament was preceded
by that period which has been denominated "the four
hundred years of silence" that long stretch of
time in which there is no recorded evidence of God
having spoken to man. We know that John the Baptist
spoke severely to the religious leaders of his day
saying, "You brood of vipers, who warned you to flee
from the wrath to come? " (Matt. 3:7). We know that
Christ came to His own and His own received Him not
(John 1:11). Certainly, the evidence is ample that
the New Testament opened below the line.
Is it not also clear that
the people of God were moved way above the norm when
the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost? In one day about
three thousand were baptized, and all believers were
of one mind, taking their meals together with
gladness and sincerity of heart, praising God and
having favor with all the people. (Acts 2:43-47).
But where, in relationship
to this line, did the New Testament close, and how
many full cycles appear in the New Testament?
Clearly, it closed above the line and obviously,
there was less than one full cycle in the entire New
Testament! While we know that numerous warnings in
the Epistles predict a descent below the line, and
the Letters to the Seven Churches of Asia Minor
(Rev. 2-3) fortify these warnings, the New Testament
Church remained above the norm.
There is indeed a most
precious sense in which the New Testament must be
described as revival at its highest and at its best.
Thus, instead of concluding that revival is not at
all a New Testament theme, it can be described as
the grandest theme of all the New Testament God
drawing near to His own people through Immanuel
God with us.
Since New Testament days it
is as easy to observe the cycles of history as it is
in the Old Testament. Just in the history of the
United States of America alone, several full cycles
are clearly evident. The same can be said for the
United Kingdom.
The church today at a
lowpoint. But what does all this teach us about
where we are today, and how can it help us?
Consider again the great
lesson of the Book of Judges. A season of revival
brings the people of God into a restored
relationship with their Father. But when that people
sin and will not repent, God Himself brings them
under His righteous judgment. Surely that is where
the Church in the western world is today. We have
sinned grievously against God. Think of the terrible
pride of evangelicalism! Consider the spirit of
stubbornness and rebellion that mars so much of the
work of the Church in this age of decadence! Ponder
the terrible unbelief that marks both the conduct
and the practice of vast portions of professed
believers. Realize that millions of people have been
led to a false hope of salvation by the grievously
distorted and paltry teaching and preaching so
popular today. Surely these sins, not to mention
innumerable others, are an affront to our Holy God
and sufficient to have brought the wrath of God upon
an entire generation.
But do the evidences of
God's righteous judgements upon us in the form of
restraining the stirrings of His heart and
compassion toward us (Isa. 63:15); the withdrawal of
His manifest presence and the delivering us up to
the power of our own iniquities (Isa. 64:7); the
forcing us to drink the wine of His wrath to the
point of spiritual drunkenness (Jer. 13:12-14); the
visitation of earthquakes, floods, fires and
devastating storms, and hosts of other indicators of
His wrath have the desired effect? Are we crying
out to God for mercy? Do the groanings of our
burdened hearts reach the throne of the Almighty?
Apparently not yet!
Oh, to be sure, there are
some individuals here and there who are under an
immense burden of concern and imploring God to come
among us in power. Infrequently one does learn of a
local congregation somewhere that is weeping before
the Lord as it seeks His face; but by-and-large the
Church seems to indicate that things are not so bad
but what one more committee, or one more new and
innovative program, or some approach not yet tried,
can yet rescue us from our difficult circumstances.
How much worse must things become before the whole
Church begins to groan and cry out to God?
The lack of a cyclical
pattern. Have you ever wondered if there is any
fixed pattern in these cycles of history? Are the
moral and spiritual declines uniform in their
depths? Are the upturns or revivals consistent in
the peaks they reach? Is there any uniformity in the
length of the cycles and the periods of time between
revivals?
For an answer, consider the
history of revivals in the United States. In the
earliest days of settlement in the New England
Colonies in the 1600s there were several gracious
seasons of revival. A powerful movement of the
Spirit gripped much of the then existing nation
between approximately 1732 and 1770. Another great
revival began about 1792 and continued in various
waves into the 1840s. The mighty prayer revival
gripped much of the nation in 1857 and 1858. Another
revival occurred during the Civil War. Some parts of
the nation were touched by revival in 1905-1906 as a
spill-over of the mighty work of God in Wales.
Yet, since that time we
have seen little more than localized movements
touching small and scattered elements of our
society. In truth, we have not had a large-scale
nation-wide revival for considerably more than a
century.
And what about the peaks
and troughs? From all appearances, there is no
pattern. The times, depths, and peaks all vary,
manifesting the creative ways of our sovereign God.
We may say, however, that the current decline goes
to shocking depths, so much so that many wonder if
the nation can ever turn upward toward God again.
Hope and cry for
deliverance. Ought we to despair? Absolutely
not! Is there no hope? There is abundant reason for
hope! The judgments we are under are gracious and
remedial! Will we heed them? Will we yet cry unto
God for deliverance? Indeed, what will you
personally do?
Will you let the evidences
of where we are as a nation move you to appropriate
action? Will you, as a believing individual, cry
unto God day and night, "Turn us again, Oh God, and
cause Thy face to shine; and we shall be saved" (Ps.
80:3,7,19). Will you encourage your church to heed
the call of II Chronicles 7:14 to humble itself,
pray, seek His face, and turn from its wicked ways?
Will you stand firmly with others who are calling
the nation of churches to cry earnestly unto God in
seasons of humiliating repentance, fasting and
prayer?
Richard Owen Roberts
has had an itinerate ministry for many years with an
emphasis on revival, and has written, edited and
published numerous books and pamphlets on this
topic, including his book entitled Revival.
He is a member of the board of directors for
International Awakening Ministries, Inc. where he
also serves as President. |