Marks of Revival
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James I. Packer
The features of revival
movements on the surface vary widely, perhaps as a
result of different settings, yet indeed God appears
to delight in variety. Nevertheless, at the level of
deeper analysis, there are constant factors
recognizable in all biblical and post-biblical
revivals, whatever their historical, racial, and
cultural settings. They number five, and are
described below.
Awareness of God's presence. The first and
fundamental feature in revival is the sense that God
has drawn awesomely near in his holiness, mercy, and
might. This is felt as the fulfilling of the prayer
of Isaiah 64:1ff: "O that thou wouldst rend
the heavens and come down, that the mountains might
quake at thy presence . . . to make thy name known
to thine adversaries, that the nations may tremble
at thy presence." God "comes," "visits," and "draws
near" to his people, and makes his majesty known.
The effect is the same as it was for Isaiah himself,
when he "saw the Lord sitting on a throne" in the
temple and heard the angels' song — "Holy, holy,
holy"— and was forced to cry, "Woe is me, for I am
ruined! Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I
live among a people of unclean lips" (Is. 6:1-5). It
is with this searching, scorching manifestation of
God's presence that revival begins, and by its
continuance that revival is sustained.
Responsiveness to God's Word. The sense of
God's presence imparts new authority to his truth.
The message of Scripture which previously was making
only a superficial impact, if that, now searches its
hearers and readers to the depth of their being. The
statement that "the word of God is living and active
and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing
as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both
joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts
and intentions of the heart" (Heb. 4:12) is verified
over and over again. God's message—the gospel call
to repentance, faith, and holiness, to praise and
prayer, witness and worship—authenticates itself
unambiguously to men's consciences, and there is no
room for half measures in response.
Sensitiveness to Sin. Deep awareness of what
things are sinful and how sinful we are is the third
feature of revival that calls for notice. No upsurge
of religious interest or excitement merits the name
of revival if there is no profound sense of sin at
its heart. God's coming, and the consequent impact
of his word, makes Christians much more sensitive to
sin than they previously were: consciences become
tender and a profound humbling takes place. The
perverseness, ugliness, uncleanness, and guilt of
sin are seen and felt with new vividness. Under
revival conditions consciences are so quickened that
conviction of each person's own sinfulness becomes
strong and terrible, inducing agonies of mind that
are beyond imagining till they happen. The gospel of
forgiveness through Christ's cross comes to be loved
as never before, as people see their need of it so
much more clearly.
But conviction of sin is a means, not an end; the
Spirit of God convinces of sin in order to induce
repentance, and one of the more striking features of
revival movements is the depth of repentance into
which both saints and sinners are led. Repentance,
as we know, is basically not moaning and remorse,
but turning and change. Peter's listeners on the day
of Pentecost were "pierced to the heart," which
literally means to inflict with a violent blow, a
vivid image of an acutely painful experience.
Shattered, the congregation cried out, "Brethren,
what shall we do?" Peter showed them the way of
faith, repentance, and discipleship through Jesus
Christ, and three thousand of them took it (Acts
2:37-41). Revival always includes a profound
awareness of one's own sinfulness, leading to deep
repentance and heartfelt embrace of the glorified,
loving, pardoning Christ.
Liveliness in Community. A revived church is
full of the life, joy and power of the Holy Spirit.
With the Spirit's coming, fellowship with Christ is
brought right to the center of our worship and
devotion; the glorified Christ is shown, known,
loved, served, and exalted. Love and generosity,
unity and joy, assurance and boldness, a spirit of
praise and prayer, and a passion to reach out to win
others are recurring marks of a people experiencing
revival. So is divine power in their preachers, a
power which has nothing to do with natural
eloquence.
Fruitfulness in testimony. Revival always has
an evangelistic and ethical overspill into the
world. When God revives the church, the new life
overflows from the church for the conversion of
outsiders and renovation of society. Christians
become fearless in witness and tireless in their
Savior's service. They proclaim by word and deed the
power of the new life, souls are won, and a
community conscience informed by Christian values
emerges. Also in revival times God acts quickly; his
work accelerates. Truth spreads, and people are born
again and grow in Christ, with amazing rapidity.
Such in outline is the constant pattern by which
genuine movements of revival identify themselves.
Christians in revival are accordingly found living
in God's presence (coram Deo), attending to
his word, feeling acute concern about sin and
righteousness, rejoicing in the assurance of
Christ's love and their own salvation, spontaneously
constant in worship, and tirelessly active in
witness and service, fueling these activities by
praise and prayer. The question that presses is
whether revival is actually displayed in the lives
of Christian individuals and communities: whether
this quality of Christian life is there or not.
James I. Packer
is a professor of Systematic and Historical Theology
at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia,
and the author of numerous books. His writings on
revival include: God in Our Midst (Seeking and
Receiving Ongoing Revival), Keep in Step With the
Spirit (ch. 7), and A Quest for Godliness (The
Puritan Vision of the Christian Life) (chs. 3 & 19).
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