| God’s
Way To Revival
Walter
Beuttler
THE
NEED FOR REVIVAL
Although
the term revival is not found in the Bible as such, the experience
is there and so is the idea.
This concept is also found in an impressive variety of more
or less synonymous expressions employed in prayer and promise, e.g.,
“Wilt thou not revive us again?” Psalms 85:6; “Lord, revive
thy work in the midst of the years,” Habakkuk 3:2; “They
shall revive as the corn,” Hosea 14:7; “To revive the spirit
of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones,”
Isaiah 57:15; “When the times of refreshing shall come from the
presence of the Lord,” Acts 3:19.
In these and other expressions the idea has to do with bringing
one to a previous state in, or relationship with God by some divine
intervention.
Strictly
speaking, there should be no such need.
Whenever we speak of the need of revival, we indict either
ourselves or others, frequently both, as having backslidden at least
to some degree. Nevertheless, where such backsliding has
actually occurred, this indictment constitutes a desirable confession
of failure as an initial requisite to restoration.
It should be obvious to everyone that God’s plan is not a
continuous cycle of sinning and repenting, backsliding and restoration,
but a steady growth in God and a constant walk with God on an ever-ascending
path.
However,
since fallen nature with its innate propensity to gravitate away
from God is what it is, this ideal is unfortunately not the experience
of a multitude of people as amply evidenced by the history of Israel
and the Church. Israel’s apostasies in a many times repeated
cycle of sin, judgment, repentance, and restoration were due to
her failure to keep her covenant relationship with God. Therefore, a new revival, so-called, was
the only means to arrest Israel’s drift away from God and to restore
her to divine favor in whatever possible degree for however temporary
a period. Even so, Israel was still gravitating
toward national disaster, a course which these revivals only temporarily
interrupted but did not ultimately prevent. Yet these revivals did have the potentiality
and purpose of saving Israel from the ultimate consequences of her
evil ways. On more
than one occasion these revivals gave Israel periods of peace and
prosperity, sometimes of considerable length.
The failure of revivals to keep Israel from relapse and provide
a permanent cure lay in Israel’s failure to abide by the principles
inherent in revival as a remedy, not in the failure of the remedy
itself. The story would
be entirely different if they had maintained after revival the same
consecration which brought them into revival. Likewise, the record of Israel would be
still worse had it not been for seasons of revival. God was certainly not pleased with their
defection, but He was with their return.
The
very same principle applies today in the history of the Church,
the course of denominations, and the experience of individuals. God’s people should never be in need of
revival. There is a
far better provision. But
when there IS need for revival, thank God, revival is available. Although we do not believe in the need
for revival, we believe in revival when we need it. When such sense of need finds vocal expression
among the people of God, it is at least an honest expression of
a regrettable fact and a glimmer of hope for a change for the better.
THE
CALL TO REVIVAL
A
true sense of need for revival is actually the call of God to revival. Such a sense can only be accounted for
by the drawing of the Spirit of God in accordance with the will
of God. A conscious need of God and hunger for
God is actually God Himself hungering within us for Himself. When such drawing of the Spirit is followed
by the necessary responses to God on the part of man, revival in
some form and commensurate with that response is inevitable.
God
Himself is delighted to respond to man’s response. Whenever one of Israel’s leaders recognized
in her defection from God the true cause of her national calamities,
God evidenced His pleasure by supernatural intervention in her national
affairs. The availability
of revival to arrest a trend away from God or to regain lost ground
is not only a deduction based on historical events inside and outside
the scriptures, but is also a scriptural assurance of a glorious
fact. “I will restore unto you the years
that the locust hath eaten” (Joel 2:25). Furthermore, the promise of things beyond
past experience and above natural expectation is an additional scriptural
assurance of an even more glorious fact.
“Behold, I will do a new thing...I will even make a way
in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert” (Isaiah 43:19). “For since the beginning of the world
men have not heard, nor perceived by the ear, neither hath the eye
seen, O God, beside thee, what he hath prepared for him that waiteth
for him” (who hath worked
for him that hath waited for him, margin)
(Isaiah 64:4).
THE
WAY TO REVIVAL
Revival
is the keynote of the book of Joel.
Pentecostal revival through the outpouring of the Holy Spirit
is the essence of that keynote.
The trumpet call of Joel arouses the people to the need of
revival. His message shows them the way. What, then, is the way?
First,
reflection:
“Hath
this been in your days, or even in the days of your fathers?”
(Joel 1:2). This book with its message of Pentecostal
revival is addressed to the older generation because of their experience
and greater observation over a longer period of time. This older generation had seen what the
younger generation had not seen.
God’s people suffered a national calamity without parallel
in the memory of even the oldest inhabitants.
The drought was so severe that the daily sacrifices had come
to an end for lack of grain, wine and oil.
Now the old are asked to reflect on the present state of
affairs in contrast to the past so as to impress the younger generation
with this unprecedented situation in preparation for the application
of remedial measures.
A
wholesome reflection on the glories of the past during times of
spiritual declension plays a valuable role in heart searchings for
cause and cure. Those who look back in objective reflection
toward greater heights once possessed in God than experienced now,
do not necessarily want to go back to “the good old days”
for a mere repetition of previous experiences.
Seeing the contrast between then and now, they simply want
to use this unfavorable comparison as an incentive to press forward
to higher heights and as a fulcrum to remedial action.
Second,
alarm:
“Blow
ye the trumpet in Zion, and sound an alarm” (Joel 2:1). There are times when God’s people need
to be aroused to an honest assessment of the factual situation. “That which the palmerworm hath left
hath the locust eaten; and that which the locust hath left hath
the cankerworm eaten; and that which the cankerworm hath left hath
the caterpillar eaten” (Joel 1:4). The desolation of the land was brought
about by different agencies in progressive stages. Worse things were still in store, yet
the people continued in lethargy and self-indulgence. A church beset by increasing worldliness
and decreasing spirituality needs to be aroused into a state of
alarm. When the people of God substitute feasting
for fasting, entertainment for worship, rhetoric for prophecy, ritual
for revival, luxury for self-denial, the television set for family
prayer, the bowling alley for the altar service, the skating rink
for the Bible study, approbation of the world for the reproach of
Christ, there is ample ground for great alarm.
Joel, in faithfulness to his nation and in obedience to his
God, did not play a lullaby on his trumpet to induce a slumbering
unawareness of the realities of his day, but an alarm to arouse
the people into a consciousness of their need.
Third,
repentance:
“Therefore
also now, saith the Lord, turn ye even unto me with all your heart,
and with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourning” (Joel 2:12). True repentance has three major components
involving man’s entire personality; namely, intellect, emotion and
will. Intellectually,
man sees his wrong; emotionally, man feels his wrong; and volitionally,
man corrects his wrong. Consequently,
repentance is a change of mind, a change of heart and a change of
deeds. Each one of these three factors are present
in true repentance and in that sequence, whether we are conscious
of them or not.
The
repentant prodigal son reached the turning point in a far country
when he came to himself in the realization of his state and the
acknowledgment of his plight; when he felt in his heart the sting
of remorse and the shame of his deed; when he returned to his father
with confession of sin in humility of spirit. Returning with contrition, he was met
with compassion; coming in rags, he was clothed with a robe; suffering
with hunger, he was dined at a banquet; weeping in sorrow, he was
met with rejoicing.
Fourth,
supplication:
“Blow
the trumpet in Zion, sanctify a fast, call a solemn assembly...let
them say, Spare thy people” (Joel 2:15-17). Now the prophet sounds the trumpet call
for collective prayer by old and young, male and female, priest
and people. Even the wails of the sucklings are a
part of this prayer meeting which is characterized by earnestness
in supplication, self-denial in fasting, genuineness in repentance,
weeping in sorrow, persistence in intercession and diligence in
seeking God.
There
is no thought of prayer beautifully phrased and impressively uttered,
no delight in mere rhyme and rhythm, no interest in dignified robes
and religious paraphernalia, no clamor for ornate ritual and imposing
architecture. The need is too great, the distress too
deep, and the cries too loud for the observance of ecclesiastical
proprieties and traditional sanctions.
Things lose their meaning and men become shadows when God
is all that matters. He will restore what was once enjoyed
when those things that displaced Him will be displaced by Him, when
we pursue again that which interests Him and discard that in which
He has no interest. He
will be found anew when He is allowed to be both center and circumference
in our lives so that we can say with the psalmist of old,
“All
my springs are in thee.” Psalms 87:7
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