In 2010 God dramatically restored my hope that
America could see another great, national Spiritual awakening that would alter
the course of the nation. This was significant, for I had lost all hope for
such a revival. My hope had been robbed after seeing so many superficial
revivals and celebrity revivalists who seemed to be more concerned for their
name than God’s name.
Revival
was in my blood. I had been called into the ministry during a powerful NE Texas
revival in the 1970s. As God led me into higher education, I directed my
studies toward outpourings of the Holy Spirit in church history. Out of a
seven-year research and writing project came the book 2000 Years of Charismatic Christianity, first published in 1996,
but still used in Bible colleges and seminaries around the world.
My
wife, Dr. Susan Hyatt, and I experienced some powerful moves of the Holy Spirit
in the 1970s-80s, which encouraged us to continue. We lived through the
revivals out of Toronto and Pensacola in the 1990s but were disappointed in the
lack of cultural transformation and the direction that revival in general seemed
to take at the time.
Revival, it seemed,
degenerated into a hyped, man-made, religious event rather than a Divine
visitation from heaven. I could identify with the words of R. A. Torrey who,
almost a century ago, had said:
The most fundamental trouble with
most of our present-day, so-called revivals is that they are man-made and not
God sent. They are worked up (I
almost said faked up) by man’s
cunningly devised machinery—not prayed down.
God
Restores My Hope
By
2010 I had given up hope of America ever experiencing another Great Awakening
that would renew the nation’s churches, impact the culture and stem the tide of
secularism, immorality and false religion that is flooding our land.
But one hot summer day as I began a leisure drive to speak the
following day at a church in another city, I was unexpectedly apprehended by
the Holy Spirit, and everything changed.
I had barely pulled onto the highway when, without any thought
or expectation of such a thing, I felt I was suddenly enveloped in God’s
presence. For the next two hours, I was hardly aware of my surroundings as my
mind was continually flooded with thoughts of hope and faith that America
“could” see another Great Awakening.
By the time I reached my hotel I was so excited I could hardly
wait to get settled in with my notebook and begin writing and articulating the
new hope for America I had just received. That experience continued far into
the night as I sat on the hotel bed and wrote from an overflowing heart. Out of
that experience came my book, Pilgrims and Patriots.
Three Things that Lingered from that Experience
There were three things that left an indelible impression on my
mind and heart. First of all, as already mentioned, my hope was restored for another
great, national Spiritual awakening.
Secondly, for the first time I saw that there was a direct
bearing of the First Great Awakening on the founding of America. I had studied
the Great Awakening and written about it, but now I saw that it played a
primary role in the birthing of this nation. Spiritual awakening, we might say,
is in our national DNA.
Thirdly, it was clear that the Lord was saying that America
“could” (not “would”) see another Great Awakening. It was a reminder that many
of God’s promises are conditional. The great promise of a national healing in
II Chronicles 7:14 begins with the phrase, If
My people . . ..
There are things in life that will happen because of God’s
sovereign will. There are other things, however, that He has placed in our
hands and how things turn out depends on us.
Necessary Keys for Revival
As you can see, I am not a fatalist, determinist, or
hyper-Calvinist. It is not set in stone whether or not America will have
another Great Awakening. It depends on us. Here are three things I want to
suggest are necessary for the American church if we are to see another Great
Awakening across our land.
1. Stop
seeking revival and seek God.
Revival
is too often pursued for all the wrong reasons. The revivalist may be looking
for personal success and importance, or a pastor may want to see numbers added
to his congregation or larger offerings with which to build a more impressive
church building.
Charles
Finney told of receiving a “multitude” of letters and requests form pastors and
church leaders asking him to come and promote a revival in their city. He then
said, “But when I came to weigh their reasons, I have sometimes found every one
of them to be selfish. And God would look upon every one with abhorrence.”
In
2006, I was commissioned by Charisma House to produce an edit of the old Azusa
Street papers, which was published under the title, Fire on the Earth. As I read and reread the Apostolic Faith publications, as they were called, it dawned on me
that they did not seek revival. They wanted God. They wanted to live as New
Testament believers, in love, humility and the power of the Holy Spirit.
True
revivals in history have been birthed out of a jealousy for God’s honor and a
distress at the spiritual apathy and disregard for His truth. Jonathan Edwards,
for example, was distressed for New England. Before reading his sermon “Sinners
in the Hands of an Angry God" to the congregation in Enloe, CN, Edwards
had spent eighteen hours pouring out his soul to God and his prayer was, “O
God, visit New England or let me die.”
Edwards
was not a great preacher (he read his sermons) and there is no record of any
great singing. There was, however, great praying. The windows of heaven were
opened and entire towns began to repent and turn to God.
2. Repent
of a Spirit of Pride and an Elitist Attitude
I
was standing on the front row of a “revival” church waiting to be introduced to
speak that morning. The worship was very festive with people jumping, shouting
running and waving swords and banners. I was not into their style of worship,
but as I stood and communed with the Lord I heard the Holy Spirit say, “The
stronghold of deception is pride.” I knew immediately that that was to be the
theme of my message.
When
the service was turned to me I announced my theme and then proceeded to show
how so many revivals and revivalists have been destroyed because of pride. I
gave examples of how during times of revival the participants often get proud
of “their” revival and take on an inflated idea of their importance because of
God’s blessing. The pride then becomes an opening for demonic deception.
At
the end of my message the festive atmosphere had changed to one of somberness
and quietness. Even after the benediction it seemed that people were almost
afraid to speak as they moved quietly from the pews and filed out the door of
the church. When I later expressed concern about squelching their enthusiasm, the
pastor assured me that I had “nailed it” and given them exactly what they had
needed to hear.
The
middle letter of pride is “I,” which in Greek is ego. The “self” or ego
must be dealt with if there is to be a pure flow of genuine revival. Martin
Luther said, “I am more
afraid of my own heart than of the pope and all his cardinals. I have within me
the great pope, ‘Self.’”
3. Pray the Promises
There
have been great revivals without great preaching. There have been great revivals
without great singing. But there has never been a great revival without great
praying. And to be effective our prayers must be based on God’s word for as
Romans 10:17 says, Faith comes by
hearing, and hearing by the word of God.
There
is a wealth of Biblical promises one can pray concerning revival. In the Old
Testament, there is II Chronicles 7:14. If someone objects that this promise
was given to Israel, I will point them to II Corinthians 1:20. Referring to the
Old Testament promises, Paul said, For
all the promises in Him are Yes, and in Him Amen, to the glory of God through
us.
There
are New Testament promises such Mark 11:22-24 and Acts 2:17. The great Hebrides
revival of the 1950s was birthed out of the desperate prayers of two elderly
women who took Isaiah 44:3-4 and prayed that promise for their village. The promise
reads, For I will pour water on him who
is thirsty and floods on the dry ground; I will pour My Spirit on your
descendants, and My blessing on your offspring.
Great
revivalists such as Wesley, Whitfield, Finney and Moody based their prayers on
the promises of God’s word. R.A. Torrey, associate of D.L. Moody and a
successful revivalist in his own right, wrote,
That
is the kind of revival I am longing to see here in our city; yes, throughout
the whole land; yes, throughout the whole world. Not a revival where there is
great preaching and marvelous singing and all kinds of bewildering antics by
preachers or singers, or skillful managers or manipulators; but a revival where
there is mighty praying and wonderful displays of the convicting and converting
and regenerating power of the Holy Spirit in answer to prayer.
I say “Amen.” Do it Lord!
Come Holy Spirit!
To read how America was birthed out of a great, Spiritual awakening, check out Dr. Eddie Hyatt's book, Pilgrims and Patriots, available from Amazon and his website at www.eddiehyatt.com.
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