Friday, March 21, 2014
Monday, March 10, 2014
What is Revival? - by C. H. Spurgeon From the December 1866 Sword and Trowel
Click Here for the Biography of Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834 - 1892) - The Powerful Pulpit Preacher of England
The word "revival" is as familiar in our mouths as a household word. We are constantly speaking about and praying for a "revival;" would it not be as well to know what we mean by it? Of the Samaritans our Lord said, "Ye worship ye know not what," let him not have to say to us, "Ye know not what ye ask." The word "revive" wears its meaning upon its forehead; it is from the Latin, and may be interpreted thus—to live again, to receive again a life which has almost expired; to rekindle into a flame the vital spark which was nearly extinguished.
When a
person has been dragged out of a pond nearly drowned, the bystanders are
afraid that he is dead, and are anxious to ascertain if life still
lingers. The proper means are used to restore animation; the body is
rubbed, stimulants are administered, and if by God's providence life
still tarries in the poor clay, the rescued man opens his eyes, sits up,
and speaks, and those around him rejoice that he has revived. A
young girl is in a fainting fit, but after a while she returns to
consciousness, and we say, "she revives." The flickering lamp of life in
dying men suddenly flames up with unusual brightness at intervals, and
those who are watching around the sick bed say of the patient, "he
revives."
In these
days, when the dead are not miraculously restored, we do not expect to
see the revival of a person who is totally dead, and we could not speak
of the re-vival of a thing which never lived before. It is clear
that the, term "revival" can only be applied to a living soul, or to
that which once lived. To be revived is a blessing which can only be
enjoyed by those who have some degree of life. Those who have no
spiritual life are not, and cannot be, in the strictest sense of the
term, the subjects of a revival. Many blessings may come to the
unconverted in consequence of a revival among Christians, but the
revival itself has to do only with those who already possess spiritual
life. There must be vitality in some degree before there can be a
quickening of vitality, or, in other words, a revival.
A true revival is to be looked for in the church of God.
Only in the river of gracious life can the pearl of revival be found.
It has been said that a revival must begin with God's people; this is
very true, but it is not all the truth, for the revival itself must end
as well as begin there. The results of the revival will extend to the
outside world, but the revival, strictly speaking, must be within the
circle of life, and must therefore essentially be enjoyed by the
possessors of vital godliness, and by them only. Is not this quite a
different view of revival from that; which is common in society; but is
it not manifestly the correct one?
It is a
sorrowful fact that many who are spiritually alive greatly need
reviving. It is sorrowful because it is a proof of the existence of much
spiritual evil. A man in sound health with every part of his body in a
vigorous condition does not need reviving. He requires daily sustenance,
but reviving would be quite out of place. If he has not yet attained
maturity growth will be most desirable, but a hale hearty young man
wants no reviving, it would be thrown away upon him. Who thinks of
reviving the noonday sun, the ocean at its flood, or the year at its
prime? The tree planted by the rivers of water loaded with fruit needs
not excite our anxiety for its revival, for its fruitfulness and beauty
charm every one. Such should be the constant condition of the sons of
God. Feeding and lying down in green pastures and led by the still
waters they ought not always to be crying, "my leanness, my leanness,
woe unto me." Sustained by gracious promises and enriched out of the
fullness which God has treasured up in his dear Son, their souls should
prosper and be in health, and their piety ought to need no reviving.
They should aspire to a higher blessing, a richer mercy, than a mere
revival. They have the nether springs already; they should earnestly
cover the upper springs. They should be asking for growth in grace, for
increase of strength, for greater success; they should have out-climbed
and out-soared the period in which they need to be constantly crying,
"Wilt thou not revive us again?" For a church to be constantly needing
revival is the indication of much sin, for if it were sound before the
Lord it would remain in the condition into which a revival would uplift
its members. A church should be a camp of soldiers, not an hospital of
invalids. But there is exceedingly much difference between what ought be
and what is, and consequently many of God's people are in so sad a
state that the very fittest prayer for them is for revival. Some
Christians are, spiritually, but barely alive. When a man has been let
down into a vat or into a well full of bad air, yea do not wonder when
he is drawn up again that he is half-dead, and urgently requires to be
revived. Some Christians—to their shame be it spoken!—descend into such
worldly company, not upon such unhallowed principles, and become so
carnal, that when they are drawn up by God's grace from their
backsliding position they want reviving, and even need that their
spiritual breath should as it were be breathed into their nostrils
afresh by God's Spirit.
When a
man starves himself, continuing for a long time without food, when he is
day after day without a morsel of bread between his lips, we do not
marvel that the surgeon, finding him in extremities, says, "This man has
weakened his system, he is too low, and wants reviving." Of course he
does, for he has brought himself by low diet into a state of weakness.
Are there not hundreds of Christians—shame that it should be so!—who
live day after day without feeding upon Bible truth? shall it be added
without real spiritual communion with God? they do not even attend the
week-night services, and they are indifferent hearers on the Lord's day.
Is it remarkable that they want reviving? Is not the fact that they do
so greatly need it most dishonorable to themselves and distressing to
their truly spiritual brethren?
There
is, a condition of mind which is even more sad than either of the two
above mentioned; it is a thorough, gradual, but certain decline of all
the spiritual powers. Look at that consumptive man whose lungs are
decaying, and in whom the vital energy is ebbing; it is painful to see
the faintness which suffuses him after exertion, and the general languor
which overspreads his weakened frame. Far more sad to the spiritual eye
is the spectacle presented by spiritual consumptives who in some
quarters meet us on all hands. The eye of faith is dim and overcast, and
seldom flashes with holy joy; the spiritual countenance is hollow and
sunken with doubts and fears; the tongue of praise is partially
paralyzed, and has little to say for Jesus; the spiritual frame is
lethargic, and its movements are far from vigorous; the man is not
anxious to be doing anything for Christ; a horrible numbness, a dreadful
insensibility has come over him; he is in soul like a sluggard in the
dog-days, who finds it hard labor to lie in bed and brush away the flies
from his face. If these spiritual consumptives hate sin they do it so
weakly that one might fear that they loved it still. If they love Jesus,
it is so coldly that it is a point of question whether they love at
all. If they sing Jehovah's praises it is very sadly, as if hallelujahs
were dirges. If they mourn for sin it is only with half-broken hearts,
and their grief is shallow and unpractical. If they hear the Word of God
they are never stirred by it; enthusiasm is an unknown luxury. If they
come across a precious truth they perceive nothing particular in it, any
more than the cock in the fable, in the jewel which he found in the
farmyard. They throw themselves back upon the enchanted couch of sloth,
and while they are covered with rags they dream of riches and great
increase of goods. It is a sad, sad thing when Christians fall into this
state; then indeed they need reviving, and they must have it, for "the
whole head is sick and the whole heart faint." Every lover of souls
should intercede for declining professors that the visitations of God
may restore them; that the Sun of righteousness may arise upon them with
healing beneath his wings.
When
revival comes to a people who are in the state thus briefly described,
it simply brings them to the condition in which they ought always to
have been; it quickens them, gives them new life, stirs the coals of the
expiring fire, and puts heavenly breath into the languid lungs. The
sickly soul which before was insensible, weak, and sorrowful, grows
earnest, vigorous, and happy in the Lord. This is the immediate fruit of
revival, and it becomes all of us who are believers to seek this
blessing for backsliders, and for ourselves if we are declining in
grace.
If revival is confined to living men we may further notice that it must result from the proclamation and the receiving of living truth.
We speak of "vital godliness," and vital godliness must subsist upon
vital truth. Vital godliness is not revived in Christians by mere
excitement, by crowded meetings, by the stamping of the foot, or the
knocking of the pulpit cushion, or the delirious bawlings of ignorant
zeal; these are the stock in trade of revivals among dead souls, but to
revive living saints other means are needed. Intense excitement may
produce a revival of the animal, but how can it operate upon the
spiritual, for the spiritual demands other food than that which stews in
the fleshpots of mere carnal enthusiasm. The Holy Ghost must come into
the living heart through living truth, and so bring nutriment and
stimulant to the pining spirit, for so only can it be revived. This,
then, leads us to the conclusion that if we are to obtain a revival we
must go directly to the Holy Ghost for it, and not resort to the
machinery of the professional revival-maker. The true vital spark of
heavenly flame comes from the Holy Ghost, and the priests of the Lord
must beware of strange fire. There is no spiritual vitality in anything
except as the Holy Spirit is all in all in the work; and if our vitality
has fallen near to zero, we can only have it renewed by him who first
kindled it in us. We must go to the cross and look up to the dying
Savior, and expect that the Holy Spirit will renew our faith and quicken
all our graces. We must feed anew by faith upon the flesh and blood of
the Lord Jesus, and so the Holy Ghost will recruit our strength and give
us a revival. When men in India sicken in the plains, they climb the
hills and breathe the more bracing air of the upper regions; we need to
get nearer to God, and to bathe ourselves in heaven, and revived piety
will be the sure result.
When a
minister obtains this revival he preaches very differently from his
former manner. It is very hard work to preach when the head aches and
when the body is languid, but it is a much harder task when the soul is
unfeeling and lifeless. It is sad, sad work—painfully, dolorously,
horribly sad, but saddest of all if we do not feel it to be sad, if we
can go on preaching and remain careless concerning the truths we preach,
indifferent as to whether men are saved or lost! May God deliver every
minister from abiding in such a state! Can there be a more wretched
object than a man who preaches in God's name truths which he does not
feel, and which he is conscious have never impressed his own heart? To
be a mere sign-post, pointing out the road but never moving in it, is a
lot against which every tame heart may plead night and day.
Should
this revival be granted to deacons and elders what different men it
would make of them! Lifeless, lukewarm church officers are of no more
value to a church, than a crew of sailors would be to a vessel if they
were all fainting and if in their berths when they were wanted to hoist
the sails or lower the boats. Church officers who need reviving must be
fearful dead weights upon a Christian community. It is incumbent upon
all Christians to be thoroughly awake to the interests of Zion, but upon
the leaders most of all. Special supplication should be made for
beloved brethren in office that they may be full of the Holy Ghost.
Workers
in the Sunday-schools, tract distributors, and other laborers for
Christ, what different people they become when grace is vigorous from
what they are when their life flickers in the socket! Like sickly
vegetation in a cellar, all blanched and unhealthy, are workers who have
little grace; like willows by the water-courses, like grease with reeds
and rushes in well-watered valleys, are the servants of God who live in
his presence. It is no wonder that our Lord said, "Because thou art
neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth," for when the
earnest Christian's heart is full of fire it is sickening to talk with
lukewarm people. Have not warm-hearted lovers of Jesus felt when they
have been discouraged by doubtful sluggish people, who could see a lion
in the way, as if they could put on express speed and run over them?
Every earnest minister has known times when he has felt cold hearts to
be as intolerable as the drones in the hive are to the working bees.
Careless professors are as much out of place as snow in harvest among
truly living Christians. As vinegar to the teeth and smoke to the eyes
are these sluggards. As well be bound to a dead body as forced into
union with lifeless professors; they are a burden, a plague, and an
abomination. You turn to one of these cold brethren after a graciously
earnest prayer-meeting, and say with holy joy, "What a delightful
meeting we have had!" "Yes," he says carelessly and deliberately, as if
it were an effort to say so much, "there was a good number of people."
How his frostbitten words grate on one's ear! You ask yourself, "Where
has the man been? Is he not conscious that the Holy Ghost has been with
us?" Does not our Lord speak of these people as being cast out of his
mouth, just because he himself is altogether in earnest, and
consequently, when he meets with lukewarm people he will not endure
them? He says, "I would thou wert cold or hot," either utterly averse to
good or in earnest concerning it. It is easy to see his meaning. If you
heard an ungodly man blaspheme after an earnest meeting, you would
lament it, but you would feel that from such a man it was not a thing to
make you vexed, for he has only spoken after his kind, but when you
meet with a child of God who is lukewarm, how can you stand that? It is
sickening, and makes the inmost spirit feel the horrors of mental
nausea.
While a
true revival in its essence belongs only to God's people, it always
brings with it a blessing for the other sheep who are not yet of the
fold. If you drop a stone into a lake the ring widens continually, till
the farthest corner of the lake feels the influence. Let the Lord revive
a believer and very soon his family, his friends, his neighbors,
receive a share of the benefit; for when a Christian is revived, he
prays more fervently for sinners. Longing, loving prayer for sinners, is
one of the marks of a revival in the renewed heart. Since the blessing
is asked for sinners, the blessing comes from him who hears the prayers
of his people; and thus the world gains by revival. Soon the revived
Christian speaks concerning Jesus and the gospel; he sows good seed, and
God's good seed is never lost, for he has said, "It shall not return
unto me void." The good seed is sown in the furrows, and in some
sinners' hearts God prepares the soil, so that the seed springs up in a
glorious harvest. Thus by the zealous conversation of believers another
door of mercy opens to men.
When
Christians are revived they live more consistently, they make their
homes more holy and more happy, and this leads the ungodly to envy them,
and to enquire after their secret. Sinners by God's grace long to be
like such cheerful happy saints; their mouths water to feast with them
upon their hidden manna, and this is another blessing, for it leads men
to seek the Savior. If an ungodly man steps into a congregation where
all the saints are revived he does not go to sleep under the sermon. The
minister will not let him do that, for the hearer perceives that the
preacher feels what he is preaching, and has a right to be heard. This
is a clear gain, for now the man listens with deep emotion; and above
all, the Holy Spirit's power, which the preacher has received in answer
to prayer comes upon the hearer's mind; he is convinced of sin, of
righteousness, and of judgment to come, and Christians who are on the
watch around him hasten to tell him of the Savior, and point him to the
redeeming blood, so that though the revival, strictly speaking, is with
the people of God, yet the result of it no man can limit. Brethren, let
us seek a revival during the present month, that the year may close with
showers of blessing, and that the new year may open with abundant
benediction. Let us pledge ourselves to form a prayer-union, a sacred
band of suppliants, and may God do unto us according to our faith.
"Father, for thy promised blessing,
Still we plead before thy throne;
For the time of sweet refreshing
Which can come from thee alone. "Blessed earnests thou hast given,
But in these we would not rest,
Blessings still with thee are hidden,
Pour them forth, and make us blest.
"Wake thy siren bering children, wake them,
Bid them to thy harvest go;
Blessings, O our Father, make them;
Round their steps let blessing flow.
"Let no hamlet be forgotten,
Let thy showers on all descend;
That in one loud blessed anthem,
Myriads may in triumph blend."
The word "revival" is as familiar in our mouths as a household word. We are constantly speaking about and praying for a "revival;" would it not be as well to know what we mean by it? Of the Samaritans our Lord said, "Ye worship ye know not what," let him not have to say to us, "Ye know not what ye ask." The word "revive" wears its meaning upon its forehead; it is from the Latin, and may be interpreted thus—to live again, to receive again a life which has almost expired; to rekindle into a flame the vital spark which was nearly extinguished.
Still we plead before thy throne;
For the time of sweet refreshing
Which can come from thee alone. "Blessed earnests thou hast given,
But in these we would not rest,
Blessings still with thee are hidden,
Pour them forth, and make us blest.
"Wake thy siren bering children, wake them,
Bid them to thy harvest go;
Blessings, O our Father, make them;
Round their steps let blessing flow.
"Let no hamlet be forgotten,
Let thy showers on all descend;
That in one loud blessed anthem,
Myriads may in triumph blend."
Courtesy @ http://www.spurgeon.org/s_and_t/wir1866.htm - From the December 1866 Sword and Trowel
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