The Holy Presence And The Word On Fire
(Excerpted from the book, From Holy Laughter
to Holy Fire, chapter fourteen)
By Dr. Michael L. Brown
What is revival? It is God "stepping down from heaven" and baring His
holy arm. He comes and acts and speaks. There is a holy presence and a word on fire.
God is in the midst of His people. The Lord is shaking the world. That is revival!
It is a time of visitation.
If it is confined to one church it is not revival. If it is confined to the meetings
themselves it is not revival. If it can all be traced to the efforts of man it is
not revival. If it does not ultimately affect the society it is not revival.
When Jesus was on the earth, He explained to His disciples that it was better for
Him to go away so that the Holy Spirit could come. Jesus could only be in one place
at one time, but the Holy Spirit could be everywhere. Jesus could directly touch
only those who heard and saw Him, but the Holy Spirit could directly touch people
anywhere at anytime -- even if they were resisting and running. He transcends all
human agency!
In revival, the Holy Spirit moves deeply and widely, supernaturally and powerfully.
He goes into the homes and schools, into the places of business and the places of
sin, and He brings the sense of the reality of God. He brings conviction! It is
impossible to flee from God during revival.
The words of the Lord in Jeremiah 23 and the words of the psalmist in Psalm 139
are always true, but their reality is fully sensed during times of revival:
"Am I only a God nearby," declares the LORD, "and not a God far
away? Can anyone hide in secret places so that I cannot see him?" declares
the LORD. "Do not I fill heaven and earth?" declares the LORD. (Jer
23:23-24)
Where can I go from Your Spirit? Where can I flee from Your presence? If I go up
to the heavens, You are there; if I make my bed in the depths, You are there. If
I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea, even there
Your hand will guide me, Your right hand will hold me fast. If I say, "Surely
the darkness will hide me and the light become night around me," even the
darkness will not be dark to You; the night will shine like the day, for darkness
is as light to You. (Psa 139:7-12)
During the Welsh Revival, it was commonly reported that men would go into the bars
to drink, not wanting to go to their homes, because they knew their wives were praying
and the presence of God was there. But they couldn't escape Him in the bars!
As they would take the drink in their hands, an unseen Hand would stop them, and
they would run from that place to their homes and get saved.
As the Spirit converted many of the profane, ungodly coal miners, His presence went
with them to work, and they would start their days with prayer and worship. It was
said that you could feel His presence in the coal mines as much as you could in
church!
Once, some visitors were asking for directions to the meetings in one part of Wales.
They were told to take the train to such and such a place and get out there. "But
how we will know when we are there?" they asked. "You'll feel
it!" was the reply. And they did! After getting out from the train, they asked
for further directions. They were told to walk to a certain place and turn there.
Again they asked, "But how we will know where to turn?" "You'll
feel it!" was the answer again. And they did!
That holy presence is not geographically limited, as Arthur Wallis documented:
Ships as they drew near the American ports [in 1858] came within a definite zone
of heavenly influence. Ship after ship arrived with the same tale of sudden conviction
and conversion. In one ship a captain and the entire crew of thirty men found Christ
out at sea and entered the harbour rejoicing. Revival broke out on the battleship
"North Carolina" through four Christian men who had been meeting in
the bowels of the ship for prayer. One evening they were filled with the Spirit
and burst into song. Ungodly shipmates who came down to mock were gripped by the
power of God, and the laugh of the scornful was soon changed into the cry of the
penitent. Many were smitten down, and a gracious work broke out that continued night
after night, till they had to send ashore for ministers to help, and the battleship
became a Bethel.
I heard a story about a man here in the States who had witnessed to his unsaved
friend and prayed for him for years. One day, that friend came over to borrow a
tool but no one was home. So he went to the tool shed to find what he was looking
for when, suddenly, the presence of God overtook him. He was convicted of his sins
and broke down, putting his faith in Jesus at that very moment.
When he told his Christian friend what had happened to him he found out there was
a simple explanation: That faithful believer had prayed with tears for his salvation
for a period of years, making intercession for his soul in that very shed.
The Holy Spirit was there!
Now, multiply that picture a thousand times over and spread it across cities, counties,
states, and even nations, and you have a glorious picture of revival.
After the night of prayer in the Hebrides when the house literally shook with the
presence of the Lord, Duncan Campbell relates that:
The following day when we came to the church we found that the meeting house was
already crowded out. A stream of buses had come from the four quarters of the island.
Who had told them of the services? I have no way of knowing; God has His own manner
of working when men are praying in faith. A butcher's van brought seven men
from a distance of seventeen miles.
We gathered in the church, and I spoke for about an hour. The Spirit of God was
at work. All over the building men and women were crying for mercy. And on the road
outside, I could hear the strong cries of weeping men. I saw both men and women
swooning, some falling into trances. Many were crying, "Oh, God, is there
mercy for me?"
A young man beneath the pulpit prayed, "Oh, God, hell is too good for me."
The seven men who came in the butcher's van were all gloriously converted
that night.
In the field of evangelism today, the desperate need is for conviction of sin --
conviction that will bring men on their faces before God.
When the service was about to end and the last people were leaving, the young man
by the pulpit, himself a new convert, began to pray, and his prayer lasted for 45
minutes. Somehow, word got out that the meetings were to be held all night! People
began to return from all over, packing the church. The service lasted until 4:00
AM! But the story doesn't end there. At 4:00 AM Campbell received a message:
Mr. Campbell, people are gathered at the Police Station, from the other end of the
parish. They are in great distress. Can anyone here come along and pray with them?
Who drew them there? Who convicted them? Many of these people had been strongly
opposed to the gospel right up to that very day. What was happening? The Spirit
was at work! This is a true picture of revival:
We went to the Police Station and I shall never forget the scene that met our eyes.
Under a starlit sky, with the moon gazing down upon us -- and angels, too, I believe,
looking over the battlements of glory -- were scores of men and women under deep
conviction of sin. On the road, by the cottage side, behind a peat stack, they were
crying to God for mercy. Yes, the revival had come!
For five weeks this went on. We preached in one church at seven o'clock [in
the evening], in another at ten, in a third at twelve, back to the first church
at three o'clock [in the morning], then home between five and six, tired,
but glad to have found ourselves in the midst of this Heaven-sent movement of the
Holy Spirit.
Remarkably, in the first parish where revival hit, Campbell reports that 75% of
the converts were born again before they arrived at the meeting place!
There was also an amazing revival among the young people. In those days, not a single
young person attended any public worship services in any of the churches, but the
very first evening -- without announcement or advertisement -- the awareness of
God in the dance hall at midnight became so great that all the young people
left there and crowded into the church! And so the revival continued, spreading
in like manner to the neighboring counties.
Why can't we believe God for similar outpourings in our day? Why cheapen revival
by dragging it down to the feeble level of our unbelief-ridden, flesh-dependent
expectations? Why not ask God for the real thing? And here's a good check-point
for Pentecostals and Charismatics: With all our emphasis on the power of God and
miracles, another sign of revival for us will be true, frequent New Testament healings
in our midst. They will not be the exception to the rule but they will be the norm.
Such things cannot be fabricated! But as long as our healing ministers reach multiplied
millions of sick people through TV, radio, book, tape, and magazine, yet continue
to have relatively meager results, we have little to boast about. All the more should
we cry out for a real visitation that will not disappoint!
In 1922, when Smith Wigglesworth was ministering in Wellington, New Zealand, he
called for a special prayer meeting with a group of eleven leaders. After each of
them had prayed, Wigglesworth rose to seek the Lord, and the presence of God began
to fill the room. Soon the glory of God became terrible. The light became too bright,
the heat too intense. The other men couldn't take it any longer. Every one
of them left the room! Only Wigglesworth could continue in the midst of the Shekinah.
Another minister heard what had happened and determined at the next gathering, no
matter how strong the presence of God became, he would stay until the end. Once
again the scene repeated itself: Wigglesworth began to pray, the holy presence of
God filled the room, and the glory became unbearable. Everyone left, except this
one leader. He would not be overcome and driven out by the manifest presence of
the Lord. But it was too much. Wigglesworth was caught up in the Spirit, radiant
with holy fire, and even the determined minister couldn't stand the intensity.
Soon enough he was gone too!
That is the presence of God that comes with revival. It becomes unbearably intense.
Its light breaks through the darkness. Its heat raises the temperature all around!
It cannot be localized or confined. By its very nature, it must make an
impact on its surroundings, otherwise it is not true revival. And while it will
not completely change the world, it will make a radical impact. It will drive sin
out!
With this in mind, we can speak quite clearly about "revival" in America
today: As long as homosexuals march brazenly down our streets and serve in leading
positions in our governments; as long as abortion clinics and pornography theaters
thrive; as long as "Christian" young people watch MTV and "Christian"
adults watch HBO; as long as the jails have too many prisoners and the mission fields
have too few laborers; as long as greed and materialism rule most of the world and
much of the church; as long as humanists, new agers, and atheists dominate our college
faculties; as long as these things are at the forefront of our society -- we are
not experiencing revival! Sweeping revival in America would mean upheaval. The holy
presence would change the complexion of our nation dramatically.
And what if all of America does not experience revival? Then its powerful
impact will be felt in select towns, cities, or states. And even with these limitations,
the far reaching effects of revival will be experienced well beyond local church
walls. The divine "invasion" -- actually, to most Americans, a return
to New Testament reality would be as abrupt and shocking as an "invasion"
-- will cause a shake down and a shake up.
Of course, we praise God for the refreshing that He is now bringing to many of His
people. We thank Him for the joy and encouragement. Yet we can roll on the floor
and laugh every night until three in the morning, but if the world around us remains
unchanged that is not revival.
If the way we live outside the building does not become characterized by holiness
and sacrificial love for the Lord and the lost, that is not revival. And
if everything that happens in our "revival" meetings comes through the
hands of human vessels -- without the supernatural visitations outside the church,
without the abiding Presence, without the clear evidence that God Himself has "stepped
down from heaven" in power -- that is not revival.
For many ministers, that's frustrating. We like to do it ourselves! If revival
is truly a heavenly visitation, that means that we can't manufacture it or
produce it. We are utterly dependent on God. But that's the best place to
be! He wants to bring revival more than we want to see it. He wants to bless more
than we want to be blessed. He has invested far more into this dying world
than we have, and He has far more at stake. What better place to be than at the
feet of the Lord in fervent prayer, crying out: "Revive Your people O God!"
And when He comes in power He will not only act. He will speak! Revival is characterized
by the Word of God on fire. It is not simply a matter of making time in every service
for teaching and preaching. It is not just giving the Word its proper place. We've
had our fill of lifeless pulpits that "honor the Word," and many believers
today are "taught to death." No, it is a matter of the Word on fire,
a matter of holy unction, a matter of hearing the urgent message of the hour.
The effects of the Welsh Revival at the beginning of this century were far reaching
and world wide. Clearly, these were days owned by the Lord. But the revival was
not perfect, and many believe that it could have had an even greater and more lasting
impact -- especially in Wales itself -- if there had been a deeper, more consistent
ministry of the Word of God.
It's so easy to get caught up in the fervor of revival, in the excitement
of the manifestations, that we forget about something critical: God wants the heart,
and through the Word of God, He probes the heart and changes the heart. The excitement
will pass and the manifestations will wane. But if the trumpet has been sounded,
if the awakening cry has been raised, if the burden of the Lord has been delivered,
if the radical call to follow Jesus in a radical way has gone forth -- that will
determine just how deeply individuals will be changed. The Word is the road map
for the revival's future.
Trivial, non-challenging messages will not lead the way. Those who were nourished
by lightweight meals will falter during the hard times. They will find themselves
swerving and veering, lacking clear direction. Soon enough, they will rebuild the
walls that revival tore down and revert to the habits from which revival delivered
them. Within a few years, they will be living on memories and trying to perpetuate
those memories through now-dead forms. If only there had been a prophetic, piercing,
challenging, truthful proclamation of the Word! If only there had not been so much
entertainment and frivolity!
Matthew records that:
Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the good
news of the kingdom, and healing every disease and sickness among the people. (Matt
4:23)
Do we know better than Jesus? He gave Himself to teaching and preaching
as well as healing -- and He taught without compromise. (His words are so disturbing!)
He taught with authority. What better time than during true revival to bring the
uncompromising, prophetic call? What better time to preach the cross than during
times of renewal when Jesus is seen in His glory?
Even in the intensity of the spiritual outpouring in the Book of Acts, the anointed
Word was still central:
Every Sabbath [Paul] reasoned in the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks.
When Silas and Timothy came from Macedonia, Paul devoted himself exclusively to
preaching, testifying to the Jews that Jesus was the Christ. . . . So Paul stayed
for a year and a half, teaching them the word of God. (Acts 18:4-5, 11)
Do we know better than Paul?
But someone will say: "Oh, in our current 'revival' meetings,
there is always time devoted to the Word of God" -- especially before the
offerings, I might add! But putting that aside, when the Word is preached,
what is the substance? One prominent leader has asked some questions about the current
preaching emphasis. Does it exalt Jesus? Does it produce a real burden for the lost?
Does it present the wrath of God along with the love of God? Does it challenge and
convict?
God used Charles Finney mightily in the first half of the nineteenth century. But
his words still speak today! His sermons on revival preached in New York City in
1832 were subsequently published as Lectures on the Revival of Religion,
and these messages have gone around the world in multiple languages. Through the
anointed word, the revival lives on. At the turn of this century, Jonathan Goforth,
the Canadian missionary to China and Manchuria, began to get reports about the Welsh
Revival. At the same time he began reading Finney's Revival Lectures
and he put into practice what he read. A move of God swept the cities where he ministered!
The Great Awakening and the Methodist Revival ended more than 200 years ago. But
the messages of Edwards and Wesley still challenge us today. They being dead yet
speak. Their words still burn and set our hearts aflame.
Now look for a moment at the compromised worldly church of America. We know almost
nothing of the dedication, sacrifice, fervor, or faith lived out daily by our brothers
and sisters around the world. We know almost nothing of the gospel of martyrdom.
We have little understanding of the cross. What does the Spirit want to say to us?
Do we need froth or fire? What is the divine prescription for the sick patient?
Do we need surface manifestations or serious movings, frivolity or fervor, glitz
or glory? Enough with all the fluff!
We must never forget: Revival is a supernatural work of the Holy Spirit
(not the "Happy Spirit" -- although He brings great joy; not the "Hollow
Spirit" -- in spite of the impression given by some of our empty meetings;
and not the "Hollywood Spirit" -- in spite of our superstar preachers.
He is the Holy Spirit). I have heard Him described as "wild," "exciting,"
and "creative." But have we forgotten that He is HOLY? His manifest
presence is holy and His work is to make us holy. Peter wrote that we
have been chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying
work of the Spirit, for obedience to Jesus Christ and sprinkling by his
blood. (1 Pet 1:2)
The Spirit is not a showman; He is a Sanctifier. He may cause us to weep or laugh
or stagger or fall. But His goal is holiness. His goal is separation. His goal is
to make us like the Son, shining in His glory and radiance.
What is holiness? According to Samuel Logan Brengle, "holiness is pure love."
Holiness is beautiful, not binding, and wonderful, not wearisome. Holiness is being
like God -- in character and inner nature, in heart and soul. What a blessed state!
It is marked by Christlikeness instead of corruption, by divine attributes instead
of devilish attitudes, by loyalty instead of lust, by generosity instead of greed,
by devotion instead of drunkenness. Holiness is perfect goodness. Holiness is purity
of life.
But holiness will not be attained by spiritual excitement alone. It is not an abstract,
nebulous "something" existing "somewhere," no more than
God Himself is just an abstract "something" existing "somewhere."
Holiness does not float in and skip out. Holiness means definite, concrete, radical
change. It means a whole new way of living. And it is grounded in the Word of God.
Without a clear call to holiness, revival will run amuck. If the standards
of the Lord are not clearly lifted up, the people will soon fall down (and I don't
mean in the Spirit). If their experience is not grounded in the Scriptures, they
will have the long term stability of a feather blowing in the wind. When the shouting
dies down, disappointment will set in. Some will even turn against their initial,
transforming experience. Why? It didn't last. It had no solid foundation!
Revivals have been famous for their revival preachers, and true revival preaching
-- not emotional ranting and raving or pseudo-spiritual rambling -- must become
central once again. Otherwise we will quickly lose our bearings. Otherwise we will
drift!
There are at least six things the Holy Spirit will commonly do in times of revival:
He will sanctify (Heb 9:13-14); convict (John 16:8-11); glorify Jesus (John 16:14);
deliver and heal (Acts 10:38); empower (Acts 1:8); and refresh (Acts 3:19). He can
do all these things by means of His inner, secret work on our hearts. But just think
of how much more effective the working would be if it was coupled with His voice!
The Holy Spirit was upon Jesus to preach the Good News and to liberate
the captives (Luke 4:16-18). In fact, it was through His anointed Word
that the captives were set free. The Spirit does not contradict the Word, compete
with the Word, or confine the Word. He confirms the Word (Heb 2:1-4).
Seven times in Revelation 2-3 Jesus addressed His Church. Seven times John recorded
the Lord's exact words. And all seven times He ended by saying:
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches (Rev
2:7, etc.)
Jesus speaks to His people by His Spirit! Are we hearing His voice today? The Spirit
speaks His words. During revival, those words thunder forth. The message has not
changed; we have changed. We need to get back to the Word! (Of course, most of our
churches boast about their faithfulness to the Word, and some are even called "Word"
churches -- yet there's a lot more to the Word than what you may hear in some
of these places.) We need truly anointed, holy pulpits and truly anointed, holy
preachers. This generation is crying for a fresh word from above. As Leonard Ravenhill
expressed:
Evangelistic preaching is often a heart massage. Revival preaching is heart surgery.
We have had varieties of evangelistic preaching -- million dollar gospel crusades,
charismatic healing evangelism. It is now time for confrontational preaching of
holiness unto the Lord. Evangelism touches the emotions. Revival preaching touches
the conscience.
Although the Welsh Revival did not have an emphasis on public preaching or teaching,
it began with a message of immediate repentance and instant obedience. That remained
as the foundation of the Spirit's work. The Azusa Street outpouring was known
far and wide for its Pentecostal manifestations, and some of its leaders strayed
into strange doctrines like British Israelitism. But if you look at the doctrinal
statement they drew up you will see something very clearly. It put repentance first,
second, third, fourth, and fifth -- leading to a holy, Spirit-baptized life.
Has that become passe? Is such a message no longer needed in this hour? Have
we advanced beyond repentance and holiness? Has the Lord finally decided to look
the other way? Is He choosing to ignore the fact the most of the American "Spirit-filled"
(or, as I have said many times before, "Spirit-frilled") church is hardly
distinguishable from the world?
I think back to the fire-baptized preachers of past generations -- to the Whitefield's
and Tennent's, to the Savonarola's and Fox's, to the Finney's
and Campbell's -- and I long to see a new breed of no-compromise leaders arise
in our day. I think back to their heart-rending messages, their challenging calls
to get right with God, their tearful offers of the mercy of the Lord, their fearless
proclamation of the cross, their devastating descriptions of the state of the lost
and their wonderful promises of the glory to come -- and I can only shudder when
I compare this to most of our contemporary North American "revival"
preaching.
Do the people of God today need a master surgeon or a circus master? Do we need
to be provoked or primped? Do we need our leaders to tell us the truth or to tell
us a joke?
The world is self-destructing without God. The harvest is more ripe than it has
ever been. The need for holy laborers is absolutely pressing. The time to go for
it without reserve is now. What are we waiting for?
Implore the Lord of harvest to raise up spokesmen who will bring His prophetic message.
Ask Him to bring to the fore those who will "cry out and spare not"
(Isa 58). Beseech Him to speak clearly and directly to His people. We cannot afford
a shallow revival. We cannot afford a spurious work.
Pray for the Word on fire that will set us on fire so we can go and set the world
on fire -- for the glory of God. The time is short. The potential is breathtaking.
Let's not miss the opportunity of a lifetime. NOW -- not never.
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