Wednesday, July 6, 2016

REVIVAL, BIRTHED AND MAINTAINED

By Arthur Wallis

Prior to Pentecost it is recorded that the believers “continued steadfastly in prayer” (Acts 1:14; after Pentecost the young church “continued steadfastly...in prayers” (Acts 2:42); and when the rivers of blessing were flowing far and wide, and the work was so extensive that the apostles could no longer cope with it, we hear their solemn resolve, “We will continue steadfastly in prayer (Acts 6:4).

Let it be burned upon our hearts by the Spirit of God that this mighty movement that turned the world upside down was not only born out of prayer, but that it brought forth prayer, and was maintained by prayer.

Such praying cost but indispensable, has ever characterized the great revivals of the past.

How simple were the channels along which the Rivers of that first outpouring flowed. The corporate life of the fist church was maintained by no methods or devices more complex than teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayers. These means were simple, but they were sufficient.

When the Spirit of God is poured out again it will be seen that nothing more is needed. Other expedients are only called for when the power of the Spirit begins to wane.

The local church is the only visible society that can adequately meet the varied needs of the believer, young or old. This is the design of God, though He raises up and uses other organizations when the local churches have failed.

It is vital that the living stone quarried in times of revival shall not be left lying about, but shall be built into The House of God, share the corporate life of the church. Therefore the form and condition of that local body are of great importance.

It is surely right that a soul in Revival, when the Spirit was in complete sway, should be brought into a fellowship where, in the simplicity of apostolic church order, the Spirit continues to control and where there is scope and liberty for each member of the body to exercise his or her spiritual gifts to the blessing of all.

How often the flames of Revival have been extinguished by the very structure in which it broke out.

After the first inrush of the Spirit, the doors and windows were shut by the iron hand of ecclesiasticism, formalism, and tradition; the flame was suffocated; the Spirit quenched.

The outgoings of Revival are a key to the continuance of the work.

If factory wheels are arrested by some outside agency, either the motive power is also arrested and all movement ceases, or else the link that joins the power to the wheels is broken.

In a mighty move of the Spirit sometimes the link is snapped, and the Revival movement is severed from the old machinery and linked to new that is fit to receive and use the fresh output of power.

It is the old principle of new wine causing the old wine-skin to burst so that the wine is spilled (Matt. 9:17),

New wine requires new wine-skins, and if the old are not prepared to be renewed and remodeled by the Spirit of God to meet the new situation, God has no alternative but to reject them.

A movement of the spirit can only be contained by the organization of the Spirit, and that organization is characterized by simplicity.

As we scan that distant horizon, and watch the sun rising over that first church as I move downward in the power of the Spirit, we are compelled to exclaim with Cowper,

Oh, how unlike the complex works of man
Heaven's easy, artless, unencumbered plan!
..Majestic in its own simplicity.”


My comments: Men always want Control, but to have Revival and to maintain Revival, they Must Relinquish Control and give All Control to the Spirit of God. Through the ages, God Alone has kept His Church Alive. Men, left to their own devices, have always killed her. This was true in the Old Testament and in the New. It remains true to this day.

It should be understood that there is No Christianity apart from Revival. The True Church of God is in Continual Revival. The Life of Christ on earth is the story of Revival. The story of the Church after Pentecost is the story of Revival. The nature of the Spirit of God, and His outworking, never changes.

When the Church has died, because men have killed her, God raises up someone who will respond to the Spirit of God. John the Baptist was such a man. The Prophets of Old were such men. Luther was such a man among many others. And it was and is always Costly to Obey God.

No comments:

Post a Comment