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The Revival We Need
by Andrew Murray
How is the Church to be lifted
up to the abundant life in Christ, which will fit her for the
work that God is putting before her? Nothing will help but a
revival, nothing less than a tremendous spiritual revival. Great
tides of spiritual energy must be put into motion if this work
is to be accomplished. Now there may be great differences in
what we understand by revival. Many will think of the work of
evangelists like Moody and Torrey. We need a different and mightier
revival than those were. In them the chief object was the conversion
of sinners, and incidentally, the quickening of believers. But
the revival that we need calls for a deeper and more entire
upheaval of the Church. The great defect of those revivals was
that the converts were received into a Church that was not living
on the high level of consecration and holiness, and speedily
sank down to the average standard of ordinary religious life.
Even the believers who had been roused by it, also gradually
returned to their former life of clouded fellowship and lack
of power to testify for Christ.
The revival we need is a revival
of holiness, in which the consecration of the whole being is
to the service of Christ, and that for the whole life shall
be counted possible. And for this there will be needed a new
style of preaching in which the promises of God to dwell in
His people, and to sanctify them for Himself, will take a place
which they do not now have. When our Lord Jesus gave the promise
of the Holy Spirit, He spoke of the New Covenant blessing that
would be experienced—God dwelling in His people. “If a man love
me, he will keep my words; and my Father will love him.” So
Paul also writes: “That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith...
that you might be filled with all the fullness of God.” With
the Reformation, the great truth of justification by faith was
restored to its place. But the other great truth of sanctification
has never yet taken its place in the preaching and practice
of the Church which God’s Word claims for it. It is for this
that we need a revival, that the Holy Spirit may so take possession
of us that the Father and the Son can live in us, and that the
fellowship with Them, and devotion to Their will and service
shall be our chief joy. This will be in very deed a holiness
revival.
The Moravian community (at Herrnhut)
owed its birth to a holiness revival. There were gathered together
a number of Bohemian refugees, and along with them a number
of Christians of different sects. It was not long before disputes
arose, and Herrnhut became a scene of contention and divisions.
Zinzendorf felt this so deeply that he went down to live among
them. In the power of God’s Spirit he succeeded in restoring
order and in binding them together in the power and devotion
of Jesus Christ and of love to each other. More than once they
had remarkable manifestations of the presence of the Spirit,
and their whole life became one of worship and praise. After
they had for a couple of years been having their nightly fellowship
meetings, they were lead to the consecration of the whole body
to the service of Christ’s kingdom. It was in this holiness
revival that the Moravian missionary idea was born. When John
Wesley visited them he wrote: “God has given me the desire of
my heart. I am with a church whose conversation is in heaven,
in whom is the mind that was in Christ, and who so walk as He
walked. Here I continually met what I sought for—living proofs
of the power of faith, persons saved from inward as well as
outward sin, by the love of God shed abroad in their hearts.
I was extremely comforted and strengthened by the conversation
of this lovely people.”
A holiness revival! What was the
great evangelistic revival in England through Whitefield and
Wesley but this? They had together at Oxford been members of
the “Holy Club”. With their whole heart they had sought deliverance
from the guilt of sin, but also from the power of sin. When
their eyes were opened to see how faith can claim the whole
Christ in all fullness, they found the key to the preaching
which was so mightily effectual for the salvation of men. What
John Wesley did for the Methodism, General Booth, and his disciple,
did for the Salvation Army. Looking at the material on which
he had to work, it was amazing how, with his teaching of the
clean heart and full salvation, he was able to inspire tens
of thousands with a true devotion to Christ and the lost. There
may be great differences of doctrine, but no one can be blind
to the seal God has set upon the intense desire to preach a
full salvation and an entire consecration.
A revival of holiness is what
we need. Such preaching of the claim that Christ has on us,
shall lead us to live entirely for Him and His kingdom; such
an attachment of love to Him as shall make His fellowship our
highest joy; such faith in His freeing us from the dominion
of sin as shall enable us to obey His commandments; such yielding
to the Holy Spirit as to be led by Him in all our daily walk—these
will be some of the elements of the revival of true holiness
for which the Church must learn to seek as for the pearl of
great price.
And how is it to be found? It
will cost much prayer. It will cost more than that - much sacrifice
of self and of the world. It will need a surrender to Christ
Jesus to follow Him as closely as God is able to lead us. We
must learn to look upon a life like Christ’s, having the very
same mind that was in Him, as the supreme object of daily life.
It is only when a prayer such as Robert Murray McCheyne’s becomes
ours, “Lord make me as holy as a pardoned sinner can be”, and
begins to be offered by an increasing number of ministers and
believers, that the promise of the New Covenant will become
a matter of experience.
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