The words to which I should like
to call your attention this morning are to be found in the book of
Joshua, in the fourth chapter, verses 21 to 24. Verses 21 to
24 in the fourth chapter of the book of Joshua. And he spake
unto the children of Israel, saying, When your children shall
ask their fathers in time to come, saying, What mean these
stones? Then ye shall let your children
know, saying, Israel came over this Jordan on dry land. For the Lord your God dried up
the waters of Jordan from before you, until ye were passed over,
as the Lord your God did to the Red Sea, which he dried up from
before us, until we were gone over. That all the people of
the earth might know the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty,
that ye might fear the Lord your God for ever. Now I'm calling attention to
this incident here recorded in this book of Joshua because it
seems to me to provide us with a parallel and indeed at the
same time with a great deal of instruction with regard to the
whole question of revival which we are trying to consider together
these Sunday mornings. And we are doing that, let me
explain again, because this happens to be 1959 and is the 100th anniversary
of a great movement of the Spirit of God in revival in different
countries a hundred years ago. in America, in Northern Ireland,
in Wales, in Scotland, Sweden, and in various other places.
And here it seems to me we have something which helps us to consider
this. This year, 1959, makes us think
of 1859. Well, in exactly the same way,
we find that God had commended Moses to do something which was
going to be a kind of reminder to the children of Israel of
what God had done for them. Here were the children of Israel
passing over the Jordan, rather through the Jordan, in order
to enter into the promised land of Canaan. God worked a miracle. And he commends these people
to take up twelve stones from the very spot where the priests
had been standing in the river of Jordan in order that they
may set them up as a memorial outside a town, so that in ages
to come, when the descendants of that generation of the children
of Israel should happen to be passing in that direction and
should see these stones, they should be provoked to ask the
question, what mean these stones? And then they would be able to
give them the answer, and they would remind them of how God
had done this wonderful thing. and that enabled them to walk
through the Jordan, as he had done a similar thing in enabling
them to walk through the Red Sea on dry land. What mean these
stones? And we are considering the answer.
Now, that is the position in which we find ourselves this
year. Books are written, articles are written on this great revival
of a hundred years ago. Meetings of celebration are held
and are to be held, and so on. But the question is, What does
it all mean? What is it all telling us? What
is the purpose of this? Why do we thus turn aside and
spend a number of Sunday mornings on this particular thing? Well,
now we've already started answering that question. The first thing
of which we are reminded is a fact, something that literally has
happened. What happened a hundred years
ago found its way into the newspapers. on the front pages. It was hot
news. This isn't theory, therefore.
This isn't just a matter of thought. This is literally something that
has taken place, as these events have taken place in the history
of the children of Israel. And we've furthermore been trying
to consider the general character of what is called a revival.
We're not confined to 1858 and 59. It's one of a series, as I was
showing you, and I was indicating that there are certain general
characteristics which you all must invariably find in a revival. We've been looking at some of
them. How the Spirit of God comes upon a people. The first thing
they're aware of is the glory and the majesty and the greatness
of God, and are humbled beneath it, silent, convicted. conscious of sin, and they cry
out unto God, and then become aware of God's way and God's
provision in the Lord Jesus Christ. And they begin to be filled with
praise and joy and thanksgiving. Then they feel a burden for the
soul of others, and so they spend all their time in talking about
this, praying about it. And thus this movement spreads,
and large numbers who are outside the church become influenced
and affected, drawn and attracted and converted, and join the Christian
Church. Now, I ended by saying this,
and it is a very vital part of the description of a revival,
that always in a time of revival, the Holy Spirit seems to be presiding
and is in charge. The Holy Spirit, if one may use
such an expression, seems to be in the very atmosphere The
whole district or country seems to be charged with the power
of the Spirit. Thus you will find people converted
on their way to a meeting, even before they get to the meeting,
suddenly awakened in the midst of the night and convicted of
sin. This presidency of the Holy Spirit
over everything and the life of the whole community. Well,
now there are some of the general characteristics which we've already
considered, but we must proceed to emphasize certain special
points which seem to me to be of very great significance and
of great importance. Here's one. It is characteristic
of revival that all classes are affected by it. People of all
classes, people of all ages, people of all temperaments, people
of all intellectual types. That's a point that's well worthy
of elaboration. We haven't the time to do so.
But I'm emphasizing it to the extent I am for this reason.
That here is one of the final answers to those who would dismiss
evangelical conversion in terms of psychology. It is not confined
to special types, to the so-called religious type. Nothing is more
striking in the story of revivals how you get a cross-section of
every conceivable type and group in society, irrespective of classes,
ages, intellect, temperament, and everything else. A most astonishing
feature, but which is found with strange regularity in the story
of all revivals. And then another thing that's
characteristic is this, that a revival is something that thus
comes, as I've said, it lasts for a while, And then it passes. Nothing is more interesting than
that. Emphasizing, you see, that it is this definite action of
God. Comes suddenly or gradually, works to some great climax, and
then it ends, perhaps suddenly, perhaps gradually. There's something
discreet about it. Sometimes you can give the very
date of its beginning and the date at which it ended. That,
I think, again, is a matter of the greatest possible significance. Establishing once more that it
is the work of God, and that it is not something which belongs
to the realm of mere psychological experiences. Because with them,
as long as you have the stimulus and the factors, you continue
to get your result. But here, that is not the case. And that brings me to say a word
about the results. The results of revival. And here
are the points that need to be emphasized of these. The results
of revival are abiding. I mean by that, that in contradistinction
to what is so generally true in evangelistic campaigns, the people who profess conversion
and give indications of conversion continue. There are exceptions. There are some who fall back.
But this is the great feature of revival, that the men and
women who are converted by this power that has entered into the
life of the Church continue. It isn't that they come forward
as the result of an appeal, and you imagine that great things
are happening, but that you find afterwards that perhaps only
10% of them hold, which is the figure that is expected to hold
by most evangelists. That's not the case in revival.
In a revival it's a very exceptional thing for people not to hold,
but they abide and they continue. Now you will find that the literature
is full of this. I've been reminding myself of
it again this week. I've been reading descriptions
given by a number of ministers a hundred years ago, and every
one of them volunteers this self-same point, that the people were standing
and were holding. It wasn't something that only
lasted an evening. Of course, they didn't test their meetings.
They didn't call people to come forward. There again is an interesting
point of difference between an evangelistic campaign and a revival,
that in an evangelistic campaign you have to plead with people
to come forward. In a revival you don't. They
come without your asking them. That was put very well by a man
who was in the revival that has happened in the Congo in these
recent years. You may have read that little
book called Something Happened, and the man puts it there very
eloquently. He said, there I'd been preaching for twenty years
in that area, and pleading with people to decide for Christ at
the end of the meetings, trying to persuade them to come forward.
And I wasn't succeeding. But then he said, this came,
this happened. And now, he said, there was no
need to ask them to come forward. The difficulty was, in a sense,
to deal with the numbers who did come forward. They'd even
come forward while he was still preaching. He couldn't stop them.
Now that is the kind of thing, I say, that you get in a revival.
And the results are abiding. There are certain concrete facts
that can be given. I'm going to give you some figures.
I've hesitated to do so because figures have, by now, become
rather unrealistic. in this age which attaches such
significance to figures and doesn't wait to see whether they're true
figures, but is so anxious to proclaim them immediately. Nevertheless,
the figures are interesting. I'm emphasizing not that a given
number came forward at the end of a meeting. I am going to give
you figures of people who joined the Christian Church and who
continue to be active and zealous members. It is said that from
1730 to 1745 in the United States, when that great awakening took
place under Jonathan Edwards and the tenants and Whitfield
and others, that some 50,000 people joined the Christian churches. In 1858, in 1857 to 1859, in
that great revival that then swept the United States, it is computed that half a million people joined
the Christian Church. Notice my emphasis. Joined the
Christian Church. And they were not admitted immediately,
they were tested, they were examined, they were instructed as catechumens,
and they were trained. I'm not talking about decisions.
We've become so accustomed to that they didn't do that sort
of thing in those days. Let's get that right out of our
minds. I am referring to people. who having given such true evidence
of their conversion and their regeneration, were admitted into
the full membership of the Christian Church. Half a million a hundred
years ago in the United States. One hundred thousand in Ulster
alone joined the Churches. And in Wales, fifty thousand. And when you remember the population
figures, you see the significance of these striking facts. And
this is a thing to be emphasized also. that a great zeal for God
and for holiness becomes manifest in the members of the Church
and in these converts, invariably. The meetings are crowded, the
people are anxious to work, every enterprise in connection with
the Church is given a mighty stimulus. You can read, if you
like, Edwin Orr's book on the Second Evangelical Awakening,
which will give you striking facts in that respect. It will
show you the number of things that came out of that revival
of a hundred years ago. Not some passing emotion, but
something so deep and so profound that people are consumed with
a zeal for God and for His name and for His cause. And new churches
were built in large numbers. Not only did the existing churches
become too small, they had to bring to build new churches all
together. You see, when you get a revival,
as I was emphasizing last Sunday, it is the church, it starts in
the church, and the church is built up. But so often you have
evangelistic campaigns and the churches are left exactly where
they were. But a hundred years ago, in that
short time, the churches all became filled to overflowing
and they had to build these fresh churches. Ministerial candidates,
men called to the ministry, The numbers were enormously increased,
and this is something I say that always happens in a period of
revival. And then, speaking still more
generally, in a time of revival you will find that the moral
tone and the moral level, not only of the Church but of the
world outside the Church, is visibly affected and raised. You can read statistics. provided
by the public authorities with respect to prosecutions in police
courts and other courts for drunkenness and various other things, and
the figures are simply staggering. And how practices, evil practices,
that had characterized the life of a district or a town suddenly
disappear. There's a famous instance of
this. There was a great and famous preacher in North Wales about
a hundred and fifty years ago, the name of John Elias. And that
man preached one sermon at a famous fair, at a place called Rithlin,
a fair that was famous for its debauchery and vice and evil
and sin and wrongdoing. That man, by preaching one sermon,
put an end to that fair once and forever. He killed it and
it was never revived. Now that's the sort of thing
you see that you get in a time of revival. But you can have
great evangelistic campaigns and then you're given the figures
for vice and crime and you see that they're going up instead
of coming down. You might think from the reports you read that
the whole country has become religious, but when you read
the figures of vice and crime, I say, you find it steadily going
up. That's never true in a revival. Even people who are not converted
are influenced and affected. A sobriety enters into the life
of the whole community, and the general effects of revival will
last for quite a number of years after the revival. Well, there
are some interesting facts. Well, now hitherto we've been
looking at the phenomenon of revival in general, but I do
want to say just a word about particular variations which take
place in different revivals in different places and in different
times. While they all share certain general characteristics, you
do find these most interesting and, to me, fascinating variations. Take, for instance, the way in
which a revival starts, and what can be of greater interest to
us than that? Now here, as I've said, it may be sudden, or it may be gradual. A revival
may come quite unexpectedly. Or it may be the case that a
number of people had been burdened and had been concerned and had
been praying, perhaps over months and perhaps even over years.
Have you read these stories? I do plead with you to do so.
Read either of these two books that's been written on the revival
in Ulster a hundred years ago. If we can help you to get them,
we'll be delighted to do so. But I plead with you to read
the facts. And you will see some of these
points illustrated. Sometimes it's just a handful
of people who have been concerned and burdened, and God answers
them. Well, there are those variations. And again, it may come in different
types of meeting. Sometimes a revival breaks out
in a prayer meeting. Not some great crowded meeting,
but just a little prayer meeting with a handful of people. You
see, in Northern Ireland it was three men, really, who met together
regularly to pray. Just three men. It's sometimes
been just two. Doesn't matter, in New York a
hundred years ago it was one man who prayed alone for some
time in that famous midday prayer meeting. So it may come in a
prayer meeting, or it may happen in a preaching service. It may
even happen when an evangelist is holding a series of regular
meetings. He started to have an evangelistic
campaign, but suddenly it becomes a revival, something quite different.
There is no limit, therefore, to the ways in which it may start. Jonathan Edwards tells us that
he has no doubt at all but that the sudden, tragic death of a
person in the town of Northampton in which he ministered was probably
the thing that rarely proved to be the factor that God used. A calamity, some strange happening,
something that alarms people or astonishes them, something
that makes them realize the fleeting character of life in this world,
these are the things that God has often used. Sometimes a revival
starts in a great city. Sometimes it starts in a village. Sometimes it starts in a hamlet. I'm emphasizing these things
because they are to me the most glorious things of all. You see,
when man does something, he likes to do it in the big cities, doesn't
he? And he does it in a big way. And he feels that that's essential
to success. Do you know, my friends, this is the wonderful thing.
The next revival may break out in a little hamlet that you and
I have never heard of. And it's a burden upon my heart
and upon my mind. I'm afraid in this respect. lest
we here in this great city of London and in this big building
may be passed by and God will bring us to naught and to nothing
and do this mighty thing in a little unknown hamlet with a little
group of people. That's what happens in revival.
It can happen anywhere. Thank God. That's what makes
this life so hopeful and so romantic at the same time. There is no
limit. And then it may happen with a very small number, as
I've been saying, or it may happen in a great crowd. God isn't confined
to numbers or to anything else. The Bible's full of that. God's
greatest things have been done with small numbers, with remnants.
But it can equally happen with a great crowd. And that is why
people who try to lay down rules and regulations, and who think
because it happened once in this way, it's going to happen again
in the same way, are showing a complete misunderstanding of
the laws of the spiritual realm. There are endless variations
in the way in which it begins. And then consider the variations
in the type of men that God uses in revival. Another most fascinating
theme Sometimes God has used in revival very great men. Look at a man like Jonathan Edwards,
one of the greatest philosophers of all time, certainly the greatest
philosopher that the United States of America has ever produced. Everybody's agreed about that.
That's why they're reprinting his works now, even men who are
not primarily interested religiously. He was such an outstanding philosopher.
He was the man that God used, above all others, two hundred
years ago in the New England states. Whitefield, by any assessment,
was a great man, possibly the greatest orator that the English-speaking
world has ever produced. John Wesley, by any showing,
was a great man, a genius of an organizer, and the most able
intellectual man. All these men of the 18th century
were undoubtedly outstanding men of ability, yet they were
the men who God used in bringing this great revival amongst the
masses of the common people. But here is the interesting thing.
God doesn't always use men like that. He does sometimes That
seems to have been the general rule, because Luther again was
a great natural man, and so was Calvin, so was John Knox, so
were all these men. But you see, he doesn't always
do that. When you come to a hundred years ago, you find something
very different. You find God now using simple,
ignorant, unknown, most ordinary men. He did that in the United
States. He did that in Ulster. How many
of you have ever heard of the name of James McQuilkin? Well,
he was the man who was used in Northern Ireland a hundred years
ago. James McQuilkin, a most ordinary man. But God laid hold
on him and began to use him. It was exactly the same in Wales.
The name of the man most used there was David Morgan. He was
actually a minister of the gospel, but a very ordinary minister,
an unknown minister, a man of no gifts whatsoever. God took
hold of that man and used him like a lion for nearly two years.
A most ordinary man. Isn't this something that is
worthy of our careful contemplation? Shouldn't we reflect upon this? God taketh hold of the weak things
of the world to confound the things that are mighty. That's
it. It's a part of the principle. It may be a great man, it may
be a very little man, it doesn't matter. Then think of the area
in which a revival takes place and the spread of revival. It
may be very local, it may remain local, it may involve a whole
district, it may involve a whole country, or as you see a hundred
years ago and two hundred years ago, several countries at the
same time. All these facts are full of significance,
especially when you think of these attacks of the psychologists.
who think that they can explain away religious phenomena in terms
of psychology. I'm hoping to deal with that
later. But let me hurry now to a next question. The question
of the so-called phenomena that are in evidence sometimes during
a revival. Now, again, there is great variation
here. Sometimes a revival may be very
powerful and yet more or less quiet. There may be a very deep
and a very profound emotion. Large numbers are converted,
but quietly. But it isn't always like that.
Indeed, it comes nearer to being the rule in revival that certain
phenomena begin to manifest themselves, such as these. That men and women
are not only convicted of sin, but they are convicted by an
agony with respect to sin. It isn't merely that they see
that they are sinners and that they must believe in the Saviour.
It comes to them with such overwhelming force that they become even physically
ill. They are in a literal agony of
soul. You remember the story of John
Bunyan, don't you? He tells it in grace abounding
how he had such an agony of conviction for nearly eighteen months that
on one occasion he even felt envious of beasts that were grazing
in a field, wished that he hadn't been a man at all. This agony,
this terrible conviction, well, you get that in revival. People
are in an agony of soul and groan audibly. They may cry and sob
and agonize audibly. But it doesn't even stop at that.
Sometimes people are so convicted and so feel the power of the
Spirit that they literally faint and fall to the ground. Sometimes
there are even convulsions, literal convulsions, physical convulsions. And sometimes people seem to
fall into a state of unconsciousness, into a kind of trance, and may
remain like that for hours. Now, all I'm anxious to do this
morning is to remind you of the facts. These are not invariable. These are variable. They may
be present, they may not be present. But generally in revival you
will get something along this line. I am hoping later to come
back to this and to deal with this point as it becomes the
focus point of the criticism that is generally leveled against
the whole notion of revival. I'm simply acquainting you with
the facts for the time being. Well now then, what meaneth these
stones? What are they telling us? Well,
I've been answering the question. That's the sort of thing that
happened a hundred years ago. That's the sort of thing that
always happens in revival. These general features, these
variable features. It is clear, therefore, that
we are being asked to consider this phenomenon which takes place
from time to time in the history of the Christian Church. But
come, let me emphasize the second thing. If those are the facts, what
is the real character of the facts? What is the nature of
the facts? Well, let's go back to our text.
Here are people suddenly walking past Gilgal, and they see these
stones set up, and they say, what mean these stones? And this
is the answer that is to be given. The Lord your God dried up the
waters of Jordan from before you until you were passed over,
as the Lord your God did to the Red Sea, which he dried up from
before us until we were gone over. You are to tell them that
these are set up, that all the people of the earth might know
the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty. These stones remind
us of facts. What sort of facts? miraculous facts. And as that
was true of these tongues, it is equally true of every revival
that has ever taken place. A revival is a miracle. It is a miraculous, exceptional
phenomenon. It is the hand of the Lord, and
it is mighty. What do I mean by this? Well,
I mean that a revival is something that can only be explained by
the direct action and intervention of God. It is God alone that
could divide the Red Sea. It is God alone that can divide
the waters of the River of Jordan. These were miracles, hence the
reminder, God's unique exceptional action, the mighty acts of God. And revivals belong to that category. Let me examine this. These events belong to the order
of things that men cannot produce. Men cannot produce them. Men can produce evangelistic
campaigns. Men cannot and never have produced
a revival. Oh, they've tried to many times,
and they're still trying to. Alas, Phinney has led the whole
church astray at this point by teaching that if you only do
certain things, you can have a revival whenever you want it.
The answer is an eternal no. And that isn't my opinion. This
is a question of fact. Haven't we all known and watched
and seen men who've been trying to produce revivals? They've
introduced all Phinney's methods. They've read his book, they know
it by heart, and they've tried to do it, they've tried to make
people confess their sins, they've tried to make them come forward,
they've done everything that Finney says should be done, and
if you do it, you get a revival. They've done it all, and they've
brought great pressure to bear. But there has been no revival. A revival, by definition, is
the mighty act of God. And it is a sovereign act of
God. It is as independent as that.
Men can do nothing. God, and God alone does it, set
up these stones. Why? Well, to say that it is
the hand of the Lord and that it is mighty. The sovereign act
of God, apart from men. And all the details I've just
been giving you, you see, fit into this and illustrate this. But not only can men not produce
a revival, they can't even explain it. And that is again most important. I would lay this down as a part
of the definition. If you can explain what is happening
in a church, it isn't revival. If you can possibly explain it,
it isn't revival. You see, that's true of miracles,
isn't it? If you can explain a miracle, it's no longer a miracle.
That's why it's rather pathetic to see people becoming excited
when a man publishes a book with the title, The Bible is True.
He's going to prove to us now that the miracles of the Old
Testament have literally happened. And what does he proceed to say?
Well, he proceeds, you see, to say this sort of thing happens
quite often. Did you read that book? There was one illustration.
I mention it in order to show my point. You remember when Moses
struck the rocks, the water came gushing out. Ah, says this man,
we are now in a very happy position. We can really believe this. On
what grounds? Well, he said, during the last
war, a number of soldiers in charge of a sergeant were doing
a bit of work in a given place and the men were not doing the
work to the satisfaction of the sergeant. He said, let me have
that pick. And he just took hold of it and accidentally just happened
to remove a bit of shale from the side of the hedge and water
began to trickle out. He says, you know, we can believe
that when Moses struck the rock that the water gushed out. See,
it happened when the sergeant, who wasn't a Christian at all,
just happened accidentally to touch that bit of earth, a little
bit of water trickled out. And so we can believe in miracles.
Isn't it rather pathetic? If you can explain a thing, it
isn't a miracle. A miracle is the direct, sovereign,
immediate, supernatural action of God, and it cannot be explained. And that is the essential truth
about a revival. No, no, you can't explain a revival. There are no methods used in
a revival. If methods are used, well, you can understand the
result, can't you? You do certain things, you'll
get certain results. The advertisers know all about
that, don't they? You use your methods correctly,
you'll get your results all right. People are very gullible, you
can make them do almost anything you like. And we're living in
an age of propaganda, an age which is Suggestible. But there
are no methods used in revival at all. None. You read the stories. No great crowds, no band, no
choir, nothing whatsoever, no preliminary advertising, none
of these things at all. And yet the thing happens. So
you can't explain it in terms of the methods used, because
there are no methods used. And then I say again, look at
the men who are used. How often has it been the case
in revivals that you had the sort of reproduction of the kind
of thing that we were reading about in the fourth chapter of
the book of Acts at the beginning. Here was the problem to the religious
authorities in Jerusalem. Here is a man who was known to
everybody, who used to sit every day at the beautiful gate of
the temple asking alms of the people, a man of forty years
of age who'd never walked at all. But suddenly this man has
been walking and leaping and running into the temple and praising
God and everybody knew it. And who'd done this? Well, Peter
and John. Who are these? Here's the problem
for the authorities. Ignorant and unlearned men. And
yet they said, we can't deny but that a notable miracle has
happened and everybody knows it. And here's the enigma, here's
the problem. Ignorant and unlearned men? Fissioning? Is it possible? Can they have
done this? They've no learning, they've
no training, they've nothing, and yet it's happened, what can
we do? Ah, you see, men can't understand
it, they can't explain it. The results are not commensurate
with the powers implied. The answer is it's God who's
using these men. Now I've reminded you that it
was like that in 1858 and 59. And it was like that in 1904
and 5. the last major revival in the
British Isles. The man whom God used was a man
whose name was Evan Roberts. He was a very ordinary man indeed. But he was the man whom God used. And you can't explain that revival
in terms of the man. Totally inadequate. And then
take another argument. Look at the change in the men.
Look at these apostles of whom we've been reading. Look at them
before Pentecost. Weak, helpless. Look at them after Pentecost.
Held with a blazing power and with a courage, the Peter who
denies his Lord is now facing the hostile crowd and the authorities
that have power to put him to death, and he is not afraid of
them. Look at John Wesley before May 24, 1738. A complete failure
in the ministry. Absolute failure. Look at him afterwards. The same
man with the same abilities, the same powers, the same everything.
How do you explain that? You can't explain it in terms
of Wesley. What is it? Oh, it's the Spirit of God that
has come upon him. It's a miracle you can't understand
these things. And so I say it was a hundred
years ago in Northern Ireland and in Wales, I've mentioned
a man called David Morgan, a very ordinary minister. Oh, just carrying
on, as it were. Nobody had heard of him. Did
nothing at all that was worthy of note. Suddenly this power
comes upon him, and for two years, I say, he preaches like a lion.
And then it goes, and he reverts to David Morgan again, the same
man you see. You can't explain it in terms
of men. There's only one explanation. The hand of the Lord, that it
is mighty. It can take the things that are
not and confound the things that are, and ridicule them. Then
I say, consider the places where it happens. May I use the expression, the
divine humour? Where did the revival break out
a hundred years ago? It wasn't in the capital city of
Belfast in Northern Ireland. It was in a village you've never
heard of called Conor. That's how God does things. When
he sent his Son into this world, he wasn't born in Jerusalem,
he was born in Bethlehem, the very least of the cities of Judah. Thus God, you see, to keep the
honor and the glory to himself, makes it impossible that you
can explain it in terms of men. It's in your Bethlehems, your
Connors, your little villages that people have never heard
of, that the mighty thing happens. And it was exactly the same 200
years ago. It was in that little town of
Northampton in New England that the revival broke out. It was
in a little hamlet called Trevecca in Wales that Howell Harris was
suddenly laid hold of, and in another similar small village
that Daniel Rowland was laid hold of. Places you've never
heard of. That's how God does it, not in London, not in the
capital cities, but in these unknown places. Why? Well, the hand of the Lord, that
it is mighty. You can't explain it. Neither
can men in the third place control it. You get your sudden beginning,
you get your sudden ending, you get your variations during the
revival, and men seem to be utterly helpless. While it is perfectly true to
say that we can quench the spirit and be a hindrance, It is never
true to say that if we observe all the rules and the conditions
that we can get revival. No, no. God keeps it in his own
hands, beginning, course, end, everything. You're dependent
upon the Holy Spirit and his power. But lastly, think of its
overwhelming character. What mean these stones? These
stones are there to tell us of the hand of the Lord that it
is mighty. What is revival? Well, it's something
that happens that leads people to say what was said by the townspeople
of Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost. What is this? What is it? It is something that comes almost
like a tornado. It's almost like an overflowing
tide. It's like a flood. Astounding
things happened and of such a magnitude that men are left amazed, astonished,
astounded. Let me give you but one illustration,
one of the most lyrical and one of the most wonderful. There
was a preacher in Scotland three hundred years ago of the name
of John Livingstone, of Kilsyth. There was a marvellous day in
the life of John Livingstone. He tells us himself in his autobiography
that he was a very ordinary preacher. And writing at the end of his
life, he looks back and he says, you know, there was a day, I
shall never forget it, in June 1630. He was at a communion service
at a place called Schatz. Have you ever read of the revival
at the Kirk or Schatz? Read it, my friends. This is
what happened. They'd had their services. They'd
gone on over the weekend. John Livingstone and a number
of others had been spending Sunday night after the services in prayer
and in conference, as they called it, talking to one another about
these things. And Monday morning came and John
Livingstone had been asked to preach. And he was out in the
fields meditating and suddenly he felt that he couldn't preach,
that the thing was beyond him, that he was inadequate. And he
felt like running away. But suddenly the voice of God
seemed to speak to him, not in audible language, but in his
spirit. telling him that he mustn't do this, that God didn't work
in that way. And he felt he must go back,
and he preaches. He preached, he tells us, on
Ezekiel 36. And he said, I preached for about
an hour and a half. And then he said, I began to
apply my message. And as he was beginning to apply
it, suddenly the Spirit of God came upon him. And he went on
for another hour in this application. And as he did so, people were
literally falling to the ground. In that one service, 500 people
were converted. Oh, modern people, I've got to
say this. Unfortunately, he didn't test the meeting. I'm not saying
that 500 came forward at the end. They didn't do that sort
of thing. 500 were convicted, some falling
to the ground, having to be carried out. Others went out groaning
in agony and were in this agony for days. But as the result of
that one sermon, 500 people were added to the churches, truly,
permanently, soundly converted. That's the sort of thing that
happens in a revival. And poor John Livingstone says
that that kind of thing only happened to him on one other
occasion in a long life, just these two days. But what days? Not John Livingstone, but the
hand of the Lord, that it is mighty working in and through
John Livingstone. I've told you before the story
of a man preaching in a little town called Llanidloes in Wales
who preached in one sermon. And during the next six months,
a thousand people were added to the churches in the district
round about that little town. What is this? This is the hand
of the Lord, that it is mighty. At Pentecost you had miracles,
speaking with tongues and many other things. They are variable.
They don't always happen. You don't get accounts of these
in subsequent revivals. But mighty things happen. Miraculous
things happen. Things that are beyond the explanation
and the wit of men. And indeed, if you consult the
men whom God has used on such occasions, they will all tell
you the same thing. They suddenly, like John Livingstone,
became conscious of a power coming upon them, not themselves, taken
up, taken out of themselves, given liberty, given authority,
given fearlessness, speaking as men of God with the boldness
of the original apostles. They knew when the power came,
They knew when the power went. You will read it in the journals
of Whitfield and of Wesley and all the rest. This is the hand
of the Lord, I say. This is the demonstration of
the Spirit and of power. It was because he knew so much
about this sort of thing that the Apostle Paul says, the weapons
of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God, through
the pulling down of strongholds. casting down imaginations and
every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge
of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience
of Christ. That's it. Or, finally, listen
to it like this. Here are the apostles meeting
together for prayer in the upper room. They'd been doing it for
ten days. Suddenly, there came a sound from heaven,
as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all the house where
they were sitting. That's it. Not always the sound,
but always the consciousness. of the mighty wind of God, the
Spirit of God, descending upon preachers, prayers, praying persons,
those meeting in conference, the sound of a rushing, mighty
wind, the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty. Do we know anything
about that, my friend? Do you believe this? Do you believe
the facts? Do you believe the explanation?
Do we who claim to believe in God and in the Lord Jesus Christ
still believe in miracles, in the possibility of miracles,
in God coming in and doing things that we can not only not do,
but cannot even understand, nor control, nor explain? Yea, I
ask you, do you long to know such things,
to see such things happening again today? Are you praying for such a visitation? For believe me, when God hears
our prayers and does this thing again, it will be such that not only will the church
be astounded and amazed, but even those who are outside will
be compelled to listen and to pay attention in a way that they're
not doing at the present time, and in a way that men left to
themselves can never persuade them to do. That's the meaning
of the stones. That's why I'm calling your attention
to revival. This is what God can do. This is what God has
done. Let us together decide to beseech
Him, to plead with Him, to do this again. Not that we may have
the experience or the excitement, but that His mighty hand may
be known, and His great name may be glorified and magnified
amongst the people. We do hope that you've been helped
by the preaching of Dr. Martin Lloyd-Jones. The MLJ Trust
retains exclusive copyright ownership to all audio files of Dr. Lloyd-Jones
sermons, including all derivatives, such as translations, modifications,
or edited versions of the files. You must gain written permission
to license, distribute, or broadcast the audio files. And under no
circumstance may the files be offered for sale to or by a third
party. You can find our contact information
on our website at mljtrust.org. Thank you.