Chapter 5
IT'S REVIVAL WE NEED!
If revival is renewal of right relationship with God and man, if revival
is quickening of the
Spirit in the hearts of Christians, if revival is replenishing the passion
for the lost, if revival is
refreshing from the Lord -- then what need could possibly be more urgent
than the need for
revival?
1. We need revival to maintain our doctrines.
When our hearts are warm, there is a definite intensity in the way
we feel about the things
we say we believe. When there is a decline in piety, in warmth, in devotion,
there is a
corresponding decline in emphasis upon doctrine.
Something always happens in the heart first before it happens in the
head. For with the
heart man believes. If there is a leakage of love from the heart, there
will be a loss of commitment
to the doctrine. The real reason some Nazarenes are not as committed to
the doctrines of the church
as once they were is not that they have more in their heads but that they
have less in their hearts.
Some Nazarenes whose parents and grandparents paid a terrific price
for their beliefs are
willing to sell those beliefs today for the cheap pottage of popularity
and social respectability.
Some Nazarenes whose parents suffered persecution for their beliefs are
not even willing to suffer
embarrassment over their own. It isn't that we have outgrown our doctrines;
it is simply that some
of us have grown too soft and flabby of hand and soul to hold on to them.
A preacher who was once wonderfully used of God in the Church of the
Nazarene is today
out of the ministry completely and it is because he no longer believes the
doctrines he once
believed and preached. He not only does not believe in holiness, or in crisis
conversion, or in the
deity of Christ -- he makes fun of those who do. His decline in faith and
effectiveness
corresponded with his decline in devotion. When his heart cooled towards
Christ, his commitment
cooled towards the doctrines of the church.
Dr. Donald Metz warned of just such a tragedy when he wrote in the
Preacher's Magazine
for May-June of 1950 under the title "Prophet, Priest, or Promoter." "The
most tragic thing that can
happen to a preacher," said Dr. Metz, "is gradually to lose the prophetic
fire, to drift into
formalism, and then swing into a religious huckster with nothing to sell
except himself and his own
cheap personality. He becomes a promoter and politician. The message of
salvation is merely a
screen to camouflage his selfish aspirations for an easy and profitable
way of life."
James Burns, in his book on Revivals, warned of the same dilution and
distortion when he
said, "Every revival, when it appears, discovers to the church its spiritual
decay, its worldliness,
and the insincerity of its witness ... The first tendency [of this spiritual
decay] is for the doctrine of
the church to lose its power of converting the conscience, convincing the
mind, or moving the
heart." And then he continues, "In dead and unspiritual times, preachers
continue to use the old
words once so full of convincing and converting power, but now devitalized,
partly because the
age has drifted from them, partly because to those who use them they have
become the mere jargon
of the pulpit. They mumble out their shibboleths, but they fail to strike
home to the conscience, or
to gain response from the heart, for they themselves have ceased to be moved
by them ... At such a
time the priesthood degenerates; those who minister in holy things become
worldly; the love of
wealth, of ease, and of power -- the three deadly sins of those who occupy
this high vocation --
appear; they give the sanction of an evil example to the worldly, and
become the object of scorn to
the skeptical and indifferent."
There are few sights more pathetic than to see a man -- preacher or
layman -- trying to
evoke an emotion he no longer feels, or repeating words he no longer believes.
We need a revival all right -- a revival of doctrinal emphasis so warm
and emphatic and
convincing that those Nazarenes who give lip service to the doctrines of
the church but in their
hearts no longer believe them will be won back to God and become so revived
that these doctrines
will once again become a living, radiant reality in their lives.
Cold logic will never do that. Fancy phrasing will never do it. Little
snippets of Tillich or
Freud or Ferre' will never do it. Any number of socials and suppers and
showers will never win
them back to a real commitment to the doctrine of holiness. But a revival
in which men and women
and young people are getting back to God and surrendering anew their lives
to Christ will see a
renewed commitment to the doctrines of the church. A holiness revival creates
a climate in which
Nazarenes can again talk about and witness to holiness without embarrassment
and without
apology.
May God give us more men and women and young people who are Nazarenes,
not because
of the size of the buildings or the popularity of the preacher or the music
program or the youth
program or because of family tradition or friends within the church, but
because they believe 100
percent in the doctrines of the church!
That kind of total belief and commitment is not merely a matter of
the head, but is primarily
a matter of the heart, for the "heart has reasons that reason does not know."
And when the heart is
renewed and refired and revived, those reasons of the heart are given fresh
force and validity and
thrust. As W. A. Powers said, "The experience of holiness in the individual
heart and the work of
revival in the church, are closely associated. God has joined them together,
and no man should
attempt to put them asunder."
2. But then again, we need revivals to maintain our standards.
Dr. Timothy Smith, in his book Called unto Holiness, said that the
early Nazarenes and
their leaders "set out to produce by means both human and divine revivals
of sufficient power to
overcome all the attractions which a worldly life held for young people.
Then, between revivals
they could shelter them in church schools and youth programs from polluting
contact with evil."
And this is the best safeguard ever found for the encroachments of
worldliness into the
lives of people of any age. Those whose hearts are freshly warmed and revived
are never bothered
too much by the attractions of the world. It is when a leanness comes into
the soul that a person
looks with longing upon the amusements and pleasures and practices of the
worldly people about
him.
That is why a person starts asking, "What's wrong with the dance --
or the show, or a
smoke, or a social drink, or ... ?" -- and the list goes on and on. When
any person find himself
beginning to ask such questions he should immediately get on his knees
and move up close to
Christ and allow the Holy Spirit to come afresh upon his soul. If he does,
those questions will fade
away.
I have stood many times replying to questions that had been written
on slips of paper, and
invariably the majority of those questions dealt with worldly amusements
or pleasures. And
invariably those putting up the strongest defense for those things were
those who were "out at the
edge" spiritually. Spiritual people, young or old, do not find the things
of the world alluring. It is
when the realities begin to slip, when the fervor dies down, when the vision
of Christ gets dim,
when the heart gets cold, when the devotional life is neglected, when the
things of God no longer
have a pull and tug at the heart -- then it is that people begin to ask,
"What's wrong with ... ?" or to
say, "Well, I don't see anything wrong with that."
We may perhaps give reasonable replies to their questions but those
replies will never
change their basic desires. Our replies may satisfy their minds, but if
their hearts are cold and
empty, whatever we say is not going to make much difference. It is the heart
that needs to be
satisfied -- and only Christ can do that.
There are those who think that this problem of worldliness is an instructional
problem, but
it is basically a spiritual problem. Replies to honest questions are always
in order and can be
helpful. But if we spent half the time praying with those with the questions
as we do trying to
answer their questions with our fancy arguments, suggesting that, well,
the Manual doesn't mean
"exactly" that, we would have less problems and fewer people seeing how
near to the world they
can get instead of how near to Christ they can live.
Worldliness is never solved by instruction; it is never solved by advice;
it is never solved
by compromise. The problem of worldliness is solved only in the heart. When
the heart is right
there is no problem. To tell a person he has to quit this or that because
the church says so, or
because it's in the Manual, usually leaves him cold. There's no romance
to that. But to pray with a
person until he really prays through to a vital relationship with Christ,
until he has fallen in love
with Christ, and Christ has become real in his life -- there is thrill to
that. There is romance in that.
And as that love grows in the heart, his attitude will be that Christ means
more to him than the
things of the world ever meant and he won't spend his time, or other people's
time, asking, "What's
wrong with that?" He will be too busy singing, "Take this world with all
its pleasures; take them,
take them, one and all. Give me Christ, my blessed Saviour; He is sweeter
than them all."
Christ and Christ alone is the Antidote to worldliness. And with the
intense and manifold
pressures of a secular age constantly crowding us, constantly probing for
our weaknesses,
constantly tempting us -- how desperately we need those times of refreshing
from the Lord, those
times of renewal of commitment, those times of revival!
May God give us more men and women and young people who will turn a
deaf ear to the
smooth voices or siren songs of the world, not because the Manual says so,
or because their
companions say so, or because their parents say so, or because the church
says so -- but because
their hearts are so warmed by His presence and the thrill of His will is
so real that the attractions
of the world no longer allure them, no longer bother them, no longer even
interest them.
If revival means renewal of relationship and commitment, if it means
a fresh vision of
Christ and how wonderful life can be if lived in His will, if it means reinforcing
the reasons of the
heart -- then holiness revivals are absolutely necessary if we expect to
maintain our holiness
standards.
3. But most important of all, we need revival if our evangelism is
to be effective and
spiritually productive.
The Church of the Nazarene was born in the fires of revival. But we
can die in the smoke
of evangelism -- the smoke of an educational evangelism that knows no heart
passion, the smoke of
a visitation evangelism that is nothing but recruitment for church members.
We can die in the
smoke of a passionless, powerless evangelism that requires no tears, no
agony, no sweat -- and
sees no conviction, no repentance, no restitution -- and hears no shouts
of the newborn or the fully
sanctified.
Without revival, the very word evangelism is drained of its ruggedness,
its vigor, its
historic meaning.
Religious leaders talk about "evangelism" being their "main business"
still, but what does
that kind of "evangelism" mean? The word is still spelled the same; it still
sounds the same; but is
it the same? Would Wesley recognize it as "evangelism"? Would Asbury? Would
Bresee? Would
H. C. Morrison? Do we?
The Communists take words like liberty and freedom and democracy, suck
all the meaning
out of them, pump in their half-truths, their distortions, their denials,
and then go on pronouncing
and proclaiming the words. But those words no longer mean what once they
meant. They are still
spelled the same; they still look the same and are pronounced the same --
but they no longer mean
the same.
And so it is with religious words like revival and evangelism. There
are those who drain
all the vitality out of the word revival until it means nothing more than
a preaching mission or
convention. There are those who suck all the spiritual meaning out of the
word evangelism until it
means nothing more than visitation, recruitment for Sunday school or church
members, religious
exercises that have no spiritual value or meaning or challenge whatever.
They can say, as one
pastor said, "Everything we do is of evangelizing significance." Since that
church sponsored
dances and movies and bridge and pool parties, they would undoubtedly consider
those activities
of "evangelizing significance."
As mentioned earlier, "Evangelism, on its way from Jerusalem to Jericho,
has been beaten
and robbed and left half dead." And I submit that some Samaritan or some
Nazarene or someone
needs to rescue the word, and wipe off the mud that has been slung on it
in derision, and bind up
the wounds that have been inflicted even by its so-called friends, and take
it to a prayer meeting or
to a real revival some place where it can be restored to its original meaning
and vigor and
spiritual health.
There are those, of course, who believe that vital evangelism is out
of place in intelligent
and sophisticated circles; so instead of paying a revival price to meet
the demands of the word,
they cheapen the word and drag it down to the level of their own pseudo
intellectualism and
stifling formalism. It is W. E. Sangster who said, "The snobbish idea spread
that culture and hot
evangelism did not go together -- and Methodists were terribly anxious to
be known as cultured."
Could the word be changed to "Nazarene" without affecting the meaning? "The
recurring sin of the
Christian Church," Sangster continues, "is to leave her evangelism to those
whose gifts are of the
heart, rather than the head, and God, in His longing to redeem, makes use
of whoever He can. But
what mighty things He does when He has both! All the great figures in the
evangelical succession
-- Paul, Augustine, Luther, and Wesley -- were intellectuals, and three
of them had spent years in
lecturing. There is no necessary divorce between a keen mind and a hot gospel."
And yet there are Nazarenes, here and there, who apparently feel that
warm-hearted
evangelism is not compatible with their blinding brilliance. A young preacher
once wrote Dr.
Chapman that, since he was of the intellectual type instead of the emotional
type, he found it
difficult to prepare and deliver evangelistic sermons. I appreciated Dr.
Chapman even more when
he answered that young preacher in the pages of the Preacher's Magazine
by saying that there was
no conflict between real intellect and evangelism and that he himself always
found it easier to be
evangelistic when he had experienced a fresh movement of God's Spirit upon
his own heart.
Was Paul deficient in intellect? -- and yet he burned his way across
his world with the fire
of his evangelistic zeal.
Was Wesley deficient in intellect? -- and yet he saved England from
revolution with his
evangelistic preaching and passion and gave to the world a church that for
many years was a
marvelously effective redemptive agency.
Was Finney intellectually deficient? -- and yet he changed the moral
climate of entire cities
by the passion of his evangelism.
Was Bresee intellectually deficient? -- and yet his evangelistic zeal
made his wooden
tabernacle in Los Angeles a "glory barn" filled with the Shekinah of God's
presence, and out of
that revivalistic fire the Church of the Nazarene was born.
Was Dr. R. T. Williams intellectually deficient? -- and yet my first
recollection of him is in
a revival service he conducted, and the impression is still vivid of seeing
him standing there at the
edge of the platform giving the altar call and with tears running freely
down his face pleading with
men and women to come to Christ. He was more than an ecclesiastic; he was
an evangelist.
Was Dr. J. B. Chapman intellectually deficient? -- and yet, read again
his articles, his
books, his editorials and feel the throb of evangelistic passion that pulsated
through all his works
-- and look again at him stand in Kansas City before the assembled leaders
of the church and sob
out of a heart of evangelistic concern: "All out for souls!"
Let's have done with all these self-appointed "geniuses" who look down
from the lofty
heights of a sterile ministry and imply that revival passion and evangelistic
zeal are a little beneath
their brilliance and dignity and that the ability to give an altar call
is God's gift to the handicapped.
Their attitude and their snide remarks are no reflection upon the validity
of real
evangelism; they are but reflections upon the paucity of their own thinking
and the coldness of their
own hearts. Let them sputter out their cynicisms in those religious groups
that are too cold to care
and too dead to object, but as Nazarenes still committed to vital holiness
evangelism, let us let
them know we are too busy to listen to their cutting witticisms or to be
affected by their cynical
criticisms.
In his book Evangelism in the Home Church, Andrew W. Blackwood warns
of the drift
away from revival and evangelism by calling attention to the fact that when
Henry Ward Beecher
delivered the first three series of the Lyman Beecher Lectures on preaching
at Yale he devoted
considerable time to the subject of revivals. Later speakers spoke of evangelism.
But still later the
emphasis was upon social problems, and since 1918 there has been little
emphasis upon
evangelism in the lectures.
This same pattern of drift and dilution can be observed, not only in
successive generations,
but in individual churches and in individual lives. Whenever the talk is
more on evangelism than
on revival -- watch out! -- the drift is on. Whenever revival is neglected,
evangelism becomes
impotent and marginal, and the final result is a loss of mission and effectiveness
and, as one said,
instead of the children being willing to dig out the old wells, they go
wild-catting in all sorts of
strange places and ways to try to recover the old power and the old effectiveness.
Churches, like
people, do not lose their passion or their mission by revolution but by
dilution.
Instead of "wild-catting" for new methods and new gimmicks, isn't it
time we were willing
to pay the price to dig out the wells of real revival until they begin gushing
again with the streams
of vital and effective evangelism?
Even the reports of our "successes" should drive us to our knees in
prayer for real revival.
When there is a district in the Church of the Nazarene that had nineteen
churches last year
which reported not one member taken in on profession of faith -- isn't it
time for revival?
When there is another district in which eighteen of its churches did
not take in one member
last year on profession of faith -- isn't it time for revival?
When on still another district twenty-four churches did not take in
one member on
profession of faith last year -- isn't it time for revival?
When on another district of over sixty churches, nineteen of those
churches did not have a
single seeker at their altars all one year -- isn't it time for revival?
And, worse still, when thirteen
of those churches did not even attempt to have a revival all that year --
isn't it time for revival?
When in one of our larger cities we have two fewer churches than we
had ten years ago,
and the total gain in membership in that ten-year period is exactly fifty-seven
-- isn't it time for
revival?
When in a church of over four hundred Sunday school attendance there
were fifteen Sunday
school teachers who did not attend a single week-night revival service --
isn't it time for revival?
When in one of our fastest growing states the population growth over
the past ten years has
been 46 percent while the increase in Nazarene church membership has been
only 42 percent --
isn't it time for revival?
When the growth rate of the Church of the Nazarene for 1965 was 1.88
percent while the
world population increase was 2.2 percent -- isn't it time for revival?
Isn't it time that we listened more carefully to E. Stanley Jones as
he says, "Before we can
go farther, we must first go deeper"? We have gone about as far as we're
going to go on the
momentum of the original thrust. What we do evangelistically from here on
in we will have to pay
the price for out of our own blood and tears and sweat. And the price for
effective evangelism, for
any church, is revival.
Surveying the future as best he could, John Wesley said, "I am not
afraid that the people
called Methodists should ever cease to exist in Europe and America, but
I am afraid lest they
should only exist as a dead sect having the form of religion without the
power."
And in 1847, Bishop Edmund S. Janes warned this same church of what
might happen to
their mission, in these words: "Drawing our proof from past dispensations,
we say to the
Methodist Church that, if she proves recreant to her important trust --
if she fails to fulfill the end
for which she was raised up, 'to spread Scriptural holiness over the land'
and over the world --
God will give her stewardship to another. He will raise up a people who
will perform His
gracious pleasure, and receive the glorious reward."
We Nazarenes believe deeply that we were raised up to be inheritors
of that tradition and
that commitment. Will there ever come a day when others will say that they
are inheritors of our
mission?
That there will cease to be a Church of the Nazarene is unthinkable.
We will continue to
grow. We will continue to increase in membership and finances and social
prestige and
denominational respectability. We will continue to speak about and emphasize
evangelism. But
that we may do all that and still lose our mission is not only possible
and probable; it is inevitable
-- unless we are willing to pay the price for a fresh infilling of the Holy
Spirit!
It is inevitable that we lose our mission -- unless all of us -- superintendents,
pastors,
evangelists, professors, laymen, all of us from center to circumference,
from top to bottom -- get on
our knees and ask God's forgiveness for our complacency, our pride, our
insistence on seeing
evangelistic results without paying revival prices, for our spending our
time patting each other on
the back and saying what a great job we're doing when our whole world is
on its way to hell and is
already wrapped in the flames of its racial tensions, its rampant nationalism,
its lust, its greed, its
hatreds, its sins.
It is inevitable that we lose our mission -- unless every one of us
gets on his face before
God and pays the price for that measure of the Holy Spirit's power that
alone will enable us to
withstand the terrific pressures of a godless age and the secular sag that
saps our spirituality and
robs us of our vision and dilutes our message and drains away our dynamic.
It is inevitable that we lose our mission of holiness evangelism --
unless we pay the price
for real Holy Ghost revival!
The phrase of this quadrennium, "In the Power of the Spirit," is more
than a slogan. It is the
most urgent need we have for the survival of our mission. The power of the
Holy Spirit is the only
adequate corrective there is to the pressures that would arrest the cleansing
tides of real revival.
The power of the Holy Spirit is the only adequate corrective there is to
the influence of those who
would shift us from our primary emphasis and blunt the thrust of vital evangelism.
The power of
the Holy Spirit is the only corrective there is to the drift and dilution
of our day. We can survive as
a religious institution without it, but we cannot be true to our mission
of holiness evangelism
without it.
"To run an organization needs no God," said Samuel Chadwick. "Man can
supply the
energy, enterprise, and enthusiasm for things human. The real work of the
church depends upon the
Power of the Spirit ... The energy of the flesh cannot do the work of the
Spirit."
Or listen to our founder, Dr. Bresee, as he says: "Without the manifest
presence of the Holy
Ghost any church is a failure. It may be a great machine, wheels within
wheels, but it is without
life and power. Such an organization bears the same relation to the Church
of Christ that a dead
body bears to the man. A dead body is organized matter; it is in the form,
and has the appearance
of a man, but for all purposes for which a man was created it is a useless
thing. So with a church. It
is organized humanity; in many respects it looks like the real thing, but
for the purposes for which
the Church was called into being, it is utterly useless. It may amuse, entertain,
instruct men, but to
lift men out of their sins and take sin out of them it is powerless to do
so."
If we do not have the power of the Holy Spirit, what do we have that
other churches do not
have?
We have fine buildings -- so do they; we have fine choirs -- so do
they; we have fine youth
program -- so do they; we have promotional know-how -- so do they; we have
able administrators
-- so do they. If we lack, then, the power of the Holy Spirit, we are no
different from any other
church; we have nothing distinctive to offer; we have no excuse for existence.
And yet writers like Martin Marty speak of the Church of the Nazarene
and others as the
"third force," and he suggests that one of the bulwarks against what he
calls "religion in general,"
this "watered-down peace-of-mind, success saints, adapting to your environment
emphasis" is a
church like the Church of the Nazarene -- "the third force penetration,
who do not fit in." We are,
he says, "the square pegs in the smooth round holes of the new evangelism."
If this is true, then our responsibility to pay the price for revival
so that our evangelism
will be vital and effective is larger than merely to save our own mission.
It is to be a leading edge
to the penetration of vital religion into all phases of church life in America
and the world. May
God in heaven help us not to fail ourselves, and others, in this day of
our God-ordained
opportunity in the fulfillment of our destiny!
What does a little more prestige and respect and sophistication and
improved
denominational image and profile have to offer against an opportunity and
a destiny like that!
And what shall it profit us if we gain big buildings and big money
and big success and big
membership -- if we lose our mission and lose sight of our destiny!