Posted Mar 09, 2020 by Michael L. Brown

John Knox prayed, “Give me Scotland or I die!” George Whitefield prayed, “Give me souls, or take my soul!” Today, millions of Americans Christians need to pray, “God, revive us or we die!” And there is no hyperbole in that prayer. Without a national awakening, America as we know it is doomed.

In 1944, Rev. Peter Marshall declared, “Surely the time has come, because the hour is late, when we must decide. And the choice before us is plain — Yahweh or Baal. Christ or chaos. Conviction or compromise. Discipline or disintegration.”

That was 1944, 9 years before the first edition of Playboy.

Compare that today to the epidemic of internet porn, affecting even our children. Marshall never could have imagined America falling this low.

1944 was a long time ago.

In 1969 Dr. Bill Bright wrote, “We live in the most revolutionary period of human history. . . . Social band-aids and reform antiseptics give little hope for a cure or even an improvement. A revolution is needed. . . . You can experience this revolution. In fact, you can help bring it to pass.”

Also in 1969, Rev. Tom Skinner wrote, “I’m convinced America is at her crisis hour. Revolution is inevitable. It’s just a matter of which faction is going to prove strongest and will win out in the end. I believe most Americans are so apathetic that they will just sit back and go to whoever wins the struggle.

What would these men of God say today?

1969 was also a long time ago.

It was the year of Woodstock. And it was the year of the Stonewall Riots.

But I doubt that the most zealous gay activist would have predicted that the Supreme Court would one day redefine marriage. Or that a “married” gay man would run for president. Or that another presidential candidate would say that transgender rights were the Civil Rights issue of our day. Or that a famous male athlete would be declared woman of the year. Or that the American Library Association would endorse Drag Queens reading to toddlers.

No way!

And 1969 was 4 years before Roe v. Wade.

Put another way, 1969 was 4 years before more than 60 million babies would be aborted in their mother’s wombs.

How much more, then, do we need massive awakening today? How much more do we a sweeping revival in the church that will spark a moral and cultural revolution in the society?

Think about it for a moment.

Even if Roe v. Wade was overturned, that would not change the hearts of tens of millions of Americans who would fight day and night for the “right” to abort.

Even if President Trump was reelected and appointed hundreds of fine judges, including more Supreme Court justices, that would not stop our rapid, national slide down the slippery moral slope.

Even if we were able to push back against radical LGBT activism in the courts and the schools, that would not undo the damage that has been done. Nor would the LGBT community surrender any of the hard-earned victories they have won.

That’s why there’s only real solution for the future of our nation.

We must have divine visitation. We must have revival. We must have awakening.

What else will turn the rising tide of opioid addictions? Or stop the vile sin of human trafficking? Or address the ongoing epidemic of fatherless homes? Or heal the deep divisions that are tearing us apart?

American history has been marked by great awakenings and revival movements, without which we would have crashed and burned a long time ago.

To give one case in point, our nation was powerfully impacted by a prayer revival that swept the country in 1857-1858.

Before that time, according to the late revival scholar James Edwin Orr, the churches were becoming worldly and internalized, and immorality, violent crime, spiritualism, corruption, and atheism were on the rise. Does this have a familiar sound?

Jeremiah Lanphier, a retired businessman become missionary, acting in obedience to the Spirit’s prompting, began to promote a weekly “Lunch Hour Prayer Meeting” for revival. Only six attended the first meeting, and twenty the second. But within several months, tens of thousands were praying seven days a week.

The revival spread from city to city, jumped across the ocean to England, Ireland, and Wales, and shaped the history of our nation.

I have read that, from 1857-1858, over 1 million non-church members came to faith, in addition to 1 million formerly nominal church members who also came to faith. In fact, at the height of the revival, there were reportedly more than 50,000 new births a week.

As a result of this revival hitting Chicago, the 40-year ministry of D. L. Moody was born. And within a decade, slavery was legally abolished.

According to Mary Stuart Relfe, “The Revival of 1857 restored integrity to government and business in America once again. There was renewed obedience to the social commandments. An intense sympathy was created for the poor and needy. A compassionate society was rebirthed. The reins of America were returned to the godly. Yet another time, Revival became the solution to the problems, the remedy for the evils, the cure of all ills.”

And so, our prayer today is, “Do it again, Lord! Revive us or we die!”

Do we have another choice?

(The paragraphs on the 1857-1858 prayer revival were taken from Michael L. Brown, The End of the American Gospel Enterprise.)

Tags: 

Sign Up or Login to post comments.

Comments

Deancooper posted a comment · Mar 12, 2020
I largely agree with your article. And yet, you state, "We must have divine visitation. We must have revival. We must have awakening." What happened to "We must have repentance", or "We must have the fear of the Lord"? And the one I really like, "We must have a new reformation", i.e., one that truly ends the idea that because of God's abundant grace, rich mercy and unconditional love, He understands and forgives our "mistakes" repeatedly, meaning we don't really have anything to fear from our loving Father. Somehow, we just ignore all the scriptures that tell us things like, "if you live according to the flesh, you will die", or "let everyone who names the name of the Lord depart from iniquity". It seems as though Calvinism has deeply influenced the theology of even those who don't consider themselves Calvinists. Perhaps this pandemic will at long last strike some fear into the hearts of those who think they don't truly need to change. Would it be a blessing in the from of judgement from God if it did?