I am currently reading an amazing book, Henan by Paul Hattaway. It is the history of work for Christ in the province of Henan from the 19th century until today. Tremendous revivals are chronicled, right through tragic times of persecution such as the Boxer Rebellion of 1900 and the terrible time of the Cultural Revolution of 1966-1976. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in revival, missions, and China.
I believe in both personal and corporate revival. Walking with Christ every day, keeping prayed up, confessing sins to the Lord right away, witnessing for Christ, this is personal revival.
What is corporate revival, and how does it occur? Surely no one here would deny the necessity of it! Charles Spurgeon wrote: “When a man says, ‘Oh! Yes we are getting on very well, we do not want revival that I know of,’ I fear me he is not low enough to be blessed; and when you and I pray to God with pride in us, with self-exaltation, with a confidence in our own zeal, or even in the prevalence of our own prayer of themselves, we have not come low enough to be blessed. An humble Church will be a blessed Church; a Church that is willing to confess its own errors and failures, and to lie at the foot of Christ’s cross, is in a position to be favoured of the Lord. I hope we are agreed, then, with God, as to our utter unworthiness and helplessness, so that we look to him alone.”
C. H. Spurgeon, Revival. Pensacola: Mt. Zion Publications, p. 9, n.d.
I believe in both personal and corporate revival. Walking with Christ every day, keeping prayed up, confessing sins to the Lord right away, witnessing for Christ, this is personal revival.
What is corporate revival, and how does it occur? Surely no one here would deny the necessity of it! Charles Spurgeon wrote: “When a man says, ‘Oh! Yes we are getting on very well, we do not want revival that I know of,’ I fear me he is not low enough to be blessed; and when you and I pray to God with pride in us, with self-exaltation, with a confidence in our own zeal, or even in the prevalence of our own prayer of themselves, we have not come low enough to be blessed. An humble Church will be a blessed Church; a Church that is willing to confess its own errors and failures, and to lie at the foot of Christ’s cross, is in a position to be favoured of the Lord. I hope we are agreed, then, with God, as to our utter unworthiness and helplessness, so that we look to him alone.”
C. H. Spurgeon, Revival. Pensacola: Mt. Zion Publications, p. 9, n.d.