Showing posts with label Mary Katherine May. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Katherine May. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2013

A Christian American Thanksgiving
by Mary Katherine May
November 9, 2013

The act of setting aside time to appreciate and celebrate what we have and victorious events has gone on most likely since before the beginning of recorded history.

It wasn’t something new that the Pilgrims to the New Continent suddenly invented after a long, hard time of hardship, suffering, and death. And it was most appropriate for the giving of thanks to include those native of their new land, for if not for their aid most likely none would have survived. 

President Abraham Lincoln in 1863 declared a day of thanks giving on the last Thursday in November to be a yearly national holiday. From this declaration I read,
October 3, 1863
By the President of the United States
A Proclamation 
The year that is drawing toward its close has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constantly enjoyed that we are prone to forget the source from which they come, others have been added, which are of so extraordinary a nature that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften the heart which is habitually insensible to the ever-watchful providence of Almighty God. 
No human counsel hath devised, nor hath any mortal hand worked out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most High God, who while dealing with us in anger for our sins, hath nevertheless remembered mercy. 
It has seemed to me fit and proper that they should be solemnly, reverently, and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and one voice by the whole American people. I do, therefore, invite my fellow-citizens in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea and those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next as a Day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the heavens.
However each individual and family might celebrate Thanksgiving Day, whatever religion might prevail in the home, the actual fact is that from the first thanks giving enacted in this land it was the Almighty God to whom thanks were offered for life and sustenance, for prevailing through great hardship and suffering.

Nowadays Christians are often accused of being exclusive and excluding of those who believe differently than themselves, and none of us like it because such a disposition is in direct contradiction to our Savior Jesus Christ’s great commandment, to Love each other. Just as I have loved you, you should love each other. (John 13:34 NLT).  Yet in one sense the accusation is true.  Christians do not believe as Oprah tells us, that there many paths lead to God, nor do we believe that we need multiple lives as in reincarnation to get it right.  We do not believe that Jesus Christ taught only a philosophy by which to live.  We Christians are exclusive in that we believe that the one way and only way to salvation and eternal life in Heaven is through Jesus Christ, that He is the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. (John 14:6 NIV).  What Christians do that makes us wrongly exclusive, and what Christ commanded us not to do, is judge what is in the heart of others and pronounce their eternal fate.

So here we are now, in the United States of America, where our faith and way of life are being challenged every day.   We see our fellow citizens who do not presently believe in what we know to be true constantly battling to remove God from every part of public society.  We find ourselves liking the fun and glittery society where giving thanks is replaced by football and food, and Santa Claus instead of Jesus Christ is what matters at Christmas, or CHRISTmas. And yet, the act of giving thanks, and I state what is evident, giving thanks is an action.  When we offer thanks we are offering it to someone, and for Christians the one to whom we offer thanks is God.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, for Christians there must be more to thanksgiving than self-gratification. Yes, we are a part of this world, but more importantly we are citizens of the Kingdom of God. For us, who recognize and glorify our Heavenly Father for all that we have and are, for providing for our every need, for giving us the confidence of knowing that we can be at peace because He is ultimately and always in control of the final outcome, for giving us our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, his Son, who willingly gave himself in death that changed the world from being broken and separated from his holiness to living in the expectation of hope for a beautiful future, this is what thanksgiving is about.  Certainly, every day should be a day of thanks giving.  To stop for a day of thanksgiving, however, to celebrate life, home and family, giving honor and praise to the One from whom all is given, is very appropriate indeed.  This is the Christian’s Thanksgiving.


Amen.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Return to the Garden of Eden

God Speaks
Mary Katherine May
Christians believe that one of the ways that GOD speaks to his children is through the Scripture of the Holy Bible.  It is my contention that when Christians utilize all of the excellent literature available to them, as in commentaries, what various authorities and books that tell them about what Bible texts mean, and what preachers and teacher tell them on radio and television, that they are missing a very important, even critical resource.  That resource is the LORD. 

How can GOD impart his holy wisdom, meant for each one of us personally, if we don't take the time to hear him speaking to us through Scripture?  If all we do is read and listen to what others tell us, we are hearing what GOD told them--and this is not a bad thing, but it also not a complete education in the School of GOD.

It takes time.  Often a passage, a chapter or a book of the Bible will need to be read over and over until GOD speaks.  He will speak, but only if we give him our complete attention and listen. 

It is a fabulously joyous moment when we know that GOD has revealed his wisdom to us.  Most likely it is not a new bit of wisdom or anything strikingly momentous--but what is revealed is special and unique, because GOD gave it to us!

The following are some thoughts of mine that I present to you, the reader.  My plan is to revisit what I have written after a period of time has gone by to see if there is validity over time, and I welcome comments and feedback.

Mary Katherine May

Return to Eden
By Mary Katherine May
28 October 2013

1.         When Adam and Eve were cast out of the Garden of Eden they did not leave a place on earth, but were separated from the Kingdom of God to roam the in the place where the ruler of the world reigned.

2.         Based upon Matthew 4:23, 9:5, 28:19-20, etc., baptism is first and foremost an act of healing of the broken relationship that leads each person from the world of sin into God’s Kingdom.

God created man in his image and gave him dominion over all that he created.  Man was not created upon a whim of God but man was created as the steward of God’s creation. (Gen. 1:28)

God is One.  "Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD; (Deut. 6:4). In human terms, however, God defines himself in three essences. Father (originator), Son (creator), and Spirit (activator).  Unfortunately we often go too far in separating and defining their individual essences without making the clear point that what we are explaining is God alone.

Creating by God is a natural extension of himself.  God with the ability to create is going to create.  God with ability for action is going to act.  God with ability to create and act is going to create that which can and will act.

Though complete in himself, a God who IS, out of relationship is not a God but nothing other than a stagnant entity because a God without relationship is a God only to his own entity.  Human definition of God implies an entity with interaction, power and authority, and interaction is by any definition relationship.  God is relational to his creation, and God is relational among his creation. God creates because he is God.

God is complete in himself, and Scripture explains this by saying, God is, and I am.  God speaks (acts) through his essence as the Word, the acting power performed through the Spirit.  The Word, even if God had not stated so specifically in Scripture, as speaker is the instigator and communicator of action through the power of the Spirit.  Action happens through speaking—thought (silent speaking), audible word (audible motivator of action), and physical activity (language of body motion).

But," he (God) said, "you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live." (Ex. 33:20).  Thus, Christ, whom we call the second essence, by the will of God is the creator (Jesus spoke, i.e. put creation into motion) of all and as the Word is the communicator throughout Scripture, both before and after Christ.  This tells us that God has always been present in his creation relationally and interacting through Christ.  There are two probable exceptions, but otherwise I am speculating that when Scripture states that God spoke, it was through Christ.  The exceptions are at Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan and when he was transfigured,

Adam, created in God’s likeness was created in the likeness of Christ, into whom the Spirit entered and breathed life.  Adam, flesh and spirit, and his female counterpart Eve before the fall were one with God (righteous) and knew only God, only good and nothing of evil. The free will, which they used inappropriately is necessary for relationship otherwise there is none—without free will our relationship with God is as a one-sided ordering of toys and puppets.   Here is why Lucifer had the will to disobey, for without free will he would have done only as his commanded roll as an angel allowed.  Relationship to be true must have at least two interacting.  It is in God being himself love that we discover why He allows for his creation to have the ability to will and have relationship with him, even to the point of going the wrong way.  Love, and God is love (1John 4:8), without will of choice is no more than an action in the manner of a programmed computer.

When the serpent enticed Eve he said, “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” (Gen. 3:5)  And of course, the serpent was right.  By Adam and Eve’s own disobedience and lie, even though done because of their naïve minds, they opened themselves up to willing evil actions.  They covered themselves out of shame.  We read about loin cloths and fig leaves and often by their placement in images we add a sexual connotation, but this wasn’t about sexuality.  Adam and Eve’s covering was a lame attempt to hide from God.  Their disobedience rendered them exposed, naked, before God.  They were no longer in God’s likeness because God is all good, all love, righteous and pure. 

Adam and Eve were cut off from God, i.e. the Kingdom of God.  They were no longer one with God.  Their likeness to God was hidden, removed from the possibility of acting only in likeness to God, and they now belonged to the world, i.e. Satan.

I believe that the cutting off from the Garden of Eden, its entry protected by Cherubim and flaming sword, was a spiritual act and that there is no specific place on earth where the Garden of Eden was or is located for the following reasons.

First, Eden is said to be in the East, as in sun and light, with Adam and Eve leaving to the west (implied), as in sunset and darkness.  John 1:4 In him was life, and the life was the light of all men.

Second, all of creation belongs to God, including the earth and all that is in it and on it.  After the fall, and specifically in the New Testament, Jesus refers to God’s Kingdom by stating, my kingdom is not of this world (John 8:23).  The world, of course, belongs to God as his creation, but Jesus’ Kingdom is his spiritual world, to which there was no access.

Third, man was created as both flesh (from the earth of God’s creation) and spirit (his life breathed into him by the Holy Spirit).  After the fall, man is flesh with spirit sorely lacking.  This is why the Jews kept getting it wrong.  This is why Jesus wasn’t received by his own (John 1:11) and most everyone else.

Fourth, Jesus Christ came at the right time (Rom. 5:6) as flesh and spirit, Son of God and Son of Man.  Through death and resurrection, in Jesus Christ flesh and Spirit were re-united, i.e. healed, the breech between God and Man.  Death (spiritual death by sin) was conquered by the death that didn’t remain dead.  Christ’s rising in flesh and spirit, as first-born from the dead with his promise to do the same for us, tells us that man in the likeness of God has been, is, and will be restored.  Christ’s leading the way is why there is the expectation and hope for us to do the same. When we enter through the gates of Eden into eternity, we will live in the glory of God’s light, in the likeness of God, knowing only was it pure, holy and good.

I refer to the death and resurrection as healing for this reason.  Jesus equated forgiven sin with healing, and our sins were forgiven by his willing gift of his life for us.  The Gospel of Matthew tells us that Jesus’ ministry consisted of preaching, teaching and healing.  It is further stated that preaching was the proclamation of the Gospel, teaching was instruction on the Christian life and to make disciples, and healing.  The Great Commission instructions were to

Preaching: Go therefore and make disciples of all nations,
Healing: baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
Teaching: teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you;

This certainly does not exclude physical healing, but Jesus’ healing most definitely was about spiritual healing.  Baptism brings us into the Kingdom of God through the active indwelling of the Holy Spirit, thus we joined to Christ in flesh and spirit.  John said that he baptized with water, but one who is coming will baptize with the Spirit.  If we make symbolic water baptism a requirement for salvation, we are making salvation into a human work, and that can never be.  

Fifth, it is reasonable that Christ in his dual nature, flesh and spirit, should be the means by which God reconciled the world.  It was a justification, a reconciliation, an equal exchange, a re-joining of man with God, to grow and mature in the righteous man as God created him to be.  Can this be complete in a human lifetime?  I doubt it.  We live in a world of sin and this is not what Eden was or is.  Eden is the spiritual Kingdom of God.  Paul writes in 1Corinthians 3:2 I fed you with milk, not solid food; for you were not ready for it; and even yet you are not ready,…Just as on earth we are born, grow, learn and mature, so we do the same spiritually.

Sixth, the reconciliation is the beginning, and that implies baptism as infants or at the beginning of the Christian life, not after reaching a point of fulfillment.  Growing in Christ includes growing pains.  I believe that too often we make the idea of Christian suffering into having to do some serious martyr-type suffering, when by nature of living in a sinful world that itself is suffering.  Being strong in faith and hope is growth, but also a way leading us to the time when we will be whole.  Suffering to endurance, endurance to character, and character to hope.  (Rom. 5)  Character has to do with the nuts and bolts of who we are, and right character is to live and be in the likeness of God.

The world has always belonged to God physically, but not spiritually even though… The light (Christ) shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. (John 1:5).  Christ’s death and resurrection returns us to the beginning, to Eden.  It is each person’s…

In the beginning..”
Thanks be to God who gives us the victory
through our Lord, Jesus Christ.
(Rom. 6:17)

Monday, October 15, 2012

Separation of Church and State for Christians a response to Ancient Faith Today Faith Informing Politics


Separation of Church and State for Christians

Mary Katherine May of QualityMusicandBooks.com
a response to Ancient Faith Today: Faith Informing Politics

The highly charged current American attitudes in relation to national policies among Christians is at least as diverse as the number of Christian doctrines espoused throughout the land.  Though many Christians feel that they are in the limelight of the debate, other religions do agree with biblical teaching on particularly popular issues.

Religion defined as a belief system leaves no one out of the fray when speaking about how separation of church and state, or perhaps instead it should be phrased separation of religion and state, is interpreted in the 21st century, and thus an ideology that particular groups police for abuse and champion as the utopia they long for is really not an issue at all.  What the point to be debated actually encompasses is how we the people and our elected legislators carry out policy within the framework of such a huge number of diverse theological bases, and how policy compromise may be executed without anyone being placed in the position of denying their core beliefs.

Christians themselves are not in agreement even when determining what it means to be a Christian, and thus it is foolish for any Christian to have the expectation of  a united front in relation to government, voting criteria, and support of elected officials.  I would like to say that Christians are unique among the people in committed faith groups, but there are those believers who do not follow Christ’s biblical teaching of turning the other cheek.  We might then claim that those who resort to violence and pushing other people’s stress points until they react are not Christian at all—yet, are there not those in other groups who would withhold relationship for the same reason?

I don’t have the definitive answer.  In response to the thought provoking discussion I listened to through Ancient Faith Radio hosted by Keith Allen about legislating Christian agenda in our diverse American society between two men who were described as one being a conservative and the other a liberal, I can understand though not necessarily agree with both of them. 

It is perhaps grand and noble to claim generous benevolence toward those with whom we disagree as AmirAzarvan (political science lecturer at Kennesaw State University) did in this discussion—and yes, of course, without being in a police state we cannot possibly govern at least what others publically espouse to be their belief system—yet, when and if we cast our vote based upon our Christian faith and choose against another group’s political agenda, our claim of neutrality philosophically and essentially becomes a lie.  For this reason Azarvan’s concept is in the Christian framework of having love and respect for all is correct, but as he presents it is poorly stated.

On the conservative side of the discussion, William Hinkle (Minority Whip, Washington State) stated that he votes for the candidate that most agrees with his Christian beliefs, and this is perhaps at times the best any of us can do.  The only other option in some cases is to not vote, which then leads to the question of whether non-voters have a right to vocalize any public opinion since they did not have a part in the decision.  In the U.S.A., however, even the right to vote is a free choice while it is required in other democratic countries. 

Regarding the vote, is it now time in America to have a conscientious objector status?  For the Christian, whatever kind of Christian the believer claims to be, the decision of how to vote should be a faith-based decision.  Having respect and love for all people includes casting votes for what we believe is the one true way.  When we say that God is love, then it also follows that to love anyone is through our love for God.  True, I cannot be anyone else’s conscience but my own.  It grieves me when my love for family, friends and others is in conflict with what  conscience is telling me with firm conviction--that I cannot vote for sin despite what name might be hurled at me or how I will be branded by society.  

In conclusion, I am reminded of two Bible verses relevant to this topic. And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. (Joshua 24:15 KJV) and For do I now persuade men, or God? or do I seek to please men? for if I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ. (Galatians 1:10 KJV)


 

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Prayer the Holy Spirit and Christian Revival

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, I am posting the following article with accompanying permission and link to the orginal for reading and insight as to the power of prayer for spiritual revival within the Christian Church worldwide. When you read this article, please note that its beginnings were founded upon prayer. ...Mary Katherine May

Early Twentieth Century Revivals
LINK TO ORIGINAL ARTICLE
1904 - Loughor, Wales (Evan Roberts)
1906 - Azusa Street, Los Angeles (William Seymour)
1907 - January - Pyong-Yang, Korea
1914 - Belgian Congo in Africa (C. T. Studd)
1921 - Monday 7 March - Lowestroft, England (Douglas Brown)
1936 - Sunday 29 June - Gahini, Rwanda (East African Revival)


1904

Revival historian Edwin Orr observed: 'The early twentieth century Evangelical Awakening was a worldwide movement. It did not begin with the phenomenal Welsh Revival of 1904­05. Rather its sources were in the springs of little prayer meetings which seemed to arise spontaneously all over the world, combining into streams of expectation which became a river of blessing in which the Welsh Revival became the greatest cataract. ...

'The Welsh Revival was the farthest­reaching of the movements of the general Awakening, for it affected the whole of the Evangelical cause in India, Korea and China, renewed revival in Japan and South Africa, and sent a wave of awakening over Africa, Latin America, and the South Seas.

'The story of the Welsh Revival is astounding. Begun with prayer meetings of less than a score of intercessors, when it burst its bounds the churches of Wales were crowded for more than two years. A hundred thousand outsiders were converted and added to the churches, the vast majority remaining true to the end. Drunkenness was immediately cut in half, and many taverns went bankrupt.


Crime was so diminished that judges were presented with white gloves signifying that there were no cases of murder, assault, rape or robbery or the like to consider. The police became "unemployed" in many districts. Stoppages occurred in coal mines, not due to unpleasantness between management and workers, but because so many foul­mouthed miners became converted and stopped using foul language that the horses which hauled the coal trucks in the mines could no longer understand what was being said to them, and transportation ground to a halt' (Orr 1975c:192­193).

Touches of revival had stirred New Quay, Cardiganshire, on the west coast of Wales where Joseph Jenkins was minister of a church in which he led teams of revived young people in conducting testimony meetings throughout the area.

Seth Joshua then held meetings there, then at Newcastle Emlyn and at Blaenannerch, at which students from the Methodist Academy attended including Evan Roberts.

At Blanannerch on Thursday 29 September, Seth Joshua closed the 7 am meeting before breakfast crying out in Welsh, 'Lord ... bend us'. Evan Roberts remembered, 'It was the Spirit that put the emphasis for me on "Bend us". "That is what you need" said the Spirit to me. And as I went out I prayed, O Lord, bend me.'

During the 9 am meeting, Evan Roberts eventually prayed aloud after others had prayed. He knelt with his arms over the seat in front, bathed in perspiration as he agonised. He recalled, 'I cried out, "Bend me! Bend me! Bend us! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh!" (Evans 1969:70).

The revelation, 'God commendeth his love' (Romans 5:18) overwhelmed Evan Roberts. Soon a motto of the revival became 'Bend the church and save the world'. Evan Roberts in his twenties was one of God's agents in that national revival.

Monday 31 October - Loughor, Wales (Evan Roberts)

Soon after the impact of the Spirit on him at Seth Joshua's meetings, he took leave to return home to challenge his friends, especially the young people.

Back home in his small village of Loughor on the south coast of Wales, Evan Roberts spoke after the usual Monday night meeting to 17 people. The Holy Spirit moved on them all. He then spoke every night to increasing crowds. By the weekend the church was packed and invitations came for him to speak in other churches and chapels. He usually took a small team with him to pray, witness and sing.

November 1904 saw the fires of revival spread throughout Wales. Newspapers began describing the crowded meetings. By January 1905 the papers had reported 70,000 converted in less than three months.


The Spirit of God convicted people as Evan Roberts insisted:

1. You must put away any unconfessed sin.
2. You must put away any doubtful habit.
3. You must obey the Spirit promptly.
4. You must confess Christ publicly.<
He believed that a baptism in the Spirit was the essence of revival and that the primary condition of revival is that individuals should experience such a baptism in the Spirit.


1906

Easter Saturday 14 April - Azusa Street, Los Angeles (William Seymour)

William Seymour, the Negro leader of The Apostolic Faith Mission located at 312 Azusa Street in Los Angeles on Easter Saturday, 14 April 1906 began there with about 100 attending including blacks and whites. It grew out of a cottage prayer meeting at Bonnie Brae Street where the weight of the swelling crowds has broken the front verandah, so they had to move.

Not only was the racial mixture unusual, but newspaper reports, usually critical of these noisy Pentecostal meetings, drew both Christians and unbelievers, poor and rich, to investigate.

'At Azusa, services were long, and on the whole they were spontaneous. In its early days music was a cappella, although one or two instruments were included at times. There were songs, testimonies given by visitors or read from those who wrote in, prayer, altar calls for salvation or sanctification or for baptism in the Holy Spirit. And there was preaching. Sermons were generally not prepared in advance but were typically spontaneous. W. J. Seymour was clearly in charge, but much freedom was given to visiting preachers. There was also prayer for the sick. Many shouted. Others were "slain in the Spirit" or "fell under the power."


There were periods of extended silence and of singing in tongues. No offerings were collected, but there was a receptacle near the door for gifts. ...

'Growth was quick and substantial. Most sources indicate the presence of about 300­-350 worshippers inside the forty­-by-­sixty­foot white­washed wood­frame structure, with others mingling outside... At times it may have been double that. ...

'Thus the significance of Azusa was centrifugal as those who were touched by it took their experiences elsewhere and touched the lives of others. Coupled with the theological threads of personal salvation, holiness, divine healing, baptism in the Spirit with power for ministry, and an anticipation of the imminent return of Jesus Christ, ample motivation was provided to assure the revival a long­term impact' (Burgess & McGee 1988:31­36).

The exploding pentecostal movement around the world usually traces its origins to Azusa Street, from which fire spread across the globe. For example, John G. Lake had visited the mission at Azusa Street. In 1908 he pioneered pentecostal missions in South Africa where, after five years he had established 500 black and 125 white congregations.


1907

January - Pyong-Yang, Korea

Revival in Korea broke in the nation in 1907. Presbyterian missionaries, hearing of revival in Wales, and of a similar revival among Welsh Presbyterian work in Assam, prayed earnestly for the same in Korea. 1500 representatives gathered for ten days at the annual New Year Bible study course in which a spirit of prayer broke out. The meetings carried on day after day, with confessions of sins, weeping and trembling. The leaders allowed everyone to pray aloud simultaneously as so many were wanting to pray, and that became a characteristic of Korean prayer meetings.

'The day before the course ended, the evening meeting seemed full of the presence of God, many broke down confessing their sins, and the whole congregation wept, confessed, prayed and praised at the same time. According to those present, what might appear to be chaos was actually a beautiful expression of the work of God's Spirit' (Davies 1992:189).

Observers were astounded. The delegates of the New Year gathering returned to their churches taking with them this spirit of prayer which strongly impacted the churches of the nation with revival. Everywhere conviction of sin, confession and restitution were common.

By March 2,000 were converted, and 30,000 by the middle of 1907.

Brutal persecution at the hands of the Japanese and then the Russian and Chinese communists saw thousands killed, but still the church grew in fervent prayer.


Prior to the Russian invasion thousands of North Koreans gathered every morning at 5 am. Sometimes 10,000 were gathered in one place for prayer each morning.

Early morning daily prayer meetings became common, as did nights of prayer especially on Friday nights, and this emphasis on prayer has continued as a feature of church life in Korea. Over a million gather every morning around 5 am for prayer in the churches. Prayer and fasting is normal. Churches have over 100 prayer retreats in the hills called Prayer Mountains to which thousands go to pray, often with fasting. Healings and supernatural manifestations continue.

Now the city of Seoul alone has 6,000 churches, many with huge numbers. Koreans have sent over 10,000 missionaries into other Asian countries.


1914

Belgian Congo, Africa (C. T. Studd)

Africa has seen many powerful revivals, such as the Belgian Congo outpouring with C T Studd in 1914. 'The whole place was charged as if with an electric current. Men were falling, jumping, laughing, crying, singing, confessing and some shaking terribly,' he reported. 'As I led in prayer the Spirit came down in mighty power sweeping the congregation. My whole body trembled with the power.


We saw a marvellous sight, people literally filled and drunk with the Spirit' (W.E.C. 1954:12­15).

Accounts like that are typical of the continuing moves of God's Spirit in Africa this century. Early this century an estimated 10% of the population was Christian. The Christian population has reached 45-50% of Africa south of the Sahara. By the end of this century the number of African Christians is expected to be 400 million, half the population.

Local revivals are a characteristic of the worldwide growth of the church this century.


1921

Monday 7 March - Lowestoft, England (Douglas Brown)

Douglas Brown, a Baptist minister in South London, saw conversions in his church every Sunday until he began he began itinerant evangelism in 1921. Within eighteen months he then addressed over 1700 meetings, and saw revival in his evangelistic ministry. The Lord had convicted him about leaving his pastorate for mission work. Although reluctant, he finally surrendered.

'It was in February 1921, after four months of struggle that there came the crisis. Oh, how patient God is! On the Saturday night I wrote out my resignation to my church, and it was marked with my own tears. ...


'Then something happened. I found myself in the loving embrace of Christ for ever and ever; and all power and joy and blessedness rolled in like a deluge. How did it come? I cannot tell you. Perhaps I may when I get to heaven. All explanations are there, but the experience is here. That was two o'clock in the morning. God had waited four months for a man like me; and I said, "Lord Jesus, I know what you want; You want me to go into mission work. I love Thee more than I dislike that." I did not hear any rustling of angels' wings. I did not see any sudden light' (Griffin 1992:17-18).

Hugh Ferguson, the Baptist minister at London Road Baptist Church in Lowestoft on the East Anglia coast had invited Douglas Brown to preach at a mission there from Monday 7th to Friday 11th March. The missioner arrived by train, ill. However, he spoke Monday night and at meetings on Tuesday morning, afternoon and night. The power of the Holy Spirit moved among the people from the beginning.

On Wednesday night 'inquirers' packed the adjacent schoolroom for counselling and prayer. Sixty to seventy young people were converted that night, along with older people. Each night more packed the 'inquiry room' after the service. So the mission was extended indefinitely. Douglas Brown returned to his church for the weekend and continued with the mission the next Monday. By the end of March the meetings were moved from the 700 seating Baptist Church and other nearby churches to the 1100 seating capacity of St John's Anglican Church.

March saw the beginning of revival in the area. Although Douglas Brown was the main speaker in many places, ministers of most denominations found they too were evangelising. Revival meetings multiplied in the fishing centre of Yarmouth as
well in Ipswich, Norwich, Cambridge and elsewhere. Scottish fishermen working out ofYarmouth in the winter were strongly impacted, and took revival fire to Scottish fishing towns and villages in the summer. Jock Troup, a Scottish evangelist, has visited East Anglia during the revival and ministered powerfully in Scotland.

At the same time, the spirit of God moved strongly in Ireland, especially in Ulster in 1921 through the work of W. P. (William Patteson) Nicholson a fiery Irish evangelist. This was at the time when Northern Ireland received parliamentary autonomy accompanied by and tension and bloodshed. Edwin Orr was converted then, although not through W. P. Nicholson. Orr wrote:

'Nicholson's missions were the evangelistic focus of the movement: 12,409 people were counselled in the inquiry rooms; many churches gained additions, some a hundred, some double; ... prayer meetings, Bible classes and missionary meetings all increased in strength. ... Ministerial candidates doubled' (Griffin 1992:87).

In Great Britain the Welsh Revival of 1904-5 impacted the nation. Though not as widespread or as intense, the revivals of 1921-2 touched thousands following the devastation of World War I. Revival flamed again in 1948-9 after World War II, especially in the Scottish Hebrides.

1936

Sunday 29 June - Gahini, Rwanda (East African Revival)

Sunday seemed normal at the mission station built on the gentle slopes of a hill at Gahini in north-east Rwanda. Pupils from the day schools and the Evangelists' Training School attended the service along with local people gathered in the whitewashed, mud brick and corrugated iron roofed church. A ward service was also held in the similarly built 30-bed hospital for patients and visiting families and friends. A hundred pupils aged up to late teenagers in the girls boarding school hostel met that evening for their hymns and prayer.

About 9.30 pm the silence erupted into frightening shrieks and pandemonium in the girls' hostel. A few girls who had been intensely seeking to know God better seemed embroiled in demonic attacks stirred up in others. Some furniture was smashed in the turmoil. Mission staff ran to intervene, dragging girls outside to separate and calm them. 'Slowly they calmed down. Even as they did so, however, the sound of shouting and singing could be heard from different parts of the hill. And it went on all night!

'At 3.30 am on Monday morning, the noise started again in the girls' school ... Girls were shaking and crying uncontrollably and some were very frightened. ... 'What could have caused such a disturbance? The teachers in the school explained it simply. Four school-girls had been "in dead earnest about getting right with God". While they were praying quietly some non-Christian girls came in. They too were seeking, but not for God; they were seeking contact with their ancestral spirits. The atmosphere changed. ... Of one thing there was no doubt: the pandemonium created was of the devil. It was certainly not of God' (Osborn 1991:17-18).

Similar strange eruptions occurred in the hospital, boys' school, Evangelists' Training School and among people visiting the mission station, but without the destruction of property nor the satanic atmosphere encountered that first night.


'In the days that followed people in many different circumstances would suddenly begin to shiver, leading them at first to believe that they had a fever of some sort. Then a terrifying sense of their sin would overtake them and a fear of facing a holy God. The existence of unforgiven sin became unbearable... [and] it was not enough to repent of a sin unless that repentance was evidenced by total rejection and removal of everything associated with that sin. The blazing light of God's holiness required nothing less. Then the joy and peace of forgiveness and liberation from the guilt and power of sin became almost overwhelming and expressed itself in wild singing and jubilation' (Osborn 1991:18-19).

The famous East African revival began in Rwanda in June 1936 and rapidly spread to the neighbouring countries of Burundi, Uganda and the Congo (now Zaire), then further around. The Holy Spirit moved upon mission schools, spread to churches and to whole communities, producing deep repentance and changed lives. Anglican Archdeacon Arthur ­Pitts wrote in September, 'I have been to all the stations where this Revival is going on, and they all have the same story to tell. The fire was alight in all of them before the middle of June, but during the last week in June, it burst into a wild flame which, like the African grass fire before the wind, cannot be put out' (Osborn 1991:21).

That East African revival was sustained for forty to fifty years and helped to establish a new zeal for enthusiastic holiness in African Christianity. It confronted demonic strongholds, and began to prepare churches to cope with the horrors of massacres and warfare which erupted in later years.


(c) Geoff Waugh, Fire Fell: Revival Visitations. Brisbane: Renewal.
PO Box 629, Strathpine, Qld. 4077, Australia.
E-mail: geoff@renewal.dialix.oz.au
Internet: http://www.pastornet.net.au/renewal
Reproduction is permitted as long as the copyright remains intact with the text.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Christian Poetry by Mary Katherine May DROP GENTLE RAIN Deuteronomy 32:2

Drop, Gentle Rain
by Mary Katherine May.  6 August 2010
© 2010

Like drops that fall
In warm, summer rain
At dusky eve of day
I longed for your Word
To water my soul
Till refilled, restored, and full
Knowing my need
My Lord said to me
It is evening, take your rest

I laid His Word upon my heart
Drifting into sleep
Bible on my breast

He came in quiet night
Warm breath whispered
Feather light
Fanned Spirit Flame
Sparked to soft glow
His Word
Seed of Truth
Planted in me
Flowering as He spoke.


Let my Word drop from heaven
As the warm, summer rain
My speech distill as the dew
A gentle drop
On the tender herb and showers on the field.  ~
Deuteronomy 32:2

Sometimes God shows the way by guiding your decisions, or by the people around you. When God wants a person to move and that person is absolutely comfortatble where planted, there may be upheaval in the future. Think of Jonah. He didn't wan't to go to Ninevah. Think of Elijah, he didn't think himself capable. So it is with the poem. I don't have a pipeline to God that runs 24 hours a day with clear fuel.

As often in the late evening I do, I sat down at my piano. When I write music, the music usually comes to me first followed by the words. They slowly fade into my mind. At first, I can here sound but cannot make out the words.

This past evening was different. The words came, followed by the music. The music has to develop, but the words are a blessing. I wrote the opening and then did a word search through the Blue Letter Bible on "dew." There was the verse, Deuteronomy 32:2. The words are nearly identical to the ones I heard in the quiet of the night.

Amen.

Mary and Rick May own and operate Quality Music and Books out of Minneapolis, Minnesota.

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