Ought the Church Pray for Revival?
Herman C. Hanko
INTRODUCTION
If one were to ask the question, "Ought the
church to pray for revival?" the answer almost surely would be a
resounding, "Yes." Anyone who has a love in his heart for the
church and who is concerned about the cause of Zion is aware of the fact
that the church is by no means in a healthy condition. It is simply a
fact that, from a doctrinal point of view, today's church has, at best,
become doctrinally indifferent and, at worst, allowed all kinds of
heresies to creep into her confession. From a doctrinal point of view,
the church is not strong.
The same is true if one measures the strength of the
church from the viewpoint of her spiritual walk. The church is
spiritually very weak. It is characterized by worldliness and carnality.
The commandments of the Lord are openly broken by its members. The
Lord's day is desecrated. The name of God is taken in vain. Fornication,
adultery, and immorality flourish in the church as if they are plants in
a heavily fertilized soil.
It is no different if we consider the church from the
viewpoint of her zeal. Anyone who is at all concerned about the church
cannot help but see that the church has lost her zeal for Christ and for
the cause of the truth; lost her spiritual energies; become spiritually
lethargic, spiritually cold, sunken in formalism so that the vibrancy
that ought to characterize her seems to be gone. And the church has,
without any doubt whatsoever, come under the condemnation of the Lord in
His letter to the church of Ephesus, "You have lost your first
love."
From all of these points of view it would seem
immediately evident to anyone who concerns himself with the welfare of
the church that the church is in need of revival. And so it has
happened, too, that the cry for revival has become increasingly loud,
widespread, and urgent.
Let me give you just a few instances of this.
Ian Paisley, who is perhaps the best known man in Northern Ireland, has publicly gone on record as stating
that he is "convinced that before he dies the Lord will send
revival to the church." And the Lord has told him, so he claims,
that he will be an instrument in such revival. A great deal of the work
which he carries on is geared to bringing about revival in the church of
his land and in the church throughout the world.
Martyn Lloyd-Jones, whose influence has been so great
and who has cast his long shadow not only over the British Isles where
he laboured all his life, but also over America, has said publicly, and
has written in his books, that "the last hope of the church in our
day is revival" (e.g., in his introduction toThe Welsh Revival of
1909).
The Banner of Truth, which has been instrumental in
the excellent work of publishing innumerable Puritan classics and which
sponsors the Banner of Truth Conferences, plays a large role, if not a
crucial role, in the growing clamour for revival and in the growing
interest in revival which characterizes the church of our day. At their
conferences they speak of the need for revival, they lecture concerning
revival, and they pray for revival.
David Bebbington has said: "Revivalism is a
strand within the evangelical tradition."
The same thing is true in the Reformed churches. The
following prayer appeared this past January in a magazine of a Reformed
church: "Lord, for our souls, families, churches, missions,
schools, and nations we desperately need revival. The times are dark.
Thy judgments are imminent" (Banner of Truth [January,
1990], p.7).
And so revival has become an important and an urgent
cry that arises from a church concerned about the spiritual welfare of
God's heritage.
The question that faces us is this: "Is it
proper, is it biblical, is it Reformed to pray for and seek revival in
the church?" To that question the Reformed faith must needs give a
resounding "No!" Revival is wrong. Revival is contrary to the
Scriptures. Revival is at odds with the Reformed faith. To pray for
revival is to go against the will of God and is to grieve the Holy
Spirit. That is my thesis.
WHAT IS REVIVAL?
Before we enter into any kind of an analysis of
revivals we must be careful that we understand what we mean by this
term. There have been many who have used the term "revival" in
a very broad sense of the word. They have used "revival," for
example, to describe those incidents in the history of the nation of
Judah when, under the leadership of a good king (such as Asa or
Jehoshaphat or Hezekiah or Josiah), the nation of Judah returned to the
true worship of Jehovah after a period of idolatry and grievous sin.
Although Scripture uses the word "revival" in the Old
Testament, this term must be understood in the context of Israel's
theocracy and before the time of the outpouring of the Spirit on
Pentecost. It had therefore an entirely different connotation.
This broad meaning of revival has also sometimes been
applied to various reformations in the church, such as the great
Protestant Reformation of the 16th century, the rise of Puritanism in
the British Isles, and the Separation in the Netherlands from the State
Church under the leadership of Brummelkamp, Van Raalte, Scholte, and
others.
But none of these events, either in the Old or New
Testament, is rightly called a revival. They were church reformations,
but to confuse church reformation with revival is a serious historical
and theological mistake.
There are others who speak of revival, especially in
evangelical and fundamentalistic circles, as referring to that kind of
preaching which goes sometimes under the name of "revivalistic"
preaching—preaching after the order of Dwight L. Moody and, in our own time, such men as Billy Graham. It is common for
churches who have become spiritually lethargic to call in a revival
preacher who attempts to instil new life into a congregation, gain new
converts to Christ, and solicit from members of the church new
commitments to the Lord Jesus. And, on a much broader scale, efforts are
made by such powerful revival preachers as Billy Graham, to bring
revival to whole cities or countries. The Reformed faith has a quarrel
with that type of preaching, particularly with its decisionism, its
whole approach to the preaching of the gospel, and its idea of the
church.
But we are not particularly interested in this
either, although some of the things which are characteristic of revivals
in the narrower sense of the word are characteristic also of revival
preaching. But you shall have to draw your own comparisons and
analogies.
When I speak of "revival" I am using the
word in a much more limited sense than that, but in the sense in which
it is used time and time again in church circles today. Perhaps it is
best for us to take our definition of revival from one who himself is an
ardent proponent of revival (or was until the Lord took him from this
life), Martyn Lloyd-Jones. In his book Revival: an Historical and
Theological Survey, he defines revival in these terms: "Revival is an experience in the life of the
church when the Holy Spirit does an unusual work." The key word in
that definition is the word "unusual." At unexpected times and
in unexpected ways, the Holy Spirit enters the church to bring about
unusual events in the lives of men which bring about drastic change in
the lives of men and churches.
There have been many such revivals, especially since
the time of the Protestant Reformation. Some of the more important ones
were the Welsh Revivals of 1859 and 1904; the Irish Revival of 1859; the
revivals of the 18th century in England, under the leadership of John
Wesley and his brother Charles, the great hymn-writer, as well as George
Whitefield, who also came to America to promote revivals. In America,
perhaps the best-known revival is the Great Awakening in New England in
the time of Jonathan Edwards in 1734-1735 and again in 1740. And
Jonathan Edwards, himself a minister at that time in the church of
Southampton in Massachusetts, was a leading figure in the revival
movement. George Whitefield came from England to join Edwards in this
work. There were other such revivals in the eastern part of America, as
in the early 1800s under the preaching of Charles Finney.
When Martyn Lloyd-Jones defines revivals in the terms
that he uses in his book, these are the revivals to which he
specifically refers and these are the revivals which he says are the
last hope of the church in our day. If the Lord is not pleased to send
revivals, the end has come for the church.
So the question is: What characterizes all these
revivals? What do they have in common? What are the unusual aspects of
the work which the Holy Spirit performs which makes these revivals
different from the Spirit's ordinary and common work?
The distinctive features of such revivals are, first
of all, that they come especially at a time when a church is
characterized by the two great evils of worldly-mindedness and dead
formalism in her life, confession, and worship. The church has been
conformed to the world and, as a result, has died spiritually. It is at
such a time, if revival is to come, that it comes as an unusual working
of the Spirit.
Such revival is always characterized by and has its
beginning in a work of the Spirit which brings about, in the people upon
whom the Spirit falls, a deep and profound, an extraordinarily
disturbing consciousness of sin. It is an effusion of the Spirit, an
outpouring of the Spirit in unusual measure, an outpouring of the Spirit
in great abundance, so to speak, which brings about and manifests itself
in a profound and even unnerving and frighteningly disturbing conviction
of sin.
But this conviction of sin takes on the outward form
of very strange and very peculiar happenings. If you read the literature
on revival, the books on the Welsh revival or the Great Awakening which
describe the New England revivals, they are all filled with the dominant
theme that the conviction of sin brought about by the Holy Spirit
manifests itself in extraordinary and unusual forms. It comes about in
such a way that those who are brought under the conviction of sin are so
completely under the control of forces beyond their power that they cry
out and groan and shout. They fall down in fits of despair. They are, in
their awful agonies of soul, seized by fierce tremors of the body,
shaking of the limbs, strange contortions, so that they roll about on
the floor, sometimes in agony. They fall into what amounts almost to a
catatonic state in which they are immobile and rigid, and during which
time they see visions of the flames of hell and of demons which come
seeking their souls -- all of which are intended to portray to them in
graphic and unusual ways the horror of sins and the fury of God against
the formalism and worldliness which characterized their life. All
revivals, without exception, were accompanied by phenomena of this sort.
Sometimes within a congregation, as the minister was preaching, the
disturbances, the groanings, the shoutings, the pleading, the cryings
became so loud and so boisterous that it became impossible for the
minister to go on. He had to quit his preaching and dismiss the
services.
In the second place, that kind of an unusual and
extraordinary working of the Spirit bringing about conviction of sin was
soon followed in many people, if not most, by experiences of total
rapturous joy. When the conviction of sin was removed and the Spirit
worked in the hearts of those under the conviction of sin, the rapture
of their salvation was indefinable and indescribable. They were cast
into ecstasies of joy and were carried on the wings of rapture into the
very presence of God Himself, where they were given the privilege of
seeing visions and receiving revelations which they could scarcely
describe. They experienced a closeness and fellowship with God which
tore at the heart. I have, for example, a description of one such
ecstatic experience which, as a matter of fact, characterized the leader
of the Welsh revival in 1904.
One Friday night last spring, when praying by my
bedside before retiring, I was taken up to a great expanse without
time and space. It was communion with God. Before this I had a
far-off God. I was frightened that night but never since. So great
was my shivering that I rocked the bed. And my brother, being
awakened, took hold of me thinking I was ill. After that experience,
I was awakened every night a little after one o'clock. This was most
strange for, through the years, I slept like a rock and no
disturbance in my room would awaken me. From that hour, I was taken
up into the divine fellowship for about four hours. What it was, I
cannot tell you except that it was divine. About five o'clock I was
again allowed to sleep on till about nine. At this time I was again
taken up into the same experience in the early hours of the morning,
until about twelve or one o'clock. This went on for about three
months (Efion Evans, The Welsh Revival of 1904 [Evangelical Press of Wales,
1969]).
What is so strange to me, apart from anything else,
is the fact that this man had such a precise understanding and knowledge
of the exact time all these things took place even though he claimed
that he was taken up to a great expanse without time or space. One
wonders how he could have kept such accurate account of time if the
experience brought him above time and space. Nevertheless, this is by no
means the most unusual of experiences, literally hundreds and hundreds
of which are reported in the literature on revival. And this was,
indeed, the state in which revivals were intended to lead one. The
prayers that ascend today from the hearts and minds of so many have this
as the goal: that some kind of an experience such as this would become
the experience of every believer.
One leader of the Welsh revival received a vision of
''unprecedented excitement'' which is described as follows: ''His
spiritual perception had been considerably developed and he could not
fail to draw inspiration and motivation from those supernatural, extra-biblical
[notice the terminology] revelations. There was no question in my
mind as to their authenticity or authority" (Evans, op. cit., p.191).
The result of that kind of an experience is one in which one withdraws,
as it were, into direct union and fellowship with God and which gives to
one a rapturous joy and an other-worldly peace and tranquillity of
heart.
This experience brings one into such close union with
God and experience of fellowship with Him that it defies human
description. It is a wholly emotional and completely ethereal absorption
into mystical union with God Himself, and it has resulted in a kind of
revival in the church which manifested itself in a new zeal for the
cause of God and a new zeal for missions and for the conversion of
souls, and has brought the church to a state of spiritual strength such
as she had not known in all of her existence.
This is what is meant by revival. When you hear
prayers for revival, when you hear people speak of the need of revival,
this is what is meant. This is the unusual work of the
Holy Spirit which characterizes revivals.
This is what revivalism is all about. I know that
there have been those who have warned of the excesses of revivalism.
Jonathan Edwards himself wrote a book in which he specifically condemned
the excesses that were present in the New England revivals. And Samuel
Miller, the old Southern Presbyterian Calvinist, himself an ardent
defender of revivals, delivered an extraordinarily lengthy speech
warning against its dangers. Nevertheless, this is what characterizes
revivals. These are the unusual outpourings of the Spirit. Those who
engage in such things have made a return to Roman Catholic mysticism.
(See also these two sections from Charles Hodge's book The Constitutional History of the
Presbyterian Church: "The
Great Awakening - Part 1" and "The
Great Awakening - Part 2.")
That kind of revival is what men seek for today as
the cure of the church's ills. That kind of revival is inimical to the
Reformed faith, is something that must be condemned by every believer
who loves the truth of the Scriptures.
THE MYSTICISM OF REVIVALS
What is the scriptural and confessional objections to
revival?
The answer to that question is, in the first place,
that that kind of revival is characterized by mysticism. Mysticism has
an interesting history in the church of the Lord Jesus Christ. It first
made an appearance very early in the history of the church, as early as
the third century; and the great church father, Tertullian, made the
mistake at the end of his life of joining a mystical movement called
Montanism. But mysticism did not really come to its own until the Middle
Ages, during the period when the Roman Catholic Church was ruling
supreme in Europe. That is striking because the mysticism of the Middle
Ages was also a reaction to worldliness and carnality in the church and
to the dead, cold formalism of Roman Catholicism. The mysticism that was
developed in the Middle Ages, however, was a highly developed theology
of mysticism. I cannot go into many of the details, but it is very
interesting that mysticism had as its goal what is called "union
with God," a phrase which sounds not only perfectly innocuous, but
also like something imminently desirable in the life of the child of
God. What could be better than union with God? Mysticism spoke of this,
however, in such a way that that union with God was attained through a
series of steps which one had to go through in order to reach that high
goal. Now, without going into any kind of detail concerning these steps,
the last step that was to be taken before union with God could be
achieved was what was called by the medieval mystics "the dark
night of the soul." It was as if the steps to union with God led
first of all downward to the dark night of the soul only then to spring
out of the dark night of the soul to that rapturous, joyful,
otherworldly union with God.
It is very striking that that Roman Catholic idea of
mysticism found a certain analogy in the thinking of the Puritans. Now,
I know when I say anything bad about the Puritans it is almost as if I
am beating a sacred cow. And I do not want to leave the impression that
the Puritans are of no value. The works which they produced, especially
the early Puritans, can be read even today by any child of God with a
great deal of pleasure and spiritual benefit, so much so that I would
urge you to read Puritan literature. And, in fact, I can think of little
devotional literature that is better to read than Puritan literature.
That does not alter the fact, however, that they were wrong, desperately
wrong, in their conception of Christian experience. What the medieval
mystics called the "dark night of the soul" became, in Puritan
thinking, "the conviction of sin" or "being under the
conviction of sin."
But the mysticism of Roman Catholicism was carried
directly into Protestant thinking through the revivals of John Wesley in
the 18th century. It may surprise you to know that prior to his
Aldersgate experience, at which time John Wesley considered himself to
have been converted, he steeped himself deeply in the writings of Roman
Catholic, medieval mystics, read them avidly, devoured them, as he says,
and was even instrumental in publishing a great number of these Roman
Catholic works. That mysticism stayed with him all his life. Robert G.
Tuttle, in a book entitled Mysticism in the Wesleyan Tradition, points
this out very clearly. Tuttle, by the way, is himself a Methodist, an
admirer of John Wesley, and is pleased and thankful for the fact that
Roman Catholic mysticism became a part of Protestant thinking through
the work of John Wesley.
John Wesley and the Puritans are the fathers of
revivalism. In fact, so much is that so that an acknowledged authority
on revivalism goes so far as to say: "The Puritans gave to the
English-speaking world what may be called the classical school of
Protestant belief in revival" (lain Murray, The Puritan Hope [Banner,
1971], p. 4).
All the trappings of mysticism are present in
revivalism. The idea of "the dark night of the soul" has
become known as "being under the conviction of sin"; the
experiences according to which one defines genuine conversion are the
experiences of the mystics; the rapturous joys that grip one and that
carry one to realms unknown and into union with God are the rapturous
joys of the mystics of the Middle Ages. The emphasis on vision and
dreams, special, extra-biblical revelations, the guidance of the Spirit
through these revelations—all these things belong to the tradition of
mysticism.
It is interesting that a crucial and integral part of
mysticism was also the performing of miracles—exorcism and miracles
of healing. I say this because that immediately ought to bring to our
minds the obvious relationship between revivalism and the charismatic
movement. These two have much in common—so much in common, in fact,
that those who promote revivals even go so far as to say that before a
revival can come it is necessary that the church have a second
outpouring of the Spirit. This is charismatic language indeed! In fact,
those who promote revivals have, in many instances, been, if not
supporters, then encouragers of the charismatic movement, and unwilling
to condemn it. Are you aware of the fact, for example, that Dr. Martyn
Lloyd-Jones was himself a strong supporter of the charismatic movement?
You can find that in several of his books. You can understand some of
what he says, for example, in his sermons on Ephesians, especially Ephesians
4 and 5, if you are aware of his leanings toward the charismatics.
There has always been the closest relationship between revivalism and
the charismatic movement because both are characterized by mysticism.
One can perhaps understand the need people feel for
revival. In these times of spiritual darkness and lethargy, when our own
spiritual life is so cold, there is something about revivalism that
brings with it a promise that is eminently attractive. By a cultivation
of the inner life, by a special effusion of the Spirit, by an outpouring
from above in which the Spirit enters the heart in unusual and powerful
ways, one is transported into the very presence of God Himself, there to
be united with God in this totally other-worldly, rapturous, emotional
joy which transcends anything that can be found in this world. There is
a siren song in that. There is a particularly sensuous appeal of Satan
in that sort of thing. And the colder becomes one's spiritual life, the
more that sort of a thing seems to be desirable.
Nevertheless, mysticism is contrary to the Scriptures
and the Reformed faith. It is contrary to the Reformed faith because
mysticism, in all its forms, places all the emphasis on the human
emotions. It is a theology of emotions, a theology of feeling. Perhaps
that is exactly its great appeal in our day. We live in an age in which
feeling is everything. Feeling is the end-all and be-all of life. And
when this siren song of rapturous, emotional joy of union with God comes
dinning in our ears at times when our lives seem barren and cold, it
seems as if the emotional high of mysticism is eminently desirable. But
it is a siren song that leads to destruction.
Mysticism has little regard for doctrine. With its
emphasis on feelings and emotions, it makes light of the knowledge of
the truth. In this respect it also stands at odds with the Reformed
faith. The Reformed faith has always emphasized the importance of
knowledge as an essential part of faith. It takes seriously the warning
in Hosea: "My people perish for lack of knowledge"
(4:6) The
Reformed faith believes in the importance of doctrinal soundness, of
confession of faith in harmony with the Scriptures. Revivalism shows
little interest in doctrine; it is much more concerned about emotions.
This manifests itself in two ways.
It manifests itself first of all in a carelessness or
indifference towards doctrine, even to the point where it considers
doctrine a detriment to true spiritual life. Consider, for example, this
quote which is taken from the book of Ian R. K. Paisley. He writes about
someone involved in a revival who was asked concerning whether or not he
was a Calvinist. This is his answer:
I would not wish to be more or less a Calvinist
than our Lord and His apostles. But I do not care to talk on mere
points of doctrine. I would rather speak of the experience of
salvation in the soul (The '59 Revival [London: Valiant
Press]).
Secondly, this influence of mysticism on revivalism
often results in crass and open false doctrine. This can be illustrated
from The Memoirs of Charles G. Finney (Zondervan,
1989). Charles Finney was a revivalist of the 19th century who worked in
the northeastern part of the United States. In these Memoirs he
tells us of how he repudiated all the fundamental doctrines of
Calvinism, including the vicarious nature of the atonement of Jesus
Christ, in the interests of preaching revival. He writes:
But my studies, so far as he was concerned as my
teacher, were little else than controversy. He held to the
Presbyterian doctrine of original sin or that the human constitution
was morally depraved. He held also, that men were utterly unable
to comply with the terms of the Gospel, to repent, to believe, or to
do anything that God required them to do. That while they were free
to all evil, in the sense of being able to commit any amount of sin,
yet they were not free in regard to all that was good. That God had
condemned men for their sinful nature; and for this, as well
as for their transgressions, they deserved eternal death, and were
under condemnation. He held also that the influences of the Spirit
of God on the minds of men were physical, acting directly
upon the substance of the soul. That men were passive in
regeneration; and in short he held all those doctrines that
logically flow from the fact of a nature sinful in itself. These
doctrines I could not receive. I could not receive his views on the
subject of atonement, regeneration, faith, repentance, the slavery
of the will, or any of their kindred doctrines (p. 48).
Throughout the book Finney consistently repudiates
and even mocks Calvinism and all it stands for. He speaks openly of free
will and of universal atonement, and even embraces the Arminian doctrine
of perfectionism—that the converted man can free himself from all
known sins. Interestingly enough, he even explains that he adopted what
is today known as "the altar call" (which he called
"summoning sinners to the anxious seat") because he believed
that this method would be a solution to the constant backsliding of
those who earlier had claimed to be converted. Revivalism substitutes
emotions for sound doctrine. Although this cannot be said of all
revivalists, notably of such men as Jonathan Edwards and George
Whitefield, nevertheless for the most part revivalism at best is
disinterested in and careless of doctrine; at worst, it is an enemy of
the truth.
Faith, as our Heidelberg Catechism says, is, though
also confidence in Christ, a certain knowledge whereby I hold for true
all that God has revealed in His Word. That is the amazing wonder of the
Scriptures. When I appropriate the Scriptures and lay hold on their
truth and receive as true all that they teach, I lay hold on Christ. Not
by some emotional high, not by reducing religion to some kind of a
spiritual shot of adrenaline, but by laying hold on the truth of the
Scriptures. And in that way I lay hold on Christ and on God and live in
fellowship with Him. Faith, the faith that brings assurance, true
assurance, an assurance not built on the shifting sands of emotional
experiences which are here today and gone tomorrow, but a faith which is
solid as a rock, a faith which withstands the onslaughts of Satan, a
faith which says with Job, "I know that my Redeemer liveth," a
faith which is the calm, quiet confidence of victory over all our
enemies, over the devil and his hosts and even our own flesh, the faith
which is the victory that overcomes the world. That faith
is knowledge.
A WRONG VIEW OF CONVERSION
All of that brings us to another objection which a
Reformed man brings against revivals: the theory of conversion which is
inherent in revivalism and which is specifically taught by those who
still promote revivals today.
Once again I have to go back to the Puritans,
specifically the later Puritans, the Puritans at the time of the Marrow
controversy in the early part of the 18th century, including the
so-called Marrow men: Thomas Boston, the Erskine brothers, and others.
They emphasized that when the law was preached in the church then the
Holy Spirit could make the law and the preaching of the law instrumental
in bringing people under the conviction of sin. Read, for example, the
diary of Robert McCheyne, an old Puritan divine of this school, and you
will find a diary that is filled with this sort of thing. Under the
preaching of the law, men came under the conviction of sin. That
conviction of sin manifested itself in all of these strange phenomena
which we described. Sometimes this happened to a greater degree than
others, but all agree that law-preaching manifested itself especially in
such terrible fears of hell and of damnation which so gripped the soul
of a man that he was overcome by them. He saw that his condition was
hopeless; he understood that the only way of escape was by a power
greater than himself. This was how the Spirit worked, first of all,
through the preaching of the law.
The wrong of this was that this conviction of sin was
apart from the work of regeneration. It was what the Puritans called,
"preparatory grace." It was what sometimes was called the
"work of the Spirit in His prompting," a phrase that carried
with it the idea that the sinner was prompted to seek Christ. Or, it
created a man who was sometimes called "a seeker"—not
regenerated, not converted, not saved, not a child of God, but one who
possessed that work of the Holy Spirit which, as a preparatory grace,
enabled him to "seek" for salvation. To that man had to be
directed the preaching of the gospel which brought the urgency of taking
Christ, taking hold of Christ, or, as the Puritans were wont to express
it, "closing with Christ." But whether one under the
conviction of sin would actually "close with Christ" was not
certain. He could feel deep sorrow for sin. He could experience the
torments of a guilty conscience. He could long for deliverance and
salvation. But the outcome remained uncertain and the possibility
existed that he could still go to hell.
It was in this context that the Puritans developed
their ideas concerning the free offer of the gospel. One must preach the
gospel and preach Christ's love for all, urging men to "close with
Christ." This could only be done on the basis of the fact that in
some sense Christ, as Thomas Boston put it, was dead for all. Boston did
not want to say that Christ died for all. He insisted only that Christ
was dead for all. But in this way Christ's death could serve as a
"warrant" to all who heard the gospel to close with Christ.
None could say: I will not close with Christ because He did not die for
me. Salvation was offered freely.
The preaching of the gospel, therefore, which urged
one to take Christ into his life, was preaching that made salvation
dependent upon the individual, who was put in this state of preparatory
grace, whether or not at that crucial point in his life he would indeed
take Christ into his heart. What he did would result in his salvation or
in his damnation. Such a one, in other words, who had these promptings
of the Spirit, who was prepared—the Puritans, as you know, developed a
theory of "preparationism"—by the Spirit, and put in a
spiritual frame of mind either to accept Christ or reject Him, is now
left with a decision resting in his hands (cf. Martyn McGeown, "The
Notion of Preparatory Grace in the Puritans").
That is their view of conversion. But that view is
fundamentally Arminian. It places the salvation of the sinner in the
hands of the sinner himself. It places the salvation of the sinner in
the choice or the free will of man, although it is a will prepared by
the Spirit. It makes salvation less than sovereign and is, therefore,
opposed to the Reformed faith.
This error which arose 150 years after Dordt is
already condemned in the Canons of Dordt: "We condemn the
errors of those who teach that the unregenerate man is not really nor
utterly dead in sin, nor destitute of all powers unto spiritual good,
but that he can yet hunger and thirst after righteousness and life, and
offer the sacrifice of a contrite and broken spirit, which is pleasing
to God" (III/IV:R:3). That, says our Canons,
is the error of Arminianism which puts salvation in the hands of man.
Revivalism adopts this same view of conversion and
thus holds to the false doctrine that salvation rests in man's hands. I
know that they would dispute this because they want to appear as
proponents of sovereign grace. Nevertheless, they teach that there is a
common grace worked by the Spirit in the hearts of all, which grace puts
all in a spiritual position to accept or reject Christ. Christ is
presented through the preaching as eminently desirable, as the one who
can deliver them. And they, on their part, though thirsting for
deliverance, though seeing the riches of Christ, though understanding
that in Him alone is escape from sin, though even praying to be
regenerated, may nevertheless still go lost.
This brings us to the theory of conversion promoted
by revivalism in a more specific way. Conversion is, in revivalism,
something that is accompanied by some kind of unusual and extraordinary
experience. This element has always characterized mysticism, either in
medieval Roman Catholic thought, in John Wesley's work, in Puritan
theology, or in revivalistic thinking today. It so happened, when
revivals took place, that those who supposedly came to this pinnacle of
rapturous joy when the soul was united to God had to undergo a very
rigorous examination on the part of the ministers and the elders of the
church to determine whether such a conversion was indeed genuine. And
the criterion which was used to determine the genuineness of such a
conversion was the genuineness of the experience through which one
passed. All of this presupposed not only that a man could give a
rational and intelligible account of his conversion, but also that it
was within the power of the minister and the elders of the church to
evaluate that conversion, to pass judgment upon it, and to determine
whether or not it was indeed genuine. They believed that the devil was
lurking about, especially at times of revival, attempting to imitate the
work of the Holy Spirit and bringing to people wrong experiences,
experiences that arose out of delusion. The devil would bring people to
a false and carnal security in which they had no faith in Christ at all,
but an imitation, a counterfeit faith that would only lead them more
rapidly to hell. The ministers and elders, especially in the Great
Awakening during the time of Jonathan Edwards, would, surprisingly
enough, claim to be able to tell with almost one-hundred per cent
accuracy, whether the conversion of the particular individual was indeed
genuine or whether it was devil-inspired. So many were the conversions
and so busy were the ministers and elders that sometimes these
examinations went on, during periods of revival, day and night. There
was no time for preaching. There was no time for pastoral work. There
was no time for sermon-preparation, because of the vast amounts of time
which were taken up with examining the genuine character of conversions.
Further, such conversions, sudden and profound, not
only became the test of whether one was a genuine Christian, but also
served as the ground of personal assurance of salvation. Indeed, without
such extraordinary experiences, assurance was impossible.
All of that is inimical to the Reformed faith. No man
who is genuinely Reformed can teach that kind of doctrine of conversion.
The Reformed doctrine of conversion is something quite different.
Conversion in Reformed thought, and this is
explicitly stated in our Heidelberg Catechism in Lord's Day 33,
is not an unusual, once-for-all, extraordinary, inexplicable experience
through which one passes from the "dark night of the soul" to
rapturous union with God. But conversion is a daily characteristic of a
believing, regenerated child of God. Conversion ought to take place and
does take place every day of his life. As long as the believing child of
God lives here in this world, he is a believer who does battle with sin,
not only in the world about him, but in his own flesh. He is not yet
perfect. He is not yet brought into the everlasting joy that shall be
the inheritance of the people of God in glory. Here he is in the church
militant. Here he must do battle. Here he carries with him the body of
his death.
Conversion is, as Lord's Day 33 expresses it, "a
daily killing of the old man." That is, conversion is a deep, daily
sorrow for sin. Yet it is also a quickening of the new man. It is a
daily joy that one finds at the foot of the cross when one brings the
burden of his sins to Calvary. A daily conversion, a daily battle, a
daily fleeing from sin, a daily hastening to the cross with an
increasingly urgent longing to leave this life which is nothing but a
continual death in order to be at last in the everlasting perfection of
heaven - that is conversion.
Revivalism scorns this. It mocks the humble sinner,
the humble child of God who fights daily against the sins of his flesh.
It has no time or patience for the daily battle which the believer
fights. It looks for the spectacular. Like Elijah of old it has never
learned that God is not in the earthquake, in the fire, or in the strong
wind; but only in the still, small voice. Revivalism has not learned
what Zechariah had to learn: "Not by might, not by power, but by my
Spirit, saith Jehovah of Hosts. Who hath despised the day of little
things?" Looking for the spectacular, for the exciting, for the
unusual, looking for that which can serve as some kind of ground for
assurance, they find nothing but sinking sand, shaky ground on which to
build one's faith and hope and joy. Nevertheless, conversion is in the
daily, bitter, and fierce battle against sin; it is carried on in the
hearts and lives of the elect children of the covenant; it is
characteristic of the faithful child of God all his life long. This is
the work of conversion and this is the true work of the Spirit.
We must not mock this. We must not turn away from
this as if it is a kind of carnal security, a self-deception, an easy
religion. It is not. It is the hard way. It is the way of daily
struggle. It is the way of groanings and tears. It is the way of fleeing
to the cross. It is the way of casting one's self down in shame at the
foot of Calvary. But it is the way of the joy of salvation in the blood
of Christ. And that Christ is the Christ that is appropriated by faith.
A WRONG VIEW OF THE COVENANT
Another error which is made by those who press for
revivalism is, I am increasingly convinced, an error that has to do with
the doctrine of God's everlasting covenant of grace. I cannot go into
this in detail. I only want to point out, very briefly, in the first
place, that the Reformed doctrine of God's covenant teaches that the
essence of the covenant is that God establishes a bond of friendship and
fellowship with His people through Christ. It is a bond of friendship
and fellowship.
In the second place, however, God establishes His
covenant in the line of believers and their seed. Those who teach
revivals and plead for revivals have quite a different view. They
believe, as you well know, that the church is composed for the most part
of unconverted people. This is the explanation for the spiritual
lethargy, the carnal-mindedness, the formalism in the church. The church
is composed, for the most part, of unconverted people who have to have
the law preached to them if perchance the Spirit would bring them under
the conviction of sin. And the gospel, when those hearers of it come
under the conviction of sin, presents Christ who pleads with them to
"close with Him." The Reformed faith teaches that the church
is not composed predominately of unconverted people. The Reformed faith
teaches, as Calvin did, that on this earth the church always has
hypocrites in her midst, tares among the wheat; nevertheless the church
is composed of believers and their spiritual seed. It is not composed of
unbelievers and unconverted people for the most part. The church is made
up of those who believe in Christ whose children are also children of
the covenant. In the line of generations the elect children of the
covenant are also, as a general rule, regenerated and brought to
conversion in earliest infancy. The children of the church are covenant
children, themselves already regenerated. In their lives also conversion
is a daily turning from sin and turning to God in humble repentance.
That has always been the Reformed view since the time
of Calvin, and it is the Reformed view today. But it stands opposed to
the views of conversion which are promoted by revivalism.
CONCLUSION
Do we pray for revival? No. May we pray for revival?
No. Does this mean that we are not troubled about the condition of the
church? We ought to be and we are. And this precisely means that the
Reformed church is and always ought to be a reforming church.
But we must not confuse church reformation with
revivalism. The two are completely different. Church reformation is the
calling of all the people of God always. But church reformation begins
with the child of God on his knees confessing his sins. There is not
anything more important in church reformation than this. If it does not
start with the Christian daily confessing his sins, there will not be
church reformation.
In confessing his sin and hastening to the cross one
has the beginnings of true church reformation. On our knees we seek the
welfare of Zion. On our knees we seek the peace of Jerusalem. We do not
pray for revival, unusual outpourings of the Spirit, but we pray for the
courage and the grace of the Holy Spirit to be steadfast in the battle;
not to waver, not to compromise, not to be overcome with fear, but to
stand fast in the cause of the truth.
And if it comes to that, as it has in the church of
Christ many times, one must reform the church by leaving a church that
will have nothing any longer of the truth of the gospel. That is
reformation. That is what we seek. That is our calling. May God grant
that to us, may God grant that mighty work of the Spirit which brings
the sinner to his knees but which makes him strong and courageous in the
assurance of the cross in the battle in the church here below.