Preface
In our day of spiritual superficiality and anemic
Christianity, characterized by sin-infested pulpits and
indifferent pews, the subject of revival is nonetheless a
popular one. Few who talk of it, however, have the faintest idea
what a real moving of God is all about. Impressive financial
holdings, ornate edifices of worship, statistical proofs of
"success," and mind-boggling technological sophistications
merely mask the spiritual bankruptcy within the Church as a
whole today. We are indeed poor in spirit. The real problem is,
we seem completely incapable of even beginning to recognize just
how spiritually poor we have become. We lean to our own
understanding, make peace with our pet sins, deem ourselves to
be rich and increased with goods and in need of nothing, all the
while piddling piously with ideas of revival.
But revival can
never be piddled with. It is very, very costly. Duncan Campbell,
in this heart-stirring message of personal and corporate
revival, strikes the taproot of the genuine working of God among
His people. Such revival is rare, priceless and exceedingly
costly. Campbell captures the spirit of God's desire to work,
and carefully delineates both God's sovereign moving and man's
responsibility to respond to the promptings of the Spirit of
God.
This world has witnessed God's sovereign dealings through the
humblest of men, often at the darkest hours in history. We
remember the rebirth of Martin Luther and the Reformation that
followed. The Puritans obeyed God's Word with abandonment in the
midst of a wicked generation. The Spirit moved mightily upon the
congregation of the dry preacher Jonathan Edwards and affected
an entire generation. The eighteenth century saw the powerfully
convicting work of Charles Finney, the nineteenth had its great
New York prayer revival and the early twentieth century heralded
a phenomenal spiritual awakening in Wales.
The cry of our day is, "Where is the Lord God of Elijah?" The
question might better be asked, "Where are the Elijahs of the
Lord God?"
While there is much
prayer today, there is little of the humility that is behind it
that characterized the life of Duncan Campbell. Here is a
message by this great servant of our century. It is hot with the
breath of God. It needs to be read and reread upon our knees
until it burns its way into the hearts of the people of God and
out through their lives. The truth is here to kindle the flame.
Are we ignitable? May God once again drench us with the oil of
the Spirit and set us ablaze!
Introduction
Now will you turn with me to a very familiar passage of
scripture. You will find it in the book of Psalm. And together
we shall read Psalms 85:
"LORD, thou hast
been favourable unto thy land: thou hast brought back the
captivity of Jacob. Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy
people, thou hast covered all their sin. Selah. Thou hast taken
away all thy wrath: thou hast turned thyself from the fierceness
of thine anger. Turn us, O God of our salvation, and cause thine
anger toward us to cease. Wilt thou be angry with us forever?
wilt thou draw out thine anger to all generations? Wilt thou not
revive us again: that thy people may rejoice in thee? Shew us
thy mercy, O LORD, and grant us thy salvation. I will hear what
God the LORD will speak: for he will speak peace unto his
people, and to his saints: but let them not turn again to folly.
Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him; that glory may
dwell in our land. Mercy and truth are met together;
righteousness and peace have kissed each other. Truth shall
spring out of the earth; and righteousness shall look down from
heaven. Yea, the LORD shall give that which is good; and our
land shall yield her increase. Righteousness shall go before
him; and shall set us in the way of his steps." (Psalm 85:1-13
KJV)
The Lord will bless
that reading from His Word. Now, will you turn with me to verse
6. We might read verses 5 and 6, "Wilt thou be angry with us for
ever? wilt thou draw out thine anger to all generations? Wilt
thou not revive us again: that thy people may rejoice in thee?"
I mentioned the other evening that I would be speaking this
afternoon on principles that govern spiritual quickening, and I
would also tell you something of how God in mercy met with me
and brought revival to this heart and life of mine.
"Wilt thou not
revive us again that thy people...thy people...may rejoice in
Thee." These words of the Psalmist express the heart cry of many
of God's dear children today. There is without question a
growing conviction in many quarters that unless revival comes,
that is, a God-sent revival, other forces that are out to defy
every known Christian principle will take the field.
Indeed, the
observant eye can already see shadows around the world that are
ripening and ripening fast for repentance and judgment. With
that conviction there seems to be a growing hunger and so deep
the longing that the cry of the prophet of old is frequently
heard upon the lips of God's children.
Our Only Hope is
Revival
"Oh, that thou wouldest rend the heavens, that thou wouldest
come down that the mountains might flow down at thy presence"
(Isaiah 64:1,2). You will observe that in the prayer of the
prophet two fundamental things are suggested. That unless God
comes down, mountains will not flow and sinners will not
tremble. But if God comes down, if God manifests His power, if
God shows His hand, if God takes the field, mountains will flow
... mountains of indifference, mountains of materialism,
mountains of humanism, will flow before His presence, and
nations, not just individuals, but nations, shall be made to
tremble.
We haven't seen
nations trembling, but we have seen communities; we have seen
districts; we have seen parishes in the grips of God in a matter
of hours when God comes down!
It is true that we have seen man's best endeavor in the field of
evangelism leaving communities untouched. We have seen crowded
churches. We have seen many professions. We have seen hundreds,
yes, and thousands responding to what you speak of here as the
altar call. But I want to say this, dear people, and I say it
without fear of contradiction, that you can have all that
without God! Now, that may startle you, but I say again, you can
have all that on mere human levels!
Howard Spring was
right when he wrote, "The kingdom of God is not going to advance
by our churches becoming filled with men, but by men in our
churches becoming filled with God." And there's a difference!
Oh, no! Crowded churches, deep interest in church activity is
possible on mere human levels leaving the community untouched!
The Difference
Between Evangelism and Revival
The difference in successful evangelism, (and I use the word
'successful,') and revival is this: In evangelism, the two, the
three, the ten, the twenty, and possibly the hundred make
confessions of Jesus Christ, and at the end of the year you are
thankful if half of them are standing. But the community remains
untouched. The public houses are crowded, the dances, dancing
ballrooms, packed. The theater and the picture houses are
patronized by the hundreds. No change in the community!
But in revival, when
God the Holy Ghost comes, when the winds of heaven blow,
suddenly the community becomes God-conscious! A God-realization
takes hold of young, middle-aged and old. So that, as in the
case of the Hebrides Revival, 75% of those saved one night were
saved before they came near a meeting!
"The fear of God is
the beginning of wisdom." That is where the difference comes in
between evangelism and revival, and that is why I say our only
hope is not in crusades. Thank God for all that has been
accomplished! Thank God for all that is being done through
missions! I represent a mission in Scotland. We have also
workers in Canada, and we thank God for all that is being
accomplished through the efforts of ministers and evangelists
and Christian workers, bringing one here and two there to a
saving knowledge of Jesus. But our supreme need and the only
answer to the problem that confronts the Christian church today
is a visitation from God!
Revival at
Berneray
Let me illustrate what I mean by an incident that happened, not
in Lewis, or Uist, but on the small island of Berneray. I was
addressing the Bangor Convention. The Bangor Convention is
perhaps one of the largest conventions in Britain. I was sitting
in the pulpit beside the chairman of the convention and the
other speaker when I was suddenly gripped by the conviction that
I had to leave the convention, and leave at once, and go to this
island. I turned to the chairman and told my convictions, "Oh,"
he said, "you cannot leave the convention. You are down to
giving the closing address with this convention!" So, to make a
long story short, it was agreed that I should leave the
convention. I left the following morning by plane to the city of
Glasgow, and from Glasgow by plane to the town of Stornoway, and
then by car across the island where a ferryboat met me and took
me to this island of, say, 500 inhabitants.
On arriving, I met a
young lad. I said nothing to the man who ferried me across. They
were strangers to me. I was never on the island, and to my
knowledge no one on the island had ever met me. But I was there.
And I said to the man that met me, "Would you direct me to the
nearest minister?"
"We have no minister
on the island. Just now both churches are vacant."
"Would you then
direct me to the nearest elder?"
"Yes, the nearest
elder lives in that house on the hill."
So I said to the
lad, "Do you mind going up to the elder and telling him that Mr.
Campbell has come to the island? And if he asks, 'What
Campbell?' tell him the Campbell that was on the Island of
Lewis."
So that the young
lad went up and after a few minutes came back and said, "Hector
McKennon was expecting you to arrive today. And you are to stay
with his brother. And he asked me to tell you that he has
initiated a meeting at the church at 9:00 tonight and he expects
you to address it."
The Secret of
Revival at Berneray
Now, explain that as you will. Here was a man who on the morning
of the day that I sat in the church of Bangor Island, decided to
spend the day in prayer. He was concerned about the parish,
particularly about the state of the young people growing up in a
state of indifference to God and to the church. And his wife
told me that on three occasions she went to the door of the barn
where he was praying and she heard him pray, "God, I do not know
where he is, but you know, and you send him."
About 10:00 that
evening he was possessed of the conviction that God heard his
cry and that I would be on the island on this particular day.
Hence, the initiation that I would preach in the church at 9:00
that evening.
We went to the
church. Quite a considerable congregation gathered - about 80.
The service was a very ordinary service. Indeed, at the end, I
wondered after all if I was led to the island. But there were
men there nearer to God than I was. My dear people, we've got to
be honest!
This old man that I
already referred to came to me and said, "I hope you are not
disappointed that revival has not come to the church tonight.
But God is hovering over us, and He will break through any
minute!"
Here was a man near
to God! "The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him."
God has Come!
We are now walking down from the church. The church is on a
hillock, the main road is down about 300 yards below the church.
The congregation is moving down and we are walking behind them
when suddenly..oh, this is what I am getting at, noting the
difference between evangelism and revival ... suddenly, the
elder stands, takes off his hat, "Stand, Mr. Campbell. God has
come! God has come! See what is happening!" And I looked toward
the congregation and I saw them falling on their knees among the
heather. I heard the cries of the penitent. And that meeting
that began at 11:00 that night continued on the hillside until
4:00 in the morning.
The island was
suddenly gripped by God! Was it because Campbell went to the
island? Banish the thought!
I thank God for the
privilege, and how thankful I am that I was near enough to God
in that pulpit to hear His voice. I have often thought of that.
Oh, I've often thought of it! If I was out of touch with God -
if I was in the place where I couldn't hear the voice of the
Savior, the voice of God, would Berneray have missed that mighty
visitation that shook that island from center to circumference.
I question if there
was one single house on the island that wasn't visited that
night! An awareness of God, a consciousness of God, seemed to
hover over the very atmosphere! The very atmosphere seemed to be
charged with the power of Almighty God! That is Revival!
Note the principle
brought into operation. If my people called by my name, humble
themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their
wicked ways, then will I in heaven hear, come, and heal their
land.
There was at least
one man on that island who fulfilled the conditions of that one
passage of Scripture, and because he fulfilled the conditions,
God, being a covenant-keeping God, must be true to His covenant
engagements. And God, to vindicate His own honor, had to listen
to the prayers of the parish postman who knelt in a barn for a
day.
The principles that
govern spiritual quickening ...Oh, that God may find a people
ready to fulfill and to comply with the governing principles
relative to spiritual quickening.
The Origin of
Revival
Now, let me touch first of all on the origin of revival. You
have it in this verse. "Wilt Thou not revive us again."
My dear people, we
do well to remember that in the whole field of Christian
experience, the first step is, and remains, with God. We want to
remember that. Thought, feeling, endeavor must find their basis,
must find their inspiration in the sovereign mercy of God. Now I
believe that. I believe it with all my heart.
I remember making
that statement at a conference outside London some time ago. And
at the close of the conference the chairman overhead a certain
titled lady say, "That was a wonderful address that we listened
to, but I don't agree with all that he said, particularly to the
sovereignty of God. But we must not forget that the dear man was
born and brought up among the hills of Scotland, and that is his
background and he can't help it."
My dear people, let
me say again, in the field of revival, God is sovereign! But, I
hasten to say, that I do not believe in any conception of
sovereignty that nullifies man's responsibility. God is the God
of revival, but we are the human agents through which revival is
possible. And God found that man in the postman of Berneray.
I believe this to be
the reason for so few making contact with Christ that is vital;
to me, one of the most disturbing factors of present-day
evangelism (let me say, present-day evangelism) is the
over-emphasis on what man can do. "Come to the front. Raise your
hand. Respond to the altar call. Come to Jesus and be happy!"
God have mercy on us! I say, God have mercy on us! Man, in the
final analysis, can do nothing but throw himself on the
sovereign mercy of God! Oh, let's get that clear. That is not
Highland Theology. It's New Testament Theology! It's Old
Testament Theology! I'm tired, positively tired of the gospel of
simple believism!
The Difference
Between Human Faith and Saving Faith
Oh, there is a difference between human faith and saving faith!
I heard a prominent evangelist in Britain say something that
really startled me. He said, "You exercise faith in a plane. You
go into that plane and you exercise faith that that plane will
take you to your destination. You go into a steamer and you
exercise faith in the steamer and the captain and the crew to
take you to your destination. Exercise that faith in the
promises of God." Did you ever hear or listen to such nonsense?
That is human faith! It is not given by God!
Oh, Calvin was right, and I love to quote him, although I am not
an extreme Calvinist - though I'm a Highlander. Calvin said, "We
are saved through faith alone, but the faith that saves is never
alone." God is in it! Surely that is what Paul tells us in that
great passage. "I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless, I
live. Yet not I, but Christ, He liveth in me. The life that I
now live in the flesh I live by the" -- faith of Paul? Oh, no!
That wouldn't get him very far. "I live by the faith of the Son
of God." The faith of God.
Harvests of
Infidels or Believers?
Now, I'm convinced of this, that if this truth was stressed,
there would be less appeals. If this truth was stressed, our
crusades and campaigns would not be producing harvests of
infidels.
If men and women
would but recognize that glorious truth - "They shall seek me
and shall find me when they shall search for me with all their
heart." That means that they may not find Him tonight. They may
not find Him tomorrow night. They may not find Him next week.
They may not find Him for a month or for six months , but if
they are seeking God with all their hearts, they're going to
find Him, or God is not true to His covenant engagement.
Oh, let's get this clear. It comes into revival. That is why I
could count upon my five fingers all that I spoke to about their
soul during the whole of the three years I was in the midst of
it. (1949-53).
You see, in the
Northwest of Scotland, if you were to press yourself and your
advance and your help upon an anxious soul, he would be inclined
to believe that it was man's work...just man's work. And he
would much rather be left to God so that God Himself would
handle him. That is why we have known people for weeks and
longer in distress of soul before light broke in upon them.
No Backsliders
You go back to those villages today - I'm glad I see Mr.
McFarland of the Faith Mission here. He was up on Lewis not so
very long ago. He was in a village that saw the mighty movings
of God. I never spoke to one single person in that village in an
endeavor to help them find the Savior! We just left them to God
and God did it! That is why you haven't a single backslider in
that whole community. Oh, my dear people, when God does a work,
He does it well! You can go back, and you can go back again, and
you'll find them pressing on with the God that revealed, not
only Himself to them, but revealed Himself in them.
Salvation is of God
"God," said David,
"God is the God of our salvation." The fact of ultimate reality
surely is this, that salvation is of God!
I was asked recently
to help a young woman. She was a nurse in Glasgow, now home in
the Hebrides, and she was in terrible distress of soul, and the
distress continued for a long period. Her father thought that
perhaps a word from me might help her, so I called and I found
the young woman in a terrible state, fearfully distressed about
her soul. The sense of guilt, the sense of unworthiness, and
behind it all, the question: "Am I in the covenant...Am I in the
covenant?" So I knelt beside her and did my best to help her,
and I quoted that great verse of Scripture that I so often
quote, John 10:27, "My sheep hear my voice and I know them and
they follow me and I give unto them Eternal Life and they shall
never perish, neither can any man pluck them out of my Father's
hand." And I quoted it again, and I tried to point out the two
supreme characteristics of the sheep for whom Christ died. They
hear his voice and they follow Him!
Have you heard His
voice? Oh, have you heard His voice, young people? Have you
heard His voice? It is different from the voice of man! The
voice of the Shepherd speaking the word of conviction, speaking
the word of pardon, speaking the word of assurance, speaking the
word of power. Have you heard the voice of the Shepherd?
I spoke along these
lines, and then she looked at me through her tears and said,
"Mr. Campbell, I thank you for your kindly words of counsel, but
surely, surely, as a minister, you believe that a verse of
Scripture won't save you?"
Have you got it? Oh,
have you got it?
Extensive
Delusion About Salvation!
There are thousands today living under a self-created delusion,
and a delusion given birth to in our evangelical crusades, who
have nothing to rest upon but a verse of Scripture. Are you
saved by a verse of Scripture?
Listen to the poet,
"The promise can't save though the promise is sure. It is the
blood we get under that cleanses us through. It cleanses me now.
Hallelujah to God! I rest on the promise but I'm under the
blood!" That's it! That's it! "Beyond...beyond...the sacred page
I see Thee, Lord...I seek thee, Lord...my spirit yearns for
Thee, thou living Word."
Tell me, has the living Word spoken? Has the living Word spoken,
or are you just holding on to a verse of Scripture?
So she said, "Surely
you are not suggesting that a verse of Scripture will save me?"
"My heart cries for Jesus!" That's it! "My heart cries for
Jesus!" And Jesus, four or five days after that, revealed
Himself in her...revealed Himself in her! And she was gloriously
saved. And today she rests upon the promise, she feeds upon the
Word - that brings her to Jesus.
Revival Where the
Bible Is Unknown
Oh, let's get this clear. It is a truth we want to lay hold of.
And it becomes so wonderfully real in revival. People have said
to me, "But you see, Mr. Campbell, up there they know the Word
of God and the Holy Spirit has ground to work on. They are not
tied up with this doctrine and that doctrine and the other
doctrine."
But listen friends.
God sweeps into communities where the Word of God, to a large
extent, is unknown. There are such communities in Britain,
almost pagan. But I've seen God sweeping into such communities.
For instance, the Midland of England just recently, sweeping
into a godless community, and suddenly men and women
understanding perfectly what it means to be born again and what
it means to be sanctified, who, before the moving of God knew
nothing or could not understand what Christ meant by saying,
"You must be born again." That's why I say there's hope for any
community when God takes the situation in hand. |