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Revival Under
Samuel
By
Ernest Baker
“And Samuel spake unto all the house of Israel, saying: If ye do
return unto the Lord with all your hearts, then put away the
strange gods and Ashtaroth from among you, and prepare your
hearts unto the Lord, and serve Him only; and He will deliver
you out of the hand of the Philistines.” I Samuel vii. 3.
BOTH the religious and the national life of Israel were at a low
ebb. For years an old and feeble priest had been at the head of
affairs. His sons ministered in the priest’s office. They were
covetous and immoral, and used their position for their own vile
ends. The offerings of the Lord were consequently abhorred.
Their father, Eli, had not the courage to deal with them as a
parent should, or to purify the service of the Lord’s house, as
the position of high priest required him to do. The service of
God was neglected and in disrepute. At this time the Philistines
came against the people, and inflicted upon them a severe
defeat. In their extremity the Israelites sent for the ark of
God. They did not inquire into the moral reasons why the Lord’s
help was not forthcoming. They turned superstitiously to a
symbol instead of to the living God. Their religion was one of
externals only, and was altogether independent of questions of
character. With the ark in their midst they fought another
battle with the Philistines, but were defeated more disastrously
than ever. The ark itself was taken, the priests were slain, and
Shiloh, their national centre and the meeting place of their
faith, was laid waste. For 20 years they were under the heel of
the Philistines, and had no place where they gathered to worship
God. Though the ark was returned by their oppressors, it was
consigned to a private house. It was no longer a rallying point
for their faith. Then the people began to lament after the Lord.
They became conscious of His absence. There was a power and a
blessing, once enjoyed, but now missed. The presence of the
living God was their need.
How this yearning found expression we do not know, but we have,
in our text, the answer that Samuel gave to their longing. The
instructions were obeyed. With all their heart they sought and
served the Lord. A national assembly was convened, and
ceremonies, expressive of their contrition and of their
whole-hearted surrender to God, were observed. They confessed
their sins, and individual cases were judged by Samuel, and his
judgements were accepted. Then the Philistines gathered against
them again. Samuel prayed for deliverance; and, before a blow
was struck by them either in self-defence or for liberty, the
power of the Lord was made manifest. In a thunderstorm He
appeared and discomfited their foes. They saw that He was once
more amongst them; and, acting under the inspiration of this,
they pursued their enemies and were delivered out of their
hands. National deliverance followed a general revival of
religious faith and practice. The points we will notice in this
story are: The Cause, The Conditions, and The Consequences of
Revival.
I. THE CAUSE OF REVIVAL.
In our study of the revival under Moses in Egypt, we noticed
that God is the great first, moving cause in such an event. That
fact remains concerning all real religious awakenings. In this
story we deal, however, with the secondary cause.
The human cause was Samuel. He was the instrument that God used.
When quite a boy the Lord had spoken to him and given him His
first message. This was one of warning and rebuke to Eli for the
careless way in which he dealt with his family and supervised
the Lord’s work. After that “the Lord appeared again in Shiloh:
for the Lord revealed Himself to Samuel in Shiloh by the word of
the Lord. And the word of Samuel came to all Israel.” That is
the record of 20 years before the revival. But the work that
produced the great awakening began then. Our text must not be
regarded as an isolated utterance of the great prophet at the
end of the twenty years, but as an epitome of the message which,
during that period, he was continually giving. The burden of his
preaching was that the reason for their defeat and oppression
was moral. The nation would not revive until religion revived.
If there was a widespread reformation in their lives the Lord
would give them deliverance. For twenty years Samuel preached
this. It took all that time for it to sink into their minds. But
it bore its fruit at last. The revival seemed sudden when it
came, but it was the result of years of patient labour. This is
a lesson we need to learn.
A revival is sadly needed in this land. The religious life is
low. Morality is conspicuous by its absence in much of our
business life. Men have little conscience in the matter of debt.
Gambling is indulged in to an alarming extent. Social evils
grow. Not only are divorces on the increase, but the number of
wives and families abandoned by their husbands is very great. An
awakening that will touch the consciences of men is needed if
religion is to be an aggressive force, and if our social,
commercial and civic life is to be saved from ruin. With these
facts before us, and encouraged by the Welsh Revival, we have
begun to pray and work for revival. After a short time many have
become discouraged. We see no great movement, and we think we
have expected too much. We begin to explain that the Revival in
Wales is largely a matter of temperament, that the people are
emotional, and naturally religious. We say it is impossible to
have such a revival here. Our circumstances are so different,
our populations are so mixed, we have such a mass of
anti-Christian element. Judaism, Mahommedanism, Hindooism,
Confucianism—all number their adherents by the thousand. The
emigrants from Continental Europe have a lower moral standard
than the British and the Dutch, and a greater mixture of
superstition with their religion. All these combine against the
atmosphere that would issue in a revival. But our God is equal
to all this. The special difficulties are a challenge to His
power and to our faith. The greater the difficulty and the need,
the greater the reason for a revival. But we must have patience.
We must be prepared to work long, and to do what, in the
political world, Lord Rosebery calls spade work. God’s best
things can only be given to those who show appreciation of their
value by persistent desire and effort to obtain them. The
spasmodic prayers that represent flitting desires, though they
are good, He does not answer. The prayers which reveal the
settled longing of the heart are the prayers He heeds. And it
takes time to reveal that such desires are possessed by us.
Some may be inclined to say: “If we only had a man like Samuel
amongst us we should soon have a revival. But we lack an
outstanding leader.” Wales has given us the answer to this. The
work there is the work of no one man. God has used many men, and
many of humble origin. There is a story told concerning the
football team of Harvard University which is also appropriate to
this. For several seasons the Harvard team was beaten by those
from the Yale and Pennsylvania Universities. Three young men
gave themselves to the task of finding the cause, and also a
remedy. The tide of defeat was stayed, and then it turned to
victory. One day, after beating Yale by 28 to nil, a friend
enquired about the new plan, and received a reply to the effect
that every member of the old team was a star. Each was the best
in his own particular line, and each played his own particular
part, but the playing was that of individuals. “Now,” he said,
“we have only one star, but we have a team. We all work
together.” Is there not in that a hint for us? A number of us
working together can equal a Samuel. With faith in and
consecration to God, and with a conviction of the need of and
desire for revival, the blessing can come through us.
II. THE CONDITIONS OF REVIVAL.
1. Earnestness.—”
If ye do return unto the Lord with all your hearts,” said
Samuel. That is, if you are in earnest, then put away, the
strange gods. Nothing that is required to bring revival can be
done unless, first of all, there be whole-heartedness. “If you
mean business,” Samuel seems to say, “I can give you the
programme, but it turns upon this, ‘If with all your hearts.’”
But this earnestness that must precede everything else must
continue throughout and permeate the remaining conditions. After
putting away comes: "Prepare your hearts unto the Lord,” or
“set” or “make firm your hearts.” Also "serve Him only.’’ The
whole thing must be done with the entire being.
John Collett Ryland, in the eighteenth century, at the age of
20, wrote these words: “If there is ever a God in heaven or
earth, I vow and protest, in His strength, or that God
permitting me, I’ll find Him out; and I’ll know whether He loves
or hates me; or I’ll die and perish, soul and body, in the
pursuit and search.” Ryland not only found God, but became one
of His ministers. Within six years of writing this he was called
to be the pastor of a Baptist church. Such earnestness cannot
fail of finding God. “The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence,
and the violent take it by force.”
2. Repentance.—Though
the people had forgotten God they had not altogether discarded
religion. In the place of the true they had put the false. The
false gods and the practices connected therewith must now be put
on one side. Whilst the mind was occupied with other gods, the
true God could not be seen. The heart must be wholly turned to
Him to see Him; and in order to do this that which filled the
vision must be put on one side. In this country we have not to
face the substitution of a false religion for the true, so much
as we have to face the substitution of the things of this life
for the eternal. “The pure in heart shall see God." The reverse
is true : “The impure shall not see Him.” Lust blinds the eyes
to God. Men cannot see Him, or be sure of Him, when they are
lustful. It is easy and natural to be sceptical when impure.
Money is as blinding to the true vision as lust. If men are
wholly occupied with the pursuit of wealth, and are determined
upon getting money, they cannot see God. It is not a question so
much of whether the methods of getting it are justifiable or
unscrupulous, as it is the absorption in the pursuit of it. A
man who has no time for anything else but business, though he
run his business honestly, will find that God is outside his
vision. His whole horizon is filled with that which absorbs him.
Men must turn from the whole-hearted pursuit of money if they
would get right with God.
Ambition is equally blinding. “How can ye believe,” Christ said,
“which receive honour one of another, and seek not the honour
that cometh from God only?” If the praise of our fellows be the
dominant motive of our life we cannot find God. If we are
prevented from taking our stand for Him, simply because it would
mean the contempt of those whose good will we value, we shall
find it impossible to be refreshed and helped by His presence.
The inspiring, comforting, purifying effect of His presence is
worth every sacrifice; and anything that is first, and places
Him in a secondary position, must be put on one side.
This repentance includes confession. The children of Israel
gathered at Mizpah and said:
“We have sinned against the Lord.” The facts of one’s life must
be faced. The sins must be acknowledged. The responsibility for
them must be taken. The blame must not be put upon
circumstances. True confession is accepting the guilt. “If we
confess our sins He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins.
But confession is not completed by making a secret
acknowledgment unto the Lord. If our sins have been against
individuals, and these are within reach of our word, the
confession must be made ‘to them. “Confess your faults one to
another, and pray one for another, that ye may be healed,” says
James. “Samuel judged the children of Israel in Mizpah.” The
individual cases came before him, and wrongs were righted.
Relationships that were discordant were made harmonious. When
people are ready to make up their quarrels revival is not far
off.
III. THE CONSEQUENCES OF REVIVAL.
1. Unity — The Book of Judges concludes with the sentence:
“Every man did that which was right in his own eyes.” There was
no recognized head. Eli, as high priest, never rallied or united
the people. Not till Samuel came was the old unity restored. Now
“all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord.” “Samuel spake
unto all the house of Israel.” “And Samuel said: Gather all
Israel to Mizpah.”
Revival always means unity. In Wales the churches have never
been so one as at the present time. Though the distinctive rite
of the Baptists has been more in evidence than ever, 40,000 out
of the 8o,ooo converts having been publicly baptised, the
harmony of the churches has not been disturbed. In spite of the
fierce controversy over the Education Act, Church of England
clergymen have joined with the ministers of the Free Churches in
the meetings for prayer and the care of the converts. The points
of agreement are seen to be more; and whilst individual
convictions are not lessened, they do not divide the workers.
In South Africa revival would mean not only greater unity
amongst the churches, but amongst our various races. The great
mission of Gipsy Smith brought together in the centres he
visited men who had been separated for years, and, that kind of
thing would be multiplied throughout the land if revival should
sweep over it like a great wave.
2. Conflict — The children of Israel could not bestir themselves
without their gathering appearing to be a challenge to the
Philistines. Sooner or later the two powers must be pitted one
against the other. Revival does not mean ease. It is a
preparation for work. It will either arouse the organized forces
of evil into open hostility, or it will compel the Christian
forces to attack them more seriously.
3. Deliverance — “And He will deliver you out of the hand of the
Philistines!” When the religious life of a country is low the
wicked prosper, and at the expense of the majority of the
people. Drinking corporations flourish, monopolies and trusts
come to great estate, wealth is amassed without any
consideration for those who are pushed on one side. Dividends
have to be paid, and corporations are heartless. Revival means a
great awakening of the public conscience, and with that
awakening deliverance from greed and selfishness and corruption
will follow.
This article originally appeared
here.
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