Summary: Any outpouring of the Spirit has its origin in the heart of God Himself. But, it’s birthed in the burden of believers who are in prayer.

Revival: A Surprising Move of God (Pt.2)

September 9, 2015 CFBC, Chester, IL Dr. Mike Fogerson

A “Lord, what will You have me to do?”

1 On September 23, 1857, Jeremiah Lanphier (a missionary, street corner preacher, door-to-door soul winner) prayed this prayer out of a heart that was broken for the people of New York.

a Within two months of Lanphier praying this prayer to God, there would be 50,000 gathering in prayer meetings.

b Any outpouring of the Spirit has its origin in the heart of God Himself. But, it’s birthed in the burden of believers who are in prayer.

2 Matthew Henry, “When God desires to do a fresh work, He sets His people to praying.”

a The Laymen’s Prayer Revival of 1857-59, considered by Perry Miller of Harvard to be the most important event of that century, started with a desperate, concerted prayer from the ordinary church members.

b The fires of the Second Great Awakening (1787-1843) had grown cold, churches became stagnant.

aa Most churches were not growing enough to outpace the losses they were sustained by death, removal, or discipline, while a widespread indifference to religion became prevalent during the years leading up to the Layman’s Prayer Revival.

bb Our nation was rich, doing well: President James Buchanan said on March 4, 1857, “No nation has ever before been embarrassed from too large a surplus in its treasury.” During the same inaugerial speech he said that corruption was thriving as the result of the love of money over public virtue.

cc “Men forgot God in pursuit of gold.” one writer described the national landscape.

B At the height of this economic boon, the bottom dropped out of our economy (October 14, 1857, btw, a Shemitah year) and the east coast was financially decimated.

1 Preachers were saying that the collapse was God’s judgement of America’s sin. (Called their congregations to prayer, fasting)

a Some revival historians see the Layman’s Prayer Revival simply as a knee jerk reaction to the economic panic.

aa Samuel Prime, editor of the daily New York Observer, observed that the prayers had began prior to the bank collapse.

bb However, when people didn’t have jobs . . . they had plenty of time to go to prayer meetings.

b As a nation, we were also feeling the tensions of slavery (Nation was divided, ideologically, economically, racially).

2 The Layman’s Prayer Revival wasn’t planned, organized, under the leadership of one person . . . not one voice calling for “revival.”

a It was birthed from the hearts of the believers in individual churches, across denominations.

aa However, the revival that would take place nationally would start in the same place that every awakeing occurs, “pleas for explicit agreement and visible union of the people of God in extraordinary prayer for revival of religion and the advancement of Christ’s kingdom on earth.” -Jonathan Edwards (1740's)

bb This awakening didn’t come as a river at first . . . started in puddles (Here & there)

b In 1857, FBC Beaufort, South Carolina baptized 428 people in 4 months, a similiar move took place at a Methodist churches in Columbia.

aa In Pittsfield, Massachusetts, one out 15 residents came to Christ.

bb God was sending revival rain to localized congregations and didn’t notice the signs on the lawn, but the hearts of the laity.

cc Presbyterians, Methodist, and began in North Dutch Reformed Church on Fulton Street in New York City.

c Lanphier’s meeting started with an hour-prayer meeting at that church from 12 to 1 in the afternoon (free/spontanous).

aa The first meeting, he was alone, then by the end of the hour six; next meeting 20, next meeting 30-40.

bb October 14 (over 100), people started getting saved, within a six months 50 thousand were meeting in NY to pray . . . in other cities, thousands more would be praying for their city.

3 The thing about the Layman’s Prayer Revival is that most the churches that experienced revival were unnoticed churches.

a “I have reason to know, and with intense pleasure stated here, that some of the most remarkably favored churches have been those that are out of the great centers of attraction, in the retired or waste places of the city.”

b Another difference, free of emotional excess that characterized the second great awakening/camp meetings.

aa Prayer Revival was marked with calm, deep solemnity.

bb Witness,”The most crowded meetings were solemn by their deep and strange stillness; the most thorough conviction and terrible anxiety showed themselves in concentrated meditation and half-suppressed and deep drawn signs; while the joy and hope and forgiveness told of its presence by tears which made the eyes they moistened more radiant than ever.”

c The Prayer Revival touched every city in the Midwest: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Louisville, Indianapolis, Detroit, Chicago, and St. Louis.

aa In Indiana 150 towns experienced revival.

bb In 2 months in Ohio, 200 hundred towns recorded 12K conversions.

d My favorite story of the Prayer Revival: (pg. 261)

e 4 Sailors aboard the battleship North Carolina docked at New York Harbor, started a prayer meeting on-board, some of the ungodly crew mocked them, fell under conviction and cried out to God in mercy.

aa From this harbor, Revival was exported to Britian.

bb Charles H. Spurgeon, witnessed perpetual revival while pastor at Metropolitan Tabernacle in London.

*His Call

*What he saw

cc Next Wednesday night, Welsh Revival & Azuza

C College campuses: Oberlin, Amherst, Dartmouth, Williams, Yale (447 students, nearly half got saved), Princeton (272 students, 102 got saved.) (Birth of the YMCA)

1 The prayer revival was unique: it brought churches together, differences were put aside for the united cause of revival.

a Almost every denomination saw increase in the 1850's. (Baptists saw 650 new churches birthed.)

b William Booth (Salvation Army) was saved during the Prayer Revial.

c The revival in Chicago (YMCA) is where a young man got saved that changed way “crusades” were done: D.L. Moody. . . ministry went international before the first Jets filled the sky.

2 What I’m most impressed with is . . . the prayer revival got the laity engaged/involved. (People took time off work to go witness to others, go to prayer meeting)

a They wanted revival, awakening . . . they we’re where the fire was started.

b Spurgeon would be preaching, and he had people praying in the basement while he was preaching. He called it, “the furnace.”

3 Why not us? (There’s nothing magical about a noon prayer meeting. God can answer our cries for revival at this hour . . . from the spiritual inheritors to the blessings that the Prayer Revival brought in the late 1850's.)

a It all started with Lanphier’s simple prayer, “Lord, what you have me do?

b I challenge you tonight to make his prayer yours, “Lord, what you have me do?”

Notice to Sermon Central Users:

My name is Mike Fogerson, and I pastor a Southern Baptist Church in Chester, Illinois. I have been a long-time user of Sermon Central and truly appreciate its content and contributors. Some of the best sermons I’ve ever preached have been reworked material from this website. As you use the material from my sermon bank, understand that it is work that has been done from not just myself, but from hundreds of other pastors as well. If you see part of your message, or a bunch of your message with my name on it and this upsets you, please email me and I will quickly respond and cite you as the main source. My intent is not to claim someone’s work as my own. I am disclaiming up front that I use the resources from Sermon Central and appreciate the tool. I simply want all those who use my work to know that some of these messages were inspired by the Holy Spirit working through other pastors. Because I do use the messages of other pastors I waive all claims of originality or origin of creativity for the messages posted under my messages. I pray God blesses your preaching ministry for the glory of His Kingdom.

Respectfully,

Mike Fogerson