The Missing Ingredient for the Next Great Awakening
“What lack I yet?” was the question the rich young ruler asked Jesus, after declaring that he had kept all the commandments (Matt. 19:20, KJV). Jesus gave him an answer he did not like, and he went away sorrowful.
Many years ago, I asked the Lord that same question, “What lack I yet?”
The answer came back, “True humility.”
If the modern church asked that same question regarding a Great Awakening, I suspect the answer would be “True humility.”
This is confirmed by the fact that humility comes first in the conditions listed for a national healing in 2 Chronicles 7:14a (MEV). God said, “If My people, who are called by My name, will humble themselves.”
Signs of Pride in the Modern Church
The opposite of humility is pride. The middle letter of pride is “I,” and in pride the “I,” or ego, becomes central, and we look for ways to lift ourselves in the eyes of our contemporaries. Pride has many symptoms, but one of the most obvious is an unhealthy love of titles.
I will never forget picking up a Christian tabloid in a large metro area on the East Coast where I was ministering. As I turned the pages, I was astounded at all the bishops, archbishops, prelates, apostles, covering-apostles, presiding-apostles, jurisdictional-apostles and so on. One person even had a full-page ad filled with a large photo of herself with a caption underneath that read, “Her Super Eminence, Apostle ___.”
I thought to myself, Can these people be followers of the one who humbled Himself and washed the feet of His disciples, a task reserved for servants and slaves in that culture? Can they be followers of the one who admonished His own disciples not to be like the haughty Jewish leaders, saying, “They love the places of honor at feasts, and the prominent seats in the synagogues, and greetings in the marketplaces, and being called ‘Rabbi’ by men. “But do not be called ‘Rabbi,’ for you have one Teacher, the Christ, and you are all brothers. And call no man on earth your father, for you have one Father, who is in heaven” (Matt. 23:6-9)?
The Call to Humility in the Founding of America
In the many calls to prayer before and after the first Great Awakening, the word “humiliation” was almost always used. For example, the Continental Congress proclaimed Dec. 11, 1776, as a day of “solemn fasting and humiliation” in which all Americans were admonished to plead with God for His assistance in their fight for freedom (Hyatt, 1726: The Year That Defined America, 116).
By humiliation, they did not mean a groveling or self-flagellation, but an acknowledgement of their own human inadequacy and their desperate need for God’s assistance. This is how they understood Matthew 5:3 which says, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
This attitude of humility carried over into the founding of the nation and in Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution the founders forbade the granting of honorific titles of nobility by the U.S. government. They also forbade any government employee from receiving an honorific title from a foreign government without the consent of Congress.
In other words, in the United States of America, there would be no “Lord so and so” or “Lady so and so.” There would be no dukes or duchesses and no barons or baronesses. There would be no “His Majesty” or “Her Majesty.” Aristocratic titles were banned and the playing field was leveled.
Is there not a lesson here for the church?
Humility and the Azusa Street Revival
The leaders of the Azusa Street Revival understood the importance of this Christian virtue and exhibited a humility seldom seen in the modern church. This, no doubt, is a major reason God used them to change the course of church and world history.
Meeting in a dilapidated old building that had most recently been used as a stable and a warehouse, the attendees sat on rough board benches with no backs. There was no raised platform and no special, reserved seating. Everyone was on the same level.
The pulpit was a stack of wooden shoe boxes. William Seymour, the recognized leader of the revival, spent most of his time sitting behind the pulpit with his head inside the top shoe box in prayer. There was no pretense or show, and the leaders made clear that such would not be tolerated.
The December 1906 issue of The Apostolic Faith, the official publication of the revival, carried a rebuke of two of the most famous charismatic ministers of the day, John Alexander Dowie and Frank Sanford, who had exalted themselves as special end-time apostles and prophets. Concerning the revival they were enjoying, the leaders at Azusa wrote,
“There is no pope, Dowieism or Sanfordism, but we are all little children knowing only Jesus and Him crucified. This work is carried on by the people of Los Angeles that God has united by the precious blood of our Lord Jesus Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit.”
From this humble setting a revival swept the world and changed the course of the church and world history.
A Lesson From the Healing Revivals
Gordon Lindsay, one of the most prominent leaders of the divine healing revivals of the 1940s-50s, declared, “As one rises higher and higher in spiritual power and blessing … he must ever seek to become lower and lower and lower and lower.” This statement was born out of his observation of the tragic collapse of the lives and ministries of several men who had been powerfully used of God in healing and deliverance ministries.
In each case, Satan’s door of entry into the person’s life seems to have been an inflated idea of his own importance. Instead of humbling themselves before God, they became enamored with their own success. And instead of moving on to greater displays of God’s glory and power, they were brought down because of their pride and arrogance. 1 Peter 5:5b says, “God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble.”
Bowing Down Before the Lord
In 1999, I sat in a “Revival Now” conference and experienced an overwhelming urge to bow down before the Lord. I struggled with this, for no one else was bowing down. In fact, people were going forward and standing in a long line as they waited to receive prayer from the pastor and guest speaker.
Bowing down is an outward expression of humility, and as this urge continued, I finally turned and bowed at my seat. As soon as my knees touched the floor, I heard the Holy Spirit speaking in a very vivid manner. He said,
“I am going to be doing some incredible things in the days ahead, and when you see My power and My glory, this is to always be your posture. You are to bow down and acknowledge that I am the sovereign Lord of this universe.”
It Is Time For Us to Humble Ourselves
Yes, I am convinced that biblical humility is the missing ingredient in our prayers for another Great Awakening. Let us, therefore, humble ourselves before the Lord. Let us acknowledge our complete inadequacy apart from Him. Let us acknowledge how desperately we need Him at this time in our history.
He has promised to answer with floods of His Spirit and presence (Isa. 44:3). He has promised to hear our prayers, forgive our sins and heal our land (2 Chron. 7:14). {eoa}
This article originally appeared at biblicalawakening.blogspot.com.