| The
Power of the Pulpit
by Charles Crismier
History proves that anointed
preaching can result in
spiritual revival and societal transformation like
that seen in the First and Second Awakenings. But
are we preaching with that same power today?
“AMERICA IS IN DANGER!” declared
the late Leonard Ravenhill, yet “American is Too Young
to Die.” “This is the most critical time in American
history,” he warned. A growing chorus of pastors and
para-church leaders now agree. The message echoing from coast
to coast is “Revival or Perish!” But what is the
role of pastor and para-church leader? Is there a secret to
national survival? Could the promise be in our pulpits?
The First
Great Awakening
Looking back to the mid 1700's,
a dark cloud could be seen rising over the American horizon.
The colonists were increasingly antagonized by the British
King and Parliament. Conditions were explosive. But developments
among the colonists themselves also threatened their survival.
Trouble brewed in the cities. Slaves were transported in droves.
Prostitution proliferated. Drinking, gambling, and brawling
were common pastimes. Colonial churches and their pastors
were losing power to affect an increasingly worldly society.
Church membership was in decline, and the Christian faith’s
impact on society was decreasing radically.
It had been 134 years since the men of the Virginia Company
landed at Cape Henry, Jamestown, and Richmond, when Jonathan
Edwards stepped, as a visiting preacher, into the pulpit at
Enfield, Connecticut on July 8, 1741. The colonies would never
again be the same.
Reading his scripted sermon, the thirty-six year old preacher
told the parishioners, “The wrath of God is like great
waters that are dammed for the present. They increase more
and more, and rise higher and higher, till an outlet is given,
and the longer the stream is stopped, the more rapid and mighty
its course, when once it is let loose.” One eyewitness
observed, “Before the sermon was done - there was a
great groaning and crying out through the whole house.”
Edwards warned, “let everyone that is out of Christ
now awake and fly from the wrath to come.” Awake they
did!
That sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of An Angry God,”
became the most noted sermon in American history, causing
a tidal wave throughout the colonies known as the First Great
Awakening. Tens of thousands fell on their faces in repentance.
Christians were revived. Pagans were converted. The hearts
of the people were being prepared for the conflict just ahead
that would determine destiny... the Revolutionary War.
The Second
Great Awakening
Revolutionary War victory lead
to a religious vacuum. In 1795, Washington warned the people
from his Presidential pulpit of their proclivity to wander
in pride under the blessings of prosperity. He called upon
the “kind author of these blessings graciously to prolong
them to us; to preserve us from the arrogancy of prosperity,
and from...delusive pursuits....” Celebrating in 1820,
the bicentennial of the Pilgrims landing, the great orator,
Daniel Webster, warned, “If we abide by the principles
taught in the Bible, our country will go on prospering...,
but if we and our posterity neglect its instructions and authority,
no man can tell how sudden a catastrophe may overwhelm us
and bury all our glory in profound obscurity.”
As with ancient Israel, the nation refused to heed early warnings.
The Industrial Revolution shifted into full gear. America
was moving to heights undreamed of by previous generations.
But the people forgot the God “who hath made and preserved
us a nation.” There was a wilderness to conquer. Money
to be made. Empires to be built. The nation was losing her
men to mammon. How would God get America’s attention?
He “retained” Charles Finney for the task.
“When he opened his mouth he was aiming a gun. When
he spoke, bombardment began. The effects of his speaking were
almost unparalleled in modern history. Half a million people
were converted through his ministry.... He spearheaded a revival
which literally altered the course of history.” Such
was the description of impact of lawyer-turned-preacher, Charles
Finney. According to Harvard professor, Perry Miller, “Charles
Grandison Finney led America out of the eighteenth century.”
Humorous...shocking isn’t it, that God would “retain”
a lawyer to spiritually resuscitate a nation, yet that is
precisely the record of history. So astounding to saint and
sinner alike were the results of Finney’s pleading God’s
ultimate cause among a nationwide jury of American citizens
that it bears a closer look for its implications in our time.
“MANY OF THOSE
most resistant to true
revival have been pastors
who fear losing power, perks and
position if they rock the boat.”
How does such a thing happen? How could city after city be
turned right-side up, radically changing both powerful business
moguls and busy housewives... and all that seemingly by mere
words from the pulpit of a converted lawyer who forsook his
practice to plea the cause of a lifetime?
Effects
of a Second Great Awakening
Charles Finney was the galvanizing
force of the second Great Awakening. His meetings covered
cities, small and great, in most of the industrializing states
in pre-Civil War America. “No more impressive revival
has occurred in American history....”
What happened in Rochester, New York, was the fullest expression
of what took place elsewhere, righting that which was wrong
among We the People.
The atmosphere...seemed to
be affected. You could not go upon the streets, and hear
any conversations, except on religion. The entire character
of the city was modified because so many of the converts
were leaders of the community, who “would remake
society and politics....”
Lyman Beecher of Boston, who
inherited the evangelical mantle of the awakening, had many
a dispute with Finney over methods and message, yet he concluded
that the Rochester revival was the greatest work of God, and
the greatest revival of religion, that the world has ever
seen in such a short time. “One hundred thousand,”
he said, “were connected with churches as a result of
that great revival...unparalleled in the history of the church....”
Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian and Congregationalist congregations
exploded. Baptists multiplied 800 fold in 50 years. Bible
societies were found. Ministries to the nation’s social
concerns were raised up. “The Second Great Awakening
brought massive and permanent changes to this country and
the world,” including fueling the abolitionist movement.
Power
in the Pulpit
Just as Finney was pounding Rochester
with scathing pulpit power, the Frenchman, Alexis de Tocqueville,
came to America to study what had made America great. Since
de Tocqueville came to these shores, 170 years have passed.
Yet his perspective, recorded in Democracy in America is worth
our prayerful observation today.
I sought for the greatness
and genius of America in her commodious harbors and her
ample rivers, and it was not there; in her fertile fields
and boundless prairies, and it was not there; in her rich
mines and her vast world commence, and it was not there.
Not until I went into the churches of America
and heard her pulpits aflame with righteousness did I
understand the secret of her genius and power.
“The best way to revive
the church is to build a fire in the pulpit,” declared
Dwight L. Moody. Yet many of those most resistant to true
revival have been pastors who fear losing power, perks and
position if they rock the boat. We need a “Shaking in
the Pulpit,” writes Pastor Ken Hutchinson. “We
are afraid to upset our congregations or our substantial givers.
What we excuse as diplomacy has actually become compromise.”
“There are hot potato issues,” he says, that we
know will cause difficulty in our ministries, “so we
avoid them like the plague.” “The greatest problems
in the church lie in the fearful hearts of those who stand
in the pulpits.”
“Fearless preaching is all the more necessary in dangerous
times,” exhorts John MacArthur. “When people will
not tolerate the truth, that’s when courageous, outspoken
preachers are most desperately needed to speak it.”
“Sound preaching,” he says, “confronts and
rebukes sin, and people in love with sinful lifestyles will
not tolerate such teaching. They want to have their ears tickled.”
“Churches are so engrossed in trying to please non-Christians
that many have forgotten their first duty is to please God.”
“The church suffers not so much from the sins of the
world as the world is suffering from the sins of the church,”
observes Jim Russell. “Individual blatant and subtle
sin,” he states, must be “defined, identified
and dealt with according to biblical truth.” Our national
destiny will be determined by rekindled fire in America’s
preachers whose flame will ignite the people. But pulpit power
requires pastoral purity.
Power
Requires Purity
“Religion is increasing,
morality is decreasing,” laments George Gallup. We Americans
are amazingly religious: 96% believe in God, 85% claim to
be “Christian” and 45% claim to be “born
again.” With such widespread belief in Jesus, how can
we as a nation be in the advanced steps of moral decline?
James Russell in Awakening the Giant, says “This is
the most persistent, perplexing, demanding question of all.”
And what does it say of our preaching and teaching?
What happens when an undiscipled people do not possess what
they profess? Hypocrisy devolves into decadence. Consider...
- 91% of us lie regularly. Lying
is now called “a cultural trait in America.”
- Only 13% of us believe in
all of the Ten Commandments.
- 33% of all our children are
born illegitimate.
- 80% of our children in our
larger cities are illegitimate.
Those of us who claim to believe
the Scriptures from cover to cover have literally taken the
lead in tearing down the American family. All protestations
to the contrary, the facts speak for themselves.
- The divorce rate among “born-again”
Christians exceeds the nation as a whole by 4%.
- The divorce rate in the Bible
Belt of America now exceeds the nation as a whole by 50%.
Since the Scriptures we purport
to believe clearly declare that God “hates” divorce,
considering it “treachery,” the dramatic extent
of spiritual drift for those who claim to be the nation’s
lighthouse reveals how unbelievers justify their unrighteousness.
Clearly the true battle in our midst is not a “Culture
War” but a spiritual war.
Pastors now have joined their flocks in the moral and spiritual
slide. A Hartford Seminary study confirmed pastors now divorce
their covenant partners as often as their parishioners, the
second highest divorce rate of all professions. It is “cause
for alarm,” warned an editorial in Charisma. Jack Hayford
declared, “There simply is no way to describe the present
situation in lesser terms: We are at a point of crisis.”
“Neither grace nor love,” says Hayford, should
ever be a label used to bandage over our neglect or self-indulgence.”
Pornography is also a plague to pastors. Somber statistics
reveal that “twenty percent of all ministers are involved
in the behavior,” one-third confess inappropriate sexual
behavior with someone in the church, and twenty percent “admit
to having an affair in the ministry.” Truly, like ancient
Israel just before God’s judgment was poured out, it
is now “like people, like priest” in modern America.
A spirit of lawlessness prevails from pulpit to pew. The God
who “hath made and preserved us a nation” declared,”Be
ye holy” which we have redefined as, “be ye happy,”
and now we are neither happy nor holy. Indeed, “If the
light that is in us be darkness, how great is that darkness!”
Will the God we purport to serve gloss over our gross display
of god-less-ness with a glib grace? To whom will He extend
mercy and on what terms? The Psalmist makes it clear that
the Lord is merciful and gracious...
- Toward them that fear Him;
- To such as keep His covenant;
and
- To those that do His commandments.
What Must
We Do?
What should we do? Pastors,
could it really be that we have become a decadent people on
the verge of destruction notwithstanding a good and godly
heritage? What can bring us back to our senses?
We Must Admit Drift
A dying patient that denies the
disease that consumes him will not seek a physician to heal
him. We must individually and collectively, as pastors, confess
the prevailing absence of God’s purity in our own lives.
Such admission has been soundly resisted for an entire generation.
We have decried the moral drift in the White House, while
refusing to see the same drift in the Church House. And the
light in America’s lighthouse now flickers faintly,
barely visible through the soot and sin that shrouds the windows
of our own souls. “Righteousness alone exalts a nation,
but sin is a reproach to any people,” including pastors.
Admission of personal and collective spiritual drift will
take us across the threshold of truth into a place of hope
and healing. But there must also arise a profound and holy
fear of divine judgment.
We Must Fear Judgment
“Our nation has become
like Sodom and Gomorrah, only worse,” wrote Dr. Bill
Bright. We are not only destroying ourselves but are playing
a major role in helping to destroy the moral and spiritual
values of the rest of the world as well.”
We Americans tend to see ourselves as the exception to every
rule...even God’s rule. That is true for pastors and
people as well. In our power and prosperity, we have proudly
convinced ourselves that we are not to be concerned about
divine judgment from a holy God for our unholy ways because,
after all, we are Americans. Yet we stand in awesome danger
of God’s judgment even as we revel in the hope of a
godly heritage.
We are in massive breach of covenant with the God who “hath
made and preserved us a nation.” God is holding us collectively
as a people... We the people...to the terms of that covenant.
But pastors and teachers will be held to even greater account.
The Scriptures record that “judgment must begin at the
house of God.” God will order it to “begin at
my sanctuary.” If God would Renew the Soul of America,
His church must turn from her wicked ways. That must begin
with her pastors, teachers and para-church leaders.
We Must Weep
“The First Great Awakening
largely missed Virginia in the 1740's leaving her one of the
most materialistic of all the colonies.” When Devereux
Jarratt, an Anglican, became rector in Dinwiddie County in
1762, he stood alone, “not knowing of one clergyman
in Virginia like-minded.” To his hearers, his preaching
was both “strange and wonderful.” Just before
the Revolutionary War, Jarratt’s preaching was “attended
with such energy, that many were pierced to the heart. Tears
fell plentifully from the eyes of the hearers, and some were
constrained to cry out.”
‘It is time to weep,” writes Stephen Hill. Spiritual
turning in the land will follow tears of pastoral repentance
in the lighthouse. Mission America President, Dr. Paul Cedar,
declared, “It’s time to sit down in the presence
of God and each other, to repent and weep over our sins.”
Will America
Be Given Another Chance?
“A spiritual revival is
not important to the church and to America. It is imperative!”
This moment is “the darkest in our nation’s history
and, for that matter, in world history,” warns Leonard
Ravenhill. We need a baptism of honesty in the courts of the
Lord. Honesty means truth, and truth can be painful.”
The painful truth is that the nation’s survival depends
upon the Church’s revival, and the Church’s revival
depends upon you and me. Without God we can do nothing, but
without us, God will do nothing. We must repent! And repentance
demands preaching righteousness.
For a generation we have exhorted sinners to repent while
the saints persisted in their sins. Do we now see that if
light is to shine in national darkness, the saints must first
turn from their own wicked ways? “Our nation is standing
at the brink of judgment,” writes Cindy Jacobs. “Our
spiritual crisis requires a desperate response.” “No
matter how fervently we pray,” warns Chuck Colson, “the
Lord will not grant renewal to a nation that does not honor
Him. First, we must repent.”
Chicago Pastor, Erwin Lutzer, asks, “Will America be
given another chance?” His answer...”Whether America
has another chance is up to God; whether we are faithful is
up to us.” The apostasy of a nation and her people does
not happen over night. It happens with each compromise, with
every pastoral accommodation to the lure of popular culture,
with the inexorable shift from pleasing God to pleasing the
people.
As it was in the days of Noah, so it is today. Noah was “a
preacher of righteousness.” Are you? Don’t answer
too quickly. It takes risk to preach righteousness. Revival
of the people demands risk in the pulpit. The Word of God
must again become “the sword of the Spirit” piercing
our hearts, before it becomes a salve promoting our healing.
Let those manning the lighthouse blaze again with holy fire
that the glory of the Lord may shine forth to the nations.
And may those visiting from far and near once again declare,
“Not until I went into the churches of America and heard
her pulpits aflame with righteousness did I understand the
secret of her genius and power.”
© Charles Crismier III,
2000
|
Charles
Crismier is president of Save America Ministries and
author of Renewing
the Soul of America (Elijah Books), on which this
article is based. This book, endorsed by 38 national
Christian leaders, is a pastor’s best friend.
It says what many pastors have wanted to say to their
flocks but have lacked the courage.
Pastors from coast to coast are now quoting from Renewing
the Soul of America from their pulpits. Parachurch ministries
are using it as a resource. Pastors have given copies
to all of their elders, trustees, deacons...leadership.
If you desire bulk purchase, substantial discounts are
available by calling Elijah Books (804) 754-3000. |
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