Perhaps God withholds His blessings because we can’t handle
them? To illustrate this, let me use the example of Holy Spirit revival. The
Church is languishing. There doesn’t seem to be any reason why the Spirit
shouldn’t breathe new life into His people, right?
After all, the great outpourings of the Spirit have brought
incredible spiritual fruit, even transforming society. Here’s how one historian
described the impact of the revival in Wales (1904):
·
Judges were presented with white gloves: they
had no cases to try. No rapes, no robberies, no murders, no burglaries, no
embezzlements, nothing. The District Consuls held emergency meetings to discuss
what to do with the police, now that they were unemployed. Drunkenness was cut
in half. The illegitimate birth rate dropped 44 percent in two counties within
a year of the beginning of the revival. (The
Rebirth of America, The Arthur S, DeMoss Foundation, 64)
Why then might God withhold such blessings? In Dynamics of Spiritual Life, Theologian
Richard Lovelace has written:
·
Almost every major revival recorded, in fact,
has been surrounded by an aura of irregular religious activity and has also
been centrally affected by elements of weakness and sin. As a result,
successive eras of church leaders have found it easy to immunize themselves and
their followers against awakening movements by applying caricatures stressing
the worst features of past revivals. (239)
In Untamed Christian
Unleashed Church, Professor of Christian Formation, Terry Wardle, goes
further about the dangers of revival. Even though he hungers for the movement
of the Spirit, he has acknowledged its downside:
- What starts out as a fresh move of the Spirit ends in a confusing and unproductive free-for-all of unbiblical spiritual excess…There has also been more than a little immaturity evident in these movements, which has not always ended well for the people or congregations involved…Not all people or congregations who have “caught the fire” [of the Spirit] have survived the experience. Individual believers, and in some cases local churches…experience division and in some cases destruction. (152-53)
·
Some Christians, desperate to appear powerful,
try to fake it…Others are reckless, failing to discern the difference between
what is from God, what is of the flesh, and what is of the evil one. (126)
- I have experienced Christians moving in gifts in the absence of love. It can be a real mess. Spiritual pride, showing off, self-righteousness, a critical spirit – it all shows up, and when it does, it’s nasty…In the end, far more people are hurt than helped. (142)
How can such evils have been associated with the glorious outpouring
of the Spirit? Because of their many apparent abuses, some have tried to
dismiss the revivals by denying the involvement of the Spirit. In 1743, Charles
Chauncey issued Seasonable Thoughts on
the State of Religion in New England where the Great Revival had broken out. Lovelace summarizes his stance:
·
Chauncey felt that an unusually large number of
those professing conversion were falling away from the faith soon afterward and
that those who did not apostatize were puffed up with pride, contemptuous of
the rest of the church including “unconverted” ministers, and full of spiritual
intoxication leading to uncontrolled celebration and dependence on visions and
trances. The order of the church was being broken up at every level. Worship
services were chaotic, lay people were preaching and exhorting, and itinerant
evangelists were invading other men’s parishes and undermining their pastoral
authority. (242)
While acknowledging the truth of many of Chauncey’s charges,
Lovelace explained that these extremes were natural for the immature Christian
at their first profound encounter with the Spirit:
·
The seven deadly sins of the non-Christian have
their spiritual counterparts within the growing Christian, as the gravitational
field of self-centeredness seizes and bends the elements of the new life into
old carnal patterns. New Christians may envy the spiritual gifts of others and
covet them. They may become preoccupied with the emotional side effects of
Christian experience and lapse into spiritual gluttony, lusting after joy and
ignoring its giver and the responsibility of an obedient walk of faith. Wrath
may find its counterpart in censorious judgment. But the most dangerous form of
religious flesh is spiritual pride. (244-45)
Our Lord wants to give us the world and will not hold back
any good thing from those who love Him. However, we lack the understanding and
maturity to profitably receive His blessings. I had had an incredible encounter
with Jesus when bleeding to death from a horrid chainsaw injury. Suddenly, I
knew that I wasn’t alone, and that I would be safe, even if I died. I knew that
God was there, that He loved me and would protect whatever the outcome. I was
filled with ecstasy, knowing beyond a doubt that He, whoever He was, would
deliver.
I was miraculously rescued. On the following day, my surgeon
instructed me to exercise my wrist, which had almost been cut off, if I was to
regain its use. However, after this encounter, I was convinced that this God
was all-powerful, and, therefore, I concluded that I didn’t have to do anything
with my wrist. Wrong! And I did lose some of its mobility.
Later, I reflected that my understanding of God was unable
to fully grasp my experience and relationship with my Benefactor. I lacked the
understanding to make the most out of my recovery. I couldn’t make proper use
of this blessing.
However, this was the least of my problems. There was also
spiritual pride, perhaps the worst seductress of all. About this danger of
pride, the great American theologian, Jonathan Edwards, had written in defense
of the Great Revival in response to Chauncey:
·
This is the main door by which the devil comes
into the heart of those who are zealous for the advancement of religion…the
chief source of all the mischief that he introduces to clog and hinder a work
of God. (Thoughts on the Revival,
414)
Pride is self-exaltation, a magnifying of oneself at the
expense of others. It also represents a hardening to whom we really are and the
things of God. In essence, it claims, “I am worthy, more than others.” It is
the opposite of love. Instead of being other-centered and God-centered, it is
self-centered. Instead of drawing brothers together, it drives them apart,
destroying the work of God.
It is particularly dangerous, because it poses as righteousness. Lovelace writes:
It is particularly dangerous, because it poses as righteousness. Lovelace writes:
·
Pride magnifies the faults of other Christians…Under
the guise of prophetic righteousness, pride can move awakened believers to censorious
attacks on other Christians, a lack of meekness in rebuking those who really
need it and a hair-trigger readiness to separate from those less holy or less
orthodox. (246)
Instead, it is humility that honors God and not self. It
brings brothers together, seeking to bless them. It understands that it is only
by the grace of God that it can confidently walk. Edwards described humility in
this way:
·
The eminently humble Christian is as it were
clothed with lowliness, mildness, gentleness of spirit and behavior, and with a
soft, sweet…deportment…Christian humility has no such thing as roughness, or
contempt, or fierceness, or bitterness in its nature. (423)
Because our fleshly nature is always present and battles
against the ideals of God (Galatians 5:17), we should not expect to be free
from prideful impulses. Yet the mature Christian has the alert understanding to
guard against pride’s cravings and deceptions. Consequently, we have to keep
watch over these impulses:
·
Keep your heart with all vigilance, for from it
flow the springs of life…Ponder the path of your feet; then all your ways will
be sure. Proverbs 4:23, 26)
However, the immature Christian lacks this understanding.
Without it, they are particularly vulnerable to Satan’s wiles, especially when greatly
blessed. Consequently, too much of a good thing is not good. This is why a
writer of the Proverbs prays:
·
Remove far from me falsehood and lying; give me
neither poverty nor riches; feed me with the food that is needful for me, lest
I be full and deny you and say, “Who is the LORD?” or lest I be poor and steal
and profane the name of my God. (Proverbs 30:8-9)
Troubled by the condition of the Church, I still pray for
revival. However, we must note that prayer is a vital ingredient. Prayer is an expression
or our need and inability to meaningfully impact the Church or our society. It
is a humble cry before the One who can change things. It cries, “Lord, have
mercy upon us, who are helpless without you.” It is in opposition to pride and
is fertile soil to receive blessing.
We need to accept the fact of our helpless, that we can do
nothing without Him (John 15:4-5). It seems that only then will He come to our
rescue:
·
This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him and
saved him out of all his troubles. The angel of the LORD encamps around those
who fear him, and delivers them…When the righteous cry for help, the LORD hears
and delivers them out of all their troubles. The LORD is near to the
brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit. Many are the afflictions of the
righteous, but the LORD delivers him out of them all. (Psalm 34:6-7, 17-19)
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