What was Preached
* Why it was so Effective
"The Declaration of Independence was a direct result of the preaching
of the evangelists of the Great Awakening.” – Perry Miller, Harvard professor
We all want to be more effective in preaching the Gospel and in teaching the Word of God. For some time I have asked the question, “What was the key (or keys) that produced the Great Awakening and led to the transformation of the 13 colonies?” To be more specific, I wanted to know what it was about the preaching of that era that made such an impact.
In considering this
question, it became obvious that it was not the act or style of preaching, for
there were very diverse styles; from Jonathan Edwards, who wrote out his sermons
and read them in a monotone voice without movements or gestures, to George Whitefield who
preached extemporaneously with much fire and movement. This also led me to question
if, in our day, style has not taken precedence over substance and technique
over content?
In researching and
considering this, it became clear that it was not the act or style of preaching
that made the difference; it was the message itself that brought the results. This
is what Paul tells us in I Cor. 1:18; that it is not the mere act of preaching
that produces fruit for the kingdom of God, but the message that is preached. Style may stir the emotions, but it can never change the heart. In
fact, Paul says that if we go too far in trying to make the message cool, hip,
and acceptable to contemporary culture, we run the risk of preaching a Gospel
that is emptied of its power.
The Great Awakening, of course, had its problems
and excesses as does any revival, and as does any Christian movement. Nonetheless, my research leads me to say that the results
of the Great Awakening should be credited to the message that was preached,
backed by much prayer, and to messengers who lived like they believed what they
preached. Below, I have delineated 7 emphases that made up the message they
preached—the message that transformed colonial America and, according to Harvard
professor, Perry Miller, led to the Declaration of Independence of 1776.
The Message
1) God is a great, majestic,
and holy Being who created all things and to whom all creatures owe their love,
honor, and respect. Humanity was the crown of His creation, made in His own
image and likeness.
2) The man and woman
whom God created rebelled against their Creator and went their own way,
dragging their posterity down with them into the abyss of sin and judgment,
into what, in historical theology, is known as “the fall.”
3) The human race in its current state is a rebellious
and fallen race, separated from God, under the power of sin, and deserving of
hell.
4) God in His sovereign
mercy and grace now offers full pardon and forgiveness of sins to all who will put
their faith in Jesus Christ, the Savior whom God, in His sovereign grace, sent
to die on the cross for our sins and rise again for our salvation.
5) Get rid of faulty
foundations. They emphasized that many professing Christians had built their
faith on faulty foundations, such as church membership, good deeds, family
pedigree, social status, and cultural refinement. They emphasized that these old
foundations must be overturned and faith in Jesus Christ alone must be laid as
the only foundation for righteousness and acceptance with God.
6) There must be a new
birth. They emphasized that when one truly believes in Christ there is a work
of regeneration by the Holy Spirit that occurs in the heart—a new birth—from
which springs new desires and aspirations that are godly, producing a whole new
tenor of life. They believed that one would be forever changed by this new
birth, and the changed behavior they called the fruit of righteousness and
faith.
7) They emphasized the
eternal bliss in heaven for all who truly trust in Christ and the eternal suffering and damnation of all those who refuse God’s gracious gift of salvation in
Christ.
The preachers of the Great Awakening were both pious and intellectually astute. Preachers like George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards, Gilbert Tennant and others were trained in Hebrew, Greek, Latin and in church history. They spent many hours studying the Scriptures in the original tongues and many hours in prayer, which they often combined together as demonstrated by the statement of Whitefield in his Journal that he began reading the Scriptures on his knees, "praying over if possible every line and every word."
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