But I fear, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, so your minds may be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.
II Corinthians 11:4
II Corinthians 11:4
During the fall and winter of 1857-58 a third Great Awakening swept across America. It came unexpectedly and swept hundreds of thousands into the kingdom of God. It helped end slavery and provided the spiritual resources necessary to preserve the nation through its darkest hour.
This
Awakening had some peculiar features, including the fact that people did
not want to hear preaching or be entertained—they wanted to pray. This Great
Prayer Awakening was also characterized by a unique simplicity--a simplicity of
format, purpose, and leadership that hearkened back to Jesus and the New Testament.
More than anything, the contemporary church would do well to learn these three simple lessons from the Great Prayer Awakening of 1857-58.
Lesson
1
A
Simple Format & Structure
This nation-shaking revival began
when a businessman and home missionary with the Dutch Reformed Church decided
to begin a noon prayer meeting for businessmen in downtown Manhattan. His
desire was that business people in the area would come during their lunch break
and pray for the conversion of the many new non-Christian immigrants that were
pouring into the city.
The format for this prayer meeting on
Fulton Street was simple. At 12 noon the leader of the meeting would open with
one or two verses of a well-known hymn, an opening prayer, and then read any
prayer requests. Anyone was then free to pray, share a prayer request, or give
a testimony.
No one, including visiting ministers,
was allowed more than five minutes and if anyone took more than their allotted
time the leader would ring a bell signaling for that person to conclude their
prayer or comments. Promptly at 1 p.m., the meeting was dismissed with a
concluding prayer by the leader or someone appointed by him.
Although very punctual and simple in
format, the meetings were accompanied with great spiritual power. An
overwhelming sense of God’s presence seemed to pervade the very atmosphere and
marvelous answers to prayer began to occur. As if drawn by an invisible force,
people began to come from all parts of the city to be in the prayer meeting.
The room they were using was soon
filled and then two adjoining rooms were opened and filled. It was
standing-room-only with men and women being drawn from throughout the city.
From this simple prayer meeting on
Fulton Street, a Great Prayer Awakening spread across America. Many of the
prayer meetings that sprung up in different cities used this same simple format
and saw incredible results.
Lesson
2
A
Simple Purpose
The simple purpose of the Fulton
Street prayer meeting was to pray for the conversion of those who did not know
Christ. Yes, they prayed for other needs and requests, but the conversion of
the unsaved was their stated purpose for gathering to pray.
God
honored their simple purpose. Along with the many Christians who were drawn
into the prayer meetings, many non-Christians begin to come and experienced
overwhelming conviction of their need for Christ.
One notorious criminal nicknamed
“Awful Gardiner” came into the meeting and was gloriously saved and
transformed. This created a further sensation and news of the prayer meeting
spread throughout the city and beyond.
During
another meeting, a man wandered in who intended to murder a woman and then
commit suicide. He listened as someone was delivering a fervent exhortation and
urging the duty of repentance. Suddenly the would-be murderer startled everyone
by crying out, “Oh! What shall I do to be saved!”
Just
then another nonbeliever arose, and with tears streaming down his cheeks asked
the meeting to sing the hymn, “Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me,” which he remembered
from his youth. As the praying throng enthusiastically lifted their voices in
song, both men were converted on the spot (Hyatt, The Great Prayer Awakening, 20).
This simple purpose of reaching the
lost guided the revival as it spread throughout the land. Finney estimated that
at the height of the revival fifty-thousand were being converted per week—and
that without the aid of modern communication and technology.
Conservative estimates place the
total number of conversions at around one million, but some have suggested that
as many as two million may have been converted. The March 1858 issue of a
religious journal reported,
The large cities and towns from Maine
to California are sharing in this great and glorious work. There is hardly a
village or town to be found where ‘a special divine power’ does not appear
displayed (Hyatt, The Great PrayerAwakening, 26).
Lesson
3
Simple
Leadership
The Great Prayer Awakening began with
a simple layman who did not claim any special gift or calling, and it continued
to be led by laypeople who claimed no special position or title. Pastors,
ministers, and revivalists seemed to be laid aside.
The prayer meeting on Fulton Street
was begun by Jeremiah Lanphier, a Christian businessman who was a nobody in
Christian leadership circles. He had no desire to be a pastor or revivalist,
but began the prayer meeting out of a deep burden and concern for those in his
city that did not know Christ.
The
daily meetings were led by Lanphier or some other simple, nameless believer. As
the revival spread to other cities, these meetings, for the most part, were led
by more nameless, faceless believers, unknown on earth but renowned in heaven.
The famous revivalist, Charles G.
Finney, was still alive at the time but played no leading role in the revival.
He later wrote in his Memoirs,
This revival had some very peculiarly
interesting features. It was carried on to a large extent through lay
influence, so much so as almost to throw the ministers into the shade . . . the
people very extensively seemed to prefer meetings for prayer to meetings for
preaching. The general impression seemed to be, “We have had instruction until
we are hardened; it is time for us to pray” (Hyatt, The Great Prayer Awakening, 31).
This
was a New Testament expression of the body of Christ. The New Testament church
knows nothing of the sharp division that exists today between a
professionalized clergy and the people known as the “laity.” This division
comes from historical developments, not from the New Testament.
“Laity,”
in fact, comes from the Greek word laos,
which is translated as “people” in the New Testament and always refers to the
whole people of God. Paul, Peter, John and Barnabas, though obvious leaders,
are all part of the laos, i.e., the people of God. In the New
Testament Church, the laos (people)
are all filled with the Spirit and equipped to carry out the work of the
ministry.
One
of those profoundly impacted in this revival was a young D. L. Moody who later
became the nation’s most successful evangelist/revivalist. Interestingly, Moody
never sought ordination, influenced, no doubt, by what he saw God accomplish
through the simple people of the Great Prayer Awakening.
Expect God, in the days ahead, to
raise up an army of simple, nameless, faceless people and use them to ignite
the greatest revival America has yet seen.
Concluding Thought
What the contemporary church needs
more than anything is not a new revelation, impartation, program, order or
structure, but a return to the simplicity of Jesus and the Gospel. As Paul said
to the Corinthian church in II Corinthians 11:4, But I fear, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, so your
minds may be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.
This article was derived from Dr. Eddie Hyatt's latest book, The Great Prayer Awakening of 1857-58, available form Amazon in both kindle and paperback. To read about his vision for another Great Awakening, check out his website at www.eddiehyatt.com.
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