Saturday, January 14, 2012

Revival is Always Christ-Centered


He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you.
-- John 16:14
"In all companies, on other days, on whatever occasions persons met together, Christ was to be heard of, and seen in the midst of them. Our young people, when they met, were wont to spend the time in talking of the excellency and dying love of JESUS CHRIST, the glory of the way of salvation, the wonderful, free, and sovereign grace of God, his glorious work in the conversion of a soul, the truth and certainty of the great things of God's word, the sweetness of the views of his perfections, &c."

-- Jonathan Edwards, A Narrative of Surprising Conversions
It is the Spirit's raison d'etre to shine the light on Christ. The Spirit is often called the "shy" Person of the Trinity because of this. He is content -- no, zealous -- to minister to the Church the Father's blessings in the gospel of Jesus. He quickens us to desire Christ, illuminates the Scripture's revelation of Christ, empowers us to receive Christ, and imparts Christ to us even in his own indwelling. For this reason, then, any church or movement's claim of revival better have exaltation of Christ at its center, or it is not genuine revival.

At the front end of Paul's excursus to the Corinthians on the sign-gift charismata, he reminds us: "Therefore I want you to understand that no one speaking in the Spirit of God ever says 'Jesus is accursed!' and no one can say 'Jesus is Lord' except in the Holy Spirit" (1 Corinthians 12:3).

What we often see in false revivals is the exaltation of particular figures or the worship of a worship experience itself. You can turn on nearly any religious television programming and see this work in action. Christ is given lip service but exhilaration, personal revelation, warm fuzzies, and spectacular manifestations are the real objects of worship. Charlatans are at the helm, and they purport to wield the Holy Spirit as if He were pixie dust. In these cases and others, it is not the Spirit stirring, but the spirit of the antichrist.

Edwards writes elsewhere:
When the operation is such as to raise their esteem of that Jesus who was born of the Virgin, and was crucified without the gates of Jerusalem; and seems more to confirm and establish their minds in the truth of what the gospel declares to us of his being the Son of God, and the Saviour of men; is a sure sign that it is from the Spirit of God.
Revival given of the Spirit of the living God, places Christ always and ever at the center.

By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God; and every spirit that does not confess Jesus is not from God; this is the spirit of the antichrist, of which you have heard that it is coming, and now it is already in the world.
-- John 4:2-3

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Out of interest have you been baptised in the spirit?

Jared said...

Well, yes, but I bet I define "baptized in the Spirit" differently. In your view, what is the baptism of the Holy Spirit?

bullets said...

thanks for this jared, as someone who grew up using (and still using) "revival culture" language, i am always leery, and rightfully so, of "the show."

Anonymous said...

This is incredible, Jared. Oh that the Spirit might move in this nation, persistently pointing us to the One, the King, Christ Jesus! We need this kind of revival in the Church today.

Lost Blogger said...

Totally true. Anything we do outside of Christ is not Christ-centered, obviously. It is amazing how the Holy Spirit works in our lives. One thing I realized in my walk is that we should be getting fruits if we have the spirit and are walking in the spirit, not flesh! I'm blogging about that this year, or more specifically, each of the fruits the spirit gives us.

Great blog by the way (fyi: found you on google blog search)