The crew chrismatic movement existed long before this.
"Crew?" Now it is you who are speaking gibberish.
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The crew chrismatic movement existed long before this.
"Crew?" Now it is you who are speaking gibberish.
Duncan Campbell was a Presbyterian minister, who prayed for revival regularly with a friend of mine's Dad, who just happened to be be blind. That fact is unknown to the public. What is known is that the main prayer warriors who catalyzed this revival were the 2 Smith sisters in their 80s, one of whom was also blind and both of whom were too infirmed to attend church. Campbell makes a special point of stressing that in true revival the power of God falls on unbelievers everywhere before any organized meetings are held. Watch this video of Campbell's testimony and you might understand why I consider it the most impressive account of a mass move of God ever posted on the internet!
I understand what you're saying but the Bible makes it clear there is not going to be a big revival. We are in decline.Also, another feature of true revival which has been noted is that it is a pastor-led revival--as in Jonathan Edwards leading the Great Awakening in New England or, in your example, Duncan Campbell in Scotland. Another feature is a return to Scripture as the basis of faith and practice. With our current crop of heretics in the pulpits of many mega churches, it is difficult to see that happening any time soon.
But, on the other hand, if it is in God's sovereign will to see it happen, then it will. God listens to the prayers of His people. I wonder how many are today praying for revival?
I tend to agree with you--that we are in the "gleaning" stage of the "harvest"--that we might be nearing the territory of the "full number of the Gentiles". Pentecostalism has taken off in the Third World--I wonder how many are real: "Blood-bought, Bible-taught, Holy Spirit-wrought" believers? A friend's son was an Assembly of God (Pentecostal) missionary for a year. In trying to get a church going in the village where he was, he asked a Christian woman who she thought would be a good candidate for elder. She named several men who she said didn't "sin a lot--only a little bit of adultery and stealing".I understand what you're saying but the Bible makes it clear there is not going to be a big revival. We are in decline.
"Storming the gates of the enemy with prayer" is something that is actively taught in some Pentecostal and Charismatic churches. It seems to entirely leave out the sovereignty of God. He becomes a sort of "vending machine God" where the prayers go in and out comes whatever is wanted. This type of "prosperity gospel" would, of course, appeal to desperately poor people. When they don't get what they want--do they fall away?It's like this whole concept of prayer warriors. Not to be found in the Bible.
That is generally true of Presbyterianism and has been true since the liberals took over the Presbyterian seminaries (which Francis Schaeffer describes in The Great Evangelical Disaster). Schaeffer was a young Presbyterian minister when that happened and he saw the same forces shaping up in evangelicalism because of the lack of Bible knowledge in the younger generations. There has been a small attempt to get an evangelical group going among Presbyterians but I'm not sure how successful it has been. Freemasonry has a very strong foothold in Presbyterian churches.Scotland is not a stronghold of Christianity. The Presbyterian church is very apostate.
Remember, Africa is still the heart of pantheism and occult today.I tend to agree with you--that we are in the "gleaning" stage of the "harvest"--that we might be nearing the territory of the "full number of the Gentiles". Pentecostalism has taken off in the Third World--I wonder how many are real: "Blood-bought, Bible-taught, Holy Spirit-wrought" believers? A friend's son was an Assembly of God (Pentecostal) missionary for a year. In trying to get a church going in the village where he was, he asked a Christian woman who she thought would be a good candidate for elder. She named several men who she said didn't "sin a lot--only a little bit of adultery and stealing".I suspect that part of the appeal of Pentecostalism in the Third World is that there is what I would call a "radical grace" doctrine taught by many Pentecostals. For those who truly know their Bible, "radical grace" is the perversion that the Apostle Paul was fighting in Romans chapter 6. He says in verse 2, "If we have died to sin, how can we continue to live in it?" We even have some "radical grace" types here in the forums and they are quite aggressive toward orthodox Christians.
"Storming the gates of the enemy with prayer" is something that is actively taught in some Pentecostal and Charismatic churches. It seems to entirely leave out the sovereignty of God. He becomes a sort of "vending machine God" where the prayers go in and out comes whatever is wanted. This type of "prosperity gospel" would, of course, appeal to desperately poor people. When they don't get what they want--do they fall away?
That is generally true of Presbyterianism and has been true since the liberals took over the Presbyterian seminaries (which Francis Schaeffer describes in The Great Evangelical Disaster). Schaeffer was a young Presbyterian minister when that happened and he saw the same forces shaping up in evangelicalism because of the lack of Bible knowledge in the younger generations. There has been a small attempt to get an evangelical group going among Presbyterians but I'm not sure how successful it has been. Freemasonry has a very strong foothold in Presbyterian churches.![]()
Remember, Africa is still the heart of pantheism and occult today.
I read The Great Evangelical Disaster in 1985 and it was an excellent, timely book.I tend to agree with you--that we are in the "gleaning" stage of the "harvest"--that we might be nearing the territory of the "full number of the Gentiles". Pentecostalism has taken off in the Third World--I wonder how many are real: "Blood-bought, Bible-taught, Holy Spirit-wrought" believers? A friend's son was an Assembly of God (Pentecostal) missionary for a year. In trying to get a church going in the village where he was, he asked a Christian woman who she thought would be a good candidate for elder. She named several men who she said didn't "sin a lot--only a little bit of adultery and stealing".I suspect that part of the appeal of Pentecostalism in the Third World is that there is what I would call a "radical grace" doctrine taught by many Pentecostals. For those who truly know their Bible, "radical grace" is the perversion that the Apostle Paul was fighting in Romans chapter 6. He says in verse 2, "If we have died to sin, how can we continue to live in it?" We even have some "radical grace" types here in the forums and they are quite aggressive toward orthodox Christians.
"Storming the gates of the enemy with prayer" is something that is actively taught in some Pentecostal and Charismatic churches. It seems to entirely leave out the sovereignty of God. He becomes a sort of "vending machine God" where the prayers go in and out comes whatever is wanted. This type of "prosperity gospel" would, of course, appeal to desperately poor people. When they don't get what they want--do they fall away?
That is generally true of Presbyterianism and has been true since the liberals took over the Presbyterian seminaries (which Francis Schaeffer describes in The Great Evangelical Disaster). Schaeffer was a young Presbyterian minister when that happened and he saw the same forces shaping up in evangelicalism because of the lack of Bible knowledge in the younger generations. There has been a small attempt to get an evangelical group going among Presbyterians but I'm not sure how successful it has been. Freemasonry has a very strong foothold in Presbyterian churches.![]()
Also, another feature of true revival which has been noted is that it is a pastor-led revival--as in Jonathan Edwards leading the Great Awakening in New England or, in your example, Duncan Campbell in Scotland. Another feature is a return to Scripture as the basis of faith and practice. With our current crop of heretics in the pulpits of many mega churches, it is difficult to see that happening any time soon.
But, on the other hand, if it is in God's sovereign will to see it happen, then it will. God listens to the prayers of His people. I wonder how many are today praying for revival?
Yes, neither of the last 3 great revivals were "pastor-led." Lady Crosswalk speaks dogmatically without having bothered to watch the 3 posted videos on the Welsh, Azusa Street, and Hebrides revivals. The Welsh revival was sparked by Evan Roberts, an emotionally unstable new Bible school student. The Azusa Street Revival's Martin Luther was William Seymour, the son of a Black slave.
Yes, neither of the last 3 great revivals were "pastor-led." Lady Crosswalk speaks dogmatically without having bothered to watch the 3 posted videos on the Welsh, Azusa Street, and Hebrides revivals. The Welsh revival was sparked by Evan Roberts, an emotionally unstable new Bible school student. The Azusa Street Revival's Martin Luther was William Seymour, the son of a Black slave.
The Azusa Street Revival
Was no more a revival then the founding of Mormonism and Jehovah's Witnesses were revival.
It was the founding of a cult.
Not even close to the same.In the same sense that the eruption of tongues on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2) signified "the founding of a cult."![]()
And of course you were there in person to witness both events as the official observer and judge standing in apparently for God!Not even close to the same.