Chapter 4
ALTERNATIVES TO REVIVAL
One of the most frequent questions asked me these days is this: "What
changes do you see
in our evangelism today from what it was when you went into the field twenty-five
years ago?"
There are several changes that should be obvious to even a casual observer.
For one thing,
there is a percentage decrease in the number of people who will come to
pray with seekers. There
are still numbers who will come down and kneel around the altar during the
altar service, but too
often they will yawn or look through their fingers, or will get up and sit
on the front seats after they
have "said a few words." The percentage of those who will really get under
the load and pray until
real victory comes gets smaller.
And, in some cases, why not? How often are pastors shaking hands and
visiting while
seekers are praying in the altar? It is hard for the laymen to feel burdened
at the altar when their
pastor is just visiting at the door.
Another change is the increasing difficulty in creating an evangelistic
atmosphere. Many
things have contributed to this, not the least of which is the type of building
some of our churches
have put up. It is almost impossible to create a sense of rapport, of audience
participation, of
"closeness" necessary to Nazarene-type services when there are a hundred
and fifty people in an
auditorium seating eight hundred. It is not just weeknight revival services
that are affected; the
same difficulty exists in regular Sunday night services and in prayer meetings.
Some of the
buildings we're building are absolutely destructive to what we say we're
trying to do. One
Nazarene church built a sanctuary seating almost nine hundred, and even
on the night of their
dedication, with a general superintendent preaching, there were 180 present.
Another change, not as definable but just as observable, is the lessening
mood for personal
involvement. An increasing percentage of people will attend rather faithfully,
will listen
attentively, will be very gracious socially, but are not willing to get
involved in the hard, sweaty
business of the actual work of the church. Any number of people are willing
to sit in the
grandstands and cheer, but fewer and fewer are willing to get down in the
arena and grapple and
bleed and agonize over souls and the real spiritual problems and potentials
of the church.
Some might mention small week-night attendance. But it has always taken
promotion and
planning and effort to get even an appreciable number of outsiders. And
why expect the outsiders
when it is impossible to get many of the members to attend?
I have talked with those who were very active in the field of evangelism
during the
twenties and thirties and, while the reports varied from less than half
to more than the Sunday
school attendance, the consensus seemed to be that if they had an average
week-night attendance of
from one-half to three-fourths of the average Sunday school attendance in
that church they felt they
weren't doing too badly.
Even in the big city-wide campaigns, with hundreds of churches participating,
it has
always taken tremendous planning and publicity and promotion and prayer
to have crowds. In his
Detroit campaign, Billy Sunday decided to do away with the "special nights,"
but after the third
night the crowds had fallen off so terribly that he told his staff to go
back to promoting the special
nights. The Graham crusades today depend heavily upon special nights and
special delegations and
unprecedented outlays for publicity.
But these changes are not the most important or the most disturbing.
I would like to suggest
four major trends in our evangelism today that, in my opinion, are important
and are disturbing.
Dr. Harold W. Reed did his doctoral dissertation on the forces that
shape churches, and I
asked him once if in his research he discovered any church, in which the
trends away from its
original mission had become pronounced, that had ever swung back. His answer
was significant:
"No," he said, "but I did come to the conclusion that if we knew the steps
down we could
deliberately refuse to take those steps."
The four trends that I mention are, in my opinion, steps down and away
from real revival.
Any one of them, if used exclusively, or as a substitute for revival, will
eventually drain the
dynamic and urgency from holiness evangelism in any church.
1. The first is the trend toward preaching-mission or convention-type
meetings.
These are usually prestige meetings with general or district leaders
as workers. No one
could, or would even desire to, imply that much good is not accomplished
in many of these
meetings. Besides the spiritual good accomplished, it is beneficial for
the church to be in close
contact with the leaders of the church and to catch their vision and concern
for the work of the
entire church.
There is no objection here to these men holding meetings because of
limiting the work
available to evangelists. In fact it would be better if our general men,
especially, would hold more
revivals in local churches instead of saving themselves for the college
revivals and the camp
meetings and the union meetings -- none of which is a normal evangelistic
situation. For in each
case there is a captive audience with practically a built-in response. The
true picture of
evangelism in the church cannot be accurately evaluated in such situations.
It is only in the local
church revival that one sees the true picture of evangelism in the church,
for there and only there
can one see Nazarenes at their most concerned, or their most complacent.
Along with this trend is the increasing practice of pastors exchanging
meetings. And again,
these meetings can occasionally be profitable to all concerned. But the
motivation is not always
the best. For meetings are exchanged for all sorts of reasons -- from paying
a wife's doctor bills, to
getting a free hunting trip, to paying back a friend for a favor -- or providing
the obligation for one.
Dr. Richard Taylor told in one of his splendid editorials in the Nazarene
Preacher of the pastor
who canceled a meeting on an evangelist so that he could have one of his
pastor friends hold the
meeting -- because the friend needed money to make a car payment!
"I see happening in the Nazarene church," said a retired Methodist
preacher, "just what
happened in my church -- the increasing use of connectional men and exchange
of pastors for
meetings. And while there was some good done in all those meetings, there
was not the same
urgency and all-out effort that had characterized our revivals of the past,
until our laymen began to
say, 'Why have revivals? -- we have the same kind of preaching in our regular
services -- and
sometimes it's better; we have good crowds on Sunday morning, but hardly
any interest or crowds
during the week.' So finally we quit even trying to have special meetings
in the old revival sense."
There is no meeting, undertaken in Christ's name, but what accomplishes
some good. But
the pattern is clear: When the church is no longer vital enough to have
revivals, or even to see the
need for one, it resorts to all sorts of substitutes and it goes in for
"Deeper Life Crusades,"
"Preaching Missions," "Exercises in Evangelism," etc. What's in a name?
Nothing -- when the
words are drained of their spiritual vitality! As has often been said, it
does no harm, or good, to
change labels on empty bottles. Of one of these "revivals," it was agreed
all around that the folk
had had a "nice little meeting."
May God forgive us for prostituting the cause of revival on the altars
of our own
selfishness or ambition or pride, and trying to hide the loss of our revival
dynamic under the flimsy
cloak of evangelistic "dignity" or "expediency."
2. Another trend that is a step down and away from genuine revival
is the Nazarene union
meeting.
That this type of meeting is used occasionally to great profit is readily
admitted. But to
make it the exclusive mass evangelistic thrust in a city is to weaken the
revival emphasis and
involvement in each of the churches participating.
Merger is not always a sign of strength; it is sometimes an indication
of weakness. And in
some cases the union meeting is resorted to in an abject admission of failure
to have genuine
revivals in local churches.
There are advantages to an occasional union meeting sponsored by Nazarene
churches such
as: pooled advertising, the chance to make a larger "impression" upon the
community, the image of
unity among the pastors and people of the various churches, the genuine
development of fellowship
among the Nazarenes in the community. All of these results are good and
would be sufficient to
merit an occasional union meeting.
But there are at least two distinct disadvantages of making this type
of meeting the
exclusive means of mass evangelism in a town or city:
a. The illusion that because of the larger crowds more good is being
done. The man in
charge of counting the crowds at one Nazarene union meeting of 7 churches
said that the average
crowd for the seven nights was 356 -- in other words, an average of 50 per
night per church
attending the meeting. If the 7 churches had engaged in simultaneous meetings,
and had averaged
only 50 per night in each church, they would have considered it a failure;
but because they had
averaged 356 per night with 7 churches, they considered it a "success."
One of those churches
participating, when it went in for real revivals, had averaged over 200
per night in week-night
attendance. But in the union meeting it took 7 churches to average 356.
Is that progress?
b. Another disadvantage of the Nazarene union meeting is that some
of the smaller churches
participating in the union meeting simply cannot pay their budget for the
union meeting and then be
able to afford a revival in their own church. All of this tends to reduce
the necessity for personal
involvement in the matter of soul winning. And anything that reduces that
sense of personal
involvement and commitment and responsibility is ultimately harmful to the
total evangelistic task
of the church and is a step down and away from real revival -- which, by
its very nature, is a
renewal of the sense of personal involvement in the evangelism of the church.
I attended a breakfast with a group of pastors one month after they
had closed such a union
meeting. Not all of the participating pastors were there but there were
ten present, and not one had,
up to that time, received one new member as a direct result of the union
meeting. The meeting had
cost over five thousand dollars, and three of the churches were not having
a revival in their own
church that spring because of the expense of the union meeting. If the same
amount of time and
planning and money and prayer had gone into simultaneous meetings, there
would have been more
personal involvement on the part of the members, which, had there not been
even one "outside"
seeker at the altar, would have been beneficial.
"It is at the local church level," says Martin Marty in his book The
New Shape of American
Religion, "where the church's encounter with the world can be most violent,
and most productive
-- and where opposition from worldly Christians can become most intense
... [And while] the
church revival, being on a more personal basis and challenge, does affect
the morality and
attitudes of fewer people, [it] affects them at greater depth."
And Marty continues with this analysis: "The local church is the front
line. It is the cutting
edge against the world. If that cutting edge is thought of as an institution
that circles the globe, it
will be impossible to hone or sharpen. But a local church can be honed,
it can be sharpened, it can
become more effective -- and if enough local churches are honed, or revived,
then it will make a
more effective contribution to the total task by being more effective in
its local task."
The occasional use of the union meeting has merit, but to sacrifice
the revival in the local
church to the union meeting is a step down and away from that revival emphasis
that has been the
central thrust of the most effective Nazarene evangelism.
3. Another trend in our evangelism, and definitely a step down and
away from real revival,
is the one toward shorter meetings.
It is not surprising that many pastors and churches like this idea
of shorter meetings. For
one thing, it is cheaper; and for another, the normal life of the church
is not, as they say,
"disrupted" for as long.
It is also not surprising that evangelists find this arrangement more
financially profitable.
For almost any two one-week meetings will pay more than the average two-week
meeting. And if
there are books or records to sell, the shorter meetings mean just that
many more "exposures."
But if the church is looking for the cheapest way out, it should dispense
with special
meetings altogether. And if evangelists are in the field merely for the
money, they're in the wrong
field.
No one will deny that one can usually see as many results in the altar
in a one-week
meeting as in a longer one. But, for that matter, in certain circumstances
one can see as many
seekers in a weekend, or even in a Sunday service, as in a longer meeting.
But are numbers in the
altar all we're after? Is this all that a revival should mean to a church?
Revival, remember, is
exclusively an experience of the church; evangelism is what the church does
about its reviving.
Are these shorter meetings really long enough to "let the plow down," and
allow the Holy Spirit to
do His work until there is genuine sense of need, of neglect, of coldness
and leanness and growing
indifference -- with the resultant cry for renewal and reviving and fresh
warmth and movement of
the Spirit within the hearts of the church members? Is the church really
revived and renewed
spiritually enough to conserve whatever evangelistic results may have been
seen in the altar? Are
the shorter meetings really revival? -- or just bits of evangelism? Of course
a longer meeting is not
always a revival either, but at least there is more opportunity for its
becoming one.
We are creating many of our own problems and frustrations. For as shorter
meetings
produce less and less real change in the spiritual tone of the churches,
increasing numbers of
pastors and laymen are asking, "Why have revival meetings at all?" But that's
just it: these
meetings may not be revivals at all. They may be just bits of evangelistic
activity -- and like one
man said about aspirin: They don't cost much; they don't do much; and they're
not worth much.
It is real revival that we need if our evangelism is to be meaningful
and the fruits of it
conserved. It is when Zion travails that souls are born. And travail can't
be turned on and off like a
spigot. Real spiritual births are a result of this travail. We can have
religious "abortions" without
it, but there can be no spiritual birth without it. The conversion of sinners
-- not just people in the
altar, but genuine conversion of sinners -- is a result of the revived condition
of the church. It is
precisely because we do not go in for real revival as often as we should
that we have so much
frustration and sense of futility in much of our evangelistic activities.
There are discount houses where one can buy merchandise; there are
dealers who will sell
cars for practically wholesale; but no one -- absolutely no one can cut
the price of revival. There
are no markdowns on the price tag of revival -- and when we think we've
found a "bargain" in
revival, we may find out that all we bought was a shoddy substitute.
Dr. Chapman once said that if Finney were alive very few Nazarene pastors
would call
him for meetings, because he didn't go in for quick results. It was a fundamental
conviction with
Finney that the church first had to be revived before there could be any
worthwhile evangelistic
results. He would labor for days to produce a revival in the church, and
when the church was
revived then sinners would come crying, "What must I do to be saved?"
But we want quick results. Let's see something happen quickly -- no
matter whether it lasts;
let's get action. Our insistence on something happening quickly might be
because we are afraid that
if we tarried beyond the frenzy and the hubbub we might get down to our
real needs and have our
real shams exposed and be confronted with our real selves. And when that
began to happen, we
might lose part of our crowd. But would that be a tragedy?
In those ten days preceding Pentecost, the disciples began to lose
their crowd until it got
down to 120. Think of it -- three-fourths of the crowd had left! If some
of us had been there we
would have said, "Let's get a quartet in here, or a Hollywood singer --
we're losing our crowd.
Let's at least get somebody in here to crack a few jokes and liven things
up a bit. Let's get this
show on the road."
But the 120, renewed and filled, did more in one day than they had
done before in three
years. And it is conceivable that one-fourth of our church members, if truly
revived and filled,
would accomplish far more than the over four hundred thousand Nazarenes
we have on the rolls.
General Superintendent Walker said once that it was "possible to have
a revival of God's
work and have fewer in the church when the revival was over than when it
began," and then he
quoted John Wesley as saying, when he visited a society and found it "not
strong": "We dismissed
thirty members. Glory be to God."
Martin Marty suggests that "a willingness to step off the statistical
treadmill for a moment,
to lose status among the families of competing denominations, may be the
better mark of
stewardship and evangelism in the present moment."
There is no such thing as instant revival. And there is no such thing
as instant evangelism.
Revival is hard, sweaty business. And those who are interested in quick
results are never
interested in paying that kind of price. It is so much easier, and more
sophisticated, to go around
asking, "Do revivals pay?" or, "What's wrong with our evangelism?" than
it is to get down on our
knees before God and pray and agonize and cry and fast until revival comes.
A short meeting can be profitable occasionally, but when it becomes
a steady diet it fails to
nourish the church and is a step down and away from real revival.
4. The last trend I will mention is not as widespread as yet, but if
resorted to exclusively,
or as a substitute for revival, is definitely a step down -- and that is
the substitution of visitation or
personal evangelism for revivals.
But one is never a substitute for the other. Genuine revival, in fact,
will make personal
evangelism far more productive and necessary than any talk or series of
talks about the advantages
or methods of personal evangelism. Our people need not only the know-how;
they need the
wherewithal -- and revival can be the time of that motivation and dynamic.
It is a growing conviction that if our meetings are going to justify
the time and expense and
effort put into them, they simply must be times of reviving and renewal
of the church members,
with the inevitable increase in the effectiveness of visitation and personal
evangelism after the
revival. Most calling programs, in fact, would receive greater support and
would produce more
spiritual fruit if promoted after the revival rather than preceding it.
It is not enough for us to be
what's the difference? An evangelistic church is one in which the pastor
preaches evangelistically
occasionally and promotes two or three evangelistic meetings a year. But
an evangelizing church is
a church filled with men and women who are so alive with the reality of
Christ and so alert to their
soul-winning opportunities that they will go day after day from house to
house, or from heart to
heart, and witness effectively to the reality of Christ in their hearts
and lives. And the major task of
every preacher -- whether pastor or evangelist or superintendent -- is to
produce, with God's help,
an evangelizing church. Real revivals are times of refreshing from the Lord,
and those
experiencing that refreshing not only see the need to witness -- they have
a want-to in their hearts.
All the knowledge about "ought to" and "how to" will not make any person
a soul winner -- unless
his heart is warmed and filled with God's Spirit.
We can, of course, knock on doors and invite to Sunday school and church
without that
renewing and refreshing from the Lord. And it is better to do that than
to do nothing. But Fuller
Brush salesmen or Avon callers can, and do, knock on doors and "witness"
to the desirability of
their product. And if we are to be anything more than religious peddlers
we must have our hearts
warmed and stirred and refreshed and filled periodically -- if our witness
is to be spiritually
productive. "Ye shall receive power" -- when? -- when we knock on doors?
When we hand out
Heralds? When we invite our friends? No. "Ye shall receive power" when the
Holy Spirit comes
upon you. Then whatever form your witnessing takes, God will make it spiritually
meaningful and
your evangelistic activity will advance His cause.
"Ye shall receive power ... and ye shall be witnesses unto me" everywhere
you go. We can
be witnesses without that power. We can be witnesses to a certain doctrine
or a certain standard
or to a certain church or to a certain preacher or teacher, or to the beauty
or adequacy of a church
plant -- we can be witnesses to all of these without any help at all from
God. But if our witnessing
does not find its center in Christ, we are off center. And to be an effective
witness unto Christ
takes more than knowledge, takes more than signing a calling pledge, takes
more than human
enthusiasm; it takes warm and full hearts -- warmed and filled by the fresh
movement of His
presence and power.
We evangelists are no Johnny-come-latelies to this idea of personal
evangelism. Every
evangelist I know emphasizes its importance. One of the most practical helps
in personal
witnessing that we have had is a little book called Win Them, written by
Dr. Jarrette Aycock --
and he wrote it as an evangelist.
In my own meager attempts at writing, my first article in the Herald
of Holiness, which
appeared in August of 1942, was titled "Evangelism in a Changing World,"
and it was primarily a
plea for personal evangelism, in which I said, "If an individual is really
a follower of Christ he
will soon realize that all of his religious work cannot be done in the church.
Instead he will find
himself bragging on Jesus and witnessing for Christ, wherever he goes --
in the home, in the shop,
in the store, on the street -- in such a way that others will see Him and
want Him and accept Him
as their personal Lord and Saviour!"
I am just as convinced that that is the only effective method of evangelism
that really meets
the challenge of a changing world as I was when I wrote those words twenty-four
years ago. But I
am more convinced now than I was then that we must have revival, real revival,
if all our
witnessing and going is to be meaningful and spiritually productive. Every
book that I have tried to
write except one has emphasized this truth, and three of them have been
exclusively about personal
involvement in soul winning.
And yet there are some today who feel they are springing something
new on the church
when they advocate personal evangelism. But as long ago as 1932 the Young
People's Society
adopted this as its primary emphasis, and in 1948 the entire church launched
its "Crusade for
Souls," which had as its primary emphasis this matter of personal soul winning.
So the Church of the Nazarene has been busy promoting personal evangelism
long before
some of those who are advocating it as a substitute for revival were even
born. And the method
didn't start with us; it started on the Day of Pentecost. But then, as now,
it was not a substitute for
but a supplement to the public proclamation of the gospel. All those who
think they are suggesting
something new should remember that every discovery in evangelism is a recovery.
Each of these evangelistic emphases can be profitable in its place,
but whenever any one of
them is promoted as a substitute for genuine revival it is a step down and
away from that revival
emphasis which has been the central agency of our most effective evangelism
from the very
beginning of our church. And if we fail to recognize the danger and insist
on taking those steps
down, then we will be led down that well-travelled road that leads to an
evangelism wherein, as
one put it, "the conference table replaces the mourners' bench, the planning
session replaces the
prayer meeting, the organizers replace the agonizers, and the promoters
replace the passion-filled."
That may be evangelism, but that is a juiceless, tearless, powerless,
emasculated
evangelism that is a mockery and a denial of that vigorous and effective
evangelism the church
engaged in when the tides of revival were running strong.