“In
the fall of 1947, George Hawtin and Percy Hunt joined
Herrick Holt of the North Battleford, Saskatchewan,
Church of the Foursquare Gospel in an independent work
that Holt had already established…During this
time, the students began to gather to study the Word
of God, with fasting and praying…on February
12, 1948, God moved into their midst in a strange new
manner. Some students were under the power of God on
the floor, others were kneeling in adoration and worship
before the Lord. The anointing deepened until the awe
of God was upon everyone. The Lord spoke to one of
the brethren. ‘Go and lay hands upon a certain
student and pray for him.’ While he was in doubt
and contemplation, one of the sisters who had been
under the power of God, went to the brother saying
the same words, and naming the identical student he
was to pray for. He went in obedience and a revelation
was given concerning the student’s life and future
ministry. After this a long prophecy was given with
minute details concerning the great thing that God
was about to do. The pattern for revival and many details
concerning it were given.”
“In
our journey to the camp meeting we went through the
Northern States to the south of Saskatchewan; then
up over the muddy roads, ending a trek of 1500 miles
to the old Air Force grounds at North Battleford. Upon
arriving in the early afternoon of the first day of
camp, we found that the afternoon meeting was already
in progress. There was little or no activity outside—nearly
everyone had entered the meeting hall…The atmosphere
was one of expectancy—all eyes were on the speaker.
Only one man was upon a small platform which was about
8’ x 12’ and approximately one foot high.
This rather singular thing attracted our attention—only
one man on the platform and he was standing behind
a simple pulpit.”
“In
the past conventions and camp meetings, we had always
been used to seeing a large platform crowded with preachers.
Here was a camp meeting from which was to flow a message
and a blessing that would rock the religious world;
yet what simplicity. No showmanship, no outstanding
song leader, no orchestra or choir, an done man at
a time on the platform. The only one exception to this
being when someone from the audience stepped up to
the platform to say something; then in most cases the
one already at the position of the speaker to step
aside. Yet the first remained on the platform to resume
his charge. This simplicity was the first thing that
attracted our attention…The next thing that
impressed us was the anointed and authoritative word
of prophecy. They prophesied as ones having authority…To
say that there were no flaws in the prophecies…would
be a mistake. The instruments were beginners and
undoubtedly made mistakes, but the manifest sovereignty
of God was wonderful.”
“At
the invitation of Reg Layzell in Vancouver, British
Columbia, George and Ern Hawtin held meetings in Glad
Tidings Temple during November 14-18, 1948. Myrtle
Beall, pastor of Bethesda Missionary Temple in Detroit,
Michigan, traveled 2500 miles by car to attend the
meetings, and returned to her church to spark revival
there…In February 1949 Dr. Thomas Wyatt of Portland,
Oregon, invited the Hawtin party to his church, Wings
of Healing Temple, where George Hawtin and Milford
Kirkpatrick ministered to ninety preachers from almost
every part of North America. One of the pastors attending
was Dr. A. Earl Lee of Los Angeles, California, whose
church became a center of revival soon after he returned.”
It
is from A. Earl Lee’s church that the spark that
became City At The Cross was ignited through a man
named David Schoch, the founder of what was then called
Bethany Chapel on October 4, 1953 on the corner of
6th & Dawson streets in Long Beach,
California
“I
was born in Pasadena, California, on April twenty-fourth,
1920. I was raised in what is called a classical Pentecostal
family. My mother and father received the baptism of
the Holy Spirit in Azusa Street. They came out of the
German Methodist Church, hungering and seeking after
God. At that time God was moving in the city of Los
Angeles in what is known as the livery stable on Azusa
Street. My father went first with his father-in-law.
The Lord baptized them with the Holy Spirit. After
that my mother, who was quite opposed at the beginning,
was baptized with the Holy Spirit right in our living
room. It was quite a delightful thing to hear the story
of how the Lord brought my family into the fullness
of the Spirit.”
“It was right at that time
that we heard that there was something happening over
in Los Angeles. I said to my wife, ``Let's go and see.''
It was a Thursday night in 1948. I hurried home from
my job, and she and my daughter had everything ready.
We just picked up, packed up and went to Immanuel Gospel
Temple down on South Flower Street. We walked in at six
o'clock, getting the last three seats in the back of
the auditorium. There wasn't anybody on the platform,
although the auditorium was full of people. There was
a holy hush; just an awesome presence of God in that
place. Somebody slipped to the piano and began to play,
``Wonderful, Wonderful Jesus.'' I'll never forget the
glory of God that came in that place. I'd never heard
the song, but it didn't take long to learn it. In about
ten minutes, we all stood. As we sang, the glory of God
swept over that place. It is just as real and vital to
me today as it was the day I walked in and heard it.
A tremendous healing came to my wife and me at that moment.
For an hour and a half the whole congregation of hundreds
stood with hands in the air worshipping.
“That was the first time I
ever heard the song of the Lord: spiritual worship and
singing unto the Lord. I didn't even know who the pastor
was. Shortly after seven-thirty or eight o'clock a group
of people came and sat on the platform. Nobody got up;
nobody seemed to take the initiative. We began to sing
again; well, we hadn't really stopped. We were just singing
and worshipping, and they all joined in. I didn't know
who was who, but there were three brethren from Canada
plus the pastor and his wife. When it seemed as though
the Spirit of God indicated there was order of change,
a man got up. I learned later his name was Dr. A. Earl
Lee, the pastor of the church. He took an offering. For
the first time in my life I saw an offering on this wise.
He just asked the folks to come and take care of the
needs of the visiting brethren by bringing their offering
and laying it on the platform. These people filed down
and piled what I could literally say to you was a heap
of money on the platform. Nobody seemed bothered or worried
about gathering it up. They just left it there, and I
guess it was a good place to be. It was being sanctified.”
“A man of experience in wisdom
in years, I presume he was about forty or forty-five,
stood up. He was introduced as Brother George Hawtin
from North Battleford in Canada. His brother, Ernie Hawton,
also was there, and Brother Milford Kirkpatrick. The
three traveled together as a team. That was their first
time in Los Angeles. For two hours he spoke from the
first epistle to the Corinthians, taking his text from
the third chapter, verses one to four: ``because we are
divided and because some say, `We are of Paul and Apollos
and Cephas,' are we not only children, are we not carnal,
do we not walk as men?'' I never had the word laid on
me in such a wonderful way, and yet cut so deeply and
bring such conviction.”
“After two hours of sitting
under comprehensive teaching, the people fell on their
faces before the Lord. Nobody left; everybody laid before
God, knelt in his presence and sought God for another
hour, asking God to forgive us for our carnality, or
divisive attitudes and ways. And there was a tremendous
healing. This was my first exposure to Latter Rain. These
three men, the Hawtins and Brother Kirkpatrick, returned
to Los Angeles twice after that first trip. I wasn't
closely involved with them, being just a layman in the
church. But I heard them. By the way, the term ``Latter
Rain'' was not what we who were involved in the revival
called ourselves. It was a label put on us by our antagonists
and adversaries. They called us Latter Rain because we
were preaching Joel 2:25 and 28 and Hosea 6:1-3. Naturally
we were talking about rain, about latter rain, but we
weren't saying ‘we were latter rain.’ Others
categorized us that way. Actually, there was nothing
wrong with it. It was a good designation because Jesus
is the rain. Our contention is, “Let her rain.''
“Needless to say, we went to
church every night from that time on. As soon as I could
get home, my wife had supper ready, and she and the girl
were ready. We took a pallet, and she slept on the floor.
We didn't have nurseries in those days; we never thought
about nurseries. For one year we went every night, and
God's glory came down, moved upon us and ministered to
us. I was still committed to the Lord as to what God
wanted us to do. Then in December of 1949, because of
the circumstances that we needed to have prayer for,
I had just asked Dr. Lee on a Sunday evening if he would
just pray for us. “Instead of just praying, he
called the brethren of the presbytery together…They
laid their hands on us and set us apart as a prophet
of God unto the body of Christ. The Lord told me that
we wouldn't have to seek for ministry, we wouldn't have
to ask for any open door, we wouldn't have to write a
letter or we wouldn't need to use the telephone, but
God would open the doors for us whereby we would minister.
He said we would go from coast to coast and border to
border and we would go to the nations of the world. It
was then that God had definitely indicated that our prophetic
ministry would be on an international basis.”
“I
stayed at Immanuel Temple with them until the summer
of 1950. Then in a morning service during a convention
around July the Fourth, God spoke to us again. It was
one of the greatest conventions I think we've ever
been involved with. There were two hundred fifty preachers
from all across the country: can you just imagine that?
Pastor Fred Poole from the Gospel Temple in Philadelphia,
the main speaker, was speaking on the last night of
the convention. He preached until midnight, but it
wasn't because of a long-winded sermon. God was so
sovereign that Brother Poole would make a statement,
and the people would stand and begin to worship until
worship was the predominant thing. Then Brother Poole
would make another statement, and people would just
get lost in worship again. A prophet from Ireland named
Adam McKeowon was in the congregation on the morning
that the Lord spoke to us. Pastor Poole was speaking.
There were about a thousand people in that morning
service. The word of the Lord came to this Irish prophet,
who began to call different ones by name and he set
them into office. I didn't know this man and he didn't
know me, but God knows who you are. All of a sudden
the word of the Lord came, and he called my name. He
didn't even mispronounce it.
“He
said, ``I've called my servant David Schoch to be a
prophet unto the nations, and I'm setting him apart
and calling him out from secular life.'' And then he
prophesied something that was completely a surprise
to me. He said that when I was born, my mother had
received a phenomenal visitation which had to do with
my calling and my ministry. I questioned him, asking
whether he had any understanding or any knowledge of
what he had prophesied. He said that was all he had
received from the Lord. After the prophetic word came,
they set us aside and ordained us to the ministry of
the Lord.”
“I
took this man, Brother McKeowon, home with me at one
in the morning. I wakened my mother, who was living
in Pasadena, and said, ``I must talk to you.''She said,
``All right.' Then I brought Brother McKeowon in, and
I said to her, ``Tell me what happened when I was born.
Did God visit you? Was there something that happened
to you concerning my birth?'' And my mother started
to cry. She said, ``Who told you? I have said nothing
to anyone except your father.'' My father had died
about three years prior to that. I explained to her
how the word of the Lord had come to Brother McKeowon.
Then she told me a about a vision that God had given
her in relationship to the call of God. I prefer just
to leave that between the Lord and myself.”
“After three glorious months
in India, I returned home feeling God wanted me to resign
from Immanuel Temple and strike out in a field of evangelism.
I submitted my resignation without having a meeting to
go to. But I remembered the word of the Lord: ``You won't
have to ask for a meeting, you won't have to write, you
won't have to telephone, you won't have to do anything.''
As soon as I submitted my resignation I got a call from
a man up in Watsonville, California, by the name of Fred
White. He said, ``I want you to come for a meeting. Are
you free?'' I said, ``Yes, I just resigned.'' I went
up there and held my first meeting, staying with him
six weeks. I had no other meeting, but about the fifth
week a phenomena began to develop. I began to get calls.
When I was in prayer, the Lord spoke to me and said,
``This would be my indication to you that it will be
time for you to move on. When it is time to move on,
I will begin to send to you invitations. ''So I said,
``Thank you, Lord. I appreciate that.''
“I
would spend sometimes two or three or four weeks, or
maybe one week, at a place. God gave us visitations, pouring out
his Spirit. We had tremendous blessings, and God gets
the glory. It wasn't through any ability or talents
of my own; it was God using us in obedience to his
word and to the call. Just about a week before we were
to close out a meeting, I'd begin to get calls. My
problem wasn't where to go next in the sense of looking
for an open door. My problem was which door that was
open should I take. Which would be the will of the
Lord? My wife and I and our little girl traveled for
a year and a half that way, my wife teaching our daughter
as we went. We never lacked one single opportunity
for a meeting.”
“In fact when I came to Long
Beach on October fourth, 1953, I came only to start a
revival in an empty Lutheran Church. There were six people
that asked me and wanted me to come and pastor, and I
said, “Well, let's see what we'll do. We'll start
the work, and we'll see what God will do.''…He
said to us he would make us a fountain of many tributaries;
that out of it would flow many, many streams of life.
They would come and stay with us for a season, and then,
he said, ``Don't hold them, but release them. Let them
go.'' This is what we've tried to do, in order that they
would find the level of God's will for their lives, and
in so doing they would be able to serve God according
to his call.”
“October
4, 1953 Sunday morning finally came. The Lord impressed
Pastor Schoch to not write any letters, advertise,
or invite anyone to church. He would bring those of
His own choosing. At 10.00 a.m. they gathered for prayer.
Service was scheduled to begin at 11.00 a.m. While
praying, Pastor Schoch could hear people coming in
and sitting down, but he couldn’t bring himself
to look up and see what was going up. After praying
for an hour, Pastor Schoch got up to begin the service
and much to his delight, fifty people were sitting
in the congregation! They had three services that first
Sunday with 125 people in the first Sunday night service.
Two weeks after that first service, a Sunday School
program began with 90 people in attendance. The Holy
Spirit broke out upon the congregation, a revival had
begun, and it lasted for six weeks. During that time
25 people gave their hearts to the Lord, 25 backsliders
were restored, and 25 people were filled with the Holy
Spirit.”
Reformation
Focus Points
It
is important to remember that the Latter Rain was birthed
out of a desire for the Pentecostal movement to continue in accuracy. “Discouraged
by waning spiritual fervor and the relentless institutionalization
and professionalism of North American Pentecostalism,
they viewed their early history as merely having set
the stage for a greater event and opted once again
to believe that in their day, the restoration of apostolic
power would be realized. They discovered—as their
forebears had—that emphasis on the latter rain
and restoration involved implicit and explicit indictment
of their fellow believers.”
“This
visitation of God is the fulfillment of Hosea 6.3…it
is Jesus appearing to His Body.” Hosea 6.1-3: “Come, let us return to the Lord.
For He has torn us, but He will
heal us; He has wounded us, but
He will bandage us. He will revive us after two days; He will raise us up
on the third day, that we may live before Him. so let us know, let us press
on to know the Lord. His going
forth is as certain as the dawn; and He will come to us like the rain, like
the spring rain watering the earth.”
Therefore
while emphasizing the Pentecostal doctrines birthed
in Azusa Street, the Latter Rain reformation pushed
away from what was considered inaccurate in it, and
into that which was still not restored
Restoration
“The
Church lost everything spiritual and God has for years
been fulfilling prophecy and restoring these spiritual
truths, virtues and powers that were done away. These
Scriptures show the promise of restoration: ‘And
I will restore to you the years that the locust hath
eaten, the cankerworm, and the caterpillar, and the
palmerworm, my great army which I sent among you. Joel
2.25’…God began to restore in Luther’s
day with the foundation of ‘the just shall live
by faith.’
“Notice
that Luther, like Ezra and Nehemiah, did not make a
new foundation, but merely cleared away the garbage
from the one that was already laid. God has been restoring
each truth, step by step, as the church can absorb
it…With each step of restoration comes opposition
and usually from the ones who were used of God to restore
the last step. All through church history this has
been true. The persecuted of the past now become the
persecutors of the present…Each time there has
been a restoration, it was Jesus appearing. Some forty-five
years ago (1907) He appeared in the great revelation
and experience of the Baptism of the Holy Ghost. At
that time, the message of the Body coming together
was proclaimed. Men who are now fighting for their
organizations were outspoken in preaching that this
new visitation of God must never be organized. ‘How
the mighty have fallen!’”
Unity
of the Body
“What
is the primary message of the Latter Rain and what
is the immediate objective? Its greatest message is ‘That
they may be one as We are…that the world may
believe.’ The world is actually to see the Body
one, not only in spirit but in reality. Today only
the eye of faith can see it. Some day the natural eye
will behold it when the delivering company have reaped
the reward of faith. God always some who see His purpose
completed by faith before others can see. The primary
message is the Body coming together as one, physically
and spiritually. Let all who will, laugh or scoff;
but it shall be, nevertheless, because Jesus prayed
for it.”
“Naturally,
this message caused tremendous opposition. There are
thousands of jobs and positions at stake—religious
political systems are to tumble. This latest move of
the Lord’s is to free God’s people from
building treasure cities for others. This is raising
the wrath of the Pharaohs.”
“The
ascension ministries are now coming to the front. Read
what they are for and how long they function. They
are to function until we come to the unity of the faith.
They are to have as their supreme objective and ministry ‘bringing
unity among the members of the Body.’…The
denominational walls and the doctrinal walls must come
down. One cannot say to the other, ‘We agree,
but you must join our denomination or accept our doctrine…My
brother and sister, this visitation could never be
taken into a denomination. Its very message would of
necessity tear the walls down. You may take in some
of the Pentecostal blessings which were lost and received
(this is all that many have taken in), and yet you
could never take the message in. It contains the same
dynamite that brought down the walls of Jericho. You
cannot preach ‘The Body is one’ without
breaking down walls of division. No wonder there is
so much opposition.”
Laying
On Of Hands
“The
laying on of hands is a fundamental doctrine of the
Church, being one of the foundational doctrines outlined
in Hebrews 6…God is now moving to restore the
third of the doctrines outlined in Hebrews—the
doctrine of laying on of hands. It is just the beginning—the
fully glory, and the power of it, is yet to be revealed.
The hangers-on, the blessing-seekers, the scoffers,
the testers, the unbelievers, are being shaken so that
only the true will remain. This visitation from God
is no different than the others. The hue and cry is
coming from the formalists, the same protests and even
the same words are used as were used against every
other visitation—the only difference being that
the accused of the past are now the accusers!”
“The
laying on of hands is not to build the pride of individuals
or to satisfy their ambitions, but rather it was the
receiving of our equipment to carry out a calling…All
ministries did not take in the laying on of hands—only
those whom the Spirit indicated had such a ministry.
It was generally recognized as the ministry of prophets
and apostles….The ministry of laying on of hands
and prophecy were the major ministries used to impart
gifts and to impart the Holy Ghost. We realized that
through this great ministry of ‘laying on of
hands’, God was going to bring His Body together.
All who had hands laid upon them were no longer independent,
but there was a great dependence on one another.”
Biblical
Praise
“Jesus
told the disciples to wait. Notice two things about
their waiting. First they obeyed. Second, notice how
they waited…The 53rd verse of Luke
24 now tells us how they waited. ‘And were continually
praising and blessing God’ They waited together,
praising and blessing God. When we know the Scripture
this is easy to understand. Psalm 119.171 says, ‘My
lips shall utter praise, when Thou hast taught me Thy
statutes.’ Notice, when? You see Jesus (God)
opened their understanding or taught them His statutes.
We might ask the question, ‘Why did they praise
God?’ We give two Scriptures of the many available
on this subject of waiting. Psalms 65.1 – ‘Praise
waiteth for Thee, O God, in Zion’. Praise is
waiting; also, Psalm 22.3, ‘But Thou art holy,
O Thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel.’ Jesus
lives in our praises!”
“The
early church had unity first in spirit, they were all
worshipping Jesus. What greater unity can a church
have than all praising and blessing Jesus? Can you
with the same breath praise Jesus and murder your brother?
We all know that we cannot. Do you want what the early
church had? Then follow its steps to perfection…Notice
they were all one—not just a few in the front
benches, but all every last one of the 120 were praising
and blessing God…Before the glory appeared,
and the city was stirred, they came to one place, losing
all ambitions and personal feelings, to just worship
Jesus.”
“Jeremiah
33.11 tells us that this same condition will be restored
as the end time appears. A restoration of praise, a
restoration of joy, and a restoration of the sacrifice
of praise, preparing the way for a restoration of the
power that followed the Day of Pentecost…In
Hebrews we are told to offer the sacrifice of praise
continually—the fruit of our lips. Note it is
from the lips or mouth…120 brethren gathered
together in unity…All heaven was aglow. The
thing the heavens were waiting to see on the earth
was before them. Here was the fulfillment of Psalm
133, the unity was (as is only possible) around Jesus,
worshipping Him. God speaks? No—He does more
than that—HE COMMANDS A BLESSING. He even goes
further—He comes Himself as the God of fire and
sits on each member in unity. They each one become
the habitation of the God of fire…All because…they
saw only Jesus and worshipped Him. Are you ready for
the same again? Where do you stand on Biblical praise.
Which will you have—fire or your own way?”
Dick
Iverson, former pastor of Bible Temple and founder
of Ministers Fellowship International writes about
the impact of Latter Rain worship seen the early 1960’s
in his book The Journey, A Life Time of Prophetic
Moments saying, “The ‘latter
rain’ movement, as I have emphasized, was characterized
by the Holy Spirit’s emphasis on prophecy and
the laying on of hands, as well as the ‘sacrifice
of praise’ form of worship…Just the mere
rumor that our church might be a part of it was enough
to bar our participation in the Pentecostal ministers’ association.
In the beginning, when Edie [Iverson’s wife]
had sent letters about this movement, I had been opened
to it. Over time, however, things had changed and I
had come to see more of the charlatans than the good.
That’s why what followed was all the more amazing
and I can only praise the Lord for it and for my wife
who never forgot what she’d seen and heard and
didn’t fail to preserver in her persuasion
“As
we pursued our pilgrimage to various churches, Edie
was eager that we visit two other churches in particular
pastored by two men she had seen minister in Canada—David
Schoch and Reg Layzell…My first encounter with
David Schoch was, in fact, one of the those key prophetic
moments in my life—in more ways than one. Brother
Schoch was not only a pastor, he was a prophet. I still
remember being with my family in Long Beach, California
for the first time. Bethany Chapel [City At The Cross]
was an older, traditional building which seated about
four hundred. The auditorium was packed and, as the
worship service began, the presence of the Lord was
powerful. Being raised in a Pentecostal church, I had
heard praise before, but this was different. They worshipped the
Lord the Lord by lifting their voices and singing praises
to Him, spontaneously, both in known and unknown languages.”
“At
first I thought it was tremendous, but only for a short
while. Soon I found myself becoming agitated. In fact,
I wished that they would stop. I had never experienced
prolonged praise before, and it just went on and on.
After a time, the spontaneous season of worship died
down, and several prophecies were given. Then a great
volume of praise began again. I remember shifting from
one foot to another, waiting for it to finish, eventually
realizing that maybe it wasn’t going to end for
a while. In my irritation, I began to judge the church
and criticize its unusual worship.”
“At
that point the Holy Spirit spoke to me and said, ‘What’s
wrong with what they’re doing?’ I replied, ‘Nothing
is wrong. They’re lifting their hands, singing,
and worshiping the Lord.’ Then the Spirit said
to me, ‘Why don’t you do it too?’ So
I lifted my hands and joined in singing songs to the
Lord. For the first time I really worshiped Him. The ‘fountains
of the deep’ in my spirit broke loose. The heavens
opened, and I found myself in the presence of the Lord
in a way I had not experienced before.”
Body
Ministry
“Many
hours were spent around this subject both in teaching
and in actual operation. It was unique and new to most
of those present and therefore very attractive. The
central Scripture for this subject was 1 Corinthians
14.26. this Scripture was interpreted to mean that
when the church came together, each member should be
ready to contribute something to the meeting. They
were to contribute something that would edify the other
members present. In this way they were to serve one
another.”
“Each
member should always be ready to minister both to the
unsaved and to the church. The position was taken at
the camp that all should come to the meeting with something
ready to contribute. This was repeated, over and over
again and stated that the day of the ‘one-man’ ministry
was over. Each member was now expected to have light
and revelation flowing to edify the whole body.”
“Some
would do this through a prophecy or through a tongue
followed by an interpretation. Others would speak by
revelation; there would also be those who would minister
by knowledge…There would be the ones who would
just read the Scriptures or a psalm which fitted into
the tone of the meeting. A song of songs would be sung
which had been received by revelation such as a ballad
or an ode. Still others would sing a known song that
was very appropriate. All this without a given signal
from the leader, but as they were led of the Lord.”
World
Vision
“The
vision of the first camp meeting was a world vision
NOW! Calls were prophesied, money was raised, some
were sent…The praise and worship of Jesus was
the order of the services. The Word was taught with
authority. Over and over again it was emphasized that
the old organizational leadership was over—now
the Holy Ghost would rule. Through the laying on of
hands and prophecy each member of the Body of Christ
was to receive the gifts of the Spirit. We understood
that God was recruiting his last day army. Prayer and
fasting were the order of the day. Saints and ministers
met on common ground to seek the Lord. These were days
of rejoicing and God-consciousness. The spirit of prophecy
was everywhere in evidence as was the spirit of revelation—making
God’s Word to live in the midst of the people.
The field of labor truly was the World. From the very
beginning the World Vision burned. We had visions of
God’s army going forth, directed by the Spirit
and fully equipped for battle. For the purpose of reaching
the world, money flowed freely and offerings reached
up into thousands of dollars were received easily and
frequently. The people had a vision and a mind to fulfill
it. Praise the Lord…There are many people who
KNOW that God visited His people…When a train
leaves a track the very next job is to get it back
on again. Every revival God has sent up to the present
hour has at some place gone off the track. I do not
know one single one which has not done this. And worse
still, I do not know of a single revival movement which
ever got back on again. Each time a revival goes off
track God has had to start another one to begin where
the last one went off. What a tragedy! Yet this is
all too true. These articles are being written with
the hope that we will stay on track of God’s
choosing which He gave us in the beginning.”
A
Call To Remembrance – Reg Layzell, October
1958
“Eleven
years ago a real stir gripped the churches in the land.
Some churches were stirred with apprehension—a
nervousness gripped them. Other churches were stirred
with anticipation—expectancy gripped them. Both
groups were affected by the same thing. A revival had
broken out, God was on the move, another step in restoration
was breaking upon us. As was the case in the day of
Pentecost and with every succeeding revival up to the
present time, the groups formed two camps. One camp
heard the glorious things of God, the other said that
are filled with new wine—they meant they are
drunk.” One group saw an answer to their much
prayer and fasting. The other group saw a threat to
their carefully built treasure cities. One group almost
recklessly threw open their doors and their arms to
receive the rush of the Spirit of God. The other ground
sounded an alarm and a call to close the gates and
tighten their grip on their possessions. One group
followed the experience of all revivals greatly blessed
of God Sings and wonders were done by the Holy Ghost
and in some cases error and wild fire crept in. The
other group so shut themselves in that not even the
Holy Ghost could penetrate their defenses.”
“Now
the first group, still blessed by God is going forward
and accomplishing the purpose of God. They have stopped
and taken inventory of their ways and spiritual possessions,
they have taken a look at what God challenged them
with in the beginning and are returning to the great
challenge of the revival and the first camp meeting.
The other group is glorying in their earthly possessions
and both are miles apart in spiritual actions. Time
alone will tell who has followed God in His way. God
help us to see God’s vision for this hour and
follow on. The challenge of the Spirit has not changed.
God moved in this revival for a purpose; He will not
veer from it. He will perform what He purposed to do.
He will have a people who will follow and fulfill the
last day vision. “The challenge of God in the
beginning of this revival (and still is) the same as
in every revival. First, a fresh call to worship the
Lord Jesus. The first and greatest commandment of all
to be carried out is worshipping Him with all our four
faculties. These four are: the
heart, the soul, the mind, and our strength. The heart
(our deep inner feelings), the soul (our emotional
nature), the mind (the reasoning part of us and the
faculty where faith must start), and our strength (no
quiet, sedate, half-hearted effort here, but the suggestion
is that we tire ourselves out worshipping Him). A new
experience in God was introduced by the Spirit as He
restored that wholesale, whole-hearted worship to the
Lord. This wholesale praise brought a new experience
in God. The sacrifice of praise lifted the church to
new heights in God.”
“No
longer did our feelings rule us. No longer did we praise
God only when things went good and we felt good. The
church began to catch’s David’s vision
of the goodness and mercy of God. The church began
to realize that faith was above our feeling. God had
divorced faith from our feelings and now at last we
could have a steadfast faith irrespective of our feelings.
The church began to realize that God was raising up
David’s army and like David, they were called
to be men after God’s own heart. If you are hungry
and thirsty you will hear the joyful sound of the manna
and rain and plunge in. He is coming again as the rain
upon the mown grass.”