“A seed shall serve him; it shall be accounted to the Lord for a generation.” (Ps 22:30 AV)
A seed here is a specific generation that awakens to a deeper commitment to God. This promise points to Israel’s reclamation. It points to the generation that will enter into the reign of Jesus Christ. The last a final revival experienced upon mankind is coming at the return of Jesus to His Earth. Yet we do not have to wait for this to be a micro-realty. The people of God have experienced revivals all throughout our history. Israel’s history is littered with times of disobedience, repentance, and refreshing. It was more of a pattern than it was the exception to the rule. If that be the case, then the same should be true of the church. And it is. Sacred history books tell of times of refreshing. The same history books tell of equally great apathy. There are times when a generation falls away from God. There are times when younger generation sees the apathy, and it stirs them to spiritual awakening. We exist in such a time as this.
Our news outlets are speaking of an awakening. They believe we are in the midst of one right now. I sure hope they are right. They speak of younger generations showing an interest in spiritual matters and make the leap that this interest transfers to a revival. A spiritual awakening does precede revival, but it doesn’t always cause it. The mystic movement of the mid to late 1800s, which lasted for almost 75 years is a good example. Spiritualism and mysticism were rampant following the Civil war. However, much of the result was the formation of cultic religions that spoke heresy. There was a great awakening and spiritual revival under the likes of Finney and Billy Sunday. In the late 70s to the early 80s, following the Vietnam conflict and the hippy revolution, there was a period when churches exploded in attendance and growth. Christendom became a counterrevolution to the growing cultural changes that had happened a few decades earlier. Perhaps we are seeing the same thing today. Perhaps we are seeing a younger generation respond to satanic forces over-playing their hand with deviant corruption which cannot be stomached. Perhaps the young men who are starting to return to church know that biblical masculinity is not something that should be shunned. Maybe we will see young ladies return to the LORD once they realize the emptiness of worldly feminism. What will true revival look like? How will we know this is genuine as opposed to the mysticism that spawned the cults of the late 1800s?
True revival makes a priority of repentance and holiness. True revival is not entertained. True revival causes the saint to evaluate his or her life against the standards, principles, and laws of the word of God. True revival produces humility and selflessness. True revival has a healthy fear of God and will recognize sin as the Bible labels it. True revival in the pews is not contained therein. True revival is moved with compassion on a lost world that faces an eternity in a devil’s hellfire. True revival believes the word of God is perfectly pure and without error. True revival treats the sacred things of God sacredly. True revival offers worship that is God-centered and not man-pleasing. True revival results in holiness as the standard for a nation. Regardless of personal belief in God, behavior is changed in all. Not merely in the believers. We need a generation! We need a generation that will fall on their knees before they wave their arms in the air. We need a generation that has boldness to speak the truth even if it means persecution will follow. We need a generation that is not afraid to love the lost, seeking their conversion, but maintaining a balance wherein righteousness is the commitment of a lifetime. We need a generation that refuses to be entertained unto spiritual death but sees the doom of a human soul far more important than the latest social media post. We need a generation that awakens to reality rather than be lulled to sleep by fantasy. Where is that generation? It is yours?