E.A. Johnston passionately calls the church to genuine repentance and revival, urging believers to seek God's mercy and power to restore spiritual vitality and impact the nation.
In this compelling devotional sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges the modern church to confront its spiritual decline and embrace true revival through repentance and prayer. Drawing from Nehemiah's heartfelt intercession, Johnston illustrates how God’s mercy and power can restore the church and nation. He calls believers to humble themselves, seek God's face, and expect a transformative move of the Holy Spirit. This message serves as a timely reminder of the church’s pivotal role in national renewal.
Full Transcript
I remember having lunch with a well-known preacher exactly ten years ago, but we were discussing a certain large Protestant denomination, and I made the following comments. I said that I believe that if this particular denomination did not turn back to God immediately and confess their sins and turn to Him in repentance, that in ten years they would be as ineffectual as other denominations that had turned away from the God of the Bible. That big preacher who was part of that denomination agreed with me wholeheartedly, but it didn't take ten years.
Things fell apart a lot quicker. Listen friends, I've never seen a time in my whole life where the church at large in America has fallen into such spiritual decay and ruin. When your typical pastor is mainly a comedian who feels he has to make you laugh, and your typical church is nothing more than a house of entertainment, we're in bad shape, friends.
Society crumbles all around us today while the church builds bigger buildings. Ichabod is on the door of the modern church today. Listen friends, true revival of religion has not visited America since 1858.
Did you hear me? 1858, that's 156 years since this nation saw a national spiritual awakening that brought spiritual vitality to the church and ushered in tens of thousands into God's kingdom through conversion. If the church be moved by revival, it would impact this generation like a thunderbolt from heaven. And that's what revival is, friend, a thunderbolt from heaven.
It's an intervention from God into the affairs of man. It is God who sends his plentiful effusions of divine grace to revive his people, to bring him glory. If the church be moved by revival, it could shake this nation from coast to coast, and that's the title of my message today, If the Church Be Moved.
Our text is found in the book of Nehemiah in chapter 1. You may turn in your Bibles there now, but we will read it in its entirety, for in it is a prayer for revival. Nehemiah got news that Jerusalem had fallen into desolations. The remnant that were left of the captivity were in great affliction and need.
They were in spiritual distress. And on top of that, the wall of Jerusalem was broken down and no one was bothering to fix it. And the invading army of the Chaldeans had even burned the very gates of the city and left them in ruins.
It's a picture of people, of God in distress, and in need, and in a desperate hour. Nehemiah was wise enough to know that a servant of God must both be an agonizer and an organizer. So he sets out to do something about it, and the very first thing he does is bring the sad situation before the face of God in prayer.
And in this, friends, we see a similar situation in the church in America today. Her walls are broken down. There is no authority.
The very gates are in ruins. The church has no influence upon society. The church has sinned and refuses to repent and return to God to be repaired and revitalized again.
This passage from Nehemiah chapter 1 is a prayer for revival, and revival is America's only hope, friends, her only hope. If this nation does not turn back to the God of the Bible, there will be no nation left to be turned. Do you believe that? Do you? Then pay close attention to this passage from Nehemiah chapter 1 as I read it to you and notice several aspects in this prayer of Nehemiah.
Notice first, he addresses a high and lofty God who sits on the throne. Number two, he reminds God that he is a covenant keeping God. Number three, he confesses the sins of the nation and confesses his own sins.
Number four, he reminds God of what he has done in former times on behalf of his people. And number five, he expects God to act in mercy and power. Now let me read you our passage and pay close attention to each of these aspects I just mentioned.
And as I read it to us, a picture in your mind how the church in America should respond to the current dilemma. It stands in there is a remnant in America who cry out in anguish over both the condition of the nation and the condition of the church. This remnant weeps real tears of bitter sorrow over the moral bankruptcy of the nation and the spiritual declension in the church.
Here now friends is the prayer of Nehemiah as found in chapter 1 from the word of God. The words of Nehemiah, the son of Hecaliah, and it came to pass in the month Chislew in the 20th year as I was in Shushan, the palace, that Hunayah, one of my brethren came, he and certain men of Judah. And I asked them concerning the Jews that had escaped, which were left of the captivity and concerning Jerusalem.
And they said unto me, the remnant that are left of the captivity there in the province are in great affliction and reproach. The wall of Jerusalem also was broken down and the gates thereof are burned with fire. And it came to pass when I heard these words that I sat down and wept and mourned a certain days and fasted and prayed before the God of heaven and said, I beseech thee, O Lord God of heaven, the great and terrible God that keepeth covenant and mercy for them that love him and observe his commandments, let thine ear now be attentive and thine eyes open that thou mayest hear the prayer of thy servant, which I pray before thee now day and night for the children of Israel, thy servants, and confess the sins of the children of Israel, which we have sinned against thee, both I and my father's house have sinned.
We have dealt very corruptly against thee and have not kept the commandments nor the statutes nor the judgments, which thou commandest thy servant Moses. Remember I beseech thee, the word that thou commandest thy servant Moses saying, if ye transgress, I will scatter you abroad among the nations. But if you turn unto me and keep my commandments and do them, though they were of you cast out onto the uttermost part of heaven, yet will I gather them from thence and will bring them unto the place that I have chosen to set my name there.
Now there are thy servants and thy people whom thou hast redeemed by thy great power and by thy strong hand. O Lord, I beseech thee, let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of thy servant and to the prayer of thy servants who desire to fear thy name and prosper. I pray thee, thy servant, this day and grant him mercy in the sight of this man, for I was the king's cupbearer.
Observe, friends, the prayer for revival found here in Nehemiah's wonderful intercession on behalf of the nation. If we, as a church, as a nation, should go and do likewise, what glorious things could be accomplished in the name of the Lord if the church be moved to repentance. What a transformation could appear in the land if the church was revived into a vital brand of New Testament Christianity.
Imagine what would occur. It could be like the book of Acts, wherein the Christians were described as these who have turned the world upside down have come here also. When God comes in revival, the church becomes a vitalized and energized entity by the power of the Holy Spirit.
The second great awakening in America ushered in a great missionary enterprise, which sent out thousands of young men and women from America to the shores of distant lands. Many died there as a witness for the gospel. They planted their lives on foreign fields for the souls of men.
I was recently speaking to a young Christian college student, and I asked her what God had intended for her life. She said she felt called to be a missionary, but when she looked into it, she found out she could not support herself financially, so she is now studying for a secular career, which can support her. When the church lies in spiritual decay, the focus is on us.
When the church is in revival, the focus is on the perishing, reaching them with the gospel of the Son of God. Let us look now, friends, how Nehemiah prayed to God and be familiar with it so we can apply the same principles to our prayer life for the church and for our nation. Number one, Nehemiah addresses a high and lofty God who sits on a throne.
Our concept of God today is too small. We've shrunken him down to our size or smaller, and we treat him like a pal, but Nehemiah addresses the Almighty who sits on a throne. Number two, he reminded God that he was a covenant-keeping God, who we have here in Nehemiah the prayer for revival, and in 2 Chronicles, we have the pattern for revival.
In 2 Chronicles 7.14, God declares, If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land. Listen, friends, we must remind God of his covenant promises. He says that if his people meet these conditions of turning back to him in humility, and in repentance, and in prayer, he will then keep his promise to hear from heaven, forgive their sin, and heal their land.
Let me ask you, does our land need healing today? Then let's apply this prayer and this pattern for revival in our personal lives, in the corporate life of the church as well. Notice the third aspect found in Nehemiah's prayer, and that is, he confesses the sins of the nation, and then he confesses his own sins. This is applying the principle and pattern from 2 Chronicles in a real and practical way.
Are we, in our churches today, crying out to the Almighty in true repentance? I do not believe we are. The church in America has sinned, and she refuses to repent, and God has withdrawn his presence from among us. But if we fall on our faces before God in true humility and repentance, and turn from our wicked ways, he will hear, he will hear friends, he will forgive, and he will heal our land.
This nation could be shaken from coast to coast with a mighty outpouring of his grace and revival, if only the proud church would bend her neck and bow to the King of kings. Notice the fourth aspect of Nehemiah's prayer. He reminds God of what he has done in former times.
Let us go to God, friends, and remind him of how he blessed America in the past, through seasons of revival and spiritual awakenings. Let us call to his mind the great awakening and the second great awakening, and ask him to do it again, to do it again. Oh Lord, what you have done in former times, do again, great God.
Now notice this last aspect of Nehemiah's prayer, and that is this. He actually expects God to act in mercy and power. We may pray for revival, friend, but do we have the necessary faith to accompany it, to see revival? Do we truly expect God to do what we are asking him to do? Nehemiah was a man burdened for his nation, brokenhearted over his afflicted people, and bent on doing something about it through action and faith.
Listen, friends, America cannot go on sinning in the face of God much longer and expect anything other than certain judgment. The church in America cannot continue on with its building programs and pride without being brought into judgment by an offended sovereign. I've been around a long time, and I've never seen such a perfect storm of judgment brewing for this nation as I do now.
Should the church be moved by revival, there would be hope for the nation in a national spiritual awakening that could keep us from certain ruin and destruction. But will we pray as we ought, or will we forsake our wicked ways and true repentance? We must apply the prayer of Nehemiah and the pattern for revival as we should before it's too late. Let us pray.
Great God of heaven, your people are in affliction. Our hearts are grieved over the desolation in the land. Heavenly King, visit your church in revival blessings, for our walls are torn down and our very gates are burned.
We have grieved you away from our sanctuaries through our wicked rebellion and sin. We have replaced you, Lord, with entertainment and idols. We have sinned as a nation before thy face wickedly.
But our greatest crime is forsaking you in our churches and relying on money and manpower to run the church rather than relying on you and holy ghost power. Grant us, I pray, the grace of repentance. You who dwell among the cherubim, come dwell among your people once again.
Move as you have moved in former times in seasons of revival and spiritual awakening when you sent blessings of grace throughout this once great land. We sit in sackcloth and ashes, Lord, and wait upon thee and thee only to rescue us from your great displeasure. Do it for thy great namesake, O Lord.
Restore your people to vital Christianity once again. And forgive us, great God, from turning your house of prayer into a house of entertainment. Have mercy upon us, I pray.
Amen.
Sermon Outline
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I. The Current State of the Church and Nation
- Spiritual decay and entertainment replacing true worship
- Broken walls and gates symbolize lost authority and influence
- Urgent need for revival as last hope for the nation
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II. Nehemiah’s Prayer as a Model for Revival
- Addressing God as high and covenant-keeping
- Confession of national and personal sins
- Reminding God of His past mercies and expecting His intervention
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III. The Pattern for Revival from 2 Chronicles 7:14
- Humbling ourselves and seeking God’s face
- Turning from wicked ways
- God’s promise to forgive and heal the land
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IV. The Call to Action and Faith
- The church must repent and pray earnestly
- Expect God’s mercy and power to move
- Revival will transform the church and nation
Key Quotes
“If the church be moved by revival, it could shake this nation from coast to coast, and that's the title of my message today, If the Church Be Moved.” — E.A. Johnston
“Our concept of God today is too small. We've shrunken him down to our size or smaller, and we treat him like a pal, but Nehemiah addresses the Almighty who sits on a throne.” — E.A. Johnston
“The church in America has sinned, and she refuses to repent, and God has withdrawn his presence from among us.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Pray earnestly and consistently for personal and national revival.
- Confess personal and corporate sins honestly before God.
- Expect God to move powerfully when the church humbles itself and seeks Him.
