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Difference between Anabaptists and Evangelicals Mysteries of the Kingdom of God Anabaptist Sermons by Eli Hofer The Writings of Ulrich Stadler |
Andrew Murray and the Holy Spirit Revival Andrew Murray was born on May 9th,
1828 in a Dutch Reformed parsonage in South Africa. In 1838, at the age of ten,
Andrew left home with his brother John to study in Scotland. The two brothers
were ordained at The Hague on Andrew’s twentieth birthday, leaving soon
afterwards to begin their work in South Africa. In 1860 Andrew Murray accepted a call
to pastor the church at Worcester. His induction to the church coincided with a
revival and missions conference made up of 374 South African ministers. The
conference was planned for the specific purpose of encouraging spiritual revival
and recruiting new workers and missionaries for the Dutch Reformed churches of
South Africa. Shortly after the conference, a
meeting of young people was held at the church on a Sunday evening. It was at
this meeting that the Spirit of revival unexpectedly broke out. The meeting
moved along as expected, until an unassuming 15-year-old black girl stood up to
pray. Mr. Murray’s associate, J. C. deVries, was overseeing the prayer meeting
and gives us an eyewitness account of these extraordinary events. "On a
certain Sunday evening there were gathered in a little hall some sixty young
people. I was the leader of the meeting, which began with a hymn and a lesson
from God’s Word, after which I prayed. Three or four others gave out a verse
of a hymn and prayed, as was the custom. Then a colored girl of about fifteen years of age, in service with a nearby farmer, rose at the back of the hall and asked if she too might propose a hymn. At first I hesitated, not knowing what the meeting would think, but better thoughts prevailed, and I replied, ‘Yes.’ She gave out her hymn-verse and prayed in moving tones. While she was praying, we heard, as it were, a sound in the distance, which came nearer and nearer, until the hall seemed to be shaken; with one or two exceptions, the whole meeting began to pray, the majority in audible voice, but some in whispers. Nevertheless, the noise made by the concourse was deafening. A feeling, which I cannot describe, took possession of me…" While this meeting was going on,
Andrew Murray was preaching in another section of the church. He was not present
during the beginning of these events. When his own service was over, an elder
passed the door of the prayer meeting, heard the noise, peeked in, and then ran
back to get Mr. Murray. J. C. deVries vividly recalls Murray’s surprising reaction to the young people’s meeting, "Mr. Murray came forward to the table where I knelt praying, touched me, and made me understand that he wanted me to rise. He then asked me what had happened. I related everything to him. Then he walked down the room for some distance and called out as loudly as he could, ‘People, silence!’ But the praying continued. In the meantime, I kneeled down again. It seemed to me that if the Lord was coming to bless us, I should not be upon my feet but on my knees. Mr. Murray then called loudly again, ‘People, I am your minister, sent from God! Silence!’ But there was no stopping the noise. No one heard him, but all continued praying and calling on God for mercy and pardon. Mr. Murray then returned to me and told me to start the hymn-verse commencing ‘Aid the soul that helpless cries’. I did so. But the emotions were not quieted and the meeting went right on praying. Mr. Murray then prepared to depart, saying, ‘God is a God of order, and here everything is confusion!’ With that he left the hall." Prayer meetings were spontaneously
organized every evening after that. The order of these meetings was usually the
same each time, although no one set it. At the beginning there was generally
great silence; no efforts were made to stir up emotions, but after the second or
third prayer the gathering would suddenly begin to simultaneously cry out in
prayer. This was definitely not the custom of the Dutch Reformed churches at
that time, nor did anyone ever teach them to do this. Sometimes the gathering
would continue until three in the morning; even then, many wished to stay
longer. As the people returned to their homes in the middle of the night they
went singing joyously through the streets. The revival shook the entire
countryside. The young and old, rich and poor, blacks and whites were all
equally affected by the revival. "It was quite amazing that the awakening
was not confined to the towns and villages, but felt in totally isolated places
without outside contacts, even on remote farms, where men and women were
suddenly seized with emotions to which they had been utter strangers a few weeks
or even days before." People were frequently gripped with intense
conviction. Strong men cried out in anguish while others fell to the ground
unconscious and had to be carried out of the meetings. Mr. Murray’s expectations about proper church order and that of the Holy Spirit’s were obviously quite different. Broken expectations, if left unchecked, can lead to confusion, frustration and even harsh criticism. When the crowd in Jerusalem rushed to observe the miracle of Pentecost, Acts 2: 6 notes that many of the onlookers were "CONFUSED". These feelings of confusion obviously caused some to become offended, resulting later in them openly ridiculing the work of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:6-13). Mr. Murray’s new revival experiences eventually taught him not to judge every seemingly confusing situation as the result of a lack of proper order. Andrew Murray died in 1917. He was a prolific teacher on the subject of prayer and the deeper, Spirit-filled life, publishing some 240 books between 1858 and 1917. He stresses PRAYER, HOLINESS and POWER! Some links to articles by Andrew Murray: |