Intro. I’ve entitled this message, "Isaiah: Preparation for Revival.”
Isaiah 64:1-8
ILLUS> A retired U.S. Army chaplain
tells of visiting a denominational church in California and finding a
stirring red and orange banner on the wall. "Come Holy Spirit.
Hallelujah!" it declared in words printed under a picture of a
fire burning. The ex-chaplain was also interested in the sign
directly underneath the banner which said: "Fire extinguisher."
So much for that church's commitment to spiritual renewal he
thought. All too often this is the case. We go to Church but
the presence of God is not evident or is extinguished at the first
spark of spontaneously eruptive worship. We need revival. Isaiah
chapter 64 is a plea from the great prophet for revival among the
people of God. In this text we see three very key facts about
revival. We see what revival is, what revival looks like, what we can
do to hasten it.
I. A DEFINITION OF REVIVAL (V1)
Isaiah
cries out to God, "Oh that thou wouldst rend the Heavens and
come down." He was proclaiming this prophecy to God’s people
who would be in bondage in Babylon 120 years later. They would soon
be delivered into exile. The Temple, God’s house will be trodden
under foot by the Babylonians. They would be carried away captive in
586 B.C. Because the people were shallow, their ears were burning to
hear the false prophets. In bondage, shallow, no sense of the
presence of God. Sound familiar?
Isaiah cried out on their
behalf to God, "Oh that thou would rip open the heavens and come
down...and visit your people." This is revival. Now Isaiah
didn’t have theological problems. He knew that God was everywhere.
He knew that God sat on the circle of the universe, that no temple
could house his presence. He was pleading with God to manifest His
presence among His people, make Himself known, make Himself real
again.
We need to experience the presence of God in our
services again. We need to be like Jacob and cry out," surely
the Lord was in this place and we knew it not." All to often our
services are dry and ritualistic, there’s no presence, no
life.
Revival is the presence of God among His people once
again.
This is revival’s definition. Not a slick haired
evangelist from out of town, but a divine visitation.
II. A
DESCRIPTION OF REVIVAL (1,2)
What happens when God does make
His presence known? Isaiah describes three things that happen in
verses 1 and 2.
A Shaking---He says, "mountains would tremble before you". When God shows up things are shaken up. When God gave the law at Sinai the earth quaked. When Christ returns the bible says that the stars are going to be shaken out of the heaven. When he stands to judge the earth mountains will be leveled. God shakes things up when He shows up. Here Isaiah says mountains are shaken at His presence.
As I studied this passage I thought, "What are mountains?" Geologically, mountains frame continents. They are comprised of Diorite/Andesite, Granite/Rhyolite, and Gabbro/Basalt usually, having a different content than that which valleys and ocean bottoms are usually composed. They rise above oceans and valleys and reach deep into the earth's crust. When people are asked why they climb mountains all they can say is "because it is there." It can’t be moved. You might just as well climb it.
We have mountains in the church and in our lives. Have you ever heard the expression, "We’ve always done it this way". Those mountains get shaken up when God visits the church in revival. How about those mountains in your life? How about those things you don't want to change or don't think you could ever change? God shakes them up and turns us and our churches upside down. This is why many don’t want revival. They would rather play church than have God visit the church and shake them up. Shake us up God, shake us up for our own good and your glory!
2) There is fire---Isaiah says, "As when fire sets twigs ablaze and causes water to boil." God is spoken of in the bible as being a "consuming fire". What is the significance of fire?a) Judgment--When God judged in the bible he judge often by fire. Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed by fire. The complainers of the Old Testament were consumed by fire, the sons of Aaron, the prophets of Baal, etc... When God shows up in revival there is a great sense of our sin and failure. Sin is judged and sin is repented. There is great judgment of sin and repentance among God’s people when the fire of revival comes upon a church.
b) Refining---Jesus in Malachi is referred to as the Messenger of the covenant who is like unto a refiners fire, and he will purify the sons of Levi. The fire of God is a refining fire, it consumes the dross. Dross is a word used many times in prophecy when speaking of Israel. “Your silver will be as dross.” Dross is the by-product of metal smelting. It's the slag, or the scoria left behind to be thrown away. Israel had forsaken God and exchanged the pure for the profane. When God shows up little things are confronted in our lives and taken care of. Once careless Christians begin to be concerned about even the slightest of inconsistencies as God’s presence refines. Look at Isaiah himself in chapter 6. In the face of God, he finds himself contaminated with the corruption of his people; a people marked as unclean. “Woe is me, for I AM RUINED; because I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the midst of people of unclean lips.” (6:5)
c) The Holy Spirit is Fire--John the Baptist said, one will come after me who will "baptize you in the Holy Ghost and fire". The Holy Spirit’s ministry is equated to fire in the Bible. Paul said we can quench the fire of the Holy Spirit. When revival comes the Holy Spirit blazes upon God’s people, for He is the presence of God in the Church. He renews passion for Christ and people. He makes worship come alive, and He empowers witness. Blaze Spirit Blaze set our hearts on fire.
3) Fear--Isaiah says in verse 2,
"Cause the nations to quake before you." There is a great
since of fear when God shows up. What ever happened to the fear of
God in the Church and in the world? A.B. Simpson once preached on
the Holiness of God and when the service was concluded the people
just sat still afraid to leave their seats for fear of God’s
Presence. The fear of God comes upon us when God visits the
Church.
Even so Come upon us Lord Jesus!
III. A
DIRECTIVE FOR REVIVAL (7)
What can we do to hasten revival?
Or can we? Isaiah explains in verse three why God’s people are in
such a sorry condition. In this description he outlines three things
we can do to hasten God’s presence among us.
Fervent prayer--He says, "No one calls on your name". This describes a desperate plea to God for His presence and help. James says, You have not because you ask not! I do not need to go back a few years to the sermon series on prayer to remind us how revival is started in the hearts of God's people when we respond to Him in desperate fervent prayer. We like Isaiah must begin to cry out to God for personal revival. Notice that Isaiah says, "No One". Revival begins with the individual.
Wake ourselves up---the prophet says we must "stir ourselves, or wake ourselves up". Many church members sit and wait for a preacher to stir them up with a fiery sermon, or a wonderful testimony, or a moving song. God says, quit waiting to be moved, and move yourself, wake yourselves up. Wake up to the state of our sleepy Christianity, wake up to the lateness of the hour.
andLay Hold of God---How do we do this. Easy! Do what you know to do. Make a bold move toward God. Discipline yourselves to pray and seek God even when you don't feel like it. Go to church, even when you don't feel like, repent and confess sin, even when you don't feel like it. James says if you "draw near to God, He will draw near to you."
Conclusion: Who will commit themselves to fervent prayer and bold movement toward God in commitment with the expectation of experiencing the wonderful manifest presence of God in His Church? Bethlehem is a place of expectation and revival. It is a place of the presence of God. It is the place where the nations were shaken and God's Word became flesh. If you are not a Christian, let me invite you to become one. One must be born again. The gift of the Spirit and the regeneration by the Spirit happens when we are baptized. Believing faith, followed by baptism was the NT precedent for becoming a Christian. In fact baptism is the place where we are put to death in the likeness of Christ's death and raised in the likeness of His resurrection.

