|
-65-
MARCH
22, 1471 --Czechoslavakia. George Podiebrad, King of Bohemia, dies at
Prague. He has united Bohemia formerly torn by religious discord. When
Pope Pius II demanded the king’s unconditional obedience, he at first
stalled. The Pope then excommunicated him. His successor, Pope Paul II,
authorized the formation of a league of discontented nobles, and Mathias
Cominus, King of Hungary, to help the church. But King George Podiebrad
of Bohemia is not conquered and the Bohemian crown will pass to Ladislas
II.
22, 1622 --Virginia. Indians swoop down upon unsuspecting English
settlers, and in one hour, three hundred and forty-seven Englishmen are
killed. Last night, a converted Indian warned the inhabitants of
Jamestown and the nearby settlements, and these were thus prepared for
the attack. As a result, this day will be set aside annually to
commemorate the deliverance of the colony from utter extermination.
22, 1758 --Massachusetts. Jonathan Edwards dies. He has been the
instrument in the hands of God to bring about the revival along the
eastern seaboard known as the “Great Awakening.” He is known as the
Preacher of this revival whereas George Whitefield will be known as the
Evangelist. This revival has occurred at the same time as Pietism
occurred in Germany, and the Netherlands, and as the Wesleyan Revival in
England.
22, 1832 --Massachusetts. In Lee, Rev. Alvan Hyde, pastor of the
Congregational Church here, writes to Mr. William Sprague of the 1792
revival:
“Dear Brother, In compliance with your particular request I now commence
a concise narrative of the work of God’s Holy Spirit in reviving
religion at several periods, among the people of my pastoral charge.
“The
first season of ‘refreshing from the presence of the Lord’ which this
people enjoyed, commenced in June 1792, a few days after the event of my
ordination. “There was, at this time, no religious excitement in this
region of the country, nor had I knowledge of their being a special work
of God’s grace in any part of the land. The Church here was small and
feeble, having only twenty-one male members belonging to it. It was,
however, continuing with one accord in prayer.
“With a
view to form a still more particular acquaintance with the people
committed to my charge, I early began to make family visits in different
sections of the town. These visits of which I made a number in the
course of a week, were improved wholly in conversing on the great
subject of religion, and in obtaining, with as much correctness as I
could, a knowledge of their spiritual state, that my instructions on the
Sabbath, and at the weekly meetings, might be better adapted to their
case. This people had been for nine years without a pastor, and were
unhappily divided in their religious opinions. Some were Calvinists, and
favored the Church, but the largest proportion were Arminians. And as
they had been in the habit of maintaining warm disputes with each other
on the doctrines of the Bible, I calculated on having to encounter many
trials. Contrary to my expectations, I found on my first visits, many
persons of different ages under serious and very deep impressions, each
one supposing his own burdens and distresses of mind, on account of his
sins, to be singular, not having the least knowledge that any others
were awakened. It was evident ...a marvellous work was begun, and it
bore the most decisive marks of being God’s work. So great was the
excitement, though not yet known abroad, that into whatever section of
the town I now went, the people in that immediate neighborhood, would
leave their worldly employments at any hour of the day, and soon fill a
large room. Before I was ware, and without any previous appointment, I
found myself on these occasions, in the midst of a solemn and anxious
assembly. Many were in tears, and bowed down under the weight of their
sins. And some began to rejoice in hope. These seasons were spent in
prayer and exhortation, and in conversing with the anxious, and with
such as found relief, by submitting themselves to God, adopting my
instruction to their respective cases. This was done in the hearing of
all who were present.
“As yet there
had been no public religious meetings, excepting on the Sabbath. A
weekly lecture, at the meeting house, was now appointed to be on
Thursday; and though it was the most busy season of the year, the house
was filled. This lecture was continued for more than six months without
any abatement of attention; in sustaining which I was aided by
neighboring ministers, and by numbers from a distance, who came to
witness this display of Sovereign Grace. The former disputes of the
people, respecting religious sentiments, in a great measure subsided,
their consciences seeming to testify in favor of the truth. The work
spread into every part of the town, and what was worthy of special
notice, it was entirely confined within the limits of the town,
excepting in the case of a few families which usually attended public
worship with us from the borders of the adjacent towns. Especially
powerful was the work among those who had taken their stand in
opposition to the small church and the distinguishing doctrines of
Grace. Many of this class were convinced, that they had always lived in
error and darkness, and in a state of total alienation from God. They
were compelled, notwithstanding their former hatred of the prominent
truths of the Gospel, to make the interesting inquiry, ‘What shall we do
to be saved?’
“The truths
which I exhibited in my public discourses, and in the many meetings
between the Sabbaths were ...the Holiness and Immutability of God; the
Purity and Perfection of the Law; the Entire Depravity of the Heart
consisting in voluntary opposition to God and holiness; the Fullness and
Sufficiency of the Atonement made by Christ; the freeness of the offer
of Pardon made to all on condition of Repentance; the Necessity of a
Change of Heart by the Holy Spirit arising from the deep-rooted
Depravity of men which no created arm could remove; the Utter
Inexcusableness of Sinners in Rejecting the Kind Overtures of Mercy as
they Acted Freely and Voluntarily in Doing it; and the Duty and
Reasonableness of Immediate Submission to God .…
“All our religious
meetings were very much thronged, and yet were never noisy or irregular,
nor continued to a late hour. They were characterized with a stillness
and solemnity which I believe have rarely been witnessed. The converts
appeared to renounce all dependence on their own doings, feeling
themselves entirely destitute of righteousness, and that all their hope
of salvation was in the mere mercy of God in Christ, to whom they were
willing to be eternal debtors. To the praise of Sovereign Grace, I may
add, that the work continued, with great regularity and little
abatement, nearly eighteen months. In this time, as appears from the
records, of the church, one hundred and ten persons of different ages
united themselves unto the Lord and His covenant people. All these were
examined in the presence of the church, and were received, on the ground
of their professing to have experienced a change of heart and to have
passed from death unto life. They appeared to exhibit the fruits of the
Spirit, and to exemplify the religion of Jesus in their subsequent
lives. The instances of apostasy have been but few.
“This revival
of religion produced a surprising change in the religious sentiments and
feelings of the people, and in the general aspect of the town. It
effected a happy union; ...not did the people lose their relish for
religious meetings.
“In the
year 1800, we were again favored with special tokens of God’s presence
in a work of the Holy Spirit. This display of Sovereign Grace was
witnessed soon after I commenced a weekly religious conference with
particular reference to the young people; and it was noticed that the
subjects of the work were confined almost wholly to those who attended
this conference. As in the former revival, I explained and enforced the
doctrines of the Gospel, showing the youth, who flocked together in
great numbers, that sinners had brought ruin upon themselves, and were
awfully guilty and justly condemned, and that all their hope of
salvation was in a crucified Saviour. Prayer and Praise accompanied this
instruction. No attempts were made to produce an excitement, only in
view of the plain truths of the Gospel. The great body of the people as
they did not attend on these means were not affected and solemnized, as
they were in the first revival; but the convictions of the awakened were
clear, rational and pungent, and those who received comfort appeared
understandingly to embrace the soul-humbling doctrines of the cross, and
to be renewed in the temper of their minds. This revival occasioned an
accession to the church of twenty-one persons, the most of whom were
between the ages of sixteen and twenty-four.
“A few years
now passed in which we had no revival . . .. (But) in September 1806,
the Lord graciously visited us again....”
Previous
Next |