You hear a lot about revival. Many Christians say they want it. I have been a part of four genuine revival movements. I have witnessed first hand two others. I have learned a valuable truth that has led to a deep conviction. REVIVAL IS COSTLY. Most people are not willing to pay the price. People want revival on their terms. God sends revival on His terms. Those terms include brokenness over sin, repentance, prayer, and evangelism.
A 13 year old boy received a heavy burden from the Lord for revival in his country. Imagine that. A young teenager becoming so burdened for his country that he begins praying God send revival. Nothing changed after a year. Not even after five years. A decade passed without any signs of revival. This young man continued to pray. He testified he would be awakened around 2:00 a.m. and pray until about 5:00 a.m. He would go to work in the coal mines praying. The burden never left. He went to a Bible college, but felt so burdened for revival he left to devote himself more fully to prayer. After 13 years, he preached a simple message to some teenagers. That was the spark that ignited the Welsh Revival of 1904 where God saved 100,000 people in six months! That move of God spread all over the world. Would you have persevered in prayer for 13 years before the revival came?
Roberts' life changed. He was in high demand in churches all over the country. He never announced where he would show up not wanting to draw attention to himself. Revival services were happening everywhere. The services were not centered around a preacher. The people sang, they testified, the sang more, they prayed, and God wondrously saved many. Even when Roberts did attend local meetings, he did not always preach. He prayed and waited on God. If God prompted him to preach then he did. If he had no message he would just pray. The prayer burden took a toll on his physical and emotional health.
After the revival ended, Roberts withdrew from public ministry devoting himself exclusively to a ministry of intercession in private. He died alone in a hospital unknown and forgotten. He devoted his youth to the pursuit of God for revival. The cost was high. Higher than most would pay.
Genuine revival is not just costly on the ministers. It is costly on the church members. They still have to work and do household chores. On top of that, they add attending revival meetings late into the night for weeks, months, and in some cases years night after night. It is costly on church facilities. The wear and tear on the building from continual use for extended periods of times takes a toll. Just ask Brownsville Assembly of God in Pensacola, FL or Asbury College in Kentucky.
A lot of people say they want revival. Few are willing to pay the cost in prayer. Few are willing to inconvenience their schedules. Few are willing to let go of control so God can freely move. Three times in my ministry God has broken out revivals. He called me to preach all of them. All three lasted for weeks. My days were devoted to prayer, message preparation, and preaching. It cost time with my family. It cost time in extra preaching and study. It cost physically as most of those services lasted a minimum of two hours and some longer. It cost spiritually praying through spiritual warfare. It cost emotionally seeing people encounter God night after night, pleading with people to trust Jesus for salvation. It cost sleep deprivation as morning prayers were kept after late night ministry. I've experienced God's powerful revival movement. I can tell you it is costly. A cost I'm willing to pay all over again if God will just come move in power. Lord, please do it again.