A Call To Holiness, Fasting & Revival

The following is an article by J.L. Grady and does a great job urging us on / into 2008. My personal belief is that we will began to see more persecution of the Church and Christians in America, as well as revival and growth. It is time that we stand as brothers and sisters in Christ and not as Pentecostals, Baptists, Methodists and such. – Marv

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A Desperate Cry for Revival in 2008
As we begin a new year I urge you to join other believers across the nation for three weeks of fasting.

Never in my 15 years at Charisma have I known a time of such intense spiritual turbulence. God is shaking everything that can be shaken, including our Christian colleges, our megachurches and our most prominent ministries.

At a time when a U.S. senator is investigating the financial practices of six well-known preachers, I sense that God has taken out His holy plumb line to conduct His own detailed inspection of every church and ministry in this country. He wants to unleash a nationwide revival, but He must bring His correction first.

“I urge you to join me in this solemn fast. Pray with desperation for the five topics outlined here.”

These are desperate times that require desperate measures. That is why I have joined with the Awakening America Alliance to call for a solemn 21-day fast that runs from January 1-21. Here’s a list of the things I’m praying for during the next three weeks:

1. The fear of God. Holiness was so tangible among early Christians that false prophets were blinded and greedy liars fell over dead. As a result of God’s judgment on Ananias and Sapphira, “great fear came over the whole church” (Acts 5:11, NASB).

Where is this sense of “shock and awe” today? How can Christians be so cavalier about divorce or so flippant about adultery? How can television preachers sleep at night after robbing God’s people with manipulative fundraising appeals?

We celebrate His mercy but ignore His severity. We need a thunderclap from heaven and a display of Elijah’s fire to remind a wayward church that God will not be mocked.

2. Integrity and purity in the church. Our movement hit rock-bottom in October when charismatic pastor Donnie Earl Paulk of Atlanta announced to his stunned congregation that a DNA test had proved he is not the nephew of Bishop Earl Paulk but is in fact his son. That such unspeakable depravity was permitted to thrive for decades at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit is an indictment against the elder Paulk and all leaders who refused to challenge his behavior when they first learned about it years ago.

This and other recent religious scandals have so tarnished our credibility that we have become a curious freak show. Many unbelievers now associate ministers with wife-swapping, wife-beating, no-fault divorce, gay affairs and $10,000-a-night hotel rooms. We need a Holy Ghost housecleaning.

3. A return to evangelism. In the 1970s we were less sophisticated but so much more zealous for Jesus. We handed out tracts and witnessed to everyone. Sharing our faith was the priority. Yet most people in churches today have never led anyone to Christ.

We are no longer contagious. Spirit-filled believers spend more time chasing “financial breakthroughs” than lost souls. We have rejected sacrifice and compassion and embraced a counterfeit gospel that produces bored, selfish spectators.

4. Godly leadership. As we head into an election season it’s obvious that our nation is facing a leadership crisis. But this leadership vacuum is not just in the political arena. Many of our spiritual fathers have disappointed us, either by their own moral failures or by their refusal to confront sin.

I pray that God does not give us the president we deserve in 2008. If we cry out for mercy, perhaps He will upset the current slate of candidates and put someone in the White House who can model Christian integrity. May He also give us spiritual shepherds who care more for the flock than for the crowd’s applause.

5. A national spiritual awakening. There were seasons in America’s past when sinners became so convicted of their sins that they collapsed under the weight of their guilt. During the days of revivalists George Whitefield and Charles Finney, huge waves of conversions led to a widespread transformation of society. Drunks became sober, prison inmates sang hymns, stingy business owners stopped oppressing their workers, atheists surrendered their unbelief and rebellious children returned to faith.

Can such a movement happen again? It must or our country will descend into its darkest hour. I urge you to join me in this solemn fast. Pray with desperation for the five topics outlined here. We can’t settle for anything less than a heavenly visitation.

J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma.

2 Responses to “A Call To Holiness, Fasting & Revival”

  1. Gilbert Says:

    This message should be posted on every forum in America. This is not the ramblings of a lone ranger seeking attention; but rather a follower of Jesus obeying the call and sending out a warning to other Christians. Thank you Marv for sharing this and thanks to J. Lee Grady for stepping out from the pack to challenge us all. This is making me consider what I have been doing, and not doing, in my own life. That is the fruit of this message. I pray it is borne in more readers also. God bless.

  2. Dave Stone Says:

    Why not face the fact that corrupt leaders are, in fact, lost — unregenerate. And qualify for the many warnings against false teachers in Scripture. Example: 2 Peter 2:1-3.

    And spirit-filled believers do NOT chase after ‘financial breakthroughs’, but rather are obedient to the Holy Spirit, especially in preaching a Scriptural Gospel. For example:
    Acts 5:32 — “And we are his witnesses of these things; and so is also the Holy Ghost, whom God hath given to them that obey him.”

    America’s biggest challenge in personal evangelism is to be honest about the reality that multitudes of professing Christians in Pentecostal, Baptist, and evangelical megachurches have never been born again. They don’t need to ‘get right’ or ‘grow’ or ‘get serious’ — they need to repent, believe the Gospel, and be born from above. I meet them every week on the street.

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