Nehemiah Series #12
Elements Of Real Revival
Text: Nehemiah 8
Introduction
An anonymous writer observed a paradox of our generation:
We spend more but have less.
We buy more but enjoy it less.
We have bigger houses and smaller families.
We have more conveniences but less time.
We have more medicine but less wellbeing.
We read too little, watch TV too much, and pray too seldom.
We have multiplied our possessions but reduced our values.
We have tall men and short character, steep profits and shallow relationships.
We have two incomes but more divorce, fancier houses but broken homes.
We have added years to life, not life to years.
We have cleaned up the air but polluted the soul.
We have learned how to make a living but not a life.
“Revival” is warning the believer who is living like an unbeliever. His heart for God has stopped beating and the affections for God have subsided. He no longer breathes the air of fellowship with the Lord, and he is in need of resuscitation by the Father.
1) The People Had A Renewed Hunger For God’s Word
between the time of Moses writing the book of the law and the time of Nehemiah, there was a span of one thousand years. Consider, also, that these people no longer spoke or understood Hebrew. They had Hebrew hearts but Babylonian ears.
2) The People Had A Renewed Perspective Of God
VERSE 6
3) They Had A Renewed Desire For Biblical Application
God said for them to build little shanties and lean-to shacks out of branches so they could remember their journey in the wilderness. This custom did not make much sense to the modern Jew. They needed to continue rebuilding their own homes inside the newly constructed city walls. But God’s Word said, “Build booths using leafy trees.” They unhesitatingly responded, “We’ll build booths, just as the Word commanded.” The end result was great rejoicing. Insight led to obedience, and obedience led to joy.
Conclusion
You might say, “I’ve confessed, tried, and failed so many times—revival just doesn’t last.” Someone made this comment to evangelist Billy Sunday in the early 1900s and tried to make the point that since personal revival wasn’t a permanent end-all to temptation, sin, and failure, revival wasn’t important. Billy Sunday replied with his characteristic humor, “A bath doesn’t last either, but it’s good to have one occasionally.”
