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God's Covenant With Man
Leonard Ravenhill

Leonard Ravenhill (1907 - 1994). British-American evangelist, author, and revivalist born in Leeds, England. Converted at 14 in a Methodist revival, he trained at Cliff College, a Methodist Bible school, and was mentored by Samuel Chadwick. Ordained in the 1930s, he preached across England with the Faith Mission and held tent crusades, influenced by the Welsh Revival’s fervor. In 1950, he moved to the United States, later settling in Texas, where he ministered independently, focusing on prayer and repentance. Ravenhill authored books like Why Revival Tarries (1959) and Sodom Had No Bible, urging the church toward holiness. He spoke at major conferences, including with Youth for Christ, and mentored figures like David Wilkerson and Keith Green. Married to Martha Beaton in 1939, they had three sons, all in ministry. Known for his fiery sermons and late-night prayer meetings, he corresponded with A.W. Tozer and admired Charles Spurgeon. His writings and recordings, widely available online, emphasize spiritual awakening over institutional religion. Ravenhill’s call for revival continues to inspire evangelical movements globally.
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the preacher discusses the events described in the book of Revelation, specifically focusing on the sounding of the trumpets. He describes the darkening of the sun, moon, and stars, as well as the opening of the bottomless pit by a fallen star. The preacher also mentions the release of four angels from the Euphrates River, who are prepared to kill a third of mankind. He then goes on to talk about the destruction caused by hail, fire, and blood, as well as the poisoning of the waters by a star called Wormwood. Throughout the sermon, the preacher emphasizes the importance of seeking righteousness and warns against the folly of modern man.
Sermon Transcription
And then there was a second start, when after the sin of of Noah and the others, that God cleansed the earth by a flood. And then we have the third start, when he called this wonderful man Abraham. The outstanding figure, I believe, in the Old Testament, if not one of the most towering figures in all history. Again, I remind you that he's revered by Jews and Mohammedans and Gentiles. That's more than you can say for Moses even. The Jews, I noticed just the other day, when some men and women, I think 60 of them, were rescued in a sinking ship somewhere in the Philippines. And they were taking on board an Israel ship of some kind, merchant ship. Other ships had passed them, a Japanese ship, I think a Norwegian ship, and others. And the Israeli boat picked them up and signaled to Israel and asked what they should do. And the new president there said, bring them here. We open our doors as our father Abraham told us. I thought that was rather interesting in the midst of all the news, our father Abraham. And they still revere him and rightly they should. You know, we get so used to reading things, I think very often we're in danger of reading the word of God like we read a newspaper or a magazine. Just read it, that's it, now let's go milk the cow or a goat, and let's go do something else, you know. The word needs to infiltrate our minds and our spirits. Again, as the psalmist says, thy word have I hid in my heart. It's not enough even in my mind. As I say, it has to get into my bloodstream if it's going to build me up in my most holy faith. And faith isn't something very mysterious. Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God. And the more you know the word of God, the stronger your faith is. If you don't put gasoline in your car, you'll run out. If you don't put food in your body, your body will weaken. If you don't strengthen your spirit with the word of God, you'll become spiritually sick. I believe there are spiritual accidents just like there are physical accidents. And people who have spiritual accidents don't recover very quickly, they recover very slowly. And so the great antidote against the things that would assail us, the chief to me, is again reading, believing and obeying the word of God. Now we reminded ourselves about this 12th chapter in Genesis last week. After these things, the word of the Lord came unto Abraham in a vision. This is again the second time. Remember God came to him in Ur of the Chaldees. Again, how dramatic was it? Well I'll tell you what to do. Try it out on your wife or your husband. Just walk in the house this week and say, sweetie, sell every stick of furniture, pots, dishes, wedding gifts, we're going. Going? Where are we going? Well never mind, we're going. Obey your husband, we're going. Is it very far? I don't know. Is it a good climate? I don't know. Who lives there? I don't know. What kind of vegetation? I don't know. Is it a good country? I don't know. What do you know? I don't know. You see, we read it as though he had a highway map, as though he reserved holiday inns every 500 miles on the trip, as though he had a blacktop road or plenty of food. Now it says that, and this again is staggering to me, that he went out, and it says in Hebrews, not knowing whether he went. But immediately following that, it says this, he could have returned if he wanted. Now he not only went out, he stayed out. And God doesn't paint a very rosy picture for him and his ultimate inheritance. You see, God says he's going to run into some difficult situations. Blackness, opposition of the enemy. Now what did the man have to hang on to? In this twelfth chapters, I've just read it, after these things, after what things? Well here, there had been a battle with this famous king. I don't know why he has such a clumsy name, it's longer and worse than mine, Cheodle Homer. Glad that's not my name. But he battled along with the other kings in the north. And you remember that Abraham took his servants. Now it says there in that 14th verse of the 14th chapter, the servants of his own house, they were 318. Now let's get this clear. It says in the 51st chapter of Isaiah, and somewhere about verse 2, I called Abraham alone. Well then that's all it means. Now it can mean to me, at least one of things, I called Abraham alone. Well it could mean I called him alone and nobody else with him. It would mean his wife, because the two were one flesh. But I called him alone, nobody else. Or, I called Abraham alone, I didn't call the bunch that are coming with him. Now it says here that he had what? He had in his own house 318 servants. And he got them all together to go after his son, or his son-in-law, or his brother-in-law, whoever in the world he was. There's so many versions of this. But it was his brother's son that he went after. Now notice with you that this man came out of Ur of the Chaldees, he came with his father, they came to a place called Haran. And the father refused to budge there. Because you see the next obstacle in their way was the river Euphrates. And once they crossed the Euphrates, there wasn't even a toll bridge. There was no bridge. They had to ferry it. There were hazards in crossing that tremendous river. One of them, you remember, that came out of the Garden of Eden. And they were leaving behind them. This is, this is a, this is a disaster to everybody else but Abraham. Again I can't tell you how he heard that voice. I reminded you in the 7th chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, where Stephen is giving a defense just before they stone him. And he gives a marvelous recitation, the history of Israel. And he's talking to those men who said, we have Abraham to our fathers. They said to Jesus, why, why? You're not as old as Abraham? And Jesus, you remember, said, well, do you know God is able to make children out of those very rocks on which you're standing, as children unto Abraham? That's no difficulty. But you see, as I say, he gave them a real thrust, he hit them where it hurt. He said, the God of glory appeared unto our father Abraham. I'm convinced, disagree if you like, that I'm convinced the reason the God of glory doesn't reveal himself to you and to me, we're too much in a hurry. We don't have time to wait, we don't have time to ponder. This man is called of God. He's in one of the greatest cities in the world, in Ur of the Chaldees, on the Persian Gulf. The great merchant ships came round from India, they bought their treasures, they came with their goodly pearls, they came with their marvelous garments. How do you think God spoke to Abraham? Do you think it was some dazzling revelation like John had on the Isle of Patmos? Do you think it was like that revelation that I noticed there in Ezekiel 31, where there was a rainbow thrown, or like the revelation given in the 24th chapter of Genesis, where God is sitting in his majesty, where there's a sea of emerald round about him, where the man is lost for language to describe the majesty and the glory of God. Did God appear to him like that, or do you think God just made him sick one day? Now the word of the Lord came unto this man. How? As I've read Jewish scripture here, he's just come back from a battle. Previous to that, there had been the collapse of the Tower of Babel. God had promised that he would bless the world through Noah, but they built a tower. They were going to do it their own way, they were going to have their own United Nations. They built this tremendous, the first skyscraper ever made. And they thought they were secure and safe, and the thing collapses. Now the immediate history of Abraham is disaster. The Tower of Babel, they've all been put to confusion. The flood has covered the earth. Remember, this man has no fellowship of the saints, such a thing doesn't exist. He can't take the Bible, there wasn't one. He can't read the Ten Commandments, there weren't any. He can't talk to the patriarchs, they weren't yet born. He can't say, my, I'd just like to have a word with Moses. Moses didn't even exist. The law was not given until 340 years after Abraham, this day of Abraham. But I, I, I meditated on this, and I may be wrong, but I, as a deacon once said to me, and they're, they're terrible people. A deacon once said to me, I may be wrong, but I'm sure I'm right. And, uh, I, I feel I got a clue here. God is going to say to this man a little later, in the 17th chapter and verse 1, when Abraham was 90 years old, 99, the Lord appeared unto Abraham, this is a second appearance, and he said unto him, I am the Almighty God, walk before me and be thou perfect. Now what in the world did Abraham have to hang on to? Again, he's no Bible. He can't tread in the footsteps of the saints. There's the Tower of Babel gone down, there's the battle with the kings. He's had quite a heartbreak. You see, it's a very interesting study, isn't it, that Abraham brought with him his old father. Well you need older men, they've so much wisdom. And then he brought a young man with him by the name of Lot. Now I know what kind of a lot he was, a good lot or a bad lot, I think he wasn't much of a lot anyhow. And if he didn't say in the book of Jude, which is an epitome of the whole Bible, if he didn't say in the book of Jude that the conditions in Sodom and Gomorrah vexed his righteous soul every day, I would have thought his light went out. You see, actually the study of Abraham and Lot is a study, a tale of two cities, if you want to quote Charles Dickens, a tale of two cities, Sodom and Gomorrah, a study in two latitudes, Lot and Abraham. Again, the argument that Abraham became rich because he obeyed God doesn't hold water in my judgment. For the simple reason he had over 350 students, uh 350 students, 350 servants that were raised in his own house. But one man, he lost control. The world got on top of him, instead of him sitting on top of the world. You see, he pitched his tent towards Sodom. Ah, it's the old story, isn't it? The woman saw the fruit, and then she took the fruit, and then she ate the fruit. It's the old story, the lust of the eye, and the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life. And this young man moves toward Sodom. And not only moves toward Sodom, he became the most successful man there. The word of God says he sat in the gate, and sitting in the gate meant two things. One, he was a judge, and second, he was the mayor of the city. And he got lost in the materialism. Now it didn't cost him very much, don't get me wrong. Didn't cost him very much to become a superman, a multi-millionaire, and a, and a socialite. It didn't cost him much, only his family. But in God's name, if you lose your family, what have you left? He lost his family. His daughters married Sodomites. And he's going up, and up, and up. You see, he began away there in Earl of the Chaldees. He was nameless, homeless, wifeless, childless, moneyless, positionless, possessionless. An old bald-headed man came in a prayer meeting we were holding one morning in a town called Eccles. We'd locked the gate outside of our, our big old tent, but I don't know to this day how that man got in, unless the Lord transported him. But he came in the tent, and he knelt in the sawdust, and he prayed with us. And at the end, he began to talk, gave us some words of counsel. It was 1937, the year I met my dear wife. And he said this, remember this, gentlemen, I'm 82, or 84 years of age, I forget which is over 80. And he said, remember this, if Satan can't keep you on the bottom rung of the ladder, he'll help you get to the top, and he'll push you over. Now he was talking to preachers. It's a very good word of advice really. You see, I say this man began in Ur of the Chaldees. Homeless, wifeless, childless, moneyless, positionless, possessionless. He got on the giddy ladder, and he went up, and up, and up, until everybody coveted him. They saw his nameplate on the door, his name in the newspapers, if you like. Everybody spoke of him as the most successful man around. And then he starts going down. Blessed is the man what? Well, who trusteth in the Lord. But you see, he began to trust in other things, and his ears got very heavy to the voice of God. And I remind you again, when God was going to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah, he didn't send a message, he didn't send the angel to the, to the president of the city, or the mayor of the city. He gave the message to the man in the prayer meeting up there on the hill. The man who I figure never put his feet in Sodom and Gomorrah. And he says, I'm going to utterly destroy this people. And the man who prayed for Sodom and Gomorrah, this man's prayer life was nil, I guess. There's no communication to him. And so love gets lost in the materialism. I don't think for a minute that Abraham was a poor man. I don't read that he fired all his 380 servants afterwards. But he had everything under control. They did not control him. Situations did not control him. You see, the greatest possession in the world isn't a million acres or a billion dollars. The greatest possession in the world is self-possession under God. My personality is under control. I'm not given to my appetites. They may pull in some people strong enough, but when God is in control, then you've got the answer. Because you see, he constrains us when we're too slow, and he restrains us when we're too fast. Now, I say I believe that I know a couple of reasons. I think that since there'd been so much damage done to what we might call the Kingdom of God since the days of Adam, there were some outstanding lights, you know. One of the things instilled into my mind as a little boy in a little church I attended was a pastor who repeated himself so often. I wished he wouldn't, but I'm glad he did. You see, you've got to keep hitting a nail on the same place to fasten it and make it secure. And one thing he used to say amongst others was this, God will always have a remnant. He'll always have a remnant. He's always had a remnant. Yeah, there's that ugly blotch in the Garden of Eden, there's that mess at the flood, there's this disaster in Ur of the Chaldees, after Ur of the Chaldees, and then this disaster with the Battle of the Kings and the mess of Sodom and Gomorrah. But wait a minute, there were some characters in the Old Testament further back in those unrecorded days. They were unrecorded then, but not now. And one of them was that marvellous man by the name of Enoch. Now read his story, it's in the fifth, I didn't check it, sixth chapter of Genesis. But when you read it, you'll discover that nearly everybody in the chapter lived longer than he did. But he's the man who's on record. And he's on record for what? He walked with God. He walked with God. Now God puts this tremendous challenge to Abraham, he says, walk before me and be thou perfect. And listen, in case you argue against it, there's a man and he walked with God in the midst of all the crookedness just immediately before the flood. Secondly, I like to think that maybe somebody reminded him, somebody who was, who said Enoch was my great-grandfather or something like that. Or again, he may have seen something that reminded him of the disaster, or maybe it was the very attitude of the people that got lost in materialism. We were down in Baton Rouge, where these dear friends come from, just a couple of weeks ago, and two or three weeks ago, anyhow. And I said, as we, I went to a church to preach just one night, that's all they'd have me. But anyhow, I went one night, and as we went, I said, my the buildings, the buildings, the buildings, everywhere they're building. Now if you talk about the return of Christ, and signs in the heavens, and earthquakes, and diverse situations. But you know, one of the conditions before the flood was, they bought, they sold, they planted, they built it, until the very day that Noah entered into the ark. Do you think they're going to legislate in Washington, that we can't build anymore, or do this, that, and the other, and sit and wait for the return? No, no, no, no. Men are going to be going for all their worth, till the very last second before the judgment of God comes. They bought, they sold, they planted, they built it. And they were going back to the same old thing in Ur of the Chaldees, and suddenly something inside of this man revolted. And as I've said, God is eternally the same. And it was as true in those days, as in the days of Jesus, or today, that blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled. And this man has an inward longing. Isn't it really folly, what you want to say about modern man? A genius, or an idiot? I get angry, three times at least this week, they've mentioned this neutron bomb. They could drop one tomorrow, when there's a festival, or a carnival here, or in, those guys with Baton Rouge again, but San Antonio. Somebody could devilishly drop that bomb, and it wouldn't do any harm to the houses, would just liquidate the population. Isn't that kindness? Can you think of anything more loving and gentle than that? Huh? Man's technical knowledge is fantastic. We can liquidate a city of human beings, and not blast a tile off the roof. If that isn't devilry in God's name, what is? Men have gone mad. Oh, there's an upsturch, oh sure, sure, sure. Everybody's mad now. Mr, Mr Carter's given the bomber away. They say that's the best gift he's given yet on a silver platter to Russia. They're going to breathe much more easily, and here we are, we're crowded with this technology of evil. But I don't find people crowding prayer meetings, or getting too anxious about these things anyhow. I say that maybe this man was disturbed when he looked on the wickedness of the city, and said, listen, this is, God's going to have to do something before long over this wickedness. It could be that he saw some wreckage. It could be that, uh, he thought about this man who had walked with God. But there's another thing. Can you think of something God made after he finished the earth, and finished with creation? Something he made, that he, he didn't forget it, but it wasn't needed. Well, uh, it was a very wonderful thing. God says to Noah in the, in the ninth chapter of Genesis and verse 9, behold, I establish, listen, my covenant with you. Now God has made a covenant with Abraham. His covenant with Abraham there in that twelfth chapter. The Lord said unto Abraham, get thee out of thy country, from thy kindred, from thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee. That's all negative, that's all taking away. It's a wreckage again, socially, economically, he had to leave all his land. Domestically, he had to leave all his relatives. And it seems God is stripping, stripping, stripping. And then God turns around and says in verse 2, and I will make thee a great nation, I will bless thee, I'll make thy name great, thou shalt be a blessing, I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee. Somebody should write that in capital letters to Mr. Sadat, because he's going to lose the next round anyhow. And in thee shall all the families of the earth, you notice that? He doesn't say the ten tribes of Israel, and the two tribes of Benjamin and Judah shall be blessed, he says all the nations of the earth shall be blessed of thee. Now that's God's covenant with this man. Well does God keep his word? After all, it's all right making covenants, but very often people make covenants and can't keep them. They back down, they back off, they've all kinds of excuses. Now, now, now what example does he have? Can he reach again into history and say, ah but listen, God once made a covenant. Say, do you get a thrill every time you see a rainbow? There's not much in it, good heavens, you can fly over it, you can fly underneath it, you can fly through it. You can see one every day the sun shines at Niagara Falls. I've seen them many times. Nothing wonderful about it, but I'll tell you what, there was never a rainbow till God put it there. There was no rain, because God had watered the earth with a dew that went into the ground. And now God says, I'll make a covenant with thee. God made a covenant. In verse 11 of chapter 9 he says, I will establish my covenant. In verse 12 he says, this is the token of my covenant. Do you know he mentions covenant seven times in this chapter? And there are seven colors in the rainbow. It seems as though God is just making it as strong as he can. He says, listen, I'm putting my bow in the heavens. Now you can blow the earth up, but you can't blow rainbows up. You can destroy many things, you cannot destroy the rainbow. Dewitt Talmadge was a very, very picturesque preacher. He preached in that great tabernacle down there in, uh, down where in, um, hmm, I forgot the name of it. We used to live there in, in, in New York anyhow. Where did we live Martha? What, what state? Part of New York City anyway. Brooklyn, Brooklyn. The great Brooklyn tabernacle. Strangely enough he built the tabernacle and, uh, got married and the tabernacle burned down. And he rebuilt it and got married again because his first wife had died and the tabernacle burned down. And he rebuilt it a third time. His third wife died and the tabernacle fell down. I think he gave up on tabernacles and wives. But he was a great preacher. And he said, you know, one day God, as a sign of his faithfulness, he took some ribbon and wrapped it around his finger and said, hey that's the best bow you'll ever see in your life. There it is in the heaven. It's God's permanent record of his faithfulness. He said, I set my bow in the clouds, verse 13, and it shall be for a token for a covenant between me and the earth. And it shall come to pass that when I bring a cloud over the earth, the bow shall be seen in the cloud. And listen, I will remember my covenant, never mind you. He says, I will remember my covenant, verse 15 of chapter 9 of Genesis. I will remember my covenant which is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh. And the water shall no more become a flood to destroy all flesh. And the bow shall be in the cloud and I will look upon it that I may remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature. And verse 17, and God said unto Noah, this is the token of the covenant which I have established. Now there God says, I have made an everlasting covenant. And you know every time you and I should see, you should thrill and praise God and say, there it is, there is God's sign in the heavens. Now he not only says that there, but also he says in, um, I've forgotten the scripture again now, I get mixed up in them. But anyhow, it doesn't matter if the prophet Ezekiel, I guess, in which Ezekiel says that he saw a throne and he saw above the throne, he saw one who had a rainbow upon him. Now here in the book of the Revelation, in chapter, uh, chapter 4, pardon me, Revelation 4, let's read from verse 1. After this I looked and behold a door was opened in heaven and the first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me which said, come up hither and I will show thee things which must be hereafter. And immediately I was in the spirit and behold, a throne was set in heaven and one sat on the throne and he that sat was to look upon like a jasper, a sardine stone, and there was a rainbow round about the throne in sight like unto an emerald. Now the throne is not only, pardon me, the rainbow is not only set in the sky as a permanent memorial, but here it is, it's around about the throne of God. Now in the 10th chapter, he says, I saw another mighty, chapter 10 verse 1, I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven. Listen, this is the clothing of an angel, an angel. Think how awesome it is. I saw a mighty angel come down from heaven clothed with a cloud and a rainbow upon his head and his face was as like the sun and his feet as pillars of fire and verse 3, he cried with a loud voice as when a lion roared. Now that's just one of the created beings, this is not the majesty of God, this is just an angel. His face is like the sun in its strength, his feet are like pillars of fire, he's clothed with a cloud and he has a rainbow upon his head. This is the finale after the battle of Armageddon. You know, this, this, this hit me very forcibly this week. It may not have the same impact on you, but it did on me. You know, men are very neatly divided history into two sections, what they call secular history and biblical history. They don't match in any way at all, because the whole of secular history is fallible. There are patches, there are guesses. Divine history is written by the one who is the faithful and the true. Do you know why men reject biblical revelation? Do you know why they try and work on the theory of Darwin or something else? Because if they have to be intellectually honest and they say they are, you see, what, what, what prophecy is, prophecy is history written beforehand. Isn't it? Because every prophecy that God has made, that at least a hundred prophecies have been fulfilled out of the Old Testament, prophecy is history written beforehand. Therefore, if a man is intellectually honest and he says, I'll accept the book, well, I'll accept right up to the Old Testament, but I won't accept the New Testament. Do you know why he doesn't want to accept it? Because if he accepts the Old Testament, to be intellectually honest, he'd have to accept the New Testament. And you know that wonderful rosy day of optimism they're always talking about just doesn't exist. You see, that God who put that bow in the heaven is exactly the same today as he was before there was ever a star in the heavens. Before ever there was a earth to plant the daisies on, before ever there was a sun and a moon, God was there in his majesty. And when this old earth has been removed and be dissolved, God will still be there in his majesty and in his glory. Now remember again he says, I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven. Well if, if you go to the 11th chapter verse 15, it says the seventh angel sounded and there were voices from heaven. But you see, that is the end of all things. There's no rainbow there. There's no rainbow at the 20th chapter of the book of the Revelation when Jesus sits with his hair as white as snow and his feet like burnished brass, and his face like the sun in its strength. There is no rainbow there because the rainbow is a sign of mercy and there is no mercy left at the 20th chapter of the Revelation. He's going to judge the nations with righteousness and in his holiness. Now I say this is, this is why men don't want to accept the biblical revelation. In the 8th chapter of Revelation, here it is. The first angel sounded. This is, this is coming right down to the end of the age. Nobody knows what's going to happen. Oh yes we do, read the book of the Revelation. Every prophecy made has been fulfilled. The first trumpet sounds, listen what happens after the first trumpet. They followed hail, fire mingled with blood. They were cast upon the earth and a third part of the trees was burned up and all grass was burned up. Verse 8, the second angel sounded. As it were a great mountain burning with fire was cast into the sea and the third part of the sea became blood and the third part of the creatures which were in the sea and had life died and the third part of the ships were destroyed. Verse 10, and the third angel sounded and there fell a great star from heaven burning as it were a lamp, burning as it were a lamp and it fell upon the third part of the rivers and the fountains and the waters and the name of the star is called Wormwood and the third part of the waters became Wormwood and many men died of the waters because they were made bitter. Verse 12, the fourth angel sounded, listen and the third part of the sun was smitten and a third part of the moon and a third part of the stars. So as the third part of them was darkened and the day shone not for a third part of it and the night likewise. Chapter 9 verse 5, verse 1, the fifth angel sounded. I saw a star from heaven fall to the earth and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit and he opened the bottomless pit. Verse 13 of the ninth chapter, the sixth angel sounded and I heard a voice from the four horns of the golden altar which is before God saying to the sixth angel who had the trumpet, loose the four angels which abound in the great river Euphrates and the four angels were loosed which were prepared for an hour and a day and a month and a year for to slay the third part of men and the number of the army of the horsemen was two hundred thousand thousand and I heard the number of them and I saw the horses in the vision. Well what does it mean? Well there you have the finale. Two hundred million men fighting the final battle of Armageddon. It says the great river, the river Euphrates has dried up. This is symbolic of the of the kings of the east coming forth to fight in a battle of Armageddon. But you see all the time there, there has been that. Now we come to the tenth chapter verse one, I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven clothed with a cloud and a rainbow was upon his head and his face was as it were the sun. That's the point I'm trying to make however clumsy I've been. The rainbow was there upon his head even though the stars had fallen, even though the earth had been pillaged and and raped and every conceivable evil which is beyond all the imagination of the Hollywood bunch to conceive, that even there that sign is there in the heaven of God's faithfulness. He put a bow in the heaven and he said there is no chance of that bow ever being eliminated. It's a sign of my mercy. Isaiah 54 says this. In the sixth verse of Isaiah 54 it says the Lord hath called thee as a woman forsaken. This is God speaking to the rebellious house of Judah by the way. For the Lord hath called thee as a woman forsaken and grieved in spirit and a wife of thy youth when thou hast refused saith the Lord. For a small moment have I forsaken thee but with great mercies will I gather thee. Now going back again to the promise that God made to Abraham, he said in thee shall all the nations of the earth be blessed. You may not like the Jews, I'm not particularly fond of them myself, but there's a mysterious covering over them. You see all the nations of the earth are going to be blessed through them, not merely the ten tribes and then the other two tribes of Judah and of Benjamin, not just those, but all the nations of the earth are going to be blessed through the Jews. After all, all the great prophets of the Old Testament were Jews, weren't the apostles Jews? Wasn't the day of Pentecost launched by Jews? Doesn't Jesus say to some of them, you're going to sit one day in the eternal kingdom and you're going to judge the twelve tribes of Israel? Now I'm not trying to establish who are the Israelites and who are the Jews, that's not the point. You know we sing a hymn sometimes, Peron's great hymn, all hail the power of Jesus' name, I like that hymn. But have you noticed in that hymn there's a subtle thing in there? Ye chosen seed of Israel's race, ye ransomed from the fall, hail him who saves you by his grace and crown him Lord of all. Now let's read this 54th chapter here, verse 7 says, For a small moment have I forsaken thee, but with great mercies will I gather thee. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer. For this is as the waters of Noah unto me, for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth, so I have sworn that I would not be wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee. For the mountains shall depart, the hills shall be removed, but my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the Lord who hath mercy on thee. The covenant of his peace was the rainbow in the sky. The Jews ought to take comfort in that as much as in the fact that of their father Abraham. Now God not only made the statement there in that 15th chapter of Genesis, which I'm going to read to you again, at least in part. When Abraham was 99 years of age, the Lord appeared unto him and said unto him, I am the Almighty God, walk before me and be thou perfect. And I will make my covenant between me and thee, and I will multiply thee exceedingly. And Abraham fell on his face. Now you remember after this, that Abraham lifted up his son Isaac, offered his son, and God again confirms, verse 14 of the 22nd chapter of Genesis says, And Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah-Jireh, as it is said to this day, in the mount of the Lord it shall be seen. And the angel of the Lord called unto Abraham out of heaven the second time and said, By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, because thou hast done this thing. Now if you go down to the epistle to the Hebrews, you'll find there in that, what the sixth chapter, where God says, He swore by two immutable things. He swore by himself, because he's unchangeable, and he swore by his oath. There's a lovely old hymn in our hymn book we may learn sometimes, The God of Abram prays, who reigns enthroned above. And one stands when it says, He by himself hath sworn, I on his oath depend. What I'm trying to do, whether it gets through or not, is this, I'm trying to build your faith, I'm trying to assure you that God made his promise to Noah, and he has never, never violated that promise. That bow is going to be the heavens if the earth splits into, if California falls into the ocean, so what? That bow will still be in the sky, because God has said so. There is no way of destroying it, there is no way of evading it. It's going to be there till the final trumpet blast, when God says, I finish with the system of earth as you know it now. And we've gone through the hellishness of the most terrible war that it's possible to conceive, the great and final battle of Armageddon. But also God here establishes his covenant with this man Abraham. He says, walk before me. Well it doesn't matter who else we walk with, if we don't walk with God. Walk before me and be thou perfect. He had to walk before him, number one, I believe as his God. Number two, he had to walk with him as his companion. Number three, he had to walk like a child on total dependence. Remember this, that as you and I say, the props are going to be pulled from under him. He's not going to have it in easy street. He has to have what we sang, blessed assurance. He has to have an assurance. He can't grab his Bible, he can't read streams in the desert, he can't even find any streams in the desert. He has to say that God that gave me his word, God cannot lie, God cannot die. He's made me a promise. When I thought of that, I thought of my old granny used to sing in the chimney comb in England, forever and ever, oh not for a day, he keepeth this promise forever, for all who believe, for all who obey. Do you know what? I say that this man had no Bible. This man had no patriarchs before him. This man had no pillar of fire to lead him. I very, very often think of Pontius Pilate and I'm always sorry for him. Do you know why? Because he was a vassal king in a strange country. The Mediterranean is what? 2,300 miles long, 1,200 miles wide, in its widest part, 14,200 feet deep. And somewhere between the coast of Israel, as we call it now, and the Gibraltar, there's a place called Rome, a proud Roman empire. There was a Caesar in the days of Jesus, and there was a Caesar in the days of the Apostles. And here is a man by the name of Pilate, he's a thousand miles at least away from home. I guess, I guess, I make a guess again, I guess he couldn't even speak their language. He didn't like their customs. And one day, just like a rock in the sea is blasted on every side with water in a stock, the poor man is tossed about with many a conflict and many a doubt. People are howling for the blood of Jesus. I don't think Pilate ever heard Jesus preach. I don't think he ever saw Jesus do a miracle. Somebody might have gossiped about it one day, making a meal. He may have eavesdropped it and heard. There's a strange man around, and there were some people saying, get rid of him, because he says there's no king. You say there's no king, but Caesar, he says, I'm going to make myself a king. The Jews were howling for his blood, because he threatened their system. The money changes, because he kicked them out of the temple one day. The other people, everybody was against the Son of God. And Pilate stands there, he's tried to get rid of him, and he's been to Herod, and he's come back again. And he asked the great question, what shall I do then with Jesus, who is called the Christ? You remember somebody slipped him a note and said, your sweet wife sent this, and she says, I've nothing to do with him, I had a terrible dream about him. And Pilate stands there, and he gave those tremendous words, he says, this man is innocent, I find no fault in him. But to save his neck, and to save his job with the people in Rome, he washed his hands in trying to get rid of the responsibility. Well, are you going to throw a rock at him? He's a heathen king. He was raised in heathenism. He was, you know, you talk about parties they have these days, they used to have parties lasting six days. You can find the record, women went topless there, as they do today. That's nothing new under the sun. They ate until they could eat no more. They went to a vomitarium, and they tickled their throats, and threw it all up, and ate again. And slept only when they were exhausted. They were as drunk as dogs laying everywhere. They had feasts, they had revelry. And here is a man talking about purity, and talking about righteousness, and talking about holiness. A crackpot talking about a kingdom that he's going to establish. He hasn't a soldier. He's no money. He's no government. He's a bunch of fishermen too lazy to work anyhow. When he said fall, they dropped their nets and ran after him. The only following he ever had were a bunch of screaming women, when he was riding a donkey. He is a threat to the Roman Empire that was covering the earth, forget it. No, I'd better get rid of this man. He may be very nice, he's meek, and I admire him. I like his features and everything, but I just can't risk everything. Do you know what? And I want to say this lovingly, but say it to you, and to myself as well. Your unbelief and mine is defenseless. That man didn't have an Old Testament, he couldn't read it, he couldn't read Hebrew. You and I have 2,000 years of Christian history, 2,000 years of missionary enterprise, 2,000 biographies and more that tell us of the faithfulness of God, that men have stepped out in naked faith like Abraham did. God pities we fall over matchstalks sometimes, don't we? Somebody hurts our feelings. You tried to buy something and somebody bought it yesterday. Oh, you were going to save it. Some tribute can upset us till hell lasts with us. I've said this, said it almost facetiously, but I say it again, that one day somebody's going to read the Bible and believe it, and when they do, we'll all be embarrassed. That's all that God is asking for. He isn't asking us to put 10 million dollar radio stations up and blast the same stuff over week after week to people that don't want to hear. He's asking you, maybe asking me, step out, here it is, I am the Lord, I change not, therefore ye sons of Abraham cannot be consumed. You see, this inheritance of possessing the whole earth is not just to Abraham, I'm not going to weary with you, read it yourself. Read the 4th chapter of Romans and see what God says there repeatedly and repeatedly, that this man Abraham, he was not blessed because he obeyed the law of God. The law wasn't given till 430 years after. In the book of Judges, 500 years after, in the book of Judges, 500 years after Abraham had passed on, God said, listen I'll never break the covenant that I made. And isn't it the apostle Paul that says unto us that God has given to you exceeding great and precious promises. You're never going to destroy the Jew, you may as well try and blow the sun out. They're going to last. They're the biggest headache in the world today. We don't like them but we, we give them money. It's a strange situation we're in now, we've got a marvellous, marvellous, loud voice about human rights. And yet we're trying to get married to a nation that knows nothing about human rights, Cuba. We're trying to establish a new bridgehead with a country that's running with the biggest, horrible, most horrible genocide in history, Cambodia. And we're trying to make friends with a bloody wretched crowd like that. We're trying to establish relationships with China but I'll tell you what, God is still righteous and we'll suffer for it. You see that the whole calamity is not political, the whole calamity in America or England today is spiritual. It's the bankruptcy of the church which is the tragedy. God has given me this book and the more I read it the more amazed I am at how little I know about it and how little I obey it. I believe God is going to call young men, we've got one young fella going to step out, thank God, and pray for Jake as he goes. He's got a tough road to hoe, no question about it. You see it so happened that this man Abraham was just as emotional as any of us. He hadn't gone far up the road before he had problems with Lot, he had problems with his father, his father he had to bury him and then he had to move her and he had dealings with Lot and he had to park company with Lot. And God says to him, look you're going to run into trouble the whole way, your nation is going to go into captivity for hundreds of years. But I want to tell you something, these promises I've given you they're exceeding great and precious promises. Jeremiah 33, let me quote this and close, that this should be a covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days saith the Lord. I will put my law in their in most inward parts and right in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my people. And they shall teach no more every man his neighbor for every man and every man his brother saying no the Lord for they shall know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord. I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sin no more. Now listen, thus saith the Lord God which giveth the sun for a light by day, the ordinances of the moon and of the stars for the light by night, which divideth the sea when the waves thereof roar and the Lord of hosts is his name. If those ordinances depart from me saith the Lord then the seed of Israel shall cease from being a nation for me forever. You see what he says? There's only one way that Israel can cease to be a nation and that is when there's no day and when there's no night and when there's no moon and when there's no sun and when there's no light and when there's no darkness. And if you can get rid of those he says you can get rid of Israel. That since you can't get rid of those eight things they're established forever. Do you remember? There was a prophecy I won't worry you with but it was just at the time that these people, well maybe I'll read it, Jeremiah 31. I said I wouldn't read another but I'm sure you'd like me to. Jeremiah 31. Can't even find it at the moment. Well that's a script I just read. Jeremiah 31, okay. This should be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel. Now again he's making this covenant when the ten tribes of Israel had been in captivity for about a hundred years. He's making it just before the tribe of Judah go into captivity with the Assyrians. But he says that despite captivity, I don't think for a moment God didn't get angry with this nation because he loved them. He sure did, he'd beat them up. Man they went into captivity at least twice for 400 years. They had all kinds of suffering, they'd hardship, they'd famine. But again whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and he scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. Look at this word in Genesis 49 verse 10. The scepter shall not depart from Judah nor a lawgiver from between his feet until Shiloh come. And unto him shall be the gathering of the people. Binding his fall unto the vine and the Gnathist colt unto the choice vine, he washed his garments in wine and his clothes in the blood of the great. Typical of the Lord Jesus riding in triumph into the city, typical of Jesus being the true vine. But he says the scepter shall not depart from Judah nor a lawgiver from between his feet until Shiloh come. Then right at the end of the book, do you remember what it says? It calls Jesus what? The meek and lowly lamb, no no no. It calls him the lion of the tribe of Judah. Particularly while God loves Israel. I don't know where we come in in this, do you? I don't know where the Gentiles come in and go out, but this I do know that God has established a covenant with the ten tribes and with the two tribes of the left. And he promised that out of the seed of Abraham, and remember it was when he said to him that his seed shall inherit the earth that God told him that he was a righteous man. And you see that seed, if you read it, read it for yourself. Read that in the epistles of the Galatians and you'll discover the seed is not merely the seed according to the flesh, but we are Abraham's seed because the just live by faith and we have entered by faith as he entered by faith. And because of that God is going to preserve his church. He's going to go through trouble, I'm convinced of that, greater troubles we've ever dreamed of. But the promises are there, the only thing you can stand on. You can't stand on feelings, you can't stand on friendship, we can't stand on material security. The battle that we're in today is not a battle of communism and capitalism. The battle of the day is a battle of materialism and spiritism, true spiritual life, let me put it that way. This world is gearing itself up to a final thrust against God. Could you believe five years ago, that was it last Sunday, the Sunday before, that a quarter of a million homosexuals marched through the leading cities in the nation? Did you notice one of them got killed and they threw the flag at half staff, wasn't it in Frisco, in honor of a homosexual? They didn't do that for thousands of boys killed in battle. I tell you what, we're not going to, we're not going to deteriorate at this speed much longer. Either God Almighty comes in mercy and gives us revival or he comes in judgment. But thank God we're on the Lord's side and better still the Lord is on our side. We put our trust in him and those who put their trust in him shall never be confounded. Yeah that's a great hymn, Peronet wrote that hymn. All hail the power of Jesus name, let angels prosperate for, bring forth a royal diadem. We're going to see him, the lion of the tribe of Judah one day. We're going to see those thrones on which some are going to judge the nation, the twelve tribes, they're still there, they've made it right into the book of the revelation. So it's an insane thing to try and destroy them. Again I don't know why God loves them but you know what, let me close my eyes and say this, I don't know why he loves you either. I mean I don't know why he loves me. It's a strange way of loving but he loves. And though they rebel he's going to bring them back. Read the 11th chapter, away there in that lovely epistle to the Romans. Paul mentions Abraham right through the fourth chapter, it's all Abraham. Come to the 11th chapter, he's going to bring them, they'll go a long way. I read to you he says, for a little while I forsaken thee, a little while and it's two thousand years since he forsook them. That's a little while with God, it's not long, it isn't a tick of the clock on eternity. And one day we're going to see these people, do you know they're going to fall at his feet, the word of God says. They who looked upon him and pierced him, they're going to bow at his feet. Oh that with yonder sacred throng we at his feet may fall and join in the everlasting song and crown him Lord of all. The line of the tribe of Judah shall prevail and give us the victory again and again. So however dark it is, remember when you see the bow in the sky, God put it there, nobody can destroy it. The government can't shift it, bombs can't shift it, it's going to stay, it's going to stay. If the whole nation falls in the ocean it'll still be somewhere to be seen. It's God's eternal signature, he signed it with his name. He made his promise that I'm going to bless you to a thousand generations, he said to this people. That's an awful long while. He not only loves Israel but he loves his new Israel, he loves the church of the living God. I like the hymn where the church's one foundation is Jesus Christ our Lord. I love that phrase in it, with his own blood he bought her and for her life he died. And then that lovely hymn, we used to have it as our national anthem we said when we were in Baton Rouge there, that we sang this afternoon. Just so beautiful, fairest Lord Jesus. There's nobody fairer, nobody more beautiful. Heaven will be lovely. I'll stare at those thrones won't you? I'd like to see who the four and twenty elders are, maybe not from the first baptist church but anyhow, four and twenty elders that sit on the throne judging the nation. And this angel whose face is so bright and his feet like pillars of fire. He's only a created being. What must the majesty and glory of God be like? All earth's proud empires pass away. His kingdom stands and grows forever till all his creatures all my sway.
God's Covenant With Man
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Leonard Ravenhill (1907 - 1994). British-American evangelist, author, and revivalist born in Leeds, England. Converted at 14 in a Methodist revival, he trained at Cliff College, a Methodist Bible school, and was mentored by Samuel Chadwick. Ordained in the 1930s, he preached across England with the Faith Mission and held tent crusades, influenced by the Welsh Revival’s fervor. In 1950, he moved to the United States, later settling in Texas, where he ministered independently, focusing on prayer and repentance. Ravenhill authored books like Why Revival Tarries (1959) and Sodom Had No Bible, urging the church toward holiness. He spoke at major conferences, including with Youth for Christ, and mentored figures like David Wilkerson and Keith Green. Married to Martha Beaton in 1939, they had three sons, all in ministry. Known for his fiery sermons and late-night prayer meetings, he corresponded with A.W. Tozer and admired Charles Spurgeon. His writings and recordings, widely available online, emphasize spiritual awakening over institutional religion. Ravenhill’s call for revival continues to inspire evangelical movements globally.