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David Smithers

David Smithers (c. 1960 – N/A) was an American preacher and revival historian whose ministry focused on promoting Christ-centered revival and prayer within evangelical circles. Born in the United States, he experienced a profound conversion in his youth that ignited a lifelong passion for spiritual awakening. Largely self-educated in theology, he immersed himself in the study of historical revivals for nearly 40 years, drawing inspiration from figures like David Brainerd and John Wesley. Smithers’ preaching career centered on teaching about revival and missions, often speaking at churches, YWAM Discipleship Training Schools, and Perspectives classes across North America and beyond. His sermons, such as “Extreme Prayer” and “Revival Scenes,” emphasized the power of prevailing prayer and the restoration of New Testament church patterns. As a watchman for revival, he authored numerous articles and served with ministries like Watchword and Revival-Library.org, amplifying his message through written works and recordings. Married with a family, though specific details remain private, he continues to advocate for a return to fervent faith and global outreach from his base in the United States.
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David Smithers delves into the secret of the anointing of the Holy Spirit, emphasizing the importance of being willing to pay the price for God's anointing. Through the example of Mordecai Ham, who experienced overwhelming encounters with the Holy Spirit, Smithers highlights the need for deep spiritual preparation to operate in a prophet-revivalist role. Ham's success as a revivalist was attributed to Apostolic power, seeking out sinners and facing opposition with boldness, leading to both judgment and salvation. Smithers stresses the necessity of the Holy Spirit in the church, quoting Charles Spurgeon, and encourages believers to fully surrender to God to pave the way for true revival.
Mordecai Ham
What is the secret of the anointing of the Holy Spirit? Does God endue men in a sort of haphazard way? Has He favorites? Certainly not! God's difficulty is to find men who are willing to pay the price." Mordecai Ham was a man who was willing to pay the price and as a result was powerfully anointed by the Holy Spirit. Early on in his ministry he had some striking experiences with the Holy Spirit that helped prepare him for the prophet-revivalist role he would later operate in. Mr. Ham writes, "I had an overwhelming experience of the Lord's presence. I felt so powerfully overcome by the nearness of the Holy Spirit that I had to ask the Lord to draw back lest He kill me. It was so glorious that I couldn't stand more than a small portion of it." As his spiritual life deepened, his success as a revivalist increasingly spread. An early example of the fruitfulness of Mordecai Ham's ministry is seen in a Jackson, Tenn. newspaper report dated April 1905. The report reads, "Has the spiritual fire of the great Wales revival reached across the ocean and ignited the hearts of the people of Jackson? It begins to look as if it has at the big tent revival conducted by Rev. M.F. Ham." Mr. Ham's success was not the result of traditional evangelistic methods, but the fruit of Apostolic power. Often he would seek out the worst of sinners in the community and then proceed to pray and plead with them until they were surrendered to Christ, resulting in a great in-gathering of the lost. At other times he faced down stubborn opposers of the gospel, declaring he would pray to God to either convert them or kill them. In Mr. Ham's biography there are several incidents recorded where those who resisted and opposed the Holy Spirit were brought to swift judgment. "The evangelist recalls with great reluctance that deaths took place during many of his great campaigns. Ambulances would have to come and carry bodies away from our services." "Many persons that openly fought a Ham meeting met with some form of violent death soon after." (Acts 5:1-11). So, as the Holy Spirit was being poured out, some were visited with judgment while others were saved and even physically healed. Charles Spurgeon rightly said "that a church in the land without the Spirit is rather a curse than a blessing. If you have not the Spirit of God, Christian worker, remember that you stand in somebody else's way; you are a fruitless tree standing where a fruitful tree might grow." Mordecai Ham's clear understanding of this spiritual principle helped him develop an effective strategy for reaching the lost. On this point he writes, "There are a lot of Christians who are halfway fellows. They stand in the door, holding on to the Church with one hand while they play with the toys of the world with the other. They are in the doorway and we can't bring sinners in. And, until we get some of God's people right, we cannot hope to get sinners regenerated. Now they always accuse me of carrying around a sledge hammer with which to pound the church members. Yes sir, I do pound them, every time I come down, I knock one of the halfway fellows out of the doorway, and every time I knock one out I get a sinner in." It was this kind of bold Biblical preaching that brought a young 16 year old boy to Christ by the name of Billy Graham. It should be emphasized now that Mr. Ham was always a man of zealous prayer. "Sometimes he spent hours in his room wrestling with God." He often encouraged all night prayer meetings to be attended for several consecutive nights in order to lay the proper ground work for the moving of the Spirit. He learned early on that human wisdom could not do the work of the Holy Spirit. In closing let us consider some of Mr. Hams thoughts on the hindrances of true revival. "One of our troubles is we are not willing to humble ourselves. We are not willing to give up our opinions as to how things should be done. We want a revival to come just in our way. You never saw two revivals come just alike. We must let them come in God's way. People are ashamed to admit they need a revival. If you are not willing to take the shame on yourself, you then let it remain on Jesus Christ. You must bear the reproach of your sinful state of indifference, or the cause of our Master must bear it."
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David Smithers (c. 1960 – N/A) was an American preacher and revival historian whose ministry focused on promoting Christ-centered revival and prayer within evangelical circles. Born in the United States, he experienced a profound conversion in his youth that ignited a lifelong passion for spiritual awakening. Largely self-educated in theology, he immersed himself in the study of historical revivals for nearly 40 years, drawing inspiration from figures like David Brainerd and John Wesley. Smithers’ preaching career centered on teaching about revival and missions, often speaking at churches, YWAM Discipleship Training Schools, and Perspectives classes across North America and beyond. His sermons, such as “Extreme Prayer” and “Revival Scenes,” emphasized the power of prevailing prayer and the restoration of New Testament church patterns. As a watchman for revival, he authored numerous articles and served with ministries like Watchword and Revival-Library.org, amplifying his message through written works and recordings. Married with a family, though specific details remain private, he continues to advocate for a return to fervent faith and global outreach from his base in the United States.