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Longing for Personal Revival
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 11:06
E.A. Johnston

Longing for Personal Revival

E.A. Johnston · 11:06

E.A. Johnston emphasizes that personal revival, marked by clean hands and a pure heart, is essential before the church can experience corporate revival.
In this devotional sermon, E.A. Johnston explores the vital need for personal revival as the foundation for corporate awakening. Drawing from Psalm 24, he highlights the importance of clean hands and a pure heart—symbolizing honest relationships and wholehearted devotion to God. Johnston challenges believers to examine their lives, embrace forgiveness, and prepare their hearts to receive God's powerful presence and blessing.

Full Transcript

I believe we need to see revival in our day, friends, but I also believe before the church can experience corporate revival, there must be a hunger in the people of God for personal revival. It is this longing for personal revival that can give us a fresh encounter with God. And that's the title of my message today, friends, longing for personal revival.

And my text can be found in the book of Psalms. You can turn in your Bibles there now, friends. We will be in Psalm 24, which I believe speaks of personal revival.

God is sovereign when it comes to revival. We cannot produce revival by ourselves, but I believe we can prepare our hearts aright to see revival on a personal basis. In verses 1 and 2, we see the sovereignty of God.

The earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof, the world and they that dwell therein. For he hath founded it upon the seas, and established it upon the floods. The God of creation is also the God of revival.

How bad do we want to have revival in our lives? Are we desperate enough to get a fresh touch from Almighty God? I believe God wants to bless us with his presence, and I believe our passage of day, friends, has the preliminary requirements to seeing a personal revival in our lives. Let's examine these one by one. The psalmist asks a question, and then he answers his own question.

In verse 3, he asks, Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord, or who shall stand in his holy place? First, let us examine how the habitation of God is described here. It is called a hill. It is an elevated place that one must climb to reach it.

Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord, the psalmist asks. Next, he describes God's place as a holy place. Who shall stand in his holy place? God is holy.

He is high and lifted up. God is not man. His ways are not our ways, neither his thoughts are thoughts.

God is on the hill of heaven, which is a holy place. Well, how on earth can a sinner climb up there? First by the blood of his dear son, the Lord Jesus Christ, through forgiveness of sins. Then we see the psalmist answer this perplexing question in verse 4, He that hath clean hands and a pure heart.

Let me pause here, friends, to say this speaks of two directionals in the life of the believer. We have two beams here, one horizontal and one vertical. Clean hands speaks of the horizontal beam, which is our dealings with man.

Are our hands clean in this regard? Have we dealt fairly and honestly with our fellow man? We must examine ourselves and be honest with ourselves. This is our daily interaction with others, our family members, our friends, our neighbors, our work associates, our patients, or our customers. Have we dealt honestly in all categories here in all regards? Do we harbor an unforgiving heart towards others? I'll never forget preaching in a church years ago where God was pleased to send a touch revival, but there was a main hindrance existing in that church, which prevented God from a deeper movement of his blessings.

The church was filled with bitterness and an unforgiving heart toward one another. The two pastors were fighting among themselves, and instead of God visiting that church with a deeper movement of his presence, rather God withdrew himself, and that church was split right down the middle. Half the congregation left to go form a new church with one pastor, and the other half remained where they were.

To this day, I believe it was this bitterness among the members that hindered a deeper work of God. I have studied historical revival for decades now, and I have discovered that there is a golden thread that weaves its way through revivals, and if this purified thread is broken, it has been a bar to revival throughout history. To which I refer is the golden thread of a forgiving heart toward others.

When one researches the history of revival, it is plainly shown that many revivals began accompanied by a sudden manifestation of God's presence when Christians began to confess their sins of an unforgiving heart to one another. So clean hands here speaks of our relationship with our fellow men. This is the horizontal beam of Psalm 24.

Next we see the vertical beam, which is our walk with God. This is described as a pure heart, and this speaks of single-mindedness toward God. Is he first and foremost in our daily living? Does he have first place, first call, and first priority? Are we harboring any unconfessed sin in our lives which would hinder our walk with God? I believe Amos 3.3 says it all.

Can two walk together except they be agreed? Are we in agreement with God in our lives? Are we obstructing him in any way? Our text in Psalm 24 goes a little deeper with more clarity with the words, Who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully? Are we worldly more than we are godly? Have we told a lie to someone and left that undone? I remember when I was a Sunday school teacher at a big Baptist church years ago, and I played racquetball with one of the members of my class. And while we were playing racquetball one day, we learned we went to the same college, and he asked me when I graduated. Well at the time I was a college dropout, and I was embarrassed about it, so I lied to him and gave him a year of my graduation.

That night I tossed and turned on my bed, realizing that as his Sunday school teacher, I had lied to him. What a horrible example I was as a Christian. As soon as I could, later that week I cornered this man in a hallway at church, and confessed to him how I lied to him, and I asked him to forgive me.

Well, he was hurt and shocked, but he said he forgave me. Our horizontal beam on the hill of Psalm 24 is critically important to our ascent up that hill into God's holy place. He will allow no liars up there.

He will allow no unconfessed sin to dwell with him. I'm reminded of the story told by Duncan Campbell of the loose revival of the Scottish Hebrides. Some deacons met in a barn monthly to pray for revival to come to the island.

Finally, in the midst of their prayer meeting, a young deacon stood to his feet and exclaimed, Brethren, all our time here in prayer is getting no results and is nothing more than humbug. Let me ask us this question. Are my hands clean? Is my heart pure? Suddenly, a wave of conviction went through the barn among those men, and God's presence fell among them in power.

We must ask ourselves the same question. How badly do we want to have a personal revival? Those rare individuals who make this ascent according to these requirements will receive something for their efforts. Verse 5 speaks of this.

He shall receive the blessing from the Lord and his righteousness from the God of his salvation. This, friends, speaks of personal revival. I believe the object of revival is seen in verses 8-10.

Who is this King of Glory? The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle. Lift up your heads, O ye gates, even lift them up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of Glory shall come in. Who is this King of Glory? The Lord of hosts.

He is the King of Glory. So to draw the net on our lesson today, friends, we find that in Psalm 24 we have two beams, so to speak, a horizontal and a vertical, and when they meet in harmony, they form a cross. That's the pathway up that hill to revival with Christ Jesus.

Let us pray.

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Need for Personal Revival
    • Revival must begin with individual hunger
    • Corporate revival follows personal renewal
    • Fresh encounter with God is foundational
  2. II. The Sovereignty of God in Revival
    • God is the creator and sustainer
    • Revival is a work of God's power
    • We prepare our hearts but cannot produce revival
  3. III. The Requirements for Ascending God's Holy Hill
    • Clean hands symbolize honest relationships
    • A pure heart reflects single-minded devotion
    • Forgiveness is essential to remove barriers
  4. IV. The Blessings of Personal Revival
    • Receiving God's blessing and righteousness
    • Encountering the King of Glory
    • Harmony of horizontal and vertical beams forms the cross

Key Quotes

“Before the church can experience corporate revival, there must be a hunger in the people of God for personal revival.” — E.A. Johnston
“Clean hands here speaks of our relationship with our fellow men. This is the horizontal beam of Psalm 24.” — E.A. Johnston
“When the horizontal and vertical beams meet in harmony, they form a cross. That's the pathway up that hill to revival with Christ Jesus.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Examine your relationships and seek forgiveness to maintain clean hands.
  • Confess and remove any unconfessed sin to cultivate a pure heart before God.
  • Cultivate a deep hunger and desperation for a fresh encounter with God's presence.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 'clean hands' mean in the context of revival?
'Clean hands' refers to honest and fair dealings with others, free from bitterness and unforgiveness.
Why is a pure heart important for revival?
A pure heart signifies single-minded devotion to God and the absence of unconfessed sin that hinders fellowship with Him.
Can revival be produced by human effort alone?
No, revival is sovereignly initiated by God, but believers can prepare their hearts to receive it.
How does forgiveness relate to revival?
Forgiveness removes bitterness and is a vital prerequisite for experiencing God's presence and revival.
What is the significance of Psalm 24 in this sermon?
Psalm 24 outlines the conditions for approaching God’s holy presence and serves as the foundation for personal revival.

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