E.A. Johnston highlights the powerful revival led by Ezehiel Nettleton in Schenectady in 1820 as a profound example of God's transformative work through conviction, prayer, and repentance.
In this sermon, E.A. Johnston recounts the remarkable Schenectady revival of 1820 led by evangelist Ezehiel Nettleton, highlighting the powerful conviction and conversions that marked this historic awakening. Johnston draws from Nettleton's personal journal and historical research to vividly portray the spiritual fervor among students at Union College. The message calls contemporary believers to learn from past revivals and earnestly pray for a fresh move of God in America.
Full Transcript
One of the primary leaders of the Second Great Awakening was the evangelist, Ezehiel Nettleton, whom God used as a mighty instrument of revival. Nettleton preached the great doctrines of grace with unusual power, and when it was rumored that he was coming to a town, it made strong men tremble with the fear, for it was said that the evangelist could read the wicked windings of their heart. Powerful revivals under Nettleton occurred under his searching sermons, and one such example took place in Schenectady, New York, in 1820, on the campus of Union College.
When I was conducting my research for my definitive biography on the life of Ezehiel Nettleton, I spent a great deal of time at Union College, going through their archives as I researched that remarkable revival, and I located the house where this revival occurred. It was the home of faculty member Dr. Thomas Macaulay. It is still on campus to this day.
That house saw a great revival occur around the casket of a corpse of a student that was kept in the drawing room as an example of one's mortality. Nettleton stayed in this house and witnessed the move of God there, and recorded it all in his personal journal. The following is an extract from my biography on Nettleton, and it is Ezehiel Nettleton's handwritten account, which I copied verbatim from his personal papers at Hartford Seminary in Hartford, Connecticut.
Here now are the words of Ezehiel Nettleton as he gives an eyewitness account of the Schenectady revival. South from Malta, about twelve miles, is the city of Schenectady and Union College, where I now reside with Dr. Macaulay. He takes a lively interest in this good work.
I first became acquainted with him last summer at the Springs, and more particularly at Malta, where he frequently visited us and preached and conversed and attended the meetings appointed for those anxious for their souls. On a Sabbath, when a number were to be admitted to the church in Malta, he brought with him several students from the college. Some of them became anxious.
About this time, one of the students was called into the eternal world. He was laid out in Dr. Macaulay's study. The doctor was anxious to improve this solemn providence to the best advantage.
He assembled the students around the lifeless remains of their departed friend and conversed and prayed with them in the most solemn manner. A number of them engaged to attend to the subject of religion in earnest. From that time, many of the students became deeply impressed with a sense of their lost condition.
For them were appointed meetings of inquiry, and in this very room, where they lately beheld the breathless corpse of their young companion, and where I am now writing, was witnessed a scene of deep and awful distress. About thirty of the students are brought to rejoice in hope. The revival is now very powerful in the city.
Such a scene they have never witnessed before. More than one hundred have been converted. Besides these, we had more than two hundred in our meeting of inquiry, anxious for their souls.
We met in a large upper room called the Masonic Hall. The room was so crowded that we were obliged to request all who had recently found relief to retire below and spend their time in prayer for those above. But that evening will never be forgotten.
The scene is beyond description. Did you ever witness two hundred sinners, with one accord in one place, weeping for their sins? Until you have seen this, you can have no adequate conceptions of the solemn scene. I felt as though I was standing on the verge of the eternal world, while the floor under my feet was shaken by the trembling of anxious souls in view of a judgment to come.
The solemnity was heightened when every knee was bent at the throne of grace, and the intervening silence of the voice of prayer was interrupted only by the sighs and sobs of anxious souls. Some of the most stout, hard-hearted, heaven-daring rebels have been in the most awful distress. Within a circle whose diameter is twenty-four miles, not less than eight hundred souls have been hopefully born into the kingdom of Christ since last September.
The same glorious work is fast spreading in other towns and congregations. So ends this narrative. It is important for us, friends, to study today historical revivals, to learn how God has moved in former times so we can better prepare our own hearts as we long for revival in our day and pray for it.
It's been over 160 years since God has sent a national revival to America. We desperately need revival in our day to rouse a sleeping church, to turn the heart of a nation back to Almighty God. I pray that God will send a revival to America for it's either revival or ruin.
Sermon Outline
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I
- Introduction to Ezehiel Nettleton and his role in the Second Great Awakening
- Description of the Schenectady revival setting at Union College
- Importance of historical revival research
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II
- The solemn scene of the student's death and its impact on the college students
- Meetings of inquiry and deep spiritual distress among students
- Powerful conversion experiences and widespread revival
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III
- Description of the emotional and spiritual atmosphere during the revival meetings
- The scale of conversions within a 24-mile radius
- The spreading of revival to other towns and congregations
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IV
- The need to study past revivals to prepare for future ones
- A call for revival in contemporary America
- The urgent choice between revival or ruin for the nation
Key Quotes
“Did you ever witness two hundred sinners, with one accord in one place, weeping for their sins?” — E.A. Johnston
“I felt as though I was standing on the verge of the eternal world, while the floor under my feet was shaken by the trembling of anxious souls in view of a judgment to come.” — E.A. Johnston
“It's been over 160 years since God has sent a national revival to America. We desperately need revival in our day to rouse a sleeping church.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Reflect on the seriousness of mortality and the need for personal repentance.
- Engage in earnest prayer and spiritual inquiry to prepare for revival.
- Learn from historical revivals to cultivate a heart open to God's transformative work today.
