Revival

“Early Tent Revival ca 1930”

One of the first recorded large camp meetings “was held at Cane Ridge, Kentucky, in August 1801, where between 10,000 and 25,000 people attended, and Presbyterian, Baptist and Methodist ministers participated. It was this event that stamped the organized revival as the major mode of church expansion for denominations such as the Methodists and Baptists, who were newly converted by the teachings of John Wesley.

“The significant and most recurring theme in mountain preaching,” according to Deborah McCauley, author of Appalachian Mountain Religion, “is that of a broken heart, tenderness of heart, a heart not hardened to the Spirit and the Word of God. Mountain people teach through their churches that the image of God in each person lives in the heart, that the Word of God lodges itself in the heart, and the heart is meant to guide the head, not the other way around.”

“God led me into the Free Methodist Church when in 1935 I was sanctified in a revival preached by Brother Albert Faust from Pittsburgh,” said West Virginian Dewilla Lemmon of her revival experiences. “Melrose Uphold, a neighbor, and Sister Eva Young, a local Free Methodist preacher, arranged for a meeting in a vacant building near my home. This came as an answer to prayer for me because I had been privately seeking holiness, not really knowing what it was, only that for many months I had craved a pure, perfect condition of heart with God, notwithstanding the knowledge that I had been born again.”

One of Lemmon’s fellow worshipers, “Sister Uphold,” explained to her that the experience she sought was “sanctification.” “So I went to the altar and prayed for it. I also made various restitutions. Brother Faust quoted the Scripture: ‘The Lord whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple.’ And Jesus did just that for me on the night of September 22, 1935 after Brother Faust had delivered his sermon and while Sister Young walked up and down behind me at the altar quoting in a strong voice: ‘This is the will of God, even your sanctification.’”

There are wonderful historical photos of early Frontier camp meetings that cannot be copied here due to Copyright.  You may go here to view them.

This Sunday we will learn more about this time in our history when enthusiasm for the Holy Spirit was quite acceptable and the fervor for sharing the joy that God brought into the heart and soul was celebrated with deep seriousness.  What quiet message has God left upon your heart recently?  How might you be moved to wonder out loud about this message?  

This post taken from the blog:http://www.appalachianhistory.net/

Sources for original post are:

http://are.as.wvu.edu/ferber.htm#_edn24

Lemmon, Dewilla. “Camp Memories” journal exercise recorded by Pauline Shahan. July 6, 1980
Appalachian Mountain Religion. University of Illinois Press: Chicago; 1995

http://www.theopedia.com/Great_awakenings

One Comment

  1. Sara Zeigler

    I’ve been praying for Rivial in the Methodist Church. I hope this is the beginning for us here in Sacramento. May we all Catch the Spirit.

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