Evan Robert in the land of
Revivals
By Rev. Dr. Ed and
Janice Hird
How might Canada be different if ten per cent of Canadians entered
into the Kingdom of God in the next two years? That’s what happened in Wales,
the land of revivals and song. Evan Roberts, the spiritual father of the 1904
Welsh Revival, worked from age 12 to 23 with his father Henry in the coal
mines. He had visitations from the Holy Spirit, showing all Wales being lifted up
to Heaven. For several months before the
revival broke out, Evan would be taken up into the heavens every night where he
would commune with God. Evan began to
ask God to give him 100,000 souls, something that occurred during this revival.
During this awakening, ten per cent of the Welsh people were ushered into the
Kingdom. Revival historian J Edwin Orr
says that 150,000 became members of local churches in Wales, with 250,000
becoming born again.
Prayer was the very breath of Evan’s soul. He seemed to be constantly praying. The
prayer that Evan received from his mentor Rev Seth Joshua was “Bend me, bend
me, bend us.” He urged total abandonment to the will of God. As one participant commented, “Did we not
hear him time and again praying the words “Empty me! Fill me! Use me” until
they became part of our thinking?” Whenever the Holy Spirit came upon Evan in a
revival meeting, his face was transformed, bringing a radiant smile and shining
eyes.
The four "points" of Evan’s revival message were:
1. Confess all known sin, receiving forgiveness through
Jesus Christ
2. Remove anything in your life that you are in doubt or
feel unsure about
3. Be ready to obey the Holy Spirit instantly
4. Publicly confess the Lord Jesus Christ
Evan became perhaps the most famous man in the world at the
time. Even the future UK Prime Minister, Lloyd George, vouched for the
genuineness of Evan Roberts and the Welsh revival. Evan was present at only
about 259 of the tens of thousands of Welsh revival meetings that took
place. The chapels were often so crowded
that Evan often had to climb over people’s shoulders just to make it to the
pulpit. Participants said that it was not the eloquence of Evan Roberts that transformed
people —it was his tears. People were standing for hours in the cold, wintry
air hoping that by someone leaving the church, they could push in to witness
the scenes that were taking place inside.
Troubled by both the adulation and criticism, he wouldn’t announce his
meetings in advance. He wanted Jesus, not himself, to be the focus. Sometimes
he would go to a revival meeting and then refuse to speak, instead praying
silently before leaving. Evan said “I am
not the source for this revival. I am only one worker in that which is growing
to be a host. I am not moving the hearts of men and changing their lives; but
‘God is working through me”.’
From the very beginning of the revival, there was a strong sense
of conviction of sin, with wrongdoing publicly confessed. Instead of sports, the
hot topic in the pubs was about Evan Roberts and the revival. Drunkenness was
cut in half, causing bankruptcies in many pubs. Crime was cut in half. Former houses of
prostitution turned into homes of heavenly singing, encouraging their former
customers to go to the revival meetings. The Bible Society in Wales could not
keep up with the request for their bibles. People began to pay off their bad
debts. Some of the toughest characters in the Welsh valleys were converted.
Pit-ponies could no longer understand the miners' commands as they had stopped
cursing the ponies. The police, often having no one to arrest, would come to
the revivals to sing in quartets. In one court case, the prisoner came under
conviction, confessing his sins. The judge then preached the gospel to him, and
the jury spontaneously broke out into Welsh revival singing.
Just like with the 1970s Jesus movement, most of the Welsh
revival leaders and participants were very young. The revival services were marked with informality,
laughing, crying, dancing, joy, and brokenness.
Many of these youth did spontaneous Jesus marches, singing songs and
visiting the pubs to invite people to the revival. No one bothered about the clock. People often
stayed until two to three am in the morning, and then marched through the
streets singing hymns. A participant, David
Matthews commented, “When I left the heavenly atmosphere of the church for
home, I discovered that it was five in the morning! I had been in the house of
God for ten hours — they passed like ten minutes!”
As predicted by Evan, the Welsh revival had a worldwide
impact, birthing over 30 revivals around the world, including in China, Korea, India,
East Africa, and the 1906 Azusa Street revival in Los Angeles, impacting
hundreds of millions. At one meeting, all Evan said was ‘let us pray’, before
revival broke out. As with the later Korean revival, the Welsh all prayed
simultaneously. This revival of love gave Evan the ability to sing all day. The
first Welsh revival team was five teenage girls who would sing about God’s love
at the revival meetings. The love song
of the Welsh revival was the song “Here is love vast as the ocean”. Evan told the reporters, “I preach nothing
but Christ’s love”.
Because Evan seldom ate, slept and rested, he soon succumbed
to the pressure of his rigorous schedule, and, in 1906, suffered a physical and
emotional collapse, the first of his eight nervous breakdowns. The doctor told Evan
after his nervous breakdown that if he ever preached again, he would die. He then moved to England, living in virtual
seclusion until he died. Sadly, Evan refused
to see his family when they visited, only returning to Wales upon the death of
his father in 1928. While there for his dad’s funeral in Loughor, Evans spoke a
few sentences and a "mini-revival" sparked. Evan Roberts died in 1951 at age 72.
Imagine what God might do in Canada, if we like Evan Roberts
bent our will to God’s will for our nation? Bend us, Lord! Bend the Church in
Canada!
Rev. Dr. Ed & Janice Hird
-an article previously published in the June 2019 Light Magazine
1 comment:
Thanks Ed. The influence and imprint of Evan Roberts' ministry and that great revival are still to be found - however faintly for some. Sadly, some years ago I was speaking with a Welshman - a fellow now in his mid-to-late seventies, and he had no idea what I was talking about when I mentioned Roberts and the 1904 Welsh Revival. ~~+~~
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