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A Call for a Day of Prayer, Fasting, and Repentance
10/23/2006
James 4:9,10 Be miserable and mourn and weep; let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves in the presence of the Lord, and He will exalt you.
Like me, you may have not been aware that October 31st marks more than just the dark holiday of Halloween. It also happens to be the day that Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the door at Wittenberg. This day is celebrated by several Protestant denominations as Reformation Day. Although I do not consider myself a Calvinist (nor an Arminian for that matter) as many who observe this day do, I believe that Reformation is something needed as much today as it was in the 16th century. Perhaps while the world celebrates Halloween, we should consider remembering the Reformation and the Spirit which gave birth to it.
Steve Camp made me aware of this day, and I have joined him in planning to spend the day in prayer, fasting, and repentance before God. I ask that you consider joining us. This is not an act seeking to win “brownie points” with God nor is it intended to puff us up in feeling that we’ve done something “really spiritual.” It is born out of a realization of how badly we have fallen short of what God has called us to both individually and corporately and a burning desire to have it change. Below are some questions which I hope will awaken within you that same desire:
Are you satisfied with the state of your relationship with God? Have you become comfortable with your current level of spiritual maturity? Have you been faithful in obeying God’s call upon your life? Are there areas of sin, disobedience, or ignoring God that you have just gotten used to so that they don’t bother you anymore? Do you take pride and comfort in the thought that you are not as sinful as others you know? Or does it cut you to the quick when you realize the extent of your corruption before God? Are you willing to pay the price to change or is it just too disruptive to the comfortable self-image that you’ve created for yourself?
Do you see the Church today as a whole bringing a sense of satisfaction and joy to God? Do you see the Church as being a bastion of truth and sound doctrine presenting a clear and godly message to the world? Does the Church have a biblical set of priorities? Or does it grieve you to see the confusion and worship of self and corruption of God’s intent for the Church? Are you willing to pay the price and speak up for the need to change the Church or would it be too much to risk your comfortable social standing…to risk becoming known as a “boat rocker” and a troublemaker who sows strife?
Are you as grieved as I am by my personal need for repentance as well as the Church’s need for repentance?
Please consider the following quote from Charles Spurgeon:
“Everybody admires Luther! Yes, yes; but you do not want any one else to do the same today.
When you go to the Zoological Gardens you all admire the bear; but how would you like a bear at home, or a bear wandering loose about the street? You tell me that it would be unbearable and no doubt you are right. So, we admire a man who was firm in the faith, say four hundred years ago; the past ages are a sort of bear-pit or iron cage for him; but narrow-minded bigot, or give him a worse name if you can think of one.
Yet imagine that in those ages past, Luther, Zwingli, Calvin, and their composers had said, ‘The world is out of order; but if we try to set it right we shall only make a great row, and get ourselves into disgrace. Let us go to our chambers, put on our night-caps, and sleep over the bad times, and perhaps when we wake up things will have grown better.’ Such conduct on their part would have entailed upon us a heritage of error. Age after age would have gone down into the infernal deeps, and the pestiferous bogs of error would have swallowed all. These men loved the faith and the name of Jesus too well to see them trampled on. Note what we owe them, and let us pay to our sons the debt we owe our fathers. It is today as it was in the Reformers’ days.
Decision is needed.
The faith I hold bears upon it marks of the blood of my ancestors. Shall I deny their faith, for which they left their native land to sojourn here? Shall I deny their faith, for which they left their native land to sojourn here? Shall we cast away the treasure which was handed to us through the bars of prisons, or came to us charred with the flames of Smithfield?….An ancestry of lovers of the faith ought to be a great plea with us to abide by the Lord God of our fathers, and the faith in which they lived.
As for me, I must hold the old gospel: I can do no other.... It is today as it was in the Reformers’ days. Decision is needed. Here is the day for the man, where is the man for the day? We who have had the gospel passed to us by martyr hands dare not trifle with it, nor sit by and hear it denied by traitors, who pretend to love it, but inwardly abhor every line of it…. Look you, sirs, there are ages to come. If the lord does not speedily appear, there will come another generation, and another, and all these generations will be tainted and injured if we are not faithful to God and to his truth today. We have come to a turning-point in the road. If we turn to the right, mayhap our children and our children’s children will go that way; but if we turn to the left, generations yet unborn will curse our names for having been unfaithful to God and to his Word. I charge you, not only by your ancestry, but by your posterity, that you seek to win the commendation of your Master, that though you dwell where Satan’s seat is, you yet hold fast his name, and do not deny his faith.
God grant us faithfulness, for the sake of the souls around us! How is the world to be saved if the church is false to her Lord? How are we to lift the masses if our fulcrum is removed? If our gospel is uncertain, what remains but increasing misery and despair? Stand fast, my beloved, in the name of God! I, your brother in Christ, entreat You to abide in the truth. Quit yourselves like men, be strong. The Lord sustain you for Jesus’ sake. Amen.”
Please join us and seek a true move of God’s Spirit this Reformation Day by confessing our sin and humbling ourselves before Him in repentance.
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