Monday, July 29, 2019

5/• 1882► 5th Great Awakening


The Fifth Worldwide Awakening of 1882 It would be vary 
easy to review this period, 1880 to 1903, as a period of 
unusual evangelistic effort and success, as most its 
documentation surrounds the ministry of Dwight L. Moody, 
together with a host of other ministries that were 
also born out of the 1857 revival. 

Orr regards this period also as a 'resurgence.' Certainly the fourth 
great awakening had produced some highly motivated and anointed 
ministries, but looking at the world situation, something more 
than evangelistic success was afoot. 
It was quite distinct in its character and effects. 

It initially centred around the ministry of D L Moody, 
whose ministry may be described as "highly successful crusade 
evangelism interspersed with periodic revivalism". 
Moody began his ministry in Chicago and entered full-time 
Christian work in 1860, concentrating on his 
Sunday school and YMCA work. 

He was God's chosen vessel to take the sparks of 
the 1857-60 revival to ignite a fresh passion for God and for 
souls around the world. Moody traveled, with his singing evangelist 
companion, Ira Sankey, to England a number of times. 
Spurgeon spoke of the visit of 1873-1875 as "a gracious visitation" 
and a "very notable ingathering of converts", especially 
at Newcastle and Edinburgh. 

Andrew Bonar, too, refers, in his diary to "the tide of real revival 
in Edinburgh" comparing it with his own experience of revival 
35 years earlier. Similar results followed Moody and Sankey as 
they traversed England, Ireland and Scotland, filling the largest halls 
in the land. Moody returned to England in 1881-83 and 
had an astounding affect on a new breed of evangelists in the 
U.S., Britain and across the world. His mission in Cambridge,
 in 1882, marked the beginning of a worldwide interdenominational 
student missionary movement. 

Though the YMCA in the States and Christian Unions in the U.K. 
had their inception during the former revival (1857), Moody's 
influence transformed these works into powerful missionary movements. 
The 'Cambridge Seven', including C. T. Studd, were products of 
Moody's visit and they went to on evangelise China in 1885. 
By 1912 Studd founded W.E.C., a missionary movement which 
had great success in parts of Africa. 

Wilfred Grenfell, the renowned missionary to Labrador was 
converted at a tent mission led by Moody in 1885. 
Similar results occurred in the US. Thousands of young men 
volunteered for missionary work and the Anglo-American impetus 
spread around the world, producing the world's Student Christian 
Federation, which, in turn, provided a large proportion of 
the outstanding Christian leaders of the early 20th Century. 

Moody founded the Moody Bible Institute in 1883, with an
 emphasis on missions. The Christian and Missionary Alliance was 
formed during this time by A. B. Simpson and the Christian 
Endeavour Movement was born out of a revival in Portland, 
Maine, in 1880-1881. Other evangelists, spurred on by Moody, 
threw themselves into the harvest. Sam Jones, 
J. Wilber Chapman and Billy Sunday had extraordinary s
uccess in North America. 

Andrew Murray exercised a powerful ministry in South Africa, 
as did John McNeil in Australia. Revival hit Japan in the early 
1880's, increasing the adult membership from 
4,000 to 30,000 in five years. The China Inland Mission 
experienced a large influx of new missionaries. 

New missions were planted in many unevangelised fields 
and revivals were reported in India, Africa, South Africa, 
Madagascar, Australia, Central and South America. 
We may well describe this resurgence "a missionary revival"
 which took the flame of the 1859 revival 
even further around the world,
 ensuring a strong church base in all nations
 just in time for the great 20th Century awakening.

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