Recorded Message

Confession and Revival: Key Doctrines and Cautions

Confession, guided by the Holy Spirit's conviction, is essential for spiritual revival, requiring appropriateness to the sin's context and avoiding antinomian misunderstandings of grace.

Key points

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The Importance of Confession in Revival

In the context of revival, confession emerges as a crucial doctrine. Evan Roberts, a key figure in the Welsh Revival, emphasized the need for public confession of faith in Christ. However, confession can sometimes devolve into exhibitionism. True revival involves genuine confession of sin among believers. I advise that the circle of confession should match the circle of sin. Secret sins should be confessed to God alone, private sins should be addressed privately, and public sins should be confessed publicly.

Confession is not the work of the Holy Spirit; rather, conviction is. Our response to conviction, which includes confession, is influenced by our temperament and circumstances. Sidney Powell of Tremont Temple in Boston shared a story of a deacon transformed by the Oxford Group movement. His confession, however, crossed boundaries, revealing private matters publicly, which led to personal and communal embarrassment.

Understanding Confession

The term "confession" derives from the Greek roots ek, homo, and logos, meaning "out of the same word." This concept is illustrated by Peter's confession of Christ's deity, expressing outwardly what the Holy Spirit revealed inwardly. Similarly, confessing sin involves acknowledging one's faults as revealed by the Holy Spirit.

A book by a former Campus Crusade member, Love is Now, presented a flawed view of confession, suggesting mere acknowledgment of wrongdoing suffices for forgiveness. This antinomian perspective undermines true repentance. Antinomianism manifests in various forms: Calvinistic, Wesleyan, and Pentecostal, each misinterpreting grace to justify sin.

Biblical Guidance on Confession

Scripture provides clear guidance on confession. Leviticus 5:5 emphasizes specific confession: "He shall confess that he has sinned in that thing." Proverbs 28:13 highlights the necessity of thorough confession: "He who covers his sins shall not prosper, but whoever confesses and forsakes them shall have mercy." Matthew 5:23-24 instructs private confession and reconciliation before offering gifts to God.

Public confession, as outlined in James 5:16, involves confessing faults among believers for mutual prayer and healing. This is not an invitation for general confession but a call for specific prayer support. Confession should be sufficient to solicit prayer without unnecessary detail.

The Role of Confession in Revival

In revival, Christians confess, repent, and seek prayer, leading to deliverance. Once forgiven, sins should not be revisited. Some movements err by encouraging repeated confessions, but if God has forgiven and forgotten, we should not dwell on past sins. The Apostle Paul acknowledged his past as the chief of sinners without reliving it.

Confession in testimony, as demonstrated by Robert Doing, differs from reconfession. It serves as a witness to transformation rather than dwelling on past sins. The key verses from the Welsh Revival, 1 John 1:9, remind us that confession leads to forgiveness and cleansing. Without confession, forgiveness is withheld, and fellowship is broken.

Closing Prayer

Lord, we pray for our nation, our state, and this metropolitan area. We ask for revival in Pasadena and this congregation. Teach us that revival comes not by might or power, but by Your Spirit. Help us to pray earnestly for revival. May grace, mercy, and peace from the Father, Son, and Spirit be with us now and always. Amen.

More from Great Awakenings in American History

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The 1830 Revival: Global Impact and Key Figures
The 1857 Revival: A Leaderless Prayer Movement Transforming America
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