A spontaneous gift is sudden and unexpected to the recipient not to the giver. Revival is the sudden and unexpected outpouring of the Holy Spirit. It’s sudden and unexpected to the church and to the world, but not to God.
ATTRACTION TO JESUS
In the temple in Jerusalem, Jesus notices a particular group of people. The children. They are the lowly, unimportant ones of their society. But not in Jesus’ eyes. He pays attention to them, to their words, their actions, their lives. And the children are not oblivious to Jesus either. They notice and pay attention to him, too.
Why should it be any different today? With much fear and pessimism we believe that our children and young people will be repelled by Jesus; that the beauty of the world is the more compelling beauty. But the beauty of Jesus is inexhaustible at every angle. And he has always loved, revealed himself to, and enraptured the young regardless of century or culture (Matthew 19:14).
The promise of the Holy Spirit is for all generations, including our “sons and daughters” (Acts 2:17). So we pray for a generation of young people who though they share common interests with others, they imagine (at the gut level) their lives in vastly different ways. In revival there is precisely an awakening of young people to the glory of Jesus and the joy of his kingdom. Their lives are transformed by Jesus and they joyfully surrender the “nets” of their lives to follow him (Matthew 4:19-20), and forsake all for the pearl of his kingdom (Matthew 13:45-46).
INTUITION OF JESUS
“But when the chief priests and the scribes saw the wonderful things that he did, and the children crying out in the temple, 'Hosanna to the Son of David!’ they were indignant, and they said to him, “Do you hear what these are saying?” (Matthew 21:15-16) Surely the children do not fully understand who Jesus is or what he is doing, but Jesus still accepts their praise of him as true.
The children discern, perceive, believe that Jesus is different from those who have come before him claiming to be the Messiah. His presence awakens something in them and alerts them to something in Him. Like a baby who “just knows” who her parents are, who "just knows" when she's in their presence and calls out and responds to them, the children's praise is their heart’s intuitive call and response to who Jesus truly is.
Their praise is informed by what they know from Scripture (by what they have been taught), but it is also inspired (breathed into) by the Holy Spirit. It is by the Holy Spirit that our knowledge about Jesus becomes a living knowledge of Jesus. He becomes the object and not merely the subject of our praise and worship, so that in revival there is a heavenly sense of the admiration and awe surrounding Jesus that fills and rests upon the hearts of people.
SALVATION IN JESUS
Jesus replies to the indignant religious leaders, “have you never read, ‘Out of the mouth of infants and nursing babies you have prepared praise’?” (Matthew 21:26) “Out of”, not “In the”. There are no mute hearts. “For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matt. 12:34), and sings!
Singing is by far the most frequent activity of praise and worship commanded and attributed by God to his people. But more than what we do, it is an activity of the Holy Spirit in/out of our hearts, a sign of his fullness in/out of our lives (Ephesians 5:18-19). Where the Spirit of God is present and indwelling a heart, there will be songs being sung to Jesus.
What are the children singing? “Hosanna”. God saves! They are praising Jesus for “the wonderful things” that he is doing, and will do.
In the history of Israel, the greatest, most memorable act of God’s power was the Exodus, in particular, the Red Sea. There was no one like Moses for “the wonderful things” (“the great deeds”) that God had sent him to do and had done through him (Deuteronomy 34:10-12). There at the edge of the sea Israel saw God defeat his enemies and deliver his people. (Exodus 14:30-31). What did Moses and Israel do in response? They sang! (Exodus 15)
Jesus is a greater deliverer than Moses. But why? How? What act of deliverance can the children praise Jesus for?
“He saved others; he cannot save himself. He is the King of Israel; let him come down now from the cross, and we will believe in him. He trusts in God; let God deliver him now, if he desires him. For he said, ‘I am the Son of God.’ ” (Matthew 27:42-43)
There on the cross Jesus was the helpless, the fool, the weak. But there through the weakness of the cross God both defeated his enemies (sin, death, and the devil) and delivered his people forever through the power of Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 1:21-24). “Out of the mouths of babies”, out of the mouths of the helpless, the foolish, and the weak, we the redeemed people and children of God boast in Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior (1 Cor. 1:26-31).
In revival, at the edge of the cross and the empty tomb, a fresh cry of victory and new song of deliverance rises from out of the mouths of God’s people and resounds in the ears of the world: Hosanna, to the Son of God!
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