Thursday, February 28, 2019

WEAK AND STRONG

Here is the story of what God was doing right after WW2 on an island off the west coast of Scotland.

God's Spirit was moving and using two unmarried sisters in their 80's, a 15-year-old boy, and an evangelist.  "God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong." 1Corinthians 1:27

The revival was beginning in the years 1949-1952 with the two unmarried sisters, Peggy and Christine Smith, pictured above with Reverend Duncan Campbell.

Lewis (in gold) is the northernmost island of Outer Hebrides.
Pinks are the inner Hebrides and green is Scotland.
Peggy (84) was blind and Christine (82) was bent with arthritis, making them unable to go worship publicly.  Their "church" was in their little cottage.  Both sisters felt burdened because not a single young person came to church on their windswept little island.

They began to pray.  When Peggy had a vision in the night, the sisters sent for the local minister.

Rev. James Murray MacKay was told that in Peggy's vision, their church was crowded with young people and a strange minister was in the pulpit.  A verse was impressed on Peggy's mind from Isaiah: "I will pour water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground; I will pour My Spirit on your descendants, and My blessing on your offspring."  Isaiah 44:3


The pastor asked what they wanted him to do.  The sister's reply?  "Do?  Petition Heaven so that rivers of blessings will come!"

The pastor convened his elders and the plan was made for the church to pray on Tuesdays and Fridays at 10pm.  The sisters said they also would go to prayer at 10 and would remain on their knees until 4.

The pastor that Peggy "saw" in her vision was a famous Scottish evangelist, Duncan Campbell.  Reverend Campbell had turned down preaching the circuit; the custom was for successful preachers to go to London.  But God spoke clearly and Campbell chose obedience.  He told God that he was willing to go anywhere to preach revival.

Duncan Campbell was sitting in the front row of a conference, waiting his turn to speak when the Spirit of God came upon him.  He turned to the moderator and said "You'll have to excuse me.  God has another appointment for me."

Reverend Campbell got up, walked away, and got on a boat for the Isle of Lewis.  He got off the boat at 4:00 in the afternoon and a mailman was waiting for him.  The mailman said "We knew you would come.  You have just enough time for high tea before the meeting."  "What meeting?" said Campbell.  The islanders had posted notices for a meeting that afternoon to talk about what God was doing on the Isle of Lewis.

It is FASCINATING to read how God touched one heart after another as He brought revival.  What of the young boy?  God was working in a teen's life in the nearby village.  This LINK takes you to his back story.  The young man was Donald Smith, another relative of the Smith sisters.  He was an amazing 15-year-old prayer warrior.

Fifteenth-century church on the Isle of Lewis
You may wonder what fruit came from the Revival?  The bars on the island were put out of existence and the churches were filled with young people.  Church enrollment exploded and people came back to God.  There was a healing of the land.  The revival went on for the next 30 years and God prospered the whole land.

Heaven had invaded Scotland.

But the story continues.  The Smith sisters had a niece that was born on Lewis in 1912, the youngest of ten children.  Mary Anne McLeod lived in a thatched-roof, one-room cottage known as a "black house" on a "croft" (a small agricultural landholding).  The village had one street.

The croft could feed one family of children, but when the children married they had to go somewhere else.

So in 1930, at age 18, Mary Anne set sail for the United States to find a job in domestic service (as a number of her older sisters had done).  Mary Anne was an economic migrant, one of a new generation looking for a new life.

Please know that this story is about the way God moves people toward revival by prayer.  Knowing that the Smith sisters and the 15-year old Donald Smith were related, we can assume that their family held prayer high.

This is not about politics, but about God using who He pleases.

Mary Anne sailed for America and six years later, married Fred Trump.  After that, she no longer lived in a black house.  Perhaps Mary Anne Trump was close to God and perhaps she raised her children to love God.  I don't know.  We all make our choices.  The choices that her son has made in the past would cause you to doubt he knows God personally.

But God will use who He will use.  And it is a fact that His Word does not return void.  That means the same verse that impressed Peggy Smith's mind regarding revival in her town is still in play.  The first part has come true.  "I will pour water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground"  They asked and God watered the dry ground on the Isle of Lewis.  

And what of the rest of the verse?  "I will pour My Spirit on your descendants, and My blessing on your offspring."  Isaiah 44:3  God also promises to bless descendants/offspring.

Is God that good?  What about those who don't deserve it?  The folks who don't believe God would use our President to accomplish His purposes...don't understand that we all are sinners.  NONE of us deserve His blessings.

One day we all fall on our faces before Him, marveling in His grace and mercy.

Revival is a move of God in a community.  God works in individual hearts so that the community becomes God-conscious even before a word is spoken.

Shall we ask Him to make our sin known to us?  Shall we pray for REVIVAL?    








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