Tuesday, June 26, 2012

what's the big idea?

I believe most of you know what Tech 24-7 does on a monthly basis, but I am not sure you understand the significance of it. There is a saying, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."  My prayer is really similar, that as we remember, we will repeat history.  Graham Cooke, says,  "We become what we behold."  While ultimately beholding Jesus, it is my hope that as we re-visit these stories of old, they will fuel a fire in all of us to pursue a 21st century revival among college students. 

So join me, as I take us on an extremely brief history of revivals in America and their connection to college students praying.  It's my prayer that as you read these stories, the weightiness of what we are doing at Tech 24-7 will be revealed to you.  I also pray that you realize that you have a part to play in this journey.  Birthing a revival among students at Texas Tech requires adults, family members, professors, employers, college pastors, friends, loved ones, and intercessors to pray, give, serve, invest and believe that God can and will do this again. 

Ten years ago Pete Greig, one of the founders of 24-7 Prayer, sat in the first prayer room at 3am and scribbled a poem that would help define the 24-7 movement. 'The Vision Poem', as it became known, spread like wildfire. I honestly, deeply, full heartedly believe that God wants to loose a prayer movement here at Texas Tech, which will in turn change the lives of thousands if not millions.  You can be a part of bringing that into being.  Join with us.  For more information on how you can connect with us, visit our website.

In the 18th Century, a group of young men began gathering on the campus of Oxford University in England. This group consisted of a small group of young men who called themselves the Holy Club. This club gathered together regularly for the purpose of prayer, confession, exhortation, and Bible study in order to challenge one another in their holiness and pursuit of God.

The Lord began to breathe upon two men in this group in particular, George Whitefield and John Wesley. Through the ministry of these two men, the Lord began to revive hearts throughout both England and America, as well as cause the word of the Lord to prevail in entire geographic regions as many would be convicted by the power of the gospel and repent unto salvation. It was also through John Wesley that the Methodist Church was started. In the early days of America's history, the Methodist Church served as one of the most fervent vehicles of missions activity and church planting, the fruits of which would dramatically affect the early history of America.

All the universities in America at this time had been founded through the Church and therefore were expected to supply the next generation of evangelical leaders. The American churches viewed these student communities as the coming future of their congregations, culture, and society. They believed that the direction of their churches and that of the whole nation would soon follow the spiritual bent and character of America's college students - As the students go, so goes the nation. It was this kind of farseeing perspective about students that made the American Church quick to answer the call to a national day of prayer for colleges.In 1806, Samuel J. Mills and five other students at Williams College began to pray for the Lord to visit their university. This prayer meeting is affectionately known as the 'Haystack Prayer Meeting' because the weather forced them to pray underneath a haystack the first time they gathered to pray. Many historians and students of church movements trace the Second Great Awakening of America to this prayer meeting.

Through the 1800s the Lord began to move on college campuses. At a time where Deism prevailed in the educational institutions of the nation, all across America the Lord began to save souls. It is said that in the course of a year's time, half of Yale's and a third of Princeton's student population were saved. In the universities, these believers began to come together in societies, which began to take on more and more of a missionary focus as the years went on.
By 1886, some of these students from such societies began to possess such zeal for the task of world evangelization, they formed what is called the 'Student Volunteer Movement'. Over the next fifty years, the Student Volunteer Movement sent 20,000 college students into the foreign mission field under the watchword of 'the evangelization of the world in this generation'. It is also commonly estimated that the movement mobilized nearly 100,000 college students in these fifty years in prayer for the Lord's purpose in the nations of the earth.

In the year 1823, the last Thursday of February in each year was agreed upon as the day for special supplication that God would pour from on high His Spirit upon our Colleges and Seminaries. And what have been some of the results? In the years 1824 and 1825 revivals were experienced in five different Colleges; in 1826 in six Colleges; in 1831 in nineteen...In one of the Colleges it is stated that a revival started on the very day of the concert of prayer. In 1835, not less than eighteen revivals were reported by different colleges." By the end of the nineteenth century, these repeated student awakenings had radically transformed the culture and moral climate of many of our largest universities. As a result many of America's ministers at this time were encouraging their congregations to send their children to college, if they wanted to see them safe and soundly converted.



 

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