Monday, 15 September 2014

The woman behind the 1859 Revival in Ulster.

Thanking God for the role of woman in evangelism...

Mrs. Colville and the beginning of the Ulster Revival 1859

Without doubt, the first springing up of that mighty river of God, which so soon engulfed the whole of Ulster in its flood of revival blessing, was in the parish of Connor, Co. Antrim. The parish of Connor includes the village of Kells and is situated about 3.5 miles from Ballymena. The district is usually called by the joint name, Kells and Connor. Claims that the revival had its origin elsewhere cannot be substantiated.


In November 1856 a Mrs. Colville, an English lady, visited Ballymena. This lady had a remarkable testimony. She had been religious but unregenerate, then one day the grace of God visited her, bringing salvation to her heart. She immediately testified of the great things God had done for her soul. Her relations were very angry and said she had “gone mad.” So embittered did they become that she had to leave her home and become a “wanderer.”


This persecution, however, did not quench her zeal for Christ. Like the apostles of old she could not but speak the things, which she had seen and heard. She became a missionary of the Baptist Missionary Society in England. Her work brought her to Ulster and to County Antrim where she went from door to door telling forth the message, which had brought such peace to her heart.


One day she visited a home in the town of Ballymena where a young woman lay dying. Mrs. Colville spoke to the dying woman and those of her girl companions who were gathered round her, concerning the things that pertain unto eternal peace. She described the nature of true conversion to God and pointed out that they were strangers to it and still “in the gall of bitterness and the bond of iniquity.”


Her words were overheard by a young man named James McQuilkin, and the barbed arrows from this bow drawn at a venture fastened with a mighty pricking upon his conscience. He rose and hastily made his way homewards in deep anxiety of soul. This anxiety increased and became so unbearable that he was forced to seek out Mrs. Colville and have further conversation with her. Mr. Jeremiah Mencely, a neighbour and close associate of Mr. McQuilkin, takes up the story: “Mr. James McQuilkin was a strong Calvinist and he feared that Mrs. Colville was not teaching straight Calvinistic doctrine. He asked her whether she was a Calvinist or not. ‘I would not wish,’ she replied, ‘to be more or less a Calvinist than our Lord and His apostles. But,’ she continued, ‘I do not care to talk on mere points of doctrine. I would rather speak of the experience of salvation in the soul. If one were to tell me what he knows of the state of his heart towards God, I think I could tell him whether he knows the Lord Jesus savingly.’”


“James felt that his heart was not right toward God, but he was too proud of his head-knowledge to admit the fact and he at once dropped the conversation. A woman who was present then began to un-bosom herself to Mrs. Colville. Her spiritual condition was so much like that of James McQuilkin that he felt as though he could not have described his own condition more perfectly. He waited with almost breathless expectation to see what Mrs. Colville would say to the woman regarding her, spiritual condition. After a brief pause, she said, ‘My dear, you have never known the Lord Jesus.’ James felt that this was true concerning himself, and the reply sent conviction like a dagger to his heart. After weeks of struggling under great agony of soul, he at last found peace and rest through trusting Jesus.”


The experience of forgiveness of sins flooded his whole being with a ray of celestial light. Immediately he began to testify of the Saviour whom he now knew personally.


Shortly after this, a meeting was held in the National School, Kells, to consider the doing of some repairs to the school fabric, which had become somewhat dilapidated. At the conclusion of this meeting the young man Jeremiah Meneely, mentioned above, and the schoolmaster walked homewards together, accompanied by another young man named Robert Carlisle. - Carlisle asked them had they heard about the great change that had come over James McQuilkin. (McQuilkin was well known to them all. His wife kept a shop in the village of Kells and he himself worked at the linen trade in Ballymena. Each Saturday he returned home to Kells and spent Sunday there.). They both replied they had not. Carlisle was greatly surprised at this and told them how McQuilkin had put away the fighting cocks he had been rearing and had turned away from all the worldly pleasures because he claimed God had cleansed him from all his sins. All three of them, being old-line hyper-calvinistic Presbyterians, thought that such a claim as McQuilkin’s was, to say the least, presumptuous. Jeremiah Meneely was a communicant member of Connor Presbyterian Church but he could not claim such a knowledge of sins forgiven. Nevertheless, conscious of the unsatisfied depths of his yearning soul, he exclaimed, “I would give the world to know my sins forgiven.” Carlisle and the schoolmaster were of the same opinion.
Eager to discover more about this amazing matter, Jeremiah Meneely sought out James McQuilkin and after a long conversation with him became convinced that McQuilkin had something, which had miraculously, transformed him.
As far back as 1853 Meneely had been awakened to flee from wrath to come and afterwards oft repeated the couplet:

“Wakened up from wrath to flee
In the year eighteen-hundred and fifty-three.”

but he had no satisfying assurance as was so evidently manifested in his friend McQuilkin. Deep anxiety now possessed him but a misconception of the doctrine of election was used by Satan to keep him from the assurance of salvation. “If I only knew I was one of the elect” was his continual and soul-disturbing cry. One day in his own kitchen in Jerry’s-town, Ferniskey, Kells (the place was called Jerry’s-town after his grandfather Jeremiah) he was reading in the sixth chapter of the Gospel according to John, when he read the words of verse thirty-seven, “All that the Father giveth me shall come to me,” he stopped and exclaimed, “There it is again, how can I know I am a given one?” Then a voice, like the voice from the excellent glory which spoke to Peter, James and John on the holy mount, brought home to his heart the second part of the verse, “and him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out,” with the question “What are you doing now, aren’t you coming to me?” The glorious light burst into his heart and the same peace which his friend had experienced, became his too. He slapped his knee exclaiming, “I see it now “and arose assured of his sins forgiven and of his name written in heaven. This was in the year 1857.


About this time also two other young men, Robert Carlisle and John Wallace were brought to Christ through the efforts of McQuilkin.


These four young converts were naturally closely allied in spirit and they mutually agreed for their own edification and the salvation of precious souls to meet weekly for prayer and Bible study. The following verses from John’s First Epistle bad been mightily applied to their hearts by the Holy Spirit and greatly prompted them in their decision. “But ye have an unction from the Holy One and ye know all things. But the anointing which ye have received of Him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in Him.” I John 2: 20 and 27 the place chosen for the meetings was the Old Schoolhouse near Kells and the meetings commenced in September 1857. During the long winter of 1857-1858 every Friday evening, these young men gathered an armful of peat each, and taking their Bibles made their way to the old schoolhouse. There they read and meditated upon the Scriptures of truth and with hearts aflame with a pure first love, poured out their prayers to the God of heaven. The peats made a fire in the schoolhouse grate and warmed their bodies from the winter’s chill, but their prayers brought down unquenchable fire from heaven, which set all Ulster ablaze for God, and warmed with saving rays at least 100,000 souls.


These young converts were convinced of three great fundamentals and upon these their prayer and fellowship meeting was based. ‘They believed in the Sovereignty of the Holy Spirit, the Sufficiency of the Holy Scripture, and the Secret of Holy Supplication, and these three great truths not only characterised the Kells prayer-meeting but the whole subsequent revival movement.


In an interview with J. G. Lawson in 1903, Jeremiah Meneely himself described the prayer meeting in the following words: —” The prayer-meeting was started in the autumn of 1857 and continued for three months before there were any visible results. Two more men joined in the prayer meeting during that time. One was an old man named Marshall and the other a young man named Wassan. On New Year’s Day 1858 the first conversion took place as a result of the prayer meeting, but after that there were conversions every night. At the end of the year 1858 about fifty young men were taking part in the prayer meeting...

In 1859 what can only be explained as a Spirit filled explosion of prayer and evangelism spread across Ulster.

What if Mrs Colville has never visited Ulster?
What is she had not went from door-to-door sharing her faith?
What if she had not shared Jesus so boldly with James McQuilkin, a religious man who did not know Christ?


Rise up women of the truth
Stand and sing to broken hearts
Who can know the healing power
Of our awesome King of love



Thursday, 17 April 2014

It's Friday, but Sunday's comin'


I first heard this via Dr Tony Campolo who has an excellent book with the same title as this blog. 

This blog is a copy of an edited version I have had for some time. 



It’s Friday but Sunday’s Coming

It’s Friday. Jesus is arrested in the garden where He was praying. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. The disciples are hiding and Peter’s denying that he knows the Lord. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. Jesus is standing before the high priest of Israel, silent as a lamb before the slaughter. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. Jesus is beaten, mocked, and spit upon. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. Those Roman soldiers are flogging our Lord with a leather scourge that has bits of bones and glass and metal, tearing at his flesh. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. The Son of man stands firm as they press the crown of thorns down into his brow. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. See Him walking to Calvary, the blood dripping from His body. See the cross crashing down on His back as He stumbles beneath the load. It’s Friday; but Sunday’s a coming.

It’s Friday. See those Roman soldiers driving the nails into the feet and hands of my Lord. Hear my Jesus cry, “Father, forgive them.” It’s Friday; but Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. Jesus is hanging on the cross, bloody and dying.


But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. The sky grows dark, the earth begins to tremble, and He who knew no sin became sin for us. Holy God who will not abide with sin pours out His wrath on that perfect sacrificial lamb who cries out, “My God, My God. Why hast thou forsaken me?” What a horrible cry. But Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. And at the moment of Jesus’ death, the veil of the Temple that separates sinful man from Holy God was torn from the top to the bottom because Sunday’s coming.

It’s Friday. Jesus is hanging on the cross, heaven is weeping and hell is partying. But that’s because it’s Friday, and they don’t know it, but Sunday’s a coming...

It’s Friday

Jesus is praying Peter’s a sleeping Judas is betraying But Sunday’s comin’

It’s Friday

Pilate’s struggling

The council is conspiring The crowd is vilifying They don’t even know That Sunday’s comin’


It’s Friday

The disciples are running

Like sheep without a shepherd Mary’s crying

Peter is denying

But they don’t know

That Sunday’s a comin’

It’s Friday

The Romans beat my Jesus They robe him in scarlet They crown him with thorns But they don’t know

That Sunday’s comin’

It’s Friday

See Jesus walking to Calvary His blood dripping

His body stumbling

And his spirit’s burdened

But you see, it’s only Friday Sunday’s comin’

It’s Friday

The world’s winning People are sinning And evil’s grinning


It’s Friday

The soldiers nail my Saviour’s hands To the cross

They nail my Saviour’s feet

To the cross

And then they raise him up

Next to criminals

It’s Friday

But let me tell you something Sunday’s comin’

It’s Friday

The disciples are questioning What has happened to their King And the Pharisees are celebrating That their scheming

Has been achieved

But they don’t know

It’s only Friday

Sunday’s comin’

It’s Friday

He’s hanging on the cross Feeling forsaken by his Father Left alone and dying

Can nobody save him?

It’s Friday

But Sunday’s comin’


It’s Friday

The earth trembles

The sky grows dark

My King yields his spirit

It’s Friday

Hope is lost

Death has won

Sin has conquered

and Satan’s just a laughin’

It’s Friday

Jesus is buried

A soldier stands guard

And a rock is rolled into place But it’s Friday

It is only Friday

Sunday is a comin’!


Friday, 21 February 2014

The Good News of Jesus.

What I privilege to help lead and be part of a brilliant team at Crown Jesus Ministries.
What a great privilege that I get to tell people about Jesus as my job.

It's all about Jesus: Take a moment to read the following and share it with others:

Little over 2,000 years ago Jesus was born to an unwed teenager in a dusty rural town. By age thirty he was feeding the hungry, healing the sick, making friends with misfits and sharing a radical message of love and hope. Three years later he died after being showered with spit, whipped and nailed to a cross for claiming to be God. 

That Sunday Jesus rose from the dead, was seen by over five hundred people and within weeks this new faith was spreading like wildfire. He is the most famous person in human history. No politician, army, nation, or religious leader has affected the world like Jesus.

His death was unlike any other because he died for each of us. One thing we all have in common is sin, (our own selfish words, thoughts and deeds) no matter how big or small the verdict is the same. We are guilty of sin before a loving, holy God and justice must be done. Either we pay for our sin or someone else pays it  for us.

The Good News is that Jesus came to take our place and the punishment we deserved so that we might be forgiven and reconciled to God. When we admit we are sinners and invite Jesus to be our personal rescuer, friend and Lord we are given a new life.

These four points can help us understand


1 God loves us 2 We’ve really messed up  3 Jesus died for us 4 We need to choose

PRAY: Dear Jesus, I am truly sorry for the wrong things I have done. Forgive me. Thank you for dying on the cross for my sin. Today I ask you to be my rescuer, Lord and friend. Amen.

What next? visit www.crownjesus.org 

What next?
Tell someone, visit a local bible believing church and tell the Pastor/Minister/youth leader.
If they don't great you with enthusiasm then shake the dust of your feat and go find another church.

You can also use our free youth discipleship training course to help you in those first steps as a Christian.

Saturday, 4 January 2014

The Hobbit: Christianity on middle earth?




The much anticipated return of the Hobbit has finally arrived on the big screen in REAL D3D, HFR 3D, IMAX 3D and whatever other options your local cinema can offer. Bilbo Baggins of Bag End is now “Far over the Misty Mountains old” and on his way to “Dungeons' deep and caverns cold.” without his handkerchief!

'The Desolation of Smaug’ is part two of a trilogy of movies following the young and rather reluctant Hobbit together with a spirited group of dwarves to reclaim their stolen mountain home and treasure from Smaug the dragon. At almost three hours long it’s a test for most but every review including mine, says the same: The time moves fast, a bit like the Lord of the Rings, grabs your attention from the start and better than Part one. 

Part 1 was a cinematic masterpiece in many ways from the super high definition capturing the epic scenery of New Zealand without ‘avataring’ everything and everyone in sight.  In Part 2 however there are much higher modelling needed for the orc’s through to Smaug. Of course our very own (For Northern Ireland reads) James Nesbitt stars as ‘Bofur’; a rough diamond of a dwarf who seems to be there for the craic and banter as much as the treasure. Possibly no one could play that role better than Jimmy: Former ‘break man’ on the big dipper at Barry’s Amusement park.

The story follows the adventures of Bilbo Baggins and his dwarf friends as they travel back to the dwarves home; known locally as the lonely mountain. The face many a challenge including spiders, bears and orcs (This includes an epic water chase which will no doubt will arrive at a theme park in due course), but the ultimate problem is not enroute to the mountain but in it! A giant dragon by the name of Smaug. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug is a surprisingly violent movie in parts and once again I would say that the BBFC (British Board of Film Classification) is completely messed up. The answer is simple: tone down the violence. You can’t go HOBBIT LEGO mad for 6-9 year olds and then slap a 12A on the movie release allowing parents to bring their under 12’s. Orcs are not just shot with arrows and stabbed with swords; they really do get messed up good. As soon as the elves show up, orc decapitations start happening, with the aftermath of at least three being shown. If I read the BBFC rules I think the movie breaks the already irresponsible too lenient requirements. (Rant over... and incidentally we did not to bring our kids.)


Oh... and there's giant spiders, yes spiders! I wouldn’t put a giant spider in an 18’s movie! That could scare anyone who's scared of spiders (that’s me lol)



Is there a Christian message in the Hobbit series?



Have you ever travelled been away from home, family and friends longer than your heart can bear? This bittersweet ache for home is the beating heart of Peter Jacksons The Hobbit film series. At the end of Part one An Unexpected Journey little Bilbo is very much homesick and knows the only way to get back is to first find the home of the dwarves. In The Desolation of Smaug things as can imagine don’t go as planned, Gandalf disappears and they are faced the dangers of Mirkwood Forest alone and of course the
Dragon.


The story set in middle earth seems a strange place to find anything Christianity. There are no prayers, bibles, or any mention of Jesus or anything else that might associated it with the Christian faith; so how might it to be Christian?


 Two things to consider:


1, The Author’s own comments:


Tolkein was a devout Christian who attended church regularly and played a large part in leading his friend C.S Lewis to faith in Jesus. While Lewis published classics like ‘Mere Christianity’ where faith is clear and direct, Tolkien preferred not to make his faith so evident in his works.

This does not make his faith any less sincere or passionate; he simply chooses to express it differently.  In the same way my Christian joiner friend Trevor does not need to devote his crafts to pews, pulpits and crosses so too does Tolkien find no need to use his writing skills directly on Christian work.

However he does not hide this faith on put it under a bushel when writing: In a letter dates October 25 1958, Tolkien wrote: ‘I am a Christian” and then adding “which can be deducted from my stories.” In addition to this he told American scholar Clyde Kilby, “I am a Christian and of course what I write will essentially be from that viewpoint.”

Remarks such as these make it clear that at the very least it is not absurd to claim that Tolkien’s faith had a clear impact on his fiction including the story of The Hobbit.

2, The Christian Thread in the story:


Purpose: Bilbo is chosen for a specific purpose - one he did not create and even rejects at first. Bilbo looked content outside his little Hobbit hole, furry feet rested and blowing smoke rings into the summer sky. All is well in the shire and knowing that the cupboards where well stocked with food there seem no reason for change let alone adventure! That word was not on his radar... but someone had a different plan.

Though it seems incredible that such a person/Hobbit could be of any use to a team embarking on a life threatening adventure to the desolation of Smaug, Bilbo has been ‘chosen’ to do just that. In weakness, fear and trembling he becomes a helper and hero. And in helping others, Bilbo is helped... he returns eventually to his hobbit hole not with an ounce of treasure in his hands but a heart full of a very different treasure.
Tolkien is suggesting: If Bilbo has purpose, so might we.

Providence: Elrond holding up the lamp in the right moonlight, Bilbo stumbling across the ring, the keyhole appearing. There is too much reliance on chance and it seems clear that Tolkien is suggesting something bigger: The hand of Providence. The writer has a personal faith and conviction that God works in mysterious ways and he uses Gandalf in his final words to Bilbo to address this “You don’t really suppose, do you, that all your adventure and escapes were managed by luck, just for your sole benefit?”


I guess the bearded wizard could ask the same question to each of us... Providence?
(Providence: the foreseeing care and guidance of God over each of us)

Protection: This is a world of good and evil, a world where Bilbo needs to think carefully clearly and make choices. There is always a decision to be made: Adventure or comfort? Spare Gollum or not? Hide or fight?

With the material comfort of the Shire constantly on his mind he presses on with his mission trusting that in making the right choice, protection will come.

What is more important: mission or comfort? Character or talent?


From the smallest and weakest, The Hobbit reminds each of us that we can make a difference and we each have a role to play.

Of course you don’t need to have a Christian faith to enjoy the movies, that’s what makes them so universally popular and while I feel film director Peter Jackson (brilliant as he is) has, and perhaps unintentionally, sucked some of Tolkien’s original core value from the writing yet there is still some Christianity alive in middle earth and a little Bilbo Baggins in each of us.

In closing I will leave one of my favourite quotes from The Hobbit by J.R.R Tolkien

‘It does not do to leave the dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him’






Let’s be careful out there!
Onwards


Mitch