“Richard Baxter – Prayer Makes History”

Richard Baxter – Prayer Makes History

Light from Old Times by J. C. Ryle
From: A Revival Source Center

“Many within the Church today feel as if they are drowning in a river of empty words and hollow promises. Demoralized by superficial religion, their hungry hearts are crying out, “Where is the REAL Church, mighty in truth and power?” There are many who can give us a moving definition of revival, but where are the MEN who can move the Church with a demonstration of revival? As the late Leonard Ravenhill once said, “We can all make the menu, but we can’t make the meal.” Proverbs 27:7 tells us that, “To the hungry even what is bitter tastes sweet.” Sadly, multitudes of hungry and disillusioned souls are seeking the bitter bread of a godliness that denies power, or a form of power that denies godliness. Oh, how we need the REALITY of revival, a revival that will restore the Church to Her former apostolic beauty of PURITY and POWER. Nothing less than this REALITY will prepare us to face a dying world and the coming King.

The prince of Puritan pastors, Richard Baxter was an instrument in such a revival. Mr. Baxter possessed that rare combination of a prophet’s fiery zeal and a pastor’s tender care. In the year of 1647 Baxter was resettled in his old church at Kidderminster. It was here that he sparked and nurtured a mighty revival. When Baxter arrived at Kidderminster it had a population of about 3000 weavers who were reckless, ungodly and content to remain that way. By the end of Baxter’s stay, the entire community was miraculously transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit. Dr. Bates reported that “The place before his coming was like a piece of dry and barren earth; but by the blessing of heaven upon his labor, the face of paradise appeared there. The bad were changed to good and the good to better.” During this season of revival the church at Kidderminster became so full that five new galleries had to be built to seat the hungry crowds. Mr. Baxter himself writes, “As you passed along the streets on the Sabbath morning, you might hear a hundred households singing psalms at their family worship. In a word, when I came to Kidderminster, there was only about one family in a whole street that worshipped God and called upon His name. When I left, there were some streets where not a family did not do so.” Kidderminster became a “colony of heaven” in the days of Richard Baxter.

With tireless zeal, Baxter fanned the flames of revival with the MIRACLE of passionate preaching. Many believe that Baxter was one of the most powerful preachers that ever addressed an English congregation. He was an intense and forceful preacher, he believed that, “If hard hearts were to be broken, it was not stroking but striking that must do it.” He purposed to always, “Preach as never sure to preach again, and as a dying man to dying men.” His sermons were a combination of cutting and piercing words and a gentle and loving spirit. Baxter consistently spoke like one who had been face to face with Jesus. He drew others to Heaven through his preaching because he had touched Heaven through his praying. In Baxter’s classic book The Reformed Pastor, he reminds us that the pulpit is only a reflection of the closet. He writes, “When your minds are in holy, heavenly frame, your people are likely to partake of it. They will be able to feel when you have been much with God; that which is most on your heart, will be most in their ears.”

Even after Mr. Baxter had delivered his very soul through preaching, he still felt that his work was but half done. He knew that the preaching of the Word must be accompanied by the personal and individual touch of a pastor. “He arranged that every family in his parish should come to his house, one by one…then he took each member apart and urgently, tenderly besought him to make an immediate decision for Christ. Seldom did a family leave Baxter’s door without tears.”

J. C. Ryle esteemed Baxter as one of the most successful pastors to ever live. He writes, “While some ministers were wrangling about the divine right of Episcopacy or Presbytery, or splitting hairs about reprobation and free-will, Baxter was always visiting from house to house and beseeching men for Christ’s sake, to be reconciled to God… While others were entangling themselves in politics, and ‘ burying their dead’ amidst the potsherds of the earth, Baxter was living a crucified life and daily preaching the Gospel.” Because of Mr. Baxter’s great success among his people he soon became a shepherd of shepherds. Addressing his fellow ministers, Baxter writes, “We must feel toward our people as a father toward his children; yea, the most tender love of a mother must not surpass ours. We must even travail in birth, till Christ be formed in them. They should see that we care for no outward thing, neither liberty, nor honor, nor life, in comparison to their salvation… When the people see that you truly love them, they will hear anything from you…Oh therefore, see that you feel a tender love for your people in your hearts, and let them perceive it in your speech and conduct. Let them see that you spend and are spent for their sakes.”

Mr. Baxter’s passion for souls even reached beyond the shores of England. He hoped to one day see the formation of a college and training center, where ministers could be prepared to “Undertake the conversion of some of the vast nations of infidels… with the plain and pure gospel.” It should not surprise us therefore, that he greatly admired John Eliot, the famous pioneer missionary to the Indians of New England. Such apostolic vision and missionary zeal was very rare among many in the Church in the 17th century, even during the Golden Age of great Puritan preachers.

The pack mules of revival are always the humble and persistent prayers of the saints. The Kidderminster awakening was certainty no exception. It was the grace-empowered prayers of Baxter and a handful of people that prepared the way for revival. Fits of epilepsy, tumors and sins of every kind vanished in answer to the prayers of Baxter’s congregation. Hour after hour they poured out their hearts with fervent prayer and fasting during this revival season. Armed with the weapon of PRAYER, Baxter destroyed demonic strongholds and reduced mighty magistrates to tears. With a broken heart and callused knees, Mr. Baxter overcame every obstacle. By fervent prayer, he overcame poor health, slander, rejection, division and even the Great Ejection of 1662. Richard Baxter considered prayer the first and last thing necessary to be a successful pastor and revivalist. He writes, “Above all be much in secret prayer and meditation. By this you will fetch the heavenly fire that must kindle your sacrifice: remember you cannot decline and neglect your duty to your own hurt alone, many will be losers by it as well as you.”

In light of all the revival promises of the Scriptures, can we truly hope to see revival without such prayer? We need pastors who will not only talk about revival, but who will travail for revival. Today the Church has everything from men’s meetings to miracle meetings, but we still don’t have revival. Mere meetings and conferences will never be able to substitute for the power and authority of a true shepherd’s prayers. “Let the priests, who minister to the LORD, weep between the porch and the altar, and let them say, ‘Spare thy people, O LORD, and give not thine heritage to reproach, that the heathen should rule over them: why should they say among the people, Where is their God?'” (Joel 2:17). I fear that many pastors are naively expecting a move of God while neglecting the means of God. The Father longs to visit us. “He will come to us like the RAIN, like the latter and former RAIN to the earth.” (Hosea 6:3). Yet, like Elijah, we will have to pray and pray again, before the first rain clouds of true revival are seen. Dear pastors, “ASK the Lord for RAIN in the time of the latter rain.” (Zechariah 10:1).

References Used:

The Autobiography of Richard Baxter

Scripture for 8.4.2020


TORAH – Va’etchanan (and I pleaded) 
Deuteronomy 4:32-49


PROPHETS

Ezekiel 9 & Ezekiel 10


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 2:14-36 Part 3

Pastor John MacArthur’s Expository Sermon Series on the Book of Acts, “Preaching Jesus of Nazareth, Part 3, Acts 2:14-36.


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 82
PSALM 110
PROVERBS 25:11-14


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 284 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Scripture for 8.3.2020


TORAH – Va’etchanan (and I pleaded) 
Deuteronomy 4:15-31


PROPHETS
Lamentations 7 & Lamentations 8


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 2:14-36

Pastor John MacArthur’s Expository Sermon Series on the Book of Acts, “Preaching Jesus of Nazareth, Part 2, Acts 2:14-36


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 48
PSALM 109
PROVERBS 25:8-10


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 283 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Scripture for 8.2.2020

TORAH –Va’etchanan (and I pleaded) 
Deuteronomy 4:1-14


PROPHETS
Ezekiel 4 & Ezekiel 5 & Ezekiel 6


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 2:22

Pastor John MacArthur’s Expository Sermon Series on the Book of Acts, “Preaching Jesus of Nazareth, Part 1, Acts 2:22.


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 24
PSALM 108
PROVERBS 25:6-7


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 282 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please
share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to
the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Scripture for 8.1.2020 – It is the Sabbath!


TORAH – Va’etchanan (ans I pleaded) 
Deuteronomy 3:23-29


PROPHETS
Ezekiel 1 & Ezekiel 2 & Ezekiel 3


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 2:5-21

Pastor John MacArthur’s Expository Sermon Series on the Book of Acts, “The Birth of the Church, Part 3, Acts 2:5-21


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 92
PSALM 107
PROVERBS 25:1-5


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 281 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please
share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to
the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Ninth of Av-A Symphony by Leonard Bernstein

This evening I was thinking, was there a symphony written for this most sorrowful day of remembrance for the people of Israel mourning in recollection of the destruction of the Jewish Temple in 586 B.C. and again in 70 A.D. This is what I found which was based upon the Book of Jeremiah and Lamentations which we just finished reading.

Symphony No. 1 -by Leonard Bernstein housed at the Milken Archive of Jewish Music in Santa Monica, California.

https://www.milkenarchive.org/music/volumes/view/symphonic-visions/work/symphony-no-1/

Visit there online for the links to the Symphony. The following is their excellent post by Neil W. Levin.

Tracks
PLAY
TRACK
TIME
I. Prophecy 07:39
II. Profanation 06:29
III. Lamentation 11:04

Liner Notes:

Leonard Bernstein was a mere twenty-four years old in 1942 when he composed his first symphony, which he subtitled Jeremiah after the biblical prophet. He wrote it initially for a competition sponsored by the New England Conservatory of Music, and although it did not win that particular award, it received a much greater and unexpected “prize” in 1944 in the form of a world premiere performance by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra that its director, the venerable Fritz Reiner (Bernstein’s teacher of conducting at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia) permitted him to conduct.

Bernstein always explained that despite its subtitle, the symphony was not a programmatic work. Indeed, it does not have a specific story line, but rather it reflects what he called the “emotional quality” of Jeremiah’s dire prophecies of impending doom for the people of Judah (Judea) and Jerusalem, in which he foresaw and foretold their destruction and captivity by the Babylonian Empire in 586 BCE under the rule of Nebuchadnezzar.

Jeremiah felt impelled to speak the truth, of which he was certain, even at great risk to himself (he was often imprisoned and even in mortal danger). He began his preaching in 627 BCE, convinced that his country and his people were under Divine judgment for their corruption (and that of the priesthood in the Temple cult) and their flaunting of the moral principles of the Sinaitic covenant. In particular, he railed against idolatry and the worship of gods other than, or in addition to, the one, true God—adonai. His “Temple sermon,” sternly indicting Judea and its unfaithful ways, was an attempted appeal to the conscience of the nation and a courageous but unsuccessful challenge to its leadership. His admonitions ran against the accepted authorities, the “party line,” and the tide of popular beliefs; and consistently rebuffed, he was forbidden entrance to the Temple. But he continued to denounce and to warn of imminent calamity as Divine punishment, maintaining that he spoke with the higher authority that formed Judah’s true historical and religious basis.

Judah’s leaders thus considered Jeremiah an enemy, especially since—as he was unsuccessful in convincing the nation of its impending doom—he had come to regard the Babylonian army as God’s instrument for national punishment, a military force against which opposition would bring only complete disaster for Judea and Jerusalem.

Speaking in God’s name, Jeremiah also prophesied Israel’s eventual restoration and reunion with Judah, the return of Judah’s captives, and an end to the exile: “Your children shall return to their own land. I will gather them from all the countries where I have driven them. I will bring them back to this place, where I will cause them to dwell in safety” (31:15). According to that prediction, God would eventually make a fresh covenant with a new generation.

Bernstein described the first movement, “Prophecy,” as a musical attempt to “parallel in feeling the intensity of the prophet’s pleas with his people.” He envisioned the second movement—a scherzo titled “Profanation”—as portraying “a general sense of the destruction and chaos brought on by the pagan corruption within the priesthood and the people.”

The third and final movement, although it too lacks an actual program, has a literary foundation in its sung text taken from the Book of Lamentations. Bernstein called it a “literary conception—the cry of Jeremiah as he mourns his beloved Jerusalem, ruined, pillaged, and dishonored after his desperate efforts to save it.”

The biblical Book of Lamentations—eikha—is a collection of five poems. These comprise elegies and dirges that describe the collective agony of the defeated people and bewail the destruction of Judea and Jerusalem. They also express the hope that God will one day again bestow His grace and favor on them and restore the Jewish people to its national home and its holy city, Jerusalem. Tradition—though not necessarily objective modern scholarship—has attributed eikha to Jeremiah.

Eikha is recited (i.e., chanted) in its entirety in the synagogue on Tisha b’Av—the annual fast day and day of national mourning on the ninth of the Hebrew month of av. It commemorates the destruction of both the first and second Temples in Jerusalem, traditionally assigned to that same date in 586 BCE and in 72 CE, respectively, nearly six centuries apart. The ninth of av also coincides with the fall of Bar Kokhba’s fortress, Bethar, in his stand against the Romans. (For Sephardi Jews, the date has an additional significance; by tradition, they have assigned that date to the 1492 Spanish expulsion edict.)

The mezzo-soprano part in the third movement is a setting of excerpts from eikha (1:1–3; 1:8; 4:14–15; and 5:20–21). Its lines and the movement as a whole are based on the traditional Ashkenazi cantillation of Lamentations. Its constituent motives are sometimes quoted directly—both by the voice and by the orchestra—and sometimes liberally and artistically developed, altered, and extended, with interludes that exploit a rich array of orchestral colors and timbres. Apart from the cantillation references, the entire movement recalls the somber, mournful, and lugubrious aura of a typical traditional Tisha b’Av service—the intoned recitation of eikha, the congregation seated on low mourning stools with dim lighting and burning candles, and the singing of additional elegies and dirges known as kinot. And even with the added emotional intensity of quasi-operatic vocal lines at their climactic points, as well as the orchestral counterpoint, the principal motives and pitch cells of the traditional eikha cantillation are easily recognizable to all who experience annually this sacred ritual—beginning with the initial motive of an ascending minor third stated by the horns and continued by the vocal entrance.

In a letter to Bernstein, Aaron Copland offered his candid assessment of the symphony: “It’s the best thing of yours I’ve seen so far—more consistent in style and more grown-up in many ways. I like best the beginning and the end.” At that relatively early stage in Bernstein’s creative path, this work, in addition to its ingenious use of authentic Judaic material, reveals the positive influence of a number of American composers at the same time that it displays the intenseness and highly charged energy that defines a memorable aspect of Bernstein’s trademark.

A month after the world premiere in Pittsburgh, the Jeremiah Symphony was performed in Boston—also conducted by the composer. The critic for the Boston Globe cited it as the “best new composition of the year.” And following its New York premiere that spring (four performances), the New York Music Critics’ Circle voted it the “outstanding new work of the season.”

By: Neil W. Levin

Scripture for 7.31.2020


TORAH – Devarim (Words) 
Deuteronomy 3:1-22


PROPHETS
Lamentations 4 & Lamentations 5


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 2:4-5

Pastor John MacArthur’s Expository Sermon Series on the Book of Acts, “The Birth of the Church, Part 2, Acts 2:4-5.


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 93
PSALM 106
PROVERBS 24:30-34


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 280 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please
share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to
the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Scripture for 7.30.2020


TORAH – Devarim (Words) 
Deuteronomy 2:26-37


PROPHETS
Lamentations 3:43-66


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 2:1-3

Pastor John MacArthur’s Expository Sermons on the Book of Acts, “The Birth of the Church, Part 1.
https://youtu.be/AGAty6O9APU


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 81
PSALM 105
PROVERBS 24:28-29


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 279 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Scripture for 7.29.2020


TORAH – Devarim (Words) 
Deuteronomy 2:16-25


PROPHETS
Lamentations 3:1-42


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 1:12-26

Pastor John MacArthur’s expository Sermons on the Book of Acts “Replacing Judas”, Part 3– Acts 1:12-26.


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 94
PSALM 104
PROVERBS 24:27


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 278 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please
share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to
the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com

Scripture for 7.28.2020


TORAH – Devarim (Words) 
Deuteronomy 2:1-15


PROPHETS
Lamentations 2


THE GOSPELS & LETTERS
Acts 1:4-11

Pastor John MacArthur’s expository Sermons on the Book of Acts “Continuing Christ’s Work, Part 2– Acts 1:4-11.


WISDOM WRITING
PSALM of the Day 82
PSALM 103
PROVERBS 24:26


If you are on the journey with us reading through the Bible, welcome to day 277 or if you
are joining us now welcome and be prepared for a life changing experience. Also please
share this reading schedule with others. We will be conducting a 5-week introduction to
the Bible class on September 15. 2020, then restarting the Bible reading from the beginning with the Tuesday night sessions online. We look forward to you joining us! You can reach us at exploringgodslibrary@gmail.com