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It
was my first time in the nation. I had heard of the mighty move of God in Romania, but I
was overwhelmed as I walked into a place where God's presence was manifest
among His people. I had read stories of the great spiritual revivals in ages
past and imagined that they must have been something like what I was seeing in Oradea, Romania.
Hours before the church service began, people were gathering to pray and seek
the face of God. By the time the worship service began that night, the church
was packed with people standing down the aisles three to four abreast. They
were standing all around the platform and outside on the streets.
The year was 1980, and
believers in Romania
were severely persecuted. Some Christians lost their jobs because of their
faith in Christ. Others were beaten and some had been imprisoned. Many
observers believed that Romania
had the harshest persecution of Christians throughout all of Eastern
Europe. Yet, the move of the Holy Spirit in Romania
appeared to be unstoppable.
I'll never forget
preaching during those days in the large Immanuel
Baptist Church
in Oradea.
Scores came to Christ, and at the close of the evening service, a leader came
to me and said, "Brother Sammy, did the Lord work tonight?" I was
puzzled by his question and responded, "Didn't you see that the church was
packed and surrounded by people with hungry hearts? Didn't you see how many
people responded to the message? Why are you asking me this question?"
The godly gentleman
simply smiled and said, "Oh, I wasn't in the sanctuary. I was in another
room with 100 men and we were praying the whole time you were preaching. And
there was another room with 100 women and they were also praying while you were
preaching." I was left speechless. Up until then, I had never preached
anywhere that 100 men and 100 women were praying while I was preaching. There's
no wonder that so many people came to Christ.
The revival began
several years earlier in that region of Romania when a pastor called the
church to repent and begin seeking the face of God. He taught them to write down
the names of people who needed Christ and pray for them. The people began
praying for atheists, their persecutors, friends, family members, and
colleagues at work. Revival was birthed in the hearts of God's people and many
non-Christians came to know Christ. The church eventually became the largest
Evangelical church in Europe. Their
evangelistic growth was a by-product of the revival, and the revival was the
fruit of the prayers of God's people.
This has been the
pattern of the great soul harvests throughout the history of the church. It was
the pattern of the dynamic fast growing church in Jerusalem as recorded in the Acts of the
Apostles. The Bible says, "After they prayed, the place where they were
meeting was shaken. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the
word of God boldly" (Acts 4:31 NIV). There were four things that took
place according to the Scripture. First, they prayed. Second, God shook
everything up. Third, they were all filled with the Holy Spirit. Finally, they
had a new power to speak the word of God with courage.
The end product of
prayer was evangelism. When we draw near to God, we are filled with His
presence. He is love, and His perfect love casts out all fear. That's why they
had power to speak with boldness. They had been in the presence of the One who
is absolute love. Fear flees in the presence of Divine love. A praying church
will always become an evangelistic church. Evangelism and revival aren't the
same things, but when we pray, we're already on the road to revival. And when
revival genuinely takes hold, evangelism is the supernatural natural result.
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