Thu. Nov 7th, 2024
River

River
If you were once in the river of God but have gotten out, you can go back. Here’s how. 

Stephen
Thompson played defensive tackle for the New York Jets during the
heyday of Joe Namath. He even has a Super Bowl ring and flashes it
occasionally if someone tries to intimidate him. But tackling the
problem of staying in the river of God—the current flow of His Spirit—
proved to be an even greater challenge than tackling football
superstars.

After his days as a pro football player Stephen and
his wife, Starla, entered the ministry. He became pastor of a church
near Seattle in the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel, a
Pentecostal denomination founded by Aimee Semple McPherson, the famous
woman evangelist of the early 1900s. The denomination’s Pentecostal
roots, however, did not seem to prepare the members of Stephen’s church
for the current move of the Spirit.

Stephen and Starla realized they needed a fresh touch from God and made
their way to the outpouring in Toronto. There they were overcome with
the presence of God. He touched them in such a powerful way that they
determined never again to do things at church the way they had always
done them.

Once back home they instituted a Friday night renewal
meeting, which people attended to enjoy the blessings God was pouring
out. Many of their members dived into the river, eager to experience all
God had for them. Then the trouble began.

Dissenting factions
started to oppose the leaders of the church, and within a year the
church was facing a full-scale split. “It seemed as though everyone was
leaving,” Stephen recalls. And those who stayed were grieving over the
loss of their friends.

Although the church had problems before
the renewal started, the focus of gossip about the turmoil quickly
became the church’s participation in the renewal. Stephen’s ability to
lead was called into question, and within a few months more than half
their 830 members left.

At that point Stephen and Starla were so
discouraged they let go of the renewal. They stopped the Friday night
meetings and tried to return everything to the way it had been before
the outpouring started, working to please God with a good church
program.

“We began to question everything we had seen,” Stephen
recalls. “When the church split started, we wondered if we were seeing
bad fruit. Why had all this happened when the Holy Spirit was supposed
to create unity in the fellowship?”

As time went by, however, the
people who remained with them remained loyal to the renewal, too, and
Stephen and Starla grew hungry again. They made another pilgrimage to
Toronto. When they saw that God was still moving and that He had no
intention of withdrawing His love and blessing, the Thompsons desired
revival more than ever. But they wondered how they could ever bring
their flock back into the river.

Stephen invited his friend Brad
Davis, another Foursquare pastor, to speak at their family summer camp.
Brad’s church in Fresno, California has been flowing in the renewal
since 1994 and has become a watering hole in central California.

Brad
began to preach about the kingdom of God and exhorted Stephen’s church
not to try to go back to the way they had been before renewal. The power
of God broke out again at the camp. People who had come for “camp as
usual” went home on fire. They began to experience a renewed love for
Jesus. It seemed that God was dressing the wounds left by the split.

This
time Stephen talked with Brad about how to get back in the river and
keep the blessing. He never wanted to lose it again. Brad gave him
several pointers that are applicable to all of us who share Stephen’s
desire to regain and retain the blessing of revival.

Welcome the presence of God.
First, Brad encouraged Stephen and Starla to welcome the presence of
God. So they returned to the deeds they were doing when the river first
came to their church—spending time in God’s presence, waiting on Him
and absorbing His love, watching Him initiate acts of power and then
cooperating with Him. They began by restoring the Friday night renewal
meeting.

They also invited the Holy Spirit to move any way He
wanted upon the congregation. Many people had lost heart because of the
church split. Stephen began to pray for them, asking the Holy Spirit to
renew and touch them.

God came powerfully. He touched the people with healing miracles and renewed their spiritual strength.

Stephen
may not have realized it, but he did what Jesus said to do when you
realize you have left your first love: “Remember the height from which
you have fallen! Repent [which means ‘go back’] and do the things you
did at first” (Rev. 2:5, NIV). By far the principal “thing” is lingering in the presence of God and enjoying His love.

Start soaking again.
Brad told Stephen, “You have to start soaking again in God’s presence
and teach your people to soak, too.” As Stephen and Starla started
soaking and experiencing the love of God again, they wanted everyone in
the congregation to feel God’s love. And people began to respond.

This,
of all the evidences of revival, has meant more to Stephen and Starla
than anything else. Stephen says that the sense of God’s love is greater
now that they have gotten back into the river than it was the first
time they experienced revival. The congregation is growing in its love
for God, which is the true purpose of church and ministry in the first
place.

All this newfound love for Jesus is producing fruit,
including the ministry of helping take the river to Africa. Stephen
says: “Intimacy with God is the cause of fruit production. We are in
transition from being a program-oriented church to a Presence-oriented
church.”

Set love as a priority. Last summer
Stephen and Starla took a three-month sabbatical. His assistants took
over the responsibilities of the church; by this time they were too busy
soaking in the glory to notice that their pastor and his wife were
taking some needed days off!

During this time, the Lord spoke to
Stephen about rearranging his priorities. The first thing God said was
not surprising: “Love Me first.” The Lord gave specific instructions
concerning how He wanted to be loved: He told Stephen to give Him his
mornings.

Prior to this, Stephen and Starla’s mornings had been a
rush to get to the church and start handling the details of the day.
The Lord told him that during these mornings with Him they were to spend
time personally soaking in God’s love, doing nothing but letting God
touch them and enjoying Him. Out of their renewed communion with God,
they began to fall in love with Jesus and with each other all over
again.

Then God said, “Love your wife until she feels loved.”
Like many husbands he thought he was already doing that, but the key was
“until she feels loved.” After all, Stephen thought, what good is
revival unless it is happening at home? Stephen started treating Starla
the way he did when he was courting her. A river of new love started
pouring into their marriage.

Then God said, “Love your children
and your grandchildren until they feel loved.” Stephen wondered how many
details would have to be set aside at church to accomplish this, but he
knew that obedience to God would be worth more to Him than sacrifice,
so he decided to do this, too.

“If you do these things,” God told
Stephen, “by the time you are 70 years old, you will be going 70 miles
per hour!” Stephen is in his 50s now. Before he got back in the river he
had felt internally weary, drained of any motivation to continue. After
six months of obeying the Lord, he knows he has found the secret of
continuous personal revival: soaking in God and obeying the simple
things He tells you to do.

Go into the river together. In addition to pursuing the presence of God personally, Stephen took more of Brad’s advice: “Don’t try to go it alone.”

Brad
told him to join others who are soaking constantly in the river and not
to be bound by denominational lines. This would encourage Stephen and
his staff that they were not in this alone, that other pastors all over
the world love the river of God’s presence, too. It would also “stoke
the fire” that God was re-igniting in the congregation, providing
another form of validation for those who were learning to trust and open
up to the Holy Spirit.

Stephen invited members of the Toronto
itinerant team and other pastors whose churches are being revolutionized
by what God is doing to come to Seattle. Their congregation sets aside
special weekends to focus on the renewal.

As congregants hear
testimonies and teaching from other ministers who are also soaking in
the presence of God and encouraging their congregations to do so, they
realize the value of what God is sending. Signs and wonders have begun
to increase in the congregation, causing deeper hunger for God.

Stephen’s
church is rediscovering the secret of the early church’s ongoing
revival. There is a direct correlation between being in awe of God’s
presence and continuing to see Him work: “Everyone was filled with awe,
and many wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles” (Acts 2:43, emphasis added).

Stephen
says today: “We’ll never go back to the way we were before. This is
just too wonderful. It’s about continually experiencing the Father’s
love. Before, I thought it was about seeing the outward manifestations.
Perhaps I focused too much on seeing outward signs and whether or not
there was enough fruit. Now I’m being drawn by His love. It’s the most
important thing.”

People sometimes ask me, “Whatever happened to
the Toronto Blessing?” Simply by asking the question those individuals
show that they have walked away from the river. Maybe, like Stephen and
Starla, they left out of discouragement when the presence of God brought
a church split or division between friends. It is easy to understand.

But
there are people like the Thompsons all over the world who are taking
another look and finding the courage to return. And God will come and
come more powerfully than they ever imagined because they have learned
the difficult lesson of stewardship of the presence of God, and they
will never let go again.

If you were once in the river but have
gotten out for some reason, you can go back. Being humble enough to
admit your need is the first step. Then take Brad’s advice and commit
yourself to welcoming the presence of God, taking time to soak in it,
setting love as a priority and going into the river with others who are
hungry for God.

It isn’t easy, but Stephen and Starla did it and
so has everyone else who began to long for what they let go of. They are
finding where they set God down and returning to the blessing of a
lifetime.

Read a companion devotional.

Melinda Fish and her husband, Bill are the planters an co-pastors of River City Church of Pittsburgh. Melinda is also the author of several books.

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