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Wales has often been referred to as a Land of Revivals, and Anglesey is no exception. This book traces the history and impacts of the series of revivals that touched Anglesey from the 18th century to the most recent one, which was in 1905.
Some of these revivals were local, touching individual villages and their vicinity, while others were part of a more widespread move of God.
Iolo Griffiths
Iolo Griffiths was brought up in Anglesey, lives in North Wales and has been working for Trinity Mirror North Wales since 1987, firstly as a librarian and then proofreader, and then a journalist. He is now a Community Content Curator for Trinity Mirror North Wales His main interests are genealogy and local history (mainly North West Wales)
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Revivals in Anglesey - Iolo Griffiths
Revivals in Anglesey
Introduction
Wales has often been referred to as a Land of Revivals, and from 1735 to 1904, many revivals have swept the country, with their beneficial effects on the morals of the people, and many people turning to the Lord from their wicked ways.
During this period, revivals came frequently enough for the last one to be still a fairly fresh memory, about 20 years back, when the next one came. Though many devout Christians long to see a new awakening, even the most recent one to touch Wales, 1905 is more than a century ago, and is known from history books, and not from the experience of living people.
While this book deals almost exclusively with just one county of Wales, Anglesey, the situation there, with the initial immorality, and the succession of revivals, some local in their scope and others national, and even international, will serve as a microcosm of Wales as a whole.
It may be helpful to make it clear from the start what a revival is, and how it differs from an evangelistic campaign, to ensure that there is no confusion as to what is meant. The word revival
itself is a clue, that it is primarily for the Church, as you can only revive
something that has once been alive. The main result is that the Church becomes more fervent, and alive to God. The conversion of people from the World is a bonus that comes from the revival, and is not the revival itself.
In 1959 (the centenary of the 1859 revival) the Rev Martyn Lloyd-Jones preached a series of sermons on revivals, and highlighted some of these important differences between revivals and evangelistic campaigns.
A revival can be compared to a repetition of Pentecost, in the sense that the Holy Spirit comes down on a number of people together. As a result of this outpouring of the Spirit, the people present become aware of spiritual things in a way they weren't before, and are touched by the glory and holiness of God. This may manifest as a deep and terrible sense of guilt as they realise their utter helplessness before God, under the effect of the Holy Spirit's conviction, or in a great joy at what God has done. Revivals are always characterised by reverence, but this is not always true of evangelistic campaigns.
As people become aware of their sinfulness, and of God's love, they long to meet together to praise God. They also become concerned for the people who are outside, and feel they must tell them, which leads to a missionary zeal. The people outside then become curious by what's happening, and become converted.
Meetings may be characterised by great conviction and great joy, with some people rejoicing and some groaning, which may take place in the very same meeting. This will be noticeable in many of the revivals we shall be examining.
Revivals touch a cross-section of society, affecting all classes, ages, temperaments and intellectual types, thus defying psychology's attempts to define a religious
type, and also lasts for a while, and then passes. In some cases a definite date for the start and the end of the revival can be established. In the case of a psychological experience, the effects continue to be produced as long as the stimuli and factors remain present, but in the case of a revival, the effects cease, even if favourable factors continue to exist.
The results of revivals are abiding, and by and large the converts remain steadfast, and come forward without being asked. In the case of evangelistic campaigns only 10% of the converts
are expected to hold. As a result of a revival, a great zeal for God and holiness becomes evident in the people, which is not always as apparent in the case of an evangelistic campaign.
The effects of a revival might be dramatic. An example in the early 19th century was when John Elias preached a sermon at a fair in Rhuddlan, which was noted for debauchery and sin, and killed this fair once and for all. During an evangelistic campaign, crime figures may go up, despite the appearance that religion is going up. In a revival, however, crime figures never go up, as even the unconverted are influenced by the moral atmosphere, as sobriety enters the life of the community, and the effects remain for some years afterwards.
Revivals do vary in some respects, as the onset may be sudden or gradual, may be unexpected or may come after a long time of prayer. It may break out in a prayer meeting, a preaching meeting, or even during an evangelistic campaign which subsequently becomes a revival. But a revival is always a work of God, and not of man, may start in a big city or a small hamlet. Man's work will always start in an important place like a big city.
God may use a great philosopher like Jonathan Edwards, a great orator like George Whitefield, or a great organiser like John Wesley to carry out His work, but at other times may also use obscure people like David Morgan, an ordinary minister of the Gospel with no remarkable gifts, taking hold of the weak things to confound the mighty. David Morgan was given a remarkable preaching gift during the two years of revival, but afterwards reverted to being a very ordinary preacher.
Phenomena may accompany a revival, such as conviction with agony of soul, groaning audibly. Sometime people are so convicted that they faint and fall to the ground, perhaps accompanied by convulsions or unconsciousness. These phenomena are variable, but are often criticised by outsiders who are, understandably, suspicious of anything they don't understand, or cannot explain.
A vital difference is that a revival is a miracle, a work of the Lord. Men can produce evangelistic campaigns, but only God can produce a revival. Charles Finney misled people by teaching that man can produce revivals by certain methods, but many people have followed these same methods, and failed to create a revival. If men could reliably use methods to achieve certain results, and explain what had happened, then this would not really be a miracle, and thus would not be a genuine revival. Revivals don't need crowds, bands, choirs or any preliminaries. We can quench the Spirit and be a hindrance, but even if we follow all the rules we cannot guarantee a revival.
The real reason for a revival is for God's name to be vindicated, and for His glory. It is a demonstration of God's power, and does not need man's intellect and ability, and is not for man's glory.
Origins of the Great Awakening
The revivals which touched Wales from the 1730s onwards and Anglesey from the 1740s, were not an isolated phenomenon, but part of a move of God which is called the Great Awakening, which also affected Scotland, and in America was chronicled by the great theologian and revivalist Jonathan Edwards, and in Wales and England was marked by the origins of the Methodist movement.
Although these individual revivals do display some differences, they all shared certain features, such as a dissatisfaction with established religion, the importance of a personal experience of God, and an evangelistic zeal rather than a dry orthodoxy, and a need for society as a means of nurturing and maintaining the new life, and a deep awareness of the need for mission, and an expression of their faith and rejoicing through hymns of praise.
|Much of the major figures of the Great Awakening in Wales were from South Wales, so we need to trace the origins of Methodism there and in England before we can really look at how it affected Anglesey.
The spiritual state of Wales was not very healthy. Many of the young people, although they claimed to belong to the Established Church, were in practice completely irreligious, and given to vain activities such as dancing, drinking and fighting. Erasmus Saunders painted a very gloomy picture of the spiritual situation in the Diocese of St David's, and it seems that the spiritual state of England as late as 1747 was similarly discouraging as it said that Bishop Saunders refused to be made Archbishop of Canterbury because he believed that it was too late to save the Church from the attacks of Deists (whose belief was basically that God created the world, but was subsequently indifferent to it, and did not intervene in the world through revelations and miracles) and Rationalists. The fact that Saunders's pessimistic prophecies were to be proved untrue was largely due the Great Awakening that started in the 1730s, which included the origins of the