Newspaper Report of a
Revival Meeting During the 1905 Wales Revival
The scene was almost indescribable. Row upon
row of men and women filled every inch of space. Those who could not
gain admittance stood outside and listened at the doors. Others rushed
to the windows, where almost every word was audible. When, at seven oclock,
the service began, about 2,000 people must have been present.
The enthusiasm was unbounded. Women sang and
shouted until the perspiration ran down their faces, and men jumped up
one after the other to testify. One told in quivering accents the story
of a drunken life. A working coal miner spoke like a practiced orator.
And one can imagine what a note the testimony of a gypsy woman struck
when, dressed in her best, she told of her reformation and repentance.
At ten o'clock the meeting had lost none of
its ardor. Prayer after prayer when up from those Welsh hearts with
almost dreary persistence. Time and again the four ministers who stood
in the pulpit attempted to start a hymn but it was all in vain.
The revival has taken hold of the people, and
even Mr. Roberts cannot hold it in check. His latest convert is a
policeman, who, after complaining that the people had gone mad after
religion so that there was nothing for him to do, went to see for
himself, and bursting into tears, confessed the error of his ways and
repented.
Meetings such as this are being repeated
every day, and the enthusiasm is still spreading. While there has been
no organization, no elaborate preparation for this mission, in the
ordinary sense of the word, there is a strong belief that it is the
direct result of earnest prayer.
A prominent member of a Newport Baptist
church, who has followed the movement with close interest and deep
thankfulness, declared the other day the revival was a result of the
praying by the young women who had been engaged in it for some months.
Evan Roberts had, he said, been praying for thirteen months, for that
wave to come, and he related how the young man was turned out of his
lodgings by his landlady, who thought that in his enthusiasm he was
possessed or somewhat mad. He spent hours praying and preaching in his
rooms, until the lady became afraid of him, and asked him to leave.
It may be observed that the dominant note of
the revival is prayer and praise.
Another striking fact is the joyousness and
radiant happiness of the evangelist. It has been remarked that the very
essence of his campaign is mirth. To the rank and file of the church
ministers this is his most incomprehensible phase. They have always
regarded religion as something iron-bound, severe, even terrible. Evan
Roberts smiles when he prays, laughs when he preaches. "Ah, it is a
grand life," he cries. "I am happy, so happy that I could walk
on the air. Tired? Never! God has made me strong. He has given me
courage."
Roberts is a leader who preaches victory, and
shows how it may be wonvictory over the dull depression and gloomy
doubt of our time. Is it surprising that thousands flock to his
meetings. It has long been felt in Wales, as elsewhere, that the time
was ripe for a great Holy Ghost revival. |