City to City Blog

Questions for Sleepy and Nominal Christians

11 Mar 2013 by Tim Keller

I recently gave a talk on revival, and I want to share some thoughts from it. It’s difficult to find the right word for what we mean when we talk about revival. “Renewal” is almost too soft a word, and “revival” has too many dated connotations nowadays. But the older definition of revival is helpful. It refers to a time when the ordinary operations of the Holy Spirit—not signs and wonders, but the conviction of sin, conversion, assurance of salvation and a sense of the reality of Jesus Christ on the heart—are intensified, so that you see growth in the quality of the faith in the people in your church, and a great growth in numbers and conversions as well.

In a revival, sleepy Christians wake up, nominal Christians get converted, and non-Christians get reached. A sleepy Christian may believe they’re a Christian, but they don’t have a real sense of God’s holiness, their own sin, or the depth of his grace. They may be a moralist or a relativist, or living inconsistent lives.

Nominal Christians may be going to church, but have never really been convicted of sin or received salvation personally. When sleepy and nominal Christians get revived, attractive and bold in their witness, people who would never have believed before begin to get converted.

So how do you wake up sleepy Christians and convert nominal Christians? Let me give you what I would call my modernized American versions of the kinds of questions I would ask people if I was trying to get them to really think about whether or not they know Christ. These questions are adapted from The Experience Meeting by William Williams, based on the Welsh revivals during the Great Awakening. He would ask people to share about these types of questions in small group settings each week:

How real has God been to your heart this week? How clear and vivid is your assurance and certainty of God’s forgiveness and fatherly love? To what degree is that real to you right now?

Are you having any particular seasons of delight in God? Do you really sense his presence in your life, sense him giving you his love?

Have you been finding Scripture to be alive and active? Instead of just being a book, do you feel like Scripture is coming after you?

Are you finding certain biblical promises extremely precious and encouraging? Which ones?

Are you finding God’s challenging you or calling you to something through the Word? In what ways?

Are you finding God’s grace more glorious and moving now than you have in the past? Are you conscious of a growing sense of the evil of your heart, and in response, a growing dependence on and grasp of the preciousness of the mercy of God?

Put together, that is a growing understanding of grace.

Comments
27 Mar 2013

by Kim Batteau

Dear people, I've read some of the book, The Experience Meeting,and I have mixed feelings. I think William Williams puts too much emphasis on these small groups,and if we look at the Welsh churches, today, we can say that the "revival" ideal has not led to lasting spiritual impact, due to liberalism having come in. So while I applaud the spiritual benefits of small groups, the Bible teaches us that the proclamation of the Word, by trained men, the Biblical administration of the sacraments,and Biblical church discipline are not only the marks of a Biblical church, but the Biblical source of vital church life which glorifies and serves the Lord Jesus Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit. We need more of the teaching of Augustine, Luther, and Calvin, not less.

03 Apr 2013

by pjohnnyj

I struggle with the idea that anyone could truly be called "christian" who doesn't have "a real sense of God’s holiness, their own sin, or the depth of his grace . . . be (merely) a moralist or a relativist, or living inconsistent lives . . . be going to church, but have never really been convicted of sin or received salvation personally." It seems here that Rev. Keller must have the same belief, as he states they need to experience conversion. I think there is a real dividing line between those who are "societal christians" and those who have experienced Biblical conversion and are, therefore, authentically, christian. And, sadly, our churches are filled with societal christians, who might go to church, but in reality, live their lives as if God doesn't exist. The church has taught them for too long that they are spiritually OK, to the point that they can no longer hear the call to repentence and respond for conversion. I've seen this change happen over the past 40+ years. I pray consistenely that God will give me the words that will help people hear Truth, and respond honestly to the Holy Spirit's illumination in their lives.

20 Apr 2013

by Rupzip

Just reading about King David's middlife crisis. He was lazy in his duties, not going to war in the spring and that allowed the sin with Bathsheba to come in. In encouraging nominal believers, perhaps it goes to inspiring their passion again. get them excited for truth and righteousness and good and then God can go to work... David, www.RedLetterBelievers.com