REFORMATION
Reformation
is that word we use to speak to the recovery of the correct doctrines and their
vigorous application to all of life.
Jim Elliff
Reformation
or Revival?, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org.
Used by Permission.
We should not
want a revival of experience alone without true reformation. And so the term
revival is not adequate for our day unless we add the qualifiers
“reformational” or “word-driven.” It is not wrong to desire revival if we mean
a revival that is a resurgence of correct believing along with the enlivening
of our experience with God which comes out of (not apart from) that sound
doctrine.
Jim Elliff
Reformation
or Revival?, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org.
Used by Permission.
Experience-driven
revival is more like a flash flood than a mighty river. Heightened experience
certainly leaves its mark, some of which may be good wherever it meets
orthodoxy, but a reformational revival is a life-giving river which has
continuing positive effects. When reformation takes place, the conviction is
not just over our behavioral sinfulness but over wrong doctrine.
Jim Elliff
Reformation
or Revival?, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org.
Used by Permission.
Revival
describes a renewal of spiritual life, while reformation describes a renewal of
the forms and structures of society and culture. It is not possible to have
true reformation without first having true revival. The renewal of spiritual
life under the power of the Holy Spirit is a necessary condition for
reformation but not a sufficient condition for it. Therefore, though it is not
possible to have reformation without revival, it is possible to have revival
without reformation.
R.C.
Sproul
The Spirit of Revival by Archie Parrish, Introduction,
Copyright 2000, Crossway Books, a division of Good News Publishers, Wheaton
Illinois 60187, www.crosswaybooks.org.
p. 17.