3 Things I Learned from Pastor Bob Nichols

When you sit under someone’s teaching for more than two decades you have heard more than you can recall but some things are branded into your heart.  Some things become yours on a “cellular” level once you hear them repeated for so long.  The many things Pastor has taught me have become mine at the deepest level.  After the revival of ’93 I had the privileged to take a team to a church in Roswell, New Mexico to help them experience the refreshing as we had.  Pastor Nichols gave me these three guidelines to help me.

  1. It’s a flow not a force
  2. Don’t be afraid to do the silly to reap the supernatural.  (Obey the Holy Spirit no matter what it looks like.)
  3. Go nothing doubting

I have applied these keys to many situations. A principle can be applied in many different situations. These guidelines will work in the home, in business, in school and many other areas of life. We have to flow with the Spirit and not force things to make them happen. Not that we don’t have to work, but there is a difference when you move with the flow of the Spirit. When we move with the Spirit we move with His power and His peace. We are pressing in but not stressing in! We have to be ready to do whatever the Spirit bids us to do. It doesn’t matter how silly it looks or what anyone else thinks about it, we simply need to obey the Spirit. When we do we will reap the supernatural. When we know what He wants us to do we need to go all out. We need to go nothing doubting. When He says go we go all out. We are not holding back just in case we might be missing it – we go nothing doubting. As I’ve applied these three things I have seen God do great things. I trust that you will apply these keys to every area of your life. As you do I believe that you will “reap the supernatural!”

You Don’t Deserve the Gifts

Stanley M. Horton, What the Bible Says About the Holy Spirit (p. 208)

People have a tendency to forget that the gifts of the Spirit must be received on the same basis as the gift of the Spirit and the gift of salvation.  It is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – not of works, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9).

That the gifts of the Spirit are by grace through faith is implied also by the most common Greek word used to describe these gifts.  They are charismata, “freely and graciously given gifts,” a word derived from charis,  “grace, the unmerited favor of God.”  Charismata are gifts given us in spite of the fact that we do not deserve them.  They bear witness to the goodness of God, not the goodness of those who receive them.

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Have peace and go with the flow

Don’t be in a hurry – have patience. The Spirit of God leads us, He doesn’t herd us like cattle.  People get antsy about silence in a church service.  They are wondering, “Why doesn’t someone do something?”  We do not need to have fireworks going off every five minutes.  The supernatural is not always spectacular. I have seen God move into a service and a holy hush come over the congregation and it will not be long before someone shatters the moment because they read the quiet as nothing happening.  Or, someone takes the moment as being time for a prophtetic word. There is, of course, a time for the gifts of the Spirit to flow, but beware of the assumption that every silence needs to be filled with someone talking.  What about the ministry of the Holy Spirit.  We should believe that He can touch people and do things completely independently of the preacher or anyone else being involved.
If you are leading revival meetings be watchful during the services, don’t let someone else drain off the anointing or use your anointing to “preach” their message or do their own thing.  Shut them down.  Take the mic back and pray for them or interrupt them, but don’t let someone high jack the anointing.

I was in Pastor’s office after a service during the Rodney Howard-Browne meetings at Calvary in 1993.  Pastor Rick Shelton was there and he mentioned that Kathryn Kuhlman said, “The number one ingredient to flowing in the Holy Spirit is patience.”  We need to leave space for the Holy Spirit to operate.  He is doing something in every life. He is moving touching people as we speak. Sometimes we need to be quiet and let Him do what He wants to do.

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Keep the fire burning in your own heart

You are responsible for keeping the fire of God burning in your own heart.  No one else can be hungry for you.  No one else can obey God for you. You must do what it takes to stay hungry for more of God.  On of the best ways to do that is by talking to people who are excited about revival. Talk about the great things that God is doing. It stirs me up when my revival buddies tell me about what God is doing.  When you share your testimony with others who are hungry it renews in you what God has done. Talking about it keeps it fresh.

Paul told Timothy to “kindle afresh the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of my hands” (Stir up, KJV). The Greek word translated “kindle,” according to Thayer, is based on the word ζάω, zaō, meaning “to be among the living.”  Our testimony helps us to keep our experience of God “among the living.” Talking to others about what God has done keeps it alive or kindles afresh those experiences.

Your life influences the lives of those around you.  Your friends and family are affected by your hunger. By staying on fire for the Lord Jesus you are helping to keep their fire lit.  It is difficult to estimate the impact that a single individual can have on their local congregation but it is great.  If God did it before and you want more of it – testify to it.  In doing so you will not only keep yourself on fire for God but those around you as well.

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Preach the Word

When you analyze what many preachers are saying there is very little Word content.  Is using a verse or two to preface your remarks actually preaching the Word.  If we are using the Word to prove our point (proof texting) rather than discovering what God is saying and preaching that seems like a misuse of the Bible.  It is the Word of God that is transformational not our opinions.  Interject the Word into your conversations and God’s power becomes available.  The gospel is the power of God that brings salvation.

Our families need to hear God’s Word.  Our spouses need to hear what scripture says.  The Word of God coming out of our mouths will bring change in every situation.  Paul’s admonition to Timothy was “preach the word!”  The Word is always in season.  The Word will bring change into your life.  Preach it!  Confess it!  In the words of singer/song writer David Hinton, “Keep your opinions to yourself . . . give me some word.”

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Refuse offense of any kind

There will always be opportunities to be offended with people.  Even in the middle of a great move of God people are people.  Offense will short circuit the blessings of God.  The Proverbs say that contention comes through pride.  Offense by any other name is still offense.  So, when faced with being offended you need to check your own heart for pride.  On the positive side having a proper dose of self-respect is healthy, but too much and the result is a sense of superiority.  This kind of pride will always produce friction with others.  You can call it being frustrated or being upset but it is still offense.  Just love people, don’t judge them.  Jesus did not come into the world to condemn people and neither should we.
God is bigger than whatever happens

Remember that when difficulties arise or challenges come with schedule conflicts or location changes that God knew about all of it before you did.  He is not troubled by it so don’t you be. You can waste a lot of time and energy being upset or you can take it in stride knowing that if He knew about it all along that He has a plan to fix it.  With this attitude you can wade through the attacks without letting them affect with the ministry.  Most of the things we are offended by won’t even be a thought six days from now anyway.  Forget it and move on. This is a good thing to keep in mind whether you are married or have children.  Is this really something that really matters?  Stay focused on what is important.  By refusing to stay offended we will stay on track.

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Don’t have your own agenda.

We need to make sure that we have surrendered our agenda and have taken up His agenda.  Jesus said, in John 14:10, “The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own initiative, but the Father abiding in Me does His works.”  If anyone could have had his own agenda it could have been Jesus.  He laid down His will and took up the Father’s.  Though He could have stepped out on His own initiative, He refused to do so.  He purposed to only be led by His Father’s agenda.  So many times I have seen people push their own plans when it seemed so evident to me and others that God was moving in a specific direction.  Sometimes preachers will “talk away” an anointing.  The presence of God is being manifest and rather than submit to what the Spirit is doing the preacher will start talking and keep talking and then the moment passes.  The plan of God was to go a certain direction but lack of sensitivity causes another agenda to be put forth.  We need to do what God prompts us to do, when He prompts us to do it.  We need to develop the habit it being instantly obedient to His voice and consistently obedient to His prompting.  Regardless of what has been prepared, all is at the Spirit’s disposal. This is not to say that we can fail to prepare and do sloppy planning and then blame the outcome on the Spirit.  The apostles were led by the Spirit and what they did was purposeful and worked to form a strategic plan.  God is not the author of confusion but of order.  Sometimes His order may look chaotic but the outcome will actually be in divine order.

Expect God to move, just don’t have expectations as to how.

This has helped me more than just about anything else I’ve learned in conducting revival services.  Congregations need to develop the same philosophy.  I believe that God is going to move in every service.  I have learned that it is best to drop expectations as to exactly how He is going to do it this time.  If you can expect the unexpected that is what needs to happen.  We fall into ruts so easily.  This is not to say that we ought not have any forms or traditions, these can be helpful.  We just need to be sure that everything is available to the Holy Spirit.  He may tell me what I need to do or say in a service but how that works out may not be as I expected.  We need to trust that God will move and then be open to just how that happens.  What He does always produces life and blessing.  We need to be open to His promptings.

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TRUST THE HOLY GHOST!

Acts 10:44  NASB “While Peter was still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit fell upon all those who were listening to the message.”

We need to  depend on the Holy Spirit when we minister to others. Not only do we need His help as we study, but we have to trust that  He is operating, touching the people to whom we minister. Preachers need to trust that the Holy Ghost is touching the people in the services (and beyond) regardless of response.  We need more than words, we need the manifestation of the Holy Spirit!  Don’t put all your trust in your ability to turn a phrase or move people emotionally.  The Lord wants to demonstrate what He told you to preach!  Give Him time and space to move.  Paul said, “My message and my preaching were not in persuasive words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power” (1 Cor. 2:4).  We need the manifest presence of God.  People are hungry for it.  We must never diminish the role of the Word but we must be equally attentive to the moving of the Holy Spirit.
Don’t look for the spectacular look for the Spirit.

The Holy Spirit will confirm the word that is preached if allowed.  Both congregations and preachers need to exhibit hunger and expectation of this.  In doing so, the stage is set for the demonstration of the Spirit.  This takes place as the Spirit wills, but to tell you the truth,  He is far more willing to move than we are to have Him move.  We don’t need to look for some far out thing to take place to know He is moving.  When He moves on the hearts of the people different manifestations may occur, but that is not the goal.  Changed hearts will become obedient hearts.  Obeying the promptings of the Holy Spirit will produce the results that we want to see.  So, let’s get to obeying!

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Have confidence without conceit and boldness without arrogance.

Without a doubt we need to approach life with a great level of confidence.  There is more lost through timidity than is ever lost through overconfidence (my opinion). I think that experience bears this out.  When it comes to leading a revival, a classroom, or a family you can’t be without confidence.  The placement of our confidence is of major importance.  If you place confidence in your own abilities you are going to be disappointed.  Of course, the believer’s confidence should rest in the Lord. The book of Hebrews says, “Do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward” (Heb. 10:35).

The trick, so to speak, is to have confidence without stepping over into conceit.  There is a real temptation to begin to think that you are the reason that people are being touched.  The arrogance that tries to attach itself to the success experienced when God moves is something to be avoided at all cost.  Boldness yes, but never arrogance.  Our confidence needs to be in the Lord.  We should be quick to give Him the praise and the glory.  We need to be able to direct people back to the Lord as the source of good things they received.  Being quick to thank God when good things happen is a good way to stay out of arrogance and conceit.


Things I’ve Learned Leading Revival Services – Intro

Without a doubt, the touch of God I received in the summer of 1993 was life changing.  As big as this was at the time, it turns out it was just the beginning.  It was during that summer that we experienced revival through the ministry of Rodney Howard-Browne.  Over 4000 people were born-again during six weeks of services.  There were over 1200 baptized.  Thousands of people came through the doors of Calvary Cathedral.  These people represented hundreds of different churches, ministries, and  many denominations.  This meeting, along with Rodney’s meetings at Carpenter’s Home Church in Lakeland, Florida, are a part of Pentecostal church history.

The meetings at Calvary started a new awareness of the Holy Spirit in my life.  My ministry was never the same and became marked by a greater effectiveness.  The Gifts of the Spirit began to manifest in greater frequency, altar calls had greater impact, and people were affected in a greater way than ever before.  Along with this touch of God came the anointing to preach as never before.  Prior to that time I had taught the Word but never had the powerful proclamation we usually associate with preaching – that all changed in ’93.

I want to present several posts that give you some of the things I’ve learned conducting revival services since that time.  I’ll try not to limit these things to being in charge of services.  Most of these things can be applied to walking in the Spirit and can be useful to every spirit-filled believer.