The Restoration of the Church: A Call to Return to God

 

The church is in a dry spell—a prolonged drought from revival that’s the longest in its history. As the old hymn pleads, “mercy drops round us are falling, but for the showers we plead.” Sure, we’ve seen flickers of revival here and there but nothing has taken root. Many leaders wonder: were those even real revivals? The question lingers because the church today mirrors a troubling pattern, one we’ve seen before in Israel’s story in the Old Testament and echoed in the warnings to the churches of Revelation. Our love for God has grown cold, and our dependence has shifted from Him to ourselves.

 

The Problem: A Familiar Departure

 

What’s gone wrong? Simply put, we’re repeating history. Like Israel of old, we’ve wandered from God’s ideal. Scripture offers a clear lens to see this: God’s nature is to restore what’s broken, and He’s done it time and again. From the Garden of Eden to the Exodus to the Babylonian exile, the pattern is unmistakable — temptation leads to a choice, a choice leads to failure, and failure brings suffering. Yet, that suffering isn’t the end; it’s God’s discipline, born out of love, meant to draw us back.

 

Take Eden: Adam and Eve faced temptation, chose the serpent’s lie over God’s truth, and fell, losing their closeness with Him. But God promised restoration through the Savior who’d crush Satan’s head. In the Exodus, the Hebrews trusted Joseph’s provision over God’s during a famine, only to end up enslaved in Egypt. Their cries led to Moses, a deliverer who brought them to the Promised Land. Later, Judah ignored God’s laws, trusted foreign alliances, and fell to Babylon. Yet, God raised up Cyrus and Nehemiah to restore them. Each time, the departure began with a temptation—to trust something other than God—and a choice to give in.

 

Today’s church isn’t so different. We’ve been tempted to lean on methods and strategies—the legacy of the Church Growth Movement—over the Spirit’s power. We’ve got the motions of godliness but lack its heart. Temptation, choice, failure, suffering—it’s the same old cycle.

 

God’s Discipline and Our Response

 

Here’s where we often miss it: we treat our struggles like karma, a mystical payback for doing “something wrong.” That’s not it. Henry Blackaby nailed it in Fresh Encounter—this is God’s discipline, not punishment. He loves us too much to let us drift. Like a parent correcting a child, He uses hardship to teach us, to turn us back. When Israel cried out in repentance, God moved. He heard from Heaven, forgave, and healed. The same promise holds for us.

 

The Return: Led by One of Our Own

 

Restoration follows a return—a desperate, honest call to God. And history shows it’s often one of their own who leads the way. Jesus, fully human yet divine, restored us to God. Moses, a Hebrew, freed his people from Egypt. Nehemiah, a Jew, rebuilt Jerusalem’s walls. For the church today, that leader is likely you, the pastor. I’ve worked in church revitalization long enough to know two truths: First, revival won’t come from a denomination, a conference, or a celebrity preacher—it starts in the local church, in a pastor’s heart burning for God. Second, it won’t happen without the Spirit’s movement. As G. Campbell Morgan advised, “Put up the sail and wait for the wind to blow.”

 

A Call to Pastors

 

The church’s restoration begins with you. Look for the pattern in your own context—where’s the temptation? What choices have led to drift? Stop relying on formulas and start seeking God’s power. Call out to Him, repent, and wait for His Spirit. The showers of revival are coming, but they start with a heart turned back to Him. You’re not just a bystander—you’re God’s chosen leader for this moment. Raise the sail. The wind is on its way.

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