Friday, October 19, 2012


The Revival Centres

By Barry ChantTaken from his book Heart of Fire.
In 1958, the Christian Revival Crusade (then known as the Commonwealth Revival Crusade) was being led in Melbourne by Lloyd Longfield and in Geelong, Noel Hollins. Longfield was of medium build, with a smooth and pleasant speaking voice, and a persuasive manner. He had been a travelling salesman, a staff sergeant in the A.I.F. for six years during the Second World War and a delicatessen proprietor for three years. His war experience in the Middle East gave him an interest in Bible Prophecy and he was thus an early convert of the C.R.C. in Melbourne, where Bible prophecy was being strongly taught. He had been quickly recognised as a man of great promise, and had been used with some effectiveness in both preaching and healing ministry. In 1952, he had become pastor of the assembly.

Numbers began to grow under his positive preaching. His manner was such that even those who disagreed with him found him to be an interesting - even entertaining - speaker. There seemed to be an underlying sense of the humorous when he spoke - the twinkle in his eye and the inflection of his voice suggesting that there was another side to what he said, which he was not willing to declare openly.

Noel Hollins was a tall young man, well over six feet. His preaching voice was strong and his methods direct. He spoke simply and to the point, and with a seriousness of purpose that reflected an intensity of character. At his conversion, he had abandoned a university course, and devoted his future entirely to the Lord's work. A bachelor for many years, he was regarded as a prime goal by many of the female members! Neither Longfield nor Hollins had any previous experience of Pentecostalism, or of serious Christianity of any kind, for that matter. Their Christian experience began with their conversion; they had never known any committed Christians beyond the Crusade. This fact explains in a small way some of the subsequent events.

From about 1955 onwards, tensions began to develop between assemblies in Melbourne and Geelong and Adelaide. Initially, the rivalry was friendly. Attendance figures were compared, and both Adelaide and Geelong, for example, were running about level with congregations numbering about 300. Geelong opened its own hall in December, 1957 - a converted nissan hut of unusual but attractive design. The next year, 1958, Adelaide purchased its first hall. Longfield meanwhile, had purchased a tent and conducted evangelistic campaigns in Geelong and Brisbane.

Such mutual challenging was healthy. But it also opened the doors for criticism. Longfield visited Adelaide, and was rather distressed by what he regarded as extreme methods of exorcism. He also felt that the South Australian brethren were not firm enough in their under- standing and proclamation of the baptism in the Spirit. So he and Hollins drew up what they claimed was a statement of faith for the Victorian assemblies in which they declared that salvation was the result of repentance and faith, but that if a believer then refused to be baptised either in water or the Spirit, he would forfeit that salvation. Similarly, a breaking of fellowship with the assembly could result in forfeited salvation.
When the rest of the Crusade pastors got together to draw up a constitution, Longfield and Hollins refused to co-operate in such a move - to do so would be to abandon their "liberty" and autonomy as local churches.

Finally, there was some dissension in Melbourne because Longfield gave little scope for his officers to share in the financial management of the work. He believed that as pastor he had the right to make decisions about handling of funds without having to consult others. Although he did appoint a business council he still made independent decisions - decisions which many found unacceptable.

At this stage, the Crusade work in Australia was relatively small. With three dominant personalities such as Longfield, Hollins and Harris, it was inevitable that unless tolerance was practised, clashes would occur. Harris and Adelaide business man Don Barrett journeyed to Victoria to try to resolve things, but found that there was nothing that could be done, and so when in November 1958, the rest of the C.R.C. assemblies drew up a constitution, the two Victorian works disassociated themselves and became the Melbourne Revival Centre, and the Geelong Revival Centre, respectively. Some other assemblies joined with them - mainly ones like Canberra (A.C.T.) and Port Lincoln (S.A.) which had been started as a direct outreach of the Melbourne and Geelong works by the roaming preacher named Len Day - a happy-go-lucky fellow who flew a small plane all over the country and treated all he met as long-lost friends.

Most remained loyal to the original Crusade movement, with small groups in Geelong and Melbourne refusing to follow their pastors' lead, and maintaining affiliation with the Crusade.

Since that time, the doctrinal position of the Revival Centres has become quite clear. Without any compromise they openly declare that baptism in water and in the Holy Spirit are necessary for salvation. Longfield once said. "Jesus is coming again for those who pray in the Spirit, who are sealed by the Spirit." And again, "If they received the Spirit they haven't any life in them and are dead in trespasses and sins".

In a leaflet entitled "What must I do to be saved?" Longfield writes: "If we really believe Him, we obey Him. We believe He is alive and that He has given to us the path of salvation. We accept gladly the pattern of repentance, of water baptism and the promised power of the Holy Spirit. Our obedience indicates that we 'rely' on Him, we 'trust' Him to save us from sin and to fill us with the Holy Spirit. Such believing will bring the power of God into our lives."
The wording of this passage is careful. But the meaning is clear. Without baptism by immersion or the baptism in the Spirit, there is no real believing, and hence, no real salvation. The following quotation makes the matter perfectly plain:

"Any Greek concordance will assure us that to believe (pisteuo) is to 'adhere to,' 'trust' or 'rely on.' In short, to believe embraces placing oneself in the hands of God. To believe the Gospel is to accept the fact that it will be by obeying the commands we are now considering that our salvation will be effected..."
This then is the distinguishing mark between the Revival Centres and most other Pentecostal groups in Australia. Whereas the others teach both baptism in water and the baptism in the Spirit, they still agree that there is only one absolute essential for salvation, and that is trust in Jesus Christ himself alone for righteousness and freedom from sin. The doctrines which separate these groups are important to them, but they have never been made pre-requisites for salvation. Thus, on occasion, almost every Pentecostal church in this country has co-operated with churches of another Pentecostal denomination in some kind of joint venture. In some states, all Pentecostal pastors meet regularly for fellowship together. But the Revival Centres will never be - indeed, can never be - a part of this, for their whole concept of redemption sets them apart.

The Revival Centre doctrine of salvation results in other kinds of exclusivism. Non-Pentecostal churches are fiercely criticised. So Longfield writes:
"What Gospel? A Gospel that will bring people to believe, to be baptised, to speak in tongues, to work miracles? Or another Gospel? A Gospel described in both Old and New Testaments as one of Holy Ghost fire and power, or the insipid apology for a so-called Gospel the professing church has foisted on the unwary today?"

In his preaching, he often challenges the congregation to prove that God is real. What happens in the churches they come from? What evidence do they have that God is alive? In the Revival Crusade there is evidence of the reality of God. People are healed and baptised in the Spirit. Signs indicate God's power.
On one occasion he challenged:

"I meet a lot of people who say they are saved but who have never had a phenomenal experience. The gospel should startle. Tell me why people jump out of the baptistry here like a startled antelope shouting, 'Who electrified the water?'"

Longfield and his fellow-pastors find it necessary also to condemn the Pentecostal churches for compromise. When Pentecostals associate with functions like the Billy Graham Crusades, they are supporting a watered-down form of the Gospel.

Pentecostals, on the other hand, feel that such criticism falls strangely from men who use a hymn-book in which there are more hymns by non-Pentecostals than anyone else! And who use translations of the Bible (the Amplified Bible is popular) which were produced by (un-saved) non-Pentecostals!
A final by-product of the extremist doctrine is a rigid control over church members. Most Pentecostals teach the importance of divinely- called leadership. The offices of pastor, evangelist and teacher are seen as the result of divine calling rather than human choosing or training. Thus, such ministries ought to be respected. The Revival Centres, however, emphasise this more strongly yet. For example,

"So many today are roaming around from one church to another. They believe this to be the 'liberty' of the Lord. It is not. It is a form of lawless independence. This is usually because they are not amenable to any type of oversight or correction..."

This principle is agreed to by most Pentecostals. But it is not normally applied with the same strength. In practice, when people visit a Revival Centre, they are asked where they come from and what their intentions are. If they belong to another Pentecostal church they are told clearly that they should either go back there or move in totally with the Centre. Casual visitors are not sought. Unbelievers who attend are, of course, encouraged to join the group.
On the positive side, this same attitude produces a movement of confident, forthright, fiercely loyal people. There is no room for compromise. You either accept everything that is taught or you leave. Many do, in fact, leave. But hundreds of others stay and fully endorse what is said and done.

The preaching is vigorous and clear. Hearers are left in no doubt of what they must do. There is no middle ground.

Revival Centre meetings are lively and positive. There is a straight- forward hard-hitting quality about them. As may be imagined, there is little sentiment or soft-pedalling. The singing is enthusiastic, the praise fervent, the preaching forthright, and the expectancy high. Some Pentecostal services give the sense of joyful spontaniety or of family fellowship; these qualities can be found in Revival Centres, too, but with them, there is also a sense of militancy. These people are more like an army than a club.

The Melbourne Revival Centre has been frequently in the news. In March, 1966, they paid over $90,000 for a property in Harcourt Street, Auburn. This included one and a half acres of land and a seventeen-roomed house which had formerly been inhabited by the Lord Mayor of Melbourne. Nearby residents feared that the building of a hall on the property would spoil the previously quiet character of the area, and their protests made newspaper headlines both in Victoria and interstate.

Ultimately, permission to build the hall was refused, but the residence was kept as a manse for Pastor Longfield. The assembly purchased the old Rialto Theatre in Kew where crowds of up to 800 have met for special meetings. Normally about 500 attend.

In 1970, the Revival Centres again made the news when the Melbourne Truth launched vigorous attacks against them. The Christian Revival Crusade and other Pentecostals were also included in a series of articles which "exposed" many things that never happened in the first place. There is no evidence that any serious effect resulted from this: Longfield's meetings probably grew. He is the kind of man to revel in any publicity, good or bad.

Hollins' assembly in Geelong eventually broke up. The majority of the congregation ultimately turned against him, and claimed the hall. This congregation applied for re-admittance to the Christian Revival Crusade, which was granted. Hollins began again, and fairly soon- built up another strong assembly at Norlane, a Geelong suburb. In 1972, there was a further disagreement between Hollins and Longfield. At the time of writing, they were out of fellowship with each other.

In 1969, there were 14 Revival Centres in various parts of Australia, six of them in Victoria, the rest mainly in capital cities elsewhere.
Another feature of this ministry has been its radio voice. For years, Longfield has broadcast every Sunday over a number of stations. And on air as in pulpit, he lampoons the churches and proclaims his forthright, uncompromising message.

Each year, a camp is held. The location has varied from year to year according to the availability of camp sites. Recently, no camp site being available, the people simply booked out normal public caravan parks along a Victorian coast. Each family provides its own tent or caravan and attends to its own cooking. Combined rallies are held in the evenings. Up to 1OOO people have attended such events. Evening rallies have been effective in winning converts, who are usually baptised in the sea as soon as possible.

A periodical called the Voice of Revival is published. Although dated, individual issues are devoted to particular themes - Bible Prophecy, the baptism in the Spirit, divine healing. So they remain in stock for people seeking help on these subjects. Few photos appear; articles are often anonymous, or at most, initialled; the magazine is brief, normally of about twelve pages. True to the traditions of the Crusade from which it originated, the Voice of Revival is labelled as "proclaiming the gospel of salvation to the individual, the church and the nation." Thus, the original vision for national revival is still there.
Early in Longfield's ministry, he was campaigning in Geelong. A man came to the service one day who was well-known for his divisionary spirit. He had caused trouble in other places by showing disloyalty among members of various Pentecostal churches. Longfield politely asked him not to come again. But next Sunday, he was again present.

Standing at the door was a new convert named Jack Clay. An ex-sailor, he was muscular and strong. He had just been healed by the power of God from an incurable disease for which medicine had been of no avail. He looked at this man, and began to speak to him. "Didn't Mr, Longfield ask you not to come here again?" Then he grasped the man by the scruff of the neck and the seat of his trousers and bodily lifted him into the air. He continued:

"Mr. Longfield is a gentleman. I'm not. If I see you here again, I'll pick you up, carry you outside and throw you over the fence."

With that, he put the man down. He was never seen at these meetings again!
Jack Clay later became a prominent preacher in the Revival Centres. With time, came also maturity, but nevertheless, this anecdote clearly reveals the enthusiasm and vigour that Longfield's ministry promotes.

Not everyone can agree with him - indeed many are repelled. But none can deny that he knows what he wants and is determined to get it!

Where did the Revival Centres get their 'Gospel'?


by Troy Waller


Introduction
            This paper is an analysis of two of the major tenets of the Revival Centres International statement of faith, ‘What We Believe’ (Longfield, L: 1997).  This analysis will clearly demonstrate the influence of the early National Revival Crusade on these statements of faith, document the evolution of these doctrines and finally how they are presented by the modern Revival Centres International.
            In the early 1940s, a small group of former Assemblies of God pastors and members led by Leo C. Harris, convinced of British Israelism and it’s historicist view of Biblical prophecy, formed the National Revival Crusade.  The Crusade was largely a typical Pentecostal group but emphasised both national and individual revival in that nations of British descent needed to realise their ‘Israelite identity’ whilst individuals needed to believe in Jesus for personal salvation.  The Crusade also emphasised the Pentecostal experience of being baptised in the Holy Spirit, speaking in tongues and the complete autonomy of local congregations, purposefully distancing themselves from centralised church government structures. (Cooper: 27, 36).  By 1948 two young men, Lloyd Longfield and Noel Hollins joined the Crusade, becoming convinced of the British Israel, salvation and Pentecostal messages presented by the Crusade (Cooper: 63).  Although neither Longfield or Hollins had any formal ministerial or theological training, their zeal and passion for pastoral work did not go unnoticed and both were inducted into the ministry within the Crusade by 1951 (Cooper: 72, 73).
            The history of the Crusade is tumultuous to say the least.  One early split in 1952 forced them to change their name from the ‘National Revival Crusade’ to the ‘Commonwealth Revival Crusade’ (Cooper: 80).  The Crusade eventually changed its name to the ‘Christian Revival Crusade’ and is now Australia’s third largest Pentecostal denomination after the Assemblies of God and Christian Outreach Centres (Humphreys: 187, 190, 191).  Prior to the final name change another split took place in 1958, this time directed by Longfield and Hollins.  This split led to the formation of the ‘Revival Centres’ (Cooper: 97).  Continuing the tradition of schism, Longfield and Hollins split from one another in 1972 and those assemblies that remained with Longfield came to be known as the ‘Revival Centres of Australia’ and later the ‘Revival Centres International.’  Numerous groups have since split from Longfield.
            Perhaps the Revival Centre's greatest departure from historical Christianity is their doctrine that one must be baptised in water by full immersion and speak in tongues before one can claim to be a Christian.  This teaching, similar to that of the United Pentecostal Church, has caused the Revival Centres International to separate themselves from all other mainline, evangelical and Pentecostal churches and label all others apostate. 

We Believe the Gospel of His, death, resurrection, and the directive to repent, be baptised and receive the Holy Spirit.
The Crusade Position 
            As the founder of the Commonwealth Revival Crusade, Leo C. Harris, was an ordained Assemblies of God minister prior to forming the National Revival Crusade (Cooper: 15), he always adhered to a traditional Protestant salvation teaching.  The  Crusade always preached and taught the traditional Protestant doctrine of ‘salvation by faith alone’ (Chant: 185) which was that salvation comes to an individual at the point of true belief and reliance upon Jesus Christ (Harris: L,: 1957).  Both Lloyd Longfield and Noel Hollins were definitely taught, and adhered to, this doctrine of salvation when they were converted into the Crusade in the late 1940s (Cooper: 63). 
            The dominant view on water baptism within the Crusade was typically Pentecostal in that it was a symbolic step of obedience that, somehow identifying the convert with Christ’s death and resurrection, but played no direct part in initial conversion.  Whilst still members of the CRC, both Lloyd Longfield and Noel Hollins seemed to advocate this view of water baptism.  Longfield wrote, ‘Water baptism carries the beautiful symbolism of our burial with Christ’ (Longfield, L: 1953) and Noel Hollins asserted that, ‘water baptism is an outward confession of the stand you have taken in believing and receiving the Lord’ (Hollins, N: 1954). 
            According to Crusade teaching, the Baptism in the Holy Spirit was given for the equipping of the believer with power for Christian service and witness (Harris, L: 1956).  Like water baptism, this was an important step of one’s Christian walk but played no part in initial conversion (Harris, L: 1956).  The Crusade, like most other Pentecostal groups, taught that the initial evidence of the Holy Spirit baptism was speaking in tongues (National Revival Crusade: 1952).  If one did not speak in tongues, then one could conclude they had not been baptised or filled with the Holy Spirit and thus should seek to be.

Evolution of a Doctrine
            Just prior to the separation from the Crusade, a progressive change began to take place amongst those who were later to be recognised as the key leaders of the Revival Centres.  Barry Chant, Crusade pastor and author, asserts that prior to the split in 1958, Longfield told Leo Harris that Harris was not firm enough with his emphasis on the baptism in the Holy Spirit (Chant:  207).  Chant also asserts that the leaders of the soon to be formed Revival Centres began to advocate that although one came to salvation by faith and repentance, if one refused water baptism or a speaking in tongues experience then that person ‘fell away’ and their initial salvation was forfeit (Chant: 207).  
            This evolved a step further to where Revivalists taught that if one came to ‘saving faith’ then that person would be compelled by the Lord to go on to be baptised in water and filled with the Holy Ghost (Hollins, K: 1994).  Revivalists advocated that if someone refused to be baptised in water or refused to seek to speak in tongues then this proved that they had never possessed ‘saving faith’ at all.  Only those who believed in Christ and then followed him obediently by going on to water baptism and receiving the Holy Spirit were truly saved at initial ‘belief’.  This was based on the Revivalist  interpretation of John 10:27, ‘My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me’ (Hollins, K: 1994).  Nonetheless, when the Revival Centres split from the Crusade in 1958 they continued to take an identical position on initial conversion as they had in the Crusade.  After the split, frequent articles appeared in the Voice of Revivalmagazine affirming this clear distinction between salvation, water baptism and receiving the Holy Spirit.
‘Testimonies will be published of individuals who have been saved, baptised and filled with the Holy Spirit’ (Longfield, L: 1959).
‘...you can have eternal life.  You are required to do one thing.  Believe this with all your heart.  It is the only way to safety.  It is God’s plan of salvation’ (emphasis his) (Hollins, K: 1959).
‘This is  the Gospel, this is Christianity, this is salvation, the creation of a new man within us by the power of the Spirit of Christ when we repent and sincerely receive Christ’ (Hollins, N: 1959).
‘That the new converts had received Christ at Samaria is made obvious in the record of Philip’s evangelical revival (Acts 8:5-12), but they had not immediately received the Holy Ghost with the accompanying power is made equally clear in verses 14-19. So, then, we have evidence that one can be converted and even baptised without having received the Holy Ghost.’ (Longfield, L: 1961c)  

Acts 2:38
            By 1963 the Revival Centre position became that one must repent, be baptised and receive the Holy Spirit, speaking in tongues before initial conversion takes place.  The proof text for their new ‘gospel message’ was Acts 2:38.
‘Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptised every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.’
According to the Revival Centre interpretation of Acts 2:38, the first step required is to repent of all sin, especially disobedience to God’s ways (Longfield, L: What Must I do...).  True repentance, says Longfield, leads one on to the second step, water baptism (Longfield, L: What Must I do...).  The Revival Centres have always believed that water baptism can only be by full immersion.  They argue that as the very word ‘baptise’ comes from the Greek word, ‘baptizo’ meaning to ‘immerse’, and is only for those old enough to confess a faith in Christ (Longfield, L: Water Baptism...).  All other forms of baptism such as infant baptism or sprinkling is ineffectual and unnecessary (Longfield, L: Water Baptism...).  The third and final step is to be baptised or filled with the Holy Spirit and speak in tongues (Longfield, L: What Must I do...).  Once you have accomplished all these steps then salvation is initiated and you become a Christian. 
            Obviously the Revival Centres now have quite a distinct ‘gospel’ from their original message and other Pentecostals.  Revivalists claim that their message is the true gospel preached by the first century church and other groups have been deceived by centuries of apostasy via the Roman Catholic Church (Revival Centres International: 1991) or Martin Luther’s Protestant doctrine of justification by faith alone (Longfield L: Salvation and the Holy Spirit).  Revivalists also believe that to maintain one’s salvation one must remain in a fellowship where the ‘truth’ is faithfully preached (Longfield L: Salvation and the Holy Spirit).  The Revival Centres never claim to be the only true church but offer their members no alternative groups and thus imply that one must remain within their fellowship or one’s salvation is forfeit.

‘We Believe we are baptised into the Body of Christ (the Church) through the Holy Spirit, with the Bible evidence of speaking in tongues.’
            Whilst the Revival Centres originally drew a clear distinction between one’s initial conversion and a subsequent baptism in the Holy Spirit, it would be erroneous to assume they ever truly held a traditional Pentecostal view.   Typical Pentecostal doctrine states that when one comes to faith, that person is ‘born again’ (John 3:3, 16), immersed or brought into the church by the Holy Spirit (1 Cor 12:13) and the Holy Spirit takes up residence in the believer’s heart (John 20:21; Romans 8:9).  Pentecostals also assert that the believer then goes on to receive the baptism in the Holy Spirit wherein they are ‘filled’ with the Holy Spirit as an equipping for service (Acts 1:9; 2:4).  However, Revivalists originally believed that although one was ‘born again’ at belief and then brought into the Body of Christ by the Spirit (Revival Centres: 1963), the Spirit did not indwell or take up residence in the believer (Hollins, N: 1959).    When one was baptised in the Holy Spirit, the Spirit equipped the believer for service but more importantly took up residence in the believer’s heart (Longfield, L: 1959; 1961c).  From this distinct initial position, Revivalist leaders began to see Scriptures that seemed to teach that one must have the Holy Spirit residing in one’s heart to be ‘saved’.  Perhaps the most blatant of these was Romans 8:9, ‘Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.’   As their initial position asserted that speaking in tongues was the initial evidence of the Baptism in the Spirit and this was when the Spirit took up residence, Revivalist leaders eventually came to the conclusion that speaking in tongues must be the evidence of one’s salvation (Hollins, K: 1994).  They also concluded that the Pentecostal baptism in the Spirit must be synonymous with the baptism into the church mentioned in 1 Cor 12:13 (Revival Centres International: 1995).

Baptismal Regeneration
            Revivalists have always believed that the Holy Spirit, not water baptism, brings believers into the church (Revival Centres: 1963; Longfield, L: 1972).  In the early 1960s, when the Revival Centres began to include water baptism as part of their salvation formula, they began to re-evaluate the doctrine all together.  Evidences of varying views on water baptism are present right throughout Revivalist literature.  A form of baptismal regeneration was, and still is, held by many Revivalists.  One Revivalist wrote of the ‘reality of water baptism with its associated miraculous regeneration’ and that the ‘idea of water baptism in Scripture was that sin might be remitted and the candidate thus cleansed to receive the Holy Ghost’ (Revival Centres: 1961).  Through water baptism, wrote Longfield, ‘you pass from death into life’ and it is ‘a burial service, during which time  the “old  Adamic self” is buried in a voluntary act of the confessed sinner’ (Longfield, L:Water Baptism...).  Water baptism, wrote other Revivalists, ‘is able to separate us from our old life’ (E.J.F.: 1962) and ‘is for “remission of sin”...an integral step in Bible salvation (I Peter 3:21)’ (Revival Centres: 1962), and that a,
‘repentance which refuses water baptism is unknown in the Bible...True repentance must lead a person to the waters of baptism.  Thus we see the saving importance of a believer’s baptism’ (Hollins, N: 1962). 
Longfield made the necessity of water baptism clear in 1974 when he wrote,
We are taught so specifically that God is particular, and demands our obedience.  Jesus did say “Except a man be born (brought forth) of water and of the Spirit he CANNOT see or enter the kingdom of God,” (John 3.)  You should be baptised to obtain the promised result. (VOR: 1974:1: p2)
However, whilst noting the importance of water baptism as part of their salvation formula, Revivalists advocated that water baptism was a ‘means to an end’ which, by remitting sin, prepared one to receive the Baptism in the Holy Spirit, speaking in tongues (Longfield, L: 1972) and thus a completed conversion experience. 
            It appears that by 1979, Lloyd Longfield became aware of the problems that his earlier view of water baptism presented to the teaching that one must be baptised in the Holy Spirit to be saved.  If water baptism somehow remitted sin then why would one need to be baptised in the Holy Spirit?  Doesn’t the remission of sin constitute salvation?  In 1979 an article appeared in the Voice of Revival which read,
‘Peter...commanded the onlookers...“Repent and be baptised every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ” and then added “FOR THE REMISSION OF SINS and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy ghost”. (Acts 2:38).  The remission here was not of water but by the Spirit that would follow this prescribed act of obedience.   ...It is NOT water baptism that remits sin and brings one the “new birth” into the Church but rather HOLY SPIRIT BAPTISM’ (emphasis theirs) (Revival Centres of Australia: 1979).
This different slightly different view of water baptism was affirmed and expanded upon in a 1989 edition ofVoice of Revival.  
‘We are not baptised into the body of Christ (the Church) but on the contrary we are baptised into his death.  It is the deliverance from sin and death by the Holy Spirit baptism that confirms the transaction that places the repentant candidate into the specified new relationship with God.   ...Remission from sin is not a result of water baptism but occurs as the candidate is filled with the Holy Spirit as the result of a repentant, obedient attitude to the word of God’ (Revival Centres International: 1989).
Former Revival Centre pastor, Fred Needham claims that in December, 1990, Longfield issued an official statement requiring leaders to stop using phrases like ‘Come and have your sins washed away in the waters of baptism’ (Needham: 1991: 1).  Needham claims that in this statement Longfield wrote,
‘This point is of paramount importance to the RCI as our beliefs are that it is the Holy ghost baptism that cleanses and that the death to the old is essentially qualified and identified by the receiving of the new. (Holy Spirit).’ (cited in Needham: 1991: 1)
Needham also claimed upon discussing this  issue, Longfield,
‘became adamant that a person is saved when they receive the Holy Spirit WITHOUT WATER BAPTISM.  If they refuse water baptism it is then a “backslide”  He said many times that if people received the Spirit first and we told them their salvation was not complete, we were saying their experience was “meaningless”. (Needham: 1991: 2)
This brings the official Revival Centres International position on water baptism closer to the original Crusade position but places a much greater emphasis on the baptism in the Holy Spirit and speaking in tongues as necessary for entry into the ‘body of Christ’.

Conclusion
            It is certainly clear that the Crusade had an enormous impact on the key beliefs of the Revival Centres International.  It is also clear that although the Revival centres have utilised these original Crusade teachings as a basis, their modern doctrines bear little resemblance to those of the Crusade.  Their emphasis on the necessity of baptism in water by full immersion and speaking in tongues has also given them a distinct position in Australian Pentecostalism.  Whilst labelling all other groups as apostate, the Revival Centres have indirectly labelled themselves as possessing the only acceptable Christian teaching.

Bibliography
Chant, Barry (1984), Heart of Fire: The Story of Australian Pentecostalism, Unley Park: The House of Tabor.

Cooper, Dudley (1995), Flames of Revival: The Continuing Story of the Christian Revival Crusade, Endeavour Hills: CRC National Executive.

Durrant, J.H. (1959), ‘The Bible Exposes Fallacies...’, Voice of Revival, 1, 9,  p 4. 

Durrant, J.H. (n.d.), Bible Numerics, Melbourne: Revival Centres International.

E.J.F. (1962), ‘God’s Waters of Separation...’, Voice of Revival 4, 6, p 2.

E.S.W. (1959), ‘The Precious Blood of Christ’, Voice of Revival 1, 2, p 1.

Geelong Revival Centre (n.d.), The Great Pyramid: God’s Witness in Stone, Norlane: Geelong Revival Centre.

Harris, L (1956), ‘The Gift of the Holy Spirit: Distinct From Salvation. Distinct From Water Baptism.’ The Revivalist, 166, p 8. 

Harris, L (1957) ‘How to Believe and Be Saved: A Message that will Settle Your Doubts’, The Revivalist, 172, p 11. 

Hollins, Kevin (1959), ‘The Bible Meaning of “Safety”’, Voice of Revival 1, 1, p 4.

Hollins, Kevin (1994), recorded personal interview, 15th July.

Hollins, Noel (1954), ‘New Testament Teaching on Water Baptism’, The Commonwealth Revivalist, 140, p 21.

Hollins, Noel (1959), ‘There Shall Be No More Death...’, Voice of Revival 1, 2, p 4.

Hollins, Noel (1962), ‘Facts About Water Baptism...’, Voice of Revival 4, 5, p 2.

Humphreys, Robert & Roland Ward (1995), Religious Bodies in Australia: A Comprehensive Guide, Melbourne: New Melbourne Press.

Longfield, E.J. (1975), ‘You Can Depend on the Bible’, Voice of Revival 17, 2, p 10.

Longfield, Lloyd (n.d), Salvation and the Holy Spirit, Melbourne: Revival Centres International.  

Longfield, Lloyd (n.d.), Water Baptism - A Commandment, An Act of Obedience, And a Blessing...,Melbourne Revival Centre. 

Longfield, Lloyd (n.d.), What Must I do To Be Saved?, Melbourne: Revival Centres of Australia. 

Longfield, Lloyd (1953), ‘ Should Every Believer Be Baptised?’, The National Revivalist, 129, p 17.

Longfield, Lloyd (1959), ‘Editorial: The Objective of this Journal...’, Voice of Revival 1, 1, p 1.

Longfield, Lloyd (1961a), ‘God’s Word Withstands Attacks by the Philosophers and Traditions’, Voice of Revival 3, 5, p 1.

Longfield, Lloyd (1961b), ‘The Magnified Word of God’, Voice of Revival 3, 9, p 6.

Longfield, Lloyd (1961c), ‘Do All Speak With Tongues..?’, Voice of Revival 3, 6, p 7.  

Longfield, Lloyd (1963), ‘The Pope Promotes Bible Reading - With Reservations’, Voice of Revival, 5, 2, p 1. 

Longfield, Lloyd (1972), ‘Editorial: The Musts and the Meaning of “Water Baptism”’, Voice of Revival, 14, 8, pp 2, 3. 

Longfield, Lloyd (1991), ‘The War on Doctrine’, Voice of Revival 32, 1, p 10.

Longfield, Lloyd (1994), recorded personal interview, 1st September.

Longfield, Lloyd (1995), recorded public sermon, 19th January.

Longfield, Lloyd (1997), ‘What We Believe’, Voice of Revival 38, 2, p 5.

National Revival Crusade (1952) The National Revivalist, 115, pp 10, 11). 

Needham, F. (1991), Open letter to all pastors of the Revival Centres, dated 9th December, p 7.

Revival Centres (1959a), ‘Articles of Faith’, Voice of Revival 1, 1, p 1. 

Revival Centres (1959b), ‘Deity or Devil-Which Was He?’, Voice of Revival 1, 7, p 8.

Revival Centres (1961), ‘Water Baptism by Immersion...’, Voice of Revival 3, 5, p 2.

Revival Centres (1962), ‘Baptism - Legal or Biblical?’, Voice of Revival 4, 10, p 4.

Revival Centres (1963), ‘The Church, the Spirit - and Unity’, Voice of Revival 5, 11, p 6.

Revival Centres (1972), ‘King James the First and the Bible’ Voice of Revival 14, 2, pp 4, 5.

Revival Centres (1973), ‘Articles of Faith’, Voice of Revival 15, 11, p 3.

Revival Centres (1974), ‘What We Believe’, Voice of Revival 16, 1, p 15.

Revival Centres International (1989), ‘Water Baptism’, Voice of Revival 30, 1, p 5.

Revival Centres International (1991), ‘The History of the Christian Church’, Voice of Revival 32, 2, pp 6, 7.

Revival Centres International (1995), ‘What We Believe’, Voice of Revival 35, 2, pp 10, 11.

Revival Centres International (1997), ‘Jesus, King of Israel’, Voice of Revival 38, 1, p 9.

Revival Centres of Australia (1979), ‘Water Baptism. Means to an End’, Revival 79, 2, 1, p 11.

What is a Revival Church?

Typically, the Revival churches mentioned on this forum include all branches of the Revival 'family tree', although the various churches of the 'tree' do not recognise or talk to each other. They include 'The Revival Fellowship, The Revival Centres International, the Geelong Revival Centre, The Christian Assemblies International, and the many offshoots that carry the 'Revival' doctrine on with them.

In the 1940s ex-AOG pastors led by Leo C. Harris, were convinced of the British 'Israel theory' and formed the National Revival Crusade. They believed modern nations of British decent should realise their 'Israelite identity'. They also believed that the belief in Jesus, alongside with the 'Holy Spirit' experience of 'speaking in tongues' (ecstatic speech - glossolalia) was essential to be 'Christian' and a member of 'the' church. Baptism by full immersion into water was also mandatory.

Noel Hollins and Lloyd Longfield (neither trained in theology or ministry) rose through the ranks as the church evolved into the 'Revival Centres of Australia'. They believe themselves to be the only 'true' church and all others are 'apostate'.


Being a Revivalist

In the main, Revival Churches share the following beliefs with slight variations between them:

Salvation rules

- All members must exercise free vocalisation (speaking in tongues), a new 'language' of random morphemes that only God understands.
- All members must read a creed of beliefs before being fully immersed into a 'baptismal tank'.
- Revivalists believe that once someone is saved, they are always saved, but if Jesus returns and finds them 'slacking', they might not 'make it'.

Assembly rules and doctrines

- Members must only marry other church members
- Members are not allowed to read the material of other churches
- Members discovered to have had sex outside of marriage are ex-communicated, or banned for six months, or made to marry.
- Divorce is unacceptable under any condition
- Women are not allowed to deliver talks (sermons)
- Members are not allowed to drink alcohol of any sort.
- 10%, at least, of members' incomes are encouraged to be donated weekly.
- Members can be excommunicated for varying amounts of time for breaking various rules.
- The shunning of ex-members is encouraged.
- Easter and Christmas are not to be celebrated with any religious connection.

Revival Centre meetings

- Generally meetings are held Wednesday and twice Sunday, house-meetings on Friday, and all are compulsory.
- Meetings start with a half hour of religious choruses (short ditties) finishing with a hymn. Then there are 2 or 3 testimonies, and a 45 minute talk.
- The second half of the meeting contains the 
eating and drinking of the 'communal' body and blood of Christ, after another 'talk'.
- Youth group on Saturday nights - compulsory.
- Regular 'fasting' - Members go without eating for up to 3 days culminating with a 5 hour meeting of sermons and tongue speaking sessions.


Other Revival beliefs

- British Israelism - Europeans are believed to be descendants of the 'lost ten tribes of Israel'.
- Bible Numerics - the mathematics of bible words to prove their doctrine and the bible.- The very 'soon' destruction of the earth when Jesus returns to set up his new kingdom.
- The Great Pyramid is a prophetic device foretelling the soon return of Jesus.

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