Saturday, August 22, 2015

The Mighty Man Of Prayer And Faith







Rees Howells: The Mighty Intercessor

By David Littlewood 

 

Rees Howells was a man of little worldly fame, yet through Norman Grubb’s best-selling biography, ‘Rees Howells – Intercessor’, his life story is known to millions. As he came to know the redeeming power of his Lord and Saviour, he faced the implications of an entire surrender, learned to love the unlovely and discovered the key to praying with power.

It was from this position of power that Rees became a channel of revival in Southern Africa, and, on returning to Britain, a mighty spiritual force which many believe changed the course of World War II.

Rees Howells was born the sixth of a family of three girls and eight boys in the mining village of Brynamman, South Wales. His grandparents had been converted in the famous 1859 revival, but Rees himself, although religious, knew nothing of the new birth.

After leaving school at the tender age of twelve, Rees worked in the iron works for ten years before leaving Wales to join his cousin, Evan Lewis, in America. He got a job in a tin mine and began to make very good money. However, he was startled one day when Evan Lewis asked him if he was ‘born again’. Rees was a good churchgoer – in fact, he never missed the prayer meeting – but his cousin’s question flummoxed him. So much so, that he moved to Martin’s Ferry, about 100 miles away.

Suddenly, at the age of 23, Rees was struck down with a near fatal dose of typhoid fever. The nearness of death made him fear for his eternal welfare and, having recovered, he went to live in Connellsville, Pennsylvania, where a converted Jew, Maurice Reuben, was conducting an evangelistic campaign. Reuben’s testimony and preaching broke Howells’ resistance to the gospel, and he unreservedly yielded his life to Christ.

The experience of a living Saviour put a new set of ambitions into Howells, and soon after he left America for his homeland of Wales, arriving home in 1904, the year of the great Welsh revival. The deep sense of the presence of God in the land left a lasting impression on the young convert, who quickly matured and gave himself to discipling the many converts left by the revival.

On his return, Rees went back to live with his parents and working down the mine, but all his spare time was taken up in furthering the revival. However, this convinced him of his own need for greater spiritual power, and when attending the famous Llandrindod Wells convention in 1906, he was again challenged to yield unconditionally the whole of his life to Christ. After no less than five days of seeking God, Rees yielded and immediately received such a powerful infilling of the Holy Spirit that he returned from Llandrindod Wells a new man. However, so fierce had been the inner conflict, that in five days he had lost seven pounds in weight!

From this point, Howells’ life may be seen as a series of experiences and testings through which God took him in order to prepare him as one of the great prayer warriors of this century. His first test came when God challenged him to pray for an alcoholic tramp named Will Battery, whose nights were spent on the warm boilers of the local tin mill. Prayer filled Rees’ heart with God’s love for this poor creature, to the extent that he even spent Christmas Day with Will in the boiler house! Finally Will came to Christ, and was fully rehabilitated back into society.

Rees learned about what he later termed ‘princely giving’ by giving another converted drunk, Jim Stakes, a full two years rent to save Stakes and his family from being evicted. Then the Holy Spirit laid on his heart the neighbouring village of Tairgwaith, which had been completely passed-by in the revival, and had no place of worship. Wickedness abounded here, but Rees’ prayers, coupled with his extraordinary generosity, touched the people’s hearts, and a church was started. Every night for two years, rain or shine, Rees would walk the two miles each way to Tairgwaith to look after his flock and win others for Christ – and that after a hard day’s work down the mine!

One day Rees noticed a group of intoxicated women, and felt a stirring in his heart to pray the ringleader – a woman of terrible reputation – through to salvation by Christmas Day. During this time the Holy Spirit made it clear to him he was to have no contact with her – she was to be won by prayer alone by ‘binding the strong man’ as in Matthew 12:29.

During the weeks of prayer for this woman, God took Rees deeper into the realm of the Spirit and spiritual warfare. As he prayed, he was encouraged to see her getting nearer to God, attending the open air meeting, then the house meeting. Finally, on Christmas Day, she attended church and, in the middle of the meeting, went down on her knees and cried to God for mercy.

A phrase which became part of Rees’ prayer vocabulary was ‘the gained position of intercession’. This he believed occurred when one had by prayer gained the place of power and victory for whatever one was praying for. One particular area of victory God led Rees into was divine healing, and he saw some hopeless cases of sickness were delivered in answer to his fervent prayer.

There is no doubt that Howells’ piety and desire to obey the least prompting of the Holy Spirit, made him look eccentric and even foolish to his peers. For example, his desire to pray while walking the two miles to the mission meant he felt he had to leave his head uncovered, as one would in church. And this at a time when it was unknown for a respectable man to walk out in public without a hat! But Rees defied social convention – to the consternation of the rest of the village.

More rumours started to fly when Howells withdrew from the work of the mission in order to give himself to prayer three hours a night, but people finally decided Rees was but people finally decided Rees was crazy when he took the vow of a Nazarite (Numbers 6:2-6) and went many months without cutting his hair or shaving. However, by the end of his intercession, which he finished off with a fifteen day fast, people had begun to sense the presence of God in his life, and many of the men would touch their hats to him as he passed.

At the end of this intercession, Rees announced that his Uncle Dick, a fellow prayer warrior who had been an invalid for 30 years, would be healed at 5am Pentecost Sunday and walk the three miles to the church. On the Saturday, Dick was as ill as ever – so much so that many people pitied him for being led stray by his nephew. However, Sunday morning Dick rose from his bed perfectly healed and never had another day’s illness until he died some years later.

In 1910, Rees married Elizabeth Jones and, after a period of training at a theological college in Carmarthen, entered the Congregational ministry. However, God dropped a bombshell by calling Rees and Elizabeth to work in Africa, so in 1915 they sailed to work with the South Africa General Mission in Gazaland, close to the border with Portuguese East Africa. Here the Howells experienced a mighty revival – greater even than they had seen in Wales in 1904. And when the directors of the mission asked Rees to visit every one of the 43 mission stations, he claimed a promise that every one of them would see revival – and they did.


After five years of incredible fruitfulness, the Howells returned home in 1920, where the crying need for a Bible College to train young people for the mission field and the ministry was laid upon Rees’ heart. In 1923 during a visit to Mumbles, near Swansea, God pointed out a mansion called ‘Glynderwen’ as the place. Although other interested parties were willing to pay up to £10,000 for the property, God showed Rees he must only bid £6,150 for it. After a series of miracles (and some hair raising moments), the college was opened in 1924.

The college was run on a faith basis – tuition was free and the charge for board kept to a minimum. As Rees and his group gave themselves to prayer, money began to come in and other neighbouring properties were purchased, with a conference hall, a chapel and student hostels being also built, with every penny of the costs being prayed in. Howells had begun the college with only eighteen shillings (90p), but in fourteen years he had prayed for and received £125,000!

At the beginning of 1935, Rees had a new burden to pray for world missions. He shared this with staff and friends and they agreed to intercede for any nation and country, as well a missionaries, as the Lord indicated.

With the rise of Hitler and Mussolini, Rees and his intercessors were called to ‘stand in the gap’ in prayer; as prayer warriors they were to have no more claim on their lives, time or possessions than if they had been drafted into the forces. Particular prayer was made for Ethiopia when Mussolini invaded. Rees experienced a great trial of faith when Addis Ababa fell, but the outcome of their intercession was seen when in later years S I M missionaries returned to Wallamo Province, where they had anxiously left 48 young believers, to find a church of 10,000 Christians.

In the new year of 1937, Howells and his group experienced a visitation of the Spirit and for three weeks lost all sense of time as they were taken up in intercession. This prepared them for the battles ahead, as they interceded for Britain during the dark days of World War 2. Throughout the war Rees and his company – often up to a hundred people – interceded every day from 7pm to midnight. And that after a full day’s work! They were sustained by the power of the Holy Spirit, and only eternity will reveal their part in the conflict for freedom.

The end of the war and the return of the Jews to Palestine in 1948 were a great cause for celebration for Rees and his team. Howells’ burden to the end, however, remained the ‘every creature’ vision, and he continually prayed for an outpouring of the Holy Spirit which would make this possible. Part of the answer to this prayer came when an aspiring young German missionary, Reinhard Bonnke, was trained at the college during the 1950s. Bonnke has since experienced an unprecedented outpouring of the Spirit in Africa. In February 1950, Rees Howells suffered a series of heart attacks and died aged 71. His last whispered words were "Victory! Hallelujah!" His son, Samuel, took over as director of the college, which still operates on the same faith principles as its founder. The Bible College of Wales stands as Rees Howells’ earthly memorial. However, eternity alone will reveal the effect this remarkable intercessor has had on spiritual life in the twentieth century.


Article Source : http://theremnant.com/howells.html 








The Young Iron Man of God



No Reserves. No Retreats. No Regrets.






"Do not put out the Spirit's fire." -- 1 Thessalonians 5:19

In 1904 William Borden graduated from a Chicago high school. As heir to the Borden family fortune, he was already wealthy. For his high school graduation present, his parents gave 16-year-old Borden a trip around the world. As the young man traveled through Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, he felt a growing burden for the world's hurting people. Finally, Bill Borden wrote home about his "desire to be a missionary."1

One friend expressed disbelief that Bill was "throwing himself away as a missionary."

In response, Borden wrote two words in the back of his Bible: "No reserves."

Even though young Borden was wealthy, he arrived on the campus of Yale University in 1905 trying to look like just one more freshman. Very quickly, however, Borden's classmates noticed something unusual about him and it wasn't that he had lots of money. One of them wrote: "He came to college far ahead, spiritually, of any of us. He had already given his heart in full surrender to Christ and had really done it. We who were his classmates learned to lean on him and find in him a strength that was solid as a rock, just because of this settled purpose and consecration."2

During his college years, Bill Borden made an entry in his personal journal that defined what his classmates were seeing in him. That entry said simply: "Say 'no' to self and 'yes' to Jesus every time."3

Borden's first disappointment at Yale came when the university president spoke in a convocation about the students' need of "having a fixed purpose." After that speech, Borden wrote: "He neglected to say what our purpose should be, and where we should get the ability to persevere and the strength to resist temptations."4 Surveying the Yale faculty and much of the student body, Borden lamented what he saw as the end result of an empty, humanistic philosophy: moral weakness and sin-ruined lives.

During his first semester at Yale, Borden started something that would transform campus life. One of his friends described how it began: "It was well on in the first term when Bill and I began to pray together in the morning before breakfast. I cannot say positively whose suggestion it was, but I feel sure it must have originated with Bill. We had been meeting only a short time when a third student joined us and soon after a fourth. The time was spent in prayer after a brief reading of Scripture. Bill's handling of Scripture was helpful. . . . He would read to us from the Bible, show us something that God had promised and then proceed to claim the promise with assurance."5

Borden's small morning prayer group gave birth to a movement that soon spread across the campus. By the end of his first year, 150 freshman were meeting weekly for Bible study and prayer. By the time Bill Borden was a senior, one thousand of Yale's 1,300 students were meeting in such groups.

Borden made it his habit to seek out the most "incorrigible" students and try to bring them to salvation. "In his sophomore year we organized Bible study groups and divided up the class of 300 or more, each man interested taking a certain number, so that all might, if possible, be reached. The names were gone over one by one, and the question asked, 'Who will take this person?' When it came to someone thought to be a hard proposition, there would be an ominous pause. Nobody wanted the responsibility. Then Bill's voice would be heard, 'Put him down to me.'"6

Borden's outreach ministry was not confined to the Yale campus. He cared about widows and orphans and the disabled. He rescued drunks from the streets of New Haven. To try to rehabilitate them, he founded the Yale Hope Mission. One of Bill Borden's friends wrote that he "might often be found in the lower parts of the city at night, on the street, in a cheap lodging house or some restaurant to which he had taken a poor hungry fellow to feed him, seeking to lead men to Christ."7

Borden's missionary call narrowed to the Muslim Kansu people in China. Once he fixed his eyes on that goal, Borden never wavered. He also challenged his classmates to consider missionary service. One of them said of him: "He certainly was one of the strongest characters I have ever known, and he put backbone into the rest of us at college. There was real iron in him, and I always felt he was of the stuff martyrs were made of, and heroic missionaries of more modern times."8

Although he was a millionaire, Bill seemed to "realize always that he must be about his Father's business, and not wasting time in the pursuit of amusement."9 Although Borden refused to join a fraternity, "he did more with his classmates in his senior year than ever before." He presided over the huge student missionary conference held at Yale and served as president of the honor society Phi Beta Kappa.

Upon graduation from Yale, Borden turned down some high-paying job offers. In his Bible, he wrote two more words: "No retreats."

William Borden went on to do graduate work at Princeton Seminary in New Jersey. When he finished his studies at Princeton, he sailed for China. Because he was hoping to work with Muslims, he stopped first in Egypt to study Arabic.

While there, he contracted spinal meningitis. Within a month, 25-year-old William Borden was dead.


When the news of William Whiting Borden's death was cabled back to the U.S., the story was carried by nearly every American newspaper. "A wave of sorrow went round the world . . . Borden not only gave (away) his wealth, but himself, in a way so joyous and natural that it (seemed) a privilege rather than a sacrifice" wrote Mary Taylor in her introduction to his biography.10

Was Borden's untimely death a waste? Not in God's perspective. Prior to his death, Borden had written two more words in his Bible. Underneath the words "No reserves" and "No retreats," he had written: "No regrets."

Those who know the high price of their redemption that Jesus Christ paid for their eternal salvation also knows that a life lived for the One who ransomed them is a life with no regrets. . . . William Borden chose to go with the desire and the will of the One who had ransomed him at his own personal cost and life. How about you?

"A life fully lived out for Jesus is never a wasted life, because in it the true reward starts only the moment one dies, and from that time on wards the dividend for the earthly investment they made continues to comes back without limit for the eternity that is ahead of them." — Abraham Israel

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Portions based on material in Daily Bread, December 31, 1988, and The Yale Standard, Fall 1970 edition.

Chronology / Dates


November 1, 1887 -- birth

1904 -- High school graduation (Chicago)

1905 -- Round-the-world trip

1909 -- Yale graduation

December 17, 1912 -- Sails for Egypt on his way to China

April 9, 1913 -- Death in Egypt

Quotations taken from Borden of Yale, by Mrs. Howard Taylor, Moody Press, Chicago

1 Taylor, Mrs. Howard. Borden of Yale '09. Philadelphia: China Inland Mission, 1926, page 75.

2Ibid., page 98.

3Ibid., page 122.

4Ibid., page 90.

5Ibid., page 97.

6Ibid., page 150.

7Ibid., page 148.

8Ibid., page 149.

9Ibid., page 149.

10Ibid., page ix.


Article Source :
http://home.snu.edu/~hculbert/regret.htm