American actor and musician (1950–2017)
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Looking for Revival 1 Kings 22:1-2, 10-13; 23:25 LORD, I have heard of your fame; I stand in awe of your deeds, LORD. Revive them in our day, in our time, make them known; in wrath remember mercy. - Habakkuk 3:2, NIV Everyone likes 2 Chronicles 7:14 – “If my people who are called by my name…” – because it promises what we deeply crave: revival. But revival isn't just emotional fire. It's not hype. It's not a nostalgia trip back to better days. Revival is when God invades the ruins of his people's sin with his mercy, his Word, and his Spirit — and makes us new again. We're walking through the lives of three kings — Hezekiah, Jehoshaphat, and today, Josiah — who each experienced this kind of God-driven revival. These were moments when God turned the lights back on, not because the people earned it, but because he remembered mercy. In the generation after Solomon, the country split in half, north and south, and the northern kingdom of Israel moved into stark idolatry under their rebel King Jeroboam. He built an alternative Temple for idolatrous worship, set up an alternative priesthood, and listened to false prophets. Right in the middle of that, God sent a true but unnamed prophet to Israel to announce that centuries later, he would raise up a king who would put the finishing touches on the demolition of this idolatry and renew the covenant between God and his people. The prophet said his name would be Josiah. That's the King we are looking at today. He was the last great reformer before Judah collapsed. His story isn't just inspiring — it's prophetic. His name was called out centuries before his birth, a rare mark of divine intention. God raised him up for this moment: to tear down false worship, to rediscover the Word, and to renew the covenant — a picture of how God revives his people. 1 Kings 13:1-2 “By the word of the LORD a man of God came from Judah to Bethel, as Jeroboam was standing by the altar to make an offering. 2 By the word of the LORD he cried out against the altar: “Altar, altar! This is what the LORD says: ‘A son named Josiah will be born to the house of David…That same day the man of God gave a sign: “This is the sign the LORD has declared: The altar will be split apart and the ashes on it will be poured out.” NIV Let's look at the three movements in Josiah's story: 1. Discovering the Book 2. Repenting from Sin 3. Renewing the Covenant 2 Chronicles 7:14 is a beautiful promise from God made to Solomon when he dedicated the newly built Temple in Jerusalem. It wasn't just beautiful - it was essential. God's people would frequently stray from their faith and forsake the Lord. Yet God was also merciful, granting revival, reformation, and rescue from their enemies to his people time and time again. In the text before us today, we see the fulfillment of God's promise as King Josiah comes to the throne as an eight-year-old boy, near the end of Judah's national life, leading a country that has abandoned God, even though God never abandoned it. I. Discovering the Book - 2 Kings 22:10-13 At age 26, Josiah's workers are cleaning out the Temple when they find something that should never have been lost — the Book of the Law. God's Word had been buried. Forgotten. Tossed aside. But once it was read aloud, everything changed. The spark of revival always starts with rediscovering God's Word. The Bible isn't magic, but when God's people stop ignoring it and start listening to it — deeply, personally, humbly — revival becomes possible. The Word cuts. It convicts. It calls. You can't have a revival without the Book. If the Word has gathered dust in your life — if it's been shoved in a drawer behind the hustle and noise — there's no revival without opening it again. II. Repenting from Sin - 2 Kings 22:11-13 Josiah's response is immediate and raw. He tears his clothes — a public act of grief and repentance. He realizes that God's wrath is hanging over them, not because God is unjust, but because the people have rebelled. And Josiah doesn't just repent personally. He leads the entire nation in repentance. He cleanses the land of idols, smashing them to dust. He tears down altars built for false gods. He doesn't manage sin — he destroys it. Real revival always comes with repentance. That means naming our sin, turning from it, and refusing to make peace with what God has condemned. Is there something in your life that needs to be smashed, not managed? Revival isn't just singing louder — it's living differently. III. Renewing the Covenant - 2 Kings 23:1-3, 21-22 Josiah calls the people together and publicly renews the covenant — their sacred agreement with God. He restores worship, reinstitutes the Passover, and re-centers the nation on Yahweh. This wasn't just a ceremonial act — it was national restoration. Revival isn't just about cleaning house; it's about reclaiming God's promises and re-aligning our lives under his rule. God made a covenant with his people. Even when they broke it, he didn't walk away. Josiah leads them back into it. But here's where the story takes a turn. As beautiful as Josiah's revival was, it didn't last. After his death, Judah fell back into sin. Within a few years, Babylon invaded, the Temple was destroyed, and the people were exiled. Even the best king couldn't stop judgment from coming. Josiah was a good king, a faithful king — but he wasn't the King. The King of the New Covenant Centuries later, another young man from the line of David would rise, who was also foretold by the prophets — not to repair a broken temple, but to become the Temple. Not to renew the old covenant, but to establish a new one in his blood. Jesus is the greater Josiah. Where Josiah rediscovered the Book, Jesus is the Word made flesh. Where Josiah tore his clothes in grief, Jesus was torn for us. Where Josiah renewed the covenant with sacrifice, Jesus became the sacrifice that secures the covenant forever. Josiah brought revival for a moment. Jesus brings renewal for eternity. Through his death and resurrection, Jesus offers a better covenant, sealed by his blood, written on our hearts by the Spirit, not just in a scroll or temple. He doesn't just clean the outside — he gives us new hearts, making us the temple. “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” (2 Corinthians 5:17) Conclusion: Looking for Revival Habakkuk's prayer is ours: “Repeat your deeds in our day, Lord… in wrath remember mercy.” We don't need to manufacture revival — we need to seek the King who brings it. Let's follow Josiah's example: ● Return to the Word. ● Repent from sin. ● Renew our covenant commitment to Jesus. Let's NOT put our hope in a political figure, not in emotional highs, not in religious nostalgia — let's put our hope in the King of the New Covenant, Jesus Christ, who revives the dead, restores the broken, and renews all things. Response Questions: ● Where has God's Word been lost in your life? ● What sins are you managing instead of repenting from? ● Are you living under the old way, or under the new covenant with Jesus? Let's pray for revival — not just around us, but in us — through Christ our King.
Debsey Wykes was in Dolly Mixture, one of the very few all-girl groups in post-punk London, a time when bands with charisma won the battle for attention and you promoted singles on the back of a truck. Her memoir Teenage Daydream perfectly captures a slice of late ‘70s life, the thrill of playing the pub circuit and trying to storm Radio One. Along with … … the agony of re-reading teenage diaries … being supported by U2 then watching their “annoying” ascent … Girls With Electric Guitars and why rock hacks couldn't take them … forming bands for self-expression: “you reach that moment when all you want to do is scream!” … “when Jean-Jacques Burnel rests his boot on your head you don't wash your hair for a week” … early adventures with Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, David Cassidy and Bowie: “Cassidy was normal, Bowie was weird” … diary entries: “the lead singer of the Only Ones has fantastic legs and glittery plimsolls” … “Sugary Sweets Cause Youth Decay!”: the NME's withering interview … the satin-and-silk allure of Stevie Nicks … violence at ‘70s gigs: “we were locked in the dressing-room with the sirens going off” … “a cross between the Slits and the Nolans”: John Peel's producer's loathing for Dolly Mixture … the vicious rivalry between ‘70s girl singers … letters from her old boss and headmaster after she appeared on Top Of The Pops Order ‘Teenage Daydream: We Are The Girls Who Play In A Band' here: https://linktr.ee/new.modern?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=008bc73f-2400-4a67-81df-04fa9758dc06Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Debsey Wykes was in Dolly Mixture, one of the very few all-girl groups in post-punk London, a time when bands with charisma won the battle for attention and you promoted singles on the back of a truck. Her memoir Teenage Daydream perfectly captures a slice of late ‘70s life, the thrill of playing the pub circuit and trying to storm Radio One. Along with … … the agony of re-reading teenage diaries … being supported by U2 then watching their “annoying” ascent … Girls With Electric Guitars and why rock hacks couldn't take them … forming bands for self-expression: “you reach that moment when all you want to do is scream!” … “when Jean-Jacques Burnel rests his boot on your head you don't wash your hair for a week” … early adventures with Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, David Cassidy and Bowie: “Cassidy was normal, Bowie was weird” … diary entries: “the lead singer of the Only Ones has fantastic legs and glittery plimsolls” … “Sugary Sweets Cause Youth Decay!”: the NME's withering interview … the satin-and-silk allure of Stevie Nicks … violence at ‘70s gigs: “we were locked in the dressing-room with the sirens going off” … “a cross between the Slits and the Nolans”: John Peel's producer's loathing for Dolly Mixture … the vicious rivalry between ‘70s girl singers … letters from her old boss and headmaster after she appeared on Top Of The Pops Order ‘Teenage Daydream: We Are The Girls Who Play In A Band' here: https://linktr.ee/new.modern?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=008bc73f-2400-4a67-81df-04fa9758dc06Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Debsey Wykes was in Dolly Mixture, one of the very few all-girl groups in post-punk London, a time when bands with charisma won the battle for attention and you promoted singles on the back of a truck. Her memoir Teenage Daydream perfectly captures a slice of late ‘70s life, the thrill of playing the pub circuit and trying to storm Radio One. Along with … … the agony of re-reading teenage diaries … being supported by U2 then watching their “annoying” ascent … Girls With Electric Guitars and why rock hacks couldn't take them … forming bands for self-expression: “you reach that moment when all you want to do is scream!” … “when Jean-Jacques Burnel rests his boot on your head you don't wash your hair for a week” … early adventures with Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, David Cassidy and Bowie: “Cassidy was normal, Bowie was weird” … diary entries: “the lead singer of the Only Ones has fantastic legs and glittery plimsolls” … “Sugary Sweets Cause Youth Decay!”: the NME's withering interview … the satin-and-silk allure of Stevie Nicks … violence at ‘70s gigs: “we were locked in the dressing-room with the sirens going off” … “a cross between the Slits and the Nolans”: John Peel's producer's loathing for Dolly Mixture … the vicious rivalry between ‘70s girl singers … letters from her old boss and headmaster after she appeared on Top Of The Pops Order ‘Teenage Daydream: We Are The Girls Who Play In A Band' here: https://linktr.ee/new.modern?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=008bc73f-2400-4a67-81df-04fa9758dc06Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Send us a textGet ready for a blast from the past with the Back in Time Brothers, DJ Paulie and Brother Lou, on URL radio! This episode is packed with "Fun Songs of the 70s" and takes you on a nostalgic journey through the decade of groovy vibes.Tune in to discover:• Groovy Tunes & Their Stories: ◦ Dive into iconic tracks like Paper Lace's "The Night Chicago Died," a UK band's US #1 hit from 1974, known for its historical inaccuracies that even ticked off Mayor Richard Daley. ◦ Get down with Carl Douglas's "Kung Fu Fighting," a song inspired by kids fake-fighting at an arcade that surprisingly started as a B-side before becoming a #1 hit. ◦ Feel the "Uga Chaka" with Blue Swede's "Hooked on a Feeling," a #1 track in 1974 that added its signature vocal hook to BJ Thomas's original. ◦ Get funky with Wild Cherry's "Play That Funky Music," a song inspired by the Ohio Players' baseline, and hear about its famous Vanilla Ice cover controversy. ◦ Spell it out with The Bay City Rollers' "Saturday Night," a Scottish boy band's #1 hit that even inspired The Ramones. ◦ Explore the "hibity jibity" theme with songs like Starland Vocal Band's "Afternoon Delight" (a two-time Grammy winner from John Denver's former backup singers), Sammy Johns' "Chevy Van" (flipping the script on seduction), and The Raspberries' "Go All the Way" (featuring Eric Carmen and another #5 hit encouraging completion). ◦ Cruise along with War's "Low Rider," a song celebrating Latino culture and hydraulic cars, and Sniff 'n' the Tears' "Driver's Seat," a breakup song with a driving feel. ◦ Relive classic TV moments with Davy Jones' "Girl" from the iconic Brady Bunch episode and The Partridge Family's "I Think I Love You," a #1 hit that famously featured only David Cassidy and Shirley Jones on vocals, backed by the legendary Wrecking Crew.• Hilarious "Busted" Criminal Stories: Hear about dimwitted schemes including a bank robber trying to withdraw money, a naked job applicant at a welding shop, a thief trapped in a locked car, and a blackjack winner with outstanding warrants.• Random 70s Facts: Discover when the first Earth Day was celebrated, the invention of the computer mouse, 1970s household income and car prices, the premiere of Monday Night Football and All My Children, and the surprising word that won the 1970 National Spelling Bee: "Croissant".• Iconic 70s Fads: Reminisce about popular drinks like the Tom Collins and Pina Colada, physical fads like 8-track tapes, cork pop guns, Daisy Dukes, dashboard hula girls, Pet Rocks, and Pong, and even bizarre trends like EST therapy.• Outrageous "Bad Dates": Listen to listener-submitted stories of first dates gone wrong, from motorcycle accidents and "dined and dashed" meals to encounters with a widower whose wife wasn't buried yet, a neighbor's stabbing, and a date involving a stolen goat and a pyramid scheme.• Personal Anecdotes: Enjoy "Jersey Tales" about driving and the infamous "North Dakota Story" involving a memorable party mishap with their friend Ahmad.This episode is a journey through music, pop culture, and hilarious mishaps that will bring back great memories for many listeners. Don't miss out on the fun!Listen to the Back in Time Brothers every Monday on URL radio or download their old shows at backinttimebros.com.Support the showThanks for listening. Join us each Monday at 1pm Central at www.urlradio.net and follow us on Facebook!