A Church on Its Knees


This week, a powerful message from Pastor Rikhard at Hungry Generation brought a deep reminder about revival, repentance, and what it truly means to live close to God. The message made one thing clear: revival is not just something that happens in a church,  it starts in the heart of each person.

Pastor Rikhard taught from the story of the Ephesian church in the Book of Acts. Ephesus was filled with darkness, idol worship, and spiritual opposition. Yet God established a powerful church there. Revival broke out through preaching, repentance, and the power of the Holy Spirit. Lives were transformed, and culture was disrupted.

But years later, Jesus gave a warning to that same church in the Book of Revelation they had left their first love.

One statement stood out clearly:

“The church can be in revival, but you personally might not be.”

This highlights a sobering truth: being around revival is not the same as living in revival personally.

Key takeaways from the sermon:

Revival begins with personal repentance. True revival is marked by conviction and life change.

God’s presence does not leave, people grow distant. The issue is not God’s absence, but spiritual sensitivity.

Revival will always disrupt darkness. When truth is preached, it challenges the systems of this world.

Structure without God’s fire becomes empty religion. Passion and presence must remain, not just routine.

Revival is sustained on the knees, not on the platform.

Another powerful statement that stayed deeply was:

“If you spend more time on the stage than on your knees, you have missed the mark.”

Pastor Rikhard also shared a clear blueprint from Jesus to restore spiritual fire:

Remember. Repent. Return.

Remember when faith was alive and passionate.
Repent of anything that has created distance from God.
Return to the habits that built intimacy with Him.

Revival is not a moment – it is a lifestyle. It is sustained through humility, prayer, and surrender. True revival begins when hearts turn back to God fully.

Revival begins when the church becomes a church on its knees.

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