Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, and John Wesley preach with fiery conviction. Religious formalism shatters. Multitudes come under deep conviction and encounter Christ in personal, radical ways.
We have heard the reports of revival. We have felt its reverberations through history past. But we are no longer willing to settle for a story. This generation is desperate for more.
Register NowWe refuse to settle for anything less than everything.
What would happen if a company of young people set apart three days — only to seek the Lord and cry out for revival in their generation? Something is stirring in the spiritual climate of our time. Souls are waking up to the reality that there is more than what they have been given — more than what most have settled for. We have not come to settle. We've come to believe God for everything he promised. Come with us.
It shall be in the last days, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh
Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, and John Wesley preach with fiery conviction. Religious formalism shatters. Multitudes come under deep conviction and encounter Christ in personal, radical ways.
Open-air meetings. Weeping over sin. Encounters with God's power. Charles Finney insists revival is not only awaited — it is pursued through fervent prayer and obedience.
A small nation catches fire. Pubs empty. Courtrooms idle. Mines fall silent as miners pray before shifts. A whole country is marked by a hunger for God that outruns its institutions.
Under William Seymour, the Holy Spirit falls on a house in Los Angeles. Tongues, healings, supernatural encounters. A Pentecostal movement is born and circles the globe in a generation.
"We don't just want to know stories of revival. We want to see it with our own eyes."
Three days set apart to lay hold of the more of God.