Videos
part of the beliefs and practices of seventh-day churches
I felt called to observe the Sabbath. I wasn't aware of what churches keep the Sabbath and this would have been helpful.
Sabbatarian Baptists Seventh Day Baptists Sabbatarian Adventists Adventist Church of Promise Churches of God (Seventh-Day) Creation Seventh Day Adventist Church Sabbath Rest Advent Church Seventh-day Adventist Church Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement International Missionary Society of Seventh-Day Adventist Church Reform Movement True and Free Seventh-day Adventists Shepherd's Rod (Davidian Seventh-day Adventists) United Sabbath-Day Adventist Church United Seventh-Day Brethren Sabbatarian Pentecostalists Nazareth Baptist Church Sabbatarian Pentecostalists, Ukraine, Oneness denomination, formed in the 1920s–1930s in the Western Ukraine, Poland Soldiers of the Cross Church True Jesus Church Sabbatarian British Israelites / (Armstrongism) Church of God Assembly (CGA) Church of God: A Worldwide Association (COGWA) Church of God International (United States) Church of the Great God Church of God Preparing for the Kingdom of God Global Church of God House of Yahweh Intercontinental Church of God Living Church of God Philadelphia Church of God Restored Church of God United Church of God Judaizers Assemblies of Yahweh Black Hebrew Israelites African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem Church of God and Saints of Christ Church of God and Saints of Christ (Orthodox Christianity) Commandment Keepers Hebrew Roots Movement Makuya Messianic Judaism, some Messianic Jews observe Shabbat on Saturdays[3] Sacred Name Movement Yahweh's Assembly in Yahshua Subbotniks, the majority belonged to Rabbinic and Karaite Judaism, the minority to Christianity[4] Yehowists, a Russian Spiritual Christian millenarian movement founded in the 1840s Others Church of Christ (Fettingite) TheMillennium The Christ's Assembly Church of Israel Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite) House of Aaron Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant (AEMINPU) Jemaat Allah Global Indonesia (JAGI), internationally known as Unitarian Christian Church of Indonesia (UCCI), headquartered in Semarang, Central Java, Indonesia[5] Remnant Fellowship, headquartered in Brentwood, Tennessee and founded in 1999 by Gwen Shamblin Lara[6] The Seventh-day Remnant Church[7] World Mission Society Church of God Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland Ancient Foundations Bible Fellowship, Port Macquarie Founded in Truth Fellowship
This is actually the same time that the Seventh-day Adventist church began. It came out of revivals in the 1800's
Starting in 1844 after the disappointment of the millerite movement.
Joseph Bates who was one of the first to be convinced of the Sabbath and was a revivalist preacher. See: (Joseph Bates (8 July 1792 – 19 March 1872)
This combined with the understanding of Revelation 12:17 that there would only be a remnant of the church that would keep the commandments and have the testimony of Jesus.
And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ. - Rev 12:!7
You've asked an interesting question. I don't accept the premise/assumption on which it is based though so would be interested in any clarifications.
Who decides what is a "spirit-led revival"? You seem to share my skepticism by your parenthetical "(in which the holy spirit is CLAIMED to have moved)" [my emphasis]. Who has the authority to assign this label? Using what metric? The number of conversions or reaffirmations? The number of miracles? Healings? What about the durability of these effects?
It is easy to find pastors of different christian denominations all claiming the "leading of the holy spirit" while preaching entirely opposite doctrines. Some may go so far as to claim the opposing teaching is of the devil! Labeling anything "spirit-led" seems subjective and hence useless for drawing any objective conclusions.
Your logic allows a saturday-keeper to turn your premise around and say that the lack of an increase in saturday-keeping is evidence that these are not spirit-led revivals. That conclusion would be equally flawed though.
Revival attendees consist of at least two kinds of people:
those who already know the gospel and may be "revived", and
those who don't know the gospel and may be converted.
If the revived were already sunday-keepers (likely since that is the majority view), then there is no question what they will continue to do. The converted will seek out churches and since most churches are sunday-keeping, that's where they will go. ergo, there is no outbreak of saturday-keeping.
How many of those revivalists preachers were sunday-keepers? How many of them preach only grace? How many preached that the law applied only to the jews? How many may preach the ten commandments and when reading the 4th, state that the God want you to go to church on sunday ("the lord's day", "the sabbath" even), since that was the day he arose and conquered sin? These pragmatic reasons (and objectively measureable) may better explain (occam's razor) the behavior of the revived and converted rather than relying on the subjective "spirit-led" label to create hypotheses and draw conclusions.
In the end, imho, the holy spirit doesn't impose itself on people. People have to be receptive to and accepting of the spirit's leading. Some percent of christians subjectively believe the holy spirit has led them to conclusions (albeit opposite) on the saturday vs sunday question. The remainder of christians haven't engaged with the question, despite the spirit's leading perhaps.