MORE THAN
JUST TEA
SHEFFIELD, ENGLANDIt was called "More Than Just Tea," and the power displayed this day was a presence of a divine unity ordered by the King of Heaven Himself. Brenda Kilpatrick entered the old Ebenezer Methodist Church first built in 1820. It is now an Assembly of God in the heart of the old abandoned section of Sheffield, England, where furnaces melted coal and iron into steel. Now God was going to melt the spirit of these womens souls into the fire of an awakened nation.
The story of Pensacola was told and the sanctuary was full of 400 women ready for business. The worship team played the same "River-anointing" music that has been heard all across the world. The accord of the music and the unity of the women crossed over the lines of denominations and nations. A wind was blowing in the old hall as the breath of God could be felt in the stone church. Ebenezer is a place where a standard is raised in the Bible. Brenda Kilpatrick spoke of women with authority in a house cradled by history. What was in the cradle this day would be a new baby. During the presentation of the Pensacola story, women were touched and as Brenda finished her story, Dianne Sloan came forth to help during the ministry time.
It sounded like a birthing room in a hospital. It started with Brenda Kilpatrick, as the women began to come forward and crowd the altar area. God was in the house after her message as she slumped to her chair and deep sounds of intercession came forward. It was a "God moment" as many women began to sense and feel the birth of a new Spirit of God in the house. Many had traveled from several areas of Yorkshire to hear the revival message. The mood and moment was God on Sunday as the old house at Ebenezer felt the power of the awakened Spirit of God. A standard was raised as those women who came were not turned away but were filled with the grace of revival.