STATE OF THE CHURCH
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Revelation
1:9
1-06-85
10:50 a.m.
And this is the Pastor bringing an
annual message. On the first Sunday of each new year, I prepare and deliver a
sermon on the state of the church and that Sunday is this Sunday and the
message is this one now delivered. As a background text, we turn to the
last book in the Bible, the Book of the Revelation, chapter 1; Revelation
chapter 1, beginning at verse 9; Revelation 1:9:
I John, who am your brother, and companion in tribulation, and in the
kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ,
was in the isle that is called Patmos, for the Word of God, and for the
testimony of Jesus Christ.
I was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day, and I heard behind me a great
voice as of a trumpet
Saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last…
verse 12—And I turned to see the voice that spake with me. And
being turned, I saw seven golden lampstands;
And in the midst of the seven lampstands, one like unto the Son of man,
clothed with a garment down to the foot, and girt about the breast with a
golden girdle…
Number 16, verse 16—He had in His right hand, seven stars and out
of His mouth went a sharp two-edged sword.
And His countenance was as the sun shineth in its strength…
verse twenty—The mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in
my right hand, and the seven golden lampstands:
The seven stars are the angels—the pastors—of the seven churches: and
the seven lampstands which thou sawest are these seven churches.
[Revelation 1:9-20].
The initial
vision of the Apocalypse, this Revelation, is of our Lord walking in the midst
of His churches. Seven denominates and represents all of them through all
of the ages. And in their midst walks the exalted and glorified Son of
God. He is in this church, this is one of His lampstands. And the
blessings of the Lord have rested upon this congregation and we are appealing
to His grace and mercy that He walk with us in the unfolding days that lie
before us in the New Year.
So first we shall
speak in gratitude and thanksgiving of the blessings of God upon our
church. In Philippians—the last chapter—Paul said, “always with
thanksgiving we are to make our appeals unto God” [Philippians 4:6];“with
thanksgiving.” So we thank the Lord. We thank Him first of all for
the souls that He gave us this last year. I have torn out the leading
page of the leading article of the Baptist Standard in its current
issue. And the headline concerns our dear church and the first sentence
is:
For the fifth consecutive year, First Baptist Church of Dallas led all
Texas Baptist churches in baptisms in the 1984 church year.
We had a title of
nine hundred eighty-four baptized. The second church in the state was
Sagemont Church in Houston, which had five hundred sixty-eight. We did
not do as good this year as we did last year; not quite. But we are
praying that this year we will go over that one thousand goal in people won to
the Lord and baptized. In that achievement, we give gratitude before God
for our outreach ministries for these men who work all over our great City of
Dallas, preaching the gospel and winning souls to Jesus.
A second
thanksgiving to God: we are grateful for our Sunday school and its teaching
ministries. This past year, we had the largest Sunday school attendance
in the history of our church. For years and years, we have had the
largest Sunday school in our Southern Baptist Convention. And that
enlarging Sunday school continues to grow and we are praying that God will make
this year even greater in reaching people for the teaching ministry of our
Sunday school than the year past. We are thankful for His blessings upon
our teaching ministry.
A third
thanksgiving: we are grateful to the Lord for His blessings upon our First
Baptist Academy. This last year, Dallas Christian Academy was given to us—its
great properties, its school buildings, its effort, its organized teaching
life. The whole East Dallas Christian Academy was given to us; it is now
a part of our First Baptist Church Academic system. It will be a
satellite school of our Academy. Our boy, Chris, went to that academy
until we organized our own school here in our First Baptist Church. This
is a sign and a portent of the coming day when we shall have satellite schools
all over the Metroplex, teaching under the aegis, and ministry, and
administration of our First Baptist School here in this church. I cannot
describe to you how committed I am in heart, in theology, in experience, in
historical understanding of the building of that great academic school.
When I was in the
seminary—and I went to the seminary when I was twenty-one years old—when I was
in the seminary as a young man, I used to argue with those fellows there, one
particularly who became head of our Southern Baptist denomination. I used
to argue with him and others about that school in the church; about an academy,
an elementary school and high school in the church. And I avowed then as I do
now: I cannot understand the persuasion of a denomination that will spend
millions, and millions, and millions, and multiplied millions of dollars every
year in its colleges and in its universities, but oppose the idea of having the
school in the church.
The reason I feel
that way is this: by the time I went to the university, my life was set.
The university had nothing to do with the turn or the dedication of my
life. I was seventeen years old when I went to the university, and I
enrolled there as a young minister. I had already begun preaching and the
university but gave me tools to work with what I had already given my life
to. Well, when was it and where was it that I was molded and malleable so
I could be framed into the dedication of my life to the work which I now
dedicate my every day? It was done when I was a child. It was done
when I was small. And having been taught, and molded and dedicated to the
ministry to which I have given my life, then I went to the university.
What we need to
do—to me is obvious—is to take the child when the child is young and teach that
youngster the Word of God, teaching the Bible. You cannot teach the Bible
by law now in a public school; you cannot pray by law in a public school.
You could not think of having a revival meeting in a public school, we have
revivals in the school. We win these boys and girls to Jesus in the
school, we teach them the infallible Word of God in the school. We pray
with them in the school, we guide them and bring them up in the nurture and
love and wisdom and grace of the Lord in the school. And that is where
and when it ought to be done. And I praise God for the increasing
blessing of our Lord upon that academic dedication. When I come down here
to the church, and I come every day, I see these youngsters down here by the
hundreds and the hundreds. And as I make my way with them and through
them, I raise my hands in gratitude to God because of them. For us to
persuade ourselves that we are doing the work of teaching by having a child
thirty minutes in a class one day a week on Sunday, to me is unthinkable when
it is possible for us to have the child every day of the week, hours and hours
every day. It is a commitment to which we have given ourselves, and God
works mightily with us in bringing it to a glorious achievement and fruition.
I thank God—and I
haven't time to speak any more of it—I thank God for our Center of Biblical
Studies. You had a prayer here of invocation from Carl Singer, who heads
that wonderful radio ministry, KCBI, over which I am preaching now, reaches the
Metroplex. We now have an adjunct; we have a short-wave KCBI, and the
gospel we preach is now being beamed to Russia and to the eastern Iron Curtain
countries; and it is beamed to Central America and South America, where the
ferment of communist confrontation now goes on. There is a vast outreach
in that KCBI and in that CBI ministry. Could I add just one other
word? If you want a young man, if you want a preacher to go to a hard
place, a pioneer place, I can tell you where you can find him. You can
find him there, in that Center of Biblical Studies and we praise God for His
blessings on that teaching school.
Now for the day
that unfolds before us. We have every year here at the church; we have a
beautiful party at Christmas time for all of our staff. That means all of our
maids, that means all of our janitors, that means all of our keepers and
cleaners, that means all of everybody connected with the church. And
it is a beautiful and delightful occasion. Well, this year, they had
differing ones to testify—to stand up and speak of whatever was on their hearts
of what they would like to say— so one of them that stood up to testify to
speak, was a big, black maid. So she stood up and she said; I quote:
Our pastor thar
he has dreams. And when he has one of them thar dreams, I knows that we’s
goin’ to build another building.
Then she said—That
means I gots more work to do cause I got to keep it clean, and keep it bright
and shiny.
and then she
added graciously—but I love for our pastor to dream his dreams and I love to
keep the house of God clean and shiny.
Well, what she
said is so very true, I have vivid dreams; vivid dreams. I preach through
some of them; sing through some of them; weep through practically all of them.
They are so life-like and this is one. I had, the day before, arranged
for an evangel group in one of the homes of our people. Evidently it was
on my heart when I went to bed and slept that night. For in the dream I
was in a home here in Dallas, a large home. I can see it in my mind
now. And I was leading in an evangel group—in a home and prayer meeting
group, in an outreach group—and there were so many people who had come into the
home to share in the evangel ministry that night that we moved out in the front
yard. And I was standing there on the porch of that beautiful home, and
the people were coming from every direction. There were families—fathers
and mothers and their children—they were just coming there from every
direction. And I was standing up there with a Bible in my hand and I was
teaching them the Word of God. And the people kept coming and kept
coming. It was a marvelous thing. And as I was pleading and
speaking with the group about the consecration of our life to the Lord; I
closed it leading a song. We were singing a song. And I was so
moved by the response of the people and by the singing of the song, that as we
sang, I wept. And I woke myself up weeping and singing that song of
commitment and consecration. And we are going to sing it now. Let’s
all stand up then; let’s all stand up and let us sing it together. Ready?
Must Jesus bear the cross
alone,
And all the world go free?
[No, there’s] a cross for everyone
And there's a cross for me.
The last stanza
is:
O precious cross! O
glorious crown!
O resurrection day!
Ye angels, from the stars come down,
And bear my soul away.
I want everyone
of us to hold up our hands toward God. Lift up our hands toward God and
sing that last stanza together:
O precious cross! O
glorious crown!
O resurrection day!
Ye angels, from the stars come down,
And bear may soul away.
[“Must
Jesus Bear the Cross Alone?”; Thomas Shepherd]
Amen. Thank
you, thank you. We
are building in God's goodness and grace a lighthouse in the heart of this city
for our Lord.
God bless
the church on the avenue
That hears the city's cry.
The church that sows the seed of the Word
Where the masses of men go by.
The church that makes midst
the city's roar,
A place for an altar of prayer.
With a heart for the rich and a heart for the poor
And rejoices in their burdens to share.
The church that's true to the
call of Christ,
Who wept for the city's need.
And has sent His disciples to labor for Him
Where the forces of evil breed.
The church
that gives and the church that lives,
As seen by the Master's eye.
God bless the church on the avenue
That answers the city's cry.
[Author
and Work Unknown]
And that is our
dedication through the years and the years, now far beyond the century of
years, in building this lighthouse for our Lord; a soul-saving station in the
midst of these towering skyscrapers. There are several things—and I
haven't time even to discuss them—there are several things that enter into this
year concerning the expanding ministries of our church. One, we have
contracted to buy the Salvation Army Building right there. That completes
that entire block that we will be using for the glory of God. That
building—it’s magnificently built—that building will be used not only on Sunday
but it will be used every day during the week for our work of teaching, and
preaching, and reaching for our Lord.
We have a second
thing that is, that is incumbent upon us. The fifteen thousand square
feet—a little less than one-half of the land on which rests the Spurgeon
Building—is leased, we don't own it; and it has an escalating clause in
it. And that land has to be bought; if it is not bought, some day the
amount of money we will pay for that lease will be astronomical! It will be
unbelievable; and we must buy that land underneath that building.
We have another
tremendous decision that will be made this year in these coming almost few
days, at the most few weeks. We have to make a decision concerning the options
that are brought to our church of that land on which the Veal Building is built
and the children's playground—that block, a block long and a half a block wide—which
is located right there just this side of the Post Office. And a decision
has ultimately been made concerning our sanctuary center, which is to be built—if
it rises in realization—on that property on the other side of our
sanctuary.
These are just
some of the pressing decisions that our church will make immediately. And
we must pray that we don't make a mistake; that we have God's wisdom in the
choices that we make. Because the decision that we make now will color
the generations that worship and work in this church for God—the generations
that are yet to come. We can't afford to make a mistake. And we are
praying that God will give us heavenly wisdom in that ultimate choice.
Now in the few
minutes that remain to me, may I speak of our spiritual commitments during the
coming year? There are some outreach ministries for which I have prayed and
these fellow staff members have agonized with me, seeking God's mind and God's
blessings upon our attempt to reach lost people for Christ. And we are
beginning in what I have chosen, what I have called, what I have named, “Evangel
Group Home Ministries.” They are groups of our people who meet in homes all
over the city of Dallas and the purpose of it? To teach the Word of God; yes—but
not primarily—it‘s just not a Bible lesson. To pray; yes, but it is not
just a prayer meeting. A fellowship group; yes, where we come together
and maybe break bread and come to know each other intimately. But the
main purpose of the Evangel group is to reach families for our Lord; to win
people to Jesus; to bring them into the fold of our blessed Lord in His love,
and grace, and salvation. And that effort is to be made under Dr. Melzone
and our Sunday school. Beginning tonight at 5:45 in the Christian
Education Building on the third floor, Dr. Melzone will be leading us—all of us
who are committed to such an assignments—he will be leading us in the
preparation of the organization of Evangel groups throughout this great
Metroplex.
The purpose that
lies back of that effort is very patent when you look at the history of the
church. For the first three hundred years, there were no church
buildings. It was only after the conversion of Constantine in about 325
A.D., that they took into the Christian faith all of the Greek temples and all
of those Roman temples. They baptized the whole thing. They
baptized the priesthood, and they baptized the images and the idols, and they
baptized the basilicas, they baptized the whole buildings. That is when
the church began to have a meetinghouse. Until then for the first three
hundred years of the church—the most dynamic centuries of the church—for the
first three hundred years, there were no church houses and the church met in
the homes of the people. It was there that the children were brought
up. And it was there that the faith was inculcated. It was there
that the gospel was preached. It was there that the lost were won to
Christ.
I can give you a
poignant example of the dynamic of that in the history of Judaism. For
thousands of years, the Jewish faith has continued dynamically to this present
day. And it has continued at times when they were persecuted beyond
description; when they were burned, and crucified, and nailed to the wall; when
their property was confiscated. Well, how did the faith continue?
It continued because Judaism is primarily and fundamentally a religion of the
family. It is a religion of the home. And the child, from the day
the child can speak, is taught the meaning of the things concerning the faith
of the old covenant, the Mosaic legislation, the Deuteronomic
legislation. That is a point of dynamic that we ought not to forget in
the promulgation of the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ. It ought to
begin, it ought to have its dynamic, it ought to have its outreach in the homes
of the people. Where fathers and mothers are, where children are, where
singles are, where single parents are—reaching into the homes of the
people.
Then on Sunday
and at the stated service of the church, we are gathered here, where all of us
can be together and praise the Lord. But the outreach, and the personal
appeal, and the teaching of the Word is first of all in prayer, in commitment,
in appeal, in the homes of the people. And that is why the outreach
ministry called the “Evangel Home Group.” Each one ought to have a goal to
reach; each one ought to reach a family every six months. That is a goal
to which we visit and pray and ask God with His convicting power and presence
to help us to achieve.
Now, in that
effort—in that effort, I think, this is a personal persuasion of my own—I think
you'll find a solution to every problem that we have in the church. For
example, we have a financial responsibility in the church, a tremendous
one. The light bill alone in this vast complex is reaching toward six
hundred thousand dollars a year; just that one bill. And it goes on, and
on, and on. It takes a great, consecrated response on the part of our
people, financially, to keep our church vibrant and sovereign.
Now, where do you
get money? The problem you’d ever have financially is not money, the
problem is people. It is a people problem—never a money problem. If
we have the people, we will have the money. If we don’t have the people,
we'll not have the money. It's a matter of people, reaching people,
ministering to people.
I think of Pastor
Chou from Korea who preached here in this pulpit. The Korean works for a
few cents an hour, it is a poor nation. Yet, he has three hundred
thirty-five paid ministers who work in those home groups. And he has a
budget of over eighteen million dollars a year. Why? With those
poverty-stricken Korean people could he have such a vast, vast program in the
church? The reason is livid, it is vivid, it is stated. We asked
Dr. Melzone to go over there and become personally acquainted with it.
The reason is obvious—he reaches people—he ministers to people; the church is
people-orientated.
I feel that way
about us. Our church ought not to be like this: “Let us take these people
and get out of them all we can, let us fleece them for all they are worth, let
us squeeze out of them all that is possible!.” Let us turn the thing
around and let's say our church is to be a servant church. It is to be a
ministering church. Do you need help? Then we will help. Do
you need a prayer partner? We'll be a prayer partner. Do you need
somebody to help you with that load you bear? We will be that
somebody. I would love for our church to be a ministering church; a
helping church, a praying church, a burden-bearing church, a serving
church. Not, “What can you do for us” but, “What we can do for you?”
Isn't that the Word of the Lord?
“Simon, Simon, lovest
thou Me?”
“Lord; you know
that I love you!”
“Then feed My
lambs, take care of My children; Simon, do you love Me?”
“Lord, yes!”
“Then feed My
sheep, shepherd My flock”
[from John 21:15-18]
That is the
assignment of the church and I have the deep, deep persuasion that if we will
be a ministering church, “These hands are to help, they’re to work for you.”
If we have a servant church, I think God—through our people—will give us money
and to spare. We will pay every bill. We'll have every deacon's
meeting, a triumphant meeting, as we review how our people are supported with
tithes and offerings, the work of our Lord here and beyond us to the ends of
the earth.
Well, when you
begin a work like that, how are you going to succeed in it? How are you
going to get people to respond to it? If you have an Evangel Group
meeting in a home, how are you going to get lost people to come? That is
why we are going to our knees, we are going to pray; there is no other way to do
this kind of a work but in the presence of the power and the Spirit of the Lord
we have to pray.
A call to prayer, I cannot sleep,
A midnight vigil I must keep.
For God doth call, I hear Him speak.
"To prayer, to prayer," I but
repeat.
"To prayer, to prayer, prevailing
prayer,"
The need for such is everywhere.
It covers earth, it fills the air,
The urgent need for urgent prayer.
"To bended knee, to bended knee,"
God's call to you, God's call to me.
Because what is and is to be,
Shall reach throughout eternity.
[Author and Work Unknown]
O folks, I
say, again I say,
A truth
has burned in my heart today.
It is the
need of prayer, let come what may.
We shall
overcome if we watch and pray.
[Author and Work Unknown]
I
was asked, "When you have announced that you're going to have stated days
of fasting and prayer down here at the church, what are you going to pray for
when you come and fast and pray, what are you going to pray for?"
And
I answered, "First we are going to pray that God will give us power in our
personal witnessing." If I were to say, "I want you, or I want
you, or I want you to stand up and tell me when was the last time you came down
this aisle, bringing somebody that you had won to the Lord Jesus?"
It would be embarrassing.
If
you were to stand up, most of you would say, "Pastor, I have never done
that. I have never brought anybody down that aisle to the Lord
Jesus. I've never done it."
And
if somebody has done it, it might be five, or fifteen, or twenty years
ago. Does that mean we never say anything about the Lord? No.
What it means there is no power in our witnessing. We don't have that
baptism, that Holy-Ghost-poured-out Spirit of God upon us that when we make
appeal, people listen and respond and open their hearts to the convicting of
the Spirit and the acceptance of Jesus as Savior.
Well,
where does that power come from? It comes from intercession, it comes
from prayer, it is not fleshly and worked up by human means. It is God
Who convicts! It is God Who saves and it is God alone. It is not we; it
is not our brilliance, it is not our education, it is not our personality, it
is not our fine words, it is not our oratorical pretoration. It is
not anything about us, it is all of God! God does the convicting, God does the
drawing, God does the saving. And we're shut up to an appeal to God to
help us and work with us and to bless us. That's the first thing.
We're going to pray that God will give us power in our witnessing, that we will
win people to Jesus.
Number
two, these Evangel groups will become just one other organized live effort in
the church unless it is baptized and blessed with the power and presence of the
Holy Spirit in it. If it is the work of the flesh, it will be
nothing. It has to be the work of God. Lord, Lord, bless this
effort to take this message of Christ into the homes of the city of Dallas and
to win people to the Lord in that sacred, domestic convocation.
Third,
"What you going to pray for when you come and fast and pray?"
We
are going to pray for revival. O, Lord, I would to God that our eyes
could see a great, mighty moving outpouring of the Pentecostal Spirit of
God. I wish my eyes could see it, I wish my heart could feel it, I wish
my soul could exult and rejoice in it. A great revival; a spirit of
revival that we all feel, that we all sense, and we all share in, that we all
rejoice over. I wish God would send us a mighty revival and that's why
our stated times of fasting and prayer.
Somebody
asked me, "Pastor, what if nobody comes?”
I
have four dates down here, “What if nobody comes?"
Fine,
I'm going to be here, and the Lord is going to be here, and why shouldn't I be
happy if I'm here with the Lord? What could be better in the world than
to be with the Lord, and spend the day with the Lord praying, reading the
Bible, interceding? In these days of fast and prayer, we are going to
have two stated services in the day; at twelve o'clock noon to one o'clock, we
will have a stated service. By that, I mean the pastor will lead us in a
service of praise, and prayer, and testimony, and just looking to God and
loving Jesus all over again. Then we will have another one each evening
from seven o'clock to eight o'clock.
And
the four dates of our stated prayer and fasting are: first, next Tuesday—not of
this week—Tuesday of next week, this will be led by our staff and their
families. We'll have it, we'll meet here in the sanctuary and come and go
as the providence and necessity may dictate. But we will have two stated
services Tuesday of next week, here in the sanctuary led by the staff and their
families, and we'll be here all day long as we have opportunity, praying,
fasting, not eating.
The
next one will be the following Monday; Monday, January 21. That will be
for our deacons and their families. They have their deacon's meeting that
night and we're not going to eat; always we have a dinner at the deacon's
meeting. We won't this time, we are going to fast and we are going to
pray. And then as soon as that meeting is done, we will have our meeting,
our stated meeting here in the sanctuary at noon and in the evening.
The
third one will be the following Wednesday on January 30. It will be led
by our Sunday school leadership and their families, all of them here in the
sanctuary, all day long, fasting and praying with our two stated
services.
And
the fourth one will be the following Wednesday which will be February 6 at
which all of our members are invited to share and to lead. And we will
again have our two stated services at high noon and at seven in the
evening.
This
is an attempt, how it will be blessed of God, I do not know. All I know
is just this; I'm going to prostrate myself before the Lord. I'm going to
bow down before Him. I'm going to ask God to give us of the moving of His
Spirit in the personal testimony by which we witness to the Lord in these
Evangel groups, in the outreach ministries in our homes. And Lord, that there
might be in our church, a great moving of the spirit of revival. And that
we see it, and that we can feel it, and that we can rejoice in it. That's
the purpose of our intercessions. Then it is in the hands of God, as the
Lord shall bless in His grace and in His goodness.