THE FACE
OF SEVERITY
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
1 Peter
3:12
11-18-73
10:50 a.m.
We welcome you all across this great Southwest.
Some of you are in New Mexico, some of you in Oklahoma, some of you in
Arkansas, some of you in Louisiana, and there are hundreds of thousands of you
in Texas who are sharing with us this service of praise to our Lord, and we
welcome you. This is the pastor bringing the message entitled The Severity of
the Lord, or The Face of Severity. We are preaching through the first epistle
of Simon Peter. We are in the third chapter, and the reading of the text is this,
beginning at verse 10:
For he
that will love life, and see good days, let him refrain his tongue from evil,
and his lips that they speak no guile;
Let him
eschew evil—That’s a good, old-time word, eschew evil; cannot bear the presence
or the sight of evil—And let him do good; let him seek peace, and ensue it.
For the
eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and His ears are open unto their
prayers; but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil.
[1 Peter 3:10-12]
And that is the text, “But
the face of the Lord is against them that do evil.” Prosopon, prosopon—the
countenance, the face of the Lord.
In the little book that I wrote on “Did Man Just
Happen?” I was describing the difference between a man and a beast. A man has
a countenance. He has a face. The light of knowledge and of spiritual
intuition and recognition and sensitivity is in his face. An animal has no
countenance, but a man does. He is made in the image of God and the image of
the Lord is reflected in his face.
Prosopon—the face of the Lord, the
countenance of the Lord. Epi, that's the usual word for “upon,” but
here it has an intensive characteristic. The word epi actually here
means a “moving upon,” and we would say in the good translation of the King
James Version, “moving against.” The face of the Lord, the countenance of the
Lord, is intensely moved against that which is evil. It is a very expressive
sentence that Simon Peter has written. The face of the Lord—the face of
severity—the face of the Lord is moving against that which is evil, those who
do evil.
F. B. Meyer was a famous British preacher who
lived in the last century, a compatriot of Alexander MacLaren and John Clifford
and Charles Haddon Spurgeon. And reading some of his writings, F. B. Meyer
said that he attended a convocation of missionaries; there were about four
hundred of them present. And he said to his astonishment, and to the
astonishment of all of those who were in that assembly, when the missionaries
gave their experience of grace—told the story of how they were saved—he said,
“I was astonished, with all the others, of how practically all of them referred
to the fact that, when they were saved, they were moved by some message that
concerned the judgment and the terror of the Lord.” The reason that I remember
that especially is that that was true of my experience as a boy. The message
of the judgment of God, of hell and damnation, moved me to terror as a boy and
brought conviction to my soul.
I don't quite understand the modern theological
approach to God and to the preaching of His Word. It seems to be that there
are fads in theology and fads in preaching such as we find fads in clothing and
fads in cultural thinking and life. You would think that theology would be a
great revelation of God that was presented faithfully. Therefore, as God
doesn't change, the theological message wouldn't change, but that's not true.
There are fads in theology that I cannot understand.
For example, back yonder in the days of Jonathan
Edwards, those old divines preached on the judgment of God and upon hell and
damnation. You remember one of the most famous sermons of all time Jonathan
Edwards delivered. He read it. Jonathan Edwards read all of his sermons word
for word—stuck his face down in the manuscript and read. And yet, with his
face down in the manuscript, reading the sermon entitled: “Sinners in The Hands
of an Angry God,” the people in terror cried out as though they were over the
very pit and flames of hell itself.
Now that was in that generation. In this generation,
you'll never hear it mentioned. There are absolutely children and children's
children who have attended churches in our modern America who have never heard
a message on hell, or damnation, or the judgment of Almighty God. Well, what
is this that the Bible presents when it opens to view the judgment of God upon
our sins, the face of severity, the face of the Lord against those that do
evil?
Well, I have a first little foreword, an
observation to make, and that is this: it is a graceful, gracious, kind,
merciful goodness of God that He reveals the truth to us. It is either factual
or it is not factual. If it is factual, then how gracious is it of God to
reveal it to us, like a railroad crossing with a sign, a warning sign, or a red
light blinking on either post. It is a kindness of the company to warn of us
of the fast-moving freight. Or, like the express shipment of a capsule of
radium cobalt out here to our Baylor Medical Center, it is a kindness of the
company to write on the box of delivery this dangerous possibility of radium in
that cobalt unit. Or, like a bottle of white sugary substance, and the
pharmaceutical company will put a skull and crossbones on it and, underneath,
write, “Strychnine.” Somebody might taste it to see if it were some other
medicine. And one taste would bring convulsive, horrible death. It was a
kindness of the company to label it with a skull and a crossbones.
So it is in the revelation of the Almighty God, in
this blessed Word. It is a kindness, and a goodness, and a graciousness of God
that the Lord points out to the man: this is the way that leads to disaster,
and to damnation, and to death. This is the way to fall into hell and into the
flames and fire of the judgments of God. If there is such a thing, it is a
kindness of God that it be revealed.
Now Simon Peter writes: “The face of the Lord is
against them that do evil.” The countenance of severity is unveiled in the
face of God against iniquity and unrighteousness and unbelief. This is the
revelation of the entire Bible. It is that, and it is none other than that.
When I open my Book I turn to the first chapters of Genesis, and in the third
chapter of Genesis I read of the sweet fellowship between the Lord and the man
and the woman that He made. He made them to love Him and to be friends to Him;
for a mountain couldn't say words of love to God, and oceans don't speak
language to the Lord, and the starry universe itself couldn't think God's
thoughts.
And God said, “I want somebody like Me, that can
talk to Me and love Me and respond to Me.” And the Lord God made the man and
his wife in His own image; “male and female created He them” in God's image.
And the Lord visited with them in the cool of the day. He went down to see the
man and the wife, and He talked to them, and loved them, and was friends to
them.
And one day, while the Lord was away—one day, the
man and his wife disobeyed the plain mandate of God. And when the Lord came to
visit with His friends in the cool of the day, He couldn't find them. And the
Lord lifted up His voice and said: “Adam? Adam? Adam? Where art thou, Adam?
Where?”
And Adam replied, “Oh, God! I'm hidden away. My
wife and I are naked, and we're ashamed in Thy presence, and I'm afraid, and
I've hidden myself out of Your sight.”
And the Lord God said, “Who told you were naked?
And why is it that you are afraid?” And then, after the recounting of the
tragic truth, the face of severity: the Lord God cursed the ground.
Look at it today. The planet is blasted with gray
deserts, and howling hurricanes, and thorns, and thistles, and briars, and
weeds. And the Lord God cursed the ground, and the Lord God cursed the woman,
and the Lord God cursed the man, and the Lord God drove them out into death.
He did that; God did that; the face of severity.
Any time God is presented to you as a sweet,
motherly soul who is indifferent to the iniquity, and sin, and rejection, and
rebellion of humankind, that's not the God that we know in history or in the
revelation of the Bible. It just isn't. The face of severity. And I turn the
page of the Bible to the sixth chapter of Genesis, and the Lord God looks down
and the earth is filled with violence and blood, murder. And the Lord God sent
word and said, “My Spirit shall not always strive with man. His days shall be
a hundred twenty years.” And Noah, the preacher of righteousness, pled with
his generation for 120 years without a convert. I can't imagine that. If
there were a service here in this church, and we never had a response, your
pastor would just die in his soul. This man of God named Noah preached 120
years to a vile, and violent, and gainsaying generation without a convert.
At the end of 120 years, the Lord God said: “It’s
enough!” And He took Noah and his family and put him in the ark and shut the
door. And God, God broke up the heavens above and broke up the earth beneath,
and the entire world that breathed were floating corpses on the face of the
deep. God did that. No man did that. God did that: the face of severity.
I turn the pages of the Bible to the eighteenth
and nineteenth chapters of Genesis. And the Lord God comes to visit Abraham,
and the Lord God says, “Shall I hide from Abraham what I do? [Genesis 18:17] He's a godly man, and he'll
teach his children to follow the Lord.” And the Lord God said to Abraham, “The
cry of Sodom and Gomorrah has come up unto Me, and I'm going down to see if it
is according to the cry that has come up unto Me.” [Genesis 18:20, 21]
And we haven't time to follow the story, but in
the nineteenth chapter the verse says that Abraham stood on the top of a hill
and he looked down and saw the smoke of the burning fire of the cities of the
plain. God did that. Man didn't do that, God did that: the face of severity.
And I look through the pages of Genesis, and the
Lord God says to Abraham: “Four hundred years your people will be in a furnace,
but at the end of the four hundred years I'll deliver them. For the iniquity
of the Amorite—the Amorite is the Canaanite, who is the son of Ham—the iniquity
of the Amorite is not yet full. But at the end of four hundred years I will
judge them.” At the end of four hundred years Joshua took his people across
the Jordan River, and according to the mandate of God the Canaanite was to be
wholly eradicated from the earth. God did that: the face of severity.
And when I read the story of the deliverance of
God, when the Lord said to Moses, “Those Ten Commandments that you broke, now
you prepare two tables of stone like them and come up here and write on them
the words of the Lord.” And so Moses goes up to Mount Sinai, and there the
Lord passes by before him and He proclaims His name: “The Lord God, merciful,
gracious, long-suffering, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and
transgression of sin, and that by no means will clear the guilty, visiting the
iniquity of the fathers upon the children, upon the children's children, unto
the third and to the fourth generations.” [Exodus
34:6, 7] And when I follow the story of the people of God in the pages
and the pages thereafter, it is that: “ … who will by no means clear the
guilty, visiting the sins of the fathers upon the children to the third and the
fourth generations;” the severity of the face of God, the unveiling of the
judgments of God.
I read as I turn to the pages the story of Samson.
“Let me die,” he said, “with the Philistines.” I read the story of Saul, who
took his own life, died a suicide. I read the story of David, four times the
judgment to come upon him and his family, and the sword of blood and murder
never leave the household of David; the story of Solomon, whom God loved, yet
leaving, bequeathing to the people a divided, debauched, and demoralized
kingdom. And finally, I read of the sins of Israel, and the Assyrians who
carry them away. And I read of the sins of Judah, and the bitter Chaldeans who
carry them away, and the house of God lies in ruins, and the holy city is destroyed,
and the people are in captivity. The severity of the face of God, “who will by
no means clear the guilty, visiting the sins of the fathers upon the children
to the third and the fourth generations.”
Finally, I turn to the face of our blessed Lord
Himself in the New Testament. And when I open it in the second chapter of
John, just as John begins his gospel, I have the story there before me of the
Lord taking cords, binding them together, weaving them together, braiding them
together in a scourge, overturning the temple moneychangers and driving out
those that were trafficking and merchandising in the house of God itself.
And then I turned to the Gospel of Mark. And here
in the Gospel of Mark there stands in the synagogue a man with a withered hand,
and it’s the Sabbath day, and these who look with scorn and supercilious
disdain upon sorrow lest a tradition be broken. And when Jesus had looked
round about them with anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts, He
said to that man: “Stretch forth thine hand.” And he stretched forth his
hand. And the Pharisees took counsel with the Herodians how they could destroy
Him, how they could murder Him. The Lord, filled with indignation and looking
with anger: the face of severity.
I haven't time to follow the twenty-third chapter
of the Gospel of Matthew. Those are the most bitter, scathing, burning words
in the human language. There is nothing in speech to rival the denunciation of
the scribes and Pharisees by our Lord: “Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees,
hypocrites, whited sepulchers, full of dead men's bones!” [Matthew 23:27]
And then the twenty-fifth chapter of the Book of
Matthew, the great division between the sheep and the goats: “And these shall go
away into everlasting torment;” [Matthew 25:46]
the face of severity.
And when I follow through the Word of the Lord, I
come to these sentences in the letters of the Apostle Paul; for example, in 2
Thessalonians, chapter 1:
To you
who are troubled, rest with us, when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from
heaven with His mighty angels,
In
flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the
gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ;
Who
shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord,
and from the glory of His power;
[1 Thessalonians 1:7-9]
That doesn't sound as though He is a weak, anemic,
motherly, not caring, indifferent soul about His children.
And when finally I come to the Revelation, the
great apocalyptic visions of the consummation of the age, I read there of the
smoke of their torment ascending forever and ever, and of the beast, and the
false prophet, and Satan, and all whose names are not written in the Lamb's
book of life. I read of them being cast into the lake of fire forever. The
face of severity, God Almighty! And lest someone think this is just the Bible,
this is just the rantings and the ravings and the shoutings of the preacher, it
is confirmed in human history, and human history does no other thing than
confirm that: the judgmental severity of the face of Almighty God.
In our twentieth century, the incomparably
greatest historian is Arnold Toynbee, the famous British educator and writer.
And in Time magazine, which was reviewing the monumental work of Toynbee, The
Study of History, I copy this sentence. “Toynbee shattered the frozen pattern
of historical determinism and materialism by openly avowing, asserting that God
is a moral force in history.” All of these secularists describe what happens
in time as being just something that people are doing. But Toynbee says, “The
great moral imponderable in the life of a nation lies in God.” The moral
severity of the Lord. And in this monumental work, A Study of History, Toynbee
says that there are twenty one civilizations in the history of mankind—twenty
one of them. Sixteen of them have already perished, and Toynbee says, without
exception, all sixteen of those civilizations perished because it was inwardly
decadent. It was evil, and it failed because of unrighteousness. And don't
think that God will spare America. America cannot continue, it cannot exist,
it cannot live in debauchery, and drunkenness, and moral decay. “The great
imponderable that lies in the history of a nation lies in the moral judgment of
Almighty God.”
And what we read in the Bible is nothing other
than what we see in daily experience, in human life, and in human story. Well,
if it thus be with us, if God judges us, as the author of Hebrews says: “It is
a terrible thing to fall into the hands of the living God; for our God is a
consuming fire.” If God judges iniquity, and when a man stands before Him, he
stands before a righteous judge. And knowing us, we have to confess, “Guilty,
O God. Guilty, guilty, guilty.”
If it be thus with us, how can we ever be saved?
How could a man ever look upon God's face and live? How could we ever escape
the fires of hell and damnation? How could we ever be with the Lord in glory?
How?
That is the good news. That is why the gospel is
called the euaggelion, the “good news.” How can a man who is a sinner
live in the face and in the presence of God? How can he? This is the gospel.
In the sermon last Sunday morning from Simon
Peter: “Jesus, our blessed Lord, His own self, bore our sins in His own body on
the tree, in whose stripes we are healed.” [1
Peter 2:24] How is it that a man who is lost, a sinner, can ever stand
in the presence of God and live? It is because our blessed Jesus, God
incarnate, God made flesh—it is because the Lord Himself took our sins and
bears our iniquities. And the punishment that by rights should fall upon us,
fell upon Him; and the death we should die, He died in our stead, our great
substitute. And we are saved and delivered in Him. That is the good news.
That is the gospel.
I grew up, as some of you know, in a little town
in far northwest Texas. And we attended church in a little white cracker box
of a building. The church door was never open but that my family was there.
And I'd sit on the front seat, as these little boys here, and I'd listen to the
pastor as he preaches.
And you know, the stories by which those old-time
preachers would illustrate the gospel truth does more for me today in
understanding the message of Christ than these tomes of theology that I pored
over in these years since. How those preachers would illustrate the truth of
the gospel message of Christ! Those stories stay with me as vividly today and
as movingly today as when I heard them as a little boy, seated at the front
with my head back, looking up and listening to the pastor. Here's one of
them. This is one of them, illustrating how God took our sins and took our
iniquities and bore them Himself that we might be saved.
There was a little boy in the family, and he was
disobedient. And the father and mother reproved him, and he continued
disobedient. And finally, upon an evening, when the little lad refused to
obey, the father and mother said, “Son, you are disobedient and you have to be
punished. Now you go up to the attic, and you're to stay there all night long,
and all day tomorrow, and all night the next night. And we're going to give
you bread and water, and you're going to stay in that attic until you learn how
to obey.”
So the little fellow went up to the attic to spend
the night and the day and the night on bread and water. And that night, that
night, the father began to turn and to toss in his bed. And he finally turned toward
his wife and said, “Dear, I just can't forget that little boy up there. I know
he's afraid. It's dark, and I just can't rest. Dear, I'm going to take some
of these bed clothings, quilts. I'm going up there and stay with him.”
So he took some bed clothing with him and went up
there to the attic. And the little boy watched his daddy make a bed by his
side. And the boy in such surprise says, “Daddy, what are you doing?”
And the father replied, “Son, you've been
disobedient, and I can't rescind the punishment, but I've just decided to bear
it with you. And Daddy's going to stay with you all this time.”
So the father stayed with the little boy all that
night, and he stayed with the lad all the next day, didn't go work. And he
stayed with the boy all the next night. And when the two came down the
stairway together, it was justice and love together, and the little boy never
forgot it. There was an endearment in it. There was a love manifest in it.
There was a lesson in it that the little lad never forgot.
The story kind of halts when you compare it to
what God has done for us. But the spirit of it is that; the Lord cannot be
just and rescind the punishment. He cannot be holy and righteous and let us go
without correction. But God has done this in His mercy, and in His grace, and
in His infinite love. The Lord came down and He walked by our side, and He
lived our life, and He took our punishment, and He understands all about us.
If you need a friend to talk to, talk to Jesus. He's with you. If you need
somebody in encouragement, go to Jesus. He'll see you through. You need help
in time of trouble. He was tried in every point such as we are, though He
never failed. That's the gospel. That's the good news.
God doesn't rescind His laws, nor does God evade
His justice. At the heart of the universe is that punishment, inexorable,
inescapable, for sin. But the heart of the gospel is: “Where sin did abound,
grace did much more abound.” [Romans 5:20]
God took it, moved in pity by us, and became not only our God Creator, but our
Redeemer and Savior. How could anyone fail to love a Lord like that?
And that is our appeal and invitation to you; looking
to Jesus in confession and repentance, in loving acceptance and trust and
belief, “Lord, here I am, and here I come.” A family, a couple, or just you,
in this balcony round, in this lower floor, down a stairway or here to the
front, “I'm coming, pastor, today.” What a precious, beautiful, glorious hour
God hath given us, just to stand in His presence before men and angels and
praise His name for His wonderful goodness that reaches even to us! Come.
Come. Come, as the Spirit of Christ shall press the appeal to your heart. On
the first note of the first stanza, make the decision now in your heart. And
when we stand up to sing, stand up coming. God bless you, and angels attend
you in the way as you respond, while we stand and while we sing.