TRIALS,
TRIBULATIONS AND THANKSGIVING
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
2
Corinthians 12:7-10
11-22-81
7:30 p.m.
And bless the uncounted
multitudes of you who are sharing this hour with the First Baptist Church of
Dallas on radio, on KCBI, the voice, the Sonshine voice of our Center of
Biblical Studies, and on the great voice of the Southwest, KRLD. This is
the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas bringing a Thanksgiving
message. It is entitled Trials, Tribulations, And Thanksgiving.
And the forepart, the purport of the sermon is that maybe God has prepared for
us, fitted for us, His best blessing in the sorrows and tears that we know in
our lives. Now, for the passage that we read together, turn to 2 Corinthians,
chapter 12. Second Corinthians, chapter 12, and we are going to read
verses 7 through 10. If we had time, we would just read the whole first
part of the chapter, but this is the section of it that especially is pertinent
for us, 2 Corinthians, chapter 12, verses 7 through 10. Now all of us, let us
read it out loud together,
And lest I should be
exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations, there was given
to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me, lest I should
be exalted above measure.
For this thing I
besought the Lord thrice, that it might depart from me.
And He said unto me, My
grace is sufficient for thee, for My strength is made perfect in
weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities,
that the power of Christ may rest upon me.
Therefore I take
pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in
distresses for Christ's sake, for when I am weak, then am I strong.
[2 Corinthians 12:7-10]
And I would submit before any tribunal in the
earth that there are no more nobler words in human thought, much less
dedication and experience, than the words we just read, "Most gladly
therefore will I glory in my weaknesses, my infirmities. I take pleasure
in distresses, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions for Jesus'
sake. For when I am weak, then am I strong" [2 Corinthians 12:9, 10].
We have so much at this
Thanksgiving season of the year for which our hearts overflow before God in
gratitude. This time a year ago, I was crushed beneath an insufferable
burden. Our indebtedness had reached something like ten million, four hundred
thousand dollars. And the interest rates had so risen, soared beyond
anything in American history. We were paying one point above prime, which
meant we were paying twenty two and one-half percent! Out of the
offerings that we brought before God every year, one million, four hundred thousand
dollars had to be taken out just to pay interest—not on the debt, just the
interest that carried it. It was a bleak and burdensome future apparently
that confronted us this time last year. Look how God has aboundingly
remembered us. This last Monday, we sent two million dollars to the
bank. In about a week or so, we shall send five and a half million more
dollars to the bank. And with the other things that we have done in our
liberation appeal, our church will be completely free of the burden of debt in
a matter of days. It is too good to be true. When I think of this
time last year and compare it to the glory of what God has done for us at this
present moment, my heart overflows.
As a token of the
wonderful goodnesses of our Lord to our church, last night at midnight they
closed the “Share-A-Thon” for our KCBI radio station, on which so many of you
are now listening. We are not allowed to sell commercial time on the
radio. It has to be supported completely by the gifts of the
people. And in that “Share-A-Thon,” they had a goal of a hundred fifty thousand
dollars for the work of the year. And when it was counted up, we had
given all of us who shared in it beyond a hundred sixty-one thousand
dollars. God was good to us again. And as you know, in our
stewardship appeal, our covenant giving, we finally brought to the people
adding a million dollars to that appeal at the request of the pastor for the
world mission enterprises of our Lord. We reached for a total of seven million,
four hundred forty-five thousand dollars, which was unheard of in
Christendom. And Sunday a week ago, when we gave our total of what our
people had done, we had oversubscribed the goal. It amounted to seven million,
four hundred sixty-nine thousand dollars. God has been aboundingly good
to us. And in the church letter that we sent to our association about
three weeks ago, we reported over a thousand in baptisms. We have every
cause to be grateful for the goodness of God poured out upon us as a
church.
We no less have right to
thank God for our country and our nation. God has blessed us beyond any
way that we could ever read of in human history. We have an abundance to
eat. There are whole vast areas of the world that face starvation every
day. We have the most productive land in God's creation. We have a
standard of living that is higher than the world has ever known. If you
think you are poor, there are millions and millions of nationals in this earth
who live on less than one-hundred dollars a year. Now, you compare that to the
poorest of our people. They live on less than a hundred dollars a
year. We are an affluent people. We not only have been blessed of
God in a material abundance, but there has never been a ravaging war on our
soil in modern times. These awesome holocausts that have bathed other
countries in blood have never reached us. How much are we indebted to God
for the gift of our native land? And further, hasn't God been
unspeakably, indescribably good to us in our personal blessings? Most of
us, maybe all of us here tonight, practically all of you who would listen on radio,
you have two hands. Think of the blessing of God in just giving us our
hands. We have feet on which to walk. What a blessing of heaven,
our feet. We have breath to breathe. What a blessing from God, our
life! We have eyes to see. How could you say, "God, I thank
Thee enough that I can see with my eyes"? The personal enrichment of
our days is abounding, it is abundant, it is infinite. And all of this is
a gift from God. I never worked for my two hands; they were given to
me. I never worked for my eyes; they were given me. My feet are not
a reward of my labor; God bestowed them upon me. I am debtor to the great
goodness and gracious kindness of God beyond anything I could ever
express.
Now, having said that,
and all of us in a true spirit of gratitude, offering to God the sacrifice of
our praise and thanksgiving, what shall I do and what shall I say of the sorrows,
and the tears, and the heartaches, and the troubles, and the trials, and the
tribulations of life? All of us have them. The tears of childhood
are as real as the tears of adulthood, and the disappointments of teenagers are
as real as the disappointments of manhood or womanhood. There is no period in
human life that does not have its sorrows, and its distresses, and its
disappointments, its heartaches, its crying, and its weeping. How shall I
come before God with my sorrows and my heartaches? This to me is one of
the very dynamic centers of the Christian interpretation of our lives.
And a typical instance of it is found in this marvelous response of the apostle
Paul to the distresses and the sorrows that he faced in his life. Most of
his days, practically all of his ministry was spent in prison, in jail.
In the eleventh chapter, he enumerates the perils that he suffered and the
awesome persecutions through which he went through [2
Corinthians 11:16-33]. And in it all, he says, I glory that [God] “counted
me worthy to suffer for His name’s sake" [Acts
9:16].
Well, we are going to
look at that for just the brief minute that is allotted me. You do not
see it when you go through it. When you are in the midst of a stormy sea,
or you are weeping over an indescribable sorrow, or life seems frustrating and
disappointing and empty, you do not see it at that time, but God may be fitting
for you His greatest blessing in the trial and the tribulation that you
experience. “We see through a glass, darkly,” wrote the apostle in the
thirteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians. We do not understand, but God has a
purpose in every sorrow and trial through which we go. All things work
together for good. In all things, God works for good to them who love the
Lord. We cannot see it when we are in it, but in history and in God's
review, it is plain. I will show it to you. When God called Abraham from
Ur of the Chaldees, God sent him to a land he had never seen. He did not know
where it was. And He asked Abraham to separate himself from his father
and his kindred and his family and be a pilgrim in the earth. He dwelled
in tents with his sons and his grandsons, confessing himself a stranger in the
earth. For “he looked for a city which had foundations whose builder and maker
is God” [Hebrews 11:10]. “Therefore
God is not ashamed to be called their God; for as He had prepared for them that
city" [Hebrews 11:16]. I can
imagine the distress of heart when that call came to Abraham, but he obeyed and
was called the friend of God. Think of the blessings in the sorrow of
separation.
Look again. Could
you imagine the heartache and the sorrow when the ten sons came to Jacob and
said, "Here is the coat of many colors that you gave to your son Joseph?
Look at the blood on it." They had dipped it in an animal's
blood. "This is the blood of your son," they said. Think
of the sorrow of Jacob when he looked upon that coat of many colors, and the
sorrow of Joseph when he was separated from the family and sold by the
Ishmaelites as a slave in Egypt! Yet out of that sorrow came the
preservation of the family in a time of deepest famine and distress. Look
again. Think of the nation, God's people in Egypt, as they sweat and toil
and strive and labor under whip of the taskmaster in the land of Goshen.
Yet out of that, God welded them into a great nation. Heretofore they had
been a nomadic people. They lived in tents and followed the pastureland;
now they are a nation of people prepared to live in cities with the culture of
a national life, God, bringing out of the awesomeness of distress their
greatest blessing. Just once again, we could hardly enter into the sorrow of
the Jew when the bitter and ruthless and hasty Chaldeans came and destroyed
their nation, destroyed their holy city, destroyed their temple, and carried
them into captivity. "We hanged our harps on the willow trees as we
sat and wept by the rivers of Babylon" [Psalm
137:2]. But out of that Babylonian captivity came three of the
greatest blessings the world has ever known. Number one, the Jew became a
monotheist. Never again was he ever enticed, tempted, to serve idols.
Number two, out of the Babylonian captivity came the synagogue, our church
service, their church service. Number three, out of the Babylonian
captivity came the canon of the Holy Scriptures. Three of the greatest
blessings the world has ever known, out of the tears and the sorrows of
Babylonian captivity.
I haven’t time to review
the same wonderful blessing of God in the New Testament. What could I say
of the cross of Jesus Christ? What fountains of grace, what overflowing
streams of love and mercy out of the sufferings of our Lord! I could
speak of the persecution of the church in Jerusalem. They that were
scattered abroad went everywhere, preaching the Word. And when they
stoned Stephen to death in that persecution, it resulted in, ensued in, the
conversion of the apostle Paul, Saul of Tarsus. So many times in a little
thing even, God will bring to pass a marvelous blessing. For example, in
Acts 20:3, Paul is proposing to sail into Syria, but because of a plot to
destroy his life, he chooses rather to go through Macedonia and around into
Israel. And when he did, in Macedonia, he picked up a companion by the
name of Luke, the beloved physician. And when Paul was incarcerated for
three years in Caesarea, Luke, as a good historian, probed every source of the
Christian faith and wrote the Gospel of Luke, a beloved physician's account of
the living Lord, all because of a plot to destroy the life of the apostle
Paul. And what could I see in a limited time of the blessing that has
come to us in the exiling and the banishment of a pastor of the church at
Ephesus, the apostle John? Busy in a great heathen city with the
ministries of the church, God took him and sent him away to a lonely and rocky
isle, that there he might see the vision of God and the world that is yet to
come.
I have to stop.
What could I say of the persecution under James Stewart, the king of England
that sent away the pilgrims in the Mayflower to the new shores of
America? What could I say of the persecution under Charles II, when they
incarcerated John Bunyan, the Baptist preacher of England, and he saw the
visions of The Pilgrim's Progress? Lord, Lord, as I look and as I
read and as I bow before Thee in prayer for wisdom, I am beginning to think
maybe God has His best blessings for us not in the abundance that we enjoy, but
maybe in the necessities, in the trials, in the disappointments, in the
heartaches that we know in life; these are also to be grateful for in
everything, as Paul writes to the Thessalonians, we are to give thanks.
Now, to express that for
us, there are no providences over which God does not preside. These are
inconsequentials and insignificances to us, but they are in the elective
purpose of God, leading us and training us and guiding us to Himself. I read
of a drunkard and a derelict who landed in a cheap ward in a charity
hospital. In that great group of men that were in that big ward in that
charity hospital, they had a habit. When a man was dying, rather than all
the rest of them watch him die, when a man was dying, the nurse would come and
put a screen around his bed. And this drunken, debauched derelict, lying
there in the ward, the nurse came and put a screen around his bed. And he
cried, "O God, this means I am to die. O God, in my worthless life;
dear God, have mercy on me." And in that moment of his crying to the
Lord in heaven, God came into his soul and made him whole. The nurse came
and took the screen away and apologized to him, saying, "Oh sir, I am so
sorry. I put the screen around the wrong bed." And the man
said to the nurse, "Nurse, no, praise God! Praise God! That's
the best thing that ever happened to me in my life because when I thought I was
dying, I cried upon the Lord's name for peace and mercy and forgiveness, and He
saved me." Those are the providences of life that to us they are inconsequentials.
But out of them, they teach us the ways of the Lord. That's unbelievable!
Most gladly therefore will I rejoice, thank God for necessities and
persecutions, in distresses, . . . for when I am cut down and weak, then am I
strong” [2 Corinthians 12:9, 10].
I close. Sorrow and
disappointment and heartache will do one of two things to you, always.
There is no exception. One, it can embitter you. It did Job's
wife. When Job fell into those sorrows, his wife said to him, Husband, curse
God and commit suicide; “Curse God and die" [Job
2:9]. That is one way the heart can respond. But Job said,
"The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the
Lord" [Job 1:21]. We are like
that. When sorrow and distresses come, I can hate God and hate life and
hate the providences that have dealt thus so rudely and crudely and
unfortunately with me, or I can fall on my knees and say, "Lord, in this
distress, God is fitting some better thing for me, and I love Thee for the
strength to bear it." Yesterday afternoon, I sat down by the side of
a sweet, dear fellow worker in our wonderful church. You know who she
is. She works with our—with our Special Education people. And now,
the doctor has said, "You cannot live." Well, as I sat by the
bed, what do I do and what do I say? This is what I did, and this is what
I said. I turned to the great, beautiful, comforting words of the apostle
Paul, who in the love and grace of Jesus hath walked that way before us, and he
wrote, "As the sufferings of Christ abound in us, so our consolations also
aboundeth by Christ” [2 Corinthians 1:5].
For “we had the sentence of death in ourselves that we should not trust in
ourselves, but in God, who raiseth the dead” [2
Corinthians 1:9]. That is what God does for those who place their
trust in Him. Whether we live or die, we are the Lord's. "If
we suffer with Him, we shall also reign with Him" [2 Timothy 2:12], God having fitted for us some better thing.
Now, may we stand
together? Our wonderful, wonderful Savior, there is no step in this road
but You have preceded us. There are no tears that we shed but that Christ
also has wept likewise. There is no broken heartedness we ever experience
but our Savior knows all about it; tried in all points as we are that He might
be a faithful High Priest to strengthen and comfort us in our hour of
need. O Lord, what a wonderful, wonderful Savior! And the open door
God hath set before us, just come boldly to the throne of grace to find help in
time of need; forgiveness for our sin, strength for our weaknesses, victory for
our defeats, and comfort for our sorrows, life for our death, a heaven for the
earth in which we live that is so filled with disappointments. God hath
prepared a place where there is no disappointment, in heaven. O Lord,
that we might fully give ourselves to the faith in Thee. And while our
people pray and while we wait just for you, a family, a couple, or a one
somebody you, to come tonight, “This night, I open my heart God-ward and
heavenward and Christ-ward. I receive the Lord as my Savior.” Or, “I am
coming in obedience to His Word to follow Him through the waters of the Jordan.”
Or, “I am coming to put my life in the fellowship of this dear, dear church;”
or “I am answering the call of the Spirit in my heart.” The angels have
paved your way as you come.
And, our Lord, thank Thee
for this sweet harvest You give us, in Thy saving and keeping name.
Amen. While we sing; down one of those stairways; down one of these
aisles, “Pastor, I have decided for God, and I come.” Bless you and
welcome, while we sing, while we wait.