THOSE GRIEVOUS WOLVES
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Acts 20:29-30
1-07-79 10:30 a.m.
…here
in God’s house this morning. And to the uncounted thousands and thousands of
you who on television and on the two radio stations are listening and watching
this hour, may God fit just the right blessing of encouragement for us as we
begin the work of our Lord in the new year of 1979. In our preaching through the
Book of Acts, we are in chapter 20, and the passage from which the message is
taken is verses 28 through 31. This is the First Baptist Church in
Dallas, and this is the pastor, delivering the sermon entitled Those
Grievous Wolves. Now, we read the text, Acts 20:28-31:
Take heed
therefore unto yourselves, and to all of the flock over which the Holy Spirit
has made you overseers, to feed, to shepherd, to tend, to care for the church
of God, which He hath purchased with His own blood.
For I know
this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not
sparing the flock.
Also of
your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things to draw away
disciples after them.
Therefore,
watch and remember…
Then
Paul reminds them of his own soul-winning ministry:
… by the
space of three years I ceased not to warn everyone night and day with tears, publicly
and from house to house, testifying both to the Jews and to the Greeks
repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul,
to these pastors of the church at Ephesus, lays before them his earnest appeal:
to take heed to yourselves, to shepherd—to care for the flock—which God
purchased with His own blood. Then he uses a little conjunctive particle,
g-a-r, gar, translated here “for.” That little particle always refers to
the statement just made, and gives the reason for what he’s just said.
So, the statement that he’s just made is we’re to take heed to ourselves to
shepherd, to care for the church of God which He purchased with His own
blood. Gar, “for”—then he gives the reason for that appeal:
For I know
this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not
sparing the flock. And of your own selves shall men arise speaking
heretical—anti-God, anti-Christ, anti-church things—to draw away people after
them. Therefore watch and remember.
I
think, as I read through these Holy Scriptures, there are two animals that are
used to describe those who decimate and destroy the church of God; one is a
little fox. In the Song of Solomon, second chapter fifteenth verse, it
reads, “The little foxes that destroy the vines.” I think that is an
image of worldliness, coming into the lives of the people of God that pulls
them away from the Lord.
In
the last chapter of the last letter Paul wrote, he says, “Demas hath forsaken
me, having loved this present world.” Worldliness will take you away from
God: “The little foxes that destroy the vines.”
“For
the love of this world is enmity against God,” wrote the apostle John. And the
pleasures and the interests and the compromises that we know in this world will
destroy our spiritual life and will destroy the church of the living God—“little
foxes that destroy the vines”: worldliness.
The
second animal, the imagery of which is used to describe those that destroy the
churches of our Lord is a wolf; described by the Apostle Paul in our text as “grievous
wolves.” What could he mean by that description, “grievous wolves that
enter in and destroy the flock”? I think you have a key to it in the word
translated “grievous” here. The word that the inspired Apostle Paul uses—and
I think every word in the Scripture is infallible, inspired—the Spirit of God
caused Paul to choose this word and not another word, the word that Paul uses
is barus, barus. And it has two meanings and they are amazing meanings
when you look at them. One of the meanings of barus is “heavy, weighty,
burdensome” and finally, “hard to be borne and grievous”—barus,
translated here “grievous, heavy, weighty, burdensome, hard to be borne,
grievous.”
Now,
the second meaning of that word is astonishing. The word also means “influential,
dignified, attractive, authoritative.” What an opposite in meaning! And when
we put the two together it becomes very apparent the “wolves” that Paul is
describing who enter in, and who rise up, and who decimate and destroy the
churches of our Lord; these are ecclesiastics. They are influential, and
dignified, and authoritative, and they rise in the church, and they enter into
the church, and they destroy the gospel message of Christ and decimate the
flocks of our Lord. Isn’t that an astonishing thing, what Paul says? And
he says these “grievous wolves”—these churchmen, these ecclesiastics of great
dignity and authority—he says they arise from two sources. One: he says
they enter in from the outside: they are unregenerate; they are unconverted; they
are humanists; they are speculators; they are philosophers—but they get into
the church and they destroy it!
You
have an instance of that in Paul’s writing in the 2 Corinthian letter, the
eleventh chapter. He speaks there of false teachers, and false apostles,
and false prophets, who come into the church and deceive the people. Then
he says in the next verse, “And no wonder, for Satan himself transforms himself
into an angel of light.” These who come with superior wisdom, and great
dignity, and authority, and they enter into the church unconverted,
unregenerated, and they deceive and lead astray the people.
Then
he speaks of a second group. Also he says, “Of your own selves shall men
arise speaking heretical and anti-Christian things and draw away men after
them.” You have an example of that in the third letter of the Apostle
John. There he describes “Diotrephes, who loveth to have the preeminence among
them.” And Diotrephes opposes the apostle John himself and leads the
people into heresy:The decimation and destruction of the church by these “grievous
wolves”, who are learned, and gifted, and authoritative ecclesiastics, but they
destroy the church of God.
Now
the Apostle Paul says, “These men, these grievous wolves, will arise among you
upon my departure”—immediately! That’s such an astonishing thing: that
before the church has hardly been founded, and the great gospel message been
preached—immediately, immediately his heels are hounded by those who make
wreckage of the faith, and who destroy the flocks of the Lord. When I
read the life of the Apostle Paul in the Book of Acts, and when I read his
Epistles, I see that, just as he said. Immediately these false teachers,
these grievous wolves, these learned influential ecclesiastics come along,
hounding him wherever he went, and destroy the faith.
That’s
the reason the Epistle to the Galatians was written. Judaizers came,
immediately following Paul, saying to the people, “You can’t be saved by faith,
just by trusting Jesus; you must also add all of these good works. You
must be circumcised, and you must keep all of the laws of Moses, else you
cannot be saved.” Immediately that came to pass! And when you turn and read
through the epistles of the apostle Paul, all through them, you find these
false teachers and false apostles. For example, in the second chapter of
2 Timothy he speaks of Hymenaeus and Philetus who he says, “have made shipwreck
of the faith, saying that the resurrection is already passed.” That is,
they were allegorizers and spiritualizers, and they took the great historical
facts of the Christian faith and read them into all kinds of fanciful and
speculative notions. And he mentions one: the very heart of the Christian faith
is the resurrection of the dead. The reason for that is because of the
resurrection of Jesus Christ. And these learned teachers, Hymenaeus and
Philetus, say there is no such thing as a resurrection. It’s spiritual,
and the only resurrection there is, is that of a spiritual life, but there is
no physical resurrection—which would mean Jesus did not rise.
The
tremendous destruction of the faith by these ecclesiastics who rise up in our
midst and who by allegory, and by mythology, and by spiritualizing take away
the truth of the faith. That happened, Paul says, “immediately after my
preaching.” And that same thing has characterized the Christian church in
all of the decades and the centuries since. If you hold in your hand a
history of the Christian church, page after page and every page in it will be
characterized by confrontation and by controversy, as those who are defending
the truth will battle against those who are seeking to destroy it by heresy and
false doctrine. That’s the history of the church through the years and
the centuries.
And
to our great lament and sorrow, it is the history of the church today in this
present hour and time in which we live. There are those who have arisen
in the name of academic scholarship—great authorities—they are men of dignity,
and influence, and erudition and they have taught, and they have preached, and
they have emptied all of the churches of Europe! When you attend those
services there in England, in Europe, it is as though you were standing in a
mausoleum; the church is sterile, and barren, and dead, and empty. And that
same theology, those same ecclesiastics have depressed on a tragic and downward
trend, all of the great mainline historical denominations of the faith.
Fewer attend the services, fewer go to the mission field, fewer are converted,
fewer are reached, and the graph goes down, and down, and down.
You
marvel at how those men are able to grasp the minds of the preachers and the
minds of the denominational leaders, and to lead them into courses, and into
doctrines, and into beliefs that destroy the faith, destroy the denomination,
destroy the churches. They teach us that man is innately inborn
good. They teach humanism: “We don’t need to be redeemed. We’re
already the children of God. We’re already saved, and the man just needs
to be made aware of his salvation.” They teach that blood redemption, and
the crucifixion of Christ, and repentance, and the acceptance of Jesus as a
personal Savior has no part or place in the church. And instead of the
gospel, they substitute a social and an institutional Christianity; and they
make of the church nothing other than self-improvement societies. And the
gospel is never heard, and the churches die, and there are no converts, and no
additions, and no baptisms, and the whole thing begins to decay and to collapse
in itself. And lest we think—lest we think that may be true of “those people
over there,” and of “those denominations out there,” and of “those folks over
yonder”—lest we think this applies just to them but it doesn’t reach us, may I
read?
A milestone
was recently marked with the sale of the First Baptist Church of Winnipeg,
Canada and the dissolution of the congregation. During the generation in
which Winnipeg was transformed from a tiny, sprawling town to a metropolitan
city, the First Baptist Church was one of the great religious bastions of the
west. A long line of distinguished preachers, among whom John McNeal was
perhaps the most widely known, kept the Baptist pulpit a power in the
city. Unfortunately Baptist congregations do not thrive in liberal
theology and as the old Baptist families who had maintained the church passed
away, new ones were not converted; they did not come to replace them. And
the church found it impossible to maintain itself in a downtown location, so
this year the congregation decided to sell the downtown building and go out of
business.
Then
there is another item. There is significance not only for the Baptist
churches, but for all the major denominations in the fact that the Pentecostals
who bought the church is every Sunday night taxing the auditorium to its
capacity of 1500 seats. What is happening? When we embrace a theology and
follow a pattern of church life that destroys the churches and brings to an
awesome, catastrophic, downward trend the association—the communion of churches
called a denomination. And then lest we think, “Well, that might have happened
up there or way over yonder,” let us look at ourselves. I hold in my hand
the lead editorial of the current issue of our Baptist Standard, the
weekly magazine of our Baptist General Convention of Texas. And the lead
editorial concerns the decline that has set in our Southern Baptists. It
means that baptisms have decreased for the third year in a row; we’re in a
trend down, and down, and down. And Sunday school enrollment in Southern
Baptist Churches is projected to decline, and then other groups and
organizations in the denomination are on a downward trend.
You
wring your hands, “What is happening? What has overwhelmed us?” We
are becoming prey to a system and to a theology that is destroying our faith,
and the preaching of the gospel, and the winning of the lost, and the baptizing
of our converts, and the building up of our churches. So Paul writes as though
he were speaking to us today. He writes:
Take heed
therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock over which the Holy Spirit hath
made you overseers, to care for and to tend the flock of God, for there are
arising grievous wolves who enter in and destroy the flock.
And of
your own selves are men arising who take away from the faith.
Watch,
therefore and remember.
And
then he calls us back to the great commitments that made us, out of which we
were born:
Watch, and
remember, that by the space of three years, I ceased not to warn everyone night
and day with many tears, publicly and from house to house, testifying to the
Jews, to the Greeks, to everybody, repentance toward God and faith toward our
Lord Jesus Christ.
[Acts
20:20.31]
The
Lord God Himself, in the second chapter of the Apocalypse, of the Revelation,
addressed this same church at Ephesus. And this is what He said:
Nevertheless,
I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love.
Repent ye
therefore and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and
remove thy lampstand out of its place, except thou repent, except you turn.
[Rev
2:4-5]
What
are those “first things?” What is that “first love?” It is very
apparent “by the space of three years—that is all of the time of his ministry
in Ephesus—I ceased not with many tears from house to house, testifying
repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.” Our first
commitment, our first assignment, our primary and first mandate from heaven is
this: namely, the Great Commission. We’re to win people to Jesus.
We’re to testify, teach, make disciples. We’re to baptize our converts,
and we are to instruct them in the mind, and in the work, and in the service of
the Lord. And however a thousand other things we may do, that is primary
and first. When we turn aside from it, the Lord says: “I will come. I
will take away your lampstand except you turn—except you repent.”
That
is our commitment, our dedication in this New Year into which God hath given to
us, we’re going to turn, we’re going to repent, we’re going to do those first
works. Our first love: witnessing, testifying, knocking at the door,
talking, explaining, inviting, bringing to Jesus this whole great vast
metroplex. That’s the thing that builds us up, that’s the carrying out of the
great commandment of our Lord. That’s the reason God saved us, spares us,
blesses us: doing this first thing for Jesus. And, when we turn aside
from it, immediately we begin to die. God withdraws His blessing, and
finally removes our lampstand out of our midst.
May
I take something in the Great Depression, in the days in which I began my
ministry? There came to America in those days an ignorant, unschooled,
untaught Italian immigrant. And there in the city, he built him a hot dog
stand and he began his work of selling hot dogs. He made the best ones in
the city, and he said it. He got the most succulent, and juicy, and
delicious wieners, and he got himself mustard, and chili, and relish, and
pickles, and onions. And he walked up and down the street, and he hawked
his wares, the best hot dogs in the city; big, juicy, covered with all kinds of
condiments, whatever you like, the best tasting, the finest buns, “My hot dogs!”
And his business grew, making them delicious, appetizing, good and telling the
world about it, the best hot dogs in the city.
He
became successful, made money. And he said, “My boy, my boy, he no be
ignorant like me. My boy, I send my boy to the college. He learn to
read-a the newspaper, and he learn to read-a the books. And my boy, he be
smart. He be smart.”
So,
the old untaught, ignorant, uneducated Italian immigrant sent his boy to
college. So the boy came home to visit his papa on vacation. And
while the boy was there in the hot dog stand, he heard his father talking over the
telephone, and the father was ordering so many luscious buns, and so many big
juicy delicious wieners, and he was ordering all kinds of relishes, and chili,
and pickles, and onions.
And
the boy listened to him, aghast. And when the father hung up the phone,
he came to him and said, “Papa, Papa, you don’t read-a the newspaper. You don’t
know. Papa, we in a great depression. Unthinkable! You order
all of those buns, and all of those wieners, and all of those condiments.
Papa, you don’t know. You don’t read. We in a great depression.”
He
says, “Papa, you go back to the phone, you order half that many buns. You order
not those big delicious wieners. We’re in a big depression. You
order those little skinny ones, and cut down on the chili, and the mustard, and
the onions, and the pickles, and the relish, because we in a great depression.”
The
father: “My boy, he smart. He read-a the books.” So the father halved his
order, and he got little skinny wieners, and he got little dried up buns, and
he cut down on the mustard, and on the onions, and on the chili sauce, and on
the relish. And he didn’t go up anymore up and down the streets: “The
best hot dogs in town! Big, delicious wieners! All kinds of mustard
and chili, and all kinds of relish. The best hotdogs in town! Come!” He
didn’t go up and down the streets anymore, and his business fell off, and
people didn’t come, and they didn’t buy his hot dogs any longer.
And
the old, uneducated, ignorant Italian immigrant said, “My boy, he smart.
My boy, he go to the college. My boy, he read-a the books. My boy,
he read the newspapers. My boy, he smart. We are in a great
depression.”
Man,
no wonder you’re in a great depression! You don’t go up and down the
streets any longer saying, “Bless God! Got the best Savior and the most
marvelous Friend in the world. ‘Come, taste and see that the Lord is
good.’ Best place in the world, in the church. Best play to rear
your children under God’s heaven is to rear them in the name of the Lord.”
Don’t do it anymore. Don’t invite anymore. Don’t have a product in
which we are committed and are happy about, rejoice in any longer.
“My
boy, he smart. He read the books. He go to the college. He
understands we in a great depression.” And the church dies, and the
denomination dies, and the faith dies, and the people die, without God and
without hope in the world. That’s what he is talking about. “Nevertheless,”
says the Lord,
I have
somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love. … Repent therefore
and do the first works, or else I will come unto thee quickly and remove thy
lampstand out of its place, except thou repent, except ye turn.
[Revelation
2:4-5]
Man,
would you like to still be alive and the newspapers say, “On such and such day,
they sold the First Baptist Church. In the days when those preachers
preached the gospel, and the people witnessed to the saving grace of the Lord,
it flourished. Then they lost their faith, and they gave themselves to
other things.” It isn’t delicious any longer. It isn’t attractive
anymore. The people don’t crowd around the stand. They pass it
by.
Just
to remind us, as Paul reminds the church here at Ephesus: God help us, the Holy
Spirit working with us, we’re going to turn. We are going to repent. We’re
going back to that first work and that first love. We are going up and
down the streets of this city. We are going to knock at every house,
every one of them.
Jesus:
it is life everlasting to know Him. Jesus: it is the health and happiness of
your home—Jesus. It is the way to rear these children: Jesus, the Savior of
our souls. Come, love the Lord with us, serve the Lord with us, magnify His
name with us.
This
year is a year of turning. It is a year of evangelism. It is a year
of soul-winning. It is a year of personal appeal and invitation. As
the days unfold, God is giving us the wisdom—how all of us can share in it,
beautifully, marvelously, wondrously—every one of us, how to invite others.
And
I can tell you this, in all experiential honesty: there’ll never be a joy that
you experience in your life like the joy of seeing somebody come down that
aisle. You were at his home. You know the names of his
children. You met his wife. You talked to him. You prayed
with him. You invited him to the Lord. And there they are, down here at
the front, giving the Pastor their hand and their heart to God.
That’s
it. That’s the big thing. When we turn aside from it, we die.
When we give ourselves to it, we live. God bless us. That’s our
invitation to your heart this precious moment.
We’ll
stand and sing in a minute. As we stand and sing the hymn, to give your life
to the blessed Jesus; to bring your family and all of you in the fellowship of
our wonderful church; to pray with us; to love God with us; to serve the Lord
with us, make the decision now in your heart. And in a moment when we stand to
sing just stand up walking down that stairway. Stand up walking down this
aisle. That first step will be the most meaningful you will ever make in your
life. Make the decision now. And when you stand up, “God help me, here I am.
I am on the way.”
We
are still on television and on radio. Wherever you are, if you have never
given your heart to Jesus, open your soul heavenward, God-ward. Let the Lord come
into your life. It will be the dearest, sweetest experience you have ever known.
And wherever He comes there is blessing, and healing, and happiness. It is
the presence of God Himself. Bless you in your business. Bless you in your
home. Bless you in your family. Bless you with your children. Bless you in
life, stand by you in death, take you to heaven someday and we see God’s face
and live. To accept the Lord as your Savior just bow your head wherever you
are and say, “Lord Jesus, I give my life to Thee. Strengthen me. Forgive me.
Save me.” And He will do it. In this throng of people in God’s house this
sacred hour, “Pastor, I have decided for God and here I am this year and every
year, this life and in the life to come, in time and in eternity I am walking
with the Lord.” Do it. God bless you and angels attend you as you make that
decision and commitment. As we stand, come and tell me about it. “Pastor, I
give you my hand. I have made that decision for God and here I am.” Do it now
while we stand and while we sing.