THE JUDGMENTS OF GOD (A PLEA FOR REVIVAL)
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Kings 23:36
12-30-84 10:50 a.m.
We all feel that way, don’t we? O, bless God for you,
choir and orchestra, and no less do we praise the Lord for the great throngs who
share this hour with us in the First Baptist Church in Dallas on radio and on television.
This is the pastor bringing the message entitled The Judgments of God: A Plea for
Revival. It is actually the first of a duet of sermons, this one and next Sunday’s.
Actually also, it is a quadruplet; it is one in a series of four messages. Next
Sunday The State of the Church sermon, the annual sermon of the pastor on the first
Sunday of the year; then the next Sunday, the third message Soul-Winning Laymen,
laymen, laywomen in soul-winning; and then the fourth one is The Soul-Winning Church,
the church in soul-winning, and this first message of the four The Judgments of
God: A Plea for Revival, a plea for the intervention of Heaven. For our beginning
text, in the Book of Romans chapter 2, beginning at verse 2; Romans chapter 2, verse
2,
The judgment
of God is according to truth.
Verse 3,
Thinkest thou, O man, that thou shalt escape the judgment of God?
Verse 5,
Thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thyself wrath against the day
of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God;
Who will
render to everyone according to his deeds:
To them who
by patient continuance in work, in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality,
to them eternal life;
But unto
them that are contentious, and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness,
to them indignation and wrath,
Tribulation
and anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and also
of the Gentile.
Verse 11,
For there is no respect of persons with God.
He has, in respect to judgment, no favorites, whether
they be of a chosen people, whether they be of this dispensation or a previous one.
Whether it be man or woman, God has no favorites with respect to the judgments of
God. We’re going to look at the great, panoramic review of the hand of God in human
life. And we’re going to see in it two things. First, the inevitable and inextricable
judgments of God upon unrighteousness, and second, the intervention of God in repentance,
in contrition, and in confession.
First, the inexorable and inevitable judgments of God
upon unrighteousness. We are told in the Book of Genesis that there were two angels,
beautiful men, they are in the form of a human life, a human stature. Two beautiful
angels, beautiful men, came down from God in heaven to visit the Sodomites, to see
whether or not it was as it had come up to God in heaven, the deep wickedness of
the Sodomites. And when the two beautiful men, beautiful men, when the two beautiful
men came to the gate of the city they were met by the mayor who sat in the gate
of the city; his name was Lot. And Lot welcomed those two beautiful men into the
city of Sodom. And they walked through the streets of the Sodomites, two beautiful
men. And they came to be guests in the home and house of the mayor, Lot. And while
Lot was entertaining those two beautiful men, attractive men, angelic men, messengers
from heaven, the Sodomites gathered outside the door of the mayor of the city, Lot.
And they said, calling with a loud voice to the family of Lot on the inside of the
house, “Bring out those two beautiful, attractive men that we may sexually know
them.”
And Lot came out instead and he said to the Sodomites,
he said, “I have two daughters, virgins, they have never known, sexually, a man.”
“You take my two daughters and you rape them and you abuse them and you violate
them, but the two beautiful men who are guests from heaven, do not abuse them.”
And the Sodomites in anger replied, “Who is this stranger,
Lot? Where did he come from? And who made him a judge over us?” And as they pressed
toward the house to seize Lot, the two angels on the inside of the house took hold
of Lot and pulled him inside and shut the door.
And when the Sodomites deigned to rush the door and
to open it in violence and to seize those two beautiful, attractive men, the angels
struck blindness on the Sodomites, and they groped for the wall and the door and
could not find it. And on the inside of the house the two angels said to Lot, “You
get your family and you escape for your life, for God shall rain fire and brimstone
upon Sodom.” [Genesis 19]
The Judgments of Almighty God.
When I read in the paper of a parade through San Francisco
of two hundred fifty thousand sodomites, what do you think someday God will do?
And when I read in the daily paper in Dallas of a lesser number of sodomites, marching
and parading through the City of Dallas, what do you think some day God will do,
the God who visits judgment?
I turn again to the Holy Scriptures, and I am introduced
here to Israel. And in the providence of God the kingdom is divided. There are
ten tribes of Israel to the north, whose later capital is Samaria, and they are
called by the name of “Israel,” separated from the two tribes to the south, which
are called Judah. And Jeroboam, the first king of Israel, builds and molds two
golden calves. And he says to his people, “These are the gods that brought you
out of the land of Egypt. These are the gods you are to worship.” [Exodus 32]
And from the succession of every king from Jeroboam
on down to the last one, including Ahab and Jezebel, every king of Israel was a
wicked king. On every high place they built an altar to a heathen god. On every
day in the year they bowed down before Ashorah, the female goddess of fertility,
whose licentious rites of worship were indescribable to us. Every king of Israel
was a vile and wicked king. And finally, ultimately, inexorably I read in 2 Kings
chapter 17 and verse 7,
And so
it was, that the children of Israel sinned against the Lord their God,…
And they
walked in the statutes of the heathen, whom the Lord cast out before them….
The Lord
testified against Israel by all the prophets and by all the seers saying,
“Turn ye from your evil ways and keep My commandments and statutes….
Notwithstanding
they would not hear,
they left
all the commandments of the Lord their God…
They caused
their sons and their daughters to be offered up, as sacrifices to Molech, in the
fire….
Therefore,
the Lord was angry with Israel and removed them out of His sight: there was none
left but the tribe of Judah only…
…So was Israel
carried away out of their own land to Assyria unto this day.
[2 Kings 17:7-8, 13, 16-18,
23]
That’s the day in which the author wrote it, that’s
the day in which we live. To this day, Israel, the northern ten tribes, are referred
to as “the lost ten tribes.” They were forever scattered over the face of the civilized
world, and their nation and their capital were forever destroyed: the judgments
of God. In 722 BC, the bitter and hasty Assyrian came and forever destroyed Israel,
the northern kingdom. Do you notice in reading the Scripture, it says, “But the
tribe of Judah only”? God destroyed them and moved them, except the tribe of [Judah]
only.
So Judah remains, Judah with her capital city of Jerusalem,
stands before the Lord. But how does she stand? In those divided days there were
kings of great revival and reformation, like Hezekiah and like good King Josiah,
but other than once in a while a godly king of the house of David, Judah also was
led into vast, permeating idolatry by her nobility. Then we read in 2 Kings 23,
The Lord
turned not from the fierceness of His great wrath, wherewith His anger was kindled
against Judah...
And the Lord
said, I will remove Judah also out of My sight, as I have removed Israel, and will
cast off this city, Jerusalem, which I have chosen...”
[2 kings 23:26-27]
Then the next first verse of the next chapter, chapter
24 begins:
Nebuchadnezzar,
king of Babylon came up...
according
to the word of the Lord which He spake by His servants the prophets.
At the commandment
of the Lord came this upon Judah, to remove them out of His sight,
for the sins of king Manasseh,…
For he filled
Jerusalem with innocent blood, which the Lord would not pardon.
[2 Kings 24:1-4]
And if I could speak of the destruction of the nation
and of the city in the lamentable words of Jeremiah the prophet: Jeremiah lifted
up his voice and cried to his people, “Repent! Get right with God!” And Nebuchadnezzar
came in 605 BC and took some of the nobility captive and made them eunuchs in his
palace in Babylon, among them being one named Daniel, a statesman-seer.
Jeremiah, in Jerusalem, cried to his people, “Repent!
Get right with God!” And Nebuchadnezzar came in 597 BC, and this time he took all
of the royal family and took all of the craftsman and took the leaders of the army
and ten thousand of the people, among whom was Ezekiel, the prophet-priest.
Jeremiah, remaining in Jerusalem, lifted up his voice
and cried saying, “Repent! Get right with God!” And Nebuchadnezzar came in 586
BC, and this time he needed not to return. He took the nation into slavery. He
destroyed the temple and the city, and they became exiles and slaves in the Mesopotamian
nation of Babylonia. And Jeremiah lifted up his voice and cried,
O, that my
head were waters and mine eyes a fountain of tears, That I might weep day and night
for the slain of the daughter of my people!
[Jeremiah 9:1]
The harvest
is past, the summer is ended, and we, we, are not saved.
Is there
no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? why, then, is not the
[health] of the daughter of my people healed?
[Jeremiah 8:20, 22]
The judgment of Almighty God. In the twenty-third
chapter of the Book of Matthew our Lord is lamenting over Jerusalem, the twenty-third
chapter of Matthew,
Woe unto
you, scribes and Pharisees, leaders of the people. Woe unto you!
Behold, He
says, your house is left unto you desolate!
And the twenty-fourth chapter, the following chapter
of Matthew begins:
And the disciples pointed out to the Lord the great
vast stones in the temple.
And the Lord said, “See these great stones? Not one
shall be left upon the other.” And within a few short years, a few years, the great
seething rebellion came into Israel, and the Roman legions came under Vespasian.
Then, when he was crowned as Caesar, continuing under Titus, and the city was taken,
and the people into captivity, and the city was destroyed.
The Judgments of Almighty God.
And through the years and the centuries to our present
day, God doesn’t change. The same omnipotent Judge who weighs the nations in the
balance is the same omnipotent Judge who reigns forever and ever.
The judgments of God today. A few months, several
months, after the Second World War, I went through Germany from the south to the
north and from the east to the west. Nor is it possible to describe the vast, unmitigated
destruction of the Allied force as they rained fire and bomb down from heaven, the
instruments of the judgments of Almighty God.
I stood, for example, in the middle of Hamburg, a city
as large as Chicago, and from horizon to horizon, as far as my eye could see, there
was not one building standing. And the whole nation was like that: prostrate, pulverized,
bombed, fired, destroyed, in misery and unmitigated agony. As you stand there in
the midst of that indescribable destruction, anybody with mind at all could not
but poignantly view the preachers that Hitler had placed in prison and slain. The
people of God, the Jews that he had incarcerated and tortured and destroyed by the
millions, and the violence that he had done to human life and human right and human
nature: The Judgments of Almighty God.
I am old enough to remember, though I was a child,
I am old enough to remember the revolution, the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia;
the Rasputins, the priests using the church for vile and vicious ends. And the
Lord God looked down from heaven and said, “It is enough!” And the whole nation
was thrown into the throes of an awesome confrontation. And out of it came not
something that glorified God. Instead of turning to the Lord Christ in penitence
and in confession and in plea for help, they turned to atheistic Communism. And
the story since, every chapter to this present moment of the violation of Afghanistan,
every moment of it to the present in its insurrection, infiltration in Central America,
every, every, paragraph and chapter of the story is written in blood and in terror.
Until finally, in Ezekiel chapter 38 and chapter 39, there is coming an awesome
judgment upon Russia and her godless, atheistic Communism: The Judgment of Almighty
God.
But the same wonderful Book that reveals to us the
mind and character of the Judge of all the earth also reveals to us His abounding
grace and mercy when a people turn, when they repent, when they confess, when they
come before the Lord in plea and in confession and in repentance. You have a poignant
illustration of that in the life of the people of Nineveh, that great capital city
of the Assyrian Empire,
Jonah, God’s
prophet, entered into the city crying and saying, Yet 40 days and Nineveh shall
be destroyed!
And it came
to the ears of the Assyrian emperor what God’s prophet was saying. He left his
throne. He sat in an ash heap. He covered himself with sackcloth.
He made it
a decree that every citizen in the city was to cover himself in sackcloth and to
cry mightily unto the God of heaven in confession and in repentance.
And the next
verse says, And God repented Him of what He had proposed to do against Nineveh.
[Jonah 3:4-10]
When men repent, when men change, God repents, God
changes. God never changes in regard to His character. God will change any time
in His response to a nation, or to a man or to a family or to a youth. That’s the
kind of a God that rules and reigns over this earth. He’s a God who is moved by
the cries and the contrition and the repentance and the confession of men.
Another poignant illustration of the mercy of God:
the same Assyrian army that destroyed Samaria and the Northern Kingdom of Israel,
it was that same Assyrian mighty power that came down to destroy Jerusalem and Judah.
At that time there was a godly king in Judah named Hezekiah. And when Sennacherib
and his Assyrian army came down and “shut up Jerusalem like a vice,” Sennacherib,
the Assyrian emperor, sent his general Rabshakeh and representative with a letter
to Hezekiah. And in that letter the Assyrian emperor spoke of the terrible things
that lay before Hezekiah and his people: debauchery and rape and slavery exile,
death, blood. And Hezekiah took the letter from Sennacherib and went into the house
of the Lord, and he laid it before Jehovah God and read it in the presence of the
Lord. And in tears, and prayers, and confession, and repentance, and appeal, asked
God for deliverance and salvation and help.
And the Lord God sent Isaiah, His messenger and His
prophet, to Hezekiah the king, to say to Hezekiah, “The battle is not yours. It
is Mine. It is Mine. I will fight this battle.” And that night the angel of death
passed over the great army of Sennacherib. And the next morning they counted one
hundred eighty-five thousand dead corpses. What God will do for a people who turn,
who plead, who pray, and who confess, and who repent!
The story of the mercy of our Lord continues even beyond
the pages of that Holy Bible. In 390 AD, Antioch, the third city in the Roman Empire,
first, Rome, second, Alexandria, third, Antioch, in 390 AD the emperor, the Roman
Caesar Theodosius, was on his way to Antioch with the Roman legions to destroy the
city, to burn it with fire and to take the people into slavery and captivity. They
were guilty of insurrection, of insubordination, of riot and sacrilege. And it
was the purpose of the emperor Theodosius to punish and to make them a spectacle
before the whole civilized world.
In those days, there stood up to preach a flaming prophet
of God named Chrysostom, John Chrysostom, John “golden-mouthed,” John Chrysostom.
And that glorious preacher, like Savonarola of Florence, Italy, Chrysostom poured
out his flaming zeal in calling the people of Antioch to repentance, to faith, to
confession, to contrition, to prayer, to bowing, to intercession, interceding, pleading
with Almighty God. And when Theodosius, the Roman Caesar, arrived in Antioch to
destroy it, he found a people in the midst of a great revival meeting. The power
and the Spirit of the Lord was poured out upon Antioch and God saved the city and
the Lord spared the people. And Theodosius just bowed in worship before the Lord
God, who brought about such a vast, deep, penetrating, universal repentance and
contrition on the part of the vast population. Revival, revival, the interposition
of God.
There is no section or no chapter in history as en-crimsoned
with human blood as the story, the record, of the French Revolution. Under Robespierre
and those terrible men of the Commune, they guillotined by the thousands, they murdered
by the other thousands, they killed and slew by other thousands. They literally
en-crimsoned Paris with blood; the streets ran with human blood. They would move
the guillotine from here to there to there because the ground and the very cobblestones
were soggy with human blood. And in the days of the terrible visitation upon French
worldliness and French wickedness and French compromise, unrighteousness, iniquity,
in those days when the Lord God looked down upon France and judged it, in those
horrible, indescribable days of blood and terror and violence, in that same day
the Lord God from heaven looked down upon England.
And what did He see in England? And what I am about
to describe is a part of my imagination. But it is the universal verdict of history,
universal, that England was saved and spared and delivered, because, when God looked
down from heaven upon England, He saw a great revival, a great moving of the Spirit
of God, poured out upon England and through England upon America. In England it
was “The Wesleyan revival”; in America it is called “The Great Awakening.” And
under the preaching of George Whitefield and John Wesley, and under the singing
of Charles Wesley, the whole nation turned to God.
They were not allowed to preach in the churches. The
churches looked with disdain upon the kind of preaching that the Wesleys and the
Whitefields were doing. They preached outside. They preached in the squares, in
the commons. They preached where the miners came out of the ground. They preached
wherever men would listen. They went up and down the towns and cities of England,
preaching the gospel of Christ, calling men to repentance, to faith, to confession.
And all England bowed in contrition before the Lord. And they sang the songs of
Charles Wesley.
I can imagine, this is just my imagination, but I can
imagine; in those days when the Lord God, the Judge of all the earth, was looking
down upon England, judging France at the same time, the horrible en-crimsoning of
the nation of France, looking down at the same time upon England. And I can imagine,
I can imagine the angel Gabriel, the messenger of the Lord, I can imagine the angel
Gabriel coming before the Lord and saying, “Lord, come here. Come here, Lord.
I want You to look down. I want You to listen, and listen, Lord, listen to these
people.” And the Lord God in heaven bowed down His ear to listen and He heard John
Wesley and his people singing,
Jesus, lover
of my soul, let me to Thy bosom fly,
While the
nearer waters roll, while the tempest still is nigh.
Hide me,
O my Savior, hide, till the storm of life is past;
Safe unto
Thy haven guide; O receive my soul at last.
[“Jesus, Lover of My Soul,”
by Charles Wesley]
And Gabriel to the Lord God, “What do you think about
that, Lord? Listen to those people as they sing.” And Michael, God’s great warrior
representative, the hand of the Lord God in judgment, Michael comes to the Lord
God and says, “Lord, come over here. Come over here, Lord. Lord, look down, look
down, what do You see? And listen, Lord, and what do You hear?” And the Lord God
looked down from heaven and listened and He heard,
Oh, for ten
thousand tongues to sing
My great
Redeemer’s praise,
The glories
of my God and King,
The triumphs
of His grace!
[“Oh, for a Thousand Tongues
to Sing,” by Charles Wesley]
And Michael says to the Lord God, “Lord, what do You
think about that? Charles Wesley and those people singing, what do You think about
that?” And I can imagine, Uriel and Raphael, the angels of God, saying to the Lord,
“Lord, come with me, come with me. Look down, Lord, look and listen. What are
they singing?”
Hark, hark,
the herald angels sing
“Glory to
our Lord and King!”
[“Hark the Herald Angels Sing,”
by Charles Wesley]
“What do You hear, Lord? Listen to them as they sing.”
Lo! He comes
with clouds descending,
Once for
favored sinners slain;
Thousand,
thousand saints attending,
Swell the
triumph of His train:
Hallelujah!
Hallelujah!
God comes
down on earth to reign.
[“Lo, He Comes with Clouds
Descending,” by John Cennick & Charles Wesley]
“What do You think about that, Lord? What do You think
about that?”
And the Lord God in heaven said, “For My name’s sake,
for My name’s sake, I will spare the people of England.” And England never experienced
anything comparable, even approaching the terror and the blood of the French Revolution.
I repeat, the universal verdict of history, it’s not just my observation, is this:
England was spared because of the great Wesleyan revival.
I hasten to our own country, the announcement was made
in our little city where I pastored, “When D-Day comes, when the hour arrives for
our men to storm the bastion of Germany, when they cross the Channel in Normandy,
when the word comes, we’re going to meet in the church and pray.” The church at
Muskogee, Oklahoma, where I pastored, is built like this, just not as large, with
a balcony, horseshoe balcony all the way around. The telephone rang about 1:45
in the morning, “The American soldiers are storming the bastion of Hitler.” I dressed
as hastily as I could, went down to the church, and I could hardly get in, it was
jammed and filled with people. At two o’clock in the morning, lifting holy hands
in prayer, asking God’s mercies and grace upon our men who were fighting our war,
for our liberties, for our government, for our nation, for our people, for our families,
for our churches, for our children.
And the Lord God looked down from heaven and the Lord
spared our nation, and He gave victory to our forces, the great God of all the universe.
We live in the imponderables of Almighty God, whether He says yes or whether He
says no. And He judges according to the contrition and the confession and the repentance
and the commitment and the faith of His people.
God of our
fathers, known of old—
Lord of our
far-flung battle-line—
Beneath whose
awful Hand we hold
Dominion
over palm and pine—
Lord God
of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest
we forget!
The tumult
and the shouting dies—
The Captains
and the Kings depart—
Still stands
Thine ancient sacrifice,
A humble
and a contrite heart.
Lord God
of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest
we forget!
For-called,
our navies melt away—
On dune and
headland sinks the fire—
Lo, all our
pomp of yesterday
Is one of
Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of
the nations, spare us yet.
Lest we forget—lest
we forget!
[“The Recessional,” by Rudyard
Kipling]
But a nation is made up of people, of you. A nation
is "we." And a nation cannot bow if I do not bow. A nation does not
repent if I do not repent. A nation does not confess if I do not confess. A nation
is not saved if I am not saved. A nation is not baptized if I am not baptized.
A nation does not respond if I do not respond, the revival, the repenting, the committal,
the dedication, the consecration, the appeal, the intercession, the prayer begins
in me. And this is our plea, the plea for revival.
Lord God, as we enter our new year and as we program
these days that lie before us, may there be in our hearts, in our lives, in our
time, in our homes and families, and in our church, may there be a great wide-open
invitation to God; Lord come down, come in, bring with Thee healing and salvation
and encouragement and love, and joy and peace and glory. Do it, Lord. Make it
the finest year we have ever known, and through us and our intercessions, spare
our city. Save our nation and bless the world.
Now, as we come to our invitation hymn, whatever the
Spirit of the Lord lays upon your heart, respond. Maybe some of you for the first
time in life, “I accept Jesus as my Savior and here I am, pastor.” Maybe some of
you coming into the fellowship of the church, “Pastor, my wife, my children, all
of us are coming today.” Maybe some of you, answering a special call that the Spirit
has pressed upon your heart, as God shall say the word, shall make the invitation.
As the Spirit shall open the door, answer with your life,
“I’m coming, I’m responding, pastor, I’m doing it now.” In the balcony round, there’s
a stairway down, and the press of the people on the lower floor, there are aisles
everywhere, “I’m on the way, pastor, here I am.” May angels attend you as you come,
while we stand and while we sing.