THE CURSE
OF LIBERALISM
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
San
Antonio SBC
6-13-88
We have a full program tonight, so
we begin. May I speak on The Curse of Liberalism? Because of the
opprobrious epithet "liberal," today they call themselves
“moderates.” A skunk by any other name still stinks!
To my great sorrow, and yours, we
have lost our nation to the liberal, and the secularist, and the humanist,
which finally means to the atheist and the infidel. America used to be known
as a Christian nation. It is no longer. America is a secular nation.
Our forefathers who came on the
Mayflower founded here a new republic, a new nation, and it was Christian. Our
Baptist forefathers founded a state, and it was Christian. When I was a youth
growing up, the name of God and the Christian faith was a part of the civic and
national life of our people. It is not anymore.
By law and by legislation and by
court decision, we bow at no altar and we call on the name of no God. The
forefathers who placed in our Constitution the First Amendment did so for the
sole purpose of interdicting a state-established church. But we have taken
that First Amendment to read out of our national life, and out of our public
life, the presence of Almighty God.
No longer can we pray in our
public schools. No longer can we read God's word in our public schools. No
longer can we have chapel services in our public schools. No longer are we
permitted to place a nativity scene on a courthouse lawn. No longer can we
place a star in a public building. We have become a secular nation. I was
invited to speak at a great high school, and the administration of the school
came to me and said, "The American Civil Liberties Union has announced to
us that when that preacher speaks, if he names the name of Jesus we'll close
down the school.” That is modern America.
We have not only lost our nation
to the liberal and to the secularist and to the humanist, but in great areas of
our Baptist life we have lost our denominations and our Christian institutions,
our colleges and our universities.
All
of the Christian schools called "Baptist" in the north, all of them
have been lost—all of them: Brown University, McMaster University, Chicago
University. There's not one that remains.
And because of the inroads of
liberalism and secularism, the Baptist witness in the north is small and
increasingly anemic. It is the boast of the Roman Catholic Church that the
most Catholic state in the union is Rhode Island. It is the boast of the
Catholic Church that the most Catholic city in America is Providence. This is
the state founded by our Baptist forefathers, and this is the capital city
founded by Roger Williams.
What we have done: we have taken
the great, sanctified Baptist doctrine of the priesthood of the believer, and
made it to cover every damnable heresy that mind could imagine! It’s a
tragedy--it's a tragedy.
The British Broadcasting Company
in Great Britain—television is under their surveillance—the British
Broadcasting Company sent a crew over here, under a very gifted Britisher, in
order to make a two-hour documentary to present to the people of the British
Isles. The first hour was concerning things that are shameful to name in the
religious life of America, and the second hour was on our dear church in
Dallas, presented as a fundamental Bible-believing church in the most offensive
kind of a way.
One of our stations in Dallas, one
of the television stations in Dallas, gave us thirty minutes in rebuttal, and
when I went to the station, there were four of us seated there for the
interview. Two of them were for them, anti- everything that we believe. Two
of them were for us. Dr. Patterson and I sat there, two of the four. To my
amazement, the man who presided over the documentaries was there to my right,
and to my left was a woman. She had on a clerical collar turned around in the
back. She had on priestly robes and a gold chain and a golden cross, and she
introduced herself to me as a priest and as a professor in the Southern
Methodist School of Theology, Perkins School of Theology, where the Methodist
preachers are taught. And in that interview, that woman said—that woman said,
"The bastard heresy of the 20th century is the teaching that the Bible is
the Word of God." The man who presided over the session said, "Pastor,
what do you think about that? You talk to her. What do you think about
that?” And after it was over a thousand of my people said, "Why didn't
you answer her?” I said, "For two reasons. One, my mother taught me to
respect a woman; and second, my brethren say I'm not supposed to cuss in the
pulpit!"
She is a professor in the
theological school that teaches Methodist preachers, and that is a reason why
in the last few years the Methodist denomination has lost two million members.
And not only has that liberalism overwhelmed the Methodist denomination, I hold
in my hand a tear-out of a national magazine. We have lost in America in these
last few years millions and millions and millions in the old mainline
denominations of our nation.The United Methodist Church has lost the most; the
United Presbyterian Church second, then follows the United Church of Christ,
the Presbyterian Church of the United States, the Lutheran Church in America,
the Episcopal Church, the Christian Church, the Disciples Church, the American
Lutheran Church—all of them downward, downward, downward.
And these in the liberal press say
to us, "The reason we're facing a decline in the growth of our Southern
Baptist people is because of the confrontation in the denomination.” Then why the
years and years of decline in these other denominations? Why? Why? Why? It
is very apparent why the decline in all of the old mainline denominations of
America. The curse of liberalism has sapped their strength and their message
and their witness to the Lord Jesus Christ. That's why. When we speak of the
decline of the growth in our Southern Baptist communion, they point their
fingers at us and say, "You funny-damn-mentalist. You're the reason why
we're losing in this appeal for the lost and the conversion of America.”
Listen to me. Let me pinpoint the
exact reason why we are beginning to decline in our Southern Baptist Zion like
all of the other old mainline denominations. It is certainly not in our
conservative, fundamental fellowship in those Bible-believing Christ-honoring
soul-saving churches.
I have in my hand here the
bulletin of the First Baptist Church of Jacksonville, Florida. It came to my
desk a few days ago. Here in the month of June, I looked at those that were
baptized that Sunday. I counted them. There were 152, 152 by baptism. I
counted those who came by letter. They were 29. There were 3 by statement.
This is one Sunday in the First Baptist Church of Jacksonville, Florida, where
Jerry Vines is co-pastor—in one Sunday.
Now—now, where is the decline in
our baptisms and in our outreach ministry for Christ? I'll tell you exactly
where it is. In one of the great cities of our nation in a beautiful,
beautiful building, I visited the people and the pastor and looked at the baptistry.
And the baptistry was full of dirt, dust, and debris.
What I would like for the press to
do is take a picture of that beautiful Baptist church. By the side of it,
print the picture of that half-infidel, liberal pastor, and by his picture
print a picture of the baptistry, full of dust and dirt and debris.
In our Bible-led, conservative,
Christ-honoring, soul-saving churches, you will still see people come down that
aisle. You'll see the baptismal waters troubled. You'll see people saved.
It's the curse—the fetid breath of liberalism—that is destroying us as it has
all the other old mainline denominations. That's why we're going down.
We need a resurgence. We need a
renascence. We need a recommitment. We need a regeneration. We can do it. We
can! In the name of Christ, we can take our rural churches. In the name of
Christ, we can take our city churches. In the name of Christ, we can take our
village churches. We can take this country for Christ if we will be true to
the faith, if we will be true. Oh, Lord, that there was in us the spirit of
victory and triumph and conquest in the name of our blessed Savior!
When Alexander the Great died, his
generals gathered around and they asked him, "Whose is the kingdom?” And
Alexander the Great replied, "It's for him who can take it!" And
Cassander and Lysimachus took Asia Minor, Seleucus and Antigonus took Syria,
and Ptolemy took Egypt, and they kept it in the Greek orbit for generations and
for centuries.
We can do the same for Christ if
there is in us the spirit of devotion and soul-winning and preaching and
outreach, visitation, love for the lost, invitation, baptizing our converts;
the spirit of genuine, enthusiastic, victorious triumph.
I went to see Oklahoma and Texas
play football in the Cotton Bowl. Seated right there, square in front of me,
was an Oklahoma fan. In all of that whole side of Texas fanatics, there he
was. There he was. This was in the days of Bud Wilkinson. He stood up right
there in front of me and held up a $100 bill, and he said, "All of you
Texans, I'll give you seven points. I bet you this $100 bill that we beat
you.” He didn't have any takers. He sat down. After a little while, he stood
up again and said, "All you Texans, I'll give you fourteen points. I bet
this $100 bill we beat you.” Nobody took him up. After a little while, he
stood up again and said, "All you Texans; I'll give you twenty-one points
and bet you this $100 bill that we beat you.” Didn't have any takers; he sat
right down there in front of me, and I said, "Man, I'd like to have you in
my church. You believe in your team, and you put your money where your mouth
is! Boy, I'd like to have you in my church! I'd like to have you in my
church.”
That's what we need, that spirit
of conquest and victory. We can do it! I think of that old codger who married
at the tender age of 87 and immediately began to look for a bigger house close
to an elementary school. That's the spirit!
May
I conclude?
To my great indescribable sorrow,
we are losing our message of salvation to the liberal, to the secularist, to
the humanist, and finally to the atheist and the infidel. Long time ago—I'm
talking about over forty years ago—I built a lower platform in our church. At
the top one I preached the gospel, preached that Book word-for-word,
syllable-by-syllable, every syllable in it inspired by God, the inerrant Word
of the Holy Spirit of God. [applause] Do it! Do it!
Then in those days, I would go
down to the lower pulpit, and I’d exhort like an old-time exhorter pleading for
people to come to Jesus. On that Sunday, down the aisle came a young woman.
She looked to me to be 16 or 17 years old. She gave me her hand and said,
"Today, I'm taking Jesus as my Savior, and I want to be baptized and be a member
of this church.” Then she was seated there on the front row.
As we continued to sing the song
of appeal and I pressed the invitation, that girl began to cry and finally to
sob. I turned to my minister of music and I said, "You keep the service
going. You sing. I'm going to sit down by that girl."
I sat down by her side, and I
said, "Dear, what you crying for? What you crying for?” She took the
card that she had filled out, and she said, "You see my name?”
"Yes.” "You see that 'Mrs.' in front of my name?” I said,
"Yes.” She said, "I'm no 'Mrs.' I've never been married. I write
'Mrs.' In front of my name on account of my little baby boy. When he was born,
I said in my heart, 'I'm going to raise him in that wonderful First Baptist
Church in Dallas. So I began bringing him into the nursery, and I began
attending the services, and I've been listening to you preach, and today I felt
I wanted to give my heart to Jesus and be a member of the congregation."
“But,” she said, "since I
have come and since I've been seated here, I've been thinking about me and my
life, a prostitute. I've been thinking about me and what I've done, and if you
knew me, and these people knew me, you would not want the likes of me in this
church." I said to her, "Dear, is that why you're crying?” She
said, "Yes. I have made a mistake. I should not have come. You would
not want the likes of me in this church.”
Now, sweet people, somebody sits
there by her side as I did. These liberals. And he says to her, "Why,
it's a peccadillo. It is nothing. One half of the girls live just like that,
promiscuously, and two-thirds of the boys. You've done nothing amiss. Forget
it. Forget it. Forget it. It's a peccadillo." Or another sits there
and says, "You know, did you ever hear of an abortion? Right up the
street there's a clinic, and in three minutes or four at the most, you can
murder your baby. The abortion clinic is right up there."
I represent now and as I speak to
her, the pastor of a church that I know: "Dear, have you become
acquainted with condoms? Rubbers? Our church dispenses them, and we have
classes in our church on the use of condoms. You protect yourself against
syphilis, gonorrhea, herpes, and AIDS. You come to the class, and we'll teach
you how to protect yourself with condoms in the church."
And
another one will say, "It's your lifestyle. If you can make money easier
in promiscuity, that's your choice.” That is modern liberalism, and it's
everywhere.
“Well, preacher, what did you
say? What did you tell the girl?"
This is what I said. I said,
"Dear girl, the Holy Spirit has convicted you of sin, and that's why you
cried. That's why you cried. The Holy Spirit of God has spoken to your
heart. And dear girl, the Holy Spirit of God has done another thing. He's
brought you to Him who can wash you clean and white, clean and white."
There is a fountain filled with
blood
Drawn from Emmanuel's veins,
And sinners plunged beneath that
flood
Lose all their guilty stains.
The dying thief rejoiced to see
The fountain in his day,
And there may I, though vile as
he,
Wash all my sins away.
E’er since by faith I saw the
stream
Thy flowing wounds supply,
Redeeming love—redeeming
grace!—has been my theme
And shall be till I die.
The gospel
of the Son of God.
Sweet people, you can stand with
me at the head of the stairway that leads up from the Patterson Street side of
our church, and see a young woman still writing "Mrs.” in front of her
name—I said, "You do it"—leading a little boy growing up, leading that
little boy by the hand, taking him to Sunday school; the beginner division, the
primary division, the junior division. And now he's in our youth division. And
when I see it, I say the greatest privilege God ever gave to me was to preach
the unsearchable riches of Jesus Christ my Lord—nothing like it in the earth!
I'm so glad I belong to the family
of God,
Washed in the atoning grace,
cleansed by the blood,
A fellow heir with Jesus, as I
travel this sod,
I'm so glad I belong to the family
of God.
Preachers, we have the greatest
message in the earth. Let's deliver it with power from God in heaven. Amen.
Amen.