NEW YEAR’S EVE SERMON
THE SCARLET THREAD
THROUGH THE BIBLE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Part 3
12-31-61 7:00 p.m. –
12:00 a.m.
At the way I am now going, I have prepared at least two hours
of the Interbiblical Period between the close of the Old Testament and the New
Testament. And there is no understanding of the New Testament without a
thorough knowledge of that Interbiblical Period, but I have no opportunity to
go into it, which breaks my heart. So, we'll all be back tomorrow night at the
same time to do the same thing again and really finish this.
Now, in 587 B.C., the southern kingdom was destroyed and
Nebuchadnezzar, one of the ablest, one of the mightiest, one of the most
capable, one of the most unusually endowed of all the kings of all time and
all—of all the empire builders of the world, Nebuchadnezzar, who is mentioned
more times in the Bible than any other heathen king—Nebuchadnezzar took into
Babylon all of those who lived in the country of Judea and in the city of
Jerusalem.
And Jeremiah was forced by the remnant to go into Egypt and there Jeremiah died. The prophet Jeremiah had predicted that after seventy years
the people of the captivity would have opportunity to return. Now,
Nebuchadnezzar was a tremendously able king. He made Babylon one of the most
beautiful cities of the world.
The terraced gardens of Babylon that he made for his Median
wife who was reared in a hill country, in order for her to be at home, he built
those beautiful terrace gardens, one of the seven wonders of the world. But Nebuchadnezzar
had this tremendous weakness. All that he did he did in his own self, in his
own ingenuity, in his own planning, and he never trained anybody to succeed
him.
So, the kingdom of Nebuchadnezzar disintegrated quickly and
easily, and in 538 B.C., Cyrus, the Mede, took Babylon without a battle. It
just fell into his hands, and Daniel, as you know, describes that fall in his
book. Belteshazzar -- Belshazzar was the regent who was on the throne under
Nabonidus, his father.
And in that night, Cyrus took the city of Babylon without a
war, without a battle, without a fight. Now, when we come to King Cyrus, the
Mede, who founded the Persian empire, we have named one of God's anointed men.
In Isaiah 44:28 and in Isaiah 45:1, hundreds of years before he was born,
Isaiah called Cyrus by name. And God called Cyrus His anointed.
And Cyrus was one of those magnificent, understanding,
sympathetic empire builders who changed the policy of Nineveh and Assyria altogether and who changed the policy of Nebuchadnezzar. And Cyrus gave
opportunity to all of the captives to return home wherever they lived. And it
was then that the decree went out from Cyrus, who founded the Medo-Persian
empire, that the Jew had opportunity to go back to his homeland in Palestine to rebuild his city in Jerusalem and to rebuild his temple.
That gave rise to the beautiful Psalm number one hundred twenty
six:
When the Lord turned
again the captivity of Zion, we were like them that dream.
Then was our mouth
filled with laughter, and our tongue with singing: then said they among the
heathen,
The Lord hath done
great things for them whereof we are glad.
Turn again our
captivity, O, Lord, as the streams in the south.
They that sow in
tears shall reap in joy.
He that goeth forth
and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing,
bringing his sheaves with him.
[Psalm 126:1-6]
That was a song that the captives sang when they went back to
their holy city and their holy land of Judea and Jerusalem. Now, in the Book
of Ezra, the first six chapters of Ezra describe the return of Zerubbabel with
about forty some-odd thousand Jews. And then chapters 7 and 10 in Ezra
describe the return of the priest, Ezra himself.
It covers a period of about eighty years, from 536 to 457.
Then Nehemiah comes back to Palestine and to Jerusalem a little while after
Ezra, and then awhile after Nehemiah comes Malachi, who is the last of the
prophets. Now, for a brief word concerning the prophets: The first and the
oldest prophet is Joel. He flourished about 825 B.C. Then from about 800 to
750 B.C. were three prophets and the only three in the northern kingdom. They
are Jonah and Amos and Hosea.
And then about 700 B.C., there were under Uzziah and Jotham and
Ahaz and Hezekiah, there were Isaiah and Micah. And then from about 650 to 600
B.C., there is Zephaniah and Nahum and Obadiah and Habakkuk. And then in the
last time of Jeremiah, some of those I've just named. And then in Babylon, contemporary with Jeremiah is Daniel and Ezekiel.
While Jeremiah is preaching in Jerusalem, Daniel and Ezekiel
are prophesying in Babylon. Then you have three prophets of the restoration.
Haggai apparently was an old, old man who had seen the destruction of the
temple at Jerusalem, who had been taken into exile and who had returned back to
Palestine with Zerubbabel and Ezra.
And he was encouraging the people to build the temple. The
optimism of Haggai, the old, old man, is wonderful to behold. When Haggai
looked at the rubble and the debris and the impossible assignment of those few
ragged Judeans to rebuild the temple and rebuild the city and to rebuild the
kingdom, it is one of the most hopeless prospects in the world, but Haggai,
that old, old man who had seen Solomon's temple destroyed, who had lived
through the entire captivity and who had gone back with Zerubbabel, Haggai
said, "God says that this second temple you build will be more glorious
than the temple of Solomon."
How could it be? Because the Lord Jesus walked into that
second temple built under Zerubbabel. Then a young man, Zechariah, came with
Zerubbabel and Ezra. And as the old man Haggai preached his last messages, the
young man, Zechariah, stood up to deliver the Word of God, and of the three
restoration prophets, Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi, Zechariah is far and away
the greatest.
If we had another hour, we would look at the incomparable
prophecies of Zechariah, who spoke so much about Israel and the end times and
the conversion of the people of the Lord. Then the last prophet, of course, is
Malachi. Malachi preached about 450 to 425 B.C., and Malachi closed his
prophecy with the coming of the Lord: "Behold, He comes to His temple,
and He will sit as a refiner's fire who may abide the day of His coming."
And then in the last chapter, Malachi prophecies:
"Behold, behold, I send you Elijah, the prophet, before the coming of the
great and dreadful day of the Lord." So, the Book closes with the people
expecting Elijah, the prophet, to come and to announce the great king Messiah,
the seed of the woman, the seed of Abraham and the king promised to David who
would sit upon his throne forever and forever.
Then we come to the Interbiblical Period which saw the rise of
the Hellenistic Empire. Alexander the Great who was a pupil of Aristotle,
Alexander the Great had a passion for Hellenizing the world like Paul had a
passion for Christianizing it. And God used the great Hellenistic Empire to
spread abroad one culture and one language that made possible the preaching of
the gospel of Christ to the civilized world.
When Paul wrote the letter to Rome, which was the capital of
the Latin empire, he wrote that letter in Greek. Wherever a man lived in the
days of the Roman Empire, if he could read, he read Greek. If he was educated,
he knew Greek and Greek language and Greek customs and Greek culture and Greek
philosophy and art and science and literature, everything Greek. Alexandria covered the whole world with his Hellenizing missionary work.
When Alexander the Great died, the kingdom broke into four
parts -- Cassander took Helen, took Greece. Lysimachus took Asia Minor,
Seleucus, whose father was Antiochus. Antiochus took Syria and Ptolemy took Egypt. For the first part of the Interbiblical Period, Palestine was under
the Ptolemies, and it was very quiet and the high priests ruled.
But in 198 B.C., Antiochus the third, overwhelmed the
Ptolemists and Palestine passed into the hands of the Seleucidae, the
Seleucids. And they were cruel. One of them, Antiochus Epiphanes, took his
army and he offered a sow on the great altar there in the temple court before
the sanctuary, and he took the juice of that sow and he poured it all over the
sanctuary to defile it.
And he dedicated it to Jupiter Olympus, to Zeus, the Greek name
of the God, and he interdicted circumcision, and he interdicted the observance
of the Sabbath. And he interdicted the Jews' religion.
Upon a day, there was a cowardly Jew in the little town of Modin, about 17 miles northwest of Jerusalem. And that cowardly Jew was about to bow down
and to worship at the shrine of Jupiter Olympus, and when he did, there was an
aged priest by the name of Mattathias.
He lifted up his arm and he slew that cowardly Jew, and he
lifted up his arms and he slew the emissary from Antiochus Epiphanes who was
demanding the worship of the Hellenistic heathen god. Then this man,
Mattathias, took his boys, and they lived in the mountains and they carried on
guerrilla warfare.
The first boy of that aged priest, Mattathias, was named Judas
Maccabaeus, Judas the Hammerer, and Judas Maccabaeus, leading that guerrilla
band, to the amazement of the world and to the astonishment of any student of
history, he won Jewish independence from Antiochus Epiphanes. And when Judas
lost his life Jonathan, the son of Mattathias, the younger son, carried on.
And when Jonathan was killed, Simon carried on. And Simon, the
Maccabaean, founded the Hasmonean, the Maccabaean dynasty. His son was John
Hyrcanus, and his son was Alexander Jannaeus, and his wife was Alexandra Salome,
and her two boys were John Hyrcanus the second and Aristobulus the second. And
they were fussing and fighting in a civil war over who would raid and rule over
Judea and Pompey in 63 A.D. came with his Roman legionnaires into Judea and
before Jerusalem.
And he listened to the quarrel between John Hyrcanus the second
and Aristobulus the second, and then he just took the thing into himself and
made it a part of the Roman Empire. The Hellenistic Jews were called
Sadducees, and those who were very much opposed to Hellenism were called
Pharisees.
So, when Jesus comes upon the scene, there is Herod the Great,
an appointee of Rome, who is the king of the Jews. And there are the
Pharisees, who are very strenuously devoted to the law and against any kind of
foreign oppression, and there are the Sadducees, who love to do business with Rome or with anybody who will provide them the emoluments of their office and keep them as
rulers and leaders among the people.
And in those days, when Herod the Great was the king of the
Jews, and when Augustus Caesar is the Roman emperor and when Rome has the
entire world in her hands, the great prophecy of Isaiah and the great prophecy
of Micah and the great prophecy of Jacob, to his son, Judah, and the great
promise of God Almighty to Eve the woman, that great prophecy comes to pass.
In the seed as of one, in the seed of Abraham, shall all the
families of the earth be blessed, and our Savior is born into the world. Why
does he come? Dr. White, the other day, mentioned to me after one of our
services, a very famous theological book by Albert Schweitzer. Now, Albert
Schweitzer, the doctor in the French Cameroon in central Africa, he is a great
scientist without doubt.
He is a great musician, without doubt. He is a great philosopher,
without doubt. He is a great humanitarian, without doubt, but he is not a
Christian as I call a Christian. Albert Schweitzer's great theological book is
entitled The Quest for the Historical Jesus. And the thesis of that book is
this, that Jesus Christ came into this world and that he lived in His ministry,
and He expected the apocalyptic kingdom messianic of heaven to come down.
And when it didn't come, He died disappointed in despair of a
broken heart, dejected, outcast, disowned, denied. Now, that is the thesis of
Albert Schweitzer. To us who believe the Bible and to us who preach the Word
of God, it is the exact and diametrically the opposite.
Our Lord came into this world to die for us sinners. That's
why He came, according to the Word of God. And his death is not one of those
cheap burlesques, nor is it a divine comedy, nor is it one of those infinite
tragedies like the nemesis that follows after those in the Greek gods and in
the Greek world who are to be destroyed.
But the death of Christ was planned from before the foundation
of the world when He gave Himself at the beginning to be the redemptive means
of God for the purchase to Himself of Adam's lost and sinful race. He came
into the world to die. "Thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He shall save
His people from their sins."
And as He began His ministry, He began His ministry under the
shadow of the cross. John raised his hand and introduced Him: "Behold,
behold, the Lamb of God." Think what that meant to any Jew.
"Behold, the Lamb of God, every morning, every evening, there was a
sacrifice where the blood poured out and the Lamb offered unto God for the sins
of the nation, for the expiation of all of the iniquity of the people. “Behold,”
said John, "Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the
world."
And in His ministry, early He began to teach His disciples that
He should suffer and die. And when He was transfigured, there appeared Moses
and Elijah talking to Him about His death in Jerusalem. And when he was anointed
by Mary of Bethany, it was to His burial, He said.
And when the Greeks came to see Him from afar, "If I be
lifted up," He said, "will draw all men unto Me." And in the Last
Supper, He said, "This is My body. Eat in remembrance of Me, and this is
My blood. Drink in remembrance of Me." And when He went to the cross, He
gave Himself at Gethsemane, the travail of His soul. And when He bowed His
head and died, He said, "It is finished."
When we preach the cross and when we preach the blood and when
we preach the sacrificial death of Christ, we are preaching the meaning of His
coming into the world and the great redemptive plan and purpose of God. On the
third day, He was raised from the dead, and He appeared to Mary Magdalene
first. Then He appeared to the rest of the women. Then He appeared to the two
on the way to Emmaus.
Then He appeared to Peter alone. Then that night, that Sunday
night, He appeared to the ten disciples, Thomas being absent. Then the next
Sunday night, He appeared to the disciples, all eleven of them.
That's the reason one that I like to have church on Sunday
night. The Lord met with His disciples at night, and He revealed Himself to
His disciples at night, and He spake to them out of the book of Himself at
night.
He met with his disciples at night. Then he met with the seven
at the Sea of Galilee. Then at 500, at one time, on the appointed mountain in
Galilee, then with His disciples down in Jerusalem and then, as He ascended up
to heaven on the top of Mount Olivet. And it was then at that ascension that
the disciples came to Jesus and said, "Lord, Lord, wilt Thou at this time
restore the kingdom to Israel?"
And the Lord said, "It is not for you to know the time or
the season." God has a kingdom, and it's coming. Thy kingdom come, Thy
will be done in earth, Thy kingdom come. It is coming. There is a kingdom
coming. "Lord," said the thief who died by His side, "Lord,
when Thy comest into Thy kingdom, remember me, remember me."
There's a kingdom coming, but in the meantime, the Lord has
placed a great intermission, a great interlude, a great parenthesis. That is a
musterion. In the third chapter of Ephesians, that is a musterion
that the Apostle Paul says the prophets didn't see. And the Old Testament
never refers to it or mentions it. There is to be a parenthesis between the
rejection of the King and the kingdom and the time when King and kingdom shall
come from God out of heaven. And in this period of time, we call it the Age of
Grace. We call it the Age of the Holy Spirit. We call it the Age of the
Church.
And in this dispensation, this time of grace, Jew, Gentile,
males, females, bond, free, all of us are invited to belong to the household of
faith in the church, the church of Jesus Christ. And the Lord said to His
disciples, "You are to be witnesses of these saints," not to bring in
the kingdom. He will bring in the kingdom. There'll be sin here and violence
here.
Daniel said, "Wars are determined unto the end, until the
Great Armageddon." Men will be dividing up. They will be preparing for
war. They will be in conflict. We will never bring in the kingdom, but we're
to be witnesses of the great announcement. Come, come. We all are invited in
the love and grace of Jesus to belong to the same household of faith. Come,
come, come.
We are to be witnesses of the grace of God until that great and
final denouement, and so, they began. First, the gospel is preached by Peter
to the Jews, only to the Jews at Pentecost. Then second, the gospel is
preached by Phillip, a Hellenist, to the half-Jew, to the half-breeds up there
at Samaria. Then third, the gospel is preached to a temple proselyte, a full
Jewish proselyte in Jesus, to the Ethiopian eunuch.
And then next, the gospel is preached to a proselyte of the
gate, to a centurion at Caesarea. And then in the eleventh chapter of the Book
of Acts, the gospel is preached to out and out idolaters, to heathen
worshippers, the Greeks, who come out of their idolatry into the glorious faith
of the Son of God.
And finally, the Lord says, "Separate Me, Paul and
Barnabus, for the work whereunto I have called them." And Paul goes out
and proclaims the gospel message to the whole, wide, civilized world. So, the
gospel begins to expand over the then- known earth, first by Peter, who is an
apostle to the circumcision, who delivers a message to the Jews.
Then the bridge between Stephen, a Hellenist, who says God was
worshipped by Moses on the back side of the desert and by Abraham, who built
altars along with Isaac and Jacob. And God can't be contained in this temple
here, on Mount Moriah, and they slew him, the Hellenists who bridged between
Simon Peter, preaching down there to the Jew and the apostle Paul, the apostle
to the Gentiles, who proclaims that a man can be saved without ever having
anything to do with the Jewish religion.
He doesn't have to keep the ceremony of law. He doesn't have
to be circumcised. He doesn't have to keep the Mosaic commandments. All a man
has to do to be saved is to turn, to repent, to give his heart and love to
Jesus, and God will save him forever.
If thou shalt confess
with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and shall believe in thy heart that He lives,
thou shall be saved,
For with the heart
one believeth unto a God kind of righteousness and with a mouth confession is
made unto salvation—come.
For whosoever shall
call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
[Rom. 10:9-10, 13]
That's the gospel of Paul.
So, he went on his first missionary journey, went from Antioch
down to Seleucus, the port city at the mouth of the Orontes, then crossed over
to Cyprus, there to Salamis, then to the capital city, Paphos, then about a
hundred and seventy miles across the sea to Perga and Panthilia, then up to
Pisidian Antioch and then down to Iconium. Then they went back down to Attalia
and to Antioch again as their first missionary journey.
But they had trouble on their hands because they were preaching
that a man could be a Christian just by trusting Jesus. Then came the Jerusalem conference in Acts 15 when the Jews said, "You've got to be circumcised
before you can be saved, you've got to keep the law of Moses before you can be
saved. A man can't be saved just by trusting Jesus. You got to be baptized,
you got to keep this, you got to do that."
"No," said Paul. "A man's saved by faith and
not by works, just by trusting Jesus." And they had that big conference
in Jerusalem, and that's what the Holy Spirit said, just like Paul was a-preaching.
So, he went back up there, and on the second missionary journey, Paul and Silas,
they go by a land and retrace their steps to all those other churches they had
already organized in Galatia.
Then the Holy Spirit sends them down to Troas. They don't know
where to do, and that night, Paul sees the Macedonian in a vision. "Come
on to Macedonia and help us," so he crosses the Hellespont. He goes
through Neapolis. He goes through Philippi. He goes to Apollonia and
Amphipolis and then to Thessalonica, then to Berea, then Athens, then to Corinth.
Then he crosses over to Ephesus and then to Caesarea. And he
goes up to Jerusalem and then back to Antioch. And the second great missionary
journey is done. And then after awhile, he starts on the third one. He goes
by land again, retracing his steps in Asia Minor, and then goes to Ephesus, where he has his greatest ministry in Ephesus.
And the whole world is turned upside down or right side up in
his great, marvelous ministry at Ephesus. And all Asia hears the Word of God.
Then he goes to Macedonia and then to Corinth again and then back around to Macedonia and then down to Miletus and then down into Jerusalem and there he is arrested.
And when he is arrested, for two years he is placed in prison
down there in Caesarea. And at the end of two years, having preached to Felix,
having preached to Festus, having preached to Herod Agrippa II, he is taken by
Julius, the centurion, to Rome.
And there in Rome for two years, in his own hired house, he
preaches the gospel of the Son of God, no man forbidding him. That was about 63.
About 64, he was liberated, and from the few years that remain until 67, he
preached the gospel. He was with Timothy at Ephesus and left Timothy at Ephesus and went up to Macedonia and wrote 1 Timothy.
And then he was with Titus in Crete, and he went up to
Nicopolis on the western side of Greece and wrote the letter to Titus. And
then about 67 [A.D.] he was arrested. And just before Nero died, he was
beheaded on the Apian Way, the road down the Tiber from the City of Rome to the sea.
And he closed his life with that triumphant word,
I have fought a good
fight. I have finished my course. I have kept the faith:
Henceforth there is
laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge,
shall give me: and not to me only, but unto all them that love His appearing.
[2 Timothy 4:7-8]
Before I come to the Revelation and the final denouement of
God's purpose and plan in human history, may I say a word about the epistles?
Isn't it a shame? All of the Epistles of Paul, just this one little word about
them: they are divided into four great groups. First, the first epistles that
he wrote on his second missionary journey at Athens and then at Corinth; he wrote 1 and 2 Timothy, he wrote 1 and 2 Thessalonians. Then on the third
missionary journey while he was in Ephesus, he wrote 1 Corinthians. And then
somewhere, going from Ephesus to Corinth, he wrote 2 Corinthians up there in Macedonia.
Then somewhere, either in Antioch or going back, he wrote
Galatians and Romans; those four somewhat together, centering around the city
of Ephesus; 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians and Romans. Then the third group of
epistles he wrote from the prison in Rome, his first Roman imprisonment:
Philippians, Philemon, Colossians and Ephesians.
And then the last four—the fourth and last group of his epistles
were after his first Roman imprisonment—Timothy, Titus and 2 Timothy. Now,
each one of those epistles has to do with a very definite thing. The first
group, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, has to do with the second coming of our Lord.
You see, Paul had preached the gospel, and he delivered his
soul of the great hope that we have in Jesus. And some of the people died and
the Lord had not come. “And what about our beloved dead? What about them?
Will they share in the kingdom when it comes? And will they live to see the
face of Jesus, for they've died and the Lord hasn't come.”
So, he wrote 1 and 2 Thessalonians about the coming of the
Lord. Then the next group, that second great group, of 1 and 2 Corinthians and
Galatians and Romans have to do with the great Pauline theme of the just shall
live by faith. We are saved by trusting Jesus and not by the work of our
hands. That's the great central theme of the second group of letters.
Now, the third group of letters have to do with the Gnostic
philosophy that tried to discount the deity and the glory and the person of
Jesus; Philippians, and then the first sweet little letter of Philemon, then
Colossians and Ephesians, those first letters, those four letters.
As he exalts our living Lord, oh, what a message and then of
course, the fourth group of epistles, 1 Timothy and Titus and 2 Timothy, have
to do with the ordinances of the church, with the doctrines of the church and
with the offices of the church and with practical matters.
Now, we come finally after the general epistles to the
Revelation. All of the other apostles are dead, all of them. The apostle Paul
was slain just before Nero's death either in the fall of 67 or the spring of
68. Simon Peter was crucified just about the same time in the other part, in
the eastern part of the empire. And all the other disciples had been dead
years and years, thirty, forty years.
And only one of them is alive, and that is the aged pastor of
the church at Jerusalem. For the Lord said to His disciples, "When you
see the legions standing at the gate of Jerusalem, flee." So, they fled
to Pella on the other side of the Jordan. And in about 69 A.D., John, the aged
disciple that Jesus loved, came to Ephesus, and at Ephesus was his great
ministry.
When he wrote his gospel, when he wrote his three epistles and
when in exile under Domitian he wrote the Apocalypse, the Apocalypse of Jesus
Christ, which God gave unto him; the unveiling of the Lord Jesus Christ in His
glory and in His majesty and in His kingdom. Thy kingdom come, and it is
coming, and the Apocalypse, the unveiling of our Lord, is the reward of God to
Jesus for giving His life for the sins of old man Adam, conquering Satan and
destroying Lucifer and the power of death, the seed of the woman.
And because He hath done this, God hath also highly exalted Him
and given Him a name which is above every name, that in the name of Jesus every
knee should bow and every tongue should confess that He is Lord to the glory of
God, our Father—the unveiling, the Apocalypse, the uncovering of Jesus Christ
in His glory, in His majesty and in His kingdom is the reward that God gave to
Jesus for saving us, Adam's fallen children, from our sins.
So, on the Isle of Patmos, a rocky little point about twenty
miles in diameter, several miles southwest from Ephesus, there to die of
exposure and starvation and want and hunger and need, there does the Lord
appear to John in an incomparable and glorious vision, the voice as of a
trumpet.
And when he turns to hear and to see, there he looks upon his
risen and glorified Lord whom he last saw as He ascended into heaven. But this
time, oh, how triumphant and how glorious! His face above the shining of the
sun, and His feet as if they burned in a furnace, and the majestic robe gird
with a golden girdle, and His hair white like the snow, and His eyes like a
flame of fire, and as much as John loved Him, when he saw Him, he fell at His
feet dead, dead, the very life taken out of him.
And in the old familiar ways, his heart never changes. He's
still the same Lord Jesus in the old and familiar way He puts His right hand on
the shoulder of His beloved and sainted disciple and says, "Don't be
afraid, nothing to fear, not to the child of God. Don't fear death. Don't
fear the grave. Don't fear the judgment. Don't fear eternity, not to the
child of God. Fear not, fear not."
"I am He that was alive, was dead, and alive forever more,
and I -- I have the key of the grave and of death there in my hand. [Revelation 1:18] I've got them. Don't you be
afraid. Don't you tremble." Then He said, the great outline of the
book: "What you see, write, write." Then He gave the threefold
outline of the Apocalypse: "Write the things that you've seen, and write
the things which are and write the things which shall be after these things
that are." [Revelation 1:19]
So, John took up his pen, and he began to write. He wrote the
things that he'd seen, the vision of the glorified Lord walking in the midst of
the seven golden lamp stands, Jesus among His churches. And he wrote the
things that he'd seen.
And then second, he wrote the things that are, His churches.
Here they are. Here's a church, there's a church, yonder is a church, just as
it was in the days of John, the things that are—His church at Ephesus and His
church at Smyrna, and the one up there at—at Pergamos. And then there was one
at Thyatira, there's one at Sardis, and here was one at Philadelphia, and
there's one at Laodicea.
Write the things that are, and then write the things that shall
be metatauta after these things, after the churches are no more. So,
John wrote down the things that are, and the things that are, they are a
preview of all God's churches to the end of the age. There is an Ephesian
period in the church. There is a Smyrnan period in the church. There is a
Pergamean period in the church. There is a Thyatiran, there is a Sardian,
there is a Philadelphian, there's a Laodicean period in the church.
The Ephesian period of the Church is that period of the
Apostles when the church was persecuted. And the Smyrnan period was that
period when it began to extend over the Roman Empire, and it was a church of
martyrdom and of suffering. Then you have the Pergamean period when the church
was married to the world. Ah. Then you have the Thyatiran period of the
church, when she speaks with gold and silver and a chain around her neck and
dressed in gorgeous robes, and she speaks as the infallible, as the infallible—as
the infallible oracle of God.
That's in the Bible. I don't manufacture these things. I'm
not talking about anybody. I'm just telling you what the Book says; the
Thyatiran period of the church. Then comes the Saurian period of the church,
the church of the Great Reformation, where they have a few names that are
standing out for God -- Balthasar Hubmaier and Felix Mantz and John Calvin and
Martin Luther and John Knox, those great men, a few in Sardis who stand out for
God.
And then you have the Philadelphian period of the church, the
period of the great open door. That is the reason why I think we're coming to
the close of the Philadelphian period, because the doors are beginning to shut.
We can't preach the gospel in China. You can't preach the gospel in Cuba. You can't preach the gospel in Soviet Russia. You can't preach the gospel in Poland or in Latvia or in Lithuania or in Estonia. You can't preach it in Yugoslavia or Romania or Bulgaria.
The doors are beginning to close, and Philadelphia, the church
of the open door, we are getting to the close of the age. And the last age is
the Laodicean age of the church, where the church comes to its final
consummation in the earth, where they do live and where they are, there do they
go soft, do they go easy. They are at ease in Zion with the world on fire. And
they don't care. With the world facing its great climactic days and they are
not praying. They are at ease in Zion, the Laodicean church. Then in the
fourth chapter of the Revelation comes that final and awful and tragic
denouement, that end time, that day of the Lord, that great tribulation that is
spoken of by Joel, by Zechariah, by Jesus, that great day of the Lord.
First, the Lord comes between the third and the fourth chapters
of the Revelation, and the Lord comes secretly, clandestinely, furtively like a
thief in the night. He's coming to steal away, to steal away His jewels, His
pearl of price for whom He gave His life and did die, you, the redeemed of the
Lord. He's coming without announcement. There is no sign. There is no
token. There’s no harbinger, there's no announcement, there's no anything—any
moment, any day, any hour, any time, our Lord can come. There's no prophecy
remaining to be fulfilled. There never has been anything between the imminence
of the appearing of our Lord and His coming for us, nothing. He may come any
day, any time and pick His people away. He's coming as a thief in the night.
It may be at midnight—in ten minutes—
It may be at twilight.
It may be, per chance that the darkness of midnight
will burst into light in the blaze of His glory
when Jesus comes for His own
[James McGranaham, “It May Be At Morn”]
That's the first thing, the first thing, He comes for us. His
beloved dead are taken up, and these of us who remain are taken up. That is
the first thing. We go away to be with our Lord, and there before the judgment
seat of Christ we receive the deeds done in the flesh. Our judgment for sins
already past, that was on the cross.
Our judgment before Jesus is to receive the rewards of our
lives. That is why you cannot receive your reward when you die, because your
life still lives on. Paul is still living in the—in the Book out of which I
preach. And these old infidels such as Voltaire and such as Tom Paine, they are
still living, also. And every once in awhile, you will run across a young
fellow reading Tom Paine or Voltaire, and ready to curse God in the language of
Paine and Voltaire; they are also living on. You don't die when you die.
So you can't get your reward when you die, that is why the rewards
are given at the end time. Our lives go on and on and on and only God can
unravel the scheme and follow the strand until, at the end time, we receive our
rewards.
And when the Lord comes and our beloved dead and all of us are
changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye at the last cup, when all of us
are taken to be with the Lord, we go with our Savior into glory. And there we
stand before the Lord to receive our rewards for what we have done in the
flesh, at the end times—not when you die, but at the end time.
And then up there in glory is the marriage supper of the Lamb,
and while God's people are up there, oh, this world down here, this awful and
tragic world down here. In the turmoil and in the awfulness and in the terror
of the world down here, there arises a man who presents himself as the great
deliverer of the earth. He will bring peace, and he will bring victory, and he
will bring glory and triumph, all what he promises, and to Israel, going back to their homeland, he promises them their land, their nation, their
house, their temple, their people. He promises everything.
He's the antichrist. For three and a half years, he goes
along, and then in the middle of that seven-year period, that tribulation
period, he turns into a fiend. And then comes the most tragic and awful wave
of world anti-Semitism this earth has ever known. And that antichrist, the
beast that rises out of the sea, he has by his side another beast, a false
prophet.
And she is arrayed in all of the glory and splendor of the
ecclesiastical system itself. And that false prophet makes a covenant with
that beast, the ruler of the world, the great dictator of the end time, who
presented himself as the Fuhrer and the triumphant leader of all the nations of
the world.
He is going to lead them to peace and to glory. Ah. And when
he breaks that covenant with God's people, then all the terror and the
bloodshed, the horror; God reaches down in His mercy, and he seals 12,000 out
of Judah. Why, I didn't know there was any Judah. There's a Judah, and God knows them in Judah.
And he seals 12,000 out of Judah, and he seals 12,000 out of
Simeon. Well, I didn't know there was any Simeon. God knows. He knows
exactly where each one of those Judeans, those Simeons, those Reubenites, those
Gadites, He knows where all of it is.
And in the days of that awful and tragic trial, He is going to
seal 12,000 out of each one of those tribes, and they are going to preach the
gospel of the Son of God. And in the midst of that blood and that furor and
that horror, you are going to have the greatest revival the world ever saw.
And they're going to be killed, they're going to be persecuted,
but they don't love their lives unto death. "These are they who are
coming out of the great tribulation, who have washed their robes and made them
white in the blood of the Lamb." [Revelation
7:14]
Isn't that an unusual thing? The more terrible the
tribulation, the more God's people suffer unto death as these Jewish
evangelists preach the gospel over the earth. Well, those seven seals and the
judgment thereof, and those seven trumpets and the judgment thereof, and those
seven vials and the judgment thereof, and those seven personages and the
judgment thereof.
The beast, the false prophet, the woman in scarlet, Babylon,
the system; and this antichrist who professed to be the leader of the nations
of the world, he is gathering the armies of the entire earth together, and they
are converging from the north in Russia and from the east in China and from the
south in Africa and from the west. They are converging at that great day of
the Lord and that is the Battle of Armageddon.
And in the midst of that awful holocaust, the last great war of
the world that's going to be fought, where did I say? In that same plain from
the beginning of time—Megiddo, Esdraelon, Jezreel, the heart of Megiddo, the Mount of Megiddo as the armies of the earth by the millions and the millions
are converging to that great rendezvous of God, there is then the intervention
of heaven.
Revelation 19:11 to 16,
And I beheld, and lo,
heaven was open. And I saw a white horse, and he that sat upon him was true
and faithful.
His eyes were as of a
flame of fire, and on His head were many crowns.
He was dressed in a
vesture dipped in blood, and His name is called The Word of God.
And in righteousness,
does He come to make war.
And He has a name on
His thigh, King of Kings and Lord of Lords,
and they that follow Him are the saints
of glory.
And that is the intervention of God in human history, and He
delivers His people shut up in the holy city. And He takes Satan and binds him
for a thousand years in the bottomless pit but what about the people that enter
the Millennium? You got a twofold judgment there.
First, you got a judgment of the Gentiles. You have a
translated nations. You have a judgment of the Gentiles. And all of those
Gentiles who befriended God’s preachers, his brethren preaching the message,
all of them shall enter into the Millennium, for they received them and were
kind to them, their actions exemplifying their character. And they go into the
Millennium.
And then, according to Ezekiel [Ezekiel
20:33-38] there will be a judgment of Israel and those that are
rebellious and refuse to receive their Messiah when He appears, they shall be
cast down. And those that receive the Lord Jesus shall enter into the
Millennium. And for a thousand years, they shall reign with Christ upon this
earth when the kingdom comes and God's will is done in this weary world as it
is in heaven.
At the end of the thousand years, Satan is released, one of the
most inexorable things in prophecy. Satan is released, and some of those in
the Millennium who did not find in their heart the complete subserviency and
love for God, they will rebel. There will be at that time the final conflict
which ends forever man's rebellion against God.
Then is the great and final resurrection of the wicked dead.
The White Throne judgment, the books are open. Their names are not in the Book
of Life, and they'll be rewarded there according to their deeds. You are going
to be rewarded when Jesus comes for us.
They are going to be rewarded, the lost, at the Great White
Throne judgment according to their deeds, and death shall be cast into hell,
into the fire and flame, and the grave and Satan shall be cast in that fury
where the false beast and the false prophets have already been for a thousand
years.
Then will come the renovation. There will be a new heaven and
a new earth remade according to the fullness and the glory and the wonder of
God. There will be a new heaven and a new earth like it was in the beginning
when God created the heavens and the earth.
"And I John, I John, saw come down out of that new heaven,
I saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, adorned as a bride for her husband. And I
heard a great voice saying, 'Look, look, the dwelling place of God is with
men." [Revelation 21:2, 3]
And God shall be with them, dwelling among us like He intended
in the beginning of the Garden of Eden, walking in the cool of the day, and God
shall be with them and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes. And
there will be no more sorrow and no more crying. And there will be no more
death. There will be no more pain, be no more sorrow. These things have all
passed away—no graves on the hillside of glory, no funeral wreaths on the doors
of the mansions in the sky. And He that sat upon the throne, "Look, look,
I make all things new. I will give to him that is athirst of the water of life
freely.” [Revelation 22: 17]
And He showed unto me
a pure river of the water of life clear as crystal proceeding out of the throat
of God unto the Lamb
And on either side of
the river was there that tree of life—from the Garden of Eden in the Garden of God's paradise—and the leaves are for the healing of the people.
We shall see His
face, and His name will be written in our foreheads,
And we shall reign
with Him forever and forever.
He who has testifieth
these things says surely I come quickly.—Amen. Amen. If I know my soul, I am
worthy. Amen.—Even so, come, come, Lord Jesus.
The grace of our Lord
Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.
[Revelation 22:1-6, 20, 21]
Oh, bless your heart. I cannot imagine your faith and
patience. Now, it is 12:00 o'clock. There are so many of us here, I do not
know how we could kneel. If you can and would like to kneel between the beams
in the aisle here in the front, anywhere, let’s face the New Year on our knees
then after the prayer to go home.