A
REPORT TO THE CHURCH
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
Nehemiah
8:1-3
09-11-55
10:50 a.m.
Now, the message this
morning is the Book and the Judgments of God.
After they had passed throughout Pisidia, they came to
Pamphylia.
And when they had preached the word in Perga, they
went down to Attalia:
And thence they sailed to Antioch, from whence they had
been commended to the grace of God for the work for which they fulfilled.
And when they were come, and had gathered the church
together, they were rehearsed all that God had done with them, and how He had
opened the door of faith unto the Gentiles.
And there they abode a long time with the disciples.
[Acts 14:24-28]
And that is what we are going to do this
morning.
Now, if you want to
turn to it, my Scripture reading is in the eighth chapter of the Book of
Nehemiah:
And all of the people gathered themselves together as one
man into the street that was before the Water Gate; and they spake unto Ezra
the scribe to bring the Book [of the Law of Moses] which the Lord had commanded
to Israel.
And Ezra the scribe stood upon a pulpit of wood, which
they had made for the purpose...(verse 4)
And Ezra opened the Book in the sight of all of the
people ... and when he opened it, all of the people stood up.
… And he read therein before the street that was
before the Water Gate from the morning until the midday, before the men and the
women, and those that could understand; and the ears of all of the people were
attentive unto the Book…
[Nehemiah 8:1, 4, 3]
First, we believe—speak
of the nation and the Book, walking down the streets, the main streets of
Paris, four-thirty, five o'clock in the evening, on every side, in every
newsstand, pornographic literature openly flagrantly, unashamedly displayed,
Cartesians stopping every man on the street, just walking down Paris, thinking
of the city, and looking at its buildings, the most beautiful city in the
world, they have said; it is untouched by war. The bombs fell on Coventry.
Those terrible V-weapons destroyed large parts of London. But Paris was
untouched. She was untouched because she opened her gates to Hitlerite
slavery. She refused to resist. She opened her heart and her soul to whatever
evil tyranny and Nazi domination might bring.
And as I walked down
the streets of the beautiful city of Paris, untouched by the ravages of war, I
contrasted it in my soul with London and with Coventry and with England. In
the terrible and cruel and merciless day, when England stood alone, her armies
had been defeated on the Continent. Her cities were being ravaged by the
increasing fall of the V-weapon, and she stood trembling before the prospect of
invasion at any hour and at any moment. At that time, there was no nation in
the earth standing by England. And in those merciless and ruthless days,
Winston Churchill stood up and said, “We shall fight on the beaches. We shall
fight in the fields. We shall fight in the streets. We shall defend every
house. We will never surrender!”
Whence that will to
resist? Where does the spirit come to challenge evil against insuperable and
insurmountable odds? It comes from a people of the Book. You cannot enslave a
nation or a population who have before them an open Bible. There is no nation
in the earth today that is dominated by communist tyranny who has had an open
Book—the nation and the Book.
I went to Albert Hall
to register for the Baptist World Alliance. I was told you must go to Central
Hall, which is in front of Westminister Abbey. I went to Central Hall in the
afternoon to register and to attend the afternoon session of the Congress which
usually—one of which was usually held in Central Hall. There was no service
there. They did not have any session that afternoon.
So I walked around the
district called Whitehall, where the Parliament buildings are, where
Westminister Abbey is—the heart of England. And being very tired and weary and
not feeling well, I walked into Westminister Abbey, to be seated and to rest.
I was by myself. So I sat down on a chair at the side, in the large nave of
the Abbey. I was seated there tired and weary and resting. And I lifted up my
face and saw, on the other side of the aisle—I saw this inscription, “In
thankful commemoration of William Tyndale, 1490-1536, translator of the Holy
Scriptures into the language of the English people; a martyr, an exile in the
cause of liberty and pure religion.”
There were chairs on
the other side of the aisle. So after being seated there a while, I walked
across the aisle and sat down and looked on the other side. And this is what I
saw: John Wesley, Charles Wesley, and underneath there was a sculptured picture
of a large crowd in an open-air square in some town. And before them was John
Wesley, standing, preaching. In one hand, he held a Book, the Bible. And his
right hand was uplifted in a prayer, in appeal and in an invitation, and
underneath, the words: “I look on all of the world as my parish,” and, “God
buries His workman, but carries on His work”—a people and a nation of the Book.
After a while, I went
to the House of Lords, which is just across the street. And I sat down and
listened to their debate. That's the most beautifully decorated government
house I have ever seen. On that end is the throne, where the king or the queen
sits, when one is in attendance upon the House of Lords. And on the other end,
this side, there is a large picture. What is that picture? It is beautifully
done by a magnificent artist. It is the picture of the king of England. His
crown is laid aside, and he is kneeling. And in front of him is a minister of
the gospel of the Son of God. And in the minister's hand is an open Book. And
I looked to see where the Book was opened. It was at John 1:1: “In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” And
up and beyond was the cross, shedding its light full upon the pages of the
sacred Scriptures—a nation of the Book.
What were the lords
debating about? Three of their number were prelates. In the three of the
three, the middle one was the bishop of Garvey. The bishop of Garvey arose and
made an appeal, in behalf of the poor colliers as he called them—we would say
coal miners—pleading for justice and righteousness to be done by the poor coal
miners of Wales and of England. The rest of the afternoon, the House of Lords
answered the bishop of Garvey, giving him economic reasons why the poor miners
could not be helped. The bishop of Garvey rose, made his closing address and
ended it with this sentence, “God's principles—God's principles of justice and
righteousness, overrule man's principles of economics”—a people of the Book.
Where does the spirit
arise to challenge evil wherever she raises her head? In slavery, in tyranny,
in dictatorship, in awful merciless and ruthless cruelty, our world is
challenged. It is people who dare to stand and face that flood of
indescribable evil are the people of the Book; England, absolutely unafraid,
America, absolutely unafraid. And our sister nations like us, who have in
their midst an open church, and an unfettered pulpit, and the preacher with an
open Bible in his hand—the nation and the Book.
I now speak of war and
the Book. While in England, the Geneva Conference was held in Switzerland.
And like you, I eagerly read every one of the newspapers of London. And I
followed that conference with great and deep interest. One day, there came out
in the headlines of all of the great newspapers of London, “Ike; I Am Tired of
War.” And one newspaper in London had his picture drawn—a cartoonist had drawn
it, a large picture of the President of the United States and that sentence he
spoke at the Geneva Conference. “I am tired of war.”
The peoples of Europe
have an indescribable longing for peace. Having been through two terrible
world wars, their souls go to God in prayer and intercession daily, in behalf
of the peace of the world. And in that prayer and in that fervent hope, the
peoples of America also share, that we might have peace. But what lies ahead?
What are the prospects of peace? One of the most magnificent monuments I've
ever seen in my life, and one of the most effective, is called “The Angel of
Peace.”
It is in Munich,
Germany. It is built at the head of a great, wide avenue. It is tall. It is
wonderfully executed. It was built after World War I by the governments of
Britain and France and the United States and the Allied powers. That was a war
to end wars. It was a war to make the world safe for democracy. And when that
war was fought and it was over, the nations of the world felt that, forever
now, we would have peace and prosperity.
I just wonder what that
angel thought, so beautifully wrought, so magnificently executed—I wonder what
that angel of peace thought when, on top of that tall and beautiful column, she
watched the destruction of the vast city of Munich, the capital of German
barbarianism?
We have had our Geneva
Conference and there is a spirit of hope once again in the hearts of men. And
Russia has brought soothing words and plenteous remarks of her intentions. But
I also can remember when, in Washington, D. C., on the sixth of December, there
was in Washington, at that time, a commission of peace from the imperial
government of Japan. And they recessed their talks of peace on Saturday,
December sixth, and were preparing to take them up again and to continue them
on Monday, December the eighth of 1941.
And on Sunday, December
7, the day before the talks of peace were to continue, there fell out of the
skies over Pearl Harbor and over Hickam Field. In the Philippine Islands,
there fell the terrible bombs of the Japanese military. That same and
identical thing lies back of the peaceful palaver of the ungodly and
unscrupulous dictatorship that controls the destiny of the Soviet world. And
we are gullible. And we are lacking in intelligence. And we are not following
what lies certainly ahead when we allow ourselves to be persuaded by those men
who talk pretty words at a peace table in a beautiful city called Geneva.
“Why are you so sure of
that?” I am as sure of that as I am the Word of the living God. Jeremiah
said, “They cried, Peace, peace, when there is no peace.” Because of the
strength of the Western powers, Russia, finding herself unable to compete in
the race, has turned quiet and docile like a tiger that's on a little island
when the floodwaters have destroyed the forest and the cities. But it is still
the tiger. It is still cruel. It is still anti-God. It is still against
everything that we believe in. And Russian diplomacy is ever pointed toward
the domination of the world!
We arrived here in
Dallas on Wednesday night. Thursday morning, in the Dallas News, I read this
article from the congressman from California, Congressman Holt. He described
his experiences in the Soviet Union. And Holt said that during his entire time
in Russia, he was not able to see anything off the beaten path. There is no
freedom for the tourist going there. You see what they want you to see! And
then they come back and say marvelous things about the Soviet Union. But you
never see their slave camps! You never see their concentration camps! You
never see their terrible factories! You never see the awful tyranny and
slavery by which their people are ground to death under an impossible
dictatorship. And their only hope lies that we will be true to the basic
freedoms that belong by the Word of God and under heaven to every man that
lives. That's the reason that I am insulted by our Baptist so-called leaders
who go to the Soviet Union.
While I was in
Athens—there is a paper from Athens, Greece—I bought a paper in Athens,
Greece. And this is the headline, “Baptist Parson Startled by Religion in the
Soviet Union.” Then the under-headline, “Large Numbers of Young People,” and
then, the next—the third headline, “Four American Baptist clergymen have left Moscow
en route home, expressing amazement of the number of sincere young people in
churches in the Soviet Union.”
Then the article reads,
“The Reverend Mr. Theodore Adams, pastor of the First Baptist Church of
Richmond, Virginia, president of the Baptist World Alliance, told the press
there are half a million Baptists in Russia, and a surprising number of young
men and women in the churches.” He said that older women made up most of the
congregation, but pointed out that the same rule held in the United States.
And that's a flagrant misrepresentation! I'd like for him to see this morning
how many of the people in this congregation—and we are in First Baptist
Church—how many of us here are not old women? It would surprise him.
And I'm not saying
anything against our blessed old mothers. God be praised for them. But for a
man to say that, even in our country, our congregations are made up of old
women is a flagrant misrepresentation. Then he says—the Reverend Mr. Adams
said, “Russians certainly have full freedom of worship,” end quote.
May I point out to you
something that our Baptist people do when they go to Russia? And there's a
stream of you every once in over there. When those first Baptist ministers
went to Russia several years ago, they came back saying, “There are 5,000,000
Baptist people in Russia. They have full religious liberty.” All right, a few
years passed and the next group went over there. And they came back saying,
“There are 3,000,000 Baptist people in Russia. And they have full religious
liberty.” All right, this group goes over there and they came back saying,
“There are one-half million Baptist people in Russia. And they have full
religious liberty.” The next group that goes over there will come back and
have to say, “There's not a Baptist in Russia. But they have full religious
liberty!”
Five million of
them—and then, the next go around, 3,000,000 of them—and then the next go
around, one-half million of them. And yet, they say full religious liberty!
Our Baptist people in Russia are being decimated by every channel and every
means, that the Soviet Union could know and improvise!
Now, I say, I read this
in Athens. And there in Athens, they know the terrible scourge of communism.
In this last world war, when we were allied with Russia, we were helping Russia
buy guns and tanks and weapons of war, buy planes and petrol. In every way we
knew how, we were helping Russia. What was Russia doing? Those Greek people
said to me, when the Russians, the communists, came into Greece, they didn't
fight the Germans. The Germans were already way back, driven up toward their
homeland. But when the Russians came to Greece, they fought Greeks! And one
of the men stood and with a sweep of his hand said, “Look at the marks of a
civil war we had, precipitated in our native land by Russia and communism.”
They live in dread and
in fear and in terror of that horrible scourge that lies just beyond their
border. As for us, we have no compromise with communism in any place, in any
state, in any nation, in any society, in any cultural order. It has no place
under God! And what we need is a world of nations that are a people who dare
to stand up and challenge communism, tyranny, slavery, evil, whenever it raises
up its head. And please, God, that is the position of the United States of
America, and that is the hope of the enslaved nations of this world.
Now, may I return to the Book? The Book and war;
there is not a member of the American consulate in Munich but will tell you
there are no Germans but who believe that a war is inevitable. How would you
be if a foreign power had taken away Texas, and Oklahoma, and Louisiana, and
Arkansas, and tied it on to old Mexico, and we were driven back north, the
graves of our forefathers down here, our homes down here, our children reared
down here, and all of our land in the hands of an enemy. What would you do?
You'd do just like the German does today. He'd wait and abide the time when he
would wrest from communist control the Eastern provinces of his Fatherland.
What does the Book
say? In the ninth chapter of the Book of Daniel, you have an outline of the
course of the history of the world. And you listen to Gabriel—and the man
Gabriel said, “And unto the end war is determined.” May I quote from the Lord
Jesus Christ in the twenty-fourth of Matthew?
You shall hear of wars and rumors of wars; see that ye
be not troubled; for these things must come to pass...
Nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom shall
rise against kingdom...
… Except those days should be shortened, there should
no flesh be saved; but for the elect's sake, those days shall be shortened.
[Matthew 24:6-7, 22]
Now from the sixteenth of the
Revelation, “And I saw three unclean spirits come out of the mouth of the
dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth of the false
prophet” [Revelation 16:13]. The dragon is the Revelation word for the devil,
the serpent. The beast represents the political power, and the false prophet,
of course, the false church. You will have a great false church at the end of
time.
The dragon and the beast and the
prophet:
And they are the spirits of evil ones, working
miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and to the whole world, to
gather them to the battle of the great day of God Almighty...
And he gathered them together into a place called in
the Hebrew tongue Armageddon—the Hill of Megiddo.
[Revelation 16:14, 16]
The great, final battle of the Lord to
be fought in that great valley of Megiddo—they call it today the plain of
Esdraelon.
In the journey before,
we went through the pass of Megiddo, stood at the little hill of Megiddo. On
this journey, we stood on the other side of that great plain of Esdraelon,
where the great battles of the world in the ages past have been fought. And as
I stood there and looked over that great level plain—on one side the mountains
of Samaria, of Gilboa, of Jezreel, and on the other side, the mountains of
Galilee, and in between, that great place where God's Book says shall be the great
and final battle of the Lord: the battle of Armageddon.
God's Word says it
isn't peace. God's Book says it will be war. God's Book says it's
tribulation, it's darkness, it's trouble. God's Book says it’s all of those
things that follow after the red horseman and the black horseman and the pale
horseman, riding, riding, riding I heard the secretary of the Arab League say
this question of Jew and Arab, “For a while it is armistice, but, ultimately,
it has to be settled by force of arms.”
Last Sunday morning in
Munich, one of the young men in the Baptist church there, the finest Baptist
church we saw in all of this journey—fine group of people, large
congregation—the young man, after the service, standing by me said, “It will be
antichrist and he's coming soon. And it'll be that last war of Armageddon.
And I think,” he says, “it is coming soon.” We blind ourselves to reality when
we think, now because of sweet words of peace, the days of our danger and our
tribulation are past.
“Pastor, such dark, dark
pictures, such terrible and awful words.” Yes, when you take the downward
look, it's always dark. Looking down at humanity and the nations of the world,
it is always hopeless. But I have another word. And it's the last one: the
hope and the Book. Listen to the words of the Savior:
Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until
the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.
And there will be signs in the sun, and in the
moon...and upon the earth distress of nations…
Men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking at
those things which are coming on the earth...
And when these things begin to come to pass, then look
up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.
[Luke 21:24-28]
The darkness is a sign that the light is
coming. “The distress of nations and men's hearts failing them for fear” is a
sign that our victory is coming soon—our hope and the Book.
I heard Dr. John Saren,
pastor of the First Baptist Church of Rio de Janeiro—I heard him preach the
convention sermon in Albert Hall in London. And in that sermon, he told this
little thing out of his life. He said he was a chaplain in the 45th Brazilian
Infantry Division attached to the United States Army, fighting its way up
through Italy. He said that winter they had fought through the cold of the
Apennines Mountains until the depth of the snow prevented their fighting any
longer. And for two months, he said there was quiet on the Italian front in
those high Apennines, because of the depth of the snow and the bitterness of the
cold.
The chaplain preacher
said that, after two months had passed, and the snow was going away, he said he
walked out and around in “no man's land,” seeking bodies of the slain who had
fallen in the previous winter's campaign. And the pastor said, as he walked
in “no man's land,” he came across a Brazilian soldier boy, a sergeant, and
looking down upon him, he recognized him as a boy who had grown up in the
Sunday school of the First Baptist Church in Rio. He said he examined the boy
closely. The cold of the ice and the snow had preserved his body perfectly,
even though he had been dead for two months. And by looking around, the
chaplain said, it was apparent what had happened. The boy had no ammunition
left. He had fought until all of his ammunition was exhausted. After his
ammunition had given out, the boy apparently had arisen from his place to
charge one last time with his bare rifle. But when he rose to make the charge,
he was shot in the chest. But apparently, the boy had not died immediately,
for seating himself, he had taken out of his pocket his little Bible with the
Testament and with the Psalms. And apparently, the soldier boy was reading
God's Word as his life ebbed away, for the pages of the Book were frozen
together with his own blood. And apparently, as the boy read, he found himself
unable to hold up his head. And as he read, his head bowed forward, until
finally it was buried in the pages of the Book, for the Book was frozen to his
face by his own blood. And the chaplain said he looked to see where the boy
was reading in God's Word. And looking, the boy had turned to “the Shepherd's
Psalm,” Psalm 23: “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want ... Yea, in the
valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; Thou art with me; Thy rod
and Thy staff they comfort me.”
We live in a world of
tribulation. It is a world of sorrow and heartache. It is a world of
death and disaster. It is a world of inevitable and certain war.
That’s the world we live in.
But above that world,
high above it stands the living God, the merciful Savior, the Lord Jesus
Christ. His arms are ever outstretched. His hands are open toward
us and in life, in death, in age, in darkness, in weariness, in pain, in
suffering, in cold, in hunger, in war, in tribulation, there He ever stands our
Victor, our King, our Savior, and our hope is the blessed promise of this
Book.
I want us this morning
to change our invitation song. Let’s sing number fifteen:
Savior, like a shepherd lead us.
Much we need Thy tender care.
In Thy pleasant pastures feed us,
For our use, Thy folds prepare.
Blessed Jesus, blessed Jesus,
Thou hast bought us,
Thine we are.
Blessed Jesus, blessed Jesus,
Thou hast bought us,
And Thine we are.
And while we sing that
shepherd hymn and while the pastor is here at the front, from the balcony, the
top-most row, and from every side somebody you give his heart to the Lord, come
and stand by me. A family you, put your life in the church, come and stand by
me. One somebody you, whom the Lord calls, while we make appeal this morning,
you come, while we stand and while we sing.