THE SACRED SCRIPTURES
DR. W. A. CRISWELL
2 Timothy 3:14-17
11-09-58 7:30 p.m.
We turn now to 2 Timothy, the third chapter of
2 Timothy. We read from the fourteenth verse to the end, one, two, three, four
verses, 2 Timothy, 3:14 to17. Are we ready? All of us read it together. Second
Timothy 3:14 to the end:
But
continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of,
knowing of whom thou hast learned them;
And that
from a child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee
wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
All Scripture
is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine,
for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:
That the
man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.
Now, Paul had written of the times that were
then pressing upon his age, and speaking of those times as they prolonged
themselves, extended themselves into the future:
This know
also, that in the last days perilous times shall come…
Evil men
and impostors, goētes, impostors shall wax worse and worse,
deceiving, and being deceived.
But
continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of,
knowing of whom thou hast learned them;
That from
a child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise
unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
For every
Scripture, all of it, is given by inspiration of God, is God-breathed.
[2
Timothy 3:1, 13-17]
Paul says that in that day and in our day
these times shall be repeated. They shall be duplicated. It is a saying that
history repeats itself. It does. You have the same humanity. You have the
same dereliction. You have the same iniquity and wickedness. You have the same
devil who stirs up the evil in men. And it will continue until Satan is chained.
Now, the same remedy that Paul wrote of then
is the same remedy that we are to apply today. A physician does that. There
is a specific for pneumonia, and when this patient has pneumonia, the physician
will so prescribe, and when the next patient. So it is with the great word and
commandment of the apostle. There is a remedy for this day, this age, “When
evil men and impostors wax worse and worse.”
In a world of villainy, and rascality, and
denial, and infidelity, and unbelief, there is a thing that the apostle speaks
of, and it is this. We are to continue in the things which we have learned and
which we have been assured of, which things were taught us from childhood out
of the holy, God-breathed Scriptures. Paul's remedy is clear and specific and
decisive. The remedy lies in the propagation, in the sowing of the seed of the
Word of God.
The only thing that can dispel the darkness of
the night is the noontide. It is a vain and false dream to hope that human
learning will cast out human learning that Satan will cast out Satan. We must
look for the sun rising in the Son of God! And that is our specific and that
is our remedy for the woes of the world. We are to lift up the cross. We are
to lift up the brazen serpent. We are to teach the Word of the Holy
Scriptures.
We cannot make men believe. We cannot convert
men against their will, but we can say the truth. We can preach the gospel.
We can present the Word of God. And that is what Paul says. “In these last
days, perilous times shall come. Evil men and impostors shall wax worse and
worse,” but this is our way of salvation, “To continue in the things which thou
hast learned and has been assured of.”
Now, let us look at the instruction that he
says that Timothy had been taught. First, he says, he received it from a brephos,
a brephos. Now, a child to us is not quite a brephos. A brephos
is an infant. Timothy was not taught beginning in youth or in older childhood,
but he was taught as he rose as a child out of infancy itself.
I read this week of a great Christian English
nobleman who was a stalwart for God. And the man said that he learned the
godly way of life from a Christian nurse, the woman who was hired to bring him
up as a baby, take care of him as a child. And reading further, he said that
nurse died when he was seven years of age. All of the good of his life, he had
learned from this godly woman before he was seven years of age.
In these eight-fifteen o'clock services, we
are following the life of Moses. How long did Moses' mother have that child to
nurse before she brought him to be the son of Pharaoh's daughter? I do not
know. The Bible does not say, but it was not long. When she weaned the child
and had taken care of him as an infant, she presented him to be Pharaoh’s
daughter's own son. But in those beginning years, that mother had sowed in the
soul of that boy, a babe, an religion from which he never departed.
We are of the opinion that small children are
not able to grasp the great fundamental truths of the message of Christ. We
are therein mistaken. The time to sow the seed of the Word of God is in the
days of the brephos, “from an infant, from a child, thou hast known the
Holy Scriptures.” May I parenthesize here to speak a word about our stewardship
program? Just because we are facing it, that I mention it at all.
You take a little boy or a little girl, and
you're going to the fair or you're going to town on Saturday. And here's a quarter
for a candy. And here's another quarter for ice cream and chewing gum. And
here's thirty-five cents or fifty cents to go to the picture show. And here's
altogether a dollar.
And the little child goes down to the town,
out there to the midway and spends his dollar, riding the Ferris wheel, riding
the merry-go-round, buying chewing gum and popcorn and soda pop and having a
big time. You do that on Saturday. And the next morning, that same little
boy, that same little girl, is dressed up and is brought down here to church.
And you put in that child's hand, a small penny or a nickel. You don't need to
say anything. You don't need to expatiate. You don't need to rationalize.
You don't need to extenuate. You don't need to comment. You don't need to say
anything. The child has already learned that peanuts, and popcorn, and soda
pop, and chewing gum, and merry-go-rounds are big business! That's a dollar! But
the church of the living God is very small—that's a nickel or a penny.
The way to teach the men and women is not when
they're men and women. It's to teach them when they are children—“That from a brephos,
thou hast known the Holy Scriptures.”
Before I leave that, may I say, here's what
you ought to do. When you make that pledge, you make a pledge for that child.
And make it worthy. And give him the idea that God's work is great work, big
work, important work! Share what you give with that little fellow. Let him
see you. Put it in his envelope. If he's big enough, let him put it in, and sign
his name, and how much it is, and bring it to God's house. “From a brephos,
from a child, thou hast known the Holy Scriptures.”
Now, I want you to look again who taught this
little fellow. Over here, in the first chapter of this Book of 2 Timothy, it
says, “When I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith that is in thee, which
dwelt first in thy grandmother, Lois, and in thy mother, Eunice; and I am
persuaded in thee also.” Now, we learn from the Book of Acts that his father
was a heathen Greek. But he had a godly mother and a godly grandmother, and
they taught that boy the Holy Scriptures.
I think Lois and Eunice were fulfilling the
purposes of God, as much so as Samuel when he judged Israel, and as Solomon
when he built the temple. That little boy was led in the way of the Lord by
his mother and his grandmother. And I wish I could speak about his father.
All I know about him is the Bible says he was a Greek.
Don't send those children; bring them. Sit
down by their side. Read to them out of God's Book. Get you a storybook of
the Bible and teach them the great characters and the heroes of the faith. Let
them grow up familiar with Moses, and Joseph, and Solomon, and David, and
Daniel, and Paul, and Silas, James and John, Simon Peter. “From a brephos,
a child, thou hast known,” from the teaching and example of mother and
grandmother, “the Holy Scriptures.”
Now, may I say the next and obvious thing?
What was he taught? He was taught a great reverence for the Word of God. “From
a brephos, thou hast known the hiera grammata, the sacred, the
Holy Scriptures.” That word hiera is used to refer to the temple where
God lives and where God is worshipped. And that word sacred and holy is
applied there to the Book of God, the Holy Scriptures. That little fellow was
taught that this was God's Word and it was God's Book.
The first time I went over there to Palestine,
made a great impression upon me to visit the one part of the old city of
Jerusalem that Israel has conquered and that lies in Israeli territory. It's
the little end of Mount Zion on which King David is buried. When I was there
the first time—they've changed it since—now it's a tourist attraction—I thought
when I went back again and looked at the change, how cheap. How cheap. To
take a great shrine like that, and change it, like I'm going to describe, into
a tourist attraction, a tourist attraction.
First time I was there, they had just
conquered it, and it was one of the prize joys of the Israeli people. When I
went there the first time, it was a synagogue. And every hour of the day, it
was jammed and packed and filled with worshippers. When I was there I'd say
the first time, I watched them as they took the scroll of the prophets, they
took the scroll of Moses, the Torah, the Law. And as they unrolled the scroll,
those old rabbis—and they looked like pictures; their long beards, flowing over
their robes, their long, uncut hair, those men of God who’d given their lives
to the study of the Holy Word—as they would read, they would kiss the sacred
scroll. Then after they had read it, they carefully rolled it up and then
kissed it from top to bottom and side to side. Then they placed it in the
cylinder and they kissed the cylinder. Then they kissed the tassels. Then
they carefully laid it back in the ark, just beyond the tomb of King David.
Now, somebody may say, “That's bibliolatry,
that’s a fetish.” I don't care what anybody says! It moves the soul to see men
thus devoted to the Word of God. That's exactly what he's speaking of here. “That
from a child thou hast known the hiera grammata, the holy, the sacred
letters, the sacred words.”
I just wonder why Paul chose this young man
Timothy. Do you suppose there were other young men in that day who were
advanced in Greek philosophy? Why, certainly! Paul himself grew up in a great
university city. Do you suppose there were young men in that day who looked
upon the Scriptures as being a stereotype form of teaching? I would deign to
think so. But Paul chose this young man because, from his childhood, he knew
the Word of God. “From a brephos, thou hast known the hiera grammata.
From an infant, thou hast known the holy, sacred Scriptures.”
That's quite a contrast, Paul's attitude
toward it, to what we find in our modern and in this last day. Look how Paul
refers to those Scriptures, “the Holy Scriptures.” And he says, “All
Scriptures, all of it, is given by inspiration of God.” Didn't come by man; it
came directly from the God-inspired, breathing Spirit of heaven. Man didn't
write it, just an instrument, just an amanuensis, just a secretary. But the
thing was written by the Spirit of God, and all of it is God-inspired,
God-breathed.
You know, it's a strange thing, an unusual
thing. When that Book was written, two thousand and four thousand years ago,
that Book began to be written three, three thousand five hundred years ago. And
it was concluded in its writing a little over nineteen hundred years ago, way
back there in the story and in the history of civilization.
Why is it that in our enlightened day and in
this advanced age, men do not write a better Bible? Why do they not? If this
is a man-made book, and if it is written by the genius of men, why in our
advanced age, do we not produce a better Book and a better Bible?
Do you ever pause to think who these men were
who wrote that Book? They belonged to a small, despised race. They lived in a
hilly, mountainous country, no bigger than one of our, than one of our
counties. They had access to nothing such as we have today. Such as: they
never had any airlines and steamships to carry them to the great centers of
world civilizations; they had no great libraries to consult; they had not then
the unlocking of nature's door, of the rocks below and the stars above; they
had no opportunities to share in the enlightenment of the glorious age in which
we now enjoy.
And yet those people, relatively
unenlightened, wrote this Book that I hold here in my hand. Why do we not
write a better one today? Why do we not, for example, take the choicest graduates
of all the great universities of the world and with this little select and
chosen group, ferret out all the latest information in every center of learning
under the sun.
Let them visit the capitals of the world. Let
them consult the great libraries. Let them glean until they exhaust the fields
of astronomy, and science, and biology, and botany, and literature, and
geology. And let them acquaint themselves with the finest styles of art, and
of expression, of oratory and literature. And then after they have exhausted
every means of research, let them come together and write a Bible that is
better than this. If this is written by men, we all could write a better one
after thousands of years of advance.
Why don't they try? Do they not have the same
confidence in their God that the prophets of Baal had in Baal? Why don't they
try? Surely they don't believe that man is retrograding. Man is progressing,
they say. We're up from the beast, and we'll soon be archangels by and by. Why
don't they produce a better Book? Why don't they produce a better Christ, if
this is not of God and if men wrote it?
I tell you verily, the most pathetic men in
this world are the materialists, the evolutionists, the pseudoscientists. They
are lost and grope in the dark like in a fog. They are pitiful to look at.
They cry to their gods to answer by fire, and they appeal to inanimate matter till
it is pathetic and pitiful. And they have a greater credulity to believe in
blind force than we have to believe in God and our religious faith.
They tell us that blind, inerrant matter
created all the things that we see today, including you and your mind and your
soul. All of it adventitiously brought about by sheer accident, by blind
force. My soul, where could a man summon enough faith to believe a doctrine
like that? Yet they profess to believe it. They cry “Night, night, darkness!”
when the sun and its meridian strength is declaring that noonday is here.
Let's go on. “That from a child, thou hast
known the Holy Scriptures,” God-breathed, God-inspired. Look why God gave them
to us. “That from a child, thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, God-breathed,
God-written, God-inspired, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation.” Scriptures
don't save us, but they make us wise unto salvation; wise unto salvation. I'm
not saved because I know the Book. You’re not lost because you don't know the
Book.
There has to be a time where we accept Christ
as Savior. There has to be. There is a time when the sun has not risen, there
is a time when it is risen. It may be hard to say just that moment when it's
below the horizon, and just that moment when it is above the horizon. But
there is a time when it is not risen, and there is a time when it is.
So it is with a man's salvation. There is a
time when you did believe, though sometimes it is difficult for some to say
just at the point. But it happened. Sunrise happens or the sun wouldn't be
there. And you have believed or you wouldn't be saved. The Scriptures don't
save us, but they make us wise unto salvation, through faith.
Faith takes the knowledge of the Word of God
and makes us wise unto salvation. Faith doesn't take man's wisdom and make us
wise unto salvation. But faith takes God's wisdom, God's Word, and leads us
unto salvation. And then, after we're saved, it's a great commitment in our
lives to be wiser in the faith. “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God
and is profitable…that the man of God may be perfect, may be mature, full-grown.”
We are to continue in our study and knowledge
of the Word of God. And we are to be thereby discerning Christians in
doctrine, in instruction.
How many of our people—even Baptist people—how
many of our Baptist people are utterly without wisdom in the Scriptures and
utterly without knowledge in the ways and doctrines of the Lord? They are like
Paul describes, “Blown hither and yon, tossed to and fro, by every wind of
doctrine.” Sometimes they're like he describes in this verse—in this chapter—never
learning, never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.
You'll see them there. You'll see them over
there. You'll see them there. And they seem to be just about as much home
there as they are here, as they are yonder. They have a spiritual appetite
that can digest bricks, as well as bread. They have a spiritual appetite that
can enjoy soap as well as butter. They are spiritual ostriches that can
swallow down anything and seemingly enjoy it. They're just about as much home
over there as they are over here.
I talked to one of our finest members this
morning. After I had preached certain such, and that certain one and such—well,
I'm not going to tell you. Anyway, they are very much at home in kind of like
a ritual church. All I got to say is, if you are at home and like a certain
ritual church, you don't know the Word of God! You don't!
I can't help but remember something James
McKinley said. Bless his heart, he's in glory now, but he told something
here that I remembered, and some of you remember it. There was a great, great,
mighty church of God, and as the time passed and the days multiplied, they had
a rank modernist for a preacher. And that destroys any church. So, Dr.
McKinley said, one of the members of that church came to him and said,
"Dr. McKinley, what shall I do? That great church has turned itself to
rank infidelity and liberal modernism. What shall I do?"
And Dr. McKinley said, "Why, I'll tell
you what I'd do. I'd quit it. I'd find me a church that preached the gospel
of the Son of God and believed the Book. That's what I'd do."
"Oh," she said, "Dr. McKinley,
I could not do that. I could not do that. Why," she said, "I go to
that church and I sit in that pew. That's the pew where my grandfather sat. That's
the pew where my grandmother sat. That's the pew where my father sat. That's
the pew where my mother sat. And that's the pew where I have sat all these
years. I could not forsake my pew!"
And he said, "Pew."
And she said to him, "Dr. McKinley, what
did you say?"
He said, "I said, ‘pew!’"
I don't deny that sentiment is precious. And
I don't deny that memories are things that we treasure in our hearts, and they
make us what we are. I know. But I am just avowing to you that what we are
seeking is not people who can just spiritually digest anything, no matter what is
said, no matter what the preacher believes, no matter what the church stands
for, no matter what the doctrine! There ought to be in us, a great spirit of
discernment. This thing is the truth of God. I read it here in the Book of
God! And that is error, and that is error, and this is error, and this is not
according to the Word. O, for a people who would want just one thing, is it
written in the Book! That’s the way Jesus answered the tempter in the
wilderness. “It is written! “It is written!” “It is written!”
When you read these apostles, they are quoting
the Old Testament all the time. We ought to be that way about the apostles and
the missionaries and the evangelists that God sent to write with a pen of iron
and a point of a diamond, engraving it forever on our hearts, the immutable,
unchanging Word of God; “It is written, from a child thou has known the Holy
Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith,
which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is
practical and profitable for doctrine, that you might know the truth; for
instruction, that you might know the Lord, that the man of God may be grown up,
mature, thoroughly committed to every good work.”
We must finish quickly, should
have a long time ago! While we sing this song, tonight, somebody give his
heart to the Lord. Somebody put his life in the church. While we sing this
song, would you come and stand by me? If you’re in the balcony, these
stairwells at the front, on either side, or at the back, on either side, would
you come down those stairwells and here to the front, and stand by me? If you
are here on this lower floor, into the aisle and here to the front, would you
come and stand by me? “I give you my hand pastor; tonight I give my heart to
God, to follow Him, to be taught of Him, to enroll in His school, to sit as His
feet. Here I am!” A family of you, to put your life in the church, or one
somebody you, while we prayerfully, earnestly sing this appeal, on the first
stanza, into the aisle or down the stairwell, will you come and give me your
hand? While all of us stand and sing the song.