AWAKE!
Dr. W. A. Criswell
1 Thessalonians 5:6
2-16-58 10:50 a.m.
In
our preaching through the Word we have been, these few Sundays, in the fifth
chapter of the first Thessalonian letter. And if you will turn to the fifth
chapter, the last chapter of the first Thessalonian epistle, you can follow the
sermon with ease and facility. This is the pastor of the First Baptist Church
in Dallas, Texas, preaching on this sermon entitled Awake!, exclamation
point.
But
of the times and the seasons, brethren, you have no need that I write unto you.
For
yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the
night.
For
when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon
them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.
But
ye, but ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as
a thief.
Ye
are all the children of light, and the children of the day: we are not of the
night, nor of darkness.
Therefore
let us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober.
For
they that sleep in the night; they that be drunken are drunken in the night.
But
let us, who are of the day, be sober, putting on the breastplate of faith and
love, and for an helmet, the hope of salvation.
For
God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus
Christ,
Who
died for us, that, whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with
Him."
Awake! “Therefore let us not
sleep,” 1 Thessalonians 5:6, "Therefore let us not sleep, as do others;
but let us watch and be sober."
One
of the sad commentaries on the depravity of the human race is this little fact
illustrated here in this figure: that the glories of the plenitude of the
mercies of God in nature—that ought to be used by simile and metaphor in
comparison, to magnify His kingdom and glorify His truth—that sin has
appropriated it and those same things become figures of destruction and
judgment and damnation.
For
example, take the figure of water: the flood bears on its bosom the commerce of
the world. The overflowing stream leaves the alluvial deposits rich and
productive in which the farmer sows his seed to reap the grain for the bread of
the world. The water of life. Yet sin has appropriated that figure, and the
flood is a type of the great judgment day of God, and sin is likened unto the
breaking forth of water.
Or
take again the figure of fire, a heavenly gift if ever there was one, to warm,
and comfort, and gladden, and cheer the hearts of the people in the cold of the
winter. The fire is a figure of the burning Spirit of God, of His presence in
our midst. It is a figure of the zeal, the flame of God's children. Yet sin
has appropriated that metaphor and that figure and that type also for the fires
of damnation and the fires of torment and the fires of hell never cease.
So
it is here in my text, of all of the gracious, benign gifts of God there is
none sweeter than that of sleep. It is a figure of the very blessed themselves,
"they that sleep in Jesus." In the chapter preceding, we spoke of
it. David, in one of his Psalms, the one hundred twenty-seventh, speaks of it
as one of the graces of the gifts of God, "For he giveth his beloved
sleep." And yet, alas! Sin and depravity have appropriated this figure
also, for here, this "sleep as do others" is the sleep of the carnal
dead; it is the sleep of the damned; it is the sleep of the lost, coarse herd
of this world. And the appeal of the apostle, "You, brethren, are not in
darkness. You are the children of light" [1 Thessalonian 5:4-6]. We are not of the night,
nor of darkness. Therefore let us not sleep as do others; the coarse, lost, unquickened
herd of this world. There the figure sleep refers to this earth, this race,
this time in sin and in trespass.
Now,
the sleep that the Christian falls into is not the slumber of death itself. For
we who are quickened cannot die. We are alive to God forevermore. But the
sleep that can overtake a Christian is so like the slumber of the lost, of the
dead, of the damned, of the unquickened, of this herd of humanity in this earth
that knows not God. The Christian slumber can be so like it, until it is
difficult to tell it from it. That's a truism if ever a preacher said one. A
dead Christian looks more like a dead carnal, ungodly sinner than any two peas
you saw in a pod.
Now,
the appeal of Paul here is that we not sleep, slumber as do others—this lost
world—but that we awake, awake, awake! How many times does Paul say that here
in the Book of Romans, "knowing the time, that now it is high time to
awake out of sleep"[Romans
13:11]? He
does the same thing in the fifth chapter of the Book of Ephesians, in the
fourteenth verse, "Wherefore he says, Awake thou that sleepest, and arise
from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light." "Awake thou that
sleepest." "Therefore let us not sleep as do others."
So
Paul first points out here the danger, and it is ever present, the danger into
which the Christian can fall. In the description of that celestial road, the
glory road, from the City of Destruction to the City of God, the most dangerous
place on that road is not where lions abound, and where Apollyon challenges the
way, and where dragons are frequent. It's not even where the Slough of Despond
is located, nor the Dark Woods or the Pitfall. But the most dangerous part of
that journey is the Enchanted Grounds, the beautiful arbors of the sleep, of
those who sleep. The great spiritual geographer John Bunyan pictures it like
this:
I
then saw in my dream that they went on until they came into a certain country,
whose air naturally tended to make one drowsy if he came a stranger it to. And
here Hopeful began to be very dull and heavy of sleep; wherefore he said unto
Christian, "I do now begin to grow so drowsy that I can scarcely hold up
mine eyes. Let us lie down here and take a nap.”
Christian:
"By no means," said the other, "lest sleeping, we never awake
more."
Hopeful:
"Why, my brother, sleep is sweet to the laboring man. We may be refreshed
if we take a nap."
Christian:
"Do you not remember that one of the shepherds bid us beware of the
Enchanted Grounds? He meant by that, that we should beware of sleeping.
Therefore let us not sleep as others do, but let us watch and be sober."
And
there John Bunyan, in Pilgrim's Progress, quotes my text,
"Therefore let us not sleep as do others." The church at ease in
Zion: hush, hush, tread softly, she's sound asleep.
When
does the church sleep? Not when the beasts are roaring in the Coliseum; not
when the square in the little town of Smithfield is filled with saints for the
burning of the Baptists. It isn't when Patmos is waiting in lonely exile for
the pastor of Ephesus. But the church sleeps in its ease and in its luxury,
when it has in its own persuasions, arrived, everything is just so. Sleep.
You
don't read, in this story of John Bunyan's "Pilgrim," you don't read
that he slept when he was fighting with lions. You don't read that he slept in
the Castle of Giant Despair. You don't read that he slept in Doubting Castle. You
don't read that he slept when he was fighting with Apollyon. You don't read
that he slept as he went through the waters, cold and dark, of the River of
Death. But what you read is: when he came toward the end of his journey, at
the end of the day, when he came to the beautiful arbor and there, and now may
I quote from Bunyan again,
Then
they came to an arbor, warm and promising, much refreshing to the weary
pilgrims. For it was finely wrought above head, beautiful vines, beautified
with greens and furnished with benches and settles.
—And
I looked up that word settle, in Bunyan's day, it was a sofa—
It
had also in it a soft couch where the weary might lean. The arbor was called
The Slothful's Friend and was made on purpose to allure, if it might be, some
of the pilgrims to take up their rest there when they were weary. For this
Enchanted Ground is one of the last refuges that the enemy to pilgrims had.
Wherefore it is, as you see, placed almost at the end of the way, and so it
standeth against us with the more advantage. For when, thinks the enemy, will
these fools be so desirous to sit down as when they are weary? And when so
like to be weary as when they are almost at the journey's end? Therefore, it
is, I say, that the Enchanted Ground is placed so nigh to the land Beulah and
so near the end of their race. Wherefore, let pilgrims look to themselves lest
it happen to them as it has done to these as you see are fallen asleep and none
can awake them.
That
danger is for every pilgrim. It's for every life. It is for every church. And
it is a greater danger for an older pilgrim, for an adult pilgrim, and it is a
greater danger for an older church, for the great, old First Baptist Church. You
don't need to preach a sermon like this to a bunch of teenagers. My soul, they
stay up all day and all night, and they don't show any effects of it. They
beat anything I ever saw in my life. Don't need to preach a sermon to them. You
don't need to preach a sermon like this to a young church. My, they've got
everything yet to do. They don't have a building; they don't have a staff;
they don't have a congregation; they don't have a lot; they don't have a place;
they don't have a property; they don't have anything! They're out there
fighting with odds against them; they're young! But just like Pilgrim says,
"We are always in danger, we who have come along the way."
And
the church that has a great tradition, and is deeply established, and has a
noble and wonderful history, it is then that we "in the weariness of the
way find the arbor of rest and greenery and the settles," I like that, "and
the settles, soft and comfortable." And we take off our sandals, and we
rub our weary feet, and we stop and take a nap: the Enchanted Ground. “I've
done my part. I've made my contribution. I think it's time for somebody else
now to bear the heat and the storm of the day,” so we sit down and rest at ease
in Zion and watch the world go by.
Awake!
"Therefore let us not sleep, but let us awake!" Now, all that
sleepest awake. Now why? Brother, I'm preaching the Bible! It says it here in
the Bible—why awake? Because it's daytime! "But ye, brethren, are not in
darkness...Ye are the children of light and the children of the day. We are
not of night, nor of darkness. Therefore let us not sleep as others do." Awake,
because it is daytime!
Now,
may I illustrate what I think he means by that? Suppose I were to go downtown
at 7:30 o'clock in the morning and suppose I were just to stop on the road to
town and look, at 7:30 o'clock in the morning, at 8:00 o'clock in the morning,
at 8:30 o'clock in the morning, and at 9:00 o'clock in the morning, suppose I
were to go to town and look, and there was not a car on the street, not one. There
was not a soul moving; nothing going on. This entire, great, thriving city; the
same at 8:00 o'clock in the morning as it will be at 2:00 o’clock tonight! I'd
look around me and I'd say, "This is unearthly. This is unseemly. This
is not right! This dead, dead town of Dallas will decay; it will die! The
people are asleep at daytime!"
That's
what Paul says here, "We are the children of the day." Awake! Awake!
Why, man, did you know it? They who are asleep are insensible. The watchman
calls from the tower; he hears it not. Revolution rages in the street; he's
not cognizant of it. The very fire burns beneath his window; he doesn't know
it. He's asleep! He's insensible!
Ah,
my soul! The church, of how many things is insensible and has it been
insensible? Great opportunities have arisen and we've been asleep. You could
cry; you could wring your hands. Great open doors God hath placed before us
and we've been asleep, insensible. We have let them slip through our hands; haven't
got time to enumerate them and wouldn't if I could. It would sound like I was
being personal. Asleep, asleep! Insensible before great opportunity and wide
open door. Awake! Awake!
He
that is asleep is not only insensible; he's inactive, inactive, yes, asleep! The
farmer doesn't plow when he's asleep; the mariner doesn't guide his ship when
he's asleep. All of these merchandising men are not at their task when they
are asleep. Nor is the church cognizant, nor is it active, nor is it pouring
life and blood and ministry at the devoted feet of Jesus when it is asleep. Cobwebs
by the spiders of sloth and neglect and indifference woven all over the place. "Awake,
ye that sleep! Awake and rise from the dead!"
How
many children in this city are not taught the Word of God? How many homes in
this city have no Christ, no Savior, no foundation upon which to build? How
many lives are lost? How much needs to be done and we asleep? Not only is he
that is asleep insensible, and not only is he that is asleep inactive, but he
that is asleep is subject to all kinds of queer and fantastic illusions. You
know what? I could not tell you the number of people that come to me and
they've been to see a psychiatrist, or the doctor has said for them to go see a
psychiatrist, and then he also says, "And go see a minister." And so
they come and see me. I've had two like that already this week. And so I
listened to them, and you know what's the matter? It's a strange thing that in
the days of a war, in the days of great conflict, you don't have many suicides;
you don't have many nervous breakdowns; you don't have many fallings apart. Because
in a day of great and tremendous effort people forget themselves; they're not
thinking about themselves; they're not feeling of the bumps on their heads;
they're not gouging through all of the inferiorities of their soul; they're not
following all those complexes. “Brother, we've got a war to fight. We've got
machines to make. We've got guns to manufacture. We've got planes to put out.
We've got an enemy at our throats. Every man arise and stand and do his part.”
Well, that saves him from himself.
That's
what's the matter with the ailing and the ailing of the American people—more
psychiatrists needed, more of those, you don't call them séances, do you? More
of those sittings down and lyings down; why, no wonder we're half nuts and the
rest half crazy! Lying down, trying to tell some fella all of the things on
the inside; forget it! Forget it! Get out of bed and get to work and forget
yourself! And that will be the most healing balm you've ever known in your
life.
You
sit around and sleep around and lie around, and think about yourself and all
your woes and all of your complexes and all of the things, and no wonder you
get crosswise with yourself and everything else. You've got to get out of
yourself, out of yourself! Awake! And if you'll fill your life full of the
intensist activity, it will be the greatest health, the greatest balm, the
greatest physician, the greatest touch that you could ever experience in your
life. Man, get up! Get out! Get busy! Forget about yourself and leave it to
God; forget the psychiatrist, forget all of those who try to tinker and meddle
on the inside of you. Get away from it and give yourself to a vast,
incomparable busy activity.
"Well,
preacher, I don't know what to do." My soul! if there's nothing else for
you to do, come down here and help us rock the babies. Come on, we need you. We
need you. Many, many times we have more babies here than we have beds, and
somebody has to hold the baby and rock the baby. Rock the baby! Be a better
balm for you, and a better physician cure for you, than all of those séances
you could ever go through in your life. Awake! Awake! “Thou that
sleepest awake and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light" [Ephesians
5:14].
Listen,
that's my introduction, time's going. Look at this, look at this: he says it's
wartime. It's wartime. Awake! Why? Therefore it's wartime; look what he
says, "Sudden destruction cometh as upon a woman with child when she
labors in travail." Look at that, "Put on the breastplate." Look
at that, "Put on the helmet." It's wartime, awake! Brother, we have
an enemy that labors against us in the day, in the night, every day and all the
night, plowing under God's people, destroying God's testimony and the Lord's
witness. Awake! Awake! Awake!
Oh,
what things God does say to His people. It's wartime, wartime, wartime! Here
the enemy is at the gates, knocking, knocking at the very gates. I'm not
talking about an enemy across the sea, here against us: our enemy, the
adversary, that old devil, that dragon, that Satan. We're in the war, and
look, look, the sentinel is asleep in his box. Look, look, look, the captain with
his dispatches and his orders is asleep at the table. Look, the soldiers are
nodding over their bayonets. Look, the airmen are asleep in the briefing room.
Look, a wizard with some magic wand must have put them to sleep.
What
has happened? It's another Pearl Harbor, it's another Titanic with the wildest
telegrapher, for the first time using SOS, SOS, SOS…the telegrapher on the
sister ship "California" was sound asleep. Oh, how the enemy taketh
away when we're asleep. I reread the story of Sisera: Sisera, mighty,
victorious general, his aura, his banner, had waved over many a battlefield in
a victory. In a woman's pit, in Jael's pit, and Jael, wife [of Heber] took a
nail and a hammer and drove it through his temples and pinned him to the floor
and he died there in his sleep. I think of mightier Samson, asleep and they
shave off his locks and the Philistines are upon him. Asleep! And I think of
Saul, God's chosen servant—Abner and the host asleep around him—and Abishai
says to David, "David, this spear stuck in the ground at his bolster, I
will strike him but once. Not twice, but once. Let me strike him but
once." And the dark-winged angels says that of us, "I will strike
him but once," were it not for the hindering, keeping, merciful hand of
God.
Oh,
Awake! Awake! Thou that sleepest awake! We're in the war, and we're in it
till we die: in youth, in manhood and in age. A soldier's uniform—one thing
among others I admired in the most abominable of all enemies mankind has
produced in our generation—Hitler, one time in a flurry of address said,
"And the uniform that I wear, I shall never take off but in victory or in
death." Thank God, it was death. But the spirit, "A uniform I'll
never take off except in victory or in death." Awake! Awake! Thou that
sleepest, awake! It's wartime!
May
I conclude? It is death time; it is storm time; it is judgment time; death
time. That's why the passage was written, death time. I read again the great
Black Plague. Down the street of the great city, the bell ringing and the man
driving the cart, "Bring out your dead. Bring out your dead. Bring out
your dead," driving the cart, ringing the bell. And as I reread it,
there's only one difference in then and now. That is, in the concentration of
the time, we have a little longer and in the Black Plague they were plowed down
as with a scythe. We don't have a cart; we have a funeral car. And they
marked every house where the plague was and death was with a big cross. Now,
we put a wreath on the door, but it's the same, it’s the same, death time.
A
little while, before this year is out, there are several in this congregation
who will be with the Lord; death time. Before this decade is out, there is a
host of us that shall be with the Lord; death time! Before this century is
out, practically all of us will be with the Lord; death time! Oh, thou that
sleepest, awake, awake. Storm time. Judgment time. “Look, look at the
breakers and the great ship with passengers aboard. Oh, Captain, awake, awake!”
Poor condemned man, sentenced by the judge to hang till he died, underneath
the pillow of his friend was a pardon for life, and the friend is asleep! Storm
time, judgment time, death time—and a pardon in my hand.
Oh,
thou that sleepest, awake, awake. A message for us who are Christians. God
stir in our souls. “Lord, what I can, here I am, I will do. I may be old and
feeble; there's something for me to do. There's a task. There's a ministry. There's
a place.” God leaves us here, I think, for a purpose. Maybe invalid and not
be able to arise out of that bed, and listening to the pastor this morning in
affliction, but God has a reason. And there is a testimony, and a work, and a
ministry for you who lie in a bed of invalidism and affliction. There is a
task for you: awake, awake!
Many
of you who have been Christians for half a century, no time to quit or to sleep,
there is a ministry for you: awake, awake! And the great host in youth or in
the prime of life God's call, “Awake! Awake! Thou that sleepest,"
there's a tremendous work and responsibility for you. Awake!
And
to these to whom Paul would make appeal in this earth, unquickened and lost,
"Awake, thou that sleepest; awake from the dead and Christ shall give thee
life." Never trusted God? Never turned to Christ? Never believed in
Him? Never put your trust? Awake! Awake! I have today, now, this moment,
this hour, God's time. Would you take Him as Lord and Savior and devote the
endless days of now and eternity in love and praise and adoration to Him who
made us and Who gave Himself for us? Would you do it? Would you do it? As
God shall make appeal, as the Lord shall say the word, as Christ shall lead the
way, down these stairwells into these aisles, from side to side, somebody you. "Today,
today, I'll put my faith and my trust in the Lord. I shall arise out of the
darkness of this earth and out of the dread and the grave of this life. I
shall put my hope and trust in Jesus." Would you do it? Would you do it?
While
we sing, while we make appeal, while our people pray, while we wait, into the
aisles, down to the front, "Here I come, pastor, and here I stand. I give
you my hand. I give my heart to God." Or putting your life in the
church, one somebody you, or a whole family you, while we stand, and while we
sing.