WHEN THE WORLD IS ON FIRE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Peter 3:10-13
10-30-60 7:30 p.m.
Now the
sermon tonight will close the Book of Simon Peter, and then we enter John and
Jude, and then the Revelation. Turn to 2 Peter 3, verse 10, and we start
reading at verse 10 and read to the end of the chapter. Second Peter 3, verse
10, and read to the end of the chapter. All of us have it? Second Peter 3:10
to the end of the chapter; now let’s everybody read it together, out loud like
it was written to be read, out loud. Second Peter 3:10:
But the day of the
Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass
away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the
earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up.
Seeing
then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye
to be in all holy conversation and godliness,
Looking for and
hasting unto the coming of the day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire
shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat?
Nevertheless we,
according to His promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein
dwelleth righteousness.
Wherefore, beloved,
seeing that ye look for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of Him in
peace, without spot, and blameless.
And account that the
longsuffering of our Lord is salvation; even as our beloved brother Paul also
according to the wisdom given unto him hath written unto you;
As also in all his
epistles, speaking in them of these things; in which are some things hard to be
understood, which they that are unlearned and unstable wrest, as they do also
the other Scriptures, unto their own destruction.
Ye therefore,
beloved, seeing ye know these things before, beware lest ye also, being led
away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness.
But grow in grace,
and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be glory both
now and forever. Amen.
[2 Peter
3:10-18]
Now the
title of the sermon is When the World Is On Fire. The title that
is printed is, The New Heavens and the New Earth. The climax of
the sermon tonight will be of that new heaven and that new earth; but as I
prepared the message, it seemed infinitely better to wait until I preached
through the Revelation to speak of the new heaven and the new earth at
length. So tonight we shall follow the passage. Simon Peter here
says by the revelation of God that this world will not remain as you now see
it. He says that this world is going to be rejuvenated. It is going
to be remade. All of the tracks of Satan, all of the slime of the
serpent, all of the dregs of iniquity and sin are going to be effaced and
destroyed. And out of this world, God is going to reshape and to
remake a new, and a perfect, and a beautiful, and a righteous, and a heavenly
creation.
Now as I
said this morning, Simon Peter writes this for a twofold purpose. First,
he is encouraging the saints. Lest we be weary in waiting, and lest we
think that the powers of darkness are going to overwhelm us, unless a man might
fall into despair that we are going to lose this final battle, Simon Peter
writes this word, that there is coming an interposition, an intervention of God
in human history, and by God's own right hand, He will bring a triumph to our
Savior and to our Lord's people. That is to encourage us and to send us
with a new uplifted heart and spirit in the way of our work and ministry.
Then, of course, he wrote this as an answer to the scoffers who looked up at
the heavens that were clear and said, in Noah's day, "It never
rained. We never saw rain. It is not going to rain.” And who
looked upon the face of the face deep and said, "These great oceans are
held in the arms of the sage. They could never overflow.” And all
the while that Noah was building an ark on the dry land, hundreds of miles from
where it could be floated, all of the scoffers, and all of the cynics, and all
the unbelievers, and all the blasphemers came by and mocked the old man, and
laughed at the old man, and jeered and made fun of and ridiculed the old
man. But Noah, the preacher of righteousness, for one hundred twenty
years, spoke of the judgment of God that was yet to come. And however
they might have scoffed and ridiculed and believed and jeered and jibed and
made fun, the flood came according to the word and promise of God. And
those who were not ready perished! Simon Peter uses that intervention of
God in human history to say things do not continue always in their course, but in
God's elective purpose and in God's elective time, when God says it is enough,
when the last soul has been saved and the last name has been written according
to election in the Book of Life, the great end time shall come, and the
judgment shall come, and God shall destroy this world by fire in order that He
might, that He might make out of it the new creation that shall glorify and
bless His name forever.
Now, there
are two great forces in nature. One of them is water and the other is
fire. And both of these does Simon Peter use here as instruments of God
in the judgments of God upon the world. Water and that was in the days of
the flood, and then he says, this world that we now see is reserved by the same
word of God that destroyed it in the flood. That same word of God now
preserved this earth until the word of God shall be spoken that shall bring
that ultimate and final kataklusmos. That is the Greek word used
here, and we take that word kataklusmos and take it into English and
make "cataclysm" out of it. The great kataklusmos he
speaks of in the ninth verse. And then he says here in the seventh verse,
that these heavens, and this earth that now is, is stored up in fire against
the day of judgment. A thesauros the—literally, the meaning of thesauros
is "to treasure up.” Here it would be a better translation to say
"stored up.” That is, the fire is already in it! The fire is
already underneath it! The fire is already about it! The fire is
already above it! What Simon Peter is saying that the instrument by which
God shall judge and destroy this world, is already here. It is not
something He is going to bring from outer space. It is not something He
is going to create at the last minute. It is not some mysterious
something He is going to bring up from the deep. But this world is stored
in fire this minute! And the great active agent for the destruction and
perdition of this evil world is already present.
Now, isn't
it a strange thing that when our Lord Jesus Christ spoke of that great and
final confirmation, that he used those same two illustrations of water and of
fire? Our Lord said, "As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be
in the days of the coming of the Son of Man" [Matthew
24:37]—the water that destroyed the earth. Then, our
Lord in the next syllable said, "As it was in the days of—as it was in the
days of Lot—in the days of the cities of the plain, in the days of Sodom and
Gomorrah, in the days when they were destroyed by fire, so shall it be in the
days of the coming of the Son of Man” [Luke 17:28-30]. There
have been two great cataclysmic catastrophes in the history of the world, One,
the destruction of the world by water, and the other the destruction of the
cities of the plain by fire. And both of those cataclysmic destructive
forces and powers are figures of that great and ultimate judgment when God
shall dissolve this world by fire and shall create the new heaven and the new
earth. Now this is not a strange or a new thing that is revealed in the
Word of God. You will find the revelation of that great, ultimate, and
final judgment all through the Word of the Lord, both in the Old Testament and
in the New Testament.
May I read
for you if you do not mind just a few of the typical passages of that final
judgment that we read in the Word of God? In the Book of Joel, for
example, the thirty—the second chapter in the thirtieth and the thirty-first
verses, Joel says, "And I will show wonders”—talking of the Lord—“and I
will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, and fire, and pillars
of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood,
before the great and the terrible day of the LORD come” [Joel
2:30-31]. Then here is a typical passage from the Book of
Isaiah: "Behold—
Behold, behold,
the day of the LORD cometh, cruel, cruel in wrath and fierce anger, to lay the
land desolate: and God shall destroy the sinners thereof out of it.
For the
stars of heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give their light: the
sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not give her
light.
And I will
punish the world for their evil, and the wicked for their iniquity; and I will
cause the arrogancy of the proud to cease, and will lay low the haughtiness of
the— of the terrible.
[Isaiah 13:9-11]
Then, this is a typical passage—passage out of the Book
of Ezekiel. In Ezekiel 32:7-8: "And I shall put thee out—and when I
put you out, I will cover the heavens and make the stars thereof dark; I will
cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon shall not give her light. And
the bright lights of heaven I will make dark over thee, and set darkness upon
the land, saith the Lord GOD.”
And here is
a typical passage out of the New Testament. In the words of our Lord in
the apocalyptic chapter of Matthew 24:29, "Immediately after the
tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not
give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the
heavens shall be shaken.” And once again in the Book of the Hebrews,
Hebrews 12:27: "And this word, Yet once more, signifieth the removing of
those things that are shaken, as of things that are made, that those things
which cannot be shaken may remain.” All through the Word of God, all
through the Bible, you will find that same—that same dark threat. You
will find that same heavy, heavy and dark shadow. There is a day of
judgment coming. There is a day of the fierce, burning wrath of God, and
there is a day when the Lord shall destroy this world by fire! And those
that are not able to stand in the presence of God shall perish in that awful
and terrible conflagration.
Now Simon
Peter in speaking of it speaks of three things that are going to be destroyed,
"The day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which,”
first, “the heavens shall pass away with a great noise,” second, "and the
elements shall melt with fervent heat,” and third, "the earth also and the
works thereof shall be burned up” [2 Peter 3:10]. First
of all, the heavens are going to pass away with a great noise, with a great
catastrophic explosion, like a gigantic hydrogen bomb increased ten thousand
million times! Now there are three heavens that are spoken of in the
Scriptures. There is the heaven of God. That is called the third heaven,
where God dwells. There is the heaven of the stars, those great planetary
systems that are out there that you see in the Milky Way and in the sidereal
spheres. That is the second heaven. And the third heaven is the
heaven above us, the heavens where the birds fly, the heavens where the
airplanes go, the heavens where the clouds and vapors all gather, the heaven
that is above us. Now that is the heaven that Peter speaks of when he
says, “And the heavens are going to pass away with a great noise,” he is
speaking of the heaven above us. It is going to enter some kind of a vast
explosion, and with a great noise, it is going to be taken away. That is
the place where Satan has his principalities. That is the place where the
demons, and the devils, and the powers of the air who circle this globe and who
hound it and persecute it and who drive it into sin and blasphemy and despair
and madness, that is where they have their principalities. And God is
going to destroy it with a great explosion! And Peter says that this
thing is stored in that fire right now.
Wonder what
that refers to? Why, it is very evident and very plain. Did you
know this atmospheric heaven above us, all of this vast above us, did you know
it is composed of mainly, almost altogether two elements, oxygen and
nitrogen? Oxygen is the one element without which you do not have any
burning. When a thing burns up, it is merely the uniting of oxygen with
another element, with the consequent relief of light and heat and energy.
Fire and burning is just the union of oxygen with some other element.
Down here in the Coleman Hall, I so often see the women when they have a
banquet and those beautiful candles are burning. And after the candles
have burned a while and they burn low, I see them take a spoon and they put it
over the flame, and the candle goes out. Wonder why that candle goes
out? What is in that spoon to put out a fire? Nothing in that spoon
puts out a fire. But when they put the spoon on top of that flame, it
cuts off the oxygen, and the flame dies itself. If you want to kill a
thing that is burning, cut off the oxygen from it. If you want to heap up
the flame, as in a blowtorch, turn on the oxygen, and it will turn blue with
heat. Think of the oxygen that God has at His disposal. This world
is stored up for fire! And then the other element in the atmosphere above
us is nitrogen. Isn't that a strange thing that the two most explosive
elements in this earth are right there above us? Nitrogen—in any kind of
a manufacture of these explosives: dynamite, TNT, nitroglycerin, nitrates,
nitrogen is a vital component part. And the nitrogen in this atmosphere
above us, the Lord only knows how much is at His disposal, "And the
heavens shall pass away with a great noise, with a vast explosion.”
And then the
second thing, "And the elements shall melt with fervent heat” [2
Peter 3:10]. That word "fervent" there is kauson;
our English word "caustic"; a caustic acid, a caustic soda. By
"caustic," you mean “burning”; and kauson, the Greek word used
there, with fervent heat, kauson, that means a terrific burning.
There is not an element that cannot be melted, whatever the element is.
Our world is made up of about ninety-six or ninety-seven elements—oxygen,
hydrogen, nitrogen, sodium, iron, zinc, lead, gold, silver, aluminum, calcium—all
of these elements, and every one of them can be liquefied, and every one of
them, whatever it is, can be melted. And they can boil with fervent heat;
kauson, caustic. And isn't it the strangest thing in the
world? Here is this great atmosphere above us, oxygen and nitrogen,
highly explosive. And here beneath us and below us are these great
illimitable oceans made of oxygen and hydrogen. Isn't that the strangest
thing? Hydrogen, they used to put in dirigibles, but it is so explosive
that they dare not use it any more. So they substituted another element,
helium. Hydrogen is one of the most explosive elements in the world, and
all of these elements are right here at God's hands. Peter says this earth
is stored with fire, ready for it to be inflamed by the word of God. Why,
it scares you to death just to think about it.
I lived in
Amarillo in the days when the great oil fields were discovered out there.
And they had a fellow out there name Pick Thornton. And he put explosives
in the wells in order to make it blow. They would drill a little hole
down there about that big around, about a mile deep, and then this fellow would
come along and go down there about—send down there about a mile his explosives.
And they would blow out a great big area at the base of the well. And
then the oil would pour into that pool down there, and then they would pump it
out. Well, he was an authority and world famous on using those explosives
to blow a well. So one day, he made a speech to the Rotary Club in
Amarillo. And on a table, he had all of his explosives from one side to
the other. Here was dynamite, and here was nitroglycerin, here was TNT, here
was black powder, and here was white powder. And here was all kinds of
his explosives. They were all up there. And then he would just
handle them as though they were nothing. You know, he would flip them around
and talk about them, and he scared the bunch to death. And finally, he
picked up a little vial just about that big. And he said—he said,
"This is the most explosive of anything in the earth.” And he said,
"If I were to drop this, it would blow this whole building wide up and
open.” And you know what happened? While he was A-talking and A-flipping
things around, he just happened to lose that out of his hand, and it fell out
there on the floor, and everybody jumped. Have you got a nickel? I
have a nickel in my hand. There is enough atomic power stored up in that
nickel, if it were released, to blow up a city ten times as big as the city of
Dallas. "Law’ preacher, don't drop it. Don't drop it.
Don't drop it!” That's what Simon Peter's talking about. He says
God has stored up in this world this great power by which He's going to make
this thing turn into an atomic bomb. Thank you, [handing nickel back].
And the
third, "the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements
shall melt with fervent heat. And the earth also and the works that are
therein shall be burned up” [2 Peter 3:10]. This
world shall catch fire. It shall flame. It shall burn! Did
you notice a recurring thing in all of these passages from the books that I
read? Did you notice it says, "And the moon shall be turned red like
blood”? And did you notice all of those passages say, "And the sun
shall be darkened as though it were covered and veiled with black sackcloth”?
And did you notice those passages say, "And the stars shall fall out of
their courses—out of heaven”? Did you notice that? All that refers
to this gigantic, terrestrial conflagration, when the great fire comes to burn
up this earth. When he says, "That moon turns red.” It is
going to be red with the reflected light of this burning orb. And when it
says, "And the sun shall be black with sackcloth of ashes," it refers
to the great columns of smoke—pillars of smoke that are referred to in one of
those passages I read—pillars of smoke that shoot out into space ninety‑three
million miles and cover the face of the sun until it is black like sackcloth of
ashes. And did you notice where it says there, "And the stars shall
fall out of heaven”? That is, when this earth explodes and when God burns
up this terrestrial sphere, that the movement of it is going to shake these
other planets and these other stars out of their courses. And it is going
to look as though they are falling from heaven as they are deflected from their
regular orbits. God says He is going to shake the heavens and shake this
earth and all of these things may be taken away that the things that cannot be shaken
may remain.
Last Sunday
night, you know, I referred to the fact that we are just walking on an
eggshell. And that is literally a comparison of how we live in this
earth. The eggshell on the outside and the semi-liquid contents on the
inside is a fine proportionate figure of the earth on which we live. And
the crust is just about the same in proportion to our earth as an eggshell is
to the semi-liquid contents on the inside. And on this crust, we walk the
shell of this globular egg. But on the inside of that globule, there is
fire and heat. These men say that the heat down there is fifteen hundred
degrees Fahrenheit. And the molten mass of this earth is filled with the
fury of the burning of God! When Peter says this world is scored by fire,
he is referring to the agency that is already here out of which God shall make
a new heaven and a new earth.
Now, he says
an unusual thing, a remarkable thing. He says, "Looking for and
hastening unto the coming of the day of God, wherein the heavens on fire shall
be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat. But we,
according to His promise, look for new heavens and a new earth” [2
Peter 3:12, 13]. How in the earth could Simon Peter ever say a
word like that? "Looking for and hastening unto the coming of the day of
the Lord," why, it scares you to death! How does he say, “We are
looking, longing for, and hastening unto; our spirits go out to, earnestly
seeking for, waiting for, hoping for, praying for that day of the Lord”? Why,
it frightens you? No, no! What Peter knows is this, that God's people,
God's redeemed people, we are all with our Savior when this great conflagration
consumes this earth.
The Lord and
the thief, "Behold, He comes as a thief in the night” [2
Peter 3:10]. He is coming first, the first thing, our Lord is
coming to steal out of the world His pearl of price; to take out of the world His
jewels, to take out of the world the treasure hid in a field. First, all
of God's children are going to be taken up with the Lord. And up there in
glory, maybe we can watch—maybe we can see the fury of the conflagration and
burning and destruction of the evil in this earth. Maybe we can watch
Satan as lightning fall out of heaven. Maybe we can see God triumph over
His enemies. I do not know what it will be like, but Simon Peter
says to God's people, that is the day of our climactic victory; it’s the day of
our final and ultimate triumph. And he says we are to look forward to it—when
God shall take Satan and bind him and put him in the pit, when God shall wipe
away the stain and the track of the old serpent, and when God shall remake this
world beautiful and perfect.
Man, do you ever
think about those things? How was it in the days of Eden when Satan was not
there, and when the first parents walked in nobility and in holiness and in
righteousness and in beauty, and they talked to God face to face, and every
tree gave its fruit, and the lion ate straw like an ox, and all of the animals
were domestic. The whole world was beautiful in the hands of God, and
then Satan marred it! But look, when it is burned, that does not annihilate
it. Burning does not annihilate anything. It just changes it from
this into gas and fire, smoke and ash. Nothing in matter has ever been
annihilated, and God is not going ever to annihilate anything. When a
vase made out of gold is worn and beaten and battered, the goldsmith can take
it and melt it and make it again into a beautiful and perfect vase. That
is what God is going to do with this world. He is going to take this
world, and He is going to melt it down again; He is going to put it back into
its primeval elements, and then He is going to reshape it and remold it, and He
is going to make it perfect. Every tree will be perfect, every river will
be perfect, every stream will be perfect, every rock will be perfect, every
field will be perfect. Every part of the mountain, every part of the sea,
every part of this glorious earth will be perfect and beautiful. And when
God has prepared it—the new heaven and the new earth—then we are coming down
out of heaven, the heaven of God, coming down in the beautiful city of
Jerusalem, the New Jerusalem, and we're coming down to this earth, and God
shall have made it for us. The Lord shall have prepared it for us. God
shall have swept it clean for us, the Lord God shall have made it beautiful and
holy and glorious just for us.
And we are
going to live in that beautiful city. And you fellows that want to fish,
man, you can get you a pole and go out and fish in any stream and catch
whatever your heart's desire. If you want a trout, there is the trout. If you
want a bass, there is a bass. And if you want a crappie, there is a crappie;
you can just fish to your hearts content. And all of you fellows that
like to hunt, I do not know what you are going to do because there won't be
anything to kill. Oh, the lions will come up and lick your hand, and all
the elephants will come up and put their proboscis around you and hug you real
tight. All the leopards and the wolves are going to follow you around
like little tame dogs, and you’ll be a-petting them, the cheetahs and all those
creatures that now scare us to death just to look at us. The panthers, and the
cougars, and the lions, and the tigers, all of them going to be around us in
peace. Why, bless your heart! Why, you can hardly think of it. When
the wolves shall dwell with the leopards, when the wolves shall dwell with the
lamb; and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; when the lion shall eat
straw like an ox and when a little child shall lead them [Isaiah
11:6-7]. Girls and boys playing in the streets thereof; and
when they shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain. And when the
earth is as full of the knowledge and the love and the glory of the Lord as the
waters cover the sea. Man, don’t you want to see that? O Lord! I want to be,
I want to be there in that day. My soul, my soul! And there won’t be any
of us that are cripple there, and there won’t be any of us that are blind
there, and there won’t be any of us that have to sing with our hands because we
don’t have any ears that can hear, but the deaf can hear, the blind will see, and
the cripple can walk. And the sinners are all washed clean and pure, and
God's children sing and shout in His presence world without end. Say,
hold my hand while I shout, “O Glory! Glory! Glory!”
I tell you,
as I move to that Book of the Revelation, my heart begins to sing. It
seems like a climax doesn’t it, to what Jesus has done when He died for us, and
what the martyrs have suffered when they preached to us, and the consummation is
the day of redemption, when the Lord comes again and gives us back all that we
have loved and lost for a while, our fallen creation—holy and pure, stainless
and spotless, without sin and blemish—all of it, God shall give us again.
We’ll go over and sit down under the tree of life, and drink from the water of
the river of life, and we’ll look into God’s face and live. My, my! “What the
Lord hath in store for those who love Him, for those who love Him.”
Why
you’d—man! How could you say “No!” to Jesus? “I’m not interested.” How
could you say “No!” to God? "I do not care about that.” How could
you say “No!” to the Spirit of appeal? "I am not interested in that.”
Why man, outside of that it is death, it’s the grave, it’s the fire, it’s the judgment,
it’s the separation, it’s the perdition! And in the loving arms of Jesus, all
of this and heaven too; why, I never heard of such a bargain in my life as for
a man to come up and say, “Jesus, I think I’ll take heaven.” What does it
cost? And Jesus says, “I’ve already paid the price, here, it’s free, for
nothing- take it!” Take it? Take it in your heart, take it in your life, take
it in your soul, take it in your home, take it with you when you die! Take it
with you to heaven. It’s your eternal inheritance that can never pass away,
take it, take it, take it. Just by faith, just by loving, just by trusting,
just by bowing, just by yielding, take it, all for the asking, and it’s for
you, it’s for you.
While we
sing this appeal tonight and while we make this song of happiness reign tonight
in our hearts, isn’t it, “There’s a Land That’s Better than Day”? Isn’t that
what it is? “In the Sweet By and By,” while we sing that song of appeal,
somebody give his heart to Jesus. And somebody to come into the fellowship of
His church, would you come and stand by me? Would you make it tonight? “Here
I come, preacher, and here I am. I give my heart to Jesus gladly, gladly
gladly.” Or, “Here, we are coming, pastor, into the fellowship of the
church. I make it tonight. Here I am and here I come.” Would you so?
Would you so? On the first note of the first stanza, down one of these
stairways or into the aisle, and to the front, “Here I am pastor, and here I am.”
Would you make it so, while we stand, and while we sing?
.