THE NEW RELIGION: PEACE OF
MIND
W.A. Criswell
2 Timothy 4:1-4
9-18-55 7:30 p.m.
Tonight is one of those
messages that I mentioned that I had in my heart before we begin again in the first
Corinthian letter and the fifth chapter, our place to which we have come in
preaching through the Bible. But before we begin, I said I had some things in
my heart that I wanted to speak of, and tonight is one. We are going to talk
tonight about The New Religion: Peace of Mind. In the fourth chapter of
the second letter to Timothy, Paul says to his young son in the ministry:
I charge thee before God, and
the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at His appearing
and His kingdom;
Preach the word...
For the time will come when
they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lust shall they heap
to themselves teachers, having itching ears;
And they will turn away
their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables
[2 Timothy
4:1-4]
Now, that is my text.
After their own desires and likes, listening to the thing they want to listen
to, they shall heap to themselves teachers. They want to hear what they want
to hear. And as in every area of life, there is always somebody for a price
more than happy to supply what the public wants.
Now, this new thing came
about like this. In World War I, our nation was involved in a conflict to make
the world safe for democracy. We were fighting a war to end all wars, and we
won that conflict. We were victorious in that battle. And we looked forward
to that immediate day when the whole world would be one great millennial
kingdom. The preachers preached it. The people believed it. We had those
"Roaring '20s." And the stock market went up and up and up and up.
And upon a day when we were
just getting ready for the most luxurious bonanza the world had ever
experienced, upon a day, the ticker tape out of the Stock Exchange at New York
City said that all of the money the American people had invested in the stock
market had been washed out overnight. Fellow one day was a multi‑millionaire,
and the next day he was walking the street trying to sell polished apples or
pretty pencils. That was in 1929.
And then we went through
all of those terrible years of the Depression. And then just as we were coming
out of the Depression, Hitler turned his hordes on Poland, then wheeled around
and made his passage of death and destruction through the lowlands and into
France, and all Europe lay prostrate. In those days, Hitler, almost astride
the civilized world, added to his conquest the eastern reaches of the Soviet
Union. And we, magnanimous and great hearted, we came to the rescue of our
comrades in Russia.
Marshall Stalin, the great
representative and exponent of the people's democracy, and all of those fine,
great, noble communist leaders, our American boys would march shoulder to
shoulder by their side. We took our airplanes, sent them over there to
Russia. We took our ships and gave them to Russia. We took our gasoline and
poured it into those great fighting machines of Russia. And guns and tanks we
sent over there to our comrades in arms.
Nor would we dare to enter
the environs of Berlin. The Russians said they want it. Why should they not
have it? They are our friend. And they marched into Bulgaria, and they
marched into Poland, and they marched into Czechoslovakia, and they marched
into Yugoslavia, and they marched into Romania and they marched into Greece, our
great compatriot, our noble fellow fighters and sharers in this battle, the communists,
the Soviet Union.
Bah! When you look back
over those days, you marvel at the gullibility of the leadership of the
American government and all of us, I suppose, who were soft brained and…anyway,
it was a startling revelation when we awoke to the fact that the leaders of the
American government had sold our people down the river; Yalta, and those secret
privacies that we had made.
It was not long until our
government witnessed the defection of China into the Soviet orbit. And one
half billion people overnight became our mortal enemy. And we had given them
all of Eastern Europe, and we had given them Berlin, and we had decimated the
whole of the German people, who—by the way, we have not fought a war over there
that we haven’t been on the wrong side—the German people are the finest people
in this earth, if you could ever get them to God. And away from God, they are
the most ruthless and cruel. Oh, if it were just possible that Germany could
love God and that Germany and America could be good friends. But no, we were
friends of the Soviet Union.
Well, if you have been like
I am and like everybody else, you woke up to a world of frustration and
despair. Here are our friends with whom our men laid down their lives, they
are our mortal enemies. We do not have any enemies that are as sworn to our
death as the Soviet Union. We do not have any enemies that more bitterly
attack us and propagandize against us—more than Red China in the Pacific. And
we just woke up one day, we just found ourselves one day almost alone in the
earth and the entire world around us an armed camp against us.
Then another thing
developed. That atomic bomb did not stay just that little thing over there in
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But the thing was like a baby. It got bigger and bigger
and bigger, and it was like a Frankenstein. It now scares us to death! It is
no little old atomic bomb anymore. It is an H-bomb. It is a U-bomb. It is
the, Lord only knows what kind of a bomb. And they get more terrible with
every passing day. Every nuclear physicist who studies about it adds something
to its horror and its terror. And it is absolutely possible at this minute for
America as we know it to be absolutely destroyed!
They…. any man can tell you,
any general, any leader will tell you that with all of the defenses of America
and our radar and however else we may try to defend our nation, if the Soviet
Union were to send five hundred long-range bombers over here, we might knock
four hundred and ninety of them out of the sky, but the ten that remain that
would get through, how many hydrogen bombs would it take to destroy Dallas?
How many hydrogen bombs would it take to destroy Chicago, New York City, any of
these great metropolitan centers? And they will tell you there is no such
thing as knocking all of them out of the sky. Some of them would certainly get
through. That is possible at this moment.
Now, that and a thousand
other things that one might name hurriedly tonight plunged our people into
despair. We almost lost heart, having fought one war and then another, and
both of them to no end and no effect; all of their fruits of victory taken away.
And our former allies now our bitter enemies and as far as a man can see down
the rest of the years, we must remain like an armed camp—great armament, tanks
and planes and soldiers and conscription—far down as you can see that lies
ahead. And anything can set it off at any time. And the more they blabber
about peace the more certainly are they working for the destruction of our
nation and our people.
Now, I say, against a
background like that, our people were harassed and in despair and frustrated,
and did not know where to turn. And then like a meteor in the sky, just
suddenly, just nobody knows quite where, suddenly there came to the American
people a little packet neatly put together. This was the answer to our
problems. This was the solution to our despair. And we were like chickens
gobbling up corn, grains of corn when they were just starving to death.
That was the American
people, and that thing came to pass in 1946. There was a Jewish rabbi in
Boston by the name of Joshua L. Liebman. And in the midweek services of his
synagogue, he had been talking to his people about the marvelous potentialities
when you link Freudian psychology and religion together to relieve modern
tensions. And some publicity hound got the idea that if you could put that in
a book, it would be a wonderful seller. So they whipped the thing together, and
in 1946 there came out Joshua Liebman's Peace of Mind, and he struck
oil.
For one hundred seventy-seven
consecutive weeks, Peace of Mind was a best seller in all this world.
And say, did we have a deluge thereafter. You would not have time to list the
titles of books that came out following the Peace of Mind; The Magic
of Believing, Peace of Soul, that is by the Bishop Sheen, The Way
to Security, Beyond Anxiety, Man's Search for Himself, Mind a Lie, and
a thousand other titles. The world was swamped with them.
And above all, that noble
exponent of the, of the positive and the obvious, the incomparable Norman
Vincent Peale, his book, The Power of Positive Thinking, has passed a
million volumes already. His book, A Guide to Confident Living, is
still selling at the rate of three thousand a week, beside his book, The Art
of Living and his Guideposts, which are very interesting. And like
an editor who publishes a newspaper to give what the people want to read, the
pulpits of America have simply been turned over to Peace of Mind
religion. "Brother, where is the psychoanalyst? I’ve got to see
him." "Where is the authority on psychosomatic medicine? I’ve got
it in my stomach. I’ve got it in my legs. I’ve got it in my joints and my
bones." "Where is this psychiatrist? I’ve got to have him. I’ve
got to see him. I am all awry with myself and the world.” And these preachers
have turned into first-class psychiatrists; they take clinical study, they know
all about psychology. They are trained in those elusive things of the mind,
all of those cerebral cerebrations that have to do with our perturbations, and
we are all trying to find peace of mind. And as I say, there is nobody, there
is nobody that has gone all out for it like the Marble Collegiate Church in New
York City where Norman Vincent Peale presides over this staff.
Now, you look at this,
Billy. You look at this. This is his church staff; he has four ministers with
clinical training. That is, they have been examining the knots on people's
heads so they know what is the matter with them, four of them, four of them. He
has got one psychiatric social worker. He has got nine psychiatrics on his
staff, nine of them. And he has got four psychologists. That is the marble
collegiate staff in New York City.
Now, Norman Vincent Peale's
religion, his preaching—well, let us look at it. These are the first five
sermons by which he began this year. The first one was, "The Key to Self-confidence’;"
the second message, "How to Feel Alive and Well"; the third one,
"Ways to Improve Your Situation"; the fourth one, "Live with Joy
and Vitality"; and the fifth one, "Empty Fear from Your
Thoughts."
Now, how do you do all that?
Well, he puts out little how, how‑to cards, and, and, and it is all
packaged, you know. And it is always in ten easy rules. So here is one of
them. One of his how‑to cards is how to overcome your interiority
complex, no, your inferiority complex. Well, listen to it. Now this is the
gospel of the Peace of Mind: first, “How to Overcome Your Inferiority
Complex. “
First, hold in your mind a
picture of yourself succeeding; your mind will seek to actualize this image. Second,
when a negative thought comes to mind, deliberate[ly] cancel it out with a
positive thought. That is right. Third, do not build obstacles in your
imagination. Four, do not be awestruck by other people or try to conquer them.
Sixth, get a competent counselor to help you understand the origin of your
inferiority feeling which often begins in childhood. His eighth one,
realistically estimate your ability, then raise the estimate ten percent. Develop
a whole self, self-respect. "Brother, look at me. Here I come, and I am
ten percent better than you think I am." Now, his last one. Believe that
God is with you, for nothing can defeat that partnership.
Well, that is “Peace of
Mind” religion. That is it. What about it? Pastor of a great historic
Protestant church, and he is just one. There are a thousand and a thousand
little Peales just like him all over this nation, all over this nation. Even
the seminaries now are teaching the preachers all kinds of clinical procedures
and psychiatrical approaches and psychoanalytical understandings. That is the
new day. That is the new religion.
Well, what about it? I
have four or five comments to make. And the first one is this, it comes perilously,
perilously close, it comes dangerously near to being nothing other than a
gimmick. It comes almost near turning religion into magic. This is the way to
get what you want using God. Well, to make God nothing other than an instrument
by which I raise my self-esteem, I conquer my complexes, I rise to great
heights of success in the world. That is not the Bible presentation of God,
for the will of God may be something altogether different from what I might
want. For I remember reading in this Book that those Old Testament prophets,
sometimes they ended just disastrously. I also remember reading in this Book
that Jesus Christ Himself was nailed to a cross. Now, that may be a success of
some kind; it may be an achievement in some category, but it certainly is not
that kind of an achievement.
You know, people like to
hear what pleases them. We are just made that way. I can be—what do you want
to be?—I can be beautiful, so I will think myself handsome. I can be, oh, a
scintillating personality, so I will paint myself to be a scintillating
personality. I want to succeed and I can think myself into success, positive
thinking; that will do it; that will do it. And the way to achieve those
successes is to get ahold of God, use God. Well, there is something that He is
God, I suppose. But I say, it is like a gimmick to get what you want. It is
using God for personal purposes and personal reasons. It is making God the
source of the success that you want to achieve.
But it is not always what
God wills. What God says is what we want. And we like the things that please
us. So when the minister says all those things, we go away, oh, somehow lifted
up, elevated. "I can do that. Why, God will be with me in it." And
we like that.
I want to take a story out
of the Old Testament to illustrate this thing [2 Kings 22:6-38]. Do you remember Ahab who
married Jezebel? He was some king! He had prophets around him. He had Norman
Vincent Peale on that side of him. He had Joshua Liebman on that side of him,
and he had all of those little copycats all around him. The Bible says he had
four hundred of them around him.
Now, Ahab decided he wanted
something. Over there across the Jordan River, Ramoth-gilead was the city in
the hands of Damascus, the king of Syria, and he wanted it. So the way to get
what you want is to use the power of positive thinking. So Ahab said,
"That belongs to me. Now, if I am to get it, I’ve got to have God with
me." Why, surely you do. If you are going to simulate as a personality,
if you are going to achieve success in business, get God on your side. That is
what he said. So Ahab said, "I’ve got to have God on my side."
Well, he had by his side at
that time, he had Jehoshaphat, who was the king of Judah. Now, he had said,
"Jehoshaphat, look here." And he called four hundred of those
prophets before him, and he said to each one of those four hundred prophets, he
said, "Tell me, if I go over there and fight against Ramoth-gilead, will
God give Ramoth-gilead into my hands?" And every one of those four
hundred prophets said, "Positive thinking will do it. All you’ve got to
do is go over there and God will be with you, and you will take Ramoth-gilead."
Well, Jehoshaphat was a
little skeptical. He was a little cynical. He was a fly in the ointment. And
Jehoshaphat said to Ahab, he said, "Ahab, is there just one other prophet
here that I might ask?"
And Ahab said, "Yes,
there is one more, but I hate him because he always says something evil and not
good."
Well, Jehoshaphat said,
"Who is he?"
And Ahab said, "He is
Micaiah. His name is Micaiah, and he is a prophet of Jehovah God, but he says
bad about me. He never says anything good."
"Well," said
Jehoshaphat, "let us hear him. Let us hear him."
So they sent for Micaiah,
and Micaiah stood before King Ahab, and King Ahab said, "I am eliminating
the negative, and I am accentuating the positive. I am going after Ramoth-gilead.
Is God going to be with me?”
All those four hundred say,
“Yes sir, God is with you."
And Micaiah said, he said,
"You go over there to Ramoth-gilead and, you are not going to come back
alive, because God said He is going to scatter the people over the country, and
they are going to be without a leader and without a shepherd. You are not
coming back alive."
And Ahab turned toward
Jehoshaphat and said, "Is that not what I told you? That is exactly what
I told you. He does not, he does not prophesy good. He says God is against
me."
Zedekiah went over and
slapped Micaiah in the face. And Micaiah said, "When Ahab comes back
slain and you crawl into your inner chamber ashamed and abashed, you are going
to see the truth of the word of the living God."
So they put Micaiah in
chains and in prison and sent in water of affliction and fed him bread of affliction
"until," Ahab said, "I will come back again in victory and in
triumph."
So they went over there to
Ramoth-gilead.
Now, Ahab, in order to
protect himself, dressed like an ordinary soldier. He took off his kingly
garments. And the Bible says that in the midst of the battle that one of those
Syrian Damascene soldiers drew back a bow at a venture, at a venture and just
let the arrow fly. He never aimed. He just let the arrow speed its way. And
the Bible says that arrow found an aperture in the joints of Ahab's armor, and
it entered between the joints of his armor and pierced his heart.
And Ahab fell down in his
chariot, and he died there in his chariot, and his blood ran out in the
chariot. And when they took the chariot back to Samaria, they washed it out,
and the dogs licked up his blood, according to the word of, of Elijah, the man
of God, and according to the word of Micaiah, the prophet of the Lord. [2 Chronicles 18]
God does not always speak
what we want Him to speak! And He is not used by us! And the false prophet is
always around us, saying sweet things, prophesying beautiful things,
encouraging us in the things we want to do! But that does not mean that the
living God is that way at all! The judgment of the Lord may be the opposite of
what we want! And the will of God may lead diametrically to something that we
are aghast at; the judgment of the Almighty. Religion is not a gimmick, and it
is not a magic by which we get God on our side to do for us the things that we
want.
All right, that is one
observation. The second observation is this: according to the religion of the
New Testament, according to the religion of the Bible, we are born in sin. We
are alienated from the purposes of God. And in order to be back again in the
kingdom of God, we must experience a personal relationship with Jesus Christ
that we call the "new birth." We have to be born again. We have to
become Christians.
According to the religion
of the “Peace of Mind,” anybody, anybody can follow these ten rules and the ten
other how‑to rules, and he achieves these successes with no reference to
a personal experience with Jesus at all. And that is not the religion of the
Book.
The religion of the Book is
first, I must confess myself to be a sinner. The only way my sin can be
forgiven is through the redemptive act of Almighty God in Jesus Christ. And in
Christ, I can find a personal Savior and the forgiveness of my sin and guilt,
and I can be adopted into the family of God. But all of that is what we call
the “new birth.” And this religion makes no reference to it whatsoever—I can
be an infidel, I can be a heathen, I can be a Buddhist, I can be a
Confucianist, I can be nothing and follow all ten of these rules—no reference
to Christ at all.
All right, a third thing. Did
you ever notice how much of this Bible is negative, how much of it is
negative? The Ten Commandments, it seems to me, kind of broaches on the
negative side once in a while. Do you remember them? Is that not a strange
thing how God thunders about those things, "Thou shall not,"
negative, negative!
Did you ever notice in the
religion of Jesus Christ how it begins? Not with self- love, not with raising
your estimation of yourself ten percent after you have struck it up there as
high as egotism will allow. But the religion of the New Testament begins like
this, "Depart from me, O God. I am a sinful man" [Luke
5:8]. Or like
the prodigal son, "Father, I have sinned against thee and against heaven,
and I am no more worthy to be a son. Make me a hired servant" [Luke
15:18-19, 21].
It begins like this,
"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of God" [Matthew
5:3]. Self-love
is the antithetical attitude of the Christian faith. It is personal
depreciation in humility. It is coming to God as an abject sinner that opens
the door to the great vistas of life in the kingdom and patience of Jesus
Christ. This summer, for the second time, I went to Bedford, walked all around
looking at John Bunyan’s statue, looking at the place where he was converted,
looking at the place where he was baptized, looking at the place where he
preached, looking at the jail in which he wrote that immortal Pilgrim’s
Progress.
Do you remember how Pilgrim’s
Progress begins?
As he went through the
wilderness of this world, he came upon a certain place where was a den, and he laid
him down to sleep; And while he laid him down to sleep, he dreamed a dream. And
he looked and behold, there stood before him a man dressed in rags, with a
great burden on his back and an open book in his hand. And as he read the book
he wept and being no longer able to contain he cried with a lamentable cry
saying, “What shall I do? What shall I do?”
That is the beginning of Pilgrim’s
Progress.
All right, here is the man
dressed in rags. “With his face turned away from the city of destruction, with
an open book in his hand, weeping. ‘What shall I do? What shall I do?’”
All right, this is what you
do: according to the Coué fad
that was sweeping this world when I was a boy, this is what he does. He is to
repeat to himself ten times every hour on the hour every day in every way, “I
am getting better and better.” That is what he is to do.
All right, in our day we
have got this Peale fad now. What is he to do? This is what he is to do: he
is to eliminate the negative and to accentuate the positive. He is to raise his
estimate of himself ten percent above what he thinks he is. That is what he is
to do. That is The Religion of the Peace of Mind.
What does God say the man
is to do? Evangelist found him, showed him a little wicket gate through which
he had to kneel to enter in. Beyond was a hill, and on top of the hill was the
cross. And the Evangelist told him how to make his way in humility through
that wicket gate, how to kneel at the cross, how to look up in the face of
Jesus Christ, how to confess there his need, his lack, his inadequacy, and in
humility to plead the mercy and the forgiveness of God. And there the book
says, “His burden rolled away, and Pilgrim, now named Christian, began the
journey to the celestial city of God.” That is the difference.
Could I briefly say two
other things? This “Peace of Mind” religion does not take into account the
immoral, terrible, impersonal, implacable fabric of society, in which all of
our lives are inextricably cast. What do you mean by that preacher? This is
what I mean. When we went to the church in Munich Sunday before last, standing
out in front of the church, and Germany is ruined, poor. If anybody has a car
in Germany, they are very exceptional, and it is unusual that they would be able
to amass enough wealth to own an automobile. While we were standing out in front
of the Church, we noticed a fine young couple, a young man right in the prime
of his life, fine looking man with his wife, and he had about two little two
little children. We noticed them drive up in an automobile; they were very
different from all the rest of the people, they were nicely dressed and looked
fine and went into service of the church. But without noticing it, because we
took the first seats that we found available, why, we sat down, and we happened
to sit down by that couple.
During the service, they
did a whole lot of things. There was a man and his wife and a man and his wife
to whom they gave bouquets, to whom they made speeches and who made speeches.
And I could not understand anything, so I wrote a note to that man, thinking
maybe he could understand English or better still he could read my writing. So
I wrote him a note, and I said, “Tell me what are they are doing? Are they ordaining
deacons or ordaining ministers of the gospel; are they taking members into the
church? What are they doing?”
Well, he got his pencil and
wrote out in fine English, he said, “They are receiving into the church our
young assistant pastor and are sending out one of our young men to be the
pastor of a mission in another nearby city.” Well, after the service was over
why, I talked to that young fellow. Now, I said, “What are you doing? “What
is your business?”
He said, “I am a
pharmaceutical chemist.”
Well I said, “In our
country that is a druggist.”
“Yes,” he said, “in your country
that would be a druggist.”
“Well,” I said, “is that
your life profession?”
“No.” he said, “In this
last war I was a career air force officer.” He was trained, he said, to be an air
force officer in the Luftwaffe of Nazi Germany, and he helped to guide the
destruction of London and of Coventry and of England. “And,” he said, “since
the war, I have had to find some other means of livelihood. And,” he said, “I chose
to study,” and he is what he calls a pharmaceutical chemist.
Now, I sat by that man in church,
in the Baptist church, with his lovely wife and their sweet precious children.
And yet that man was a career officer in the air force that dedicated itself to
the destruction of England! I looked at him and thought about it. I thought,
why, in our own membership there are young men, there are young men, and your
are here tonight, who were officers in the air force of the American military power,
and you had to engineer the destruction of Germany.
What is that, this man,
what is that, you? This is that: there is an imprecable, there is an
impersonal bitterness, sin, wrong, agony, horror, death in society that no ten
little pieces that make up a formula could ever eradicate! It belongs in the nature;
it is in the warp and woof of the social order in which our lives are cast.
That is the reason this Book is realistic when it says, “And I saw the dragon,
that old enemy the serpent, and I saw the beast which represents the political
governments of the world, and I saw the false prophet which represents these men
who tried to take our eyes and minds away from the awful, awful judgment of God
upon sinful men, and rivet it upon positive thinking. And you are heading for
a fall when you do. It maybe sometime coming, but come it will. And the judgment
for man’s religion that takes that turn is as disastrous in his soul as it is in
his physical world.
I cannot close without one
other. There is an inevitable failure in this life that all of us have to
face. There is an inevitable sorrow in this life that someday shall overwhelm
every home and every family. And ten little easy lessons in positive thinking
will not do, they will not help
For example , Friday
morning, Friday morning, while one of our mothers looked upon the face of her
fifteen year old boy who had been sick with a flu, with a virus, just sick like
all off us—almost all of us are sick frequently, just that sick, not dead, just
sick. While that dear mother looked on the face of that fifteen year old boy Friday,
last Friday, while she looked upon his face, with no thought of any serious
illness or any approaching sorrow at all, while she looked upon his face, that
fifteen year old boy died, one of our finest, finest boys. He loved this
church, he loved the Sunday school, he loved the Training Union. Today is the
first day, the first Lord’s Day, we have Sunday school, we have had Training
Union without that fifteen year old boy. And as she looked upon him he died.
All right, now let us see,
hold in you mind a picture of your success. What is this? When a negative
thought comes, deliberately, cancel it out with a positive thought. What is
this? Get a competent counselor to help you to understand the origin of your inferiority.
What is this? Realistically estimate yourself, then raise the estimate ten
percent. What is this? What was this? Because in the face of life’s
inevitable tragedy, it will not do, it is husks for the soul.
“Preacher what is the
gospel?” Let me read it, then I am done:
Brethren I make known unto
you the gospel, I make known unto you the gospel which I preached unto you,
wherein you stand
And whereby you are saved,…
how that Christ died for
our sins according to the Scriptures;
that He was buried, that
the third day He rose again… according to the Scriptures.
[1 Corinthians 15:1-5]
And
brethren flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, neither can
corruption inherit incorruption, we all face that inevitable day in sorrow:
But I show you a mystery, I
show you a mystery;…we shall all be changed,
In a moment, in the
twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet: for the trumpet of sound,… and we
shall all be changed.
And when this corruptible
shall have put on incorruption, and this mortality shall have put on immortality….
then shall be brought to
pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory.
Now Death where is your
sting? Now Grave where is your victory?
Thanks be to God, who has
given us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ
Therefore, my beloved brethren,
be steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as
you know that it does not fall to the ground once you trust in the Lord
[1
Corinthians 15: 51-58].
And that will do when the
hour of the night overwhelms us and when the raging seas beat against us! That
gospel will give hope to the soul and give a promise for a better world and a
better life that is to come.
All right Billy, let us
sing our song. While we sing it, while we sing, somebody you, trusting in the
Lord, come down and stand by me. Somebody you, put your life with us in this
church, come and give me your hand, “Pastor I have given my heart to God. I
give you my hand, and here I am.” In this balcony around, however the Lord
shall make an appeal, shall open the door, shall speak to your heart; while we sing
this song, you come, you come. As God shall say the word, you come, while we
stand and while we sing.