PRACTICING
THE PROMISES OF GOD
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Malachi 3:10
10-21-87 7:30 p.m.
If you would like to follow along
in the reading of our Scripture, turn to Genesis 28; Genesis 28. The
title of the message is Practicing the Promises of God. And we welcome
the throngs of you who share the hour on radio. This is the First Baptist
Church in Dallas, and this is the pastor, bringing the message.
And our background text and story
is Genesis 28, beginning at verse 10:
And
Jacob—who later was called Israel—went out from Beersheba, and went toward
Haran.
And
he lighted upon a certain place, and tarried there all night, because the sun
was set; and he took of the stones of that place, and put them for his pillows,
and lay down in that place to sleep.
And
he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached
to heaven; and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it.
Not descending
from heaven down to earth and then back up, but the other way around. The
angels were in the earth. They were ascending and descending. The angels
of God are here with us. They are present here tonight in this sanctuary.
And
behold the Lord stood above it, and said, I am the Lord God of Abraham thy
father, and the God of [Isaac]; the land whereon thou liest, to thee I will
give it, and to thy seed;
And
they seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to
the west, to the east, to the north, to the south; and in thee and in thy seed
shall all the families of the earth be blessed.
And
behold I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest, and
will bring thee again into this land; for I will not leave thee, until I have
done that which I have spoken to thee of.
And
Jacob awakened out of his sleep, and he said, Surely the Lord is in this place,
and I knew it not.
And
he was afraid, and said, How dreadful is this place! This is none other
but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven
—as if he were in
the very house and dwelling place of the Lord.
And
Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put for his
pillow, and set it up as a pillar, and poured the oil of consecration upon it.
And
he called the name of that place Bethel…
—Bethel: “the
house of God”
And
Jacob vowed a vow, saying, If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way
that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and raiment to wear,
So
that I come again to my father’s house in peace; then shall the Lord be
magnified and exalted and uplifted as my God;
And
this stone, which I have set for a pillar, shall be God’s house; and of all Thou
shalt give me I will surely dedicate the tenth unto Thee.
[Genesis
28:10-22]
Practicing the Promises of God—On
Monday of this week, on October 19 of this year of 1987, the stock market
crashed beyond anything that had ever been witnessed in the financial history
of the world. It was called a “meltdown.” The Dow average of the
stocks owned by our people fell 508.86 points. And the number of stocks
traded were over six million shares. Nothing even approaching a debacle
like that had ever been seen or envisoned in the financial story of mankind.
Now, to the child of God,
whatever the providence, God is sovereign and is taking care. He is
watching over. Our shepherd God remembers us. So, in the fifteenth
verse of the story I have read, God says to Jacob, “I am with thee, and will
keep thee in all places whither thou goest. I will not leave thee, until I
have done that which I have promised unto thee.” And the sign of that contract,
and that covenant, between God and Jacob and Jacob and God, is in the
twenty-second verse, “And of all that thou shalt give me I will surely
consecrate the tenth unto thee.”
Practicing the Promises of God—the
practice, the incarnation of what God has bestowed upon us in life.
Number one; the basic foundation for all that we do is this—What I am, whatever
I am—whatever I exist of, whatever I possess, all of me ultimately comes from
God. It is God’s. That includes my life; my heartbeat. It
includes my breath. It includes me. It includes everything of me—everything
of me; what I am, what I possess. Everything is from God. I don’t have any
breath that God doesn’t give me. I don’t have any life but that comes
from God. There is nothing that I possess that does not belong to Him
and, ultimately, will return to His keeping.
Number two in that practice of
the goodness and grace of God; I must be a good steward, a good tenant, a good
servant. God is counting and depending on me for the building of His
church, for the teaching of our children, and for the evangelization of the
world. There is no preaching but “we” preaching. There is no
teaching but “we” teaching. There is no healing but God’s healing through
us. There is no helping but through our hands. The advancement of
the kingdom of peace and righteousness and brotherhood is committed to
us. There is no other way.
I one time, heard a wonderful
missionary, who headed all of our effort in Africa—I heard him say that, at the
resurrection of our Lord, at His entrance into heaven, He was met by
Gabriel. And Gabriel asked Him, “Lord, you have died for the sins of the
world—how is the world to know of that sacrifice?”
And the Lord answered, “Gabriel,
I have committed its story—I have committed it to the hands of a few men—eleven.”
And Gabriel says to the Lord, “But,
Lord, what if they forget, and what if they fail?” And the Lord answers
Gabriel, “Gabriel, I have no other plan.”
What that missionary said is so
everlastingly and forever true. There is no other program. There is no
other plan. There is no other thought in the heart of God, who died for our
sins, and was raised for our justification. There is no other plan for the
evangelization of the world, for the preaching of the gospel, for the teaching
of the truth of the Lord. There is no other plan but that. We do it.
Number three; in this practice of
the promises of God, I must spend, and use, and invest, my whole strength
wisely. It all belongs to God and comes from God. I must not use
foolishly or wastefully what God has given me.
I can illustrate that endlessly,
but just one or two. What if I take what God has given me and use it for
liquor, spend it on drink, patronize these stores that you see all over the
city of Dallas? What if I take what God gives me and use it to buy from
those terrible stores?
What if I take what God has given
me and waste it on gambling? I cannot understand in a thousand lifetimes,
why there are intelligent people in our great state who would seek to bring
into our midst this gambling on dogs and horses and lotteries. It is
beyond my thinking. What we have is a gift of God. It comes from God. And
to waste it, and squander it, in foolish seeking after something for nothing; I
cannot understand it.
Number four; in practicing the
promises of God, I must set aside a proportion of what God gives to me to pay
my debt to God. I owe God something for the stewardship He has placed in
my hands. What I have belongs to God—all that I have. And God says
to me that He asks a small proportion; a part—an indebtedness I owe to
God.
I thus acknowledge in that debt; that
proportion, I thus acknowledge, one; that God is the sovereign owner over all I
possess. It is not mine. It is His. And this is an
acknowledgment of that ownership. Number two; in setting aside that
proportion for God, I acknowledge that I am but a servant, a steward. It
is not mine. I possess it for a moment and I leave it forever. And
someday, I must render an accounting for what I have done with what He has
placed in my hands. Number three; in acknowledging that debt, I also
acknowledge that I am a human being with weaknesses. And I must guard
against selfishness, cupidity, greed and worldliness.
I don’t exaggerate when I tell
you, every time I stand up here to preach, that serpent of worldliness crawls
in that door and insinuates himself up and down the pews of our congregation,
and sticks his forked tongue in my very face—Worldliness is a constant
denominator present with us every hour that we live. He, our archenemy,
seeks to change the priorities of our life; the purposes of our being from the
glory and the exaltation of God to the things of this world and of this life.
Practicing the presence of God—the
promises of the Lord—number four; that I thus follow the pattern of the Lord
God who does all His work by a plan; by a system. When I set aside a
proportion of what God has given me, I acknowledge that God does everything by
a plan, by a system. Not by impulse and not by the spur of the moment but by a
plan that God does all of His work. And I am to be thus like Him.
You can count on the sun rising
and the sun setting. You can count on the seasons. You can count on
God, in His omnipotence, creating that birth of a child. God does all of
His work by a plan, by a system. When I thus acknowledge the Lord, that
means I must faithfully set aside for Him not less than one tenth of everything
I possess for God.
Let me read you a letter from a
noble layman.
I
am glad to bear testimony to the enrichment of my own spiritual life through
systematic giving. For several years, I have kept an entirely separate
bank account, which I call ‘the Lord’s account.’ In that account, I
deposit every month one-fifth of my income. In that way, I divest my mind
entirely of any need to consider whether I give or not. The giving has
already been done.
The
above method I adopted after talking it over with my wife. It has proven
to be a great blessing to us both: setting aside every month a proportion of
what God has placed in our hands.
A system, a plan—then, there’s no
convulsions and convolutions in my thinking about whether I give or whether I
don’t, by impulse. It is a dedication. This I will do for God. You
say, “You know, that’s splendid for a rich man. But, I’m so poor.” Rich
or poor has nothing to do with our stewardship before God; none at all.
The test of the Christian life is not what we would do if we possessed our
neighbor’s wealth, but what we do with the little that we possess, whatever it
is; whatever it is.
You have heard the crazy story and
it surely is a hoot. A fellow goes to another fellow, and he says this to him,
“If you had a hundred cows, would you give fifty of them to the Lord?”
“Well, certainly, I would.
If I had a hundred cows, I would give fifty to the Lord.”
“Well, if you had a hundred
sheep, would you give fifty of them to the Lord?”
“Yes, Sir. If I had a
hundred sheep, I would give fifty to the Lord.”
“Well, if you had a hundred
horses, would you give fifty of them to the Lord?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“If you had a hundred pigs, would
you give fifty of them to the Lord?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“Well, if you had two pigs, would
you give one to the Lord?”
“Now, you know I’ve got two
pigs. I’m not going to give one of them to the Lord.”
It is easy for us—it is easy for
us to look at our neighbor’s wealth and say, “You know, if I had all that
money, I would just be so generous. I would support God’s kingdom and
God’s work.” That enters into it not at all. If all I have is to a pittance
to dedicate a proportion of that, on the first day of the week, to God is
pleasing to the Lord and as I have said an acknowledgement of the debt, I owe to
God for what He has done for me.
Now, let me conclude with the
blessings; the practice now the blessings. There is a spiritual victory
in doing that. In Jesus’ teaching, so much of what He said involves our love
for the world and not being rich toward God.
For example, reading in the
twelfth chapter of the Book of Luke, Jesus said:
Take
heed, and beware of cupidity—covetousness, the love of the world; for a man’s
life consisteth not of the abundance of the things he possesseth.
And
He spake a parable unto them, saying, The ground of a certain rich man brought
forth plentifully;
And
he thought within himself, saying, What shall I do, I have no room where to
bestow all of my increase?
And
he said, This will I do; I will pull down my barns, and build greater; there I
will bestow all my goods…
And
I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take
thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry.
But
God said unto him…
There’s always
that everlasting accountability that you cannot escape. You cannot escape it.
God calls you into an accounting one day.
But
God said unto him, Foolish man, this night thy soul shall be required of thee;
then whose shall those things be, that you have left behind?
And you are going
to leave it behind. Don’t you think that you will take it with you!
Then
whose shall those things be, which you will leave behind?
So
is he that layeth up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God.
Why would a man be thus foolish
as though, “I am going to take it with me,” or, “I am going to keep it?” All I
can do is to use it for awhile and it belongs to Him.
May I speak of a seven-fold
heavenly surprise for a man, a woman who will set aside a proportion of
everything that he has for God? Number one surprise; he will be surprised at
the amount of money he has for the work of Christ. It will surprise you.
You may think you are as poor as Adam’s off ox or Job’s turkey but you do that
and you will be surprised at how much you have for the work of God. Number
two; you will be surprised at the deepening of your own spiritual life. Number
three; you will be surprised at the ease with which you will meet your own
obligations.
You will be amazed at that.
Nine-tenths will go a thousand times further than ten-tenths, if you will give
that one-tenth to God. You will be surprised at the pleasure you will
find in thus larger giving. You will be surprised at the satisfaction in
the practice of a stewardship before God. “Lord, I am a servant—I am a
tenant—I am a steward—and you have blessed me and help me Lord and I will
remember You.”
Number six; you will be surprised
at yourself for having not thought of it sooner, and followed it sooner.
And last; you will have a new appreciation for the grace and goodness of
God. You will be somebody else. It will amaze you; the change in
your life.
Talking about the blessings, there
will be a freedom and a joy in giving. So many—so many; giving is
painful, like the pulling of a tooth or the enduring of an operation; God never
intended that. In the passage that we read earlier: “Every man as he
purposeth in his heart, not grudgingly or of necessity, for God loveth a hilaros
giver, a hilaros, a hilaros. Our word “hilarious” comes from
that, hilaros. “God loveth a hilaros giver,” a hilarious
giver. The most marvelous part of my life, and the happiest and the most
joyful, is to take what God has given me, and dedicate it for His blessed name’s
sake.
And last the blessings; there is
a fellowship in that, there is a partnership with God in it. God is in
the business of giving; the sun and the earth, life and breath, even Jesus, did
God give for our salvation. God so loved us that he gave Jesus. God
is in the business of giving. And when I give, I am a partner with Him—like
Him.
I do not mean this to be
egotistical but I want to tell you how I felt, one time, in a particular
place. I was over there in Africa, and there was a wonderful doctor over
there named Dr. Goldie. And he had gathered all of those lepers in that
whole nation and put them in what he called clan settlements, clan settlements.
And in a big arc—I don’t know how many miles covered in that thing—in a big
arc, he had gathered all of those lepers in a clan settlement. And they
built villages where they lived, built them out of mud and thatch, you know. And
he put a clan settlement here. And then, miles and miles there would be
one there and then in a big arc, he had gathered all those lepers in what he
called those clan settlements.
Well, what happened over there
was, when leprosy was found in—and, by the way, in going around with that
doctor, visiting those clan settlements, children—little children were leprous;
teenagers were leprous—young men and woman, old people, just the whole gamut of
humanity—leprous. And whenever one of those became leprous even though it
was a child, they would push the child out into the bush to die. They
separated themselves from them. They had nothing to do with them—put them
out to die. Well, that’s where those clan settlements came from. He
would gather them up—put out in the bush to die—and in all of those of those
areas, why, he would gather those lepers together.
Well, anyway, I went around with
him. For days and days, I went around with Dr. Goldie. And I would
just, you know—I’m not a physician, like Dr. Mattox here—I couldn’t do anything
except go around and look and pray for them. I did preach. They would
build a church made out of mud; the whole church was made out of mud; the
pulpit made out of mud; the pulpit stand made out of mud; the pews made out of
mud; the whole thing made out of mud. Well, I would preach in those mud churches
then just go around with Dr. Goldie.
Well, here’s what happened to me
as I went around and just observed and looked. He had in his little car a whole
thing filled with medicine you know, ministering to those lepers. So, as
I would watch him, I would think, “You see that car there? Did you know, I had
a part in that? I helped buy that car. I did that.”
Then, I’d look at the doctor himself
and I would say, “See that doctor there: Dr. Goldie? I helped send him
out. I helped support him. I did that.”
And he’d take all of that
medicine, and minister to those poor lepers. And as he did so, I’d have
this saying in my heart, “Did you know? I helped buy that medicine. I
helped buy it.”
I don’t know why that particular
thing should have overwhelmed me with such hilarity, with such joyous
gladness. But, as I went around with the beloved physician and saw him
minister to those helpless, cast-out people, I just had the best feeling in the
world.
“Lord, I thank you. I
helped send out that missionary. I helped buy that car. I helped
buy that medicine. I helped build these clan settlements.”
I don’t know of anything in God’s
world that has in it the finer repercussion of joy and gladness to think, I have
a part with God. He and I are partners and we are doing it; God and I. It
lifts what we bring to God out of just, “This is something that I put up with
when the collection plate is passed.” It lifts us out of that into a great
joyous tenantry, stewardship, servanthood before God; He our great sovereign
and I His humble servant. Try it and see. How many times does God say that,
“Come, try and see, and see?”
Now, Doug, I want you to lead us
in a song. Let’s sing us a song. And while we sing the song I will be
standing right there, right there and our fellow ministers with me.
A family you to come into the
fellowship of our dear, wonderful church; or a couple you; or just one somebody
you answering the call of God, to take Jesus as Savior, to put your life with
us in the church, to be a fellow pilgrim with us from this world to the world
to come, as God shall speak, you are welcome. In His blessed name and ours to
come and be with us, you ready? While we stand and while we sing.