THE END OF THE WORLD
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Peter 3:1-18
1-1-84 7:30 p.m.
Now, the subject of the sermon tonight is The End
of the World. And you can easily follow it in your Bible. Let us turn to
Daniel chapter 9, the ninth chapter of the Book of Daniel. The key to all
prophecy is found in this chapter, the ninth chapter of the Book of Daniel, and
beginning at verse 24, Daniel 9, verse 24, the key, I say, the keystone to the
arch of all prophecy, the heart and center of everything God has told us about
the future, Daniel 9:24. It is Gabriel who is sent from God to tell Daniel the
end of the age. And Gabriel says,
Seventy
weeks, the Hebrew is “seventy sevens”, “seventy sevens,” are determined upon Thy
people and upon Thy holy city, to finish the transgression, to make an end of
sins, to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting
righteousness, to seal up the vision and prophecy, and to anoint the most Holy.
That is the end of the world. “Seventy sevens are
determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city.”
When you begin talking about the end of the world,
you immediately begin speaking about Israel: the Jewish people, the chosen
family of God. All four covenants find their consummation in that end of the
world, in that millennial reign of King Jesus. The Abrahamic Covenant finds
its fulfillment then. The Palestinian Covenant finds its fulfillment then. The
Davidic Covenant finds its fulfillment then. And the new Covenant finds its fulfillment
then.
So, Gabriel says to the prophet statesman Daniel,
when we come to everlasting righteousness: “Seven sevens are determined upon Thy
people.” Now, that is all there is. There is not anything else. “Seventy
sevens are determined upon thy people, Israel, until this consummation of the
age, until everlasting righteousness is brought in.” It isn't seventy-one
sevens. It isn't sixty-nine sevens. It is seventy sevens.
Now, when we come, as the angel Gabriel says, “Know
therefore and understand”, when we come to the interpretation of these seventy
sevens, we learn that they are sevens of years, seventy sevens of years. So,
seventy times seven is four hundred ninety years. There is four hundred ninety
years that God has determined on the people of Israel until the time of the
end.
Now, he divides that seventy sevens into this: “Know
therefore and understand that from the going forth of the commandment to
restore and to build Jerusalem.” And that commandment is in the first chapter
of Nehemiah. All of the other decrees that you read in Ezra concern the
building of the Temple. The decree that concerns the rebuilding of Jerusalem
was issued by Artaxerxes Longimanus, Long-hands, Longimanus, in the first
chapter of the Book of Nehemiah. So, from the commandment to restore and to
rebuild Jerusalem unto Messiah the Prince shall be “seven weeks,” and “three
score and two weeks.”
The seven weeks, that's forty-nine years, refer to
the rebuilding of Jerusalem, the city of Jerusalem. And after those forty-nine
years, there are three score and two weeks. There are sixty-two weeks until
the coming of Messiah.
And when you start with the decree of Artaxerxes
Longimanus in the first chapter of Nehemiah, the decree to build Jerusalem
until the coming of Messiah, you come to the days of Christ, the Lord Jesus: four
hundred eighty-three years. And after three score and two weeks: “After the
sixty-nine weeks, the seven weeks and the three score and two weeks, shall
Messiah be cut off.” And there we arrive at the date of 33 AD. Our Lord was
crucified in 33 AD. It says here, “But not for Himself.”. That is, He gave
His life for others, for us.
Now, we change to another. In the middle of verse
26,
…and the
people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary;
and the end thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war,
desolations are determined.
That refers to the coming of the prince of the
Roman Empire who, in 70 AD, destroyed the city and the nation. And the people
were desolate and the city was in ruins and the nation was scattered to the
ends of the earth.
Then, in verse 27, “that prince”, he is a
successor to the prince, the Roman prince, namely, Vespasian and Titus, who
destroyed the city and the nation, the successor coming out of the same
background and the same Gentile world power, That prince
shall
confirm the covenant with many, with the people of God, for one week: and in
the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease,…
The final week is separated from the 69. The 69
weeks is the time period from the decree of Artaxerxes Longimanus to rebuild
Jerusalem until Messiah the Prince comes and is cut off, is crucified. That's four
hundred eighty-three years.
Then, this last week, the seventh, the seventieth
week, the seventieth seven, this last week, the seven years of the last week is
pulled out and set apart by itself. And the prophet divides that week right in
the middle. And that middle division of the last week is referred to again and
again in the Bible. Sometimes, it is called 42 months. Sometimes, it is
called 1,260 days. Sometimes, it is called a time, times and a half a time. Sometimes,
it is called a time, times and a dividing of time. But, it is very much in
Scripture. This seventieth week is set apart by itself and is divided into
three-and-a half years here, three-and-a-half years there, 42 months, the rest
of these things.
Now, that is all there is. There is not anything
else. When we come to this seventieth week, it is the end. It is the end
time. That is the consummation of the age.
Well, there are more than four hundred ninety
years in this historical world and life in which our generation is cast. So,
what has happened? What has happened is—and you've heard me speak of this so
many times until I hear you smile when I refer to it—what has happened is,
there was a mystery, there was a secret that the apostles say God kept in His
heart, and He never revealed it to the prophets. All He revealed to the
prophets was this that we've just gone through. They never knew the secret
that God kept in His heart, namely, that there was a time period, Paul calls
it, the Bible calls it, the New Testament calls it a mustērion, a
secret that God kept in His heart.
And that time period is between the cutting-off of
the Messiah, the 69 weeks, and the seventieth week, which brings us to the
consummation of the age. Between those two weeks, the 69 weeks up until the
death of the Messiah, and the seventieth week that brings us to the
consummation of the age, between the sixty-nine weeks and the seventieth week; there
is a great mustērion, a great mystery, a great secret that God kept
in His heart.
And we live in the midst of that great interlude,
that great intermission. We call it the “day of grace.” We call it the day of
the church. We call it the day of the Holy Spirit. We call it the day of the
evangelization of the world. We call it the day of the preaching of the
gospel. We call it the day of calling out of the called.
The prophets never saw it. God kept the secret in
His heart until Christ the King was crucified. And when King Jesus died, crucified,
rejected by His people, before He turned to glory, He gave to the apostles a
worldwide commission. And that is the mustērion: the creation of a
church, the body of Christ.
Now, when the end time comes, and it will
certainly come, when the end time comes, it will begin with the rapture: the
taking away of the church. The church will be taken out of this world. The
Lord said, “I will come as a thief in the night”, clandestinely, furtively,
secretly, unannouncedly I will come. There is not anything between us and the
coming of the Lord. There is no sign. There is no time period. There is no
development. There is no fulfillment. He can come any day, any time, any
hour. That is why He says, “Watch, for at a time that ye think not and know
not, the Son of Man cometh.” Jesus can come any day, any time, and we are to
be ready.
Now, the end of this intermission, the end of this
interlude, the end of this mustērion, the end of this time between
the sixty-ninth and the seventieth weeks of Daniel, the end of it is when Jesus
comes for us, for His own, and we are raptured up to heaven. We are snatched
away to our Savior in glory.
In 1 Thessalonians 4, beginning at verse 13, the
Apostle Paul writes,
I would
not have you without knowledge, my brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that
have died, that ye sorrow not, as others who have no hope.
For if
we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in
Jesus, who have died in the Lord, will God bring with Him.
For this
we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and
remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not precede them which are asleep.
For the
Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with a voice of the
archangel, and with a trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first:
Then we
who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the
clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
The first thing, the first thing, the first thing,
at the conclusion of this interlude, this age of grace, the first thing is the
resurrection of those who have fallen asleep in Jesus, the resurrection of
those who have died in Christ, and the rapture, the taking away of the living
generation that will be here when Jesus comes for His own. That's the first
thing. And it can come any day, any moment, any time. It can come before I'm
through saying this sentence. It could come at midnight or at the dawn in the
morning or tomorrow. It can come any day. There is not anything between us
and the coming of our Lord. We are not looking for signs. We are not looking
for tribulations. We are not looking for Armageddons. We are not looking for
anything but Jesus. We are looking for our Savior.
And the first thing that shall happen, that shall
come to pass, that ends this interlude between the sixty-ninth and the
seventieth week in Daniel, is the resurrection of the dead in Christ and the
snatching away, the rapturing, of us who will be alive at the coming of our
Lord, to meet our Lord in the air.
Now, our people, our church, you and I, whether we
live or whether we die, we're going to be with the Lord. When we are, when we
are raptured, when we're taken away, there are two things that await us in
heaven. Up there where Jesus is, up there in that beautiful city made out of
gold, the gates of it are pearl, the river of life runs through the midst of
it, and the throne of our Lord is there. When we die, that's where we will go.
We have a home there in heaven.
Now, when we are raptured, when we are taken away,
when we come out of this earth and meet our Lord, the first thing that happens
to us is we all must appear at the judgment seat. The Greek word is bema.
We must all appear at the bema of Christ, that is the judgment seat of
Christ, that every one of us may receive the reward for the things we have done
according to what we have done. That is 2 Corinthians 5:10. The first thing
that happens to us when we are raptured, or when we are raised from the dead,
is that we are standing before the bema of our Lord, there to receive
our rewards.
Well, why don't I receive the reward when I die? Why
don't I immediately receive it? Because I don't die when I die. The influence
of my life goes on and on and on, on and on and on.
I remember, in Amarillo, there was a wonderful boy
up there, a marvelous fellow. He and I were in the same class, graduated
together. We were in the same Sunday School class together. We went down to
Baylor University together. He became an infidel. He became an atheist. And
I went to see him one night to talk to him about his infidelity and his
atheism. And when I walked into his room, there he was, reading Tom Paine's Age
of Reason, the infidel Tom Paine. Tom Paine has been dead years and years
and scores and scores of years, but my dear friend from Amarillo was there
reading Tom Paine. You don't die when you die. Your influence goes on.
And that's why you don't receive your reward until
you come to the end of the age. Then, Almighty God alone is able to unravel
the scheme of the influence of your life, the people you've touched, the shadow
that you've cast over the lives and pilgrimage of other people. You stand
before God to receive the reward of what you have done.
In the third chapter of 1 Corinthians, Paul speaks
of that reward. Some have built with gold, silver, and precious stones. They'll
receive a marvelous reward. Some have built with wood, hay and stubble. Everything
they've done will burn up. It is dust and ashes. And he says some people are
going into heaven by the skin of their teeth. That is, as if they were saved
by fire. That is, as if they ran out of a house naked, have nothing at all, just
their souls are saved. But, they have no reward; they have no anything.
That is the first thing that's going to happen is,
after we're resurrected, after we are raptured, the church up there with our
Lord in heaven, we will be rewarded according to our works.
Now, the second thing that will happen is we are
going into the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. We are in the nineteenth chapter
of the Book of the Revelation, we are there at the marriage of the Lamb, “And
his wife hath made herself ready. And she is clothed with the righteousnesses
of the saints.” [Verses 8-9] That is,
she has been rewarded. And the clothing, the garments, the “fine linen, clean
and white, for the fine linen is the righteousnesses of the saints.” We have
been rewarded and now we sit down in heaven at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb.
Now, that is the story of the church. That's our
end. That is our consummation. That is where we are facing. That is where we
are headed. We are going to be with our Lord. We are going to be judged. And
we are going to receive from Him all of the good things that He has prepared
for us. There's not a thing we've ever done for Jesus that God hasn't written
it up there in the Lamb's Book of Life and it becomes our reward forever. Every
prayer we've made, every gesture for Him we've ever offered, every good word
we've spoken, every deed we've ever done, every gift we've ever made, every
song we've ever sung, everything is written in the Lamb's Book of Life. And it
becomes our reward at the bema of Christ.
And then we sit down with the Lord in the Marriage
Supper of the Lamb. As the Lord said in the Lord's Supper, “I will not drink
it, I will not drink henceforth of the fruit of the vine, until I drink it new
with you in My Father's kingdom.” [Matthew
26:29] We are going to sit down with our Lord and we are going to eat
together.
Now, we had a wonderful family in our church that
left our church because we eat down here at the church. That was against the
religion of the family. I don't know what in the world they're going to do in
heaven because, when we get up there in heaven, we are going to sit down and
we're going to eat together. And we are going to eat marvelously. And I'm in
favor of it. God invented eating, and I think that's the finest thing God ever
did was when He invented eating. We are going to eat up there in heaven. And
that's the church.
Now, we are going to pick up that seventieth week
of the Book of Daniel, the seventieth week. This is the end time. After the
intermission, after the interlude, after the age of the church, after the age
of grace, after the age of the preaching of the gospel in this generation, that
ends with the rapture of the church, the taking away of the church into heaven,
and our reward and our sitting down at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb.
Now, we are going to pick up the seventieth week,
which brings us to the end of the world. This is found in the Apocalypse, in
the Revelation chapter 1, verse 19. The outline of the Revelation is this,
Write
the things which thou hast seen, and the things which are, and the things which
shall be meta tauta, the things after these things.
That is what John is instructed by our Lord to
write. [Second], write down “the things which are,” second, first, “write down
the things which thou hast seen”, second, write down, “the things which are”, and
third, write down, “the things meta tauta, after these things.”
So John sat himself down and, according to the
Word of the Lord, this is what he wrote, he wrote the first chapter of the
Revelation, which is the vision of our glorified Lord Jesus, “The things which
thou hast seen”, and he had just seen the glorious vision of our risen Savior
and he wrote that down.
Then, Jesus said to him, “Write down the things
which are.” And I turn to the Revelation and I turn to Revelation chapter 2
and chapter 3. And this is “the things that are”, this is the thing that is, these
are the things that are. They are the churches. This is the church age. This
is that great interlude that we spoke of a moment ago. And so, John, according
to the outline and the commandment of the Lord, writes down “the things that
are”, the churches are. Here is one. Over yonder is one. Over there in
Singapore, where our sweet Marsha served, is one. Over there in Korea where
our boy, Joe, Joe Gene Autrey, where he is going in this week. There is one
over there. These are the things that are. Write those down. So, he writes
those down. And this is the church age given to us under seven pictures, seven
messages.
Now, I am looking for “and the things which shall
be meta tauta”, the things that are after this church age, meta tauta.
So, when I come to the end of chapter 3, which is the last church, the
Laodicean church, the first thing I read is meta tauta. Now, that's
what I'm looking for meta tauta, “after this”, meta tauta,
translated “after this.”
That is the third part of this great apocalyptic
vision. First, what he had seen, which is the vision of our Lord in chapter 1;
the things which are, those are the churches in chapters 2 and 3; and now, meta
tauta, the things that are beyond the days and the age of the churches. And
that is chapter 4.
And in chapter 4, I read,
Meta
tauta I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven: and the
first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me;…Come
up hither.
“Come up hither”, Now, that is the rapture of the
church. And at chapter 4 in the Apocalypse, the church disappears. You don't
see it any more. Why? Because it is gone. The church is with the Lord in
heaven at the bema of Christ and at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. In
the Apocalypse the church disappears. At meta tauta, it is raptured, it
is taken away. You don't see it any more.
In chapters 2 and 3, when he writes of “the things
that are,” it is just one church after another. It is Ephesus and Smyrna. It
is Thyatria and, finally, Laodicea. But, when we come to chapter 4, the church
is taken away. It is raptured into heaven, and it is not seen in the
Revelation until the church comes with our Lord in the nineteenth chapter of
the Book of the Revelation, coming at the conclusion of the battle of
Armageddon.
So, in that period of time between chapter 4 and
chapter 19 is the seventieth week of the Book of Daniel. This is God's final
week, reaching to the consummation of the age.
Now, we don't have time, not the beginning of
time, for me to speak of that seventieth week. But, I can point out two things
in it.
Number one, it is a time of tremendous revival. Now,
isn't that amazing? Between the fourth chapter of the Revelation and the
nineteenth chapter of the Revelation, God is pouring out His judgment upon this
earth. The church is gone, and with the church, this period, restraining of
the Holy Spirit of God, this period of grace and the preaching of the gospel by
the church. The church is gone and God is pouring out His judgments upon this
wicked, sinful earth; the seals, the trumpets, the vials of wrath, God's
pouring them out.
And yet, in the midst of this awesome time, this
seventieth week of Daniel, the time of the judgment of Almighty God, in the
midst of that is the greatest revival the church has, I mean the world has ever
known. In the seventh chapter of the Book of the Revelation, God seals one
hundred forty-four thousand Jewish evangelists, twelve thousand from each one
of the tribes of Israel. And they preach and they cry with a loud voice, “Salvation.
Salvation.”
And how many are saved? One of the elders said, “Who
are these who are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?”
And I said, “Sir, I don't know. I've never seen
them before.”
Now, I want to ask you something. If those people
that John sees up there who are marvelously saved, if they were saints back
there from the day in which he lived, wouldn't he have recognized his father,
Zebedee? Wouldn't he have recognized his mother? Wouldn't he have recognized
his old friend Peter? Wouldn't he have recognized his brother James, who was
martyred? Wouldn't he have recognized those saints in Ephesus, where he'd
pastored for so long?
He looked up there at that group and he said, “Lord,
I don't know who they are. I've never seen them before.” And the elder said, “These
are they who have come out of hē thlipsis, hē megalē,
“the tribulation, the great.” “These are they who have come out of the great tribulation
and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb,
therefore;” and then, it goes on to describe the bliss of these marvelous
martyrs who have found their faith and hope in Jesus Christ.
Now, I cannot make but this remark as I pass by. Any
time, great revival is possible. Any day, anywhere, among any people revival
is possible. A great revival is possible in this church. A great revival is
possible anywhere in the earth. And the greatest revival the world has ever known
will be in the heart of that seventieth week of the Book of Daniel, this day of
the great Tribulation. Isn't that amazing, and isn't that the most marvelous
thing that you can ever thank for? There is not any time but is a God-blessed
time for an outpouring of the grace of our Lord. Marvelous revival, people
saved, people turning to God, it is so in the midst of the seventieth week, the
great end time of our Lord.
Now, I have just one other moment, things picked
out of this seventieth week; It is the campaign of Armageddon. In Revelation
16, beginning at verse 13,
And I
saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the
dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth of the false
prophet:
For they
are the spirits of demons, working miracles, which go forth unto the
kings of the earth and of the whole world, to gather them to the battle of that
great day of God Almighty.
…And He
gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon.
The great final conflict of the world will be in
the Middle East. It will be over there in Israel. That's where the last
battle will be fought. And when I turn to the nineteenth chapter of the Book
of the Revelation, in the midst of that awesome battle, Jesus comes with His
saints. As Jude says, “Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of His
saints.” And in the midst of that awful campaign the Lord Jesus Christ comes
from heaven.
Now, when the Lord comes with His people, remember
He came for us, any moment, any time, the resurrection of the dead, the
rapturing away of His people, the bema and the Marriage Supper of the
Lamb, when the Lord comes, when He comes, that is the beginning of the
Millennium, in the twentieth chapter, the binding of Satan for a thousand
years.
Now, no one shall enter the Millennium who is not
saved. There will be a judgment of Israel, which is outlined for us in Ezekiel
chapter 20, verses 34 to 38. There is a judgment of the people of Israel. No
Jew will enter the Millennium who hasn't been saved, who doesn't accept Christ
as His Savior. They're being put under the rod. They will pass under the rod.
And those that refuse the Messiah are rejected, cast out, lost, damned. And
those that receive the Messiah enter into the Millennium.
Now, there is also a judgment of the Gentiles, of
the nations. And that judgment is in the twenty-fifth chapter of the Book of
Matthew,
When the
Son of Man shall come in His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, He shall
sit upon the throne of His glory:
And
before Him shall be gathered all, you've got translated, nations: all the
Gentiles. [Verse 31, 32]
When the Lord comes, these Gentiles who are alive
will be gathered before the Lord for a great and tremendous judgment day.
Now, And
the King shall answer and say unto them,
Verily I
say unto you—this is verse 40—Inasmuch as ye have not had done it unto
one of the least of these My brethren, ye have, ye, if ye haven't done it unto
these My brethren, ye have not done it unto Me. If you have done it
unto one at least of these My brethren, ye have done it unto Me.
Now, it is a violation of everything in the Word
of God for us to say that we're saved or we're lost according to our good deeds
and our good works.
I was in
hunger, and you gave me meat: I was in thirst, and you gave me drink: I was a
stranger, and you took me in, naked and you clothed me:…I was in prison, and
you came unto me.
Now, for us to say that these Gentiles are going
into the Millennium saved because of their good works is a violation of
everything in the Bible. The Bible teaches us that we are saved by the grace
and mercy of God. We are saved by faith. We are saved by grace. We are not
saved by works. That is the gospel of the Old Testament. That is the gospel
of the New Testament.
Now, there has to be some meaning here when the
Lord says, these shall go into the Millennium and these shall not. And the
basis is, and it is very apparent, in that one hundred forty-four thousand that
were, that were sealed, the Jewish evangelists of this world, in that
seventieth and last week; how we listen to their message is how we're going to
be judged as to whether we're saved or lost: “Insomuch as you've done it unto
one of the least of these my brethren.” And Jesus was a Jew. And these are
His people. This is His nation, His brothers.
“Insofar as you've done it unto one of the least
of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” When they received these
evangelists who have been preaching the gospel of salvation and grace and the
love of God, when they received them and believed their message, they were
saved. When they refused them, they were cast out. That's the basis of the
judgment of the Gentiles as we enter into the ultimate and final Millennium.
Now, just one other thing: This morning I picked
out one facet of this millennial reign of our Lord. And that was the peace
that He shall bring to a warring world. Peace: “they have beat their swords
into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks. And we won't learn war
anymore and there will be none to make us afraid.” [Micah
4:3]
I picked out one facet of the millennial reign of
Christ when He comes back to this earth. I want to pick out one other tonight.
Out of a multitude of facets, there are more things in the Bible about the
Millennium than any other one subject, one doctrinal presentation, in all the
Word of God, I pick out just one other facet of the Millennium, the end of the
seventieth week, when Jesus comes to reign over this earth, and this facet
regards the world in which we live.
In the eighth chapter of the Book of Romans,
beginning at verse 19, Romans 8:19: “For the earnest expectation of the ktisis,”
translated here creature, it is creation, ktisis, creation; “For the
earnest expectation of the creation,” the whole creation of God, “waiteth for
the manifestation of the sons of God,” when we come back with our Lord. “For
the ktisis, the creation, was made subject to mataiotēs,”
the frailty that we see in life. “The creation was made subject to frailty, to
death, to hunger and sorrow and pain, not willingly”, it didn't choose, “but by
reason of Him who hath subjected the same in hope.”
There's a mystery in God: why He permits the evil
in this world. But, it is for some good thing. It is for some blessing to us:
Because
the creation itself shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the
glorious liberty to the children of God.
For we
know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until
now.
And not
only they, and not only the whole creation is fallen and groans, but we
ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan
within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of
our body.
[Romans 8:21-23]
Paul is saying there that the whole creation has
fallen into ruin and into destruction and into desolation and into travail and
into sorrow and death, the whole creation has. But, he says there is coming a
time, namely, when Jesus comes again; which we have said is at the end of this
seventieth week; when Jesus comes again, with the sons of glory, with us, when
Jesus comes again with His redeemed the whole creation is going to be remade. It's
going to be redeemed. It's going to be in its pristine and first Edenic glory.
All of the creation of God is going to be remade, rejuvenated, regenerated,
reconstructed, renewed, all of it is.
When I read about these astronomers, they talk
about these stars. They are burned and they are desolate. They are just a
fallen universe. They are a part of it. The planets, the suns, the stars, all
of it out there is fallen. It is burned. It is destroyed. It is ruined.
When I look at our world, I see in this planet on
which we live a ruined and fallen and destroyed planet. I flew, one time, from
the south end of the Sahara Desert to the extreme northern end. And as the
hour after hour after hour we flew over that Sahara Desert, it is an endless
mass of desolation, ruin, sand and rock, and vacuity crying aloud for God's
intervention, the refreshing rains that come from His gracious hands.
Not only that part of the world, one time, I flew
from Seoul, Korea to Paris, France and flew over the Arctic Circle, thousands
of miles, it was about a 23 or 24-hour journey, thousands of miles of utter
desolation. The tundra of those vast land masses of the north and the seas of
ice and waste, it is a fallen world.
And not only is the planet blasted and not only is
it hurt and ruined, but everything in it is subject to violence and to death. The
animals eat one another and destroy one another. They are vicious, the lion
and the tiger and the wolf and the rattlesnake. And the most vicious and
violent of all in the earth are the people: the human, the homo sapiens,
the race of men who kill one another and destroy one another and lie in wait
for one another and terrorize one another. It is a world fallen. It is a
world of death. It is a vast planet in which to bury those who come to the end
of life.
But, Paul says in the eighth chapter of the Book
of Romans there's going to be a re-creation of this world. And the travail and
the pain and the agony that the whole earth and the whole creation and all
that's in it has felt is going to be changed.
And then, of course, the marvelous prophet Isaiah
writes,
The wolf
shall dwell with the lamb, And the leopard shall lie down with the kid;
…and the
lion shall eat straw like an ox.
And the
sucking child shall play on the hole of the asp, And the weaned child shall put
his hand on the cockatrice’ den.
They
shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain: For the earth shall be full
of the knowledge of the Lord, As the waters cover the sea.
[Isaiah 11:6-9]
The whole earth is going to be remade. I was
asked about that by one of our staff members just before we came into this, into
this service tonight. And I replied, “God is going to remake this whole earth,
all of it.”
I haven't time to go into those prophecies. But,
even Israel, which is so mountainous and rocky, it's going to be a plain, and
it's going to be a great heavy rainfall, and there's going to be fertile
ground. And the plowmen are going to overtake one another, the reaper and the
sower, because of the abundant, prolific production of the land in Israel. And
the whole world is going to be like that. It's going to be like it was in the
Garden of Eden. The world will be beautiful, and it will be productive and
prolific and fecund. And it will be at peace, and it will be a joy and a
delight and a glory to God.
I mentioned the fact that there is, that there is
great evidence that the earth at one time was that way. Don't you know that,
up there on the north slope of Alaska, up there in the Arctic Circle, don't you
know, up there on the north slope of Alaska, they have found one of the great
oil fields of the world? Well, if the scientist is correct, oil is made from
vegetation that is decayed and great weight has fallen upon it. And there it
is turned into petroleum.
Well, what does that mean way up there in the
north? That means that, at one time, at one time that entire Arctic world up
there was filled with great trees and ferns and all of the things that
characterize the beautiful Garden of Eden. And all over this world, the whole
world was beautiful and verdant and green. And the animals lived together in
perfect peace, the wolf and the lamb and the leopard and the kid.
And God intended for us to live in grace and in
love with one another. It was never the intention of God that we hate one
another or despise one another or do wrong to one another. Nor was it the
intention of God that we ever die. It was the purpose and program of the Lord
that we have a wonderful world, and that we live in that wonderful world as
wonderful people, and that we love one another and be happy in one another, and
that we worship God and serve our Lord. That was the intention of God. And
Satan led us into the fall and destroyed God's perfect creation.
But, at the end time, all that we have lost, God
will give us back once more. And we will enjoy and praise His name and be glad
and be enriched by His presence. We'll see Him. We'll worship Him. He'll be
our visible Lord and King. We can talk to Him. The great prophecy in Isaiah
that I read this morning: All the people and all the nations will flow to the
throne of God. That means we can talk to Jesus face to face about anything. It
is glorious beyond any way that I have word to describe it. That's what God hath
prepared for us who love Him as the great eleventh chapter of the Book of
Hebrews has described it: “God having provided some better thing for us.”
Oh, how wonderfully precious and how gloriously
dear are the promises of God. We are going to win. We are going to live. Death
and the grave and all the weakness of the flesh will not interdict, will not
hide us away, will not take us away from the glorious triumph that the Lord
hath in store for those who place their trust in Him.
And that's our invitation to you tonight. What a
beautiful, glorious evening to begin the New Year with our Lord, to accept Him
as your Savior, to open your heart to Him, “Lord Jesus, come into my heart,
into my house, into my home. Lord Jesus, I just come to Thee in loving faith
and trust and give my life to Thee. I'm on the way, pastor. I'm on the way. Hurry
up with that song. I'm on the way.”