THE WORK
WHEREUNTO GOD HAS CALLED US
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
Acts 13:2
02-05-78 10:50
a.m.
This is the pastor bringing the message entitled The
Work Whereunto God Hath Called Us. It is an expounding of the first few
verses in the thirteenth chapter of the Book of Acts. In our preaching through
the Book of Acts, we have come to chapter 13. And these are its beginning
words:
Now,
there were in the church which was at Antioch certain prophets and teachers; as
Barnabas and Simeon that was called Niger, and Lucius of Cyrene, and Manaen,
which had been brought up with Herod the tetrarch, and Saul.
As they
ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Spirit said, Separate me Barnabas
and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them.
And when
they had fasted and prayed, and laid their hands on them, they sent them away.
So they,
being sent forth by the Holy Spirit, departed unto Seleucia; and from thence
they sailed to Cyprus.
And when
they were at Salamis, they preached the Word of God...
And when
they had gone through the island to Paphos they... preached there the Word of
the Lord.
And
loosing from Paphos they came to Perga in Pamphylia…
... and from Perga to Pisidian Antioch; and then
to Iconium, to Lystra, to Derbe, to the Roman Empire and finally, to the
Imperial City—the throne of the Caesars.
The thirteenth chapter of the Book of Acts is a
great continental divide here in the Word of God. The twelve chapters before
are one thing, and the [fifteen] chapters that follow after are something else.
There is a great and new and significant departure
here in the thirteenth chapter of the Book of Acts. This is the beginning of
the vast missionary enterprise, the ultimate outreach of the purpose and plan
of God.
Heretofore, in the Book of Acts, the center of the
church has been Jerusalem; now, it is in heathen, pagan, Gentile Antioch.
Heretofore, the story has concerned mostly Simon Peter; now, it concerns
Saul—Paul. Heretofore, the message has been built around the Jew; now, it is a
message concerning the Gentiles. Heretofore, it is concerned largely with one
people; now, with all peoples; heretofore, with one nation; now with all
nations—and when you remember that the letter of Paul to the churches of
Galatia are these churches that are founded on this first missionary journey.
Heretofore, the gospel has been bound up with Jewish legalism; now, it is the
message of justification by faith alone.
So when we come to this chapter 13 in Acts, we are
in a new, a different, and another world. As they go on their journey, led by
the Holy Spirit, they journey from Antioch to Seleucia. The Orontes River, a
beautiful river flowing between the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon ranges—that river
flows due north. Then there, before it reaches the [Amanus] Mountains, it
turns directly and immediately west; and so pours into the Mediterranean Sea.
At the turn of the river, was that ancient beautiful Greek city of Antioch, the
third city of the Roman Empire—Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch—at the head of
that beautiful valley. Then where the Orontes River turns due west, where it
pours into the Mediterranean Sea, is Seleucia, the port city of Antioch.
Then having gone the sixteen miles on land, from
Antioch down to Seleucia, they went from there and they sailed to Cyprus.
That's a hundred twenty-five miles to Salamis, where they preached the Word of
God. Then they walked through the isle of Cyprus, from Salamis to Paphos,
which is the capital of the island. And there, in Paphos, they preached the
gospel. And that's where apparently Saul changed his name to Paul, from the
conversion of the Roman proconsul of Cyprus named Sergius Paulus.
Then from Cyprus, they crossed the one hundred
seventy-five miles north of the Mediterranean Sea and came to Perga, in the
Roman province of Pamphylia. Perga is inland, just up the river, and was the
largest city in Pamphylia—the port city there is Attalia.
Then from Perga, they walked ninety miles to
Pisidian Antioch—Antioch in the Roman province of Pisidia—and there preached
the gospel; and then from Pisidian Antioch to Iconium, to Lystra, to Derbe,
these the churches of Galatia. And then, of course, beyond, in the second
missionary journey, the third missionary journey and finally, Paul carries the
message to Rome itself.
This is a great and marvelous work before which we
now stand. And it is a work that was in the mind of God from the beginning.
Look at my text. It says, “Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work
whereunto I have called them.” That word is proskeklemai. It is in the
perfect tense; proskeklemai, from proskaleo, proskeklemai,
perfect tense. And in that verbal form, it expresses something that is in the
mind of God—perfected, complete in the ages past; and now, finding its
implementation in all of the centuries that follow after.
In other words, this call of God, expressed in
that church in Antioch, is not an adventitious thought; nor is it a second
thought; nor was it just by a present inspiration. But it was an expression of
a divine elective purpose of God from the beginning, proskeklemai,
perfect tense—back and back and back forever in the mind of God.
You can easily see that in the revelation of the
elective purpose of God in human history as it is revealed to us in these Holy
Scriptures. The Lord God said to Abraham, when He called him in the twelfth
chapter of Genesis, “And in thee shall all of the families of the earth be
blessed.” There is a divine purpose in the mind of God.
In the twentieth chapter of the Book of Exodus,
you have the oracles of the Lord, the Ten Commandments given to the children of
Israel. But chapter 19 comes before chapter 20. In chapter 20, God gave to
Israel the Ten Commandments; but in chapter 19, the Lord God said to Israel,
“Thou shalt be unto Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.”
What do you mean by a kingdom of priests? Israel
is to be unto God priests—a nation, a kingdom of priests, a people of priests.
What does that mean? Very simple! A priest is somebody that represents a man
to God and God to man. That is, before God gave the oracles of the Almighty
into the hands of Israel, He first said to them, “You are to be the teachers,
and the emissaries, and the ambassadors, and the missionaries, and the
evangelists of the Word of God to all the earth. You are to receive these
oracles from My hands; you are to teach them to all of the nations of the world.”
“A kingdom of priests”—you find that in the
expanding revelation of God. The mind of the Lord, proskeklemai, what
God intended from the beginning. You find that in the revelation of the coming
Savior of the world in the prophets.
For example, just one typical passage in the
forty-ninth chapter of Isaiah and verse 6, the Lord says, speaking, God says,
speaking to the coming Messiah and Savior of the world, He says: “I have set
thee for a light unto the Gentiles (that is, the nations). I have set thee for
a light to the nations. And thou shalt be unto Me for salvation to the ends of
the earth”—the purpose, the divine purpose of God, from the beginning.
Then finally, it found expression in the
incarnate Son of heaven. The story in Matthew, in Mark, in Luke, in John
always consummates in the Great Commission:
Go ye
therefore and preach the gospel to all the people. Go ye therefore and make
disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Spirit…
Ye shall
be witnesses unto Me in Jerusalem, in Judea, and in Samaria and unto the ends
of the earth.
And that
remission of sins should be preached in His name throughout the world.
[Matthew 28:19; Acts 1:8;
Luke 24:47]
This is the divine mind of
God.
Then when we come to the conversion of the Apostle
Paul—I re-read those three stories of the conversion of Paul, those three
instances where it is repeated indeed—the Book of Acts—I re-read it this week.
In the ninth chapter of the Book of Acts, in the twenty-second chapter of the
Book of Acts and, in the twenty-sixth chapter of the Book of Acts—three times
is the story of Saul's conversion recounted in the Book of Acts. And all three
times, that story, that conversion, consummates in the same thing. The Lord
says to that new convert, “I have called thee and appeared unto thee for this
purpose and reason—that thou should preach My name and this gospel to all the
people of the earth.”
The missionary to the Gentiles—and when Paul
speaks of that conversion in the first chapter of the Book of Galatians to
these churches, he avows the same thing—that from his mother's womb, God had
set him apart to be the emissary from heaven to all of the people of the
earth. So what we read here is an expression of the divine mind of God from
before the foundation of the world: “Separate Me Paul and Barnabas for the
work whereunto, proskalemai, I have purposed for them from before the
world was made.”
Now, will you notice again the instrument through
which God reveals His purpose? They were in the church at Antioch. And as
they served and sacrificed and prayed and ministered, the Lord said to that
serving church, “Separate Me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have
purposed for them.”
Isn't that a divine revelation, no less? God's
purposes of grace are expressed through and implemented by His church. The
church is unlike any other organization—could I use the word organism? The
church is unlike any other organism in the world. It is unique. It is
separate and apart. And it has an assignment that no other body, organization,
group in the church, in the world has.
The church is set in the world to be God's
emissary and God's evangelist for the conversion of all of the nations on the
face of the globe. No other organization has that purpose. The church is
different from a fraternal organization. It is different from any political
entity. It is even different from philanthropical and civic organizations. It
is different from the legislature, from the judiciary, from the executive. It
is different from the great banking establishments and the merchandising
establishments.
The church is set apart in the world for one great
divine purpose: namely, the conversion of the world to Jesus Christ. Its task
and assignment is to preach the gospel of Christ, to call men to repentance and
to faith in the Lord Jesus. And it addresses itself to all men everywhere.
This is the unique assignment and heavenly mandate
of the church of the living God. That assignment; that Great Commission; does
not belong to the legislature. It does not belong to the judiciary; it does
not belong to any of the political or fraternal organizations of the world.
It is the unique assignment from God to His church. This is our high calling
and the divine purpose of God for us in Christ Jesus.
And when the church is sensitive to the call of
God… “Separate Me, Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called
them.” And when they are sensitive, when a church is sensitive, to the mind of
God, immediately you will find its people in outreach ministries—here, there,
beyond, and to the ends of God's world.
When we are in the will of God, and when we are
sensitive to the Word and calling of the Spirit of the Lord, you will find that
repercussion in our hearts.
If I
have strength, I owe the service of the strong.
If melody
I have, I owe the world a song.
If I can
stand when all around me the weak are falling,
If I can
run with speed when needy hearts are calling.
If my
torch can light the dark of any night,
Then I
must pay the debt I owe with living light.
If
heaven's grace has endowed me with some rare gift
If I can
lift some load no other strength can lift.
If I can
heal some wound no other's hand can heal.
If some
great truth, the speaking skies to me reveal.
Then I
must go to each broken and wounded thing
And to a
broken world, my gift of healing bring.
For any
God-given gift I am taught to say,
God's
gifts are most mine when I most give them away.
God's
gifts are like flowers which show their right to stay,
By
giving all their bloom and fragrance away.
Riches
are not gold or land, estates or marks,
The only
wealth transferred to heaven is found in human hearts.
And a church that is sensitive to the mind and
will of God is a church that offers itself in God's grace to the world—to be
used of God that many might be saved.
Now, one other thing: do you notice that when they
obeyed the mandate of heaven, what did it turn out to be? When the call comes,
it's not defined. The Holy Spirit said, as the church ministered before the
Lord: “Separate me, Barnabas and Saul, for the work whereunto I have called
them.” The divine purpose, to be realized in this church—It doesn't say what
it is. But when we read the following paragraphs and pages, and chapters, and
verses, what it is is a very simple thing. What God purposed through His
church was the ministering grace of the Lord to the people—it is that simple.
And so they being sent by the Holy Ghost, they
preached the gospel in Seleucia, in Salamis, in Paphos, in Perga, in Attalia,
in Pisidia, in Antioch, in Iconium, in Lystra, in Derbe, in Ephesus, in
Philippi, in Thessalonica, in Berea, in Athens, in Corinth, in Rome. And
through the converts of those first apostles, to the whole world—and finally,
brought to my father and mother and finally to me. This is what God purposed
when He said, “Separate me, Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have
called them”—namely, the ministry of the Word of God to all people everywhere.
There are many things that you will see in this
church. There are thirty million dollars worth of buildings. This church is
now covering five blocks in the downtown heart in the city of Dallas. But God
never said anything about these buildings; He never mentioned them. There are
many accoutrements to help us in the divine worship of our living Lord, all of
the things that you see: the stained glass windows, and the carpets, and the
pews, and the choir loft, and the steeple, and all the other things, many of
them, that go to contribute to an intensest activity.
But God never said anything about those
furnishing—accoutrements—He never mentioned them, never referred to them. And
so on, many, many, many things in the life of this church. But the only thing
that the Lord did say was to “Remember My lambs,” and to “Feed My sheep.” The
only thing the Lord assigned in the great heavenly mandate was to reach people
for God.
That's all! That's all! The church does not deal
with inanimate objects. It is not concerned with freight and boxes and
containers. The church concerns people! People ought to be in the heart of
the church, and the church ought to be in the heart of the people. Our
emphasis is always that.
A while back, there is a famous radio entertainer
who delivered a version, his version, of Lincoln's Gettysburg address. It was
different—and it was so different that he was deluged with mail when he
delivered the address. You see, that entertainer had researched that address
made by President Lincoln at Gettysburg. And he found that when Lincoln
delivered that address, he put an emphasis upon one word in that dedication.
Now, I want to show you how we say it—I have never
heard anybody say it any other way—here's the way we say it: “That government
OF the people, and BY the people, and FOR the people should not perish from the
earth.” That's the way we say it. And I've never heard of it, or thought of
it in my mind, as I read it in any other way.
But that man who had researched it, and delivered
the message as Lincoln delivered it, delivered it like this—which is the way
Lincoln is supposed to have delivered it—Lincoln said, “That government of THE
PEOPLE, and by THE PEOPLE, and for THE PEOPLE should not perish from the
earth.”
Lincoln emphasized not a preposition, but “the
people”—he was moved by the people. And that's the emphasis that ought always
to be in our work and in our assignments. It is people! It concerns people!
It concerns human souls. It concerns families, and babies, and children, and
young people, and young married people, and men and women in the prime of life
down to old age and to death. It concerns people!
When you look at the continents of the world, what
you see is people. When you hear the cries of the urban and rural communities
of the earth, you hear the cries of people. And when you consider the needs of
the nations of the earth, you are considering the needs of people. And when
you read the revelation of the love of God in Christ Jesus, who died on the
cross, you find there God's infinite love for the people. That is our heavenly
mandate, reaching these people for the Lord.
In the years gone by, many years now, I was a
pastor in Oklahoma. I began my pastorate, my pastoral work, as you know, in
the days of the Depression; when people were hungry; when they lost their
homes. They couldn't pay the mortgage. When they lost their farms, they
couldn't pay the debt; when cotton was sold for five cents a pound; when the
people labored all year long and yet, couldn't pay the debt of the grocery bill
at the store. Now, that's when I began my ministry and continued in it for
years.
My friend, in Oklahoma—he was later Executive
Secretary of the state—he was talking to me one time and here's what he said.
He said:
In our church, in our last every-member canvass
(that's a way we have of going to everybody and asking them to fill out a
pledge card to support the church, “the every-member canvass.”) In their
every-member canvass, there was this poor, wretched, hungry family; a man and
his wife and seven ragged, half-starved children.
So they divided up all of the cards, and the
pastor gave this family to this deacon. And the deacon said: “Pastor, I'll not
do it! I'll not go to that man and ask anything of him. He's too poor, and
too hungry, and too ragged and doesn't have any work and doesn't have a job. I
wouldn't go!
And the pastor said to him, “But my brother, it's
an every-member canvass and that doesn't mean every member except him.”
The deacon said, “Pastor, I don't care what you
say! I'm not going to do it!”
“Well,” the pastor said, “Deacon, if I go with
you, will you go?” And he said, “No, I will not!” And then the pastor said,
“Well, Deacon, I'll do it myself. Will you come with me?” And the deacon
replied, “Yes, I'll go with you, with the understanding that I'm not going to
say a word. You are going to do all of the talking.”
So they went uninvited into this poverty-stricken hovel
by a poor, wretched man and his wife and in the background, seven ragged
children. So the pastor sat down with the man; and his wife and those seven
children listened—and the deacon over there on the other side and he explained
to that poor, wretched man the work of the church, the preaching of the gospel,
its teachings of the Word of Life, and its great outreach ministries, including
the foreign mission enterprise. And in the midst of his speaking, the man
broke down and cried.
The pastor said to me, “I thought I would die. I
never felt so as I wanted to hide myself as I did then. I thought, ‘I have
hurt the heart of that man. He can't give. And here I am, asking him to
help.’”
And he said—the deacon seated over there, listening
to me, and hearing the sobs of that man—he said, “I thought I had just come to
the end of the way.”
And the preacher said to me, “You know, when the
man was able to control his emotions, lifting up his face and drying the tears
away, he said, ‘Pastor, this is the first time anybody has ever come asking us
to help.’ The man said, ‘This is the first time we've ever been treated like
other folks. They have always passed us by. We're too wretched. We're too
poor. We have been outside of their interest, and their calls, and their
visits, and their asking to help.’ He said, ‘Pastor, give me nine of those
cards.’”
And that poor fellow took nine of those cards and
passed them out. And then he said, “Each one of us will fill it out for five
cents a Sunday.” Then he gathered them up and put them in the hands of the
pastor saying, “I don't know where the money is coming from, but we'll trust
Jesus for it.”
And the pastor said in the days immediately
following, the man found a fine job. And he entered a new day. And he sat
there every service, all nine of them filling up a pew. And then he added to
me, “And I have baptized now all seven of those children.”
Man, that's the faith! That's the way to be.
We're not passing up anybody because we think they're too dirty, they're too
poor, they're too wretched, they're too sinful, they're too anything.
Wherever there is a man or a family, or a
somebody, it is a somebody for whom Jesus died. And it is a somebody to whom
to present the riches of the grace of God. And it is a somebody to invite to
come and worship the Lord with us, and to share with us in the kingdom calling
of Christ our Savior. It's a great message, addressed to all of the families
and all of the people of the world.
Now, I have a little observation to make and then
I'm through. When we read of the delivery of the message of the gospel of
Christ to the Roman Empire—and here it is, page after page after page—when we
read it, what you'll find is this: there are always those who will reject.
There are those who will not respond and not only so, but there are those who
will create all kinds of trouble in rejection. It's the story here, chapter
after chapter of it.
And I recognize that and you do, too. When we
bear the message of salvation in Christ, not everyone will respond. They'll
not all turn and believe. They'll not all even be maybe grateful that you took
time to invite them to the Lord.
But I tell you what, according to the Word of the
Lord, you may not win all, but you always win some. There will always be some
who will respond, always. And if we are faithful to the heavenly mandate, and
invite, and speak, and pray for, and witness to, God will always give us some.
I rejoice in belonging to this dear church. I
rejoice in being a part of a great communion and worldwide fellowship. Today
is Baptist World Alliance Sunday, and this is the latest work from that
worldwide communion. Baptist church membership in the southwest Pacific island
of New Guinea has climbed from zero to thirty-one thousand baptized believers
in these last few years.
On Sunday night of next week—can't do it this
Sunday night, Elaine because of the Lord's Supper—but on Sunday night of next
week, after our preaching service is over, you're going to be privileged to see
a film that's beyond anything I ever saw in my life, of the blessing of God
upon a girl from upon Wycliffe Translators in New Guinea.
And I didn't know that until I just read it. In
that island of New Guinea, they now have thirty-one thousand baptized
believers. And when you see that film you'll understand what a miracle that is
it.
The membership of our Baptist communion has
increased twenty-two percent during the last decade. There are now thirty-four
million baptized believers in one hundred thirty-seven thousand Baptist
churches in one hundred thirty-eight countries today. And that means there are
about forty-seven thousand—million—family members in this communion.
In many countries of the world, baptism means
expulsion from family and society. There are three new Baptist conventions,
one in the Philippines, one in Okinawa, one in Papua, New Guinea again. And
there are one hundred nine of these conventions, like the Southern Baptist
Convention who share together in that world-wide work.
Ah, Lord, keep on blessing it! What kind of a
dike, what kind of a barrier, what kind of a standard do we raise against the
vast flood tides of communism, atheism, except the preaching of the gospel of
the Son of God? And how do we battle the vast inroads of evil, and iniquity,
and violence, and blood, except in the preaching of the gospel of the Son of
God? And what hope do we hope for our own beloved nation of America except the
pouring out of the Spirit and blessing of the Lord upon us? What hope do we
have for the peace of the children of our generation except as God shall
empower us to carry out the Great Commission of the Son of God?
And that's the communion to which we invite you
now to belong. And that's the faith in which we encourage you to trust in
God. And that's the wooing of the Spirit of the Lord that you feel in your
heart to pilgrimage with us, to belong with us, to be numbered among the
redeemed of God's saints, to let the Lord endow you and enrich you with every
gift that only heaven could afford. It comes from His gracious, nail-pierced
hands. And it is yours for the taking, for the asking, for the helping.
Come, come, come. In the balcony round, a family,
a couple, or one somebody you in the press on this lower floor, down one of these
aisles, “I have decided, pastor, for God. And here I am.” To join heart and
hand with us as we journey this pilgrim road with Jesus the Lord, come. And a
thousand times the glad refrain echoes in heaven.
Happy
day, happy day,
When
Jesus washed my sins away.
He has
taught me how to watch and pray.
And live
rejoicing every day.
Happy
day, glorious day,
When
Jesus washed my sins away.
Come and pilgrimage with us, and welcome. Let the
angels attend you as you come, while we stand and while we sing.