COME
BEFORE WINTER
Dr. W.A.
Criswell
2 Timothy
4:5-22
11/30/58
10:50 a.m.
To you who listen over
the radio, you are sharing with us the services of the First Baptist Church in
Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the morning message entitled Come Before
Winter. In our preaching through the Bible, we have come to the fourth
chapter of 2 Timothy, and this is the concluding sermon in the series that hath
followed the texts Paul wrote to his young son in the ministry; 2 Timothy 4:
Watch thou in all
things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of
thy ministry
For I am now ready to be
offered, the time of my departure is at hand.
I have fought a good
fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith:
Henceforth there is laid
up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall
give me at that day; and not to me only, but unto all them also that love His
appearing.
Do thy diligence to come
shortly unto me; for Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world;
Crescens has departed Galatia, Titus unto Dalmatia.
Only Luke is with me. Take
Mark, and bring him with thee: for he is profitable to me in the ministry.
Tychicus have I sent to
Ephesus.
The cloak that I left at
Troas with Carpus, when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books, but
especially the parchments.
Alexander the
coppersmith did me much evil: the Lord reward him according to his works:
Of whom be thou aware
also; for he hath greatly withstood our words.
At my first answer no
man stood with me, but all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not be laid
to their charge.
Notwithstanding the Lord
stood with me, and strengthened me; that by me the preaching might be fully
known, and that all the Gentiles might hear: and I was delivered out of the
mouth of the lion.
And the Lord shall
deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto His heavenly
kingdom: to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.
Salute Priscilla and
Aquila, and the household of Onesiphorus.
Erastus abode at
Corinth: but Trophimus have I left at Miletus sick.
Do thou diligent to come
before winter. Eubulus greeteth thee, and Pudens, and Linus, and Claudia, and
all the brethren.
The Lord Jesus Christ be
with thy spirit. Grace be with you. Amen.
[2 Timothy 4:5--22]
In this last and closing
hour in the life of the great apostle, there are three friends whom he names,
who are standing with him, the first is the Friend of friends; He that sticketh
closer than a brother; He who laid down His life for us all, notwithstanding
the Lord stood with me and strengthened me. The Lord was by his side, nearer
than breath. The second friend was the beloved physician; only Luke is with
me. All the others had either already gone to missions in the far flung empire or
else had forsaken him like Demas. But Luke stood by him; “only Luke is with
me.” And the third friend is the young son in the ministry to whom he writes
these last words and makes a final appeal.
This Lycaenian youth who
first saw Paul when he came to Lystra where he lived and there heard the
apostle preach the gospel of the Son of God, the youth was half Greek, half
Hebrew. And as he listened to Paul preach, his heart was drawn to God in
faith, and he was baptized and became a Christian and a member of the church at
Lystra. And as Paul continued his fervent ministry of the message of Christ,
the populous in riot seized him, dragged him outside of the city and stoned him
and left him for dead.
And doubtless this young
man bent over him, possibly washed the blood away from his face, doubtless took
him to his house where his godly mother Eunice and his pious grandmother Lois
lived in the same home together. And Paul, in an explicable way and for
reasons that we do not know, all his life felt bound with cords of steel to
this young man; his spiritual son in the ministry.
And when this final hour
came, he wrote his last letter to that young fellow who was pastor of the
church in far away Ephesus, the capital of the Roman province of Asia. And he
says to Timothy, he says,
Come, and as you come,
go by Troas and the coat that I left at the house of Carpus, bring with thee, for
the summer is waning and the winter is coming, and it is cold in this dungeon.
And while you are in Troas, be sure to bring to me the books, but especially,
the parchments, the Old Testament Scriptures. But most of all, Timothy, come
yourself. Do thy diligence, spoudason to come tacheôs, quickly
unto me.
[2 Timothy 4:9-13]
Then he repeats the same thing, “spoudason
, do thy diligence, be diligent to come before winter. Come Timothy, soon. For
the time of my departure is at hand. I haven't long."
So young Timothy, and I
can see him, can't you? Young Timothy receives the letter, and immediately he
makes his way to Troas, and there he picks up the parchments and there the
books and there the cloak and begins his journey to Italy.
Why so earnestly Paul
entreats, “before winter do thy diligence to come; before winter,” because when
winter came, all shipping and all sailing was over in that ancient world. No
vessel dared to brave the open sea. When winter set in, the danger of even
approaching a sailing date when winter came is illustrated in the tempestuous
storm of which we just read in the twenty-seventh chapter of the Book of Acts.
Paul said, "Dare not move out to sea. The fast has past, that is the day
of atonement in the autumn, and it is dangerous. And we ought to winter
here." No ship sailed when winter came.
So it meant that if
Timothy delayed until winter, he couldn't come until the following spring. That
meant Paul would never see his face and speak to him a last and closing
address, and pray with him one more time, and bid him be true to the faith and
exhort him in his ministry. “For the time of my departure is at hand, come, Timothy,
before winter. For if you delay until winter, it means I'll never see you
again. Come.”
So we love to think that
Timothy immediately makes his way to Troas and there finding passage sails past
Samothrace, lands at Neapolis, goes through Macedonia along the Ignatian Way. On
the Adriatic Sea finds passage again crossing to Brundisium, there in
Brundisium picks up the road and up the Ostian Way, he hastens to the side of
the apostle Paul in prison.
I can see him as he sits
down with the apostle and reads to him out of the books, but especially the
parchments, the Old Testament, the scroll of the Prophets, of the Psalms, of
the law of Moses. And I can see Timothy when the final hour comes as he walks
by the side of the aged apostle down the Ostian Way just beyond the pyramid of
Cestius , and there, he beholds as the great preacher of Christ receives his
crown of glory.
“Come before winter.” There
are some things which if we do not do before winter we can never do. For the
season passes, the golden gate that is open now is closed forever. The tide
that is running high today will ebb tomorrow. Voices that speak now are forever
stilled after winter. The autumn time when it comes brings to us so pointedly
the passing of the days, the fleeting of time. When that pool is troubled with
the angel visitation, then is the time in the troubling of the water to step in
and be healed. “Come, come, come Timothy,” says the apostle Paul, “come. Do
thy diligence to come before winter, for to delay is never to come at all.
I want to use a
supposition and imagination, just suppose, just suppose that Timothy delayed.
When he received the letter and the earnest admonition and appeal of the
apostle, he doesn't go immediately. There's work to do at Ephesus in that
Asian capital. There are so many matters of the church, and beside that he has
a mission to Miletus, and besides that he must go to Colosse, and beside that
the church at Philadelphia and at Smyrna, churches of Asia, need his ministry
so earnestly. And he delays.
These things are
important. These calls are vital. And Timothy goes to Miletus, and he goes to
Smyrna, and he goes to Philadelphia, and he go to Colosse, and he is done
finally with the heavy burdens at Ephesus. And then he makes his way to Troas
to find passage across the sea. Is there a ship that sails to Macedonia, or
better, is there a ship that would sail around Greece into the open
Mediterranean and go to Italy?
And he is greeted there
with the solemn announcement. The day of sailing is past. No more ships for
Italy until April, winter has set in. And no ship sails, not till the Spring.
Heavy hearted the young pastor returns to his charge at Ephesus, and all that
winter, all the dreary days and weeks and months of that winter, he's anxious about
the aged apostle.
How did he fare? How was
that final trial? And he reproaches himself for the delay. When Spring comes,
the first one down at the port at Troas is this young pastor. The first ship
that sails, he's on it. And when it lands at Brundisium, he hastens up Appian
Way. He arrives at the place where Paul has been a prisoner, and he asks if
he's there only to be greeted by a curse from the guard and to be repulsed by
him.
Then I can see Timothy as
he makes his way hastily to the house of Andronicus, or to the house of Claudia,
or to the house of Narcissus, or to the house of Amplias, or to the house of
Julia, and he knocks at the door, and he says, "Where, where, where is the
Apostle Paul. And they look at him and say, “The Apostle Paul? Oh, you! And
you must be Timothy. Don't you know the apostle Paul was beheaded last
December? Every time the jailer put the key in the door of his cell, he
thought you were coming. The last message that he left was for you. He said, ‘Give
my love to my boy in the ministry. Remember me to my son, Timothy. Tell him to
be true to the faith.’”
Come before winter. Oh,
just to think of it is a heartache and a heart break and yet, I do not think
that there is any incident in human life that more sorrowfully recurs, and
recurs, and recurs than just that possibility. And it's too late. And we've
let the opportunity slip through our fingers. And it's too late. And we
should have done it then, and we ought to do it now, but at some more
convenient time, we are busy, we have tasks, there are responsibilities, we are
engrossed, and the day passes, and the winter comes. Tomorrow is too late.
And Jesus came to His sleeping disciples, and
after the third time said, "Sleep on now and take your rest." Why,
the great opportunity to watch by the Savior was forever gone. Sleep on now
and take your rest.
James, one of the three,
was the first to meet a martyr's death, of the twelve, James. John, the
second of the three, knew what it was to suffer for the Lord on lonely Patmos,
and Peter gave his life crucified. But never again did those disciples have
opportunity to watch in the hour of agony and Gethsemane of our Savior. Sleep
on now and take your rest.
“What? What? You mean he
is gone? Why, it was only yesterday that I saw him at the corner of Ervay and
Commerce streets. And you say he is gone? I, I cannot believe it. I can't
realize it.” The fleeting of time, the passing of days; “Come before winter.” “Behold
now is the accepted time; behold now is the day of salvation [2 Corinthians 6:2]. Today, if you hear His
voice, harden not your heart” [Psalm 95:7-8].
“Come before winter. Do thy diligence. Come before winter.”
May I make a few suggests
why the urgency and the immediacy of the appeal of the Holy Spirit of God? One,
because of the uncertainty of life; in the last interview between David and
Jonathan, David said to his best loved friend, "Jonathan, as thy soul
liveth, there is but a step between me and death." All of us have those
experiences.
My best friend in Baylor
was a year ahead of me. We were always together there. And when he was
graduated, he entered the employment of a great oil company and was with the
company in Oklahoma. We were boys reared in the far northwestern part of the Panhandle
of Texas. And in school coming from the same place, it sort of bound us
together.
On the summer, in the
summer after he had graduated, he came to Amarillo where I was then and stayed
all night with me. We had a wonderful visit together. I went down with him,
put him on the train, and he went back to his place in Oklahoma. Why, we had
such dreams. I was going to be a pastor and preacher, and he was going to make
a million dollars, he said, and give it to me for the work of the Lord. What
things young fellows can dream of; a million dollars. And he was going to do it
in oil, he said, and he was going to give it to me for me to use in the work of
the Lord.
I never saw him again. When
I went to Oklahoma to be pastor out of the seminary to my first pastorate, I
went to a certain lake in Oklahoma and stood there by the side of that lake. Just
had a little quiet devotional, a remembrance, a solemnity, just to be there, for
that's where he was drowned.
Oh, these things come
before winter! The old rabbi in Talmud said, "Repent the day before you
die." But someone asked the old rabbi, "How shall I know when the
day comes before I die?" And the rabbi replied, "Then repent today;
the uncertainty of life."
Again the changing of the
disposition of the heart; why, I suppose every minister world without end could
speak of the times when men have almost come to Christ, almost given their
hearts to Jesus and then never be moved toward God again. Stand there while
the invitation hymn is being sung and the tears roll off their cheeks like
light showers of rain, grasp the pew in front of them. Tremble, moved under the
powerful conviction of the Holy Spirit of God and then never weep again. Never
tremble again, their hearts have turned to stone, their souls to iron.
If the bricks in these
walls and their stones could cry out and the beams of this great house
answered, how many stories could it tell of men who were almost persuaded and
said, "No, not now; some other time; some other day; some more convenient
season?” But the heart turns to stone, and the soul to iron, and the life to
brass, and they are never ever moved again!
Come before winter,
before the snow falls on the upland; before the meadow brook is frozen with
ice. Come before the heart turns to marble and desire fails. Come before life
is over. Come before winter. I think the immediacy and the urgency of that
appeal is marked by the passing day of grace. Today, this moment, now, and
tomorrow forever, forever drawn, taken away. “My Spirit,” says God, “shall not
always strive with men.” And Esau found no place for repentance though he
sought it carefully with tears. He that sins against the Holy Spirit sins an
eternal sin.
There is a time, I know
not when, a place, I know not where, that marks the destiny of men to glory or
despair. There is a line by us unseen that crosses every path; the hidden
boundary between God's patience and God's wrath. And God Himself shut the
door. And the antediluvians cried, beat on that ark and called the name of
Noah, but God shut that door! And the five foolish virgins knocked at the door
saying, open, open, but God shut that door. I could not enter into the
mysteries of the human soul. I just know that there is a day for a man to be
saved. There is a time for a man to give his life to God.
When the day is past and
the time is gone, he never ever responds. I cannot enter into its mystery, and
it is not for me to say. I just behold it in sorrow, in tears, in heartache.
Come before winter.
This last observation;
come before winter for these generations themselves pass away so rapidly, so
speedily. If we don't come before winter, we never come at all. And if we don't
do it now, it is never done for the generation soon passes away.
May I speak of it with
regard to our little children. What we're going to do for these little
children, we must do now. Whatever we may plan and pray to do for children of
other generations and of other days, what we do for these children must be done
now! Whatever we may decide to do and plan to do for these teenagers of
another day, of another generation, what we do for these teenagers now, we must
do immediately! They grow up to manhood and womanhood tomorrow, in a day, in a
fleeting shadow and they are gone. What we do for them, we must do now!
One of the most dramatic
of all of the deacons' meetings I ever attended was in my pastorate before
coming here to Dallas. We were trying, I was trying to get the people to enter
into a program ministering to our young people and especially the teenagers. And
I was having great difficulty. It was hard. There was a spirit of reluctance,
and lack of faith, and withdrawing, and it was difficult.
And we finally announced
a meeting at which it would be finally decided, and the leader of the
opposition was a very difficult man, for me to get him to come along, come
along, come along. And he was a wonderful man, and a fine man, but a difficult
man for me. So I just asked God and prayed to the Lord, "O God, remember
us, and to help us in that meeting."
And the meeting came, and
my heart was so heavy, and my spirit so low. I just felt the cause was lost. It
hardly was worth any while that I make the appeal and press for the program. Oh,
how a little faith, how easily discouraged. If we would just ask God to
whisper the word; one syllable, one sentence, one word from the Holy Spirit of
God can change what a thousand sermons could never change, what a thousand
appeals from the pastor could never bring to pass. That man stood up at that
critical juncture, that all important moment, that man stood up and made a
little quiet appeal. And it was this, he said, “My brethren, as you know, I
have been against this program. It involves a great deal of money, and we are
just now seeing our way out of a heavy debt. I have been against this
program. But,”—he added—“these few days, I have been praying, and I have been
thinking. And it came with great force to my own heart, in my own family, my
wife and I have one teenage daughter. And she is growing up so rapidly. What
we do for my girl, we must do now! For tomorrow, it is all over with my child,
my girl, my daughter. What we do, we must do now for these teenagers and these
young people. Tomorrow they're gone. Then addressing the chairman, he said,
"Mr. Chairman, I make the motion we enter the program; we build the
building; we minister to these young people."
Oh, that man saw a truth
that all of us need to remember. You may minister to other children, but if
any ministry is for these, it must be done now! We may try to shape the lives
and mold the lives in our planning and in our vision for other young people,
but what is done for these we now have, must be done now! They are grown and
gone tomorrow. And that same great truth applies in this generation. We may
lay plans and programs to win other generations to Christ, but if these are
won, our generation, it must be done now. It must be done today.
Deeply this came to me as
I thought of this Lottie Moon week of prayer for foreign missions. I copied
out of an old hymn book a song that we're all familiar with. Reverend Matti
Martin the missionary in Africa said to a teacher who had come from a distant
village asking for a teacher that would go to his village and tell them about
the Lord, had the heartbreaking reply from the missionary, "You must
wait." And the African cried, "Oh, teacher, how long? How long must
be we wait?" And then this famous song.
Long have we sought
eternal life.
Years have we waited In
sin and strife,
In darkness groped, Sad
miseries made.
How long, how long must
we wait?
You now the love of God
manifold.
Ages have brought you His
grace untold,
Peace any hope no Fear
of fate,
How long, how long must
we wait?
The aged faint And long
for the friend,
Dark shadows gathering
bring the end.
Fades now the light, Tis
growing late,
How long, how long must
we wait?
[author unknown]
Come. Come. The whole
mission world repeats the refrain, come. Come before winter. Tomorrow is too
late. Do thy diligence to come before winter. Oh, how solemn these thoughts! How
soul searching, our lives, Lord, what ought I to do? What should I do?
That invitation, this
appeal, this call, this work, this opportunity, this wide open door, Lord, help
me do it now for tomorrow is too late. Help us, O Lord, as a people to do it
now for tomorrow is too late. Is there a soul to be won? Win it now. Is
there a life to be touched? Visit now. Is there a task God hath called us to
do? Do it now, before winter, for tomorrow is too late.
While we sing this appeal,
does the Lord bid you come this morning? Make it now, make it now. Give your
heart to Jesus, make it now. Put your life in the fellowship of this precious
church, come now. Never in the Bible will you ever read where the Holy Spirit
says, "Tomorrow, some other day, some other time, some more convenient
season." Always God says, now, today, this hour. In this balcony round,
down those stairwells at the back, at the front, come. In this throng of
people, on this lower floor into the aisle, down to the front, come.
At this 8:15 service, six
came down that aisle by baptism, by letter. In this morning's hour, while we
pray, while we wait, while we sing, if God bids you here, if the Spirit of the
Lord whispers, make it now. Come, give you hand to the pastor, “I give my
heart to God, preacher.” Or, “Today we are putting our lives in the fellowship
of the church,” make it now, come now, while we stand and while we sing.