WINE
OR WATER?
Dr.
W. A. Criswell
Daniel
1:3-12
2-18-68
10:50 a.m.
On the radio and on television, you
are sharing the services of the First Baptist Church of Dallas. This is the
pastor bringing the message once again, as so many times in these Sundays past,
and so many times in God’s grace in the Sundays future. I am preaching from
the Book of Daniel, through the Book of Daniel. The sermon next Sunday will be
from the second chapter of the prophecy in Daniel. This is the one of the
great, tremendous, meaningful, significant chapters in all literature, and
certainly in the Word of God. It describes the sweep of history until the
consummation of the age. And next Sunday morning at this time, the sermon will
be on the second chapter of the Book of Daniel. Now, the message today is
taken out of the first chapter of the Book of Daniel, and it is entitled Wine
or Water?
Reading in the Book of Daniel
beginning at the third verse, where the king of Babylon said to the prince of
his eunuchs that he was to bring of the king’s seed, of the royal household of Judah, gifted, talented, well-formed, beautiful, handsome young men. And they are to be
taught the wisdom, and the lore, and the learning of the Chaldeans. And the
king appointed them a daily portion of the king’s meat and of the wine which he
drank. “But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with
the king’s meat nor with the wine which he drank.” And he said, “Let them give
us pulse to eat and water to drink.” [Daniel
1:8,12]
Wine or Water? I am not speaking
from God’s Word on moderation. I don’t invent this message; I am but a voice,
but an echo. I just preach what I read in the Bible, that’s all. I am not
preaching on moderation. I am delivering God’s message from this Book. And it
is one of abstention. It is not wine and water—it is wine or water. Daniel
did not purpose in his heart that, “I will be very moderate in my eating of the
king’s meat; I will not eat so much. I will not be such a glutton as to make
myself sick.” Daniel did not purpose in his heart that he would be moderate in
his drinking. That he would not drink so much of the king’s wine as to make
himself unable to walk straight. “Daniel purposed in his heart that he would
not defile himself with ... the wine which the king drank.” And he asked that
he might have pulse to eat and water to drink.
Wine or Water? We’re not talking
about moderation. That’s not in the Book, and I preach what is in the Book.
We’re talking about abstention, total abstinence. “And Daniel purposed in his
heart that he would not defile himself with ... the wine which the king
drank.” And he asked that he might have pulse to eat and water to drink. Wine
or water?
There sat two glasses filled to
the brim,
On an old man’s table, rim to rim.
One was wine and red as blood,
One was water from the crystal
flood.
Said the glass of wine to the
paler brother
As they told their tales the one
to the other.
I can tell of banquets, revel and
mirth
And the proudest and grandest
souls on earth
That fell under my touch as though
struck by blight
Where I am monarch and rule in
might.
From the heads of kings I have
torn the crown,
From the height of fame I have
hurled men down.
I have blasted many and honored
name
I have taken virtue and given shame.
I have made the arm of the driver
fail
And sent the train from the iron
rail.
I have made good ships go down at
sea
And the cries of the lost were
sweet to me.
Ho, Ho! Pale brother, laughed the
glass of wine
Can you boast of deeds as great as
mine?
Said the water glass, I cannot
boast
Of a king dethroned or a murdered
host.
But I can tell of a heart once sad
By my crystal drops made bright
and glad.
Of thirst I’ve quenched and brows
I’ve laved
Of hands I’ve cooled and souls
I’ve saved.
I have slept in the sunshine and
dropped from the sky
And everywhere gladdened the
landscape and I.
I have eased the hot forehead of
fever and pain
I have made parched meadows grow
fertile with grain.
I can tell of a powerful wheel of
the mill
That ground out the flour and
turned at my will.
I can tell of manhood debased by
you
That I have lifted and crowned
anew.
I cheer, I heal, I strengthen and
aid,
I gladden the heart of men and
maid.
I set the chained wine captive
free,
And all are better for knowing me.
These are the tales they told each
other
The glass of wine and his paler
brother
As they sat together filled to the
brim
On the old man’s table rim to rim.
[“The Two Glasses,” from Kingdom of Love and How Salvator Won; Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 1902]
Wine or water? I am not speaking
of moderation. That’s not in my Book. I’m speaking of total abstinence.
First, these young men—Daniel and Hananiah and Mishael and Azariah—these young
men were away from home. They were in a strange land. They were away from father
and mother, family and friends. Would not that have been in itself at least an
inducement to take the cup? Again, they were courtiers. They were in the
palace of the king, and why be strange, or peculiar? Why not enter into the
customs of the land and of the people? They all drank like Americans! When I am
seated on a plane, I will look up and down. There are many times when I’m the
only one that doesn’t drink. It is the custom, it belongs. You’re a courtier
in the king’s palace. And in Babylon, as in America, you’re supposed to
drink. Why shouldn’t you?
Again, the political preferment,
the success, their advancement, their career depended on their drinking. The
prince of the eunuchs said to the young men himself, “If you do not drink the
king’s wine, I will lose my head. It is the acceptable thing, you are to
drink.” And of course, it was offered by the hand of the king. Who could
refuse? There is many a man who would refuse a glass of liquor from the hand
of an inferior. There is many a man who would refuse a glass of liquor pushed
out to him by some beefy, stupid, dull bartender over the bar. But when that
liquor is offered by the hand of a successful executive, and especially his
superior, or when that glass is proffered by the dimpled, jeweled hand of a
social queen, you are supposed to drink. And Daniel, and Hananiah, and
Mishael, and Azariah; they were courtiers to the king, they were supposed to
drink. “But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself
with... the wine which the king drank.” And he said: “Give us pulse to eat and
water to drink.” That is the word of the Lord. I did not invent this
passage. Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with
the wine which the king drank, and asked for water. Now that’s an unusual
thing. Daniel looked upon his body as the temple of the Holy Spirit of God and
he was not to defile it with wine offered by the hand of the king. Now, that’s
very unusual; it is unusually unusual. I refuse to drink because it harms my
body, is that reasonable? I’m not speaking of inspiration now. Is that
reasonable?
At the turn of this century, there
came to America one of the great doctors of all time. His name was Dr. Adolph
Lorenz, of Vienna, Austria. Phillip Armour—of the great packinghouse fame in Chicago—Phillip Armour, who headed that family, in his home had a little boy that was born
maimed, crippled. And he gave to Dr. Lorenz the unheard fee of $30,000--that
would be like about $200,000 today. He gave to Dr. Lorenz $30,000 to come over
to America to see if he could help his little crippled boy. Dr. Lorenz came,
and his coming was heralded from one side of this nation to the other. The
American Medical Association was meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana. Some of
the fine doctors of the city of Dallas, attending that medical association
meeting in New Orleans persuaded Dr. Lorenz to come to Dallas. On the
twentieth day of May of 1903, the City of Dallas had a resplendent banquet for
Dr. Lorenz, and the one who made the chief address at that banquet was the
pastor of this First Baptist Church, Dr. George W. Truett. And out of the
address of Dr. Truett, and out of the meeting that night, was born the Baptist
Memorial Sanatorium here in Dallas, which now is called the Baylor University Medical Center.
Upon a day, not that night, but
upon a day in America, Dr. Lorenz was seated at a banquet, and he pushed his
wine glass away. When he did so, his companion at his side asked him, “Are you
a tea-totaler? Are you one of those funny people who doesn’t drink at all?”
And Dr. Lorenz replied, “Yes, I am a tee-totaler, though I am not a temperance
agitator. I am a surgeon. My success depends upon my brains being clear, my
muscles firm, and my nerves steady. No one can take alcoholic liquor without
blunting these physical powers, which must be kept on edge. As a physician I
must not drink.”
I am a pastor. And I visit all the
time people who are sick. I have seen my members ruined, and destroyed, and
forever by drunken doctors. If I had a physician who drank, he would never in
a thousand years be invited to minister to me or mine. I have seen that with
my own eyes. And the physician who drinks does disservice to mankind and is
unworthy of his profession. He needs a steady hand. He needs a clear mind
when he is diagnosing his patients in the question of life or death. No
physician who drinks—who drinks —is worthy of the name. I would not have him,
never! At the time you think that he is sober and well, at that very moment he
may have just come from his cups. You don’t know; you don’t know.
It’s like a pilot with one of these
great planes—one of these great Continental planes—I used to see him often.
And just as often as we saw each other, we got in a discussion over drinking.
And of course, he’s like all Americans, he believed in moderation. I said to
him one week, I said, “You know, you believe in moderation, and I am sure that
when you get in that plane”—I’ve ridden those things at that company he’s with
many, many times—I said, “I’d feel a little better back there in the cabin if I
knew you didn’t drink.”
“Oh,” he scoffed at me, “I never
drink on the job.”
“I know you don’t drink on the job,
but I don’t know but you’d drunk just before you got on the job. I just feel
better sitting in that cabin if you didn’t drink and didn’t believe in it.”
Did you know within a week when we had our last conversation, he took his plane
into the airport at Chicago and hit a sign and killed himself and all of his passengers.
I would just feel a little better
if the physician who ministers to me didn’t drink. And I would feel a little
better if the man who is in the pilot seat didn’t drink. There is no time,
nowhere, as Dr. Lorenz says, when the professional man does not need his finest
acumen and his most splendidly integrated nerves and muscles. Frances
Willard—Mrs. Frances Willard—one time asked Edison, Thomas Alvin Edison, “Why
don’t you drink liquor?” And the great scientist said, “I have a better use
for my brains.” Liquor affects the nervous system; it affects the brain; it
affects the body.
“And Daniel purposed in his heart
that he would not defile himself with the king’s wine,” and said: “Give us
pulse to eat and water to drink.” This is according to the Word of God. In
the twentieth chapter of the Book of Proverbs and the first verse it begins
like this:
Wine is a mocker, strong drink is
raging.
And whosoever is deceived thereby
is not wise.
—and I turn the page—
Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who
hath contentions?
Who hath babblings? Who hath
wounds without cause?
Who hath redness of eyes?
They that tarry long at the wine.
They that go to seek mixed wine.
Look thou not upon the wine when
it is red,
when it giveth its color in the cup.
When it moveth itself.
At the end, it biteth like a
serpent and stingeth like an adder.
[Proverbs 20:1 and Proverbs 23:29-32]
This is corroborated in all
history. In the fifth chapter of the Book of Daniel, we shall read of the
disintegration of the great, brilliant Babylonian Empire in the drunken
debauchery of Belshazzar. In reading the life of Alexander the Great, he died
when he was thirty-three years of age; having conquered the entire civilized
world, he lost his life in a drunken debauchery. The “Iron” Duke of England,
the Duke of Wellington, stopped his army one time marching across the peninsula
and sent his sappers ahead to blow up a vast store of Spanish wine. And it was
that same “Iron” Duke of Wellington at the battle of Waterloo who delivered France from a would-be dictator, Napoleon Bonaparte. And some historians I’ve read have
said; the reason Napoleon lost the battle at Waterloo was because Marshal
Ney—the night before, drank too much of his favorite wine and when he arose the
next morning and when the battle was joined—Marshal Ney’s mind was clouded with
wine.
When the French Government fell in
this last World War II, Marshal Petain said, “France lost the war because her
army was drunk.” And in 1940, the Vichy government officially said the cause
for the moral disintegration of the army of France was alcohol. And it is the
greatest of the four problems that face France. Yet France—and I’ve heard this
from a thousand tourists—yet France is supposed to be pointed out to us as an
ideal paragon nation that has learned to use alcohol moderately. My friend,
eighty percent of all the criminals in France are delivered from their rank of
alcoholics. There is more alcoholism in a nation like France, as it is getting to be in the United States, than any other nation in the world.
John L. Sullivan was the champion
heavyweight boxer of the world—could whip any man alive—he was born with a
tremendous physique, and he developed it. And he was a mighty puncher and
fighter and all the rest that goes with some of those inhumane things that we
love to watch. Well, he was one of those pugilists, and a mighty one; John L.
Sullivan. Well, in his generation, there was a little frail consumptive
looking kid by the name of Jim Corbett, and Jim Corbett watched his food, and
his diet, and exercised, and took care of his body and grew up to manhood.
John L. Sullivan was a tremendous specimen from birth. He had one weakness:
liquor. Jim Corbett was a frail, consumptive lad from birth, but he followed
those rules of health and life. And upon a day, Jim Corbett—think of it, Jim
Corbett—challenged John L. Lewis to a match, a fight for the championship of
the world. And John L. Sullivan—did I say Lewis? Well, he was a great
fighter. Jim Corbett challenged John L. Sullivan to a real match for the
championship of the world, and John L. Sullivan was insulted. And he said,
“With one blow, I’ll mash him flat. I’ll knock him out.” The fight came off
and it raged for an hour. That was before they padded their gloves. And when
the fight was over, John L. Sullivan was on the floor and the championship
passed to Jim Corbett. And John L. Sullivan laid the blame where it belonged,
on liquor, and thereafter went up and down the land speaking to these kids and
teenagers against drinking liquor.
Upon a day, the nation’s number one
football team was playing in the Cotton Bowl, was playing in the Sugar Bowl.
And Baylor University football team, which was down the line; I don’t know how
far down the line, I’m so accustomed to them being down the line, I can’t
remember which down the line this was. But Baylor University’s football team
was going to the Sugar Bowl to play this great-famed world-state university
which was number one in the nation. And both teams hit New Orleans.
Well, Dr. White and his spouse were
there and told his boys from a Baptist school, getting ready to play with all
their hearts and might, but this university team from a state school, they came
and hit town to have a swing at it. And they were up and down Bourbon Street—Bourbon Street, whatever street that street is—drinking and carrying on and
taking in the sights. And the next day, that great state university would take
that little Baptist school down there and mash their noses in the mud, that’s
what they said. It’s amazing what liquor will do. And the next day, when the
game was played, Baylor University pinned their ears to the wall and swept them
off of the field. They didn’t know what hit them and don’t know until this
day.
Liquor: I could not but be
intrigued by a letter that a doctor at Parkland Hospital here in Dallas wrote to the Dallas News. I cut it out, and glued it on this white piece of
paper. Here’s what he writes, the editor of the Dallas News:
Recently, we saw another preview of
hell in the Parkland Hospital emergency room. A woman struck down by a drunken
driver, a college student lying semi-conscious following a head-on collision
with another drunken driver who himself was critically injured. The drunk’s companion
was dead; four other drunks with lacerations and stab wounds waiting to be
treated. Night after night, year after year, the same bloody trail of horror,
major automobile accidents, stabbings, rapes, wife-beatings, the nightly
emergencies treated and released or admitted to the hospital or pronounced dead
on arrival; and almost always the bloody trail is lead by that honored man of
distinction, the weekend drinker—almost always the moderation drinker—not the
alcoholic.
I wonder if there is that much joy
to be gained from the total consumption of all the beers and whiskies ever
made, ever to equal even a small fraction of the innocent suffering, the
damaged bodies, the broken marriages, the discarded children, the total
brutalities and crimes that will inevitably accompany its use. What a quiet
place our emergency room would be if beverage alcohol were ever abolished from
our city!
Signed by the medical doctor, Parkland Hospital, Dallas, Texas.
I’m not talking about some strange,
inspirational thing known but to God, a musterion hid in the secret of the Lord
and revealed in some time. I am talking about what God says that can be a
verified on every page of history, that can be verified down every highway and
street, that can be verified in every hospital in the land. “Well,
preacher”—and we must hasten—”Are there no good uses for alcohol?” Yes. Yes.
The Word of God says yes—there are fine uses for alcohol; one, the thirty-first
chapter of the Book of Proverbs, the words of King Lemuel, the prophecy that
his mother taught him:
What, my son? And what, the son of
my womb?
And what, the son of my vows? ...
It is not for kings, O Lemuel, ...
for kings to drink wine; nor for
princes strong drink:
Lest they drink, and forget the
law,
and pervert the judgment of any of
the afflicted.
Give strong drink unto him that is
ready to perish ...
[Proverbs 31:2, 4-6]
If a man is a condemned criminal,
this mother of Lemuel said it is an act of kindness and charity, before he is
hanged, or impaled, or to be electrocuted, or placed in the gas chamber—this
mother of King Lemuel taught her boy, saying if a man is a condemned criminal
it is a matter of palliation, of help, if liquor can be used as a sedative and
given to them. Evidently, that mother had a compassionate heart and a
compassionate spirit. And seeing condemned men executed, she may have been
like one of those who saw Jesus die, who put on a pole some wine that He might
be stupefied in his suffering, and Jesus refused it. But that’s the spirit of
this dear mother, teaching her boy. For a condemned criminal who faces death,
give him strong drink, that he might somehow be sedated, not have the full
possession of his faculties, as he faces that awful condemnation and
execution. “But, my son,” she said, “wine is not for you, it’s not for a king;
it’s not for a prince. For a king and a prince must have all of his finest
faculties if he would be judge among God’s people.” That’s one use for wine:
if you are going to be executed and face the electric chair, this mother felt
that it would be nice for them to give it to them. That’s what the Book says.
Well, there’s another use for wine
in the Book, in the fifth chapter of 1 Timothy: “Drink a little wine for thy
stomach’s sake, and thine often infirmities.” [1
Timothy 5:23] Timothy was a tea-totaler. He was an abstemious preacher
and he would not touch it—and in that I’m pretty much like him—he wouldn’t
touch it. He would rather get sick, and he would rather suffer every day.
“Thine often infirmities,” he was just sick all the time. He would rather
suffer and be sick than to take liquor. And Paul, writing to his son Timothy,
said, “Timothy, that is an exaggeration beyond all thought or reason. Take a
little wine for thine stomach’s sake, and thine often infirmities.”
So there’s a second use for wine.
There is a medical use for liquor or alcohol. And any pharmacist, any
pharmaceutical company, any physician, any doctor, any anybody who knows
anything about medicine will tell you that one of the basic ingredients of all
medicine is alcohol. It’s the solution in which so many of the healing
properties of chemical formula are dissolved and carried. And all of us are
most familiar with that. Alcohol has a great place in medicine—but alcohol in
itself poisons the body, the nerves, the brain, the muscle, the fiber—and there
is a medical use for alcohol, and all of us recognize it.
“Well, one other thing, Preacher;
what about the use of alcohol for merriment and more mirth? Did not Jesus turn
water into wine? Did He not, for a festive occasion?” Well, the purpose of
that John calls that a semeion, it’s a sign. Filling up the old law, those
Jewish foot tubs in which they bathed their feet when they walked in the house,
filling up the old law and new, bearing to the governor the joy and the
gladness of this beautiful and festive occasion. What was that? What was
that? You don’t have to wonder. The Book says, God always says, He never
leaves us unknowing. He reveals to us. When the governor of the feast took
that water that had been turned into wine by the Savior and tasted it, he said:
“It’s a new drink. I never tasted anything like this in my life. It is
different. It is different.” That’s correct. It was different.
What kind of drink was that—the
fruit of the vine that the governor of the feast drank that day, in the
marriage supper in Cana of Galilee? It was this. In the twenty-sixth chapter
of the Book of Matthew, the Lord said to his apostles, “I will no longer drink henceforth
of this fruit of the vine, until I drink it new with you in My Father’s
kingdom.” [Matthew 26:29] And in the
nineteenth chapter of the Book of Revelation is revealed to us the story of the
marriage supper of the Lamb. What was that that the Lord made in Cana of
Galilee? It was the celestial drink that we shall share together when we sit
down to the table of the Lord at the marriage supper of the Lamb, some glorious
and final day.
“Ah, but preacher, you don’t
understand. They’ll be reeling around up there in heaven! They’ll be drinking
under the table; they’ll be sot!” Do you think that? Do you think that God
made in that cup what it is that makes men stagger? That makes men beasts?
That makes men drunk? It is unthinkable. It is unimaginable. What Jesus made
that day is what He referred to when He said: “Until I drink it new with you in
My Father’s kingdom”—it is that cup that we shall drink at the marriage supper
of the Lamb. That’s what that was, and I don’t care anything else about it.
It is a far cry, what the Lord made, from the liquor industry that waits for
your youngster and mine. How else will they exist? How will they keep those
breweries churning? And how will they keep those distilleries going, if they
do not teach our children to drink? They have to, to exist.
So they’re out there, deployed over
this nation, waiting for our little boy to come along so they can teach him to
drink. And they’re out there, deployed over the states of the union, waiting
for your little boy and your little girl that they might teach them to drink.
Otherwise, they don’t exist. Otherwise, they lose money. They have to do it.
Every generation of children, they must take them and teach them to drink. And
when you go out into the world—and you’ll be forced out into the world—when you
do, you’re going to see it everywhere. It will be on the airplane, it will be
in the restaurant, it will be in the home, it will be at the festive board, it
will be everywhere:
You’re starting, my boy, on life’s
journey.
Along the grand highway of life,
You’ll meet with a thousand
temptations,
Each city with evil it’s rife.
This world is a stage of
excitement,
There’s danger wherever you go.
But if you’re tempted in weakness,
Have courage, my boy, to say “no.”
Be careful in choosing companions.
Seek only the brave and the true.
Stand by your friends when in
trial,
Never changing the old for the
new.
But when by false friends you are
tempted
To taste of the wine cup to know,
With firmness, with patience and
kindness,
Have courage, my boy, to say “no.”
[“Courage to say,’No’; hymn, author unknown]
Do it! Do it, “Have courage, my
boy, to say ‘no.’”
“And
Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with the king’s
wine which he drank and he said: Give me pulse to eat and water to drink.” [Daniel 1:8]
You have to go a long way back in
history to find a man like that, I know. Through the centuries and the
thousands of years, back all the way to the Babylonian Empire, but it was worth
it. Just to know that a man like that once lived is a crowning tribute to
mankind and manhood.
Now, I want to close, but let me
take one other thing: Young fellow, the world and the devil persuade you that
you have to do this, that’s a lie and a vicious one. At the 8:15 o’clock
service this morning, as I was closing, there came to me a man who belongs to
this church, and said, “Pastor, I want to just reconsecrate and recommit my
life to the Lord God.”
And I said, “Who is this woman
standing right there?”
He turned around, he didn’t know
she was there. He said, “This is my wife.”
Well, I said, “Why have you come?”
And he said, “I am the manager of a
great, large theater chain in Texas.”
And he said, “I had given myself
over to moderate drinking; I had just decided that it was all right to be a
moderate drinker.”
“But,” he said, “After listening to
you this morning, I just want to recommit my life to the Lord. I will not do
it.”
And his dear wife said, and by his
side, “I commit my life to the Lord, we will not do it.”
And as we knelt, you know what that
man said to me?
He said, “You know, my boss is a
drinker. But he said to me one day, ‘I drink, I know, but I am glad to have a
man who runs my business who doesn’t drink.’”
We got down on our knees there this
morning and asked God to give us victories in the business; whatever lies
ahead.
The whole world, I think,
underneath is like that. On the surface, “Let’s drink! Let’s be merry! Let’s
raise our glasses! Let’s roast and toast all of the happy, merry, good things
in life.”
But way down underneath—God made us
that way—way down underneath, there’s not a business executive in the world
that doesn’t somehow feel gladder in heart, and happier in spirit, if he knows
that the man who’s running his shop, and heads his departments, and keeps these
wheels rolling, is a man who doesn’t drink.
My brother, it will bless your
family, it will bless your home, it will bless your children, it will bless
your business, it will bless your life, if you will not drink. You are free;
you can do as you please. There is no power in my hands of excommunication;
there is no inclination on the part of the churches to hurt or to destroy. You
are free to do as you please. I just pray that you will please to do a
wonderful thing; by your house, by your family, by your children, by your work,
by the Lord, choose not to drink. “And Daniel purposed in his heart not to
defile himself with the kind’s wine which he drank, and he said, ‘Give us pulse
to eat and water to drink.’” God will bless you as He blessed Daniel, as He’ll
bless any man who gives himself like that to the dear Lord.
Now we are going to stand and sing
our hymn of appeal. And while we sing it, a couple you, a family you, one
somebody you, to give himself to Jesus, come and stand by me. To put your life
in the fellowship and circle of this dear church, come and stand by me.
“Pastor, this is my wife, these are our children, all of us are coming today,”
or just you, in the balcony ‘round, on this lower floor, as God shall say the
words, shall make appeal. Do it now, do it this morning. Decide now, and on
this first note of this first stanza, when you stand up, stand up coming; down
one of these stairwells, front and back; into the aisle, to the front.
Make it now, do it now, while we
stand and while we sing.