THE
GREAT SEPARATION: THE EARTH WITHOUT A CHRISTIAN
Dr.
W. A. Criswell
1
Thessalonians 4:16-18
1-19-58
10:50 a.m.
You are listening to the services
of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the morning
message entitled The Great Separation: The Earth Without a Christian.
In our preaching through the Bible, we have come to one of the tremendously
great eschatological discourses, an apocalypse, a little brief passage, but so
filled with meaning, written for the comfort of God’s people. I have spoken
twice from the passage, on the comfort, what it means to God’s people. The
sermon this morning is a corollary. It is a deduction. It is not mentioned in
this passage, it is not referred to; but it is so terribly, so awfully true.
Now, the passage is in the fourth chapter of the first Thessalonian letter; and
it concerns the beloved dead in Christ:
That we sorrow not, even as others
who have no hope.
For if we believe that Jesus died
and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus, will God bring with
Him.
For this we say unto you by the
word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain under the coming of the
Lord, shall not precede them which are asleep;
For the Lord Himself shall descend
from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, with the 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.
Wherefore, comfort one another
with these words.
[1 Thessalonians 4:13-18]
Isn’t it a strange thing throughout
this Book, what is for life and for comfort has also in it what is for death
and damnation? The two go together, and there is no escaping. Paul one time
wrote in the second chapter of the second Corinthian letter, “For we, preaching
the gospel of Christ, we are the saver of death unto death, to those who do not
believe; and the saver of life unto life, to those who are believing.” [2 Corinthians 2:16] The same gospel message
that saves shall also condemn others who refuse it, repudiate it. That pillar
of fire by night, and of cloud by day, was a strength and a help and a sign of
the presence of Jehovah God to His people; but to the Egyptians it was dark and
foreboding and a spoke of judgment and of death and of damnation. So, as I
read this passage here, to comfort God’s people, “Our dead in Christ shall rise
first,” they shall see the Lord clothed in His likeness and filled with His fullness,
“and we who are alive and remain at that coming shall be caught up with them to
meet our Lord in the air;” and in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, we
shall be immortalized, glorified, transfigured; and all of God’s sainted dead,
and all of God’s sainted and forgiven and justified believers in Christ shall
be taken out of the world and shall meet the Lord in the air. “Wherefore
comfort one another with these words;” but what is comfort to us, hope for us,
life and light and glory for us, oh, think of these who abide and remain; the
great separation, and the earth without a Christian; all of God’s people taken
away.
Of that, our Lord spake most and
most solemnly; throughout the whole revelation of the Word of God, you will
find that separation depicted. For example, in the passage that we read this
morning out of the great Sermon on the Mount, the Lord said, “Not everyone that
saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven. Many will
say unto me that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name?” false
preachers filling the pulpits, “and in thy name have cast out devils?” They
say they worked miracles in His name; “and in thy name done many wonderful
works? Then will I profess unto them, I never knew you, depart from me, ye
that work iniquity;” [Matthew 7:22, 23] the
great separation. Another instance from the lips of our Savior, in the
parabolic chapter, the thirteenth of Matthew:
The kingdom of heaven is like unto
a net cast into the sea, gathered of every kind,
Which, when it was full was drawn
to shore; the good placed in vessels, the bad cast away;
So shall it be at the end of the
world. The angels shall come forth and sever the wicked from the just,
And shall cast them into the
furnace of fire, of wailing and gnashing of teeth;
[Matthew 13:47-50]
The Great Separation.
Here again, in the lips of our
Lord, in the thirteenth of Luke:
Strive to enter in at the straight
gate, for many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in shall not be able.
When once the master of the house
is risen up and has shut to the door and ye begin to stand without and knock on
the door saying, Lord, Lord, open, open unto us. He shall answer and say, I
know you not whence ye are.
Then shall ye begin to say, We’ve
eaten and drunk in thy presence and thou has taught in our streets.
But he shall say, I tell you I
know you not, depart from me;
[Luke 13:24-27]
The Great Separation. In the same
Gospel of Luke, from the lips of our Lord,
I tell you, in that night, there
shall be two men in one bed, one shall be taken and the other left;
Two women shall be grinding
together, the one shall be taken and the other left.
Two men shall be in the field, the
one shall be taken and the other left;”
[Luke 17:34-36]
The Great Separation.
In this day, this age, we have an
opportunity to believe in Jesus; and God calls upon men everywhere to profess
their faith in the Lord Jesus. There are professors of faith in Christ who
give every evidence of being real and genuine and acceptable to God. There are
professors in the name of Christ, who give no evidence of being acceptable to
God; they give no evidence of being genuinely saved or converted. And there is
coming a time when God shall separate the two. When He comes for His own, when
the dead are raised from the dust of the ground, and when His living believers
are transfigured and immortalized, and they who are not real, who have not been
saved, who are not regenerated, they with the world of iniquity, shall be left
behind; the great, great separation.
May I speak of those things in that
order? First, this day and age of grace and opportunity, the door into the
Kingdom of God, into heaven, that the Lord hath left ajar for us; Paul says,
“This dispensation of grace,” this oikonomia. You could translate it
“an administration;” translated here “a dispensation.” An administration, a
dispensation is an age, is an era in which God deals with the human race in
certain covenant ways. For example, holding my Bible here I have here an old
covenant and a new covenant, an old dispensation and a new dispensation.
When I look at that old covenant,
there I see different ways that God hath wrought with men: in the Garden of Eden, in the days and age of innocence, before the flood in the antediluvian age, in the days
of the patriarchs, and under the Mosaic covenant. Then when I turn to the new
day, an age and grace, there is this great opportunity: the preaching of the
gospel of the saving Son of God to all men everywhere. Then beyond there is an
age, an administration, an oikonomia, a dispensation and a millennial
kingdom when we shall see God visible and the kingdom shall come. Then beyond
that, the ages of the ages, the eternity of the eternities; after Satan is
loosed for a season and the Great White Throne Judgment, and the judgment of
the wicked dead, and the renovated heavens and earth, and the new Jerusalem,
and the city of God forever with the Lord. This age, this day, this hour in
which we live is a certain set period of time known to God; it began at a
certain time, it shall end at a certain time.
And we know how those beginnings
and endings are; may not know the time, may not know the season, may not know
the length, but God hath revealed to us how they begin and how they close.
This age began secretly, quietly; this day of grace, this day of the church,
this day of the Holy Spirit, this day of the opportunity of the preaching of
the gospel, this day when we can be saved by looking to Jesus, it began
secretly. It began in the womb of a virgin named Mary. It began in the quiet
resurrection of our Lord, and His breathing upon the disciples, “Receive ye the
breath, the spirit, the ruach, the pneuma of God.”
Then it began openly and publicly
at Pentecost, when every nation under the sun heard the announcement of the
gospel of the Son of God in his own mother language. Now, it shall end in that
same way, this day of grace, this day of the church, this day of an opportunity
to trust in Jesus shall end first, secretly, quietly; like the stealth of a
thief; the coming of the Lord for His saints, any day, any moment, any time,
any hour, caught up to be with the Lord in the air. And then it shall end
openly and publicly, like the vivid lightening across the bosom of the sky, the
Lord shall come visibly, openly, triumphantly to be glorified with His saints.
In that space in between, however long, is our day of grace.
There are those who accept the Lord
in His proffered mercies. There are those who believe in Jesus and they give
every evidence of being really saved and acceptable unto God. Anybody can say,
“I don’t believe.” Anybody can refuse. It takes no learning. It takes no
commitment. It takes no scholarship. It takes no praying. It takes no
godliness. It takes no repentance. It takes nothing at all to be an
unbeliever; it is our natural state.
But to believe, to accept Jesus as
Savior, is to have the seal of the elective call and purpose of God. These are
the children of God. They open their hearts to the appeal of the Spirit. They
openly, publicly, gladly announce their faith in the Lord Jesus. They stand
and confess Him with their mouths. “Faith cometh by hearing and hearing the
word of God;” [Romans 10:17] They love
the Word of God: the written word; the incarnate Word, our Savior in heaven;
and the spoken, preached word as His servant stands to proclaim the mercies and
love of God. And they love the house of the Lord; glad when the neighbor says,
“Let’s go up to the house of the Lord, our feet shall stand within its gates.”
[Psalm 122:1] They love the fellowship
and the communion of the saints. These are the people of Christ; these are of
my own, these are my brethren and my sisters. And they love the lost;
missions, the lost across the sea, missions, the preaching of the gospel in the
homeland, missions, the striving after the souls of men who speak our language,
who breathe our air and who live in our cities.
And when appeal is made and they
come to Christ, to a real genuine converted Christian there’s joy in his soul
and there’s gladness in his heart. I have seen godly men and women when the
tears fall unbidden from their faces, just looking upon the sight of men and
women coming to Christ; just the sight of it, and the knowledge of the meaning
of it, the washing away of sin in the blood of the Lamb, the writing of the
name in the Book of Life and the hope we have in Heaven moves the soul of the
child of God.
There is a profession of faith that
has no evidence of being true and genuine and acceptable to God; none at all,
none at all. They may be religious, but they’re not spiritual. Their churches
are places to marry the young and to bury the dead; and if they are attended it
is a matter of respectability. There are these in every congregation, whose
names are on the church roll, who give no evidence of being born again.
I am thinking of a fine couple who
came to our city from another great city. He was an officer in his church
there; came to Dallas in affluence now, in prosperity, he moves in a glittering
circle. But wealth, and affluence, and success has turned his head and in contumacious
pride he passes by his church, and he passes by his Lord, and he passes by the
work of the kingdom of Christ. Oh, how could he if he were a saved man?
I have never yet been able to understand
why because a man was affluent he felt, “I can’t love God anymore, and don’t
want to.” I don’t understand; and the only explanation I can give for it is
this: that when a man is not really saved, when he’s not really genuine,
whether he’s poor or whether he’s rich, the fortunes of life will take him away
like the wind blows the chaff. But if a man is saved, if he’s regenerated, if
he loves God, if there’s a new heart and a new life implanted in his soul,
whether he had a billion times a billion dollars, or whether he languished in
hunger and thirst, it would be just the same; living with the Lord, dying with
the Lord, in health with the Lord, in infirmity with the Lord, in poverty with
the Lord, in affluence with the Lord, whether to live or to die, whether to be
there or here, a big house or a little one, known or unknown, forever with the
Lord. It’s going to be my next sermon, please God, Forever With the Lord.
But I continue this message.
Someday, there’s going to be a
great separation. Right now, God says, “Leave them alone, leave them alone.”
The tares and the wheat, side by side, it’s not for us to do the separating;
that’s a prerogative of Heaven that belongs to the omnipotence and omniscience
of God. “Leave them alone, side by side; the tares and the wheat,” the good
and the bad all together in the net, the two working in the field, the two
sleeping in the bed, the two grinding at the meal, side by side; but someday,
someday, some immediate day, some imminent day, some day known to God there
shall be that moment, that moment, oh, that moment, that second in the
twinkling of an eye, there shall be the catching away, the lifting up to heaven,
there shall be the rapture, the translation, the immortalization of God’s
beloved in this earth, those who place their trust in Him and that is the
moment of the great separation. Behind, left behind, all the unregenerate,
false professions, false teachers, false systems of Christianity, false
preachers of the gospel, unbelievers, a world of darkness and death and
blasphemy; the world without a Christian, every believer in heaven; they that
are dead resurrected to a life of glory, they who have abode and remained,
translated in a moment in the second, in the twinkling of an eye, and the world
without a Christian.
What shall it be like, that awful
day? Jesus tells us; listen to Him who alone could know: “As it was in the
days of Noah, so shall it be in the days of the Son of Man: they did eat, they
drank, they married, they were given in marriage until the day that Noah
entered in to the ark; and the flood came and destroyed them all. It’ll be,”
says Jesus, “like that.” [Matthew 24:36-39]
When Noah and his family entered the ark and God shut the door, there was not a
living righteous man in the earth. Outside that door, blasphemy, and iniquity,
and hypocrisy, and unregenerate, and the darkness of judgment and of death; the
great separation: not a righteous man, not a justified man, not a saved man,
not a forgiven in the earth; all taken away, and God, God shut the door. Think
of this earth without a Christian; without a believing witness, caught up with
the Lord as it was in the days of Noah; the great separation.
There shall come a night of such
wild affright, as none besides shall know,
When the heavens shake and the
wide earth quake, in her last and
deepest woe.
O lost one, give ear while the
saints are near, soon must the tie be riven,
And men side by side shall God’s
hand divide, as far as Hell’s depths are from heaven.
Some husband whose head was laid
on his bed, throbbing with mad excess,
Shall awake from his dream by the
lightning’s gleam, alone in his last distress.
For the patient wife, who through
each day’s light watched and wept for his soul,
Is taken away, and no more shall
pray, for the judgments themselves do roll.
The children of day, summoned
away; left are the children of night
Sealed in their doom, there’s no
more room; filled are the mansions of light.
The great separation.
Dear people, before I close I have
time just for a moment, to speak of a thing that the Bible says much about, and
as God shall help your stuttering pastor, he shall speak of these things as we
come to them and read them in the Word of God. The earth without a Christian,
what then, what them? The Bible calls it, “the great tribulation”. The Bible
calls it “the distress of nations;” the Bible calls it “the time of Jacob’s
trouble;” oh the darkness of those days. Jesus said, “Pray that ye may escape
from the tribulation of those days;” [Luke
21:36] those days, the earth without a Christian.
Let me comment. Any time one is
persuaded that the race left to itself can work out its own problems and
troubles by science and philosophy and speculation, any time he so thinks, oh,
look at this world when God’s hand is withdrawn and God’s people are taken
away; it is a world of blasphemy, and iniquity, and violence, and bloodshed.
As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be in those terrible days; and
nation shall arm to the four quarters of the globe and lift up sword against
nation; and they shall ride, the four horseman of the apocalypse, the white
horseman conquering in the conqueror, the red horseman of war and of blood, the
black horseman of starvation and famine, and the fourth horseman pale and of
death. The world without a Christian; the judgment of God poured out, the
seals broken, and the trumpets sounding, and the viles of wrath poured out. O
God, and who is able for these things. Our refuge is in Christ, our hope is in
Him.
Lord, I am not even able in the
little life that I live, and the inevitable death that I face, I need Thee O
Son of God. Stand by me in that hour of need; be my Savior in that day of
judgment. Be my advocate at the judgment bar of God; O Lord, how could I do
without Thee? That’s what it is to be a Christian, to lean upon Jesus. O Son
of God, who came to die for my sins, that I might stand without fault and
without blemish, to be presented unto God in that great and final hour, O Lord,
remember me, remember, me.
The prayer of every converted child
of God is the prayer of the thief dying on the cross: “Lord when Thou comest
into thy kingdom, don’t forget me; remember me.” [Luke
23:42] Sleeping in the dust of the ground, or busy at the tasks of this
life when He cometh, “Lord, Lord, remember me.”
And while we sing our song of
appeal this morning, and the Spirit is nigh, and the door is ajar, and Jesus
stands with hands outstretched, would you come in faith to Him? “Here I am,
Lord Jesus, here I come. Pastor I give you my hand, my heart I give to God.”
Coming by faith, giving your life to Jesus, trusting Him; or putting your life
in the fellowship of the church; a family you, or one somebody you, while we
make appeal, would you come? Make it now, while we stand and while we sing.