THAT THEY MIGHT BE SAVED
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Romans 10:1-13
7:30 p.m. 1-29-67
On the
radio, on WRR, the radio for the city of Dallas, you’re sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas,
and this is the pastor bringing the evening message. I would like to say a
word about how you don’t notice things, and I don’t know why I don’t notice
things. This past week I preached through the State Evangelistic Conference in
Georgia. It was held in the city of Macon and while I was there I was breaking bread with an
evangelistic team. And the singer of that team said to me, “Did you know that
our pianist, who used to be with us in this evangelistic work, did you know
that he’s on your staff?”
Now this man is from South
Carolina and now in Georgia. I said, “What, you mean a member of your evangelistic
staff is now a staff member of our church and he was your pianist?” He said, “Why yes.” But I said, “You’re
mistaken you got the wrong preacher, the wrong church, and the wrong staff.
There’s nobody on my staff that used to be a piano player for an evangelistic
team.”
Well
he said, “You’re the one that’s mistaken.” Well I said, “What is his name?”
Well he said,
“His name is Perry Taylor.” I said, “Perry Taylor? Why I didn’t know he could
even play the piano!”
So when
I sat down here tonight and looked over there, the marvelously accomplished
accompanist of all of this beautiful program tonight is none other than Perry
Taylor his own self. Has he done that before Leroy? “Not here.” Not here,
well that’s the reason I didn’t notice it! No wonder, no wonder. Well I’m a
better observer than I thought I was. Well Perry so many people love you. Oh,
you done a great work for Jesus for so long, and we’re so happy to have you
with Leroy to help us in this glorious ministry of singing.
I love
the music, I love the Levites. I love this part of the program. I just love
everything about the house of the Lord. And I love this text and this passage
I’m going to preach on tonight. It’s in the tenth chapter of the Book of
Romans, the first thirteen verses. I like it because it is so very plain; it
is so very simple. As I was preparing for these series of sermons that we’re
in now, one of the things that I shall do the twelfth of March is to hold an
evangelistic service for Millie Kahn’s division, and then the fathers and
mothers of these juniors. And in preparation for that holy hour of appeal, I
shall use this text and this passage of Scripture. You don’t ever wear it out;
you don’t ever get all of the riches; you don’t ever dip out the ocean. And
this glorious passage, again and again, it brings new meaning and new thought,
new blessing and I pray it shall be so again tonight. Now let’s read it out
loud. If on the radio you share this service, get your Bible. Read it with
us, the first thirteen verses of the tenth chapter of Romans. Now all of us
together.
Brethren,
my heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is, that they might be saved. For I
bear them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge. For
they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their
own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth.
For Moses describeth the righteousness which is of the law, That the man
which doeth those things shall live by them. But the righteousness which
is of faith speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend
into heaven? (that is, to bring Christ down from above:) Or, Who
shall descend into the deep? (that is, to bring up Christ again from the dead.)
But what saith it? The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart:
that is, the word of faith, which we preach; That if thou shalt confess with thy
mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised Him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto
righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. For the
scripture saith, Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed. For there is
no difference between the Jew and the Greek: for the same Lord over all is rich
unto all that call upon Him.
For
whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
It’s
that plain, and it is that simple. This is the middle chapter—nine, ten, and
eleven—this is the middle chapter in Paul’s discussion of the problem of Israel’s unbelief. These people, the chosen family of God
through all of the years of the years of God’s guidance and leadership, they
alone receive the oracles of heaven. The law was given to Israel and with all of their suffering for that revelation and
the persecutions that they endured for the true God—yet when the Messiah came,
when the Lord came, they rejected Him, they crucified Him. “He came unto His
own and his own received Him not.” [John 1:11].
And
in discussing the problem of Israel’s unbelief, in the middle of that
discussion is this chapter. And as he speaks of Israel’s
rejection of the Lord, of their zealousness for God and of their zealousness
for the law but of their un-understanding of the veil that was over their
hearts. He quotes from the Law of Moses, then he writes the simplest of all of
the sentences on how specifically one can be saved. Now that’s the passage we
just read. So he says, “…that my heart’s desire and prayer to God for my
people is that they might be saved,” which is the title of the sermon tonight, That
They Might Be Saved.
Then
he continues, “For I bear them record that they have a zeal for God, but not
according to knowledge.” That is so true; look at your synagogue and the
rabbi. Look at the Talmud which is an endless, almost endless explanation of
an explanation of an explanation of the law. A zeal for God, but not according
to knowledge; now, I see that today. Among our people speaking our language,
there are not many avowed atheists. There are not many open infidels. Most of
the people we know and the families among who we live, almost all of them will
have some kind of a belief in God.
But
their problem is, and their trouble is, they follow and defend that belief
according to their own ways. Not according to God’s way and according to God’s
revelation. “I believe in God,” and then he’ll say these things, then he says
this thing, then he says these things, and there are about as many different
approaches and defenses as there are people who espouse them. So Paul says
they have a belief in God, but not according to a God-kind of way—revelation
and knowledge. For they, rejecting God’s way of righteousness, of salvation, they
go about to establish their own way. Then quoting from the Law he says, “For
Moses described the righteousness, that the man who does this law shall be
saved.”
That’s the
way a man could be saved, by the law. If he does it, he’d have to never sin,
never to break a commandment, never err; then he wouldn’t die. You don’t have
to worry about and judgment or any condemnation or any death—if you keep the
law! If you are perfect in all of your life; for one thing, you’ll never die,
you’d be just translated to heaven like Enoch was, like Elijah was in the mercy
of God. Though they were mortal men, yet God translated them. And if you keep
the law and if you’re perfect and you don’t ever sin, you don’t need a Savior.
But that’s the way you’d have to be saved, by the law. But faith to us
sinners, to us who have broken the law—and there’ s no man that sinneth not,
and that includes us—but to us who are sinners, how is it that we can be
saved? And he speaks of the righteousness which is of faith.
How can
we be saved? Now there are some who would say, “The way to be saved is; we who
are sinners, we must get better, we must improve, we must be more excellent at finer
in our sensibilities, and our life. I must cut out this, I must quit that, and
I must leave off the other thing. And I must get better and better and better
and better and better and better and better and better and better.” As he says,
“Say not in thine heart, who shall ascend into Heaven, that is to bring Christ
down where we can touch Him. Who shall ascend into Heaven?”
It’s
like the rung of a ladder. We’re this good and we’re that good, and we’re this
good and we’re this good, and better still and we’re better still. And we get
better and better, and better and better, better and better, until finally the
top of our excellent ladder leans against the pearly gates itself. That’d be
all right. That’d be all right.
But the
trouble of us is—about the time we get better and better, better and better, we
get worse, worse, worse, worse, worse. And the better and better and better
people think they are, the worse, worse, worse, worse that I think they are.
Isn’t that something? The most righteous, the most self-righteous people I
know are the most heinous people I know. And the better they think they are,
the worse, actually, I think they are. That’s just the truth. And there’s so
many who think that’s the way to be saved, that’s the way to be saved. Now if
I could just quit this and quit that and quit that, why I’m gonna get to heaven.
Why, I can’t tell you the number of people who will tell me, “Well, preacher, I
got this to straighten out, this to straighten out, this to straighten out,
this to straighten out, and by the time I got this, this, this, and this
straightened out, well then I’m coming down that aisle to give my heart to
Jesus.” That’s that same thing, that the way for me to be saved is to get
better, and better and better and better, and I’ll be saved. But that’s not
the way God saves us.
Well,
there’re others who’ll say that’s no so. It’s not a question of going up and
up and up and up, better, better, better, better, finally we walk in those pearly
gates. No, that’s not the way it is. They say the way to be saved is to go
down and down and down and down. You’ve got to study, to study, to study, gotta
understand, to understand, to understand. “Or who shall descend into the deep,”
that is, find Christ way down there in those eruditions. Why, no man could be
saved just by trusting the Lord. No man could be saved just by committing his
life to Jesus. Why that’d be foolish, that’d be folly. The way to be saved,
you gotta understand, understand, understand, understand, understand.
You
know there’s something about our foreign mission enterprise that I often wonder
about. I often wonder about. Now, I’m not a passing judgment, and I’m not saying,
but there’s something that I wonder about it. On all these mission fields of
the world you’ll find they will make their converts, they will preach the gospel,
people come forward to accept Jesus. And then they’ll teach them, and teach
them, and teach them, and teach them, and teach them, and teach them, and teach
them, and teach them, and teach them, and teach them—and years, and years, and
years, and years, and years, and maybe they’ll be baptized.
I want you to show me that in the Book, Dr.
Beazer, I want you to show me one instance of that in the Book! Now, you just
come around and sit down with me and say, “Now, pastor, I’ve been on a foreign
mission board and I love lost souls and I know that’s right according to the
Word of God.” Now you just do that to me. You won’t find that in the Book!
This fellow may have been converted out of paganism and out of heathenism, but
when he accepted Jesus as his Savior, that was enough, and they baptized the
convert right there on the spot. That’s what it is in the Bible. I’m not
passing judgment, Dr. Beazer, on you and the Foreign Mission Board, I’m not.
I’m just making an observation.
The way to be saved is not that we’re gonning
to study, and study, and study, and study. We’ve got great spiritual truths to
ferret out. And without a man’s mind understanding and grasping these great
truths of the Almighty, why he can’t be saved. It’s not down, and down, and
down, and down. Well then, how is it that a man is saved? “What saith it,
this word of faith,” then he quotes again, “The word is nigh thee, even in thy
mouth and in thy heart”; which is, namely, to wit, the word of
faith which we preach. And what is it? The simplest, the plainest—there
couldn’t be anything plainer or simpler than this. That, “If thou shalt
confess with thy mouth that Jesus is Lord, and if thou shalt believe in thine heart
that He lives, that God raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be saved” [Romans
10:9].
“For with the heart one believeth,” unto
a God-kind of righteousness, not a man’s kind of righteousness, but God’s kind
of righteousness. “For with the heart one believeth” unto a God-kind of
righteousness, “and with the mouth confession is made” unto a God-kind of salvation.
For the Scripture saith, “Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed. For
there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek: for the same Lord over
all is rich unto all that call upon Him. For whosoever shall call upon the
name of the Lord shall be saved” [Romans 10:10-13]. Could you imagine anything that
simple? Could you imagine anything that simple?
All of us who are ever saved are saved
like that, we are saved alike. A rich man coming down to the front, “I have
trusted Jesus in my heart, and I stand ready to confess Him before men and
angels, and here I am.” A poor man, ragged, in tatters, comes down that aisle,
how is he going to be saved? “I have trusted Jesus in my heart, and I want to
confess Him before men and angels.” And here’s an old, feeble man, tottering
at the edge of the grave, he comes down the aisle, “I’ve trusted Jesus in my
heart and I want to confess Him publicly and openly.”
And here’s a little boy, and he’s been
saved and the Lord has touched his soul. And he comes down that aisle and he
says, “I’ve trusted in Jesus in my heart, and I want to give Him openly,
publicly, unashamedly, unreserved, I want to give Him my life.” And here is a
poor, unlettered man. He can’t read; he can’t write, but he’s heard the gospel
message, and the Spirit has touched his soul. And he comes down the aisle and
he says, “I trust in Jesus in my heart and I want to confess Him publicly
before men.”
And down the aisle, there comes a
scholar and academician, there comes a scientist, there comes a man of books
and of letters. He walks down that aisle and he says, “Preacher, I want to
trust in Jesus in my heart and I want publicly and openly to confess Him before
men and angels.” All of us alike.
Let me tell you something that I think
is true, I don’t think there are men who are saved, intellectually. I don’t
think so—I don’t think all the intellectual arguments in the world, all of
them, I don’t think they’ve converted anybody. Now, I could be mistaken in
that, and I’m sure that there are exceptions to my impression. But my
impression is that all of the intellectual arguments in this world have never
saved souls. That’s what I think, that’s what I think. And I have Scripture
for that persuasion, the Lord God said, “except you become converted and be
like little children, ye shall in no ways enter in” [Mt. 18:3]
A man’s not saved by his intellectual
understanding in his head, he just isn’t. Well, how is a man saved? A man is
saved by the Holy Spirit tugging at his heart, convicting him of his need of a
Savior, and leading him to Jesus the Lord. Now I have experimented with that,
I have tried that. Dr. Beazer, Dr. White, you wonderful men of God, many times
have I sat down with a learned man and a great Christian man and I’ve asked
him, “How were you saved? Tell me about your conversion. When were you
introduced to Jesus?”
Now I’m going to take one, if I were to call
his name everybody in the Baptist world would know him—he’s a great man; he’s
the author of many books. He’s a scholar in Hebrew and in Greek and in other
languages, one of the most gifted men that I have ever known. One day I was
with him preaching at one of our retreats, like at Ridgecrest, NC, so I asked him, I said, “Tell me about
your conversion.” Well, wouldn’t you have thought as you sat down by his side,
he would have started telling me about something in Hebrew, or maybe something
in Greek, or maybe one of those heavy theological arguments that you read in
those big tomes. Or maybe he would have gone into some extended exegesis of
some difficult, recondite passage in the Bible. Why he never approached such a
thing, he never mentioned Hebrew, he never mentioned Greek; he never mentioned
the theological arguments. What he said to me was, he said, “Well you know I
was a teenager. I was a teenager and I could feel the tugging of the Holy
Spirit of God in my heart.” He said, “After a service the preacher made an
appeal, the congregation stood up and sang.” And I remember the song he said
they sang.
“If
you are tired of the load of your sin
let Jesus come into your heart.
If you desire a new life to begin
let Jesus come into your heart.
Just now your doubtings give o’er,
just now reject Him no more.
Just now throw open the door
let Jesus come into your heart."
[“Let Jesus Come Into Your Heart” by:
Leila N. Morris, 1898]
And he said that day, I threw open the
door of my heart to the Lord Jesus and He came in, and I’ve been saved and a
Christian ever since. Why Dr. Beazer, I do believe if you had a thousand
learned theologians come up here one by one and give their testimony, every one
of them would give something like that, something like that.
We’re all saved like that, not because
we’re smart or erudite, or scholarly, or academic. We are saved because the
Spirit has shown us our need of a Savior, and we open our hearts to the blessed
Lord Jesus. And down an aisle somewhere, we make a confession of our faith in
the Lord and we’re in, and we’ve been in ever since. “If thou shalt confess
with thy mouth Jesus is Lord and believe in thine heart that God raised Him
from the dead, that He liveth, thou shalt be saved” [Romans 10:9].
I must hasten because there’s something
I want to tell you tonight. Then he closes the passage, “For whosoever shall
call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” [Romans 10:13].
That’s what I want to tell you tonight. I spoke to you that I was over there
in Georgia this last week, preaching to the State
Evangelistic Conference. Well, I had dinner with a pastor, who was—in some
years ago—he was the pastor of one of the great churches in Florida, in one of those big cities on the eastern side, on the
Atlantic side.
Well, it was a very difficult place
because all the people of the whole United
States pour down there in
the wintertime, and this meeting was in February. And it’s just a different
kind of a church from our church. But God blessed the meeting; we had a great
meeting. But what I remember about it was the last Sunday morning service.
Oh, I just never was in a service that had more feeling in it than that.
And it came about like this. There was
a man there in that city; he was a giant of a man. He was bigger than Dr.
Hazer. He was a Goliath, a tremendous man, and he was the wickedest man in all
of Florida. Oh! And the most gifted; for miles
up and down that sea coast, he had developed those plans, those motels and
hotels and seaside homes, for miles and miles and miles up and down on either
side of that city; he developed that sea coast. And he was a vile and a wicked
man and became more vile and wicked as the years past, and finally became an
alcoholic, but he had a devout wife and she prayed for his soul. And the
preacher prayed for him, and the people prayed for him, and all of God’s saints
prayed for him. And I don’t know why, just sometimes you know the lord lays it
upon the hearts of the congregation to pick out one man. Well they began
praying for him, they began praying for him, and praying for him.
And then that last Sunday morning
service, I preached on this text. How simple it is for a man to find God. And
I made my appeal, bring your soul to Jesus, and bring your broken life to
Jesus, and bring your bottle to Jesus. He’ll see you through; He’ll find
victory. Bring your whole self to Jesus, just open your heart and come to
Jesus. Well, when I gave the appeal and we stood up to sing that great big
giant of a man stepped out into the aisle and down into the front and just
swept up that preacher in his arms.
Well, I was standing in the pulpit
looking at the congregation. I have seen this, I saw it again then—the whole
congregation burst into tears! Those bankers there, and those physicians there,
and those men of parts there, they wept like children, just unashamed. And the
men and the women, there was rejoicing on every side, on every head, just one
of those things that once in awhile you see God do.
Well that’s where I left it off, I did
not know beyond. So when I ate dinner with the pastor who had since gone to
one of the cities in Georgia, He said to me, he said, “Do you know
what happened after you left with that big man who was saved?” I said, “No.”
He said, “Well let me tell you.”
He said, “The next day I went to see him and I couldn’t
find him. And the next day I went to see him and I couldn’t find him. And
the next day I went to see him and I couldn’t find him. He just disappeared
and nobody knew where he was. He just disappeared.” And then the pastor said,
“I was anxious about him.” But he said to me, “Do you know where he went? Do
you know what happened to him?”
He said, “Early the next morning, Monday morning—he
said—early the next Monday morning he chartered a plane and he flew to North Carolina and when he got up there to North Carolina, he rented a car. He got in that car
and he drove to his old homestead where his dear old mother lived up there in
the mountains of North
Carolina. And when he drove
up in the car and got out and walked up to the gate, he mother saw him, met him
at the gate and said, ‘Son, something’s happened or you wouldn’t be here. I do
not know you’re coming. Something is happened, what is it? What is it?’
And his mother looked at him closely and said, ‘Son, I know
what’s happened, you’ve been saved! You’ve been saved! Son, you’ve been
saved!’ And they just had rejoicing together.” And the preacher said to me,
“That’s where he was in those days; that’s where he was in those days. He was
up there with his mother in a mountain home in North Carolina.
He wanted her to know what God had done for him.”
“For whosoever shall call upon the name
of the Lord shall be saved” [Romans 10:13]. Isn’t that a glorious gospel, isn’t
that a marvelous promise? Maybe poor, there’s room at the cross; maybe
unlettered, there’s room at the cross; maybe don’t understand, to be saved
anyway. Whoever, however— well, there’s no difference, for the same God
overall is rich unto all. “For whosoever shall call upon Him shall be saved”
[Romans 10:13]. Why bless your heart, you could just
sing and shout and praise God forever and forever for His wonderful goodness to
us.
Now our time is gone, we must sing our
song. And while we sing it, while we sing it. Somebody you, give himself to
Jesus. Come now, make it now. Do it now, do it tonight. In this balcony
round, down one of these stairways, on this lower floor into the aisle and down
here to the front. “Pastor, tonight here I come, I take Jesus in my soul, in
my heart. I’m standing here before men and angels to confess the commitment of
my life and trusting Him.” Maybe a whole family of you want to come into the
church. Or just one somebody, you. As God shall press the appeal, shall open the
door, shall lead in the way, make it tonight. Do it now, while we stand and
while we sing.