Tormented in a Flame
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Luke 16:19-24
8:15 a.m.
1-29-67
Now
the message of the morning hour; in the sixteenth chapter of the Book of Luke:
There
was a certain rich man, who was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared
sumptuously every day:
And
there was a certain beggar named Lazarus, who was laid at his gate, full of
sores.
And
it came to pass, that the beggar died, and was carried by the angels into
Abraham’s bosom: the rich man also died, and was buried;
And
in hell he lift up his eyes, being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off, and
Lazarus in his bosom.
And
he cried and said, Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, that he
may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue; for I am tormented
in this flame.
This is not the
first time that we have met a picture, a revelation of the judgment that awaits
those who spurn the overtures of the grace and mercy of God. It is one of the
commonest things that we find in God’s revelation to sinful men, that there is a
judgment of damnation, of perdition awaiting those who reject the mercies of
God. Sometimes the Scriptures will use the word “everlasting punishment”; “And
these shall go away into everlasting punishment.” Sometimes the Scriptures
will present the agony and the pain: “For I am tormented in this flame.”
Sometimes the Scriptures will use a picture of the offscouring and the filth of
the earth; the very word translated “hell” is gehenna, and the Valley of Hinnom. Gehinnom was where the refuse of the
city had been dumped and poured for centuries. And there the jackals fought
with each other in gnashing of teeth over the carrion and the garbage that was
poured out into that unseemly and unsightly place. So, God says that there
shall be a gathering out of all of His creation, all that offend, and the sinful,
and the unrepentant, and the filthy will be sent away from the holy, divine
light and presence of God.
And
then sometimes in the Scriptures the presentation of the great judgment is in the
form of a vast separation; sometimes in the imagery of a shepherd dividing his
sheep from his goats; sometimes in the imagery of a farmer dividing the chaff
from the wheat or the tares from the good grain; sometimes in the imagery of a
fisherman who keeps the good that he catches and throws the bad away; sometimes
in the imagery of a wedding, the wise and the foolish virgins; sometimes in the
imagery of a great gulf fixed between those who are saved and those who are
lost. But I am just pointing out to us that the presentation of a judgment
awaiting mortal souls is throughout the Word of God.
Now,
the liberal, of course, rejects any such idea. I quote from one of them who
wrote a book entitled Life After Death; and in that book this author
said, and I quote, “If the doctrine of eternal punishment were clearly and
unmistakably taught on every leaf of the Bible, and on every leaf of all the
Bibles of all the world, I would not believe it.” And when I read a sentence
like that I am conscious of being strangely acquainted, familiar with a thing
like that said before; and then I remember where it was I heard it. When God
said to Adam and Eve, “In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely
die.” Then I remember where that sentence was said: Satan, the serpent, came
to Eve and said, “Yea, did God say, Thou shalt surely die? Thou shalt not
surely die.”
The
revelation of the judgment of Almighty God makes us tremble in our souls. For
one thing, I cannot escape that shadow that lies back of everything we do and every
hour in which we live; I cannot escape it because for one thing it was the same
Lord Jesus who took little children up into His arms and blessed them who spoke
the most and the most solemnly of this judgment. It was the same Lord Jesus
who loved us and gave Himself for us who has made this revelation to us. I
have read from the words of our Lord—I cannot forget that it is in the same
book, the Book of Luke—that told the story of the prodigal son; that told the
story of the publican praying who went down to his house justified; who told
the story of the good Samaritan; who told the story of the repentant thief on
the cross; it is the same gospel writer who tells the stories that move our
hearts and love to God, that also told this story of the judgment upon Dives
and of the tormenting in that flame.
Nor
can I forget as I read the Word of God that the same Book that tells us of the
Lord tells us of Satan; and the same Book that tells us of heaven tells us of hell;
and the same and identical words that are used for the duration of one are used
for the duration of the other. Look at this one sentence in Matthew 26:41: “And these shall go away into aeonios
punishment, and these into aeonios life.” If one has length, the other
has length. If one is a figment of a wild oriental imagination and
exaggeration, then the other is a figment of the same oriental wild
imagination. They are the same words. If there is no Satan, there’s not any
God; if there is no hell, there’s not any heaven; and if there is no eternal
damnation and perdition, there is no eternal life. They are together in the
Word of God.
Nor
can I escape the corroboration of what I read in this holy Book, nor can I
escape it by what I think in my mind. In reason, in reason this is not
fantastic and unimaginable, in reason as I look at our universe it corroborates
the revelation of God. Look, look, there is in this very universe the
principal of separation. The doctor will strive to bring life and health by
separating cancer cells from the health of the cells of the body; he will work
toward that separation. In all society, there is an attempt to separate in
penitentiaries, in asylums, those that are not a part of the well-being of the
body politic.
I
remember being importuned by one of the families in the church in a former
pastorate to go see the governor and make appeal for their son who was a life-termer
in the state penitentiary. That governor was one of the most devout men that
I’ve ever known; he was a deacon in the First Baptist Church, he was a teacher of the Lord’s Sunday School
class, he was excellent and fine in every part of his life, political, business
– for he was a very rich man – and statesmanship. Yet as we made that appeal,
that fine, devout, and Christian man finally decided after conferring with the
Board of Pardons that the young man should remain in the penitentiary the rest
of the days of his life.
You
will find that principle of separation through all of this universe. And you
will find that principle in the very nature of life itself. All character has
a tendency to become fixed, not unfixed but fixed. The antedeluvians were
wicked; and they became more wicked, and they became more wicked, until finally
God saw that violence filled the earth; and God judged them in the days of
Noah.
And
in the days of Lot, in the city of Sodom, the men became more wicked, and more wicked, and more
wicked, until finally they mocked the very angels of the Almighty. As I look
at it, character tends to become fixed, and more fixed, and more fixed. As the
tree falls, so shall it lie; as the bent of a man’s life is followed, it goes,
it is projected into eternity.
And
that same thing that I reason in my mind I observe with my eyes. One of the
most astonishing of all of the things that I observe in life is this: that
pain and suffering have no effect in changing a man’s heart, not at all, not at
all. These criminals, if you’ve ever read of their lives in the daily
newspapers, these criminals, the untold suffering and agony they live in is
beyond description. They will sometimes have surgeons change their faces; they
will have the very fingerprints cut off of the ends of their fingers; and they
live in constant agony and fear every footfall may the FBI, or the sheriff, or
the police. Wouldn’t you think that men like that, who live in terror and
suffering and agony, would change? It is the opposite. They become harder and
harder and harder.
I
was in Memphis, Tennessee, in a home, a devout and godly couple;
out of the dregs of that city and out of the gutter of that sordidness they had
picked up a prostitute in need, used and abused. They picked her up, brought
her to the home, loved her, nurtured her, prayed over her. And when I visited
in the home, that prostitute had just slipped out a night or two before and
gone back into her sordid life of misery. Can you explain that to me? Can you
explain that to me?
There’s only one way that a life can be turned; and that is in the power of God
to change the human heart. The bent of the soul is toward sin, and toward sin,
and toward sin, until finally we become a very negation in ourselves. And in
my observation, a second chance makes no difference. When the love and mercy
of God is spurned one time, it is easier to reject the second time. And when
God is refused two times, it is easier to refuse the third time. And when God
is refused three times, it is easier to refuse the fourth time. And that is
why it is difficult to win men to Jesus. A child is tender and young; but a
man, for the most part, has said no, and no, and no, until he is calloused; and
he dies like this man died. “And in hell, he lift up his eyes being in
torments,” character fixed, rejection forever; die without the love and mercy
and forgiveness of God.
Don’t
you ever persuade yourself that sin and unbelief and rejection shall abide in
God’s world forever, no. The great theme of the whole revelation and Book of
God is this: that Satan shall be cast into hell, that God’s whole universe
shall be purged. There shall be some day a new heaven and a new earth, wherein
dwelleth righteousness. And it is the redeemed of God that shall inherit the
earth and the kingdom of heaven. And if I am not in that kingdom, and if I am
not one of the redeemed, I am lost, I am separated, I am outside.
And
that explains the zeal of those first Christian preachers, and evangelists, and
apostles. They believed that the choices in this life were final and there’s
not a hint in all of this vast—these how many pages?—two thousand pages, there
is no hint of a second opportunity or chance or offering, never. They preached
believing that the decisions we make in this life are final, they are forever.
And they preached and believed that the pagan world around them was perishing;
and they preached and they believed that Jesus was able to save and able to
deliver.
And
that is our message: we are sinners, all, and God judges our souls all; but
there is mercy and deliverance and salvation and forgiveness in the divine love
and mercy of God’s atoning grace. For He died for us to bear in our behalf, He
died for us that we might not die. He suffered for us that we might not
suffer. He went down into the grave in the judgment of God upon sin; “the soul
that sins shall die” [Ezekiel 18:20], and “the wages of sin is death”
[Romans 6:23]; “in the day that thou eatest thereof
thou shalt surely die” [Genesis 2:17]; and “He died that we might live” [1
Peter 2:24]. And to those who turn in faith, in
repentance, in love, in acceptance, in belief, in trust, those who turn to Him,
does God save and forever. This is the gospel. This is the message of grace.
While
we sing our song this morning, somebody you, turn in love, in acceptance, in
trust, in belief. Somebody you, turn this morning to the Lord Jesus; come and
stand by me. “Today, this holy hour shall be an hour of salvation for me and
here I come, here I am.” A family you, putting your life with us in the
ministry of this glorious church, you come. However God shall press the appeal
to your heart, the Spirit shall say the word; make it this morning, make it
now. When we stand in a moment to sing, stand up coming. “Here I am, Pastor,
here’s my wife, these are my children.” Or, “I’m coming myself,” do it now,
make it now, make it this morning, while we stand and while we sing.