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A REVIVAL OF THE WORK OF GOD
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Habakkuk 3:2
3-11-90 10:50 a.m.
This
is the wonderful First Baptist Church in Dallas and this is the pastor
bringing the message entitled A Revival of the Work of God. We are,
as you have heard by announcement, preparing for one of the finest
outpourings of the Spirit of the Lord we have ever experienced in the life
and history of this dear church. The last week of this month, beginning on
Sunday the twenty-fifth, we will begin our protracted series. And the
sermons of the pastor each Sunday is a preparation for that pentecostal
presence of the Lord. The messages are from the Book of Habakkuk. I read
the first verse, “The burden which Habakkuk the prophet did see.” Then the
first verse of the third chapter,
The
prayer of Habakkuk the prophet…
O
Lord, I have heard Thy speech, and was afraid:
O
Lord, revive Thy work in the midst of the years,
In
the midst of the years make it known;
In
wrath remember mercy.
[Habakkuk 3:1-2]
Nobody
knows anything about Habakkuk. He just appears, delivers his brief message
of three chapters, then he disappears. All we can know concerning the man
lies in the thing that he wrote in delivering this prophetic message from
God.
There
are three things that we learn of him, that the world knows, from the little Book
of three chapters that he left behind. The first: he prophesied the coming
of the Chaldean, the Babylonian army, and the destruction of Jerusalem and
the state of Judah. That means that he lived in about 600 BC. The captivity
began in 587 BC, about thirteen years later.
This
prophet Habakkuk lived between the destruction of the Northern kingdom of
Israel in 722 BC, by the Assyrian host. And then he prophesied the
destruction of the southern kingdom, which came to pass in 587 BC. Between
those two tragic eras in the lives of God’s people, Habakkuk stands to
deliver the message of the Lord. And that is why he begins, “The burden
which Habakkuk the prophet did see.” He is outlining the coming of the
Chaldean hosts, the Babylonian army of Nebuchadnezzar.
Lo,
says the Lord God, I raise up the Chaldeans, that bitter and hasty
nation…
They
are terrible and dreadful:…
Their
horses are swifter than the leopards, And they are more fierce than the
evening wolves:…
They
shall come for violence: Their faces shall sup up as the east wind, And
they shall gather captivity as the sands of the sea.
[Habakkuk 1:6-9]
This
is the announcement of the coming destruction of the kingdom of our Lord in
the earth, the kingdom of Judah. And that’s why it is called hammassa,
“the burden,” which Habakkuk the prophet did see. You can read in Job when
he was so afflicted he cried saying, “My life is hammassa unto me,” my
life is a burden unto me.
So
the prophetic message that God gave this prophet to deliver to the people of
the Lord, it was a burden, it crushed his heart into the dust of the earth. That
is also why in the text, in chapter 3, “O Lord, I have heard thy speech and
was afraid.” He trembled before the judgment of Almighty God upon the sin
and sorrow and transgression of his people. He was afraid. The judgment was
terrible. Jesus said, “Do not fear those who can put your body in a prison. Fear
him who can cast your soul and body in hell.” [Matthew 10:28] Fear Him! Tremble
before Him!
Remember
the eleventh chapter of the Book of Hebrew, it says that “Noah, warned of God
of things yet to come, moved with fear, prepared an ark for the saving of his
house.” “The beginning of wisdom is the fear of the Lord.” [Proverbs 9:10]
O God, what of my soul and what of my life and what of the eternity yet to
come, before Thee, O God, have mercy upon me.
He
says something, “The burden which Habakkuk the prophet did see; did see, the
burden which he did see.” The prophetic message delivered in his hands, and
through his mouth, and to the people which he, did see.
I
think of an instance in the eighth chapter of 2 Kings, when Elisha announces
to Hazael that he is to be king over Syria. Then Hadad is sick unto death
and this Hazael is no member of the royal family; he’s just an officer there
in the court. And yet Elisha says he is to be king over Syria. And in the
story it says that Elisha fixed his eyes upon Hazael, and as he steadfastly
looked at him, Elisha burst into crying, and into tears.
And
Hazael said, “Why look upon me so and why do you weep so?” And Elisha
replies, “Because you will be king over Syria. And as king over that
dominion, these mothers in Israel, you will rip them open, who were heavy
with child, and the children you will dash against the stones and the young
men, you will slay.” [Verse 12]
And
Hazael said, “Is your servant a dead dog, that he’d do a thing like that?
And
Elisha says, “Yea.”
And
Hazael did exactly as Elisha prophesied. That’s this. The prophecy that
Habakkuk did see, the tragedy of the judgment of God upon his sinful people.
The
second thing for which Habakkuk is known is a little verse, a little tiny
verse in the second chapter in the fourth verse, “The just shall live by
faith.” When Habakkuk asked God for an answer. These Chaldeans are more
ungodly than your sinning people in Judah. And why is it that you would send
these vile, vicious, violent Babylonians and take away a people, however
sinful we may be, we’re not as evil as these who are bringing judgment?
And
in the second chapter it says that Habakkuk stands waiting for God to give
him an answer. “I also would like to have an answer for that which you can’t
ever find. How is it that the wicked prosper and some of God’s people are
cast into the dust of the earth?” Anyway, Habakkuk stands before God waiting
for an answer and the answer is, “The just shall live by faith.” You must
trust God for the ultimate.
Well,
that little verse became the touchstone, and the foundation, for the
preaching of the apostle Paul when he hurled his thunderbolt against the
Judaizers in Galatia. He did it by that verse, “The just shall live by
faith.” And when Paul wrote the greatest theological treaties in human speech,
the Book of Romans, that was his text, “The just shall live by faith,” that
little verse in Habakkuk.
You
remember this also, when the Christian faith died in liturgy and ritual, when
indulgences were sold by the papal court for money, you remember when Martin Luther went to Rome and he was climbing up on his knees, the Scala Santa. Many of you
have stood there and watched that. The Scala Santa is supposed to be the
sacred stairway that they brought from Pilate’s judgment hall up where Jesus
went to be condemned to die. It has twenty-eight steps in it.
Well,
Martin Luther was climbing on his knees, that Scala Santa. And, in the
middle of the climb, this text from Habakkuk, “The just shall live by faith.”
Not by indulgences! Not by works! The just shall live by trusting God! Like
a flame of fire that text entered into the soul of Martin Luther and he stood
up and walked down the steps of the Scala Santa and to his church at
Wittenburg, and nailed ninety-five theses on the church door, and the Reformation
was on. That’s this little verse: “The just shall live by faith.” It’s from
Habakkuk.
A
third thing that he is noted for is the third chapter. This is one of the
most beautiful lyrics ever written in human speech. And in the ninth verse, “God
does cleave the earth with rivers.” I wish I had an hour. “God doth cleave
the earth with rivers.” Not forever does sorrow and trouble and hurt and
despair continue. God breaks it up. No matter what the darkness into which
you may enter or the despair into which you may be plunged or the hurt and
agony of our soul, it doesn’t last, God breaks it up.
And
wherever you find in Holy Scripture the river, you will always find that it
is used in a glorious and triumphant way. In the Psalms, “There is a river;
the streams thereof make glad the city of God.” [Psalm 46:4] In
the forty-seventh chapter of Ezekiel, he sees a great river flowing from
beneath the altar and it flows to the desert of the east, down to the Dead
Sea and the whole created world comes to life, burgeoned and beautiful. As
he says, “Everything shall live whither the river cometh.”
And
then the Bible closes in the twenty-second chapter of the Book of the Apocalypse,
“I saw a river of life, clear as crystal, proceeding, flowing, out from the
throne of God and unto the lamb.” And that is the wonderful verse in this
third chapter of Habakkuk. God breaks up our darkness and our despair and
our sorrows with a river of the promise of life.
Now,
to the text, a prayer of Habakkuk, the prophet:
Lord,
I have heard Thy speech, and was afraid:
O
Lord, revive Thy work in the midst of the years,
In
the midst of the years,
—not
tomorrow, not of yesterday but now—
in
the midst of the years,” now, “make it known;
In
wrath remember mercy.
In
wrath, remember mercy.
[Habakkuk 3:1]
In
the judgment of God, O Lord, remember Thy goodness and loving kindness, call
it to mind. All of that arises over the blessings of God upon Israel.
Amos
said, quoting the Lord and speaking to Israel, “Of all the nations and
peoples of the world, of all of them, you are Mine. You, have I known
therefore, will I punish you.” [Amos
3:2] That’s the strangest thing,
because of their exalted place and position, chosen, beloved of God, because
they were known to the Lord, therefore, “I will punish you.” That’s a
strange thing, but it’s so everlastingly true.
I
do not know of a people in the earth that have been more heartbrokenly
persecuted than the people of God, the people of Israel, the people of Judah.
Just this last week I listened to a man from over there. And his word was,
"These Arabs, and Iraqis, and all the rest of them are just abiding the
day when he had a sign like this, when they cut the throats of the three
million Jews that are in the state of Israel.” O Lord, how they have
suffered. And they have suffered because they were the chosen people of God
and have not been true to the faith, to their high calling in Christ Jesus.
Now,
I want to apply, I want to preach as that concerns us. There has never been
a nation so blest as America, none! None comparable! The outpouring of the
mercies of God, and the gifts of God upon our native land, those mercies, are
beyond compare. They are multitudinous. And I read there has never been a
nation, and there is no nation, that is as lawless as America. Great God in
heaven, that such a thing could be said about us. There are more murderers
in prison and in the penitentiary in America than there are preachers in the
pulpits. There are more bar-maids serving liquor than there are girls in
college.
I
read this last week of a senator, he said, “The land-mine in our national
capital is liquor. It’s the cocktail party,” he called it. He said there
are three parties in Washington D.C., the Republican Party, and the
Democratic Party, and the cocktail party.
And
the whole earth is drowned in drugs. Addiction is a curse from God. I don’t
care what anybody says, venereal disease and AIDS is a judgment from Almighty
God. And all America is plunged into the most anti-God… I heard a man say
last week, he was over there in Russia and he was preaching in a school and
reading the Bible and praying in the school, he said there is more liberty in
the schools of Russia than there is in the schools of United States of America.
You
can hardly believe these things! You can hardly believe these things! And
that’s why the prophet prays. “O God, in wrath, in the judgment of God,
remember mercy.” So he takes his appeal to the Lord, a prayer of Habakkuk,
the prophet: “O Lord, O Lord, O God!” He prayed, he bowed before the Lord in
supplication.
A
call to prayer, I cannot sleep.
A
midnight vigil I must keep,
For
God doth speak, and I repeat:
To
prayer, to prayer, to prevailing prayer.
The
need for such is everywhere
It
covers earth, it fills the air,
The
urgent need of urgent prayer.
To
bended knee, to bended knee,
God’s
call to you, God’s call to me,
Because
what is and is to be
Shall
reach throughout eternity.
“Oh,
folks,” I say, again, I say,
“A
truth has been born to my heart today.
It’s
the need of prayer, let come what may,
We
shall overcome if we watch and pray.”
Awake!
Awake! Ye saints, awake!
Your
place in prayer, believe and take.
Stand
in the breach for Jesus’ sake.
If
the world be lost, and our nation be lost
And
our soul be lost for Jesus’ sake.
[author unknown]
A
prayer of Habakkuk the prophet of God: “O Lord, I heard thy speech and was
afraid. O Lord, remember in the midst of the years, have mercy, dear God.” Do
you notice His work? “O Lord, revive Thy work, Thy work,” God’s work.
As
we pray, as we prepare, O God, let it be that we see the arm of the Lord
extended to us; let it be something God does. Lord, we’re going to organize,
and we’re going to plan, and we’re going to prepare, and we’ll do everything
that human mind can think for, getting ready for revival, but O God, what are
these feeble efforts on our part if the Lord is not present, if God doesn’t
work? “O Lord, revive thy work in the midst of the years.”
I
was in a church, a very large church, happened to be there when they had a
revival meeting. I never knew a soul present, not one. But I sat there, and
I stood there, for I don’t know how long just weeping my heart out, moved for
joy. I saw those people coming forward; a mother with a daughter; a father
with his son; a businessman with his employee; two partners, one had
introduced the other to the Lord, just a host of them, coming down these
aisles, giving their hearts in faith and trust to the Lord Jesus, just moved
of God. That is the work of the Lord! That’s God’s work, seeing people
saved, coming forward, trusting Jesus as their Lord and Savior! That’s God’s
work!
“O
Lord, revive thy work in the midst of the years. In the midst of the years
make it known.” Something that God alone can do, Lord, let our eyes see it
and our hearts feel it and experience it.
Some
of these things that have happened to me along the way have so colored my
life. This is one. In a village in a county, holding revival meeting, down
the aisle came a woman and sat there on the front row, and just wept her
heart out before God. And while she was there weeping, a dignified, practical
looking woman came forward to me and said, "Have the congregation stop
the singing and be seated." Well, I had no idea, she was the president
of WMU, I learned, and a leader in the church. "Stop the singing."
So
we stopped the singing of the invitational hymn and had the people seated. And
she went over and stood in front of that woman who was weeping her heart out.
And lifting up her voice said to us, she said, "I’ve always said that
there were two things that would make me shout in the church. One, if God
would save my husband. And the other, if this dear woman would come back into
the fold and into the love and grace of the Lord God." And that woman
who was seated there on the front row stood up and said to that practical looking
dignified president of WMU, she said to her, "I have hated you, and I
have cursed you, and I demeaned and belittled you, and I’ve gossiped about
you, and I’ve told lies about you, O God,” she said, "Forgive me,
forgive me, sweet, precious friend, forgive me, forgive me."
I
didn’t know it, but the enmity, and the bitterness, and hatred of those two
women was known throughout that part of the world and throughout the church. Like
Paul writes to the church at Philippi, “Syntyche and Euodia, tell them to
love one another,” [Philippians 4:2] get together again. That’s what happened there. And
when that woman confessed to this other one, “I have hated you, and cursed
you, and lied about you, and now I ask you to forgive me.” They put their
arms around each other with many tears. You can’t describe the effect a
thing like that has upon a people. That’s God’s work. God does that. That’s
God.
There’s
nobody you ever saw in the pulpit ministry that believes more in organization
than I do: planning, preparing, meticulously making ready, but oh, God, after
we have planned and prepared and made ready, oh, God, come down, come down! Let
it be the arm of the Lord extended; let it be a Pentecost. Lord, the flames
of fire, that’s what we pray for, an outpouring of the Holy Spirit of God. “O
Lord, in the midst of the years, send revival, in wrath, remember mercy!”
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