Pre-Easter Special
Christ Today: The
Contemporary Christ
CHRIST AND POLITICS
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Matthew 22:15-22
4-12-65 12:00 p.m.
And
again, hello and welcome to the forty-sixth annual pre-Easter noonday services conducted
by our dear and precious church. Remember, you can leave anytime, any moment,
and you won’t disturb me at all. If you can stay five minutes, stay a moment,
stay until the last sentence and have to leave before the benediction, it is all
right. Everybody understands this service is held during a busy lunch hour.
Sometimes, people bring their lunches. Wonderful, come, sit down. Just
remember it is a Christian service and a fellowship, and comradeship. And if
your neighbor looks at you hungrily as you eat, share with him the pastrami, or
the dill pickles, or the onions. Just pass them down the line; but come, and
welcome.
Ted,
come here. Come here. I do not have a sweeter or a more precious friend in
this world than the manager of this Palace Theater. Nobody has ever been better
to anybody than he has to me. And when I come, I am always greeted with the
most delightful gift that I personally could ever enjoy: a great, big, luscious
bag of popcorn. I don’t mean a little bag, I mean a big one. And Ted, we
couldn’t thank you for the years and the years, ever since there has been a
Palace Theater. For the years and the years that we have come down here and
shared this pre-Easter week together, God bless you, and be good to you. And we
love to come, Ted.
The
services this year are built around an altogether different theme from any that
I have ever tried to discuss heretofore. This is the twenty-first year that I
have conducted these services. My illustrious predecessor, the far-famed
pastor, Dr. George W. Truett conducted them for twenty-five years. And in the
twenty-one years that I have led them, I have sought to set the message always
back in the days of the Bible. But this
year, the theme concerns our contemporary Lord: Christ Today, Does God Speak
To Us Now? Is there a message from heaven to our hearts this hour?
So
tomorrow I am speaking on Christ and War, and the next day, Wednesday, Christ
and Modern Science; the next day, Thursday, Christ and Communism;
and the last, Friday, Christ and Death. And today, the beginning day,
the subject is Christ and Politics, Christ and Governmental Law and
Authority. Reading from the Gospel of
Matthew:
Then
went the Pharisees and to counsel how they
might
entangle Him in His talk.
And
they sent unto Him their disciples with the Herodians,
saying
Master, we know that Thou . . . teachest the way of
God
in truth, neither carest Thou for any man: for Thou
regardest
not the person of men.
Tell
us therefore, What thinkest Thou? Is it lawful to give
tribute
unto Caesar, or not?
Then,
Jesus, perceiving their wickedness, said, Why tempt
Me,
ye hypocrites?
Show
Me the tribute money. And they brought unto Him a
denarius.
And
He saith unto them, Whose is this image and superscription?
They
say unto Him, Caesar’s.
Then
saith He unto them, Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s
and unto God the things which are God’s.
When
they heard these words, they marveled, and left Him, and went their way.
[Matthew
22:15-22]
The
question of course was an obvious trap: Is it lawful to give tribute to
Caesar? If He said, “Yes,” He would infuriate the Jewish nation. If He said,
“No,” He would invite the wrath of the Roman government. The Lord’s reply that
we are citizens of two worlds; this world—and under the government in which we
now live—and we are also citizens of another world that is yet to come, rendering
to Caesar the things that belong to Caesar. Rendering to government and to
law the things that belong to government and law, and to God the allegiance and
the reverence that belong to God; that teaching is uniform throughout all the
New Testament. I haven’t time to read the first seven verses of the thirteenth
chapter of the Book of Romans that closes,
Render
therefore to all their dues, tribute to whom
tribute
is due, custom to whom custom is due, fear
to
whom fear, honor to whom honor.
[Romans
13:7]
The
first verse of the third chapter of Titus says, “Titus, remember to put the
people to be mindful and subject to principalities and powers, to obey
magistrates .“ And from 1 Peter, “Honor all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear
God. Honor the king.” And those words were written when Nero was the Emperor
of the Roman Empire; cruel, and merciless, and tyrannical. Under Nero, the
apostle Paul was martyred. And as he lay in the Mamertine dungeon, awaiting
his final trial and martyrdom, did he rail against the tyrant, Nero? Not at
all! As a Christian, he respected the office of the emperor, and he closed his
last letter to his son Timothy, in the ministry, with these words:
At
my first defense, no man stood by me, but all men
Forsook
me: I pray that it may not be laid to their charge.
Nevertheless
the Lord stood with me, and strengthened me . . .
And
the Lord will deliver me from all evil work, and [will] preserve me unto His
heavenly kingdom: to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.
[2 Timothy
4:16-18]
No
word against Nero, no word against the tyrant. No word against an oppressive
government.
It
was thus with our Master before Pontius Pilate, in the nineteenth chapter of the Book of
John. Our
Lord, before that Roman procurator, honored the office of the Governor. He
only pointed out to Pilate that he exercised the prerogatives of his office by
the permissive will of God.
There
is a duty and an honor that we owe to the law—to government—and there is a duty,
and an honor, and a reverence that we owe to God. First, I discuss our
obligation, and duty to the law, and to government. All government, law and
order, is ordained of God. That is the word of the New Testament, itself. The
Lord God who created this universe, created it in law and in order: spheres in
their orbits, the laws of gravitation, of the speed of light and sound, of
weight and displacement, the laws of physics and chemistry. He’s that kind of
a God.
And
the Lord God that established law and order, in the material universe revolving
around us is also the same Creator that established law and order in the civil
life, and the civil government of humanity. It is inherent. The discipline of
civil society is one of the most conspicuous and cheapest ways, and instruments
by which God carries through His moral government.
According
to the Word of the Lord, anarchy is defiance against God, Himself. And
lawlessness, and crime, bears with it—inherently—the visitation of the judgment
of Almighty God. And that is why—and that is why, any kind of civil
disobedience, any kind of willful violation, undermines the very foundation of
human law and human government.
A
few days ago, one of the illustrious jurists of our city, Judge Claude
Williams, who is an honored deacon of our beloved church, delivered an address
before the North Texas Bar Association. And in that address, this loved, and
capable, and honored judge, quoting Lincoln’s impassioned words, said,
Let
every American, every lover of liberty, swear by the
blood
of the revolution never to violate the laws of the
country.
Let every man remember that to violate the law
is
to trample on the blood of his father, and to tear the
character
of his own and his children’s liberty. Let reverence
for
the law be breathed by every American mother to the lisping babe in her lap.
Let
it be taught in schools, seminaries, and colleges. Let it be written in primers,
spelling books, and in almanacs. Let it be preached from the pulpit,
proclaimed in legislative halls, and enforced in courts of justice. Let it
become the political religion
of
the nation. And let the old and young, rich and poor of all sexes, tongues,
colors, and conditions, sacrifice unceasingly upon its altar.
And
ending this quotation from Abraham Lincoln, Judge Williams added:
A
law society can never give its citizens the right—quote—
“the
right to break the law.” There can be no law to which obedience is optional.
What has happened to us? Why is it necessary at this moment to repeat what should
be axiomatic
and
accepted? The concept of civil disobedience is incompatible with the concept
of the American legal system. This is particularly true where the society
provides more than any other orderly change. Once we accept such a doctrine of
willful and volitional disobedience, we legitimize it for other causes which we
reject.
What
he’s saying there is this, that when we launch a program of willful violation
of the law, and willful disobedience, we open the door for a thousand other
inroads on the part of elements, and people, to which we could never subscribe
or give our allegiance.
For
example, they learned that lesson well. The President of the United States
says, “We shall make Washington, D. C. the model city.” I quote from the
statistics of the year ending the thirtieth day of March. Just a few days
ago—in one year, in one year—and they’ve learned it well—civil disobedience,
and violation of the law—in one year—serious crime has gone up in our nation’s
capitol thirty-six and two tenths percent.
Robbery
has gone up in one year, sixty-seven and nine-tenths percent. Rape has gone up
thirty and eight tenths percent. House-breaking has gone up fifty-one and
seven tenths percent. And auto theft has gone up an astonishing total of one
hundred eighty-two tenths percent. They have learned that lesson well.
When
I turn to the gambling syndicates, at a recent hearing before the Senate committee,
it was disclosed that there are more than fifty-billion dollars a year spent by
the American public on gambling. And the profit of that totals the
astronomical sum of more than ten billion, which is a greater sum than the
profit of the one hundred largest corporations of America combined. And that
illegal gambling is controlled by the crime syndicates of this nation. They
have learned the lesson well.
Nor
have I time to speak of the teenagers, who riot on our university campuses, and
who make the subway system of New York City a death trap, and who spend time in
orgies on the beaches of Florida and of California. They have learned the
lesson well.
I
have just said, according to the Word of God, there is no such thing as a
violation of law and order without a visitation from the Almighty. It is not
without reason that the apocalyptic discourse of our blessed Savior ends like
this: “For wherever the carcass is, there will the vultures be gathered
together.”
What
did He mean by that? A very simple thing: the great Lord God that reigns over
this earth is not the Lord God in the days of Isaiah alone, or in the days of
Paul alone, or in the days of the medieval ages alone. But the same Lord God
that ruled and reigned in that age is the same Lord God that presides over
humanity today. And wherever there is national decay, and moral decay, and
willful disobedience, there where the carcass rots, do the vultures of judgment
gather together.
Law
and order—government—is ordained of God. And Scriptures say He is the minister
of judgment from God to us. “Render unto Caesar the things that belong to
Caesar.” To be an obedient citizen, and to decry, and to flee from all civil
disobedience, is a part of the foundational work of society, itself, and of our
lives as a fellow Christian. And rendering to God the things that are God’s, the
basis of all true government and of all true liberty, lies in the reality, and
the person, and the character of Almighty God. In any society that is free,
there must be an overwhelmingly important, and increasingly enlarging, place
for the Deity who reigns over this whole earth.
I
could not help but laugh at something that I heard about a Sunday school teacher
out there in one of our West Dallas missions. We have seven missions in our
church, and several of them are located over there in West Dallas. So the
Sunday school teacher, they told me, was impressing upon her class of little
boys the omnipotence of God. So in her lesson she turned to little Johnny
and said, “Johnny, now you tell me, who gave you your shoes, and your pants,
and your shirt, and the cap you wore to Sunday school today? Who gave them to
you?”
Little
Johnny stood up and said, “Please, Ma’am. Please, Ma’am, President Lyndon B.
Johnson.”
Well,
she was nonplused, so she tried again, and she turned to little Bobby, and
said, “Bobby, who gave you the milk you drank, and the bread you eat, and the
food?”
And
little Bobby stood up and said, “Please Ma’am. Senator Ralph Yarborough.”
Well,
not knowing where to turn, she tried once again and said to little Tommy,
“Tommy, you tell me. Who made the sun, the moon and the stars?”
And
little Tommy stood up and said, “Please Ma’am, God!” And when he said that,
his little friend grabbed him by the seat of the pants to pull him down, and
said, “Sit down, you dirty Republican.”
I
have been told that when the great society reaches its peak, heaven is going to
be an anti-climax. There is something about human nature that is universally
true through all the ages, and true of all nations, including our own in
America. And it is this: that when a people and when a nation turns aside from
dependence upon God, they immediately and inevitably turn to the next greatest
power that they know for security and for hope. They turn to the powers of the
State.
And
that tragic reaction on the part of all human kind is written in blood and in
tears in the story of fascism, and of Nazism, and of communism, and of economic
political totalitarianism. When people turn from God, and when they renounce
the faith that anchors us to heaven, immediately they turn increasingly to the
establishment of an all-powerful welfare state.
Now
the tears and the story of tyranny, and of oppression, and of slavery of the
nations and populations of the world together under those tyrannical
governments, is beyond our minds to enter into, or our lips to describe. Ah!
Ah! Is there no limit to the power of government? Is there no limit to the
power of the State? Is there no redress for the grievances of the people? Is
there no refuge from an authoritarian, paternalistic government? There is.
There is, and it is found in the character, and in the reality, and in the
presence, and in the revelation, and in the government of almighty God.
In
this passage, that I haven’t taken time to read, in the thirteenth chapter of
the Book of Romans, four times Paul uses, there, “God,” in that short
passage—four times. If we could construe the argument geometrically, we would
say that he places God at every point. Any nation that lives in freedom, any
nation that escapes slavery and oppressive government, must find its heart and
its soul in the character, and the reality, and the worship of God. And any
government that oppresses must assume to itself the prerogatives that belong to
the Almighty above.
That
was true in the days of the story of the three Hebrew children, when
Nebuchadnezzar the king made a golden image and said, “All who do not bow down
and worship before it shall be cast into the fiery furnace.” That was true in
the days of the apostolic church, when Ignatius, the pastor at Antioch, and
when Polycarp, the pastor at Smyrna, were fed to the lions. It was true in the
days of William Tell, when Gessler, who represented the king of Austria, put
his hat on a pole and made every Swiss bow down before it. And it is true today
in the tyranny and the slavery of the subject peoples under totalitarian
governments.
When
I was in Hong Kong, I listened with tears and heartache to the story of one of
our Baptist pastors. The Communists hounded and arrested him, and beat him,
and crippled him until he died. And seeing the sorrow of the afflictions upon
her husband and upon the congregation, his wife lost her mind. Is there no
limit to slavery, and the tyranny, and the authority of government? Is there
no refuse and no address? There is, and it lies in God.
When
our founding fathers sought to write a constitution for these colonies, on the
shores of the new continent, they turned for an example to Spain. And seeking
a safeguard for the rights of humanity, and seeking a bold war against tyranny
and oppression, and seeking a guarantee for the freedoms of mankind, they found
that in Spain the rights of the people were founded in a monarchy. “But,” said
our founding fathers, “If a monarchy can grant rights, that same monarchy can
also take them away.”
They
turned unto England and found that the liberties and the rights of mankind were
founded in a parliament. “But,” said our forefathers, “If a parliament can
grant rights and liberties, that same parliament can also take them away.”
They
then turned to France and found there that the rights and liberties of mankind
were grounded in a majority. “But,” said our forefathers, “If a majority can
grant rights and liberties, that same majority can oppress a minority.”
It
was then that our founding fathers wrote, in their Declaration of Independence
and in the Constitution of the United States, that the rights and the liberties
of mankind were grounded in the character of almighty God. And they said, “Our
inalienable rights are endowed—are given to us—by our Creator.”
Wherever
there is reverence for God, there is true liberty in a true government, a free
church in a free state, governing free peoples. And as long as there is that
reverence for God and dependence upon God, there always attends those rights
and liberties that are inalienably endowed from heaven above. As the Psalmist
said, “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord.”
God
of our fathers known of old,
Lord
of our far-flung battle line,
Beneath
whose awful hand we hold
Dominion
over palm and pine—
Lord
God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest
we forget—lest we forget!
If,
drunk with sight of power, we loose
Wild
tongues that have not Thee in awe,
Such
boastings as the Gentiles use,
Or
lesser breeds without the law—
Lord
God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest
we forget—lest we forget!
[from “Recessional”; Rudyard Kipling]
Rendering
unto Caesar, unto law and government, the things that belong to Caesar and the
government; but reserving for our souls, and for our conscience, and for our
lives, reserving unto God the things that belong to God.
Our
Lord, as in days past Thou hast so abundantly and marvelously blessed our
America, may God continue to remember us for good. Ah! Master, in heaven,
that our people might look to Thee, for every final and ultimate decision. What
would God have us do? What pleases the Almighty? And in reverence for law and
government, and in worshipful reverence before Thee, may we prove good citizens,
loving people, honoring Thee, loving the brotherhood, honoring the brotherhood,
loving God, honoring our Lord. To Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to
God the things of soul and conscience that belong to God; in His keeping name,
amen.