COME AND SEE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
04-03-96
John 1:39; 4:29
Tomorrow, at noon: “Look and
Live.” And, then, on Friday—the last day, Good Friday—we're going to
speak about “The Open Door into Heaven,” and what it is like to enter in.
In keeping with our theme of “Showing
the Way to God”—the way to heaven, the sermon today is Come and See—Just
try it. Just experience it. Come and See.
And, of course, it is a reflection of
text in the Bible, such as in the first chapter of the Gospel of John.
The Lord says to Andrew and to John, “Come and see.” Then, Philip says to
Nathaniel: “Come and see.”
If I could describe this Bible as any
one thing above anything else, I could easily call it a book of
invitations. They are from beginning to end, repeated over and over
again. Invitations: Come and see. Try it. Experience
it.
For example, in Psalm 34, verse 8:
“O taste and see that the Lord is good; Blessed is the man that trusts in
Him!” Try it. Taste of it. Taste and see. God says,
“Come and see.”
In the tenth chapter of the Book of
Mark, the Lord says, “Let the little children come unto me, and forbid them
not.” They're welcome. Come. Come.
In the tenth chapter of the Book of
Matthew, we are invited to share in the love and grace of the Lord. He
will say in chapter 11, the verses that close it—28 to 30:
Come unto me—Come unto me all ye that
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn of me;
for I'm meek and lowly in heart; and you'll find rest for your souls.
For my yoke is easy, and my burden is
light.
Come
and see.
In the nineteenth chapter of that Gospel
of Mark, the Lord—the Gospel of Matthew—the Lord says to the rich young ruler: “Come
and follow me.”
What a tragedy! He didn't try
it. He didn't experience. But, the Lord invited, “You come”—Come
and see.
In the fourth chapter of the Fourth
Gospel of John, that Samaritan woman in Sychar said to her people, “Come and
see—there was never a man like this man who told me all things of my
life.” Come—Come and see.
In the seventh chapter of that Fourth
Gospel, our Lord says: “If any man thirsts, let him come unto me.” Come
and see.
The Bible closes with those same
glorious invitations. In the sixth chapter of the Apocalypse: “I saw a
strong angel crying with a voice of thunder, Come and see.” Then, when
the angel opened the second seal, an angel cried, “Come and see.” When he
opened the third seal, an angel cried: “Come and see.”
When
he opened the fourth seal, a strong angel cried with a mighty voice, “Come and
see.”
And, the whole Bible closes with an
invitation like that. In Revelation 22:17:
The Spirit—God's Holy Spirit—The Spirit and
the bride—the church, the people of the Lord—The Spirit and the bride say,
Come. Let him that heareth—repeat—Come. Let him that is athirst
come. And ho thelon—anybody who will—let him come and take the
water of life freely.
It
is a glorious and wonderful book of God, full of invitations. Come.
Come and see. Try it. Experience it. See what you
think.
So, this morning—in this brief
time—we're going to speak of some of the things to which we can find a
wonderful answer if we will only try, if we'll only come, if we'll only
see. So, I speak first of seeing the living Lord in the pages of this
holy Book.
Erasmus, who lived in the 1400’s, placed
the Word of God in a book that he called the Textus Receptus. And,
that is the basis of the translation for the Kings James Version of the
Bible. And, in previews of that Textus Receptus, Erasmus wrote on
these pages: “You will find the living Lord standing before you, more
real than if He were there in the flesh.” Try it. Read it.
See for yourself whether it reveals the living presence of our living
Christ.
As some of you—a long time ago—remember, the Foreign
Mission Board sent me on a preaching mission around the world. I was gone
four months, and two of them were in Japan.
In Japan, I came across—he had just
died—I came across the memory of one of the most unusual preachers of the
gospel I ever heard about. His name was Paul Kanamari. He belonged
to the Kumumato Band. And, they founded a university, a Christian school,
in Japan back yonder, over a hundred years
ago.
So, this brilliant man, Paul Kanamari,
was a professor in the school and went to Germany to study higher
criticism. In those studies, that are consumed with categorical
criticisms of the Word of God, he became an infidel. He resigned his
place of teaching in the school.
And, because of his brilliance, the
Japanese government hired him. And, he went up and down the Empire,
lecturing on national taxation and Empire finance. Eighteen years he was
employed by the government in those assignments.
Upon a day, he received word that his
wife had suddenly died. He rushed home and, that night, as he set in his
room in sorrow and in despair, there came into the room his youngest little
girl. They had eight children and his wife had remained a
Christian. And, she had taught them the way of the Lord.
The little girl came into the room where
her father was seated, climbed up into his lap, and begin to talk to him, and
said to him, “Dad, mother is in heaven. I miss her. Would you go to
heaven and bring her back to visit with us just for a while?”
And, that infidel started out to explain
to his little girl there was no such thing as heaven, no such thing as the
mother still alive. She was dead: dust and ashes.
He failed ignominiously, even trying to
teach his little girl there's no such thing as God, no such thing as heaven, no
such thing as a life after death. And, he failed ignominiously and
ingloriously.
Finally, in despair—and I would say in
half-disgust—he picked up his little girl and carried her to her room, and came
back and sat down in that chair in despondency. But, he couldn't get out
of his mind the request of the little child: “Would you go to heaven and bring
mother back just for a while, that I could see her and visit with her.”
He arose out of the chair. For the
first time in 18 years, he picked up his Bible and began to read. He
resigned his place in the government. He gave himself anew to the
Lord. And, up and down the Empire, he began to preach the glorious hope
we have in Christ Jesus. Come and see. Try it.
Read it and see if not out of the pages
of this holy Book Christ will not appear before you, more real than if He stood
in your presence in His flesh. Come and see. Try
it. Experience it.
May I make the same invitation about the
church? Come and see. Try it. Experience it.
When I was pastor in Kentucky, in
Woodburn, there joined the church a man and his family. And, as he set
there and listened to me preach, he cried.
Upon
a day, I sat down by his side and I said, “I noticed that when you were here in
church—in the services—you cried. Why do you cry?”
And, he replied, “For these last few
years I and my family have lived in the mountains of West Virginia where there
was no church. And, for these years, we have never been able to go to
church. And, now, to be here and to listen to the gospel message and to
fellowship with God's people is like heaven to me. And, I cannot keep
back the tears of rejoicing.”
I feel that same way about us. O
God, how I love this place!
The house in which we meet was built in
1890. It's a 106 years old. I look at these windows. I think
of this pulpit.
Behind this pulpit, the President of the
United States, Woodrow Wilson, stood. Even in my ministry, there have
been two presidents of the United States here.
I love the music. I love our
pastor. I love our people. This is like heaven to me. Come
and see. See for yourself if there's not joy indescribable and
unspeakable in the house of the Lord.
I've told family—and I've told you—that,
when I die, I want to be buried from this sacred and beautiful place.
I love Thy kingdom, Lord,
The house of Thine abode;
The church, our blessed Redeemer.
Saved with His own precious blood,
I love Thy church, O, God.
Her walls before Thee stand.
Dear is the apple
Of Thine eye and
Graven on Thy hand.
For her my tears shall fall,
For her my prayers ascend,
To her my toil and cares be given
‘Til toil and cares shall end.
Come
and see. Try it. You'll find nothing in life so dear and precious
as to be in the house of the Lord. Come and see. Come and
see. Try it for yourself.
To have a Christian home, to say a word
of thanksgiving before you break bread, to pray before you go to sleep at
night, and, on Sunday—God's day—to dress up in your best, and come with the
people of the Lord to call upon His glorious and saving name—Come and
see.
When I was a boy—it’s hard for me to
realize such a thing as this—When I was a boy, I belonged to the school where
we had declamations. And, I memorized declamations and entered contests
all over this part of the world.
One of those declamations that I memorized, I could
never ever forget. It was from the oratory of one of the greatest
speakers America's ever produced: Henry W. Grady of Atlanta, Georgia.
He was editor of the Atlanta
Constitution. And, after the Civil War, Henry W. Grady made a great
impact upon this nation in putting together a love for the South with a
brethren in the North.
Well, anyway, this is the substance of
that declamation. He is standing by the shore of Chesapeake Bay—by
Hampton Roads—and, he is viewing a review of the United States naval
strength. And, as he looks, he says to himself, “Surely the greatness and
the strength of America lies in its armed forces, in its military and naval
might.”
Then, he's in Washington, D.C., looking
at the capitol. And, as he sits there and watches the Senate and the
House in their deliberations, he says to himself, “No, the strength and the
might and the glory of America lies in its democratic institutions, in its
great assemblies of government.”
Then, he describes, he is the guest in
the home of an old friend, out in the country in his native Georgia. And,
after the chores are done, the father gathers his family together and he opens
the Bible and reads. Then, he kneels down with his wife and children in
prayer. And, Henry W. Grady says, as he knelt there with that family, the
great glory of the naval and military might of America faded away. Even
the United States capitol and its sessions in legislation faded away.
And, there just remained that father with his family on their knees. And,
he said, “That is the strength and the mind of America found in our Christian
families, and in our Christian homes.” Come and see. Try it.
Have a Christian family. Have worship. Have Bible reading.
Dress up and come to church. Come and see. Try it.
And, one other: I am a pastor for these
more than 69 years. And, world without end, have I prayed by the side of
those who were entering in. Come with me and see—Come with me as I kneel
down by the side of one of our godly deacons. And, I pray for him.
And, he says to me, when I rise from my knees: “Pastor, I'll see you in
heaven.”
And, as I go to the door, before I close
it, I turn around and look at him. And, with the feeble strength of his
hand, he raises his arm and points toward God, “I'll see you in heaven.”
Come and see. Come and see.
There's nothing of comfort and strength
and hope like that we have in Christ our Lord. Come and see.
My father and mother, in their age,
retired to be with the other members of the family in California. I was
out there, visiting Dad and Mother, just before he died.
My father loved to sing. And,
before I left, he sang me a song. And, right after that, he died.
You know what the song was? “I'll Meet
You.” That's right.
I'll meet you in the morning
By the bright river side.
When all sorrow
Has long passed away.
I'll be standing at the portals
With the gates open wide
At the end of life's
Long weary day.
I'll meet you in the morning.
And we will be there.
I'll greet you
In the morning
In the city that lies four square.
Come
and see.
There is no experience in life, there's
no hope so dear and precious, there's nothing comparable to the gift of God in
the Christian faith and in the Christian life. “God, having provided some
better thing for us… .” Come and see.
.