Pre-Easter Services:
America, Meet the Master
MOVING AMERICA TOWARD THE
MASTER
Dr. W.A. Criswell
Psalm 9:17, Proverbs 14:34
4-07-82 12:00 p.m.
It
certainly runs in that family to sing. God love you and thank you. And I
cannot help but remark on the beautiful behavior and reverential attention of
the young people, these boys and girls in our academy. You are as worshipful,
your attitude and spirit, as any of these adults who are seated on this lower
floor, and I’m grateful to you and grateful for that. Remember, this is a
lunch hour for so many of you who work downtown. And any moment when you have
to leave, we all understand. If you can stay just half of it, or a quarter of
it, or just the beginning of it, you’re so welcome.
The
theme this year as Mr. Bristow has announced is America, Meet The Master. What
matters to America? What matters to me? What matters in moving America to
God; moving me toward my Lord and the marvelous message of Jesus? And the
middle one today, Moving America To The Master.
There are two background texts. One is in Psalm,
chapter 9, verse 17. Psalm 9:17: “The wicked shall be turned into hell and all
the nations that forget God.” And Proverbs, the next Book: chapter 14, verse
34. Proverbs, chapter 14, verse 34: “Righteousness exalteth a nation, but sin
is a reproach to any people.”
Moving
America to the Master. It is with just pride and godly gratitude that we
look upon our beloved nation, our native land, stretching from side to side as
wide as the continent is wide. A beautiful nation, a beautiful country with
its teeming cities, and winding rivers, and broad prairies, and snow-capped
mountains that reach up to God in heaven.
Some
years ago, I made a mission tour, a preaching mission around the world. I was
gone four full months, a long time for me, then. And I so well poignantly
remember how I felt in my heart when coming back home to the west coast. In
the middle of the night the captain of the airplane, speaking over the PA
system said, “The next lights that you see on the left side of the plane will
be those of California.” And having been gone four strenuous months, those
words sounded like an announcement from heaven to me.
It
is the spirit of Sir Walter Scott in his Lay Of The Last Minstrel:
Breathes there the man with
soul so dead,
Who never to himself hath
said,
This is my own, mine native
land!
Whose heart within him
never burned,
As homeward his weary
footsteps turned,
From wandering on a foreign
strand.
If such there breathe,
Go mark him well;
For him no minstrels’
raptures swell.
And
looking at the world then, and since, and now, there is a vivid contrast
between other nations and our beloved home of America. I felt that, beyond any
way I could say it in syllable or sentence, in my first visit to Russia. We
landed in the middle of the night in Leningrad. We were taken to the Europa
Hotel and the next morning, eager to see the city, I walked out the door into
the street, then into the large boulevard at the next block. And when I stood
on the corner, I saw there across the street, a beautiful church house, a
beautiful building. It had been converted into a railroad station.
I
walked up that avenue, found another one of those onion-domed churches; it had
been turned into a granary. I walked up that same avenue, I saw another
beautiful church house; it had been turned into a warehouse. I kept walking up
that avenue and I came to the famous Kazan Cathedral. When I walked inside of
that beautiful edifice, it had been given over to displays of atheism. The
next day, I visited St. Isaac’s Cathedral where the Czars worshiped; the most
beautiful and the largest cathedrals in Eastern Europe. Where the high altar
once stood, on one side was a picture of Titov, on the other side a picture of
Gagarin; their two first astronauts. And underneath, written in Russian, and
in German, and in French, and in English, were these words, “We have searched
the heavens and there is no God.” [Nikita
Khrushchev].
As
I looked at that and remembered my country—not only a beautiful land of rivers,
and mountains, and prairies, and cities—but a land also of open churches, of
worshiping congregations, of Christian institutions, of Christian schools such
as you boys and girls represent this solemn noontide. I feel a rise in my own
heart when I think of our country and the freedoms and the liberties we enjoy
here.
Hats off!
Along the street there
comes
A blare of bugles, a ruffle
of drums,
A flash of color beneath
the sky:
Hats off!
The flag is passing by!
…
Sign of a nation, great and
strong,
To ward her people from
foreign wrong:
Courage and glory and
power,—all,
Live in the colors to rise
or fall.
Hats off!
Along the street there
comes
A blare of bugles, a ruffle
of drums;
And loyal hearts are
beating high:
Hats off!
The flag is passing by!
[“The Flag
Goes By”;
Henry Holcomb Bennett]
Our
beloved America; our colonies struggled to build this nation and to write its
constitution with the help of Almighty God. In 1787, there were fifty-five
brave, noble men who met in Independence Hall in Philadelphia to write the
Constitution of those thirteen original colonies. On the desk in front of them
was one Book, the Bible. A British visitor said, “Which one is General George
Washington?” And the reply was made, "The one who kneels is General
Washington." And they forged an instrument that has blessed their sons
and daughters and the generations since down to us in this present day.
They were looking for an instrument that would
guarantee rights and liberties to the people, and to be a bulwark against
tyranny and oppression. For a model, they first turned to Spain and found
there that the rights and liberties of the people were guaranteed by a
monarchy. But, said our founding fathers, if a monarchy can guarantee rights
and liberties, that same monarchy can take them away.
They
turned next to England for a model, and found there that the rights and
liberties of the people were guaranteed by a Parliament. But, said our founding
fathers, if a Parliament can guarantee rights and liberties, the same
Parliament can take them away.
They
turned next for a model for France and found there that the rights and
liberties of the people were guaranteed there by a majority. But, said our
founding fathers, if a majority can guarantee rights and liberties, the same
majority can take them away.
It
was then that our founding fathers, in writing the constitution of our nation,
turned to God and found that the rights and liberties of a people were
guaranteed, and founded in, and centered in, the character of Almighty God.
And our country and our nation has been built upon its Christian inheritance,
its Christian families, its Christian homes.
When
I was a boy in high school, like you young people here, I used to declaim. A
declamation is a beautiful, and effective, and mostly patriotic address made by
some great American; and then we would memorize it and deliver it. I won a
silver loving cup in the state, winning a declamation contest. Some of those
declamations I remember as vividly now as I did in the days when I memorized
them and delivered them.
One
of them was by Henry W. Grady, editor of the Atlanta Constitution; one
of the silver-tongued orators of the South. To capsulate it, to summarize it,
it went like this:
The great orator said he
stood upon Hampton Road, upon a July fourth celebration, and saw the might of
America pass by in review; in its Navy, in its Marines, and on the seashore in
its armed forces. And as he looked upon the mighty Navy and the great marching
Armies of men he said, "Truly the strength of America lies in its armed
might, its Navy, its Marines, its Army."
Then the orator
said, later he was in the capitol in Washington DC and he saw there those Congressmen
and legislators representing the people of America. And as he saw them
legislate and deliberate, he said, “I thought, truly the strength of America
lies in its democratic processes, in its great Congress and its
legislators."
Then in an eloquent and poignant turn,
he said he was later invited to spend the night with a friend, whom he’d known
in boyhood days, on his farm in Georgia. And after the chores of the day were
done, that godly man gathered his children around and with his wife, read out
of God’s Book and bowed in prayer. And the great orator said, as he looked at
that godly man kneeling in prayer before an open Bible, the great armies and
navies of the nation melted away. No longer did he see the processes of
government under the capitol dome. There just remained that godly man on his
knees before an open Bible. Then he said, "I learned that the strength of
America lies in its godly people; in its Christian homes, in its praying
parents."
We
pause now for just the remaining moment to look at the future. Whether we live
or whether we die lies in the imponderables of Almighty God. The shores of
history are strewn with the wreckage of the great empires and mighty nations,
these who have forgotten God.
Under
our view and under our gaze, we have seen the dissolution and the decay of the
greatest empire the world ever saw. It belonged to Britain. Britannia rules
the waves. On the Union Jack, the flag of Britain, to boast: The sun will
never set.
In
the celebration of the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria in this last century,
there was paraded before the world, a might and a power that the earth had
never seen. And at the end of that Diamond Jubilee-Victorian Celebration, one
of their poets, Rudyard Kipling wrote the stanzas of the “Recessional.”
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!
Far-called our
navies melt away;
On dune and headland sinks
the fire:
Lo, all our pomp of
yesterday
Is one with Nineveh and
Tyre!
Judge of the nations, spare
us yet.
Lest we forget--lest we
forget!
If, drunk with sight of
power, we loose
Wild tongues that hold not
Thee in awe--
Such boastings as the
Gentiles use,
Or lessor breeds without
the law--
Lord God of Hosts, be with
us yet,
Lest we forget--lest we
forget!
And
England turned aside from God. One of their pastors said to me, "There is
not one in one hundred in my city of London who even attends church." The
wicked shall be turned into hell and all the nations that forget God.”
Nor is America an exception to the judgments of the
Almighty Lord. We are seeing a decay in our country that is frightening and
terrible. We have drugs to tear our bodies apart; promiscuity to tear our
families apart; crime to tear our cities apart; humanism to tear our schools
apart; secularism to tear our Christian heritage apart; cults to tear our
churches apart. And our country is beginning to bleed and to hurt; wounded,
decaying. That’s why we’re here, and that’s why this church with its steeple
pointing to God, and that’s why these services of appeal, that we might open
our hearts to a great intervention from heaven.
When
I was a boy, we lived on a farm just beyond a little town in the Texas
panhandle—dry, burned up, wind-swept. And I remember standing in the back door
of our farmhouse with my father, and he was shouting to the top of his voice.
As a little boy I looked at him in amazement and astonishment. My father was
very quiet, reluctant, almost shy, and to see him and hear him shout to the top
of his voice was amazing to me. And looking up into his face I said,
"Daddy, why are you shouting so?" Putting his hand on my hand, he
said, "Son, the rain! Look! God," he said, "has given us rain!
God has given us rain!" It meant food for our hungry mouths. It meant
clothing for our naked backs. It meant life for our weary pilgrim way. “God
hath given us rain!”
Oh, for the floods on the
thirsting land.
Oh, for a mighty revival.
Oh, for a fearless
sanctified band
To hail its arrival.
The need of the land is
revival,
A freshen of grace from
above.
Repentance toward God in
forgiveness,
More trusting in Christ and
His love.
The need of the church is
revival,
More praying for those who
are lost,
More fullness of spirit and
witness,
More zeal without counting
the cost.
[Author
and Work Unknown]
God
send it in our day, and let our eyes look upon it. And our Lord, in that
spirit of prayer, and intercession, may each one of us find himself strangely
moved to open heart, and soul, and life, and hand, God-ward and heavenward.
Visit us, Lord, from above. In Thy saving, keeping name, amen.