THE NEW
EDUCATION BUILDING:
BUILDING A
HOUSE FOR GOD
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
Matthew
28:18
4-29-73
10:50 a.m.
Building A House For God, the
message will concern two questions. They are questions asked by our
people; not one, not two, not even half a dozen of our people, but scores and
scores of our members have asked these questions. Question number one: Three
years ago we brought to our people a building fund appeal and for three years
many of our people have been giving to that building fund. We are now
asking our people for three million dollars to pay for this new educational
building across Patterson Street. So the question is asked, rightfully
so, “What have you done with the money that we have already given to the
building fund? Some of us have been giving for three years, what has
become of that money?”
In answer to the question, I went
to the business office and they gave me a detailed report of what has been done
with our building fund, and I make that report to you now. In answer to the
appeal three years ago, our people have contributed, through this last month of
March, $1,017,414.95. We have given in the last three years to this
special fund something over one million dollars—now how has it been used?
This is a detailed report of how
our building fund has been used. Number one; it has been spent on
payments to buy these lots, without which there is no possibility of building
at all. And when the lots came up for sale, it was an urgency for us that
we secure them when they were offered to us. There was therefore taken out of
the building fund $344,194.07 in order to help secure these properties.
One of the properties is the lot upon which our educational building is
erected. That lot cost more than $300,000. That much money out of
the building fund was taken to secure the purchasing; to make payments on these
lots that are so desperately needed.
Number two; there was borrowed out
of the building fund for this television program color television—the buying of
these cameras and the arrangement for color television—there was borrowed out
of the fund $173,367.33. This, by far, is the greatest outreach that our
church has ever known or will know. On any Sunday, at any eleven o’clock
service, there are more than 300,000 people who are listening and worshiping with
us in this First Baptist Church in Dallas. Our service is cabled across
the state of Texas, into New Mexico, into Oklahoma, into Arkansas, into
Louisiana. And the blessing of God upon the preaching of the gospel is
beyond imagination.
A little example: I was invited [to]
a beautiful dinner given by the deacons of one of our great First Baptist
churches. The chairman of the deacons presided over the meeting, and I
was seated by his wife. And as we ate together, the chairman of the
deacons’ wife turned to me and said, “Did you know that I was converted under
your ministry?” I said, “I am surprised. I do not know you, I have never
seen you before, and I cannot imagine. How did it come to pass?” She
said, “My husband belonged to this church and he is one of the leading business
men in the city. My husband belonged to this church, but I was reared in
another faith and another communion, and I was not a Christian.” And she said,
“Listening to you one Sunday morning, over television, the Lord spoke to my
heart and I knelt down there, before that television set, and I gave my heart
and life to Jesus. I was baptized, and now my husband is the chairman of
the deacons and we are serving Christ together.”
You can multiply that instance a
thousand times, a thousand times. We offer a little book sometimes [to] just
anybody [who] would like to write in—here’s a book we will give you. And
when we do that, there will be more than a hundred letters a week just asking
for that book. The outreach ministry of our television is beyond
compare. It is the greatest open door God has ever given to us. And
$173,000 out of the building fund was borrowed in order to make possible this
television ministry.
Number three, we could not wait
until the building was built, for our Sunday school was growing
furiously. Therefore, we had to take some of the money and remodel the
facilities that we have, and go over to the Cotton Exchange Building and
remodel facilities there to house our Sunday school. And for that
purpose, there was taken $130,000, and a little beyond.
Number four; Coleman Hall was
remade and remodeled at a cost of $341,515.50. This kitchen and the hall
that accompanied it was created, built, in 1924. That’s almost fifty
years ago. And when I came here, on Wednesday nights the kitchen and the
dining room were serving about seventy-five to a hundred or a hundred-five
people. As the days and years have passed, on any Wednesday night,
there will be at least a thousand and more people down here. Our
fifty-year-old kitchen broke down in age and in felicity and something had to
be done. So we took out of the building fund and created a new kitchen,
and one of the most beautiful dining halls, though it is far too small, one of
the most beautiful dining halls of any church ever.
Last, the memorials that have been
given in these three years to our building fund have been sacredly kept, and
all of that money is in the bank downtown awaiting the building of the memorial
in our Christian Education building. That means the Ralph Baker Hall, all that’s
been given to that memorial, the sums of money given in honor of Libby
Reynolds, our Primary director—all of the memorials are in the bank and are
going to be dedicated when our Christian Education building is finished.
That is where the money has
gone. It has been blessedly invested and it has been blessedly used of
God. That is where the money has been spent that we have given to the
expansion and building program of the church these last three years.
Now, we come to the time where we
desperately need to underwrite and to pay for our beautiful new Christian
Education building. The answer to the second question: “If I give, what
do I get out of it? What does it mean to me?” In the nineteenth chapter
of the Book of Matthew [verses 27-29]:
Then answered Simon Peter and said
unto Jesus, behold we have forsaken all and followed Thee. What shall we
have therefore?”—What shall I get out of it—And the Lord answered and said:
Everyone that hath forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or
mother, or wife, or children, or lands for My name’s sake shall receive a
hundred fold, and shall inherit everlasting life.
“What shall I get out of it?
What does it mean to me if I respond and give to this building fund for the
payment of our Christian Education building?” Answer number one, we shall be
doing the will of God—I shall be doing the will of God when I give to make
possible the erection of this Christian Education building.
The last time that our church
entered into a building program was in 1952. Since that time our Sunday school
has tripled and had it not been for the Burke Building that was bought and paid
for, there would have been nothing but catastrophic disaster to overwhelm our
church. But the Burke Building has not been the beginning of the answer
to our vital pedagogical needs. So as time and the years multiplied, we
planned a great building at the corner of San Jacinto and St. Paul. And in
that building we were planning a tremendous dining hall to seat 2500 people
where we could bring our friends and the whole church gather together, say on a
Wednesday night, and we [could] have our mid-week service gathered around our
tables. It was a dream of my heart, but the reason that building never materialized
was this. The contractors came to me and said it would take three million
dollars to build that hall before above it you begin your educational units.
Then the staff and the
superintendents of the Sunday school came to me and said, “Pastor, surely God
would not lead you into building a structure that would cost three million
dollars before there was aught done for us. We so desperately need a
place for Sunday School ministries.” I said, “That is so correct. We
cannot take all of our money to build a hall and then nothing left for the
educational program of our church.” So, the building never
materialized.
We prayed. We prayed for
years. We sought the mind of God for years. And after the passing
of the years, it came to us, to me as pastor, to our men, and to our Sunday school
leadership that what we must do is to take all of the money that is possible
for us to give and to build a Christian Education building. And that,
under God, is what we have done and are doing. If I know the mind of Christ,
and if God answers prayer, and if the Lord can reveal unto us His will, and if
we can know it, this is God’s will for us, that we build this education
building.
Answer number two: What shall I
get out of it? First we shall be doing the will of God—answer number two,
second: We shall be carrying out the mandate of God, the Great Commission.
We had a staff meeting recently, a
few days ago, and in that staff meeting, I spoke to our educational leadership
and said what I dreamed in my heart and prayed for in behalf of our church is
to have a great teaching ministry [and] that our outreach be centered around a
teaching program. Some of the staff, maybe all of them, misunderstood.
For after the service was over—our meeting was over—as they talked they said, “You
know, our pastor has changed, for no longer is it first that we win people to
Christ, but he’s changed it now to a teaching program and a teaching ministry.”
That is a misunderstanding and a
misconstruction. What I am doing in the work and the teaching ministries
of this church is an earnest attempt to carry out the mandate of Christ, and
the mind of God. It is perfectly revealed to us in the Great
Commission.
And Jesus came and spake unto them
saying, All authority is given unto Me in heaven and in earth. Go ye
therefore and matheteuo all the people, baptizing them in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them—didasko—teaching
them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you. And lo, I am
with you alway, even unto the end of the world.
[Matthew
28:19]
Look at that: “Go ye therefore and
. . ..” The Lord could have used the word euangelizo. When
you take the Greek word euangelizo and spell it out in English, it comes
out “evangelize”—E-U; “E-V” in English—euangelizo; “evangelize.”
The Lord could have said, “Go ye therefore and evangelize all the people.”
Evangelize, win them to Christ, which is in the mind and the will of God. But
He never said that, He never used that word. What He used was: “Go ye
therefore and matheteuo—Mathetes is a disciple, a pupil, a
learner. And matheteuo means to make disciples, to make learners,
to enroll in Christ’s school.
For example, our blessed Lord, in
the sweetest invitation in the Bible said this: “Come unto me all ye who labor
and are heavy laden and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and
learn of Me.” [Matthew 11:28] That is an old, ancient, Talmudic expression
meaning, “Enroll in my school and sit at my feet. Take my yoke upon you,
enroll at my school, and learn of Me, sit at my feet.” This is the great
mandate of our Lord: “Go ye therefore and matheteuo,” enroll in the
school of Christ, all of the people.
Now, how does that differ from
just euangelizo? It is this: I visited a tremendous church, a
tremendous church. In the center of it, where the pulpit is, here was a
gigantic baptistry, and they baptize unbelievable numbers of people. The
church has no roll. The church keeps no record. They have no idea
of the people that they win and baptize.
It reminded me, where I grew up in
West Texas, of a cattle dip. The cattle are run through the dip in order
to get off all the ticks, and mites, and fleas and all the other things. The
cattle are run through the dip and then out into the pasture they go. The
church reminded me of that, just dipping the people and forgetting them.
All right, let’s take another
instance. One of the pastors of our tremendous churches called me on the telephone
and said, “Are you seated? I want to talk to you a long time.” He
said, “We baptize many, many people in our church, but we don’t grow and we don’t
have them. We lose them. I want you to tell me, what do you do in
Dallas in building your Sunday school and in building your church?” And I sat
down in the chair and told him how we build this ministry. We do it
trying to get our people to teach them the mind and heart of Christ: “Go ye
therefore and matheteuo, enroll in My school. Make disciples of
Me, followers of Me, pupils of Mine, all of the people.” Didasko, this
is the Greek word for actual teaching. “Teaching them the things that I
have given unto you.” And to have a ministry like that is a ministry that
is pleasing to the mind of God. Not just to win people and forget them,
but to win them using our great teaching ministry as its outreach appeal;
winning these people, and then teaching them to grow in grace and in the
knowledge of the Lord.
Now, I am not saying that to win a
convert is not first and above all important. It is. There is no
existence without birth. Except a baby be born, there’s no life. It
means death without the birth. But having been born, it is no less vital
that the child be cared for and nurtured and taught.
Some time ago, a week or so ago, I
referred to the most dramatic passage in the Bible. The imagery of it is
unbelievably powerful and dynamic. It is the sixteenth chapter of the
prophet Ezekiel. In that, the prophet says: The Lord passed by and saw in
an open field, Israel cast out. It was a little baby; the navel
cord had not been cut. It was lying in its own blood and it had not
been washed. And God says:
As I passed by, I saw in the
field that child, and I had pity upon it and Mine eye was moved in sympathy
with it. And I took the child, and I bathed it, and I washed it of its
blood, and I anointed it, and I brought it up to be beautiful and strong
[Ezekiel
16:4-7]
That is what God wills for His
people. Not that we alone be born and lay in our own blood, but to be
cared for, to be washed, to be nurtured, to be anointed, and to be brought up
to be strong in the Lord. That is the mind of God for us; this is great
mandate of Christ!
In my own life, I was converted
fifty-three years ago; down an aisle, gave my hand to the pastor, took Jesus as
my Savior, was baptized into the fellowship of the church, fifty-three years
ago. What of these years since, and since, and since, and since, and
since? I need to grow in knowledge, and in the grace and in the
admonition of the Lord. This is the will and mind of Christ for us.
In Baylor, where I went to school,
for the four years I was there, I listened to a great layman who was the
president of our school. His name was Samuel Palmer Brooks. That man made
an everlasting and indelible impression upon my soul. Every day at
chapel, I listened to that great layman. One of the things he said one
time was this, and I quote him, he said, “Young gentlemen,” he said, “I do not
say that education is everything, but I do say whether a child becomes a
goose-stepping Nazi, or a militant communist, or an atheist, or a Buddhist, or
a Mohammedan, or a Catholic, or a Baptist depends upon how he is taught and
trained.”
That is so everlastingly
true. When the child is born, what becomes of him? What he is to be, is
a matter of our pedagogical molding and training and shaping. That is why
in our church, under God, having studied the Bible, and seeking to implement
the will of Christ, I am seeking to turn our church into a great outreaching,
teaching ministry—getting people, winning people and then teaching them the
mind and way and will of God. Our Sunday school, our training union, our
First Baptist School, our weekday school, our Bible institute, our Wednesday
night meetings, the whole thing, trying to get people into the kingdom and then
teaching the mind that is in Christ Jesus.
What do I get out of it? Not
only doing the will of God; not only carrying out and being true to the Great
Commission, what do I get out of it? I get out of it a blessing for me,
and for all of our people in this dear church. You see, the director of the
nursery comes to me and says, “Pastor, we desperately need more rooms. We
don’t have beds enough for the children. Can’t you help us?” The
director of the beginner division comes to me and says, “Pastor, we have a
hundred children in a space where we ought not to have more than twenty or
twenty-five. Can not you not help us?” The only way to do is to take out
of the Truett Building—the children’s building—is to take out of it our young
marrieds and put them somewhere, in order that our nursery and beginner and
primary divisions can expand upward.
The junior director comes to me
and says, “Pastor, we so desperately need a place.” The junior high
director comes and says, “We so desperately need room.” And the senior
high [director] comes and says to me, “Pastor, you wouldn’t believe how we are
cramped and crowded into so small an area.” So there is no other thing to
do but take out of that Burke Building—our junior and teenage building—to take
out the adults that are in it, and the older teenagers that are in it, in order
for these to expand.
So the director of our older adult
division comes to me and says, “Pastor,”—Nettles Nelson is the superintendent
of our oldest adult department—and he says that if we do not find a place for
our older adults we are going to lose the entire department. They are
beginning to erode because we do not have a place for them that is felicitous
in the meeting. There’s not anything else to do but to take the median
adults and place them somewhere in order that our older adults may have a
felicitous place in which to meet. Now, what we have done is, we have built
this new building in order to take these groups and place them there, in order
that these other groups can expand and have room to breathe.
A Sunday school is like a boy
growing. He doesn’t grow just in his big toe, or just in his big thumb,
or in the lobe of his ear, or in his nose, he grows all over. So it is in
a pedagogical ministry. You can’t just add something here and then forget
all of the rest of it, everything has to conform. So what is done there
must be in keeping with the whole framework of what is being done [with] everything
else. And it has to meet beautifully, pulchritudinously, felicitously,
gloriously, and that’s what we are doing. We bless ourselves, every one
of us in the church.
Number four, what do I get out of
it? Not only doing the will of God, not only carrying out the Great
Commission, and not only blessing myself and all of the others in my dear
church. Number four, what do I get out of it? I get out of it the
sweet blessedness of seeing the precious usefulness of the building.
For example, just one: the
chairman of our missions committee went over there and looked at the new
building, and he saw that what you’d call a little theater, the Ralph Baker
Hall, a little auditorium, that has a precipitous incline, and he came to me
and said, “Pastor, that would be the wonderful place in the world for our deaf
people, our silent church. Oh, could you give that to them?” Just soon
after, the pastor of our silent church, the pastor of our deaf people, happened
to be over there looking at the new building and he came to me and he said, “Oh,
Pastor, I saw that little auditorium. It will seat about two
hundred. And the incline! Oh,” he said, “if we could have that for
our church, It would be the most heavenly thing in the earth.
Pastor, could we have it? Would you give that to us?”
I said, “I am not the whole
church, but I’ll tell you this, under God, that when that building is complete,
you will have that little chapel for your church. It will be yours.”
And why did I say that? For one reason; listen, for twenty-eight years,
for twenty-eight years, I have promised those dear silent friends—those deaf
people—that they would have a place to meet. For twenty-eight years, I
have never been able to fulfill that promise. Right now they meet in
Slaughter Chapel and they take a high platform and put it where the pulpit is,
in order for the silent people to see the sermon, because they can’t hear, they
have to see. But they say to me, “It is so unhappy an arrangement. We
don’t like it and we can’t see well.” There in that little auditorium with a
steep incline the pastor, Brother Joe Johnson of the silent church said to me, “I
can look [at] every one of them, just like personally talking to them and they
can hear the gospel with my fingers.” Oh, I’m so glad! What do I get out
of it? I can hear—at the time I am preaching here, Joe Johnson is
preaching with his hands, manually, to those people—but somehow the blessedness
of it comes to me that they have such a sweet place.
Just like going through Africa one
time, I saw a doctor under a banyan tree ministering to those miserable and
wretched people. And as I stood and watched him, I thought, who sent out
that missionary? We did. And who bought that medicine? We
did. And who made it possible for him to be here? We did. And
I was so glad. I feel the same way about the blessedness of the use of
that Christian Education building. I am glad. I am glad. I am
so glad.
Last, number five; what do I get
out of it? One, I am doing the will of God. Second, I am carrying
out the Great Commission. Third, I am being blessed along with all our
people, for my heart is raised in thanksgiving that I can see it used for so
precious a purpose. Last, what do I get out of it? It gives me a
sublime, celestial, heavenly opportunity to show my thanksgiving and
appreciation to God for His infinite goodnesses to me.
It’s like this. The church
was called together at the eleven o’clock hour, their worship service, and they
were raising money for a new building. And the pastor was there, asking
the people to stand, to give their pledges to the new building. And a man
stood up, and his wife seated at his side, and he said, “My brethren, as you
know, our son was killed across the seas, in the war. And out of memory
of our boy, my wife and I pledge ten thousand dollars to the building fund in
memory of our boy who lost his life across the seas in the war.” And he
sat down and when he did, right back of him, sat a wife next to her husband and
she touched him and said, “Husband, stand up. Stand up and tell the
pastor that we will give ten thousand dollars for our son.” And the husband
turned to the wife and said, “But wife, our boy was not killed. He came
back home, safe and sound, and he’s with us now. He was not killed.” And
the wife said, “Husband, that’s why. Stand up, get up. Tell the
pastor we give ten thousand dollars because our boy came back home. Out
of love, and gratitude, and appreciation to the Lord, we pledge ten thousand
dollars.”
That’s what I mean. Out of a
sense of gratitude and thanksgiving to God for what He has done for us. “My
eyes, I thank Thee for them. My ears, I thank Thee for them. The
breaths that I breathe, I thank Thee for them. These who love and
remember to pray and stand by, I thank Thee for them. For Jesus, who
saved me, I thank Thee, O God! For the church and the sweet communion, I
thank Thee, Lord. And this is just a way of expressing to Thee my gratitude,
and my appreciation, and my thanksgiving for what the Lord hath done for me.”
Tell
me, not out of necessity and not out of coercion, if you feel like that, “I
would like to do something for God, special. I will love doing it and I
am going to do it like that.” If that’s the way you feel in your heart,
with the pastor, would you raise your hand, would you raise your hand, would
you raise your hand? God see it and bless us and reward us a thousand
fold.
Now, in a moment, we stand to sing our hymn of appeal—a family you.