GROWING A GREAT SUNDAY
SCHOOL
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Matthew 28:18-20
10-22-89
In
Dallas, this is the pastor bringing the message. It is an exposition of the Great Commission. In the last verses of the last chapter of
the first Gospel we read:
Jesus came and spake unto them
saying, All authority, power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore and teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the triune God.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.
Teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you. And
lo, I am with you all the days. Even
unto the end of the world. Amen.
The
message arises out of looking at that in the Greek text. It looks so different. For example, there are four verbs in that
great commandment and three of them are participles. One of them only is an imperative.
Poreuthentes,
going, is a participle. Baptizontes,
baptizing, is a participle. Didaskontes,
teaching, is a participle. But one of
them is an imperative, matheteusate, making learners. Make learners.
You
have that word in Matthew 11:29: “Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me, mathete,
learn of me.” That’s the word here, mathete. It is a timeless aorist imperative. Make learners of all the people. The pertinence of the question of that shoe
cobbler, William Carey in 1798, two hundred years ago in England, the father of
the modern missionary movement, he stood up in the North Hamptonshire Baptist
Association and asked the question, "Is it not imperative upon ministers
today, this same commission that the Lord gave to His apostles?"
We’re
to make learners; we’re to make disciples of all nations and peoples of the
earth. The assignment is vast and
all-inclusive. Did you notice that word
"all" is used four times?
Pasa,
all power is given unto me. “Go ye
therefore and make learners of all nations, teaching them to observe all things
and I’ll be with you all the days.”
It
is a vast and inclusive commission. One
of the most famous religious paintings in the world is of our Lord Jesus
pointing to the world as a field. And
there are by His side, Simon Peter, and John and the other apostles and the
look on their faces is one of determination and commitment.
As
the Lord includes the whole vast humanity in our assignment we’re to go to the
wrong side of the railroad tracks and the right side of the railroad
tracks. We’re to go to the up and outs
and to the down and outs. We’re to go
to all humanity. All of them! In keeping with that Great Commission in our
modern era, there was born a Sunday School teaching movement.
In
1780, there was an editor, an owner of the Gloucester Journal in
England, by the name of Robert Raikes.
When he would go to work and come back, he noticed on the Lord’s Day the
children playing out in the streets.
He
gathered them together and began teaching them the Word of God. Being an editor and owner of the Gloucester
Journal, he publicized it to the ends of the earth. And the churches in the kingdom of Christ
responded and began gathering the families together, especially the children,
to teach them the Word of the Lord.
In
this very pulpit, a man stood here and said, "The streets of the city
offer no degrees and they confer no diplomas, but they educate with terrible
precision."
That
is seen in the tragic fact that more than one million boys and girls every year
in America now enter careers of crime.
Criminal statistics are rising furiously in the western nations of the
earth and tragically so in America.
Drug addiction, violence, rape, plunder, robbery, drunkenness are rising
fearfully, and our city is no exception.
It was not a preacher, it was a politician who said, "The moral
deterioration of America threatens the very foundation of our existence."
I
think the politician was correct. If
there is not a turning in the violence and drunkenness and drug addiction of
America, we’re going to see our very life thrown into disarray and
disintegration.
Could
I make an aside? I was grown before I
ever saw a house door locked. I was
grown. You come out there and look at
our house now. It has bars all over the
windows and doors. It’s got every door
locked two or three times and it has an alarm system on it.
That’s
the difference between my raising up as a boy and the world in which I live
today. The method of approach: how do
we meet the tremendous needs of this modern era and how do we implement this
Great Commission of our Lord? How do we
do it? First of all, we are to be
reminded that methods are many.
Principles are few. Principles
never change. Methods do. The gospel is ever the same. Truth is the ever the same. Principles are ever the same. But how we apply them changes with every
changing generation.
Here
again, may I speak of the difference between now and when I was a boy? I went to church in a little white cracker
box of a church house. Had a little
bell on it. When we had a revival meeting;
we did it by way of announcement. That
was all. The stores closed. Everybody attended. Everybody!
Right
back of our house lived the town infidel.
You could hear him cuss all over creation every time he beat his cow in
the morning. He was there on the second
seat, making fun of the preacher.
Everybody attended. And the
whole preparation of the meeting was just by announcement. I’d like to see you do that today. I’d like to see us have any kind of a
revival today. It’s another era. It’s another time. It’s another day.
It
never occurred to anyone that I ever knew when I was growing up to, say, have
an educational building by the side of that church. The ox cart is gone. The
horse and buggy are gone. Did you know
Dr. Truett, my illustrious predecessor here for forty-seven years, visited in a
horse and a buggy? And when the horse
and buggy went out, he never learned to drive a car? Truett could not drive a car.
Another day, another era, even the steam engine—the railroad steam
engine that seemed so universally fixed in history and in time, and in
transportation—even the steam engine is gone.
Out
there at the Fair Park, if you go out there they have several railroad tracks
in which they have those steam engines for a relic. Just so you can gawk at one.
I heard of a slow train through Arkansas. And a little lady was on the train and when the conductor came by
she said, "Oh, I’m so tired."
And
the conductor, to cheer her up, said, "Why dear, I have been riding this
train for twenty-two years."
And
she said, "Oh, dear, you must have got on in Texarkana."
It’s
another day. What is the great
principle that lies back of our teaching ministries? It arises out of the ministry and methods of our Savior. His teaching was not staid and static. It was dynamic and personal and
relevant. So much so that when they
heard Him, they were astonished at His doctrine, at His teaching. It was new, like a new garment. It’s even called the New Testament, the new
covenants and new creation.
Well,
what is it? It is very simple and it is
very plain. The great methodology and
the central heart of the teaching and doctrine of our Savior is the gospel of
the one lost sheep, and the one lost coin, and the one lost boy. You can sum up His whole method in that
sentence. That was our Lord. In the cursing fishermen, He could see the
great preacher at Pentecost. In that despised
tax collector, He could see the author of this first Gospel.
In
a harlot, He could see the purity of a Mary Magdalene. In that malefactor crucified with Him on the
cross, He could see His companion in paradise.
In the blaspheming persecutor, Saul of Tarsus, He could see the apostle
of the Gentiles.
The
approach of the method of our Lord was always that one somebody. You.
Always. Whether it was Nicodemus
taking up half of the night asking Him a question, or that five-times divorced
Samaritan woman, to whom He showed the way of life. That’s our Lord.
And
the great method of our Savior in teaching lies in that one somebody, that
little boy or that little girl, or that family, or that father or that
mother. And for us to approach this
great city of Dallas and to do it with the one on our mind—that one somebody of
ours—to break, to divide, to multiply, to reach not by the gobs and the masses,
but by the ones and the ones. We’re
born one at a time. We’re going to die
one at a time. We’re going to be judged
one at a time. And we’re born into the
kingdom of God one at a time.
And
for us to give ourselves to that kind of an approach, each one is precious in
God’s sight. And we’re going to
organize, we’re going to grade, we’re going to multiply to reach those ones for
our Savior. It’s a wonderful commitment
and it’s one that God would gloriously bless.
I want to take a little moment to compliment us. I don’t think I was ever more surprised in
my life than I was in this.
I
was holding a revival meeting in Caribou, Maine. That’s up there at the top.
I remember going up there from Highway 1 that runs from Canada down to
those [Florida] Keys. The United States
Highway 1. I went up there where it
started just to say I had been up there.
Oh, it’s another world I tell you.
I was holding that meeting in Maine and the snow was clear up to the
back of the motel where I was staying in Maine. Well, anyway, the house had burned down. The church house had burned down and they
were pretty well close to building their new church house.
Well,
I was in the secretary’s office and there on the wall was a picture of their
beautiful new church house. And it was
elegant. So I looked at it and I
complimented it and I said, "That’s just beautiful. That’s just beautiful." And she never said a word. So I emphasized it. I said, "Just look at that church house
here. That’s just beautiful."
And
she said to me, "It hurts my heart every time I look at it."
Why,
I couldn’t believe my ears. That
secretary: “It hurts my heart every time I look at it.”
Well,
I said, "What makes you think that?"
And
she replied, "What we need is an educational unit to reach these people
for God. Then we can build a church
house."
Like
an old Dutch farmer, he builds his barns and he lets his barns build his
house. Having an educational unit and
letting the educational unit build the church house. I did that here in Dallas.
I went to the bank and borrowed one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars
and built Shiloh Terrace Baptist Church.
And what I did, I took the one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars
which is a whole lot more back yonder in that day, and I built an educational
building. And the educational building
has built that wonderful church out there.
So
looking at that, she said, "What we need is an educational building to
teach the Word of God."
And
I said, "Dear child, where did you learn that way up on this side of
Canada? Where did you learn that?"
She
said, "I learned that where you live.
I learned that in your church. I
learned that down there where you preach."
That
we need to reach the people, teaching the people and then the people come
together in some kind of a sanctuary, there to sing the praises of God. But first we make learners. Isn’t that what God said? “Matheteusate,” going, make learners
of all the people.
We
must hasten. What do we teach? What is our text? We do not manufacture our message. It is given to us by divine inspiration. Didaskontes, making learners,
teaching them all the things that I have commanded you.
The
Gospel of Luke in the last chapter, 24, spells it out: “And the Lord spake to
them concerning the Torah, the Neviim and the Kethuvim.” The law, the prophets, and the Apocrypha,
the writings, the Book. The Book!
What
a marvelous privilege to stand before God’s people and teach them the
Book. There’s never a dull moment in it
I tell you. In one of these classes the
teacher asked the kids about Solomon.
What do you know about Solomon?
And
one of the youngsters held up his hand and said, "He loved women and
animals."
And
the teacher said, "What do you mean?"
And
he replied, "The Bible says he had seven hundred wives and three hundred
porcupines."
There
was a teacher who was emphasizing the omnipresence of God. God is everywhere. So she asked the question, "Where is God now?"
And
a little boy held up his hand and she said, "Where is God now?"
And
he says, "He’s in our bathroom at home."
And
the teacher was amazed and said, "What do you mean he’s in your bathroom
at home?"
Well,
the little boy who had been picked up by somebody else said, "When I left
the house, I heard my daddy beating on the door saying, ‘Good Lord, are you
still in there?"
There’s
nothing in the world like teaching the Word of the Lord. Two things about it. One, this is the way we’re saved. 1 Peter 1:23-25: “We are born again by the
Word of God which liveth and abideth forever.”
James
1:18: “Of His own will begat He us by the Word that we might be a kind of
firstfruits unto God from all of His creation.”
We
are saved, we are born again, by the Word of God. And the other, our hope of heaven is the Word of God. John 5:24: “Verily, he that heareth My Word
and believeth shall have everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation:
but is passed out of death into life.”
Our
hope of heaven that blessed Word. May I
take a leaf out of my life? In these
days and years past, a long time ago now, there was a beautiful, gracious
gifted middle-aged woman here in our church, a professional woman. She went regularly to New York City on
buying assignments. And upon a day
there, she married a producer of Broadway plays in New York City and brought
him back to the Dallas area. She was
very faithful in church and brought him with her. And to my infinite delight upon a day like this, down the aisle
he came confessing his faith in the Lord Jesus and giving himself to our
Savior.
Well,
sweet people, I was ecstatic because in my heart, ever since I have been here,
I have wanted us to have a drama department in our church. Don’t you ever persuade yourself that
Hollywood and the television and all those people invented the drama. They got it from us.
In
about 900 A.D., the church began to teach the people through drama, through
plays. They were called "Miracle
Plays." And in the thousands, in
the eleven hundreds, in the twelve hundreds, thirteen, fourteen, in the fifteen
hundreds, one of them is still going on, the Passion Play over at Oberammergau.
All
through Christendom, the church taught the people with drama. I wanted to do that here in our church. I wanted to have a magnificent dramatic
department. That’s why Ralph Baker Hall
is built as it is. I built that thing
in order for us to have a dramatic department.
Well,
you cannot imagine, I say, the ecstasy I felt in my heart when that Broadway
producer was converted and came down that aisle and I baptized him. Well, here again, a dream, a rainbow gone to
smash. Suddenly, he died of a heart
attack. Just broke my heart. Well, I went to the service to conduct the
service, and when I stood by the casket with his wife, for the first time in my
life I saw something I had never seen before.
He
lay there in the casket with his Bible in his hand. With his Bible in his hand.
And I turned to his wife and said, "I’ve never seen that
before." With a Bible in his hand,
lying there in the casket.
She
said, "Pastor, when he was converted, he began to read the Bible all the
time." She said to me, "When
he would shave, he would prop up that Bible by the window by the mirror, and as
he would shave he would read that Bible.
It was always on the seat by his side in the car. It was the way he began the morning. It was the way he ended the day in the
evening. He always read his
Bible."
And
she said to me, "When they placed him in the casket, I looked at him and
his hands seemed so empty. And I had
seen him so many times holding that Bible."
She
said, "I went home and I went upstairs, I got his Bible and I brought it
and I put it in his hands. And I buried
him with his Bible in his hands."
Sweet
people, when I die, when I die, I want you to place my Bible in my hand. My Book!
I want to be buried with my Bible in my hands.
Sing them over again to me
Wonderful words of life
Let me more of their beauty see
Wonderful words of life.
Words of life and beauty
Teach me faith and duty
Beautiful words, wonderful words
Wonderful words of life.
What
a preciousness that God hath so plainly shown to us, the way to heaven.
.