THE BLESSEDNESS OF HOME
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Psalm 68:6
5-9-76
I love for you to sing the songs of
Zion, the Holy Scriptures. That's another Psalm you can sing every
Sunday, if you so like.
I don't read a Psalm just one time and think
never to read it again. I love to read them over and over. And when
you sing them like that, it is glorious. How excellent is God's name,
making the firmament, the heavens above us, and creating us in His own
image.
The evolutionist says we are human
beings, just a little above an insect. But, God says in that Psalm that
He created us “just a little lower than the angels.”
There is something about materialism
that degrades the human soul. But, there is everything about God that
lifts up the worshipful heart to the highest heavens themselves.
Thank you, choir. Sing it again
and again and again. God bless us, as we lift up the name of our glorious
Lord.
We welcome you who are sharing this service on radio
and on television, particularly and especially in our prayer that God will help
us carry the message of this church and of this holy Book to all the
communities and cities of America. It will bless us beyond compare if you
will write to us. On your screen, you will see the name and the address.
May God put it in your heart to write. Bless you for doing so.
This is the Pastor, bringing the message
entitled: The Blessedness of Home. And it is a sermon prepared
from two beautiful words in the Psalms.
First,
in Psalm 68 and verse 6: “God setteth the solitary in families… .” And
the second, in Psalm 107, verse 41: “ . . He maketh his families like a
flock.”
When I read that passage, "God setteth the
solitary in families,” I think of a little baby, a little infant, a little
child. “God setteth the solitary in families”—when I read that passage, I
think of the prodigal son in a far country, degraded, feeding hogs. And
what an insult that was to a Jewish youth. He came to himself and came
back to his father and his home. “God setteth the solitary in
families”—when I think of that text, I think of an orphan boy or an orphan
girl. “God setteth the solitary in families”—and sometimes, when I think
of that text, I think of an old and aged man, and someone loves and someone
cares.
“God setteth the solitary in families,”
and “He maketh his families like a flock.” The Blessedness of Home.
It pleases God when a couple loves one
another. Isn't it an unusual discourse that Paul writes in the 2 Timothy
letter, when he speaks of Adam and Eve as a typical message from God concerning
all of our people—men and women, husbands and wives, fathers and mothers.
And the apostle says that Eve was deceived in the transgression, but Adam was
not deceived and so chose, in a volitional choice, what he would do.
What was that choice? What did
Adam choose to do? The Apostle says Eve was deceived and did not realize
the tragedy into which she was plunging herself and her posterity. Eve
was deceived, but Adam was not deceived. That is, he chose to partake of
the interdicted fruit and so died with his wife.
Or, I could place it in other words and
it would sound like this: Adam so loved the helpmeet God had created for him,
that rather than see her die and he live, he chose to die with her.
Do you remember the story of Jacob, who
loved Rachel, and he worked seven years for her hand? Then ,in a
deception, Laban, the father of Rachel, gave to Jacob Leah. Then, Jacob
worked seven more years for Rachel. And the Scriptures say that, to Jacob,
those 14 years were as nothing, because of the love wherewith he loved
her.
Is it not one of the most beautiful
stories in human literature, the story of the Moabitess, Ruth, and how Boaz,
the Bethlehemite, fell in love with the Moabitess and took her into his own heart
and into his home. And she became his wife and the mother of Obed, who is
the father of Jesse, who is the father of David—the beautiful love of Boaz, a
Bethlehemite, for Ruth, a Moabitess.
And there is no more moving story in the
Scriptures than that of Elkanah and Hannah. And Hannah was barren and
wept before the Lord, and Elkanah, the husband, said to her, “Am I not better
to thee than 10 sons?” And in answer to prayer, there was a little baby,
a child given to the arms of Hannah, and she named him “asked of God”—in
Hebrew, “Samuel.”
I tell you truly—I do not exaggerate,
there are 10,000 problems and 1,000,000 conferences that would never need to be
if the two loved one another. You could solve an ocean, a sea, a universe
full of perplexities and disappointments and discouragements and problems if
the two loved each other.
“God
hath made His families like a flock, and God hath set the solitary in
families,” and it pleases God when they love one another.
Again, it pleases God, and the home is blessed
when the child is prayed for and wanted and asked for. As Hannah said to
old Eli, “For this child I prayed.” What a beautiful and precious way to
receive a child from the hands of God, who formed it and made it and created it
in the womb of a loving and expectant mother.
When the child is loved and prayed for
in the home, everything that heaven could bestow to sanctify and hallow the
days of the family hath God done in that love and devotion. To love
children, your children, is something of heaven. It is a breath from
above.
I don't think there is a story more
preciously, tenderly beautiful than this: There was a poor, poor, poor family
who had many children. And because of the poverty of the home it was
impossible to feed them all. So, it was decided to give one of them
away. And that night, while all the children were sleeping, the father
and the mother were to decide which one was to be given away.
They looked at the eldest, and looking
upon his sleeping face, they said, “We could not give our eldest son
away. He's our first-born and our pride. We could not give our
eldest son away.”
They looked next at the eldest
girl. And the father, looking upon her sleeping face, said, “Oh, dear, we
could not give her away. She looks exactly like her mother.”
They looked at the next child, a boy,
and the mother said, “Oh, dear, we could not give him away. He is the
image of his father.”
They looked at the next child. He
was crippled. “Oh," said they, “we cannot give little Johnny away.
He's crippled. He needs us.”
They went all through the numbers of the
children and, finally, came to the baby. And they said, “We cannot give
our baby away. It's just a baby.”
They finally decided: they would stay
together and starve together. That is of God: a love that would bind the
family unto death.
You know, I have learned so much since I
began a pastoral ministry when I was a teenager 17 years of age. I keenly
remember the rebuke. I was in a home, and a mother had many children in
this home on the farm. There was one child named Robert, little Robert,
who had died before I came to be pastor of the little country church. And
every time I would visit in the home—and I stayed there many times—the mother
would always talk to me about little Robert and how she missed him, and many
times would cry as she remembered that little lad who had died.
And out of the inexperience of my young
life, one time I interrupted to say, “My dear Mrs. Hobson, look at all of these
children that you have. The house is full of them. And yet you
grieve over little Robert. You have so many beside. How could you
grieve over one being gone?”
She looked at me in amazement. And
in her astonishment and said, “Oh, young pastor, you don't understand. If
I had 40 children, and one of them died, I would grieve over that one as though
it was the only child that I possessed.”
I remember that. That is mother
love: “If there were 40 of us in the home… .” Her love is not diminished
or divided into 40 parts. It is as though each one of us were the only
child she possessed.
The Lord is pleased when, in the home,
the child is loved and prayed for.
“God
has set the solitary in families,” and “He maketh His families like a
flock.”
A third thing: God is pleased, and the
home is blessed, when that family is nurtured and loved in the admonition of
the Lord. I mean by that when our priorities and our values are appraised
in the light of the truth of Almighty God.
It is so easy, and I and so many others
fall into these tragic errors. There is work to be done. There are
tasks and assignments to be achieved, and there is much that the Lord has
placed upon us. And in secular professions, especially, there are great
corporations to build, and there is wealth to gain, and there is fame to be
won, and there is advancement. And it is very easy for a man in the
secular world to give himself to these things. And in the meantime, his
children grow up, and they grow up, and they grow up, and they grow up without
him.
And the values that he incarnates and
personifies are worldly values. They can be defined in terms of money and
advancement and success and building, when actually the great and mighty things
that God has given him are forgotten and neglected around his own door.
I remember reading a story one time, and
it was cut off just right there. And I'm going to finish it in a way that I
think happened.
There was a tall young teenager in the
court, and the judge said, “Sir, stand up and be sentenced. And the lad
stood before the bar and the judge. And the judge, looking sternly at the
lad, said, “I knew your father. He was a great barrister. He was
our greatest authority on laws of property. These volumes that I possess
are written by him. And you, son, have brought shame and disgrace on a
noble father and a worthy name.”
And the boy replied, “Yes, sir.”
And the judge said, “Why could not you
have been like your father?”
And the boy replied, “Your Honor, I
never knew my father. I never knew him. I didn't know what he was
like.”
The judge said, “You never knew
him? What do you mean?”
The boy replied, “Your Honor, when I was
little and came to him, he pushed me away. He said, ‘Run along. I'm
very busy.’ And as I grew up, I would ask him, and he'd say, ‘Son, I'm
writing these books on law. I must not be bothered.’ Your Honor, I
never knew him. I have no idea what he was like.”
That's the end of the story that I
read. I'm going to finish it. I would think that, when the court
sentenced the boy, he did it with a heavy, heavy heart.
This is a weakness that so many of us
share. We are busy. There is work to be done. There are books
to write. And there are monies to be made. And there is advancement
before us. And there are great corporations to build. And there are
elections to win. And there is the country to govern. And there are
a thousand assignments that we feel we ought to do.
But, maybe our priorities and our values
are, somehow, not arranged in an order that is worthy and that pleases
God. It is something that every man ought to consider on his knees and
before God: what is first in my life, and what is right before the Almighty in
heaven?
I must conclude. This pleases God,
and the home is blessed when “God setteth the solitary in families” and when
“God maketh His families like a flock,” and when the high priest of the home,
the father and husband in the house, when he leads and guides the family to the
house of the Lord. And by his side is a faithful and devoted and wonderful
wife and mother. Together, loving God and worshipping the Lord, they rear
their children in the house, at Shiloh, in the Temple of Jehovah, in the church
of the living God.
I grew up in a country far colder than this.
And maybe also because of the habits of the times, everybody that I ever knew
bathed in a galvanized tub on Saturday night. The Saturday night bath was
an institution in the culture in which I grew up. I remember, one time,
hearing—and I didn't see anything funny about it at the moment—a fellow looking
at one of those new luxurious, modern tubs and saying, “Oh, how I wish it were
Saturday night.”
Saturday night, everybody bathed.
And Sunday morning, we dressed up and went to church, my father to the men's
Bible class in the little tiny church in town, taught by Mr. Pennick, the
undertaker.
He made an impression upon me, that
somber man with his black mustache and black hair and black suit. Oh,
religion was a somber thing when I was growing up.
And my mother went to the TEL
class—Timothy, Eunice, and Lois—and you read that in your Scripture this
morning. She went to the mother’s class: the TEL
class.
And my little brother went to the junior
class taught by Mrs. Cassidy. And I went to the older children's class
taught by Mrs. Kemp.
And we grew up in that little
church. The impressions that are made upon me today are evanescent and
peripheral, ephemeral. But, the impressions made upon me when I was
growing up as a boy are indelible. They are there forever.
Did you know, one day, there were two
high school students who came to see me here at the church? They were
writing a theme for their class in high school. And they had been
assigned to interview a banker and a doctor and a lawyer and a preacher.
One of the boys was a Methodist, and one
was a Presbyterian. One of them looked like little Lord Fauntleroy, the
way he was dressed. And the other looked like a disheveled urchin of the
streets, red-headed and freckle-faced.
I was greatly complimented that, out of
all of the ministers of the city of Dallas they had come to interview me as the
preacher. They had been to the banker, the lawyer, the doctor. Now,
they were interviewing me.
So, they sat there—oh, so officially,
you know, and they got out their writing pads and their pencils, and they
started to ask me questions. They were greatly intrigued when they found
that I had given my life to be a minister as a child and that I had started
preaching when I was a teenager. And they asked me all about it and wrote
it down.
And after they asked me 40 dozen other
questions, why, then, finally the big one. They said, “Now, will you tell
us the one greatest day in your life? What was the one tremendously great
day in your life?”
Well, I hadn't thought of it. And
I just reconnoitered and tried to remember the great days in my life: when Bob
Coleman, Truett's assistant for 42 years, called us at Muskogee on the
telephone and said, “Tonight, the twenty-seventh of September, 1944—tonight,
the church has unanimously called you to be pastor.”
They hadn't said a word to me about
it—not a word. Out of the blue of the sky, he called me. Think of
that. Ah.
Or, when Mrs. Veel, without anyone
knowing it—and didn't want anyone to know it, gave me $155,000 to buy the
property there, and then gave me $1,500,000 to build the building and didn't
want anybody to know it. She just said, “I want you to do it.’
Or, when I was elected president of the
Southern Baptist Convention or oh, so many things.
“What is the one greatest day of your
life?”
Finally, I said, ”Young fellows, I'd
have to say the greatest, most meaningful day of my life was when I was 10
years old. And the revival meeting was annually being conducted in our
church, and the preacher stayed in our house. And every night,
after the service, my mother would pour the preacher a glass of home-churned
buttermilk. And as he sat at the kitchen table and drank it, I sat by his
side, and he would talk to me about the Lord.
And on a weekday morning, having gained
permission from my parents to be dismissed from school for the hour, I went to
the morning service. And I happened to be seated back of my dear old, and
sainted, mother.
And when the preacher was done with his
sermon and the people stood and sang, “There is a fountain filled with blood,”
my mother turned to me, and she was crying, and she said, “Son, today, today,
will you give your heart to Jesus?” And I burst into tears, and I said,
“Yes, Mother. Today, this day, I accept Jesus as my Savior.”
And I said to the boys, “I could hardly
see the preacher for the tears.”
And whenever I see a child today who
comes to the Lord with tears, I live through that experience again. What
a humble day. What a plain and a simple day. But, it's the greatest
day of my life. That's the day I became a Christian, that I opened my
heart to Jesus, that I was saved, that God wrote my name in the Lamb's book of
life. That's the day that promised forever my home in heaven.
Is that a day you also have
shared? This is the day I accepted Jesus: “O happy day, O happy day, when
Jesus washed my sins away. He taught me how to watch and pray, and live
rejoicing every day. O happy day, O happy day, when Jesus washed my sins
away.”
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