CHRIST AND THIS CRUCIAL HOUR
Dr. W. A. Criswell
06-03-79
Acts 26
It is a joy for us, in the First
Baptist Church of Dallas, to welcome the uncounted thousands of you who are
watching this service on television and who are listening to the message on
radio. This is the pastor delivering
the sermon entitled: Christ And This Crucial Hour.
The
climax of this service will be the invitation.
And when the pastor has done his message, we will all stand, praying
quietly before God that the Lord will give us a beautiful and wonderful
harvest. Nobody leave! All of us staying here to the end of the
invitation, praying the Lord will bless the appeal with many souls.
In our preaching through the book of
Acts, we are in chapter 26. And for the
third time, there is recounting the conversion of the apostle Paul: This time
in his own words as he defends his life before Festus, the procurator [of] the
Roman province of Judea and before King Herod Agrippa II of Lebanon and his
sister Bernice.
First recounting his conversion, and
then, beginning at verse 16, recounting his call as a witness of God; and then
in verse 19, his obedience to that call; then, in verse 21, the antagonism and
the bitterness of the enemies who went about to slay him.
Then in verses
22 and 23: His continued faithfulness, witnessing, he says:
Both
to small and to great…
That Christ should suffer… that he should be the
first to be raised from among the dead, and that he should show light unto the
people and the Gentiles.
What is surprising to us is that
verse 21. Because he was a preacher of
the gospel and a convert to Christ, his enemies caught him in the temple and
went about to slay him. To us who love
the Lord, and who have found refuge in the name of Christ, it is almost
unimaginable the bitter animosity, and confrontation, and antagonism that is
aroused by the preaching of the gospel of Christ. But we live in that kind of a world; and it is increasingly
so. Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 16:9:
“For a great door and effectual is open unto me, but there are many
adversaries.”
Doubtless there never has been a
time in the history of Christendom when the Christian faith was under such
pressure as it is today, this moment.
One is disillusionment. We have
lost our ideals and our persuasion of a better tomorrow. And the whole world seemingly lives in
hopelessness, and helplessness, and in abject and utter despair.
The
20th century was introduced as being the golden age of mankind. Every dream of a better tomorrow was to be
consummated and realized in this 20th century.
Instead, we have seen our dreams dashed to the ground. And, as one is presented, it also is
decimated by despair.
I
can remember when the World War I was fought.
And as the president of the United States avowed, Woodrow Wilson: “This
is the war to end all wars and to make the world safe for democracy.” Instead, it sowed the seeds and laid the
foundation for an even greater and more horrible war, the World War II. And today, this moment, our headlines are
filled with awesome confrontations by the great powers of the world. And the nations and the peoples of mankind
live in dread and in trembling for what the morrow may bring.
Another tremendous confrontation to
the Christian faith lies in the worldwide spread of Marxian communism. There has never been, in the history of
mankind, a foe so dark, and so determined, and so implacable as the communist
governments of the world. One of the
strangest things of that darkness lies in their apparent championing of the
Christian cause. Then, when they come
to power, they decimate and destroy the church that helped them realize their
growth and coming to governmental power.
In Mozambique, for example, it was
the churches that helped the revolutionaries.
And then, when the revolutionaries found power, they immediately turned
to destroy the Christian faith.
Fidel Castro was dined, and wined,
and feted in America as the champion of the people. His sister is a faithful Baptist. And the Baptist people in Cuba looked upon him as a liberator. And when he came to power, immediately, as
with all communist governments, he turned to destroy those who had loved,
prayed for, and befriended him.
It is the same in the whole, vast
communist totalitarian world. They are
seeking the extermination and the destruction of the Christian faith. We are seeing in our day and in time, a
stirring and a revival of the confrontation of pagan, heathen religions to the
Christian faith.
Not since Mohammed died in 632 A.D.,
and when the ten years that followed that death, when by the sword the Muslim
destroyed the churches of Northern Africa, and the Levant, and through modern
Turkey, has there been such a bitter confrontation as we face today in the
arousing Muslim world. There are
nations, this minute, where it is the avowed purpose of the Muslim religion to
destroy, by murder, every Christian in the state.
Nor would I have time to describe
those pagan religions such as Hinduism in India that closes the door of the
missionary, avowing only a technical doctor or a representative of one who
might help them in the furtherance of their technology to enter the land.
Another thing that breaks the heart
of those who would love Jesus is found in the increasing minority of the
Christian population in the earth. About
two hundred years ago, or less, the world was twenty-five percent Evangelical
Christian. Today, it is less than eight
percent. In another decade it will
hardly be four percent. And, in the
year 2000, it will hardly reach two percent.
Our
country, and our nation, and our world are increasingly pagan, godless,
lost! We are ever just one generation
from paganism. Every generation must be
won to the Lord. And we are daily
losing that battle.
There are more lost people, by far,
today than there were at the turn of the century. And there are far more lost people, this moment, than there were
at the beginning of the New Year.
Little by little, in nation after nation, we are beginning to lose this
appeal for the faith that we have found in the Lord Jesus.
Another
one of the awesome pressures upon the Christian faith is found in secularism,
and materialism, and humanism. These
are the doctrines that have swept the academic community of the world; and has
become a lifestyle for the American people.
Secularism, materialism—the values are all earthly and of this
world. Secularism is a way that lives
as though God did not exist.
And our heroes are those who live in
a glamorous world of either success in Hollywood or success in corporate
profits. These who might not be
affluent, are not successful. These are
“successful” who measure up to the false materialistic standards of modern
humanistic life.
One of the funniest things that I
have come across concerned a Texan who died and requested that he be buried in
his gold-plated Cadillac. So, when the
time came for the interment, there the crane lifted the big, beautiful car and
that tycoon sitting in it above the vast hole in the ground. And, as the gold-plated Cadillac was lowered
into the grave a feller said to his friend: “Look at that, man, ain’t that
living.”
Or a typical thing when the Dallas
dowager arrived finally at the gates of heaven and the gatekeeper at the pearly
gates asked her what were her credentials to enter in. She opened her purse and she showed the
gatekeeper of glory—she showed him a Neiman Marcus charge plate; and she showed
him the stub of the ticket to the Dallas Symphony; and she showed him a
membership card in the Dallas Country Club; and she showed him a letter of
appreciation for her part in the success of the Charity Ball. The gatekeeper looked at them and looked at
her and said: “Well, come on in. But
I’m telling you, you ain’t going to like it here.” All of our values are secular and materialistic. And humanism—the exalting of man, and the
furtherance of our own cause and course—is the philosophy and the teaching of
the whole earth.
Another one of the great pressures
on the Christian faith is the doctrine of universalism. And, unconsciously, it has come to be the
doctrine of the Christian faith itself.
There’s not any judgment; there’s not any damnation; there’s not any
hell; there’s not any condemnation: We’re all going to be saved. And the doctrine of universalism: That we
are all going to be saved; we just go by different roads; but we all find the
way leading to heaven. This doctrine
cuts the very tendon and nerve that supports missionary enterprise. And it forever destroys the faith, and the
fervor, and the zeal of the evangelist.
If men are not lost without Christ, why the missionary? If men are not lost without Christ, why the
evangelist? If men are not lost without
Christ, why preach the gospel?
Universalism destroys and decimates
the very thrust, and march, and meaning of the Christian faith. A liberal theologian said—and I quote him
exactly—a liberal theologian said: “If the doctrine of perdition (hell,
judgment), if the doctrine of perdition were written on every page of every
leaf of every Bible in the world, I would not believe it.”
Well good! No man would rejoice over the lost condemnation and damnation of
another man. No one would! But the darkest, starkest, [most] tragic
fact I know in human life, and in human history, is this: That men are lost
without Christ. However you say it, philosophically,
academically, psychologically, sociologically, politically—men are lost without
God. And we find God in Jesus
Christ. It was He that said:
Ego, (I) “eimi
el ha hodos (the way), ha aletheia (the truth),
kai ha zoe (the life), (John 14:6): no man cometh unto the
Father, but by me.
In
the passage that we read together in Acts 4:12—Simon Peter preaching the gospel
saying:
And there is none other name under heaven given unto
men, whereby we must be saved.
If
we can be saved in ourselves, there is no need for Jesus. If we can be saved in our affluence and
success, there is no place for Jesus.
If we can be saved riding a sacred cow in India, there is no place for
Jesus. If we can be saved by bowing
toward Mecca, there’s no place for the Lord Jesus. If we can be saved by our own genius and righteousness, there’s
no place for Jesus.
But if we are lost, and hopelessly
lost in our sins, and Jesus is the way to God, then the great mandate that Paul
heard from heaven is our mandate today: To preach the gospel of the son of God,
to send out missionaries to the ends of the earth, and to call men to faith and
to repentance here and abroad.
And that is the avowal and
commitment and obedience of the apostle Paul when standing before Herod
Agrippa—he says:
Whereupon,
O King Agrippa, I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision:
But shewed first to those in Damascus (where he was
converted), then to Jerusalem (where he met Peter) and (finally) through all…
Judea, and then (to the ends of the earth), to the Gentiles, that they should
repent… and do works worthy of repentance.
And this is our heavenly mandate
today. This is our great commitment and
assignment today. Individually,
personally—not just for them there, or for them there, or for him there; but it
is a personal assignment and a personal commitment.
I am not to ask: “Do I have a
part?” I am to ask: “Dear Lord, what is
my part?” And then, when God reveals to
me my assignment, may God help me as I give my life to it.
I
can’t help but remember that young fella, the son of a missionary. And the Standard Oil Company seeing, in the
lad, a great executive genius and ability as so many missionary children are
thus gifted. Standard Oil Company said:
“We will give you thus and thus salary—and it was an astronomical one—if you’ll
be our representative in the Orient.
And the young fella refused. And
then they came back and doubled the salary.
It was an astronomical amount: “Thousands and thousands of dollars a
year if you’ll be our representative and executive in Orient.”
And
the young fella refused. And the
executive from the Standard Oil Company said: “What’s the matter? How much money do you want? How much money would it take for you to work
for and be the representative of the Standard Oil Company?”
And the young fella replied, he
said: “Sir, there’s nothing wrong with the price. There’s nothing wrong with the salary. I’m overwhelmed by it.”
The young fella replied: “The trouble is the job is too little. God has called me to be a witness and a
representative for him; and I can’t turn aside from the mandate from heaven to
accept salary and prestige from the Standard Oil Company.”
That’s what it takes, personally, on
the part of each one of us. However
inducements or interests may be, our first assignment is to listen to the voice
of God for us. What is God’s will for
me?
In these years gone by, I preached
at the North Shore Baptist Church in Chicago where James L. Kraft was a deacon
and Sunday School Superintendent. And I
was entertained in his beautiful and spacious home.
You can hardly imagine the moving of
my heart as I listened to that man describing his little pony and little buggy
in which he first started delivering cheese down the streets of Chicago. The little pony’s name was Patty. And he was failing. Driving down the street in discouragement
and despair. He pulled up his little
pony and he began to talk to her—Patty.
And he said:
Patty, what’s wrong is, we’ve left God out of our
lives. And we’ve left God out of our
business. Patty, beginning now, we’re
going to give our lives to God. And we
are going to take God in as a partner.
And we are going to follow the will of heaven for us. Patty, this is a day of dedication.
James L. Kraft says, from that day
on, listening to the voice of God for him, God blessed him, and strengthened
him, and helped him; and finally, he said: “I had rather be a layman in the
North Shore Baptist Church in Chicago than to head the greatest corporation in
America.” Then he added one other
sentence: “My first job is serving Jesus.”
Would to God, every man was like
that: “My first assignment and mandate is serving Jesus.” Then, if I am the head of a great Kraft food
corporation, that’s in the will of God.
Or, if I am in his will, a mason laying brick to the glory of his
name—but He’s first. And if my task is
that of a housewife taking care of babies and rearing children, God be praised. But my first assignment, and my first
dedication is serving Jesus.
And
this is the dedication of our church, as a community of God’s redeemed, as the
household of the Lord’s saved. Dear
people, apart from a sense of mission, there is no reason for us to exist. Let’s just go join the club; or let’s just
go join the country place; or however we like the world of entertainment or
outdoor, why bother with the church?
Why take time and effort to build a church? Other than the tremendous sense of mission that God has called us
into these tasks, and assigned us these fields of labor? A church exists by evangelism as a fire
exists by burning. And where there is
no burning, the fire dies. And where
there is no evangelism, the church ceases to be.
I don’t know why but in these last
several weeks, I have been preaching in the north, and in the northeast, and in
Canada. They took a survey of the
churches of New England. And the survey
reported that you could take four-fifths of all of the pews out of all of the
churches of New England and they would never be missed. Four-fifths!
The chilling emptiness and deadness
of the witness, brings terror to my heart; and chills the marrow of my
bones. This very minute I have sent Dr.
C. Wade Freeman to Canada to the great assembly there—meeting—beginning
tomorrow. He is preaching in Toronto
today.
I am trying to lead that great
Baptist denomination in Canada into a tremendous evangelistic effort. And Dr. Freeman is there to plan an
evangelistic conference and a simultaneous revival campaign to see if we cannot
turn the materialistic and secular indifference of the vast population of
Canada to the truth of God.
When you visit Europe, there are not
two percent of the people in England, or the British Isles, or the whole
continent of Europe who attend church.
And when I think of my own town, and my own people, and my own church,
oh, God, could it ever be that what I see in Europe, and what I see in the
British Isles, and what I see in Canada, and what I see throughout the north,
and what I see in New England, Lord, Lord—could it be that my eyes would live
to see the day when I see the same thing here?
Nobody going to church—this great church empty—take four-fifths of its
pews out and they would never be missed.
Great God, dear God, in pity, and in
mercy, and in grace look upon us.
Search our hearts, Lord, and see if there is not in us a great
commitment and dedication to preach the gospel: To win the lost, to baptize our
converts, to gather the people together in the house of worship. There to sit at the feet of Jesus and to
listen to an exposition of the living word of the living God.
And
the Lord God whispered and said to me.
These
things shall be.
These
things shall be.
No
help shall come from the scarlet skies
Till
My people rise.
Till
My people rise
My
arm is weak, I cannot speak
Until
My people speak.
When
men are dumb, My voice is dumb.
I
cannot come until My people come.
From
over the flaming earth and sea;
The
cry of my people must come to me.
Not
until their spirit break the curse
May
I claim My own in the universe.
But
if My people rise,
If
My people rise,
I
will answer them from the swarming skies.
When God sees His people dedicated
and committed to the great program of witnessing, and missions, and
soul-winning, God bows down His ear to hear their prayers. He bears his strong arm to work by their
side. And He saves the lost, and adds
to His people, and glorifies His name through us.
Dear God, as one of the men called
me yesterday:
Pastor, maybe the finest thing you could do is to
build a church that would be a paragon, and an example, and a lighthouse for
all of the other churches of the whole world.
“See what they
are doing there! Look at the blessing
of God upon them there. Look at the
people who are saved. Look at the
spirit of burning and revival. Look at
the witness of that congregation to the city of Dallas, to the state of Texas,
to America, and to the world.”
Grant it, Lord. Be good to us, Lord. And may that spirit of revival, of
evangelism, of soul-winning, of commitment, be with us, in us, and through us
as it was when the apostle Paul said to the king: “Whereupon, O King Agrippa, I
was not disobedient unto the heaven vision.”
And for each one of us may a like
commitment and dedication be the tremendous foundation of our lives. Is that you? Does the Lord speak to you?
“Today pastor, God has spoken to me and I am receiving in my heart the
Lord Jesus as my Savior.”