MEN MOVED
BY THE SPIRIT
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
Acts 6:1-7
6-26-77
10:50 a.m.
The
passage of Scripture, sixth chapter of the Book of Acts [verses 1-7]:
And in those days, when the number
of the disciples was multiplied, there arose a murmuring of the Grecians
against the Hebrews, because their widows were neglected in the daily
ministration.
Then the twelve apostles called
the multitude of the disciples unto them and said, It is not reason that we
should leave the Word of God, and serve tables.
Wherefore, brethren, look ye out
among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom
we may appoint over this business.
But we will give ourselves
continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the Word.
And the saying pleased the whole
multitude: and they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit.
And that will be the sermon
tonight; it is entitled The Smiting of God’s Glory. God smote his
face with glory; [It] shined like the sun. That will be the sermon
tonight:
And they chose Stephen, a man full
of faith and the Holy Spirit and Phillip, and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and
Timon, and Parmenas, and Nicolas a proselyte of Antioch:
Whom they set before the apostles:
and when they had prayed, they laid their hands on them.—A consecration
ordination service—
And the Word of God increased; and
the number of the disciples multiplied in Jerusalem greatly; so much so that
even a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith.
First, the occasion that gave rise
to the choice of these men. What was it? It was trouble in the
church. And in this church, of all churches, the mother church in
Jerusalem, it is troubled by human frailty and infirmity and altercation.
Are you not surprised? These are the men who had been taught by the Lord
himself. This is the church upon which God had poured out the ascension
gift of the Holy Spirit. And this is the church where the preaching of
the Word was confirmed by signs and wonders. And yet now, it is racked
and torn by human infirmity. Isn’t that an amazing thing? Why would
God allow such a thing as that? And why would the Holy Spirit not gloss
over such altercation and difficulty as is exhibited here on these holy
pages?
It gives rise to two questions
that we must face: One; how is it that God writes this on the holy page?
Why doesn’t God hide it away? Why doesn’t God gloss over it? The
reason lies in the character of the Word. The Word of God is true and
infallible and God writes it down just as it is. For example, here in
this story in the beginning of the church, the New Testament writes it just as
it happened—faithfully and true; hides nothing of it.
The first chapter, for
example, describes the suicide of one of the twelve apostles. And in the
fifth chapter, there opens up to us the dissimulation and the hypocrisy, and
the lying of Ananias and Sapphira in their jealously of Barnabas, the son of
consolation. And then, I turn to the next chapter, chapter 6, and here is
the story of the trouble in the church arising between the Hellenists,
the Greek-speaking Jews, and the Hebraists, the Aramaic-speaking Jews—surfacing
in the house of the Lord, that eternal conflict between Hellenistic culture and
philosophy and Hebrew revelation.
And as I look at the New
Testament, the whole thing is like that. The dissimulation of Simon Peter
is meticulously outlined. This chief apostle, quailing before a little
maid, cursing and swearing that he did not even know the Lord; hadn’t ever seen
Him—that is in the Bible! As I turn the page, here is recorded the fierce
confrontation between Paul and Barnabas, arguing over John Mark, a kinsmen of
Barnabas. And so violent was the altercation between them—the Greek word
is paroxysm—there was a paroxysm between Paul and Barnabas, so
much so that they parted asunder, and one went one way and another went another
way. That is in the Bible.
And, as though that were not
enough, there is delineated here in the Word of God, that fierce confrontation
between Paul and Simon Peter in Antioch. In the second chapter of the
Book of Galatians, Paul accosts Simon Peter “to his face” and calls him a
hypocrite, a dissimulator. That is in the Bible; that is because God writes it
down, faithfully and truly and truly and glosses over none of it. The
infallible Word of God.
You have the same thing in
the Old Testament. No patriarch is glossed over. The lie of Abraham
is written on the pages; and all of the supplanting and hypocrisy of Jacob,
called Israel; and the story of Samson and of Judah and of David; all here in
the Word of God.
There was an organization of
atheists called the free thinkers and they published a book called The Bible
Exposed. And they wrote all of those things in their book as though
they were discrediting the Word of God. That is the mentality of an
atheist. He thinks just that far and that much. What the book
actually did was to authenticate the truth of the Revelation of the
Almighty. This is the infallible Word of God. It does not gloss
over anything. God writes it down just as it is, and with infinite
confidence can I open this sacred Book and read these holy words.
A second question, why would God
allow trouble in the church of all places? Why? Why doesn’t God
keep the world out of the church? And why doesn’t God keep the church
away from the world? Why doesn’t God separate it? Why place the
church in a position where all kinds of the troubles that afflict this world,
also afflict the congregation of God? Why? Well, if men were
running it, the church would be carefully kept away from the world and all of
its sin and shame and iniquity. Men have tried it. They have built
high, high walls, and on the inside of those walls—they have built their
monasteries, and on the inside of those monasteries, they have placed priests
and monks and nuns in order to separate them from the world. That is man,
but not God. God never built any high walls around His church. God
placed that church right next door to hell itself! And wherever there is sin,
and wrong, and shame, and violence, and corruption, and blood, there ought to
be the church of the living God—in the middle of it; in the very thick of
it.
I think of how Paul began that
letter to the church at Corinth, “Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ…to the
church in Corinth” [1 Corinthians 1:1; 2:1]. Why man, that was the
wickedest city that ever lived! The corruption, and the vice, and the
promiscuity, and the filth, and the dirt, and the wrong, and the sin in Corinth
reached to heaven like that of Sodom and Gomorrah. And yet, in the very
midst of the town, of the city, there is the church—the church of God in
Corinth.
Or just take once again in the
second chapter of the Apocalypse, the Lord is addressing the church at
Pergamos. And He says, “unto the angel to the church in Pergamos; . . . I
know where thou dwellest” [Revelation 2:12]. Now look at it, “I know
where thou dwellest, even where Satan’s seat is” [Revelation 2:13]. In
the very heart of the political, cultural debauchery and corruption of the
adulate kingdom of the Pergameans—there is the church.
Where should the church be?
Right down where Satan has his throne; right in the heart and in the thick of
human life, that is where it ought to be! A thousand times a thousand
times have people said to me, “When are you going to sell your property
downtown and move out to the green pastures, in the salubrious climb, where it
is easy and people attend the services just because it is convenient?
When are you going to move out?” And for forty-seven years my great
predecessor Dr. George W. Truett said, “We [are] never moving out! We are
staying right here.” And for thirty-three years, I have avowed the same
thing.
There ought to be where Satan has
his throne, in the very life and heart of the city—there ought to be the
lighthouse Jesus Christ, the church of the living God. And that is why
God does not shield it away. The only thing the Lord did was, in the high
priestly prayer of John 17, verse 15, He said, “Dear Lord God in heaven, My
father, I pray not that you take them out of the world, I just pray that you
keep them from evil.” That ‘s God—right in the heart, where Satan has
over sown God’s field, where the tares are growing up, where the leaven is hid,
and where corruption works, there ought to be the church of the living
God.
Now, we are going to look at the
wisdom of these apostles. There was brought to them this confrontation
between the Hellenists, and the Hebraists—those Aramaic-speaking Palestinian
Jews and these Hellenistic Greek-speaking Jews who were strangers, foreigners; they
were born outside of Palestine. Now, those apostles were wise with the
wisdom of God. They saw that in that division there was possibility of infinite
hurt, of anger and bitterness and succession and rupture. What did they
do? Hide their eyes from it? No! Whenever trouble begins to rise
in the church; the man of God ought to sense it, and he ought to see it, and he
ought to met it head on right there, settle it. It is a whole lot better
to settle any kind of a proposition or problem or difficulty that you have in
the church, than to let it breed and to fester and to run and finally to
destroy so many.
And that is what these apostles
did. Seeing the possibility of ruin and rupture in the church, they
courageously and boldly faced it. And what did they do? They called
together the multitude of the people. We have the half-persuasion that
people are stupid. They are ignorant; they do not know. [It is] not
that at all! It will amaze you how right and how just the verdict of a
people will be. They have sensitivities that we do not give them credit
for and they have wisdom that comes from God.
To have the people together and
to let the people enter into that ultimate and final decision is from heaven
itself. And that is what the apostles did; they appointed the men but it
was upon the council and admonition of the people. So they settled the
problem beautifully in the wisdom of the people. They divided it up and
this was the division they made of it: the apostles said, “We will give
ourselves to prayer and to the ministry, the preaching of the Word and these
laymen and laywomen will take care of all of the business of the church, while we
pray and study God’s Word and deliver God’s message.” Now, what do you
think about that?
Well, we are going to look at it
for just a moment. First, those apostles—they never divided that work
among them[selves]—now, some of the apostles will do this, and some of the
apostles will do that, and some of the apostles will do the other. No,
all of the apostles are going to give themselves to prayer and to the ministry
of the Word. And then these businesses of the church will lie in the
responsibility and purview and assignment of the lay members of the
church.
Well let us look at those apostles
first; they say that they are going to give themselves to prayer and to the
ministry of the Word. Well, we have heard them pray. Their prayers
are written here on the holy page. We have heard them pray—and what
praying! The very place was shaken where those men of God were praying and
talking to the Almighty. And then we have here on the sacred page their
sermons—and what sermons! They were filled with the convicting power of the
Spirit and people were saved by the thousands under the preaching of those
men. Now, you know, when I read that, that is a rebuke to me and to my
fellow ministers—our praying. Ah, how many times is it peripheral and
mechanical? Why, you could write about and sleep over them, and some of
us apparently do. No power in it, or feeling in it, or passion in it—just
words and syllables.
And their preaching—ah, what a
rebuke! The power, the unction from heaven in their delivery of the message of
God—dear me! I heard a definition of preachers and preaching and it was this” “Preaching
is a mild-mannered man, speaking to a mild-mannered congregation, upon how to
be more mild-mannered.” That is what I heard. We have in our Bible
Institute, a distinguished theologian by the name of Dr. Leo Eddleman.
And I heard him one time, at an evangelistic conference, describe of a preacher
who was so sissy that standing at the back door, shaking hands with the people
as they went out, one visitor shook his hand and asked the preacher what was
his maiden name. The preacher praying in the power of God; and the
preacher delivering the message of God with unction from heaven and with
conviction of the Holy Spirit.
Then these lay men and these lay
people chosen to help the preacher; to help him deliver his message in power,
to do his God-given work with the blessing and the benedictory remembrance of
heaven upon him. Like Aaron and like Hur, on either side, holding up the
hands of Moses, to have lay men and lay women in the church, helping the
preacher do a great and mighty work for God, that is glorious! That is
heavenly!
For the preacher to stand
up, and he preaches out of the frustrations of life and all of the businesses
of life, and all of the worryings of the church is to have a weak message and a
weak ministry of the Word. When the preacher stands up, what he ought to
do is preach out of the presence of the Lord, a message from heaven itself;
having prayed and having studied and having listened to the voice and mind of
the Lord.
A thousand times literally, do
young ministers come to me and say, “If you had just one thing to say to a
young preacher, what would you say?” Immediately and always have I
answered the same sentence, “If I have just one thing to say to you it is this:
Keep the morning for God. Keep it for God. Whatever the assignment
and the business of the church, or the day of the life and the town, or the
civic; whatever it is, keep that time for God. And out of the praying, and
out of the Bible studying, and out of the meditation, and out of the baring and
nakedness of your soul before Him in heaven, stand up there with unction and
with power, having come before the people with a message from heaven. And
the people will grow in grace if you will do that. It will be like manna
to their hungry souls, it will be like drinking at the fountain of the water of
life and the people are blessed. And they are saved and they come to know
God because you know Him and have spent time in His presence.”
And then as for the lay people,
they ought to assume responsibility for all of the business of the church—all
of it; all of it. Is there a financial need? That is a wonderful
way for them to serve Jesus. Are there buildings to be built? Are
there maintenance crews to be hired? Are there a thousand things that
enter into the life of the church? They have that assignment to care for
it, to see to it that it runs beautifully and well, that it is adequately
provided for.
And the preacher, when he stands
up to preach, he is not up there trying to get blood out of a turnip. He
is not trying to get money out of miserly and stingy people; they have taken
care of all of that. And when the preacher stands up to preach, what he is to
do is to take the Bible and open it, and where he leaves off Sunday morning,
begin Sunday night and minister to us the living Word of the living God.
That’s just glorious!
Now, I am going to give you a
Criswellian translation of a Greek text just like this. I received a call and
in fact, the young fellow came to see me—Dr. Bill Reynolds. And he said, “I
want you to translate out of the original Greek in your own way. I want
you to translate about ten or twelve passages that at the Sunday School Board
in Nashville, Tennessee, our Century Men can write the melody for it. And
you write the lyric out of the Greek New Testament, and then we will put music
to it and then we will sing those songs in the church services over the nation.”
So I wrote about a dozen of those texts out of the Greek New Testament, that
they could put music to and then sing them. Just like Handel’s “Messiah”—all
of the text is from the Bible. Well, these songs are texts from the Greek
New Testament.
Now, I am going to give you one of
my translations, now you listen to it. This is the Criswellian
translation of 1 Corinthians, chapter 16, verse 2: “Upon the first day of the
week, let everyone of you lay by him in store as God hath prospered him that
there be no ding-donging for money when a stand up to preach” [1 Corinthians
16:2]. Now, that is exactly what that text means—exactly what it
means. And when you have your preacher stand up here and every time he is
trying to get money and trying to squeeze blood out of that turnip, the people
come to church and they say, “All they are interested in is just money.
All they are interested in is what they can get out of me.” Oh, that is
not pleasing to God and that is what the apostles did here, “We will give
ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Word and then we will let the
lay men ding-dong for the money.” And they do it well, they do it
marvelously well.
You know what? This church
gives right now, just right along, about seven million dollars a year to the
work of the Lord; every year; all together about seven million dollars a
year. And I am asked endlessly, “What do you do there in the First
Baptist Church in Dallas? Do you preach about money all of the time?”
And I say, “I rarely mention it. I rarely mention it, rarely
mention it.” So much so, that these deacons come up to me and they said, “Now,
Pastor, in the fall time, won’t you preach one sermon on stewardship?”
Listen that is the way God will
build a great church. It is the way that God will put together a
marvelous congregation—that preacher up there in the pulpit, a man who knows
God and calls Him by name and they talk face to face, as friends. And
then, those lay men and those lay women out there doing the work of the
Lord. They are building Sunday schools and training unions. They
are carrying through the stewardship program, they are erecting buildings, they
are finding out how to carry the financial program of the indebtedness.
They are doing everything and that pleases God, and makes for a wonderful
church.
I only have one little thing to
remind myself about the team of the deacon and a preacher—the pastor and the
lay men. And it is, and I remind myself of it, it is in Joshua 1:16-17.
The men of Israel come before Joshua who now is standing in the stead of Moses,
just like there was a text I preached on when I came here to stand in this
sacred pulpit where Dr. Truett had preached for forty-seven years.
And the men of Israel came and
stood before Joshua and said, Joshua, “All that you command us, we will do, and
whithersoever you send us, we will go. . . . Only the Lord God be with thee, as
he was with Moses”
Pastor, we will follow you.
You tell us the program, where to go. You tell us the achievements and
the aims—what to do. We only ask, Pastor, this one thing, that the Spirit
of God dwell in your soul; that when you come before us you are in presence
with the unction of heaven upon you. And we will do it, God giving us
strength and wisdom for the way.
—that‘s what I call the unbeatable
team!
Now, we must hasten to our
close. I want you to look just for a moment at the men who were chosen—these
seven men; their qualifications—men of honest report. That was first;
honest report, you could trust them. They are not one way one day and
another way another day. And they are not one way to your face and
they’re one way behind your back. These are men that you can trust, men
of honesty and integrity. Why, you could entrust your souls to
them. You could entrust the destiny of the church to them—good men,
honest men, men of good report. And then the third one was, men of sophia,
the Latin would be prudentia—men of, translated here “wisdom.”
That beautiful, famous, the most famous church ever built, St. Sophia. We
think that is the name of a saint, no—St. Sophia—sophia, “wisdom.”
That is, men who combine love and zeal with good, common sense. And the Lord
is pleased for the church to be run by men who have good common sense. They’re
men of the world who understand things in the world. Our Lord one time said,
“The children of this generation are wiser than children of light.” Why these
men out here in these tremendous sky scrapers running these big corporations;
how gifted they are! And how smart they are and astute they are! There ought
to be the same gifts, the same astuteness, and shrewdness, and smartness in
running the church, and the house of God and the institutions of the Lord. That’s
exactly what the Bible says, “Men of good judgment and good sense.”
Now do you notice the middle one?
There was one at the front, “fine men of integrity, honest men.” There’s one
at the back, “men of good judgment and common sense”; now the central one—the
middle one, “men who are full of the Holy Spirit.” Now wait a minute, Preacher!
You wait on that one; we thought that the Holy Spirit was poured out on the apostles,
and he’s a gift for the preacher and the pastor but the Holy Spirit is not to be
expectedly poured out on the laymen and the laywomen of the church. They’re
not to be full of the Holy Spirit. My brother, it is the opposite of that in
the Bible!
In the great pentecostal chapter
of Acts number 2, when Simon Peter stands up to speak his great pentecostal
message, he says, “This is that which was prophesied— spoken
of—by Joel, the prophet .” Then he quotes the second chapter of Joel, “‘In
that day,’ —the day in which we now live—‘In that day,’ says the Lord God of
heaven, ‘I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh and your old men shall dream
dreams and your young men shall prophesy””
The whole world and every man and
woman in it can be filled with the Holy Spirit of God. Just think of that;
there is a way for a man to open a door that will glorify God; there is a way
that a man can seek a visitor that will open his heart to the message of the
Lord or chill his soul. There is a word that we can say when we shake
somebody’s hand that just magnifies Jesus. There’s a way we can park the car
for somebody that would make them glad they’ve come into the house of the
Lord. Why my brother, the whole part of it is to be filled with the moving of
the Spirit of the Lord. And time would fail me to speak of these who teach,
filled with the Spirit. And these who train, filled with the Spirit. And
these who sing, filled with the Spirit. And these who play, filled with the
Spirit. Everything we have done, the Preacher, the car parker, the door
opener, the visitor, the greeter, the player, the singer, the teacher—all of us
filled with the Spirit of the Lord.
And now do you see the
conclusion? “And the Word of God increased.” No wonder! “And the number of
the disciples multiplied greatly.” Praise God! It will always be that way,
always. When the people are filled with the Spirit of the Lord and when what
we do is of the unction of heaven and blessing of the remembrance of God upon
it.
You’ll
see people come to Jesus; you’ll see them walk down these isles, you’ll see
them in that baptistery, baptized. You’ll see them out witnessing; you’ll see
them out testifying; you’ll see their homes and families. It is a glory when
the people are filled with the Spirit of the Lord.
I must close; may I say one thing
more? We’ll never win the world to Jesus by a paid preacher, and a paid
missionary, never. What God intended was all of His people saying good things
about Jesus. All of the people magnifying and praising the Lord; all of us
soul-winning, inviting, teaching, training, coming, praying; all of us sharing
in the ministry alike. And when that comes to pass, O the glory, the Shekinah
presence of the Lord that moves in the house of the congregation!
Why I just—when our people are
burdened in prayer and come with great expectation, I stand up here in this
pulpit and I just feel the presence of God in our hearts and in our souls. And
the Lord always crowns it with a sweet and precious harvest; and may He do it
again, this hour.