UNDERSTANDING
PROPHECY
Dr. W.A. Criswell
Ezekiel 38:8-16
8-11-85 10:50 a.m.
…Isaiah. The announced sermon is: End of
the World. Because of the limited time, it may be that we would entitle
this message The Interpretation of Prophecy, Understanding Prophecy.
And then maybe at the end, we can summarize briefly the great denouement of the
age and speak of it next Sunday.
In the Book of Ezekiel, chapter 38, Ezekiel chapter
38, you will notice in verse 8 Ezekiel 38, verse 8, he writes, “After many days,”
then in the next clause, “the latter years.” Now in verse 16 of that same
chapter, “it shall be in the latter days.” The prophet is speaking of the end
of the world. Those phrases refer to the final denouement of history under the
surveillance, and in the purpose, and plan of the Lord God.
Prophecy is a characteristic alone of the
Judeo-Christian faith. No other religion has prophecy; prophecy in the sense
of prediction and foretelling. Nobody but God knows the future. And the only
reason we can read it in the Holy Scriptures is because of the revelation of
the true, and only, and living God. All other religions have no prophecy because
they are made by man. They are constructed by his genius. Consequently, they
are finite and limited.
And if one of those religions deigned or sought
to predict the future, their absurdity and senselessness would be immediately
and emphatically apparent. But God is the author of this Book and He knows the
unveiling of every future providence, and He writes it on the pages of these
Holy Scriptures. As I open my Bible, Ezekiel is a book of prophecy. From 36
to 37, he is describing the re-gathering, and the resurrection, and the
conversion of his people Israel. In 38 and 39, he is describing the invasion of
the holy land from the north; from the nation we call today, Russia.
Then beginning at chapter 40 through chapter 48,
he is describing the millennial temple, the worship of God at the end time.
Ezekiel is a book of prophecy. There are other books of prophecy; Zechariah is
a book of prophecy. First and Second Thessalonians is written for the purpose
of unveiling the future and Revelation is a book of prophecy.
In the Bible, in the Old Testament, there are
eighteen hundred forty-five references to the second coming of Christ. In the
New Testament there are three hundred fourteen descriptions of the coming of
our Lord. One out of every four verses in the Bible is prophetic. One-fourth
of the Bible was unfulfilled prophecy when the author wrote it down. This book
is a book of prophetic presentation, prediction, and unfolding of the future.
Now when we look at the vast amount of material
laid before us on these holy pages, how do we fit it together? It is like a
great mosaic that God can see but the prophet can only see a part of it. And
it was only God who can make it fit into the ultimate and final picture and
pattern. For example in 1 Peter, chapter 1, in verses 10, 11, and 12: the
prophet there, the apostle there speaks of the prophet who wrote and could not
understand the vision and the revelation that they received. And he closes it
with the word that even the angels desire to look into it.
The prophet himself could not understand the
full import, and repercussion, and message that he delivered. But he spoke.
And then this is the characteristic of the giving of that prophecy. In 2
Peter, chapter 1, verses 20 and 21, the apostle there writes how the prophet delivered
his message. He writes:
Knowing this first, that no
prophecy of the Scripture is of any private interpretation. For the prophecy
came not at old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were
moved by the Holy Spirit.
No prophecy is! Now to us, that’s a part of the verb to
be—is. Not in Greek. That word is not eimi, one of the "to
be" words, but ginetai, “came
into being,” came into existence.
No prophecy of the scripture ginetai, “came into being,” came into existence
by any private idios, one’s own private ownership, “of himself,”
interpretation, epilysis, unloosing origination. No prophecy came into
being by anyone’s own private origination, unloosing. He never thought it up.
It did not originate with him. For the prophecy came, not in old time by the
will of man, but holy men of God spake as they were pherō; as they
were “born along” by the Holy Spirit.
One of the tremendously gifted Christian
cartoonists of the world, and I think the best in the world, is our deacon Jack
Hamm. And in the latest group of pictures that he has released for publication
is this one, “On Schedule According To God’s Word.” And he quotes this passage
here from the Twentieth Century Translation:
There is no prophetic teaching
found in Scripture that can be interpreted by man’s unaided reason. For no
prophetic teaching ever came in the old days at the mere wish of man, but men
moved by the Holy Spirit spoke direct from God.
In my study, I have two shelves about that long
of the differing translations of the Bible. And I just copied out a good many
of them and I don’t have time to read them. But this is Phillip’s Translation:
You must understand this at the
outset, that no prophecy of Scripture arose from an individual’s interpretation
of the truth. No prophecy came because a man wanted it to. Men of God spoke
because they were inspired by the Holy Spirit.
— And the Living Bible—
No prophecy recorded in Scripture
was ever thought up by the prophet himself. It was the Holy Spirit within
these godly men who gave them true messages from God.
—And the Berkeley Version—
No prophetic Scripture can be
explained by one’s unaided mental powers because no prophecy ever resulted from
human design. Instead, holy men of God spake as they were carried along by the
Holy Spirit.
—I have the Simple Bible—
This is the most important thing
you should know; no prophecy ever came by a prophet’s own ideas because
prophecy never came from what man wanted. No, these men spoke from God while
they were being influenced by the Holy Spirit.
—The Amplified Bible—
First you must understand this,
that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of any personal or private solving.
For no prophecy ever originated because some man willed it to do so. It never
came by human impulse, but as men spoke by God who were impelled by the Holy
Spirit.
Now let’s take that as the great foundational
principle upon which we are going to find the key to prophetic interpretation.
Let us dismiss from us our own preconceived ideas. Let’s not try to put words,
or visions, or revelations in the mouth of God. Let’s accept from Him, from
the Lord God, as He shall say. Let’s just receive it and let’s not
spiritualize it. Let’s not allegorize it. Let’s not fill it full of our
finite human philosophical approaches. But let’s take the Word of God and
receive it as such as from Him. Now if we do that and read in the Holy
Scriptures these prophetic messages from heaven, there are three keys. There
are three principles of interpretation that if we will accept them, they will
open the doors of God’s revelation in a splendor of understanding and meaning.
Now the three: first, let us accept from God His
division of all mankind into three groups: first, Israel—the Jew. Second, the
nations of the world—the Gentiles—and third, the church; which is made up of both
Israelis and Gentiles. Now that is the basic to me. That is the basic of all of
the principles of understanding of the Word of God. Isn’t that simple? A, B,
C—1, 2, 3; but it has the most far-reaching implications and repercussions that
you could imagine. First I say, the key to understanding the Holy Scriptures,
the prophetic Word, is to accept from God His division of all mankind into
these three categories.
First Corinthians 10:32: “Give
none offence, neither to the Jews, nor to the Gentiles, nor to the church of God.” Just accept those three. That is the way God looks at all mankind. And
that’s the way He predicts and shapes all history is according to those three
groups.
Now what Christendom does is, they
do away with that. For example, they identify Israel with the church and they
identify the church with Israel and when you do that all prophecy becomes a
conglomerate of senseless and meaningless, chaotic material. Finally you will
just quit reading it; you will quit studying it. It is inane. It doesn’t go
anywhere. It doesn’t have meaning and doesn’t reach toward any great purpose.
For example, they will say these—practically all
of Christendom—they will say that God’s done with the Jew. There is no purpose
for Israel, He has cast the people aside, and the church is now Israel and all
the promises and blessings of Israel belong to the church, the curses belong to
the Jew. They do that in the face and in front of the long discussion of the
apostle Paul in Romans 9, 10, and 11. He starts off Paul does in Romans 11, verse
1: “Has God cast away His people Israel?” God has not cast them away!
Then he goes on to say: “We are an unnatural
branch, engrafted into the olive tree.” [Romans 11:17] But the day is come
being in the pleroma of the Gentiles when the last Gentile is saved, in
the elective purpose of God. The day is coming when God is going to take the
natural branch and put it back in the olive tree and so all Israel shall be saved. Now that’s what God says. And if I will accept as from God His
purpose in those three differing groups, the whole field and panorama of
prophecy becomes an open, a meaningful, and an understandable, sensible Book.
Now there’s a concomitant that goes with that.
When I accept that from God, that the Lord when He speaks to Israel, He means
Israel. Isn’t that strange God should mean what He says? When God speaks to Israel, He is talking to Israel. He means Israel. He doesn’t mean the church. He doesn’t mean
someone else. He means Israel. When God says Israel, He means Israel. When God says the Gentiles, the nations, he means the Gentiles. When God speaks
of the church, He means the church.
Now when I take that and read that, then what I
find in the Bible is that the church is a musterion; a secret hidden in
the heart of God that was not known until God revealed it to His holy
prophets. That is the whole discussion, and we don’t have time to read it and
exegete it, that’s the whole discussion of the third chapter of the Book of
Ephesians. Paul says that the church—this age, this dispensation, the
phenomenon of church—that the church was a musterion, a secret God kept
in His heart until He revealed it to His holy apostles.
That means that the Old Testament never saw the church.
It was a secret, hidden, unrevealed in the heart of God. And when I read the
prophecies of the Old Testament, I’m reading about Israel. They are addressed
to Israel by name as such and they are not addressed to the church. The church
is never seen and never revealed. It was a musterion until God revealed
it, established it, launched it, in the days and through the holy apostles.
Now when I see that, that means that back yonder in those Old Testament
prophecies, there is a great time gap. The prophets spoke and they spoke clear
to the end of the age. They revealed God’s purposes to the consummation of history,
but they never saw the church. They never mention the church. There is a time
gap in those prophetic scriptures of the Old Testament addressed to Israel.
Now let me give you an illustration.
And if we had all day long we would just go through the Bible, and it never
varies, that time gap. For example, in the ninth chapter in the Book of Daniel
is one of the most strategic and meaningful prophecies that God ever revealed
to man. He says that the nation of Israel shall have four hundred ninety—seventy
times seven—four hundred ninety years until the consummation of the age, that’s
what He says; four hundred and ninety years. Well that’s been, the Lord gave
that two thousand, six hundred years ago. But He said there’s four hundred
ninety years for Israel until the end time.
Now what happened there is this: sixty-nine
of those seventy weeks is put on this side, to the coming of the Lord the first
time—sixty-nine. Then the seventieth week is pulled aside, set aside. It is
not over here with the sixty-nine, it is pulled aside. And at the end of that
seventieth week, the Lord comes the second time. Now Daniel was an Old
Testament prophet and he never saw that gap between the two: the sixty-ninth
week, when the Lord comes to be crucified, and at the end of the seventieth
week, when He comes to be glorified in the earth. There was a time gap. He
never saw it. It was a musterion in the heart of God.
Now, let me take just a moment if I can. Let’s
look, for example, at the prophet Isaiah. He will have in one sentence the
whole panorama of history but in the middle of the sentence is that time gap.
For example, in Isaiah chapter 9, verse [6]: “For unto us a Child is born, unto
us a Son is given.” That is the first coming of our Lord. Jesus born as a
babe in Bethlehem, the incarnation of God--the Child is born, the Son is
given. Now in the same sentence:
And the government shall be upon His
shoulder, of the increase of His government and peace there shall be no end upon
the throne of David and upon His kingdom in order and to establish it with
judgment and justice from henceforth and forever
[Isaiah 9:7]
Do you think that’s now? Man,
alive! Look at the governments of the world, the governments of the world are
doing nothing other than preparing for the annihilation of mankind. Hatred
beyond any way you could describe it; nations hating each other. Why, is it
this Sunday or some other Sunday there are four hundred thousand people going
to gather over there at Fort Worth to look at those B-1 Bombers that can rain
down hell, and fire, and brimstone on the earth? Now that’s what the nations
are doing.
Yet the prophecy here is, “Unto us a Child is
born, unto us a Son is given and the government shall be upon His shoulder and
He shall establish it in justice forever and peace, world without end.” Don’t
you see? In one sentence he has the whole panorama of history, but he never
saw that gap between the coming of the Lord in Bethlehem and the coming of the
Lord to be glorified before the nations of the world.
All prophecy is like that. Let me just take one
other: Jesus, when He came to Nazareth, Jesus was given the scroll of the
prophet Isaiah. And He turned to chapter 61, and He read:
The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me
because the Lord hath anointed Me to preach good tidings to the meek, the
opening of the imprisoning them that are bound, to proclaim the acceptable year
of the Lord.
—and He closed scroll and said—
This day, is this prophecy
fulfilled in your ears.
[Isaiah 61:1, 2]
Now you look at the prophecy. He quit right in
the middle of the second sentence, “to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord
and the day of vengeance of our God.” That day of vengeance of our God refers
to the end time, the great and final judgment day, but that day is yet to
come. The first part of it,”to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord,” that
was fulfilled when Jesus came into the world to preach good tidings to us who
are lost in sin. There is a great gap right in the middle of the sentence and
that gap has now been about two thousand years. And how much longer it is I
don’t know.
You see time is with us, not with God. We are
creatures of time and we put everything in minutes, and seconds, and years, and
millennium, and centuries; not God. With God all history is present before Him.
It is just before Him like that. Here we are, that is ten thousand years ago—this
is ten thousand years yet to come—this is the beginning, this is the end. He
looks at the end from the beginning; all that is before God. Time is with us,
not with Him. And time, a thousand years with Him is as a day, and a day as a
thousand years. So when we read in God’s prophetic Word: when He speaks to
Israel, always it is Israel, always; and when He speaks to the church, it is the
church; and when He speaks to the Gentiles, it is to the Gentiles.
And if we keep those things before us, the whole
prophetic world becomes an open book and an open door before us. It is like I
say, the prophet looking at a great mountain range and there is a tremendous
peak, and here is a tremendous peak, and there is a tremendous peak. And it
looks as though they are in one great mountain range. But when you get to the
range, the peaks are this one first, and then this one second one, and then
that one there, and between the peaks are great valleys. That is what the
prophet does. He looks at the whole course of history to the end time, but
there are valleys in there that he didn’t see. And one of those valleys is the
musterion of the church.
He never saw the church; it was never revealed
to him. It was a secret God kept in His heart. Now that is the first key, the
first principle to understanding scripture. That God speaks to Israel, and He
means Israel. God speaks to the Gentiles, and He means the Gentiles. God
speaks to the church, and he means the church. And if you keep them separate,
just as God does, you’ll have a deep understanding and appreciation of the
prophetic Word of God. That is the first key.
The second one: if you will receive as from God,
the outline of the Revelation that the Lord Himself has given us. In
Revelation 1, verse 19, Revelation 1:19, this is God’s outline of the
Revelation; God’s outline of the denouement of the age. And all we must do is
to receive it, accept it. And if we do, we have an open door into
understanding of the age that’s yet to come. Now look at the outline. “Write,”
the Lord says to the apostle John, “Write first the things which thou has
seen,” Second, “and the things, which are,” and third, “the things which shall
be—meta tauta—after these things.” So John sat down, in keeping
with the command of his Lord Christ, he wrote the things which he had seen.
That is the glorious vision of the glorified Lord; that is in chapter one.
Then he writes the things which are. That is in
chapter 2, 3 and 4; the churches, the things which are. The churches are, we
are: we are, the churches. This is the age, the dispensation of the churches.
“And write the things which are,” so he wrote chapter 2, 3, and 4, the things
of the churches—this dispensation, this era; the era of Christendom—the era of
the Church, “the things which are.”
Third: and the things which shall be, meta
tauta. Now I’ve got to look for that meta tauta, “and the things
which shall be hereafter.” When I turn to chapter 4 of the Revelation, there
it is—meta tauta—“after these things, I looked and behold, a door was
opened in heaven and I heard a voice as of a trumpet saying: Come up hither.”
And the church is gathered to the
Lord in rapture and disappears from the Revelation. And the church is not seen
until she comes back with her Lord in chapter 19 in the War of Armageddon. Now
if I will just accept that, that’s all I have to do. If I will just accept
that, I have God’s purpose and understanding of the whole Revelation.
At chapter 4, the church is raptured, it is
taken out of the earth. God’s saints are caught up to Jesus in heaven and they
stay there during those awful days of the tribulation; they are up there. And
the judgments are poured out upon this earth. And at the end of that War of
Armageddon, in the nineteenth chapter, the saints of God come back with her
Lord.
Isn’t that simple? That means I’m a pre-millennialist.
That means I’m a pre-tribulationist; just accepting the word of the Lord,
that’s all. That is the second key; if I will just accept God’s outline of the
future denouement of history. That is the second one.
Now the third one is as simple.
The third key to understanding prophecy is this: That I am willing to accept
from God that what He reveals is literally true. This is literally the truth,
that’s all. I don’t try to spiritualize it, I don’t try to allegorize it, I don’t
try to make it mean something that I think it ought to mean; I just accept it
from God. God speaks it, I believe it, and that settles it. I accept the Word
as literal Truth.
I want to read to you some of these tremendous
men. Martin Luther in his Table Talk wrote, “I have grounded my
preaching upon the literal Word. He that pleases may follow me, he that will
not, may stay. But as for me,” he says, “I am going to believe and preach the
Word as literally true.”
All right, John Calvin, in his
preface to the Book of Romans, lays down the golden rule of interpretation; quote,
“It is the first business of an interpreter to let the author say what he does
say, instead of attributing to him what we think he ought to say. Just accept
from God what God says, not what we think God ought to say.”
Now one other, Charles Haddon
Spurgeon, warning his students about allegorizing the Scriptures, speaks thus
about Origin. Origin, the church father, was one of the greatest minds in all
human history, but he followed Plato of Alexandria, who allegorized all of the
Old Testament. And Origin did the same thing with the Scriptures of the New
Testament. And this is what Spurgeon says, “If you follow Origin in his
allegorizing,” you know, make it mean whatever you want it to mean, not what it
says, but what you think it might mean, Spurgeon says, “Gentlemen, if you
aspire to emulate Origin in wild, daring interpretations, it may be well to
read his life and note attentively the follies unto which even his marvelous
mind was drawn.”
There is no limit to a man’s wild
imagination when he turns aside from the literal Word of God and begins to
allegorize it and began to spiritualize it; it can mean anything in this
world. If I had time, I would just illustrate that with some of the inane,
far-out things that preachers have made the Word of God mean when the Word of
God says what it says, and let it mean what it means. And take it as such and
don’t try to pour into it all kinds of esoteric and unthinkable additions that
we can supposedly add to the mind, and Word, and purpose of God. Just take it
as literally true. Now when I do that, I must study the context. I must study
what the Scripture says about itself and the meaning that He gives, that God
gives to the words that He uses.
In studying prophecy, the interpreter should
have the help of six honest, serving men of Rudyard Kipling. Kipling wrote:
I keep
six honest serving-men
(They taught me all I knew);
Their names are What and Why and When
And How and Where and Who.
[“I Keep Six Honest Serving Men…”’;
Rudyard Kipling]
That is the way we do when we study the Word of God. “Now
the Lord has said thus and so…” Well, what, why, where, when, how? Look at
that and accept it as the literal truth of God, and then see what God means by
what He says.
All right we are going to take what is most
apparent in the Word of God and that is its symbolism, its symbols. “Pastor,
do you mean to tell me that all of these endless symbols in the Bible that they
are to be taken to be literal true?” That’s it exactly, you’ve got it. You’ve
got it. You’ve understood it, exactly so. Every symbol in the Bible is a
picture of a literal truth. It is not a symbol of a symbol that symbolizes a
symbol, and just goes on into meaningless inanity. A symbol is a picture, a
dramatic presentation, a definition of a literal truth.
Now let’s just look at it, just in the remaining
time that we have. John’s Gospel; John says, “Many other semeion.” He
never uses the word miracle—though it is translated in the King James Version
of the Bible, “miracle” all the way through. He never used the word
"miracle," he used the word semeion, “signs”:
Many other signs did Jesus—an
acted-out symbol—did Jesus…they are not written in this book,
but these are written that you
might believe that Jesus is the Christ… and believing, you might have eternal
life in His name.
[John 20:30,31]
So John says, “I am writing my book around the
great symbolic actions of my Lord.” All right let’s just look at one, or two,
or three of them. In the sixth chapter, he has the story of Jesus feeding the
five thousand with the loaves and the fishes. Then he says, “Jesus is the
Bread of Life. I am the Bread of Life,” the Lord says. What He did was a
symbolic action. He feeds our souls and our lives.
All right let’s take another one in the ninth
chapter. In the ninth chapter of that same book of semeion, signs, Jesus
heals the blind man. He opens the eyes of the blind. And then follows, “I am
the Light of the world. If you follow the world, you walk in darkness; but if
you follow Me, the light grows more beautiful and glorious until the perfect
dawning of the perfect day. I’m the light of the world.” [John 9:5, 8:12]
All right let’s take
one another. In the eleventh chapter of this book of semeion, in the
eleventh chapter: why, He raises Lazarus from the dead. Then it is, “I am the
resurrection and the life.” It is a symbol, it is a picture. That is the
meaning of it, a literal meaning. That’s the way the book was written.
Now the same thing obtains with
John’s Revelation, all of those symbols in the Revelation are made known to us
by the Scriptures themselves. And they have deep, profound meaning. For
example, in the fifth chapter of the Book of Revelation he sees bowls of
incense; bowls of incense. And he says these bowls of incense are the prayers
of the saints that is ascend to the throne of God. Just beautiful—God’s people
praying and the Lord says, “Its incense coming up before My throne of grace,” a
symbol. Or take again in the twelfth chapter of the Revelation he speaks of
the great dragon and he says that is Satan. Or take again in the seventeenth chapter
of the Revelation, he speaks of the many waters and then he says the many
waters are the nations, and tongues, and languages and the peoples of the
earth.
All of the symbols have a profound meaning in Scripture
and if we will see that who, where, what, when and why, you will find an answer
to every one of the symbols that are used in the Bible. And they convey
literal truth. For example, the Lord Jesus will stand before his disciples and
say:
This is My body which is given for
you, take eat, in remembrance of Me. And this is My blood which is shed for
the remission of sins,
drink in remembrance of Me.
For as often as you do this, you
dramatize the Lord’s death until He come, until He come.
[Luke 22:19,20 & 1 Corinthians 11:26]
It is a symbol. The Lord was standing there
before them, they were not eating His body nor were they drinking His blood.
It was symbolic:
This bread is a symbol of My
life given for you. And this cup is a symbol of My crimson blood poured
out for you. And do this, do this as a commitment of your faith that some day,
I will be coming back again.
A great symbol, a great action, we are portraying before our
eyes. It has a literal truth; He literally died for us, He literally poured
out the crimson of His blood for us. He is literally coming back again for us;
and the symbolism is enacted before our people every time we observe the Lord’s
Supper.
May I point out just one other? We could spend I
say, the a day here, looking at these marvelous things; a symbol. It says in
the Bible, in the first chapter of Acts, in verse 9, that Jesus ascended up to
heaven, He ascended. And while the disciples stood there looking at the Lord
ascend, a cloud received Him out of their sight. Now to us, a cloud is a rain,
it is a mist, it is moisture, a cloud. It is a symbol of the Shekinah
glory of God, the Shekinah of God; the glory of God. When He ascended
up, the cloud, the Shekinah glory of God enveloped Him, received Him.
Now, in Revelation 1:7 it says: “Behold,
He cometh with clouds.” That is not a rain cloud, as though we are going to
have a storm. “Behold, He cometh with clouds,” that’s the shekinah
glory of God. When the Lord comes, the whole earth is going to be bathed in
the resplendent, iridescent glory of the living Lord. The cloud; it is always
that in the Bible. When Moses was on Mount Sinai it was covered with a cloud;
that is the glory of God.
When they built the tabernacle, the priest could
not enter it for the cloud, the glory of the presence of God. When they
dedicated Solomon’s temple, the priest could not even enter because of the
cloud, the presence of the glory of God. In the seventeenth chapter of the
Book of Matthew in the fifth verse, when He was transfigured on that mount of
glory, it says, “and a cloud overshadowed them.” That was the Shekinah
glory of God. And His face shined above the brightness of the sun and His
garments whiter than any fuller, than any dyer could make them. That is
symbolism; that is the way God speaks to us. And if we will accept the symbol
as the literal truth of God, everything in the Bible will have with it an
overtone, a concomitant, a corollary, an attendant spiritual meaning. God will
speak to your heart beautifully.
Now, next sermon; we will speak of
these things that God revealed at the end of the world. But I just want to
summarize them, just summarize them just for a second. There are about eight
things that are going to happen, one after another at the end of the world.
The first three are pretty much together. Which one of them is which, I don’t
know. But there are three things that are going to happen at the end of the
age.
First, the Rapture, and I’ve spoken of that when
the Lord calls us to Himself--the Rapture. The second will be the re-gathering
of all of Israel in the Holy Land and their temple is built. Do they build it
right at the first of the tribulation or do they build it before? All I know
is that in the tribulation, in that seven final years, the temple is there.
And the people are there. Are they gathered there before the tribulation? I
do not know.
I see them gathering there now, they
are returning now. And on the Fifteenth of May in 1948, the prophecy of
Ezekiel in chapter 37 came to pass. The nation was resurrected out of the
graves of the nations of the world. There has never been a nation that went
out of existence and after even five hundred years came back into existence.
This nation has come back into existence after two thousand five hundred years
of being buried among the peoples and nations of the world.
Anyway, those three are together: the Rapture of
the church, when God calls us home; the re-gathering of the people, Israel. Remember Israel is Israel, the re-gathering of Israel. It’s not the church, Israel
is Israel. The re-gathering of Israel in the Holy Land and the rebuilding of
the temple, and then that terrible invasion of Russia that begins the War of
Armageddon. All of those seven years are frightful years of war.
Now after the tribulation at the end of the
Battle of Armageddon—and if God didn’t intervene, Jesus says there’s no flesh
that would be saved, we would annihilate one another—at the end of that great War
of Armageddon, the Lord comes with His saints. And He establishes His
Millennium Kingdom. Then at the twentieth chapter of Revelation, there is a
final rebellion against God of the children born in that thousand year of the
Millennium. And then we enter the eternal state.
Ah! To think that these eyes will
see it and this heart will feel it, and my eyes shall look upon the glory of
His presence. New heaven, new earth, and no more tears, or death, or sorrow,
or crying; think of it! What God hath purposed for those who love Him.
When I went to my study today—and I
live in this world—there on my study, Mrs. Pritchard has written a little note:
2:30 tomorrow afternoon, funeral service for George Lang. One of the dearest
men I ever knew in my life. I live in that kind of a world; death, age,
sickness, sorrow, crying, separation. There is going to be a day, God says,
when all death is passed away. There will be no more crying, no more tears, no
more death, no more sorrow, no more hurt, and no more pain.
That is the purpose of God for us. May I close?
I must. Every once in a while, every once in a while, somebody will say to me,
"Pastor, I will see you here, or there, or in the air!" Oh, I love
that! “I’ll see you here,” maybe we have a meeting, going to have en
evangelistic conference, or have a prayer meeting. “I’ll see you here or
there. If I don’t see you again, I’ll meet you on one of those golden streets
right across maybe from Hallelujah Square where we see the Lord walking in and
out every morning, where the trumpets sound His coming.” There; here or there?
“Or I will meet you, pastor, in the air?” If the Lord delays His coming and He
raptures us up to meet Him, “I’ll meet you there, Pastor, I’ll be there.” That
is the sweetest way for a man to live, to give his life in the love and in the
grace of our blessed Lord Jesus. And that is the gospel we preach, and that’s
the invitation we press to your heart, to answer with your life.
Zig Ziglar, I want you to come up here, out of
that pew where you are. I want you to stand right here. See you right there
where everybody can see you. Come up here and stand right there and turn
facing those dear people. Zig, I tell you, it was like a revival service to me
to be out there at the dedication of that new beautiful facility. And they are
some of you who work with Zig who today will give your heart to Jesus. Do it.
Do it. It means life now. You’re not losing anything here. You’re gaining
life now. And it means everlasting life in the world to come.
Give your heart, and your house,
and your home, and your life, and your work to the Lord Jesus. Ask Him to
bless it. Make Him the dearest guest and partner in your home and in your
life. Do it. Come up here and say, “Zig, today, this day, I’ve taken the Lord
Jesus as my Savior, and my Lord, and I’m giving my life to him.” And there are
others of you who are already saved, you’re already in the kingdom, you already
know the Lord Jesus. “But Zig, I would like to re-consecrate, and recommit,
and re-confess my heart’s love and faith in the Lord Jesus.” I’m not asking
you to join this church, most of you don’t even live here. Some of you don’t
live within three thousand miles of here; don’t think of that. Think of the
Lord, “And what God has in store for me! And I’m going to see Him at the top.”
One of these days, I’ll meet you there. Here, there or in the air. You come,
you tell Zig that, “I want to accept the Lord as my Savior.” God bless you.
Or, “I want to re-give my heart to Him, the Lord bless you.” Or, “Zig, I would
just like to praise the name of Jesus.” You can stay here with us or you can
go back to your seat. Just do it. It will bless your heart.
And to all the vast congregation
here this morning, if God has spoken to you, on the first note of the first
stanza, come down one of these stairways, down one of these aisles, “Pastor,
I’m giving my heart the Lord today.” Or, “I’m putting my family and my own
soul in the circle of this church.” Or, “I’m coming by myself; God has spoken
to me and I’m answering with my life.” Get to it and the angels will bless you
and the Holy Spirit will bless you as you come, while we stand and while we
sing.