WHERE CHRIST IS
ALL IN ALL
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Colossians 3:11
10-06-57 7:30
p.m.
Now if we are in any humor to do so let’s turn to the
Bible. Reaching to the Book of Colossians, the third chapter of the Book of
Colossians; Colossians 3; now we left off at the eighth verse so tonight we
begin at the ninth verse. Let’s read to the end of the chapter, all of us. The
text is going to be the eleventh and the twenty-fourth verses in the third
chapter of the Book of Colossians.
Now, do we have it? And if your neighbor didn't bring his
Bible, you share it with him. The third chapter of Colossians, beginning at
the ninth verse and let's read to the end of the chapter. Colossians 3:9; all
right, all of us together:
Lie not one to
another, seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds;
And have put on
the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created
him:
Where there is
neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian,
bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all.
Put on therefore,
as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercy, kindness, humbleness of
mind, meekness, longsuffering;
Forbearing one
another, and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any: even
as Christ forgave you, so also do ye.
And above all
these things put on charity, which is the bond of perfectness.
And let the peace
of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and be
ye thankful.
Let the word of
Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another
in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to
the Lord.
And whatsoever ye
do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God
and the Father by Him.
Wives, submit
yourself unto your own husbands, as it is fit in the Lord.
Husbands, love
your wives, and be not bitter against them.
Children, obey
your parents in all things: for this is well pleasing unto the Lord.
Fathers, provoke
not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged.
Servants, obey in
all things your masters according to the flesh; not with eyeservice, as
menpleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing God:
And whatsoever ye
do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men;
Knowing that of
the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance: for ye serve the Lord
Christ.
But he that doeth
wrong shall receive for the wrong which he hath done: and there is no respect
of persons.
[Colossians 3:9-25]
Our text is the eleventh verse: “Where there is neither
Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision”—that is, Jew or
Gentile—”Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all.” And
the next is followed by a “therefore.” And the summation of all you have read
is in the twenty-fourth verse: “Therefore serve ye the Lord Christ.” In our text
it is translated as an indicative: “For ye serve the Lord Christ.” A
declaration which is true, but it also can be translated an imperative: “Serve
ye the Lord Christ.”
So that is our text: “There is neither Greek nor Jew,
circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free, but Christ
is all, and in all.” [Colossians 3:11] This
is a most meaningful and precious little text. It has such a vast, expansive
meaning. In fact, how could one preach on that and be encompass it within any
allotted time? “Christ is all, and in all.” Sometimes, you can look upon a
jewel, and the worth of it is the price of empires, though you could carry it
in your hand, hold it in the palm of your hand. So a text like this: “Christ
is all, and in all.” In all history, in all time, in all eternity, in all the
plan and revelation of God, in all angelic tongue and language, in speech,
“Christ is all, and in all.”
Now, the apostle does not say that Christ is all and in all
to all men. He merely makes this avowal as an inspired prophet of God. That
in Him, there is not Jew. There is not Greek. There is not barbarian. There
is not provincial. There is not Scythian. There's not bond. There's not
free, but Christ is everything. “Christ is all, and in all.”
Now, there are some to whom Christ is nothing at all. The
only mention they make of Him is in blasphemy. They may name Him in an oath.
They may use Him as a curse word. To them, Christ is nothing at all. They
sense no need of an atoning savior. They are altogether outside and beyond the
pale of what we love and what interests us. If they were here tonight instead
of at the fair, if they were here tonight instead of at the TV, they'd sit here
and listen to the service going away saying, “What a weariness it is!”
There are those, I say, to whom Christ is nothing at all.
When you think of the future when He shall come in His glory, when He shall
judge the quick and the dead, what an awful and a terrible thing to die without
God, without Christ, without hope, without mercy, without advocate, without
mediator, without intercessor, to die and to be lost, to fall into the flames
of hell and damnation! Just to think of it is almost a call to prayer.
We ought to pause right now and pray for those who face the
awful judgment of God, who in prospect and in destiny can look forward to
nothing but “a fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation that shall
devour the adversaries.” The man without Christ is lost. The man without
Christ is damned. The man without Christ faces an eternal judgment. It is
hell. It is perdition. It is the most horror of all horrors that one could
conceive or think of, and yet, there are those who spurn the overtures of
mercy, who do spite to the Spirit of grace, who trample underfoot the blood of
the covenant. To them, Christ is nothing at all. There are those to whom
Christ is something, but not much. This thing of the judgment day of God, of
death and of damnation, scares them to death. They are filled with fright at
the prospect of dying.
So they seek a palliative. They seek an amelioration. They
seek a refuge of some kind for their fearful and frightened souls. So they
find, if they can, a faith and a religion that shall deliver their souls from
hell using Christ as a deliverance, but for nothing more. He means something
to them, but not much. To them, the world is everything. It's pain. It's
pleasure. It's embellishment. It's reward; enjoying it to the full, in it, a
part of it, but at the same time afraid to die, afraid to meet God, afraid of
the fires of hell and of judgment.
So they seek for the moment a respite in Christ. And it is
very interesting to me to see how they do it. They will observe Good Friday.
They will observe Lent. They will have certain special days, certain things
through which they go through. These they hope to deliver their souls from
damnation. But to them, Christ is nothing but just that. On a certain day,
He's to be revered. On a certain occasion, He's to be respected. At a certain
place, He is to be worshiped. But beyond that and besides that, He is nothing,
nothing at all.
I think one of the truest parables of that kind of religion
I ever heard is this. Two robbers had held up a bank, and in seizing the money
that belonged to the people, in their escape, they had shot the banker and left
him dead in blood. They were seated in their escape in a little place eating
lunch, and suddenly one of them said, “Wait.” And he pushed back the meat and
added, “This is Friday. I had forgot.” Christ is something, but not much.
There are those to whom Christ is a mistaken social and
political philosophy. I meet it here in this text. How many times have I
heard it so quoted: “Where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor
uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free, but Christ is all, and in
all.” There are those who take this text and warp it to a false and mistaken
social and sociological and political and economic and ecclesiastical ideal.
They say, “This means away with all demarcations, no longer national pride and
patriotism, no longer church and churches. All of us are to be in one government.
All of us are to be in one state. All of us are to be in one church. All of
us are to be in one world.” And they work by day and by night, by compromise,
by false propaganda, by ever insidious insinuations to undermine and to outline
for the whole world these great political concepts that they think are in
Christ.
Well, Paul was a Jew, and he gloried in his forefathers. He
said in the eleventh chapter of the Book of Romans that the Jew would be here
until Jesus came again. And that at His appearing, iniquity would be turned
away from Jacob. “Out of Zion shall come a Deliverer and all Israel shall be saved.” The Jew is still here, the nation of the Jew, and he was proud to
belong to them. Paul was proud of his Roman citizenship, and he claimed it
upon occasion after occasion. Proudly, did he say, “But I was freeborn.”
What Paul means by this is that the Christ-man is elevated
and sanctified to a new spiritual level that enhances and makes sacred all of
the relationships in life. I can be a good Christian Canadian, loyal to my
state, and proud of my country. I can be a faithful, loyal American citizen,
proud of my country and faithful to its great destiny. I, if I were so born I
could be a faithful and loyal Englishman or Frenchman or Italian. These things
to which we commit ourselves in Christ do not at all mean that, therefore, all
of the distinctions by which we live in life are to be automatically wiped
away. Not so.
I think an African can be proud of the fact that he is an
African. I think these separate nationalities that meet in the UN, though they
may represent small countries, they can be proud to say, “I am a citizen of Holland. I am a citizen of Norway. I am a citizen of Pakistan. I am a citizen of South Africa. I am a citizen of the British Commonwealth. I am a citizen of the United States of America.” At the same time, he can be a Christian citizen, not dedicated
to war and to hate and to malice and to strife and to tension, but dedicated to
the great ideals as we have them and are taught them and know them in Christ
Jesus, where Christ is all, in all.
There are those to whom Christ is all in all in some
things. For example, there are people who are anxious to look upon Jesus as
the justifier of their souls, the savior of their souls. But they think of
their perseverance as a thing of themselves. They look upon Christ as the only
one who could forgive sins, but they look upon themselves as being the
instruments by which that grace is mediated to them and is kept by them. That
is, Christ is all in all in some of this, but He's not all in all, in all of
this. Their salvation is not all of Christ. It is also some of them. Christ
was everything, dying on the cross, justifying our souls, forgiving our sins.
But in our deliverance to God, there is also me in it, of me in it, my work in
it.
For example, some say so frequently, “I believe in Jesus,
that He's all that He said He was, able to do all that He promised, but I don't
feel that I ought to come. I don't feel that I ought to respond. I don't feel
that I ought to be down at that aisle.” I see. I begin to understand. It is
Christ as the savior, as the forgiver, as a justifier, but I see there must be
also your feeling in it. The work of Christ was not finished. It must also be
added to by your feeling. I see.
Or you will say, “I don't believe I have the right
penitence. I must somehow mourn and feel these things on my heart.” I see. I
understand. We are to add to the unfinished work of Christ your penitence and
your mourning, your praying. I see.
Or you say, “I see Jesus as Savior and Lord, forgiving sins
and justifying the soul.” I see. “But I must also straighten things up before
I come. I have to do these things before I would stand up for the”—I see. I
understand. You must add to the unfinished work of Christ what you can do. I
understand. He isn't all in all.
My sinner friend, which is I and you—to us sinners—we are
all emptiness. Christ is the fullness. We are all filthiness and dirtiness.
Christ is all cleansing. We are all feeble and weak and mistaken, and He is
strong and able and mighty. There is no sense, in any wise, where Christ has
failed, and we must take up and carry on. Our salvation is the Alpha and the
Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last. Our salvation is
Christ, Christ Who initiates it, Christ Who mediates it, Christ Who gives it,
and Christ Who keeps us in that faith and in that way.
All of Christ, not anything of us; not anything that we
could do, not anything that we could give, not anything we could buy, where
Christ is all in all. When we get to heaven and sing these songs of Zion, it will not be, “All glory to Christ and for my good works. All glory to Christ and
to my prayers. All glory to Christ and to the way that I felt. Oh, glory to
Christ and to my penitence.”
No, but it shall be, “All glory to Him who loved us and
washed us from our sins in His blood. To Him be glory and honor, world without
end, where Christ is all in all.” Though I speak with the tongues of men and
of angels and give not all glory to Him, I am nothing. Though I have the gift
of prophecy and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and though I have
all faith so that I can remove mountains and give not all glory to Him, I am
nothing. And though I bestow all my good to feed the poor, and though I give
my body to be burned and give not all glory to Him, I am nothing.
“Where Christ is all, and in all.” Thank the Lord there are
many to whom He is just that—everything. He's our righteousness. He's our
intercession. He's our praying. He's our mediator. He's our strong keeper
and preserver. He's our guide and defender; trusting in Him, all in all, our
Lord Christ.
How do I know I won't fall into hell—live in the hope of
Jesus for sixty-nine years, then in my seventieth year fall into hell? How do
I know I won't? Trust in the Lord for the days of my life, since I was a boy.
Then, in my age, fall into damnation. How do I know I will not? Bless your
heart, I never think of it. He said, “Him that cometh unto Me, I will in no
wise cast out.” [John 6:37] He said,
“I give unto them eternal life, and they shall never perish.” [John 10:28] He said, “No one is able to pluck
them out of My hand. My Father, Who gave them to Me, is greater than all, and
no one is able to pluck them out of My Father's hand.” [John 10:29] He said that whatsoever trusts in Him “should
never perish, but have everlasting eternal life.” [John
3:16] I never think about it. When I get to be an old man and face
that final and inevitable hour, I don't look upon it any different than I do at
this present moment. I trusted Jesus when I was a boy. I trust Jesus
tonight. I'm trusting Him to the end of the way, “where Christ is all, and in
all.”
Now, in the little moment that remains, he follows it with a
therefore: “Where Christ is all and in all,” therefore—then is that long
passage that we read together—therefore. And he sums it up in that
twenty-fourth verse: “Therefore serve ye the Lord Christ.” We are to serve the
Lord Christ in the common, everyday acts of our lives, in the kitchen, out in
the office, on the playground, walking down the street. We're to preach
sermons for Jesus everywhere.
Let me tell you something. It is a vicious thing, and it is
not according to the Word of God. It is a fearful and tragic thing when our
people fall into the habit of saying, “This is sacred, and this isn't. This is
religious; this is secular. This is a special and holy day or season; this is
an open day and an open season.” To the Christian, everything in life is of
God, and we live and move and have our being in the divine presence. When a
man puts on his work clothes, they are vestments of the Lord. When we sit down
to eat, it's a sacrament of God. When we breathe, it's an incense of prayer.
When we walk, it's in the presence of the Lord. Our whole life is ennobled by
the grandest conception the earth has ever seen, that a man lives his life unto
God. He may toil, but he's serving Jesus. The galley slave may tug at the
oars, but he's pulling for Jesus. All of life, dedicated to Him.
“Where Christ is all in all, serve ye therefore the Lord.”
We're to serve Him in His church, in the common acts of everyday life—sweeping,
washing, working, coming, going. And we're to serve Him in His church. All of
us have a part.
I have seldom been encouraged more than I was last week. I
wrote in my Pastor's Pen, “We can't all stand up and preach like Paul or sing
like an angel, but all of us have our gifts from God.” And I said in that
little passage, “We need a bus driver for the Good Shepherd department. Is
there somebody that would drive a bus for Jesus?” And bless your heart, the
next week, I saw the leader, superintendent of our Good Shepherd department,
and he said, “Pastor, you know that little thing you wrote in your Pastor's
Pen?” He said, “We just got the finest fellow.” I don't suppose he could
preach. I don't know who he is yet. And I don't know whether he can sing like
these glorious testifiers here tonight, but he could drive a bus. He could
drive a truck, and he could drive it for Jesus.
Maybe all I could do is to open a window for God. There is
a way to open a door so as to glorify the Lord; did you know that? There is a
way to show somebody a seat in the auditorium so as to open his heart to the
message of the preacher. There is a way just to shake hands with a fellow.
There's a way just to park a car. There's a way just to point to the road that
glorifies God. God has His preachers, and God has His evangelists and His
apostles. I know. But He also has His door openers and His car parkers and
His bus drivers and His hand-shakers, all for God.
Then we ought to serve the Lord Christ all in all:
“Therefore serve ye the Lord Christ.” We ought to serve Him personally. Oh,
organized religion is a condescension to the flesh. Some of these days, there
won't be any organized religion. It's because of the world that we're in that
we have it. We have to have it. But the essence of true religion is always
this. It's between you and Jesus. It's a personal thing, serving Him,
communing with Him, talking to the Lord, adoring Him, letting Him speak to you,
and you speak to Him.
Martha, Martha, busy about many things, but Mary, seated at
His feet, just listening to Jesus. And a woman stood up and said, “Blessed is
the womb that bare Thee, and the paps which Thou hast sucked.” [Luke 11:27] I suppose the greatest gift that
could have come to any woman would be to minister to Jesus in His childhood.
But what did the Lord say? “Nay, rather, blessed are they that hear the word
of God, and do it.” [Luke 11:28]
Listening to Jesus, seated at His feet, filling your heart
with His word, serving Him, extolling Him, praising Him, bearing His reproach,
outside the camp with Him, drinking the cup that He drank, baptized with the
baptism He was baptized with.
While we sing our song tonight, somebody you, give his heart
to the Lord. Would you come and stand by me? A family you, put your life with
us in the church. While we make this appeal, would you come and stand by me?
In this balcony around, down these stairwells, “Here I come, Pastor, and here I
am.” In this great throng of people, on this lower floor, somebody you, give
his heart to the Lord. “Pastor, I give you my hand. I give my heart to
Jesus.” Or putting your life with us in the church, while we sing this hymn;
into that aisle or down that stairwell; here to the front, “Here I come,
Pastor, and here I am.” Make it now while God is here. The Spirit calls
while we stand and sing.