IT IS REASONABLE TO BE A
CHRISTIAN
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Acts 17
10-08-78 8:15 a.m.
Along
with the great host of people in this sanctuary this hour and the thousands who
are listening on radio, we express our gratitude once again to our Chapel Choir
and their instrumentalists for praising God with us.
You
are listening to the services of the First Baptist Church, and this is the
pastor bringing the message entitled It is Reasonable to be a Christian.
The message arises out of the visit of the apostle Paul to the ancient and far
famed university city of Athens, the capital of Hellas, of Greece. I could not imagine, I could not conceive of a more dramatic moment in history
than the confrontation between Hellenic culture and the preaching of the gospel
of the grace of the Son of God. In the seventeenth chapter of the Book of
Acts, Paul is standing in Mars Hill, which is separated by a satellite addition
to the great Acropolis, on which were built the temples of the Athenians to
their gods. And as he stands there in the midst of the supreme court, called
the Areopagus, he delivers his message concerning the true God who is revealed
to us in the Man Christ Jesus. Then the story concludes: And when these
Athenians and the supreme court, the areopagites, when they heard of the
resurrection of the dead, some mocked, chleuazó, jeered, ridiculed,” the
word is used twice in the New Testament.
It
was used at Pentecost when these men began to praise God in the languages of
the eastern world, they chleuazó, they jeered at them, mocked them,
ridiculed them, saying, “They are drunk; they are filled with new wine.” It is
used here; it is a very strong word. “Some of them mocked: others,” being
more gracious, just bowed out, “saying, We will hear thee again of this matter.
So Paul departed from among them. Howbeit certain men clave unto him, and
believed: among the which was Dionysius the areopagite,” a member of the
supreme court, “and a woman named Damaris, and others with them.”
The
group that the apostle had gathered together on Mars Hill was a very diverse
and polyglot group. Some of them were of the finest citizenry of Athens; they were members of the supreme court, the Areopagus. Some of them of course
were just listeners who had talked to Paul as he spoke to them and witnessed to
the Lord down in the Agora, which is just below and before Mars Hill. And some
of them were women, as you can see from the naming of one of them, Damaris. Now,
in that group you had those who were polytheists; they believed in many gods. They
did not deny God, they did not deny His creatorship, but they made Him out of
gold, or made Him out of silver, or out of stone; they were idolaters, and they
were very much open to the preaching, that it was the gods that created the
world and the gods that run the world and the gods that move in human life. The
only thing bad about them was they multiplied the gods, and sometimes the
stories that they mythologically told of those gods was worse than the actions
of men.
Now
the other group in that Athenian congregation to whom Paul was speaking on Mars
Hill were university men; they were teachers, they were professors, they were
academicians. And the author names two of them. He names the Epicureans and
the Stoics. They were atheists. They certainly did not believe in all of
those gods, whether they lived on Mount Olympus or whether they were made out
of gold and silver and stone and were right there in those temples. They were
learned men. Now the Epicureans were followers of Epicurus, who lived before
and after, a few years before and after 300 B.C. And they were atomic
scientists; they believed the teaching of Democritus, that the whole world was
a concourse of atoms. And the courser atoms made up the material universe you
see around you, and the finer atoms made up the human spirit. And those atoms
fortuitously gathered together, and then separated; gathered together and
separated; and the whole universe was explained in their scientific theory and
philosophy of the day as being a fortuitous impersonal concourse of atoms. Now
that’s the Epicureans: they were atheists; there was no god in it, and
everything was just blind chance. Now the Stoics were atheists of a different
kind. They were followers of Zeno. And Zeno taught in the stoo, the
porch. So they came to be known as Stoics. It is a great system of Greek
Hellenic philosophy. And these Stoics were pantheists. That is, everything is
god; god is everything. Everything you see, that’s god; and in their
philosophy. Why, they taught that the universe runs of itself and what we must
do is to fit ourselves into it. And whatever providences of life overwhelm us,
we must accept them in obedience and submission. And that’s where you get the
name “stoical”, stoic. They were taught to be submissive to this impersonal
universe that is god. God is pan, everything, pantheism. But they were
atheists. Both schools were atheists.
Now,
when Paul began to speak to them, they listened very quietly for a moment, for
a while. Then when he began to speak about this God who created the universe—and
that’s the first part of Paul’s message—He is not made out of gold, He is not
made out of silver, and He is certainly not polytheistic; He is not many, He is
one; and He revealed himself in Jesus Christ. And before that Lord, the
revelation of God, we shall someday all of us appear. And the verification of
that revelation of God is found in an incident in history, namely, that God
raised Him from the dead. Pointed Him out as the man by whom we shall be
judged. Now that was Paul’s message. And when he delivered that message, the
Epicureans jeered, mocked, ridiculed, laughed out loud. And the Stoics were
more gracious: they bowed out and said, “We’ll hear thee again of this
matter,” and walked away. But there were some of them who clung to Paul, who
believed the message that he brought. And among them he names two, that
evidently were much known and much revered and respected in the Christian
community in that ancient day. One was Dionysius, who was a member of the
supreme court, and one was a noblewoman, a noble Athenian, named Damaris.
Now,
our message this morning is going to concern which one of those two do you
think was correct? The Epicureans and the Stoics and the atheists, who mocked
and ridiculed the Christian message of this emissary of the gospel of Christ,
or Dionysius and Damaris and those who accepted the message that Paul was
preaching. Now the same thing obtains today. You have these two: you have
the atheists and the materialists and the secularists who mock at the very
thought that there is a personal God in this universe; and then you have the
many of us who accept the Lord Christ and His revelation of God the Father, the
great Creator. Now which of us is correct? Which is right? And that’s the
message today. Of course, I shall present the Christian faith and the reasons
for it.
Number
one, why I believe in the Christian faith, and why I do not believe that the
atheist and the agnostic and the secularist and the materialist and the whole
system of philosophy that lies back of most of this world, especially in its
academic community, why I believe in the Christian faith. All right, number
one: when I look at this universe, it is not to me unintelligible and
impersonal; but back of everything that I see, I see intelligence, and
intelligence involves personality. Back of all of the creation, all of it, I see
a creative omnipotent hand.
Now
we are going to look at it just for a minute. And before we do, I want to
illustrate what it is that we are going to look at. There was a teacher of a
little class of junior boys, and he was teaching those little fellows about the
creative omnipotence of the Lord God. And he took out his watch, pocket watch;
he took out his watch and he put on the table before that little class of
junior boys. And he says, he says, “Fellows, you see that watch there?” He
says, “Nobody made it; it just happened. It just made itself.” He said, “Upon
a day there came rolling by a watch case, and it plopped down. And upon a day
there came rolling by a whole bunch of little wheels and springs, and they
plopped in. And then upon a day there came rolling by a face, and two hands;
and they plopped on. And then there came rolling by a crystal, and it plopped
on. And finally there happened that watch. Nobody made it. And one of those
little fellows looked at that guy and said, “Say, Mister, ain’t you crazy?”
Now,
I want to show you a mechanism that is one hundred infinitudes more intricate
and amazing than that watch. Now you look at it. Around the central sun of this
universe in which we live—which, by the way, is just a little thing tucked away
in one corner of God’s vast infinitude—around that central sun there goes
around and around a planet named Mercury. It is 37 million miles away from the
sun; and it takes 88 days for it to go around; 36 million miles this way; 36
million miles that way; 36 million miles that way, and it goes around and
around every 8 days. And then just beyond that central sun, there is a planet
named Venus; and it is 67 million miles in its orbit. And it goes around every
7 months. It wll be 67million miles that way, 67 million miles that way, and 67
million miles that way, and around and around. And then, in a larger orbit, is
a planet named Earth. It is 92 million miles away, and it takes a year—365
days—for it to go around, and around, and around; 92 million miles that way, 92
million miles that way, and around and around. And then beyond is a planet
named Mars; and it is a 141 million miles away. It is a 141 million miles that
way, 141 million miles that way, and around and around it goes; and it takes a
year and a half, 18 months for Mars to make the orbit. And then beyond that is
Jupiter: Jupiter is 463 million miles; 463 million miles that way, 463 million
miles that way, and it takes it 12 years to make that orbit around the sun.
And then beyond Jupiter is Saturn, and Saturn is 886 million miles away from
the sun; and it takes 30 years to make the orbit. So it is 886 million miles
that way, 886 million miles that way, and back 886 million miles that way; and
it takes 30 years for it to go around the sun. And then beyond Saturn there is
Uranus, and Uranus is 1 billion, 800 million miles in its orbit; 1 billion, 800
million miles that way, swinging around; 1 billion, 800 million miles that way,
swinging around, swinging around, swinging around, and it takes 84 years for
Uranus to make that orbit around the sun. And then beyond Uranus is Neptune, and
Neptune is 2 billion, 800 million miles away from that central sun; 2 billion,
800 million miles this way, 2 billion, 800 million miles that way, 2 billion,
800 million miles that way; and it takes 264 years for it to swing around the
sun. Then beyond that is Pluto, and Pluto is 3 billion, 460 [million] miles
away; [three] billion 460 that way, [three] billion,460 [million] miles that
way; going around, and around, and around the sun. And it takes 434 years for
that orbit to be made. And for untold ages there has never been a second of
variation in the orbits of those planets around the sun. Elgin Watch Company
used to say, “We set our time by the stars”; God’s omnipotent creation.
And
a man had might as well say that the marvels of this universe are like throwing
up an alphabet, and he kept throwing it up and throwing it up and finally it
came down in the form of an Aristotelian treatise on Greek drama—just happened—unthinkable!
It takes a thousand times more faith to believe that than to believe the truth
of God revealed in this blessed Book.
Why
do I believe, why do we believe, that the message Paul preached is the
revelation of God and not what these atheists believe who mocked at what he
said? All right, number two: back of everything I see in the universe is
ultimate purpose, everything. And I see it everywhere. There is nothing in
the universe that I see that is not by design reaching toward some ultimate
end; everywhere in everything, a design, a purpose. I see it in the fin of a
fish. I see it in the hoof of a horse. I see it in the bird, the wing of a
bird. I see it in the hand of a man. Purpose.
I
see it in the very creation of life itself: there is a seed, and there is a
leaf, and there is a stalk, and there is a fruit, and all of it is moving toward
what the Greeks call teleios, the end for which it is made. I see it in
human history. According to the Book, all human story is reaching toward some
final consummation, and you can’t stop it. It moves. History moves; and it
reaches toward some great and final end. There is purpose in history. And above
all I see it in the Bible; 1,600 years this blessed Book was in making, written
by more than forty men under the direction of the Holy Spirit. And the Book
moves, and there is purpose in it, there is redemption in it. And it moves and
it moves and it moves from one great plateau to another until finally we reach
the consummation of the age. There is purpose in all that we see. And our
lives are included in it.
All
right, again, the scriptural identification of and testimony to the Lord Jesus
Christ, and that was the consummation of what Paul was preaching. And they
pretty well listened to him, apparently, as long as he was talking about God,
the one God. But when he came to preach about Jesus and the resurrection of
the dead— the designation of the horizo, the designation of Jesus as the
revelation of God—they laughed, and scoffed, and walked away. You know I find
that pretty well and pretty much in the world today. If a man talks about a
great intelligence, or the first cause, or the prime mover, why, he seems to be
sort of accepted in the academic community. But when you talk about the Lord
Jesus Christ as being deity, the Godhead, why, you meet the same scoffing today
as you find in the story of the Athenians. Now what is the witness of the
Scriptures to the Lord Christ? He is, according to Colossians 1:15, “He is the
image of the invisible God.” And I turn the page, in Colossians 2:[9], “For in
Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily.” And I turn to Hebrews
1:3, “He is the express image of the person of God.” That is the witness of
the Scriptures to Jesus Christ. He is the Lord God, the express image of the
Almighty.
All
right, look at that. There is no fact in the world comparable to the fact of
Jesus Christ. The world cannot bury Him. The earth is not deep enough for His
tomb. The very clouds are not wide enough for His winding sheet. And the
stone is not heavy enough to cover His grave. He arises, He ascends into heaven,
and the heaven of heavens cannot contain Him. He lives in His church unconsumed.
And He lives in our hearts, teaching us and leading us in the way. The
greatest fact in human story is the fact of Jesus Christ. He stands midmost in
all time and all history. You could almost say that Jesus is like a great towering
mountain; and the farther slope goes back and back and back to the beginning of
the ages, and the hither slope moves on and on and on to the great consummation
of the age. And with prophetic eye the ages past look toward Him; and with
historic faith we today look back toward Him, and forward toward Him. He is
the center of the universe. He is the center of time. All of the years before
His birth, His coming, His incarnation, we call “before Christ”, B.C. And all
the years that follow after we call Anno Domini, “in the year of our
Lord,” after Christ, A.D.
You
know, it is a strange thing: where He lived is the very center of the earth.
Do you notice, all of the civilizations west of where He was born read from
left to right, from left to right, from left to right, from wherever they are
to right. And do you notice that all of the civilizations on the east side
read from right to left, from right to left. And they center where Jesus lived.
He is the center of all time and of all history and of all creation. And He is
the revelation of God. He is the express image of the Father. “He that hath
seen Me hath seen the Father.” Would you like to know God? Then may I
introduce Him to you: He is the Lord Jesus Christ. To have fellowship with
Jesus the Lord is to have fellowship with God. To love Jesus the Lord is to
love God. To receive the Lord Jesus Christ into your heart and life is to
receive God. He is the express image of His person. He is the fullness of the
Godhead bodily. Look at God and you see Jesus; look at Jesus and you see God.
The
pity of God you see in the tears of Jesus. The longsuffering of God you see in
the gentleness of Jesus. And the love of God you see in the compassion of our
Lord. What is God like? As long as we just define Him in terms of
omnipotence, He is so far removed and above us and we are so small and infinitesimal
that, how could He look upon such worms as we, creatures of the dust? But the
love of Jesus, and the compassion of our Lord, and the preciousness of our
Savior brings to our hearts: Ah! God we know, in Him.
And
the way to salvation is in the revelation of Jesus Christ. “For God who
commanded the light out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light
of the knowledge of the glory of God, in the face of Jesus Christ.” In Him I
see God. And in Him I find God. And the Book says that there is no other way that
I can find God; and there is no other way I can know Him, and there is no other
way that I can see God and live except through Jesus Christ. He said, “Egō
—I— eimi —am— ē hodos —the way—kai ē
alētheia —he truth—kai ē zōē —the life.” [John
14:6] Not a way, or a truth, or a life, “I am the
way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto the Father but
by Me.” The apostle Peter preached, “There is none other name under heaven,
given among men, whereby we must be saved.” [Acts 4:12]; no other way can we
see God and live except through Jesus Christ. And the apostle Paul preached
here in this message, “God someday shall bring us all together in a fixed day of
judgment,” which is the sermon tonight, “and He has confirmed that day and that
Man in that He has raised Him from the dead.” The sign of His deity, of His
saviorhood, is His resurrection from among the dead. This is that Christ who
is our only hope and our only Savior.
A
man can live and die in this world, choosing all the emoluments and all the
pleasures and all of the addenda of this created world around him, but he can’t
know God and he can’t go to heaven by just the things that surround him in this
world. A man cannot be saved without a personal acceptance of Jesus Christ
into his heart; he cannot. A man can go to heaven without money, and without
friends, and without fame, and without fortune, and without all of the
accoutrements of life that some people possess. But you cannot go to heaven
without Jesus. Our one hope lies in the blessed Lord Jesus, and that is the
preaching of the gospel to your heart today.
“Lord,
I want to know You; who are You? Lord, I want to meet You. I want God in my
life and in my heart. And I want God in my business. “ And how do I know God?
I know Him through Jesus Christ, “And Lord, when I die, I want to die saved.”
The last thing said to me before I came into this sanctuary today, Dr. Step
says, “Last night, one of the men died in our congregation, and this is his
name.” And I’ve been to see the family; that’s happening to me one of these
days.
While
I was away one of our dearest members translated to heaven in her sleep. Some
day, some hour, some time, that will happen to us and when it does, I want God
to take care of me, I want the Lord to save me. I want to go to heaven when I
die, and how do I do that? I do that through Jesus Christ, receiving Him in my
heart in this life, and He saves me. Receiving Him in faith in the hour of my
death; and He stands by my side, and He sends His angels to carry His children
to Abraham’s bosom, to heaven. This is the Christian faith and the Christian
commitment. And God be praised for Dionysius and for Damaris; and God be
praised for you when you come.
“Today,
pastor, I accept Jesus as my Savior; for all that He said He was, and for all
that He avowed Himself to be, my Lord and my God, and here I am.” A family
you, to come; a couple you, or just one somebody you, in the balcony round,
down one of these aisles; on this lower floor, here to the front, “Pastor, I have
made this decision for Christ, and I’m coming this morning.” On the first note
of the first stanza, when you stand up, stand up walking down that stairway,
walking down this aisle.
“Pastor,
I have decided for God, I have decided for Christ, and here I stand. I haven’t
been baptized. God commands us to follow the Lord in baptism. I want to be
baptized.” Or, “Pastor, we have been saved, and we belong to the congregation
of God’s redeemed, and we are coming to put our lives here by letter or
statement in the church.” Or maybe God has whispered some special word of
faith and commitment to you and, “Here I am, pastor, I’m coming.” God bless
you as you respond and answer with your life. Do it now; on the first note of
the first stanza, while we stand and while we sing.