PRAISE AND
PROSPERITY
10-20-74
James 5
I
like it when the director does like that, I surely like it when he does like
that and that is that, and they all get blue in the face and he's doing it like
that and like that and like that. I
tell you, you sound like heaven.
You
notice our orchestra is growing. That's
just glorious. You are going to be here
all of the time with that angelic harp, not just today, all of the time. I hope so.
We're
all going to play one of those sings one of these days, so we better get
acquainted with them now. Oh,
dear.
We
welcome you who are sharing this service with us on television and on
radio. This is the pastor of the
church, the First Baptist Church in Dallas, and the title of the sermon is, PRAISE
AND PROSPERITY.
We
are preaching these days out of the life and experience of a pastor who lived
long ago. He was the brother of our
Lord. And he became a Christian when
the Lord personally appeared to him after the Savior was raised from the
dead.
And
James became the leader of the churches of Christendom. In his letter of five chapters, he writes
very pragmatically, experientially, imperially. He's down here with the people are. Not up there in some metaphysical, philosophical theological
world.
And
he writes about things that we know and experience and things that we ought to
do in the household of faith. So, out
of the 5th chapter of his letter, and in the 11th verse, he says, "Ye have
heard of the patience of Job and have seen the end of the Lord that the Lord is
very pitiful and of tender mercy."
And
what a specially drew my attention to the verse was the word translated here
"end." "You have seen
the end of the Lord." The word is telos. Everywhere in the Bible, you will find the
word translated "perfect." Telos,
teleios. And the idea of
perfection in the word is not ours of sinlessness, without spot or blemish or
taint of iniquity.
To
us perfect always means that. But there
is nothing of that in the word as it is used in the Bible. The word telos, teleios means
the consummation of a purpose for which a thing was made. It is arrived.
For
example, a man is a telos, or a teleios of a boy. The purpose of God for the boy is that he
grow. If he doesn't, he has not
achieved the purpose of God.
The
Lord made the boy to grow into a man.
Now, that's the meaning of the word.
So it drew my attention to it specially when it spoke about Job and what
God did in the consummation of his life.
So,
I turn over here to Job, in the 42nd chapter and I read what God did for him at
the consummation of his life. As Job
came to the end of God's purposes for him.
And this is what it says.
"So
the Lord blessed the latter end of Job, more than his beginning. For he had fourteen thousand sheep -- where
he had seven before -- and six thousand camels -- where he had six [sic,
three] before. And a thousand yoke of
oxen, where he had five hundred before.
"And
he also had seven sons and three daughters."
Isn't
that a remarkable thing what God did as He brought Job to the purpose, the
consummation of his life?
So
I look at Job, to see what kind of a man that he was and what it was that
brought this marvelous blessing, prosperity to his life.
In
the 42nd chapter of Job, the old patriarch cries, "I have heard of Thee, O
Lord God by the hearing of the ear,
"But
now mine eyes seeth Thee. Wherefore, I
abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes."
And
so it was that the Lord spoke to Job's comforters and He said to them, "My
wrath is kindled against thee. For ye
have not spoken of Me the thing that is right and good as My servant Job
have.
"Now
you take seven bullocks and seven rams and go to My servant Job's and you offer
up for yourselves a burnt offering and My servant Job shall pray for
you...
"And
the Lord turned the captivity of Job when he prayed for his friends. And also the Lord gave Job twice as much as
he had before."
Then
the word I read, "So the Lord blessed the latter end of Job more than his
beginning. For he had fourteen thousand
sheep, and six thousand camels and a thousand yoke of oxen,
"And
he had also seven sons and three daughters."
What
do you think about that? This is the
life of a man who steadfastly adored and worshiped and served the Lord. When he was bereft of everything he
possessed he says, "The Lord gave it to me and the Lord took it away,
blessed be the name of the Lord."
And
when Satan afflicted him with boils from the top of his head to the bottom of
his feet he said, "Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him."
And
then brought through those days of terrible disaster and catastrophic loss, he
said, "Lord, even then have I been proud and lifted up in spirit. I now see Thee and looking at Thee, I abhor
myself and repent in dust and ashes."
And
God was pleased with the words and the spirit of praise and adoration of
Job. And God accepted him, was
delighted with him. And God gave him
twice as much as he ever had before.
That's
the title of the sermon, PRAISE AND PROSPERITY. Our adoration of God, our thanksgiving and gratitude to God
and God's infinite blessings to us.
Did
you notice in reading about this telos of Job, the consummation of his
life, that it spoke of these offerings, seven bullocks and seven rams offered
up unto God?
And
that brought to my mind, of course, this series of lessons that I've been
teaching on Wednesday night at seven-thirty o'clock in this great
auditorium. We have as a general
subject for it, the scarlet line, the scarlet thread through the Bible, following
blood sacrifice in the Word of God.
And
of course, that bring us to the Levitical law.
And the last two times, we've been looking at the sacrifices that the
people brought before the Lord. And
last Wednesday night, we spoke of the five offerings of Leviticus.
Looking
at those five offerings, two of them were mandatory, commanded. It was necessary that the worshiper bring
those offerings. One is the sin
offering and the other is like it. The
trespass offering. The sin offering
against God. The trespass offering
against other people and against holy things.
Both
of them are alike. They're sin
offerings. The sin offering was
mandated. It was commanded. No man could come before God without the
shedding of blood. Without the shedding
of blood there's no remission of sins.
And in the Old Testament by type they sacrificed an innocent animal,
poured out its blood and in the blood sacrifice, came before the Lord.
Today
we come before God in the blood of the cross.
Pleading the expiation, the propitiation, the atonement, the sacrifice,
the pouring out of the crimson of His life of our Lord on the cross. There's no man who shall ever stand in the
presence of God, in his sin. He must
find atonement and atonement means the shedding of blood.
So
that sacrifice was commanded. There is
no way to come before God except in blood, in the shedding of blood, in a
sacrifice of blood.
Now,
the other three offerings were called sweet savor offerings. What do you mean by a sweet savor
offering?
It
was an offering that when God looked upon it and the smoke of the offering
ascended heavenward, the fragrance of it delighted God and it was called a
sweet savor offering. The fragrance of it delighted the Lord.
Now,
those offerings burnt, piece and meal, those offerings were called sweet savor
offering, because they were not commanded.
They were not mandated. But the
offerer came before God and brought them to the Lord because he loved God. And it was a way of praising God and giving
thanks to God.
Now,
I'm going to change the translation of one of them so you can see it more
perfectly. When we say, "the peace
offerings," it means something or not quite understand it. So let me translate the word actually as we
would say it today.
The
word translated "a peace offering," we would call it in our language,
we would say "a praise offering, a thanksgiving offering." Practically all of the offerings of the
tabernacle and of the temple were peace offerings. They were thanksgiving offerings. They were praise offerings.
Very
few of them were burnt offerings.
Practically all of them were praise offerings, thanksgiving
offerings. And they were
voluntary. The man did it out of the
gratitude and overflowing praise and thanksgiving of his heart.
And
when he did it, he gathered his family together and whatever friends he would
invite and then the officiating priest and the offering was sacrificed before
God and they shared it as a communal meal.
It
was a thanksgiving dinner. It was a
thanksgiving sacrifice. And it was
brought to the house of the Lord. And
the ministers shared it. And God looked
upon it and called it a fragrant offering, a sweet savor offering.
There
is something in that. That is
marvelous. You know what it is? It is this.
There is a presupposition on God's part Who gave all of this Levitical
legislation, there was a pre-supposition on the part of God that the life of
his people would be a life, not of onerous burdensome worship, not what they
did was always just out of mandate and commandment.
But
the presupposition was that the life of God's people would be a life of praise
and of glory and of gladness and of thanksgiving. That the overflowing gratitude of their hearts and the love of
their deepest souls for God would find expression in these offerings of
sacrifice and praise and gratitude and glory.
Now,
you will find that overflowing spirit of marvelous, wonderful song and praise
and prayer and offering, you'll find it reflected in the life of the
people.
For
example, look at this. The 96th Psalm,
"O sing unto the Lord a new song.
Sing unto the Lord all the earth.
"Sing
unto the Lord, bless His name. Show
forth His salvation from day to day.
"Declare
His glory among the nations. His
wonders among all people...
"Give
unto the Lord the glory due unto His name.
Bring an offering and come into His courts...
"Let
the heavens rejoice and let the earth be glad...
"Before
the Lord for He cometh. He cometh to
judge the world."
That
is the spirit of overflowing praise on the part of the people.
O
glory, glory. Praise His name. Give the glory due unto the Lord. Bring an offering and come into His courts.
May
I point out just one other out of all of it?
The last one, the 150th Psalm.
"Praise ye the Lord."
Or untranslated -- "hallelujah."
"Praise
ye the Lord. Praise God in His sanctuary.
Praise Him in the firmament of His power.
"Praise
Him for His mighty acts. Praise Him
according to His excellent greatness.
"Praise
Him with the sound of the trumpet.
Praise Him with the psaltery and harp.
"Praise
Him with the timbrel and dance. Praise
Him with stringed instruments and organs.
"Praise
Him in the cymbals. Praise Him upon the
high sounding cymbals.
"Let
everything that hath breath, praise the Lord."
"Hallelujah." Or translated here, "praise ye the
Lord."
What
am I going to do about this?
"Praise Him with the timbrel and dance." Dance.
"Oh, praise Him with the timbrel and dance."
Well,
when we say that word "dance" we think about the hoochy coochy, the
bunny hops. None of those. That's what we think. Oh, dear.
This
is what it means. When a man is so full
of gladness and praise and gratitude to God, he can't contain himself and he
stands up before the Lord and he walks before the Lord with words of praise,
with shouts of gladness and glory.
That's what it refers to.
In
the 6th chapter of the 2 Samuel, the story is told of David brings the ark into
Jerusalem. And then the little verse,
And when they brought the ark into the -- Jerusalem, David danced before God
with all of His might. It was a
hallelujah occasion. It was a great
holy, marvelous, heavenly hour. And
David danced before the Lord with all of his might.
We
are not moved like that much anymore.
But when I grew up as a boy, I used to see people moved like that. And in the beginning of my ministry, I used
to see people like that.
As
I began preaching, I was invited as a young man to hold a revival in a church,
not this big, but looked like this, it had a balcony all the way around. And that morning, that morning, there were
two young men who were saved.
And
when time came for the pastor to introduce them to the church, there was a
fine-looking woman who stood up and asked the pastor if she could say
something. She was teacher, I found
out, of the woman's Bible class in the church.
And
she came forward and put one of her hands on the heads of those boys and said,
"Today, I praise -- I prayed God of one of my boys."
And
then she took her other hand and put it on the head of the other lad and said,
"But God was better to me than my prayer.
Today, God hath given me both of my boys."
And
then from one side to the other of that beautiful church, she shouted and
clapped her hands and praised God. You
just never felt such a thing. The
great, vast throng that jammed the church that morning, were bowed down in one
in tears of gratitude and glory and thanksgiving.
That
is what that refers to. Oh, how
wonderful it is. How marvelous it
is. The feeling of it. The glory of it. So full of the gladness and praise and gratitude of God that you
just have to shout it. You have to clap
your hands. You have to sing it. You have to say it. You have to move. You are just praising God.
Now,
that is the presupposition of that offering.
That out of the gratitude of the hearts of the people, there would be a
voluntary offering. Not commanded. Not mandated. But something that came out of the fullness of their hearts.
Now,
I want to speak of that to us. About
us. How we are. A gift that would involve us. And the difference between one that is
mandated, commanded and one that is given out of fullness of love and
soul.
Now,
I'm going to take an illustration, the first me and the other -- and the other,
you. First me. First me.
What is given to me. If it is a
gift out of necessity. That's one
thing.
"The
preacher doesn't have anything to eat, so we're going to give him something to
eat. The preacher doesn't have any
shoes to wear, so we're going to give him some shoes to wear. The preacher doesn't have any clothes, so
we're going to give him some clothes.
And he doesn't have a place to live, so we're going to give him a place
to live."
Now,
that's one thing. But I want to tell
you what you ought to do. You ought to
take that to the deacons. "Now,
listen here, you deacons. The preacher
doesn't have any shoes to wear, what are you doing to support him? And the preacher doesn't have any clothes to
wear and he runs around here half-naked.
That's not right."
The
Bible says the workman is worthy of his hire.
If the preacher needs anything, you ought to go to the deacons about
it. He needs a car or he needs
gasoline, or he needs writing materials, you ought to go to the deacons, you
ought to pay him.
Now,
you deacons, you ought to prepare for him.
And it ought to be placed in the budget. That's what you ought to do.
You ought to take care of the -- you ought to take care of the
pastor. This is the assignment of the
deacons who make out a budget and they present it to the church.
Now,
that is of necessity. That's
mandated. That's commanded. The Bible says the minister, the worker for
God is worthy of his hire. And you
ought to take care of him and pay him.
Now, that's commanded.
But,
but, oh, how different, how different if something is given without thought of
need or necessity or payment. It is in
a different world.
Look,
about two weeks ago or something, every night we had a Round Up over
yonder. Celebrating the pastor's
thirtieth anniversary as pastor of the church.
And
upon an evening while I was there meandering around, there was a little girl, a
little tiny thing who tugged at my trouser's leg, my pant's leg. And I looked down there and there she was,
just a little bitty thing.
She
had something in her closed fist, in her closed hand. And when I looked down and spoke to her, why, the little thing
opened her hand to me. She had in it a
quarter, two dimes, and a nickel and a penny.
And she said she was giving it to me.
Well,
I had no idea. So I looked up and saw
her mother standing there. And her
mother said to me, "Pastor, I don't know what to say or how to explain it. It is just this." You
know, they had booths there where you could buy popcorn, a drink and a
hamburger and things like that. And the
little child was given some money in order to go to those booths and buy those
things.
So
the mother said to me, "She refused to use it. Absolutely refused. And
she kept it tight there in her fist."
And
she said, "I asked my little girl, what are you going to do with that and
she wouldn't tell me and she wouldn't spend it."
And
here's what the little thing was doing.
She kept that tight in her hand until she found me and then came and
gave it to me. She wanted me to have
it.
Do
I need a quarter, two dimes, a nickel and a penny? No. Don't need it at
all. But it thrilled my heart for that
little child to bring that to me. Not
of necessity, just out of the love of their hearts.
In
this thirtieth anniversary there were some sweet people in this church who give
me this stick pin. Do I need this stick
pin? I do not. I don't need it at all. But oh, just the love expressed in the gift,
warmed my heart. It's a wonderful
thing. That what the people do is not
paying you. It's not of commandment and
it's not of necessity.
"This,
Pastor, is just because we love you, that's all." It's a precious thing.
Now,
I want to talk about you. I grew up, as
you know, in a poor, poor world, a poor family. And when I began my ministry, I began in the deep of the
Depression, out in the country where the people could barely live. Sold their cotton for five cents a
pound.
Now,
I saw so many things. And there in that
context, now, you look at what I saw.
Here was a man and he give his wife a gift on her anniversary. He gave her a new washboard.
Do
you know what I mean by a washboard? A
washboard. A scrub board. You know about like this. And it had corrugated, wavy metal on
it. And you took the clothes and you just
washed and scrubbed. That's what he did
on her anniversary, he gave her a new washboard, a new scrub board.
Let's
take another one. I know another one
who gave his wife a new axe in order for her to cut the wood with. Cut the kindling, cut the fire wood. He gave her a new axe.
Another
one I know gave his wife a new iron.
You know, one of those old fashioned, you put it on the stove and heat
it up and iron with it. He gave her a
new iron.
There's
nothing wrong with that. There's not
anything in the earth wrong with that.
She needed a new scrub board, so he gave it to her. And she needed a new iron, so he gave her
it. And she needed a new sharp axe, so
he gave her a new axe.
There's
nothing wrong with that. Nothing at
all. Of necessity and of need. But oh, think how much better and much
sweeter, to bring to his wife on her anniversary or on her birthday, think of
bringing to her something she didn't need.
Of no necessity.
Maybe
she already had a dress. But he brought
her a pretty new dress. Or maybe he
brought her a new bonnet, new hat. Or
maybe brought her something pretty to put on her dresser. Think of the difference in it.
And
when he brings it to her, she looks at it and she said, "Oh, you should
not have done it."
And
he says, "Well, I'll take it back."
Oh. It is a new world. It isn't the same. It is
that overflowing love and gratitude and thanksgiving. God calls it a sweet savor offering. It has a fragrance that pleases God. It delights God. Not out
of necessity or commandment. But out of
the fullness of an overflowing heart.
Now,
I must close. I have just a moment
left. You know, there are some things
that are commanded us of God in the Bible.
One, a man owes a tithe to the Lord.
That's all the way through the Word of God. From the days of the patriarchs like Abraham and Jacob, through
all of the Leviticus legislation, the tithe is holy unto the Lord and clear
unto this present day.
In
the 7th chapter of the Book of Hebrews, it says, "And there he receiveth
tithes of whom it is witnessed that he liveth."
I
owe that to God. That belongs to
Him. It doesn't belong to me. And when a man does the commandment of God,
God says, "I'll bless Him for it."
Do
you notice in the passage that you read, the plural? "I will open the windows -- plural -- of heaven and pour you
out a blessing you can't contain it, receive it."
When
a man does that, God blesses him temporally, spiritually. I owe that to God. And when I give a tithe to the Lord, that's what I ought to
do. And God will bless me when I do
it.
But
there's something else. There's
something over and above. There's
something that arises out of my deepest soul, O God.
I
want to illustrate it and then I have to close. Long time ago, in the days of Dr. Truett and here in this church,
world without end, the preacher would stand up as Dr. Truett would stand up in
this church and they would take up offerings.
Offerings
for missions. Offerings for the new
building fund. Offerings for the
Buckner Orphans' Home. And the way they
would do it, I watched them all of the years of my life, growing up.
All
of you that will give fifteen thousand dollars, ten thousand, five thousand,
you stand up. Anybody give a thousand
dollars, you stand up. Fifty, you have
seen that all your life, too, if you are as old as I am or even younger. That's the way they used to do it.
All
right. The preacher was taking up an
offering for a new church building. And
the people were standing up to give what they would pledge to the new church
house. And there was a man who stood up
by the side of his wife and he said, "Pastor, in memory of our son who was
killed in the war, we will give ten thousand dollars," and in that day and
in that church that was an enormous sum.
"In
memory of our son who was killed in the war, we will give ten thousand
dollars."
And
when he sat down, there was a dear mother, seated next to her husband right
there and she put her hand on his arm and she said, "Husband, stand up,
stand up, stand up and tell the pastor that we will give ten thousand dollars
for our son."