THE
PATTERN SERVANT OF GOD
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
1
Thessalonians 2:1-11
12/1/57 7:30
p.m.
We turn now, all of us, to the second chapter of
the first Thessalonian letter. Paul's letter to the church of the
Thessalonians, the second chapter, and we read the first eleven verses; 1
Thessalonians, second chapter, and the first eleven verses. Do all of us have
it; 1 Thessalonians 2:1-11? All right, now, let's all of us read it together:
The second chapter of 1 Thessalonians, the first 11 verses. Everybody:
For
yourselves, brethren, know our entrance in unto you, that it was not in vain;
But even
after that we had suffered before, and were shamefully entreated, as ye know,
at Philippi, we were bold in our God to speak unto you the gospel of God with
much contention.
For our
exhortation was not of deceit, nor of uncleanness, nor in guile;
But as
we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the gospel, even so we speak;
not as pleasing men, but God, which trieth our hearts.
For
neither at any time used we flattering words, as ye know, nor a cloak of
covetousness; God is witness;
Nor of
men sought we glory, neither of you, nor yet of others, when we might have been
burdensome, as the apostles of Christ.
But we
were gentle among you, even as a nurse cherisheth her children;
So being
affectionately desirous of you, we were willing to have imparted unto you, not
the gospel of God only, but also our own souls, because ye were dear unto us.
For ye
remember, brethren, our labour and travail: for labouring night and day,
because we would not be chargeable unto any of you, we preached unto you the
gospel of God.
Ye are
witnesses, and God also, how holily and justly and unblameably we behaved
ourselves among you that believe;
As ye
know how we exhorted and comforted and charged every one of you, as a father
doth his children.
[1 Thessalonians 2:1-11]
Now, the title of the message is The Pattern Servant
of God, the pattern preacher of Christ, the pattern servant of the Lord.
You have here, in the passage you have just read, a wonderful example, a
picture, an illustration of the true servant and missionary and preacher of the
gospel of Jesus Christ. And, in the text, there are several things that Paul
says about himself and about Silos and Timothy who worked with him in that
Thessalonian ministry.
And the first thing he avows is this; that their
aim and their motive and their purpose was single to God, as pleasing God, one
hope, one prayer, that the Lord might delight in what they said and what they
wrought. He says, “When we came to you, we came after we had been shamefully
entreated at Philippi,” beat and placed in stocks and in an innermost dungeon.
“And when we came with boldness to speak unto you, it was”—and, you have it
translated “with much contention,” en pollo agoni, in a great agony.
They were in persecution and trials as they preached the gospel.
Then, there were those who said, even in the face
of their privation and toil and trial, that what they did, they were doing for
personal gain, for selfish reasons. There were those on every side who locked
Paul and his little group in with all of that crop of sophists and wandering
minstrels and magicians and astrologers and charlatans and quack religionists
who covered that Greco-Roman world. And, when Paul, Silas and Timothy came by,
they said, “Why, they're just like all the rest of them. They live off of
others. They travel in ease. And, what they say is of guile and deceit. And,
it's for selfish purposes that they have come. And, this man, Paul, has
renounced the faith of his fathers. And, he turned aside from the great Hebrew
religion, just in order to make cause of personal reward and stipend out of the
message that he preaches.”
So, in describing his ministry, he says:
And our
exhortation was not of deceit, nor of uncleanness, nor in guile;
But as
God allowed us, so we speak with the trust of the gospel; not as pleasing men,
but God.
For
neither at any time used we flattering words, as ye know, nor a cloak of
covetousness
—as
though the purpose in our hearts was hidden away. But, if you looked at it,
really, it was if we might make traffic and merchandise of these who heard—
… God is
our witness;
Nor of
men sought we glory, neither of you, nor of others, when we might have been
burdensome, as the apostles of Christ—dunamenoi en barei , when we might
have been, when we might have had power, in heaviness.
As the apostles of Christ, there was authority
delegated unto these preachers by the courts of heaven. Paul said, “We didn't
use it. When we were in your presence, we were like the dirt under your feet.
We were as those, the servants in the house who wash. We are as those who do
not command and do not seek authority. We were slaves in your presence. It
takes a whole lot for a minister to be able to say all that: Just one thing, just
serving God, just obedient to the Lord, just pleasing Him.
I, one time, heard of a train master in one of
those big union depots and the crowds and mobs of people that quarreled at him
and grew angry with him. And, when he tried to control all of those things of
boarding trains and finding trains and locking gates and opening gates,
somebody said to him, “How do you do it, with all of these people angry with
you and these people displeased and disgusted and disappointed and quarreling
at you and flaying you and… how do you bear it?”
And, he said, “Why, it is as nothing at all.” He
says, “I do not have all these people to please, nor is it of me what they say
or what they like or dislike.”
He said, “I have to please just one man.” And, he
pointed up there in the station to an office and to a window. And, he says,
“My master sits in that office. And, it is he alone that I have to please.”
That is the attitude of the true and dedicated
minister of Christ. There is just one somebody that he has to please. That's
the Lord. He ought to be delighted if the deacons like him. That's the way he
gets his salary raised is if the deacons like him. He ought to be delighted if
the people like him. That's the way he gets to stay as pastor of the church,
if the people like him. But, if he is a true minister of Christ, whether
anybody liked him or not, if he's truly dedicated, wouldn't matter—just so the
Lord was pleased. And, that's what Paul says, “As we were allowed of God to be
put in trust with the gospel, so we speak; not as pleasing men, but God, who
searcheth our hearts.” So, the pattern minister, first of all, is one who has
a single motive, an aim and purpose. And, that is that he might please the
Lord, faithfully delivering the message God hath committed to his care.
Now, the second thing here in this letter, in the
pattern minister, this model of a preacher: He was steeped in prayer. And, the
message that he brought was in the power and unction of the Holy Spirit.
Do you ever hear Dr. Fowler and catch a little
phrase at oft times that he will pray? “Now, Lord, bless our pastor.” Then,
he will pray sometimes my mind may be clear. And, he will pray sometimes that
my heart may be warm. And, then, oft times, he will pray, “And, may the Holy
Spirit indict his message.” Do you ever listen—catch that “Indict his
message?” You will never hear that word “indict” any other place in this
earth, except in Dr. Fowler's prayer. That's the only place you will ever find
it: “And, may the Holy Spirit indict his message.”
Well, there is no ministry that is possible in the
power of God without great intercession on the part of the people and the
preacher. In these few pages of Paul's first letter, written to that church at
Thessalonica, how many times will he revert to an appeal of prayer? “We give
thanks to God always for y'all making mention of you in our prayers.” Turn the
page: “For your sakes before our God…night and day praying exceedingly.” Turn
the page: “Praying without ceasing.” Next paragraph: “Brethren, pray for us.”
Turn the page: “Finally, brethren, pray for us.” There's no ministry of power
possible without it: Steeped in prayer, the intercession of the part of the
people and of the preacher.
And, there is no ministry of power possible
without that indictment of the holy, quickening, moving Spirit of God: “For our
gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power and in the Holy
Spirit.” That's the difference, I think, in a true minister and servant of
Christ and the religious philosopher and the ecclesiastical mechanic and
maneuverer and the social worker.
You don't have to be in a pulpit and you don't
have to be in a church in order to give your life to social amelioration.
Well, you can get out here and just organize you a club. You can go join a
civic betterment association and you can try for better legislation and you can
try for slum clearance and you can try to help juvenile delinquency and you can
work in order to beautify your city and to lift up the body politic. You don't
need God for that. You don't need Christ for that. You don't need to be in
the church for that. But, my brother, that's the difference between the social
gospeler and the true servant of Jesus Christ.
I could not conceive of Paul turning aside from
his great worldwide retentive message of salvation and wasting his time with
those trivialities that concern these little things of a better piece of
legislation there and a better housing project there and a finer slum clearance
yonder or some other thing than a Rotary Club or a country club or a
Parent-Teacher’s Association might do just as well as the preacher of Jesus
Christ.
Let me show you the difference between the social
gospeler and the man who preaches in the power of the Lord. This is the social
ameliorative program. They're in the river channel, digging out rocks and
digging out snags in order that the little boat of humanity might pass by.
But, the minister of God is looking to heaven and praying to the Lord to send
the floodtide that will lift up the little boat of mankind above the rocks and
above the snags, and following the great channel of the Lord down to its
infinite destiny, the illimitable sea.
I, one time, read of an engineer who was given a
problem of raising a boat that had sunk in a harbor. All of the other people,
in making bids about raising that boat, used astronomical sums in saying how
they could lift it up. But, this wonderful engineer, who knew the power of the
mighty hand of God, made a bid for almost nothing. And, in amazement and
wonder, the people of the city went down to the harbor to see him raise up the
boat for almost nothing.
You know what he did? He got great chains. And,
with platforms and logs, he tied those logs and wooden platforms with great
chains to the hook of the boat in the mire and on the bottom of the sea. And,
then, he waited for God's tide to come in. And, the Lord moved His ocean and
the ocean filled the bay. And, the waters lifted up, with great power and
strength, that boat on the bottom of the sea. That's the power of the Son of
God.
You don't need to worry about the governor. If
he's a great, devoted Christian man, you can turn your back. You can go deer
hunting. You can go about your business. And, the office of the governor will
honor God and be true to the highest aims and purposes of the people. But, if
he's a crook and if he's disloyal and untrue, and if he's not a Christian, all
of the bonds that he signs in the world and all the tokens of legislative
corralling and circumscription you can put around him won't keep him straight
and true to the people.
The message of Christ is to the heart. It's to
the souls of men. We address ourselves to the man in the great fountain deeps
of his life. If we can get him to Jesus, if we can get him to Christ, put him
anywhere in the bank, put him in the legislative assembly, put him in the
committee room, put him anywhere, he'll honor God, for the purposes of his life
are hid with God in Christ. He's a servant of the King. That's what Paul says
about his ministry. He had a great gospel, one that included the whole earth
and time and the soul and life. It was addressed to the saving of the heart
and the changing of the life, the pattern minister of Jesus Christ.
A third thing he describes here about himself:
“For ye remember, brethren”—and, three times he mentions this—“For ye remember,
brethren, our labour and travail; for labouring night and day, because we would
not be chargeable unto any of you, we preached unto you the gospel of God.” There,
he disavows mercenary motives in what he did. And, in that, he said: “Laboring
night and day.”
That was before they had a five-hour week or a
four-hour week, much less, or an eight-hour day. A man's labor in that time
was a full day, from sun up to sun down. And, for a man to labor all day long
and at night, too, was an unthought of, indescribable burden. Yet that's what
Paul did. In order not to be chargeable to those idol-worshiping pagans in
Thessalonica, he worked with his own hands all day long to support himself and,
then, publicly and from house to house, preached the gospel of Jesus, pleading
repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ.
Now, Paul did not mean by that that the ministry
is not to be supported by the people. In the ninth chapter of the 1 Corinthian
letter, he said, quoting the law of Moses: “For thou shalt not muzzle the mouth
of the ox that treadeth out the corn… Even so, it is ordained of the Lord that
they who preach the gospel, shall live by the gospel.” In the same words of
our Savior: “The labourer is worthy of his hire.”
Paul does not mean that we are to dismiss our
ministry, these who have forsaken all secular work, that they might devote
themselves wholly, completely, to prayer, to the ministry of the Word, to the
preaching of the gospel, to the shepherding of the flock. But, what he does
say is this, that in no wise and in no place and in no case is ever the gospel
ministry to be dependent upon a mercenary, physical, material, pecuniary,
stipends and emoluments, never, never, never.
Whenever our people—and, so many of us, even in
our church here, so many of us have the persuasion, “I have now given my life
to Christ wholly; therefore, I must quit my job. I must lay down what I am
doing and I must be supported by a church somewhere or by a people somewhere or
otherwise I cannot fulfill God's call in my life.”
Now, listen to me. Whether you're paid or not is
incidental. If God wills for somebody to support you and you give all of your
life and time to the ministry of the Lord, that is wonderful. That's fine, if
it's in God's will. But, if there is not a cause, if there is not a people to
support and to help and to pay your salary, then that is no sign that God hath
not chosen you for a place of service. You're not dependent upon salary and
upon money for the ministry of the work of God. Wherever you are, wherever
your place, however your place in God's lot and choice, there you can be a
great and noble servant of Christ.
And, in no sense is our devotion to the Lord and
our service to the Christ to be dependent upon our being paid to do it. Do you
realize that Daniel was a politician? He was a statesman. All the days of his
life he was in the government of his country—all of his life. He died as an
honored leader in his nation. He was never what you call a preacher, a paid
minister. But, he was in the government; Secretary of State, Prime Minister.
He was always a layman.
Do you realize Nehemiah was a layman? He was the
cup-bearer; a courtier to Artaxerxes, the king of the Persians. And, at no
time in his life did he ever depart from those political appointments.
Nehemiah was a layman. Aquila and Priscilla were tent-makers, and their home
was a fountain of blessing and a lake in the dark, dark world. But, they were
lay people all of their lives.
It was Mr. Moody, all of his life. When Mr.
Moody, as a young man, joined that church, when he moved as a shoe salesman to
Chicago, they had pew rentals in that day. And, he bought every pew that was
available and went out on the streets and filled those pews with people that he
had brought in to listen to the Word of God.
Then he organized a little Sunday School. And, he
got people to come to Moody's Sunday School, there to teach them the Word of
God. And, it was only when his Sunday School got so big and the people came to
be taught the Word, that Moody finally gave up selling shoes, in order to give
all of his time to the ministry of the Word. But, he was a layman all of his
life. He was “Mr. Moody.”
God can use you, no matter where you are or how
you are employed. The rod of Moses, the ox goad of Shamgar, the needle and
thread of Dorcas, the loom of the Apostle Paul, the washtub, the kitchen sink,
the receptionist's desk, the clerk's office, wherever you are, there you can be
as true a minister of Christ as your pastor. There that consecrated girl can
be devoted to Jesus as much as if she were a missionary out there in a rescue home.
Ah, we have it turned around. We have it wrong
when we think that, if I'm not paid for this, and if it's not my appointed,
secularized job, and if I'm not given a stipend, therefore I am not God's
servant and I am not doing God's work in the earth. No, no, no. Paul says,
“Labouring day and night, day and night…not to be chargeable unto any of you,”
he preached the gospel to them. I say, he mentions that so many times:
“Neither did we eat any man's bread, but wrought with labour and and travail
night and day that we might not be chargeable to any of you.” [2 Thessalonians 3:8]
You heard me tell this. I didn't intend to
mention it tonight. But, it seems that I sound like a hypocrite, standing up
here, preaching to you like this and receiving the salary I do from this
church. So, I'm just going to pause and tell you something that has been a
comfort to my heart all the years that I have been a preacher.
When I first started out to preach the gospel, I
preached on the street corners and on the courthouse squares and in the
jailhouse and in the poorhouse, and then in little schoolhouses. And, I had
two little churches to start off with, and one of them met in a schoolhouse.
The first time that I was taken to a church, to a pulpit to preach, I got on the
train there in Waco, and went up to a little town by the name of Mount Calm,
and got off the train there. I was just about seventeen years old. And, the
deacon in the church there—it didn't have a pastor, but they'd already called
one and he hadn't come, and, so, the fellow who was to come up to Mount Calm to
supply got sick and, in desperate need, why, he looked around for somebody to
attend at the last minute. And, I was the only little insect that he could
find.
So, he said, “Would you go up there?” And, so I
went up there, about seventeen years old, and I got off the train. I was the
only one that got off the train. And, that deacon looked to the north and
looked to the south and he looked to the east and he looked to the west. He'd
gone down there to meet the preacher who was to preach for them that Sunday.
And, I was the only poor, alone critter standing there at the depot.
So, he walked up to me and with great, great qualm
and askance and unbelief, he said, “Are you a preacher?”
I said, “Yes, sir.” Brother, I really was in them
dark days, “Yes, sir.”
He says, “Have you come to preach for us?”
I said, “Yes, sir. I have come up here. I have
been sent here to preach for you.”
Well, he never said it, but I could see. Under
his breath, he said, “Lord, have mercy on us today.”
Well, I went there to that church and I did my
best. And, if I didn't do real good in theology, brother, they all could hear
me, every one of them present that day. And, then we went back and we had a
service that night and God blessed us.
You know, I had my first response there in a
church. A fellow came down the aisle and gave me his hand and he said, “I've
been called of God to preach the gospel and I'm going to give my life to be a
minister.”
I said, “Well, glory hallelujah! That is
wonderful. You will make a wonderful Baptist preacher.”
He said, “Now, wait a minute. I'm not going to be
a Baptist preacher. I'm going to be a Presbyterian.”
I'll never forget that fellow: “Going to be a
Presbyterian.”
Well, anyway, after the service was over, why,
that deacon who had gone to the train to meet me, he said, “We want you to come
back next Sunday.”
I said, “I'll be right here.”
Then, he said, “I am sorry.” This is in the midst
of the Depression, when the farmer was selling his cotton for five cents and
less a pound, and the people were barely able to live. The senior deacon there
in the church said, “I'm sorry this is not more, but this is all we can give
you.” And, he held in his hand a ten-dollar bill.
I said, “Listen, fellow, I wouldn't take money for
preaching the gospel. I don't preach for money and I won't take that.”
Well, he nearly fainted. He nearly fell through
the floor. He said, “Why, you paid your way up here and you're going back.
Why, we're glad to do it and should do far better than this.”
I said, “Not so. Not so. I don't preach for
money and I refuse to take it.” And, I wouldn't take it. Well I was left
there at the church alone to get the train to go back to Waco later that
evening. And when I did leave the church, the last one to leave, I picked up
my hat there in the foyer an in the band of my hat that deacon had placed that
ten dollar bill. It was sticking out just about that much. Well, there wasn’t
anybody there to give it to so I had to put it in my pocket and take it home.
My mother was with me down there in Waco and I can
never forget when I came in late that night. And mother waiting and I took out
that ten dollar bill and I said, “Mother I don’t know what to do with it. This
is for preaching the gospel and I don’t know what to do with it. This is for
preaching the gospel.” Well, we dedicated it to the Lord.
When my first little church called me, they said,
“If you will come and work hard, we think we can pay you twenty dollars a
month.” I feel no different now, pastor of this church, than I felt when I was
pastor of those forty people in my first little church. I tried hard then. I
try now. I gave my whole self to the gospel ministry then. I do it now. And
the Spirit of God came upon me at times then and people were saved. And
sometime when the people pray, the Spirit of the Lord falls upon us here. I am
glad I can say that.
If they were to give me nothing and I could still
preach, it would make no difference; no difference. That’s what Paul says,
“Laboring night and day because we would not be chargeable unto any of you.”
He did that in order to win those pagan idol worshipers in Thessalonica.
We tarried too long I know but there is one other
thing Paul mentions here and I just briefly lay it before you. He speaks of
the sweetness, the dearness, the preciousness of the attitude of the true
minister of Christ. Listen to him. “But we were gentle among you even as a
nurse cherisheth her children so being affectionately desirous of you, we were
willing to have imparted unto you not the gospel of God only but also our own
souls because you were dear unto us.”
Then in the eleventh verse he says the same thing
in different words, “As you know how we exhorted and comforted and charged
every one of you even as a father doth his children.” Now he uses both father
and mother and mother there in his simile. “even as a nursing mother
cherisheth her children,” then in the eleventh verse, “as a father doth his children
so we exhorted and comforted you.”
Now the pattern minister is always one in whose
hearts the people live. Some of my staff members are not here. They do not
belong to us anymore. But I have seen some of our staff members here work with
the attitude that the people were to serve them and how they were and they were
received and how they were honored and how they were obeyed was the way that it
ought to be arranged herein this church.
I have always felt that we who are on this staff,
the design, that is these and that is our staff members, we are to encourage
and minister to our people, not our people to us. And insofar as I pray and
get close to God I do willing that when I get away from the Lord and drift and
am half back-slidden then I get angry and get easily chagrined and am
disappointed and upset; ought never to be that way. The attitude of the true
minister toward his people is always as a mother cherisheth her children, as a
father comforteth and exhorteth his children.
You never win people to the Lord by a divisive,
and quarrelsome, and sectarian, and divided church where the Spirit is not of
peace, and of joy, and of intercession, and of holiness, and of gladness. No
souls are saved in a church like that. Never, never! Where there are clicks,
and divisions, and jealousies, and envying, and fussing, and feudings, and
fightings God can’t win people to a church like that. They have a little town
in New Jersey called Cranberry and in the church at Cranberry New Jersey; they
were having an awful church fuss and the fellow stood up in the middle of it
and said, “Brother Moderator, could I say let’s put a little sugar in this
cranberry tart!” The great Spurgeon said, speaking to his young minister’s,
the great Spurgeon said, “Young men, you are the salt of the earth.” He smiled
and then added, “and the sugar too!” We are “and the sugar too.”
Alfred, Lord Tennyson one time described a super
Calvinistic aunt of his, and he said that every time he saw her she said,
“Alfred, every time I see you, you remind me of the word of the Lord, where he
said, ‘depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil
and his angels.’” Oh, if we do preach the judgment and the wrath and the
damnation of God, it ought to be with the heaviest of hearts. Who would
rejoice in the perdition of the lost and the damnation of any soul? Our appeal
is always to be one of loving care and gentle solicitation. As the nursing
mother cherisheth her children, I can just see her with the little fellow in
her arms, and she dotes on him, and looks at him, and her whole life is wrapped
up in that little bundle. Or as the father exhorts and comforts his children,
they may not always do just right, but he exhorts and he encourages. That’s
what the model minister is to do.
Now we close. Somebody tonight, while we sing
this appeal, to give his heart in faith to the Lord, would you come and stand
by me? Somebody you, to put his life here in the church, while we sing and
make appeal, would you come and stand by me? One somebody you, or a family you
as God should say the word and open the door and invite you in, would you
come? Would you come? We haven’t had anybody saved today; not at the early
service, not at the eleven o’clock hour. Somebody to give his heart to Jesus,
would you tonight? “I take Him as my Savior,” would you come? “I give you my
hand, pastor. I give my heart to God,” would you? And along with you,
somebody to put his life here in the church, coming by letter in any way God
shall say, would you do it? Would you make it now? Would you come, while we
stand and while we sing.
.