BOOKS AND THE BOOK
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Timothy 4:13
05-29-77 7:30 p.m.
The
title of the message is Books and the Book. And if you would, all of
the thousands of you who are listening to this service on KRLD and on KCBI,
would you turn in your Bible to 2 Timothy. This is the last letter that Paul
wrote just before he was executed. Second Timothy chapter 4, and we shall read
the first five verses. My text is in verse 13, but we shall read out loud
together the first five verses of 2 Timothy chapter 4. Toward the end of your
Bible, 2 Timothy chapter 4, the first five verses. Now with the pastor, all of
us read it out loud together:
I
charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge
the quick and the dead at His appearing and His kingdom;
Preach
the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all
longsuffering and doctrine.
For
the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their
own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears;
And
they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto
fables.
But
watch thou in all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make
full proof of thy ministry.
And then this is my text: "The cloak, the wrap, the coat that I left at
Troas with Carpus, when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books, but
especially the parchments" [2 Timothy 2:13]. And the title of the
message is this text: "When thou comest, bring with thee the books;" biblia,
books but especially the membrana. That is a Latin word. We took it
bodily into our language and called it a membrane, referring to a skin upon
which the writing of a treasured volume was inscribed, “but especially the membrana,
but especially the Bible, the scrolls of the Bible.” Bring with thee the biblia,
the books but especially the membrana, the Bible.
Malista, mala is the word for very. Malista
is the adverbial form of the superlative degree, most particularly above all,
especially, malista membrana. Bring the books but especially the
Bible, and that gave the title to the message: Books and The Book.
There
was something unusual about the first Christian preachers. It was a noticeable
thing. So noticeable that those who in those first Christian centuries sought
to destroy and decimate the Christian faith, they made their attack against the
Book. Well, what do you mean by the Book? You see, those first Christian
preachers had scrolls, scrolls, scrolls. There was a scroll of the prophet
Isaiah. There would be a scroll of Deuteronomy. There would be a scroll of
Jeremiah. There would be a scroll of the Psalms, and literally you'd have to
carry around a wheelbarrow full of scrolls if you carried around the whole
Bible.
What
those first Christian preachers did was this: they took the scrolls, and they
cut them up into leaves, and they bound the leaves at the back. And when the
Christian preacher stood up to preach the gospel of Christ, he would refer to
Deuteronomy. He would refer to Isaiah. He would refer to the Psalms. He
would refer to Zechariah, and he would open the Book to that passage out of which
he was quoting the Word of God. And it was called a codex, C-O-D-E-X, a codex.
That was the first time that the world ever saw what you call a book for a biblia,
for the biblia, biblion singular, biblia plural referred to
scrolls. And that was all that the world had ever seen until the Christian
preachers stood up before the people and having cut the scroll up into leaves
and bound it together at the back, turned to it in what call a book; the Book.
You
cannot imagine what a vast and deep and lasting impression that made upon the
Greco-Roman world; a man standing with that strangest innovation in his hand—first
time the world had ever seen it—and expounding the Word and message of God out
of the Book. That's why a moment ago I referred to the fact that those learned
philosophers who first encountered the Christian preacher and sought to destroy
the message that he preached, they attacked the Book.
For
example, the last great effort of Hellenic philosophy is called Neoplatonism. It
is represented by Plotinus of Alexandria, the seat of learning next to Athens
itself. And Plotinus saw in the year about 200 [AD] a great threat to Hellenic
culture by this new sect, this new religion called Christianity, and he
encouraged his brilliant pupil Porphyry to study the Christian faith and to
inveigh vigorously against it.
What
did Porphyry do, who is one of the most brilliant philosophers who ever lived,
what did Porphyry do when he attacked the Christian faith? What he did he
attacked the Book, for he saw that he could destroy the foundation upon which
the faith rests. He could destroy forever the faith itself. And Porphyry,
that brilliant philosopher, Neoplatonist, was correct. Destroy the Book, and
you will destroy the faith. Destroy the Book, and you will destroy the witness
for Christ. Destroy the Book, and you will destroy the church. Destroy the
Book, and you will destroy our hope in a better world that is yet to come; books
and the Book. Now just briefly, first, the Book is God's revelation to us how
we can be saved.
You
know, I used to wonder back there in the beginning when God began to reveal His
holy Word and when finally Moses wrote it down in about 1400 BC, why didn't God
reveal in that Word these things that we know today? Things that concern the
atom and atomic energy; things that concern biology and all the secrets of the
cells and the enzymes and the anatomical system, and why didn't God reveal to
us the secrets of chemistry and astronomy? A thousand things in the scientific
world that we are introduced to today, that God knew all about; He made them. These
things we're just now beginning to discover, like penicillin, like nylon, like
the atom, like a thousand other wonderful things, such as, propelling our
airplanes through the sky with jet propulsion. God made all that. Why didn't He
reveal it to us from the beginning? Why is it that the Lord rather reveal to
us things that concern the soul and our life in fellowship with Him? Now as I
begin to think about that, the reason is very obvious.
The
most vital and fundamental and important of all of the knowledges to which we
could ever be introduced in this world lies in the things of God, the soul, our
relationship to Him, and the rest could come in their time and in their order.
First of all, is the knowledge of the revelation of God. And that's what God
did in His Book. He revealed to us first of all the things concerning Himself
and our relationship with Him, and how we are to live and to walk in His
presence, how we can be redeemed, how we can have fellowship with God and see
His face someday and live: that above all, then the rest followed in its order.
This
is the summation of the whole marvelous truth of God in this world. I copied
from John Greenleaf Whittier, America's beautiful Quaker poet:
We
searched the world for truth;
We
[cull] the good, the pure, the beautiful,
From
graven [stone] and written scroll.
[And]
all old flower-fields of the [soul],
And
weary seekers of the best,
We
come laden back from our quest,
[To]
find that all the sages said
Is
in the Book, our mothers read.
[The Book
Our Mothers Read, by John Greenleaf Whittier]
How
true is that beautiful poem of Whittier? The great truth is always the truth
of God. Other things come in their time and in their order, but first is the
foundational knowledge of God.
The
beginning of wisdom is the knowledge of the Lord, and this is life eternal that
we might know Thee, the only true and living God and Jesus Christ whom Thou
hast sent. And may I make a corollary there before I leave that part. Number
and always one, if my first knowledge is of God, and if my first commitment is
to the Lord, all the other things will follow in perfect order. But if I leave
out that knowledge and that keystone, everything that follows after is chaotic,
disordered, disarrayed, and brings finally to ultimate ruin and chaos. First
is the knowledge of God, and that's why God revealed it first in the Book.
Second:
books and the Book; this is the Book that guides us through the pilgrimage of
this life. It is a light unto our feet and a lamp unto our path. What a
compass is to a mariner, what a radar screen is to a jet pilot, what a
blueprint is to a builder, so this Book is to us who make the journey through
this world. All the paths of the world are a crooked maze, and we are woefully
lost, for the road to Him in the paths of men is faint and hidden and crossed.
How
can I know the way? What is a sure an assured life that I can follow? There
are a thousand voices that press upon my heart saying, “this is the way, and
that is the way,” but God says, “thou shalt hear a voice behind thee saying,
this is the way, walk thou in it” [Isaiah 30:21]. And I find that sure
guide in the infallible Word of God in the Book.
Thank
God for the Bible whose clear shining ray
Has
brightened our path and turned night into day.
Its
wonderful treasures have never been told
More
precious than rubies set round with pure gold.
Thank
God for the Bible. How dark is the night
When
no ray from its pages shed forth its pure light?
No
Jesus, no Bible, no heaven of rest.
O
how could we live were our lives so unblessed?
[author
unknown]
Books
and the Book; it is our guide to the pilgrimage of this world.
Last:
books and the Book: It is our hope and our promise of the better world that
it is yet to come. Tell me, when the hour comes for us to die and that hour,
if He delays His return, will inevitably arrive. When that hour comes for us
to die, tell me, what would you say? Would you say bring me my book of
chemistry for I'm facing a long journey and an eternity yet to come? Bring me
my book of chemistry. Would you say, I am facing this inevitable and final
hour, bring me my book of economics? Or would you say, I am facing death,
bring my book of biology? Turn over there and read to me again how I was
descended from an ape and a monkey and marsupial, now read all that to me
again.
Tell
me honestly, fairly, truthfully, when time comes to die and we're facing that
final and ultimate journey to the other world, wouldn't it be apropos and
appropriate and all things beautiful and precious to turn to a loved friend, or
a loved member of the family, or to a pastor or to a Sunday school teacher and
say, bring me the Book? Read to me, "In My Father's house are many
mansions, I go to prepare a place for you" [John 14:2- 3]. Read me from the Book. Wouldn't
you? Ecclesiastes closes, written by the wisest man who ever lived, “Of making
books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh. Let us hear
the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, love God, keep His commandments;
this is the whole duty of man; [Ecclesiastes 12:12-13] bring me the Book. Let me
tell you in closing the story I love best in English literature.
I
majored in English when I was in college. I've said many times, if I had an
extra life to live, I would love to be a teacher of English literature. I'd
love to be a professor of English. May I share with you again my favorite
story of all the great literary figures in English literature. It concerns Sir
Walter Scott. That Scottish bard and incomparable novelist, after a lifetime
of labor and work, came to the end of the way, and dying turned to his
son-in-law Lockhart and said, "Son, bring me the Book." The
son-in-law replied, "My father, there are thousands of books in your
library. Which book?"
And
the dying bard replied, "Son, there's just one Book." And Lockhart
went into the library and brought to Sir Walter Scott the Bible. And the great
Scottish bard died with the Book in his hand. “There's just one Book cried the
dying sage, read me the old, old story. And the words that can never fade
winged his soul to glory. There's just one Book.”
This
is God's message to you tonight, pointing to Jesus, pointing to the cross,
pointing to the resurrection, pointing to the coming again, pointing to our home
in the sky, opening wide the doors of redemption and salvation; come and
welcome. In a moment we stand and sing our hymn of appeal, and while we sing
it, a family you, a couple you, or just one somebody you, “Tonight I have
decided for God and here I am, pastor.” I'm on the way, coming to confess
faith in Jesus, coming to be baptized. Coming to place your life in the
fellowship of our dear church, as God shall press the appeal to your heart,
make the decision now. And in a moment when we stand to sing, stand answering
with your life, walking down that stairway, walking down this aisle, “Here I
am, pastor. I have made the decision for God. I'm on the way.” May angels
attend you as you come, while we stand and while we sing.