IN THE FIERY FURNACE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 3:19-27
06-14-70
We can’t begin to encompass it in one
message, so it’s got to be two. The
sermon this morning, the half of it this morning—and I’m sorry I can’t put it
all together, because the climax is the second half. The sermon this morning is entitled: In the Fiery Furnace. And the sermon next Sunday morning, which
will conclude the message, will be entitled: The Mysterious Presence, the
Glorious Person. Now, we’re
preaching through the book of Daniel, and these two messages will conclude the
series on the third chapter.
In the Fiery Furnace: The background is familiar to us
all. Nebuchadnezzar, the king of
Babylon, made a giant image and covered it with solid gold. And he said, at the sound of music,
everybody—his counselor, his governors, his sheriffs, his people—everybody was
to bow down and worship the golden image.
So at the sound of the trumpet, and the harp, and the dulcimer, and the
psaltery, why, they all bowed down—that is, all but three; three Hebrew
captives named: Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah—(Meshach, Shadrach, and
Abednego).
And they brought word to the king and
said: “Everybody bows down at the sound of the music but these three.”
And king Nebuchadnezzar sent for them,
incredulous, couldn’t believe his ears, and said: “Is it true, is it true that
you don’t bow down and worship my golden image?”
And they answered: “We’re not careful to
answer thee in this manner, we don’t even have to think. We’re ready to answer you on the spot. No!
We will not bow down.”
Then was Nebuchadnezzar full of fury and
the form of his visage was changed; it was registered in his face. And he commanded the incinerator where they
burn the dead to be heated seven times hotter and to bind those three Hebrew
captives and throw them in the furious fire.
And, as the king watched, those three Hebrew slaves were not only
walking loose in the fire, but there was a fourth one who looked like the Son
of God. And the astonished king called
them forth.
And when they came forth and stood
before the princes, and the governors, and the captains, and the king’s
counselors, they saw these men upon whose bodies the fire had no power, nor was
a hair of their heads singed, nor was the smell of fire passed on their clothing.
Now, I submit in anybody’s language, and
in anybody’s history, that is an unusual thing. But that’s God! And He’s
always doing unusual things. We’re
going to preach about it this morning.
This is a book of prophecy. Jesus said: “Daniel the prophet.” So what I read here is a revelation. It is a harbinger. God is saying something about the future. It’s the same kind of a thing as the apostle
John when he wrote his gospel. Not only
were the words of Jesus a revelation, but what Jesus did was no less an
unfolding of the truth of God. And
that’s why John calls what Jesus did “signs,” semeion,
signs. That is, they had a deep
spiritual import and meaning. So it is
with the book of Daniel. Not only the
words that you read here in the book but what happened. The deeds, the circumstances, these events
are also harbingers and revelations of the future.
All right, here’s one: Those three Hebrew children in the fiery
furnace, unconsumed, is a harbinger, and a picture, and a prophecy of Israel in
the days of the great tribulation, when they shall be thrown into the fury of
the fire and shall be unconsumed. In
the forty-third chapter of Isaiah, the Lord says He’s going to gather them from
the north and the south, and the east and the west, and “when they walk through
the fire, they shall not be burned; and the flame shall not kindle on them.”
Then the prophet Zechariah, he says, in
that awesome time of trouble and fury and judgment, two-thirds of Israel will
be destroyed.
But I will bring the third part through the fire,
and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is tried:
Then shall they call on my name, and I will hear them: and I will say, It is my
people: and they will say, The Lord Jehovah is my God.
It’s the same identical type of a thing
as when Moses saw the bush burning unconsumed on the backside of the desert. It is a picture of Israel through the
ages. And that’s what is intended
here. Israel is indestructible, and
unconsumable, and imperishable. God
says so. As the one hundred
twenty-first Psalms avows: “He that keepeth Israel will neither slumber nor
sleep.” Israel is indestructible and
Jesus said they’ll be here when He comes back to earth again.
Do you notice in the story here, when
that furnace is heated seven times hotter with pitch, and bitumen, and tar, and
sulphur, that the men who threw those Hebrew children into the fire themselves
were consumed? That’s God’s picture,
not only by word, but by event. For the
event is as much a prophecy as the word itself. The men who threw the three into the furnace were consumed by the
fire. God said to Abraham: “This
generation of thy seed, I will bless them that bless thy seed. And I will curse them that curse thy seed.”
Well, I don’t have to be astute, or even
smart, to see that written large on the pages of the Bible and of secular
history. When Hitler proposed to
destroy Israel, Hitler himself and his Reich were destroyed ignominiously and
ingloriously. And Egypt today, now
Israel may be suffering, and they are, because of this awesome confrontation in
the Middle East. But don’t you forget that
Egypt is suffering more. Egypt has lost
the revenue of the Suez Canal. She
hasn’t gotten a dime from that for years.
And Egypt is under the iron thumb of communist Russia. The hegemony of Egypt has passed out of
Nassar’s hands and out of Egyptian hands, and the men in the Kremlin use Egypt
like you use pawns on a chessboard. How
would you like to have a nation like that and rulers over you like that? And not only that, but Egypt has lost the
millions, and millions, and uncounted millions of revenue from tourists. And Egypt is descending into abject and
unspeakable poverty.
You see, these are parables; and they
are harbingers; and they are revelations; and they are prophecies. Now, not only is this a parable of promise
and revelation concerning Israel, but it is for all of God’s children—for us
who believe in the Lord.
All right, now let’s begin with the
sermon. First of all, for us who trust
in Christ, and who believe in God, and who are the children of the Almighty—for
us there is an inevitable and inexorable trial by fire. It comes.
It inevitably, inexorably comes!
When James and John came up to Jesus and
said: “We’d like to sit on your right hand and on your left hand,” Jesus said
to them: “You don’t know what you’re saying.
You don’t know what you’re asking.
Can you be baptized with the baptism that I’m baptized with? And can you drink of the cup that I drink?”
And nonchalantly, almost indifferently,
they said: “We can.”
They didn’t realize what they were
saying. The day came when James had his
head cut off by Herod Agrippa I. And
the day came when John was exposed to death by privation and starvation on a
lonely, rocky island just south of the Aegean Sea.
If you are a child of God, you will be
thrust into the fiery furnace, so get ready.
It is the usual place where the child of God is on trial. And if you’re not in the fiery furnace, it
is the exception and not the rule. This
is the way the children of God live.
The last part of the eleventh chapter of
the book of Hebrews, that is the roll call of the heroes of faith. Listen, they were tortured, not accepting
deliverance. They had trials and
mockings and scourgings; moreover, bonds and imprisonment. They were stoned. They were sawn asunder.
They were tempted. They were slain
with the sword. They wandered about in
sheep skins and goat skins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented. They lived in dens, and dives, and caves of
the earth. These are the heroes of
faith. Jesus said: “In the world ye
shall have tribulations.” In the
fourteenth chapter of the book of Acts, Paul says to the churches of Galatia:
“By much tribulation shall ye enter into the kingdom of God.”
Pilgrims Progress is a story of the
trial and tribulations of a Christian.
Falling in the “sloughs of despond and despair,” “the castles of doubt”
and “the giants of unbelief.” This is
the life of the Christian; he faces trial by fire. And being a Christian, the Book says, it is heated seven times
hotter than it is want to be heated.
Because you’re a Christian, you’ll be tried seven times more than were
you not a Christian. On every hand,
you’ll find it, and you’ll see it, and you’ll meet it. Like the sands of the sea, innumerable; like
the waves on the crest of the bosom of the deep, innumerable; like the drops of
the rain from the sky, innumerable; like the leaves on the forest, innumerable,
so are the innumerable trials of the child of God!
One, Satan afflicts us. Satan afflicts us; he tries us and torments
us. He did Job. He even took Job’s wife and used her when
she said to her husband: “Now, give up your faith. Look what it does for you or hasn’t done for you. Now,” she said, “curse God and commit
suicide.”
He tried Jesus. And after the story of the temptation—you
look at that—and it says: “and Satan left him for a season.”
He doesn’t stop. Satan afflicts us. And in the twelfth chapter of the book of Revelation, at the
tenth verse, it says: “The accuser of the brethren, who accused them day and night,
is cast down (at the consummation of the age).” The accuser of the brethren, Satan, afflicts us, and torments and
tries us; and we’re in the fire. What
Satan does; he plants his own evil seeds in your hearts and then boasts as
though we had planted them ourselves and they were of our own natural
drawing. He lays his black whelps of
blasphemy on our doorstep and then publishes to the world that they are our own
blood offspring. He baits the bait for
the fish and the trap for the bird. And
then he boasts and points his finger at you and says: “You, you hypocrite, do
you remember so-and-so? And do you
remember so-and-so?” And he accuses the
brethren, day and night.
And not only does Satan afflict us, the
world afflicts us. Paul wrote: “In the
world you shall have,” Paul wrote, “Yea, and he that shall live godly in the
world shall suffer persecution.” Man’s
inhumanity to man has never been more violently or villainously illustrated
than in religion. As the saints have
been burned at the stake, the faggot has been set to the fire, they have been
beheaded and rotted in dungeons, imprisoned, oppressed, galling remembrances
throughout Christendom—the world afflicting the saints. And the world’s no friend to grace. And you’ll find it if you try to live for
Christ in the world.
And not only does Satan afflict us and
not only does the world afflict us, but God afflicts us. God tries us. Here in the twelfth chapter in the book of Hebrews it says: “For
whom the Lord loveth, he chasteneth and scourgeth every son he received. And if ye be without chastenment, then you
are illegitimate.”
I don’t use the word that’s here in the
Bible. But would you like for me
to? “No,” he says, “no!” So I’ll just use the word: “then are ye illegitimates
and not sons.” Now, everyone of you go
home, that’s what you want to do—it’s verse eight in the twelfth chapter—you go
home and read it. It’s the first thing
you’ll want to do. I tell you, God
doesn’t mince words! He tells it
straight! God afflicts us. God tries us. The path of bereavement, and trial, and heartache, and tears is
beat down by the children of God. It’s
a path they all know. If you are a
child of God, get ready for the furnace.
You’re going to be plunged in it.
Now, what is the purpose in the
promulgated, provocative, promoted, and permissive will of God that His
children should be plunged into the fire?
There are lots of reasons. To
the child of God, the fire will not hurt him.
It is for his health and not his hurt.
As the moth, and as the rust, and as the canker does not hurt him, neither
does the fire touch him.
When through fiery trials thy pathway
shall lie,
My grace, all-sufficient, shall be thy
supply.
The flame shall not hurt thee—I only
design
Thy dross to consume and thy gold to
refine.
What
is the purpose? It is the permissive
will of God and in the preventive will of God that we are tried in the
furnace. Why? All right, here’s why. We
are tried in order that we might be fitted for service. God tests us. When you read about the wars of the Medieval ages, they were fought
with spears, and lances, and swords.
And when a knight went forth to battle, the first thing he’d do would be
to take his sword and to bend it over his knee. “Bend it over his knee!
Why?” In order that he might see
if it would break. Is it brittle or is
it safe in the day of confrontation and battle? The testing, that’s what God does with His children: He tries us;
He tests us that we might be fit for the conflict.
There is no exaltation without that
conflict. There is no conqueror without
a battle, without a war. And there is
no ultimate experience of testimony to God until we have tried the faithfulness
of the Almighty. That’s one reason why
God lets us face the fury of the flaming fire in the furnace; that He might
prepare us for service.
Second, the reason God permits the fury
of the fire to rage against His children is that we might be purified. When a goldsmith puts things in the
crucible, he doesn’t put dross. He puts
gold, just because it’s gold. When a
silversmith sits before the burning fire, he puts silver in the crucible just
because it’s silver.
I was in Bangkok one time and I walked
through a factory that had two thousand girls grinding precious stones. And I looked at them, and looked at them,
and looked at them—rows and rows of them.
Those beautiful gems—they were grinding them on a wheel that was covered
with diamond dust. They weren’t
grinding pebbles or cheap stones—they were jewels that were mined in
Thailand. You don’t pick specks out of
rotten apples. And when God tries you
and throws you in the furnace, it’s because God sees in you pure gold, pure
silver, a gem to shine in His crown and He purifies you. That’s what the fire does. Oh, if I had an hour, I’d like to illustrate
that. The graces of God are always seen
best, they glitter the most gloriously in the light of the fire of the
furnace.
If you’re evil spoken of, I tell you,
when God says you’re not to speak back again, ah, that’s a trial. Ooh, how you want to talk back: They cuss you, you cuss them; they hate you,
you hate them; they do bad about you, you do bad about them; they plunge a
knife in you, you plunge a knife in them.
But you see, in that trial, the graces of the Christian shine in the
light of the furnace.
Some of us are volatile. Ooh, it’s so easy for some of us to get mad
and angry. One time, there was a little
old pip-squeak who came up to a pastor and he said: “I just don’t understand
you. You are so volatile and get angry
so easy.”
And the pastor said: “Listen here, you
milquetoast, I control more anger in one hour than you do in a lifetime!”
There are some people who are just
dead. They don’t get mad. They don’t get out of humor. They don’t!
They’re just smooth, go along and all.
Well, that’s all right and all.
But I tell you, some of the rest of you have got stuff that burns like
sulphur, on the inside like brimstone, and it takes the grace of God to control
it. But the graces of God shine best in
the light of the furnace.
Well, we can’t stay there; we got to go
on. The purposes of God in the fire,
why the Lord permits it and why He promotes it, the purpose of God in the fire,
third: In order that the Lord might separate the believer from the
pretender. It is easy to talk: “I will
not bow down before that golden image and I will defy Nebuchadnezzar the king.”
But when it comes to facing the fiery
furnace, that’s something else. That
separates the chaff from the wheat. The
cynic says of your profession, with a sarcastic sneer: “It’s fluff, and it’s
foam, and it’s stuff.”
And the sinner says: “It’s not genuine,
it’s not real.” And even the saints
want to see the depth of it. If you
make any profession of faith in Christ, it’s going to be tried. And that’s the purpose of the trial, to
separate the pretender from the true professor.
Did you know, when I studied for this
sermon this week, I read where a saint of God and a great man of the Lord, he
said, and I read it, he said: “The tearing down of the scaffold has ruined the
altar. And we die for want of the
headman’s block.”
That was just his way of saying that the
ease with which people name the name of God today, has filled the church with
cheap, tawdry pretenders who don’t mean it, don’t believe it and, in the fire,
they don’t act it. He’s saying nothing
could be better for us than a first-class persecution.
Now, going back here to the Bible: Did you know in the eleventh chapter of 1
Corinthians it says: “It is needful (it is necessary) that there be heresies
among you.”
Good, dear me—think of that! Paul is saying it is necessary, it is
needful, for there to be heresies among you.
Oh, that’s so terrible to me.
When a man stands up and he says: “I don’t believe the Bible is the Word
of God,” to me that’s terrible. When a
man stands up and he says: “I don’t believe Jesus is the Christ,” that’s
terrible to me. Heresies among you—they’re awful to me. But division of the body of Christ and the
tearing asunder of the household of the faithful, heresies are terrible to me,
and yet, Paul writes in the eleventh chapter of 1 Corinthians letter: “It is
needful (it is necessary) that there are heresies among you.” And then he tells why: “In order that those
that are proved and acceptable of God may be manifest unto you.” Isn’t that something? When you have heresies arise, it isn’t long
until you easily find out those who are true to the Word and true to
Jesus. It just divides them, like an
abyss between them. That’s why God puts
us in the fire.
All right, another reason why God
permits us to be thrown into the fiery furnace: In order that our bonds and our
bands may be loosed. The band of sin,
and the fetters of mortality, are all snapped and they’re all burned in the
fire. I’m going to name some of them in
just a moment that I have. Did you
know that it is so easy—don’t tell me you’re an exception–it is so easy to get
to the place in your life where you quit leaning on God and depending upon God,
and you start depending upon yourself?
“I can do it!” Oh, dear, the
fire sure does destroy a man’s self-confidence and self-dependence. It really does.
I went through one of those fires when I
was a young preacher. I listened to
those marvelous testimonies of conversion and salvation, those great
experiences where they saw a light from heaven, or an angel, or a ball of
fire. And I had no experience like
that. And I came to the conclusion that
I wasn’t saved. I hadn’t been redeemed. I wasn’t born again. I wasn’t a Christian. And can you imagine the civil war in my soul
as a young preacher, out in the country, preaching to my little churches on
Sunday, and then every night in the week, getting down by the side of the bed
and saying: “Oh, God, I’m not saved.
I’m not born again. I’m not a
real Christian. Lord, I haven’t seen
any fire. I haven’t seen any
light. I haven’t seen any angels from
heaven.”
Oh, what a tragic experience. Well, I want you to know it cured me. I learned to believe that a man was saved
not by looking at an angel, or a light, or seeing a ball of fire break over his
head, but I learned to see that a man was saved by trusting the finished work
and the promises of Christ—just the Lord and nothing else. Nothing else! Nothing else!
And that’s exactly what happened to
those three slaves. They were thrown
into the fiery furnace, bound. They couldn’t
help themselves. They had no recourse
except to God. And that’s the way a man
is saved; because you are never rich enough to buy it; and you’re never good
enough to deserve it. And you can’t
merit it. You can’t work for it. It has to be something that God does for
us. And that’s what the trial by fire
does. You get to where you look with
contempt upon yourself and your righteousnesses (which God says are as filthy rags)
and all of the efforts to save yourself and to pull yourself up by your own
bootstraps, and to find yourself equal for the exigencies and providences of
life—you get to where you just throw it all away and not depending on yourself,
you just start looking to God. “Lord,
you must help me and you must save me.
And I’m not sufficient, Lord, and I’m not equal. And I cast myself unworthy as I am upon the
mercies of God.” And that does it. That’s the way to be saved: It’s trust in God; it’s looking to God, away
from yourself. However your abilities
and defenses may be, it’s looking to God, and that’s what the fiery furnace
does for you. It snaps those personal
bindings that bind you to yourself and your sufficiencies. It just snaps them all, burns them all, and
frees you in the liberty of Christ. And
you’re not living for yourself anymore and in your strength; you’re living in
the life and the strength of Christ.
Another thing: Burning those bonds, oh,
how a man is liberated when God liberates him.
When He burns those bonds that bind him to, oh, how many things in the
earth. For example, when Martin Luther
was excommunicated, He broke those bonds that tied him to the Roman Prelate and
went forth as the champion of salvation by grace. The fiery furnace burned the bonds and liberated Martin
Luther—same way with Balthazar Hubmeier, and Felix Mantz, our great Baptist
progenitors under oppression. God
touched their tongues and they spoke like flames of fire. And those trials burned those bonds and snapped
those cords asunder that tie us down here to this earth. It just happens that way.
There was a fine businessman, and he and
his wife had one little boy—just one little boy. And the little fella died!
That businessman never thought about God, never thought about heaven;
never thought about anything but business.
And the little boy died! And
every night, he would go into his library and he would get down a big, black
book that would look like that; and he’d open it. And he’d pour through those pages and read through that
book. And every once in a while, he’d
take out his pencil and he’d underscore and then reading again, and in reading
he’d take out pencil and he’d underscore it.
And upon a day when he was at the office, his wife, just curious to know
what he was underscoring, took the book down from the shelf and opened the Bible
and here’s what she found. Whenever
God’s word said anything about heaven, he underscored it. The trial had broken the bond that held him
to the earth. And he begin to look
heavenward, and Godward, and Christward, and upward. That’s what the trial does for you. It lifts you toward glory.
Well, now, may I conclude? Do you notice it says here in this third
chapter that when those three young men were called out and they stood before
the princes, and the governors, and the captains, and the kings, and the
counselors, it says that there was not a hair of their head singed, and it says
there was no smell of the fire that had passed on them. What do you think of that? That’s the way God does. When God does a thing, He does it completely
and perfectly. When God proposes, He
also disposes. When God begins, He also
finishes. When God does it, it’s done
perfectly. As Paul said of us: “He that
hath begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of redemption,
until the day of Jesus Christ.” That’s
the Lord! When He does something, He
does it completely. Not even a smell of
fire on their clothes and not a hair of their head singed!
Ah, just think of that? What the Lord does. Never halfway! He never, the Lord Jesus never, touched a sick man and somewhat
ameliorated his condition and helped him a little bit. He never cast out some devils and then left
other demons in the man’s soul to torment him and persecute him. He never just healed one blind eye and left
the other one blind. He never unstopped
one ear and left the other one deaf.
What He did, He did completely and perfectly.
When the angel came down from heaven and
slapped Peter on the side and awakened him, when the next day he was going to
be behead by Herod Agrippa, it says and he loosed all the chains, and stocks,
and bonds of Simon Peter, but he also opened the iron door and lead him out
free. That’s the Lord! And when the earthquake came from God’s hand
and shook that Philippian jail, the Book says that everyone’s bonds were
loosed. All of them! That’s the Lord.
And that’s what God is going to do with
us. He’s started with us. And however sorry we may think the material
is in His hands, and however wretched and unworthy we may feel in His sight,
God is going to do a glorious finished work.
Some day without spot and without blemish, He’s going to present us sons
of God and joint heirs to Jesus Christ in the presence of the glorious majesty:
“Be of good cheer, little children, it is your Father’s pleasure to give you
the kingdom.” He’s not going to let us
down. He’s going to see us
through. That’s the Lord. His work is complete and perfect.
Well, let’s sing our song now. And while we sing our song, a couple you to
put your life with us in there dear church; a family you, to come, to worship,
to serve God by our sides—a one somebody you to take Jesus as your Savior, to
give your heart to the Lord—Come, on the first note of the first stanza,
come. Make the decision now in your heart. Do it now!
And in a moment when we stand up to sing, stand up coming, into that
aisle and down to the front, or down one of these stairwells and here by the
pastor: “Here I am, Pastor, we’re coming this morning.” And God bless you in the way as you
come. As we stand, as we sing.
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