SPIRITUAL OMNIPOTENCE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
06-30-57
Philippians 4:13
Let us turn to the fourth chapter of the
Book of Philippians, Paul's letter to the church at Philippi. And your
neighbor may have not brought his Bible. Share it with him.
And let's all read this last part
together. We will start at the eighth verse: “Finally, brethren,” and
read to the end of the chapter. About two-thirds of the way or
three-fourths of the way through the New Testament, the Book of Philippians,
Paul's letter to the church at Philippi, the last chapter of it—the fourth
chapter, beginning at the eighth verse.
Let's read to the end of the
chapter. Are you ready? Philippians 4:8, together:
Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are
true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever
things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of a good
report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these
things.
Those things, which ye have both
learned, and received, and heard, and seen in me, do; and the God of peace
shall be with you.
But I rejoiced in the Lord greatly, that
now at the last your care of me hath flourished again; wherein ye were also
careful, but ye lacked opportunity.
Not that I speak in respect of want; for
I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, there with to be content.
I know both how to be abased, and I know
how to abound; everywhere and in all things I am instructed both to be full and
to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer the need.
I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me.
Notwithstanding ye have well done, that
ye did communicate with my affliction.
Now ye Philippians know also, that in
the beginning of the gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, no church
communicated with me as concerning giving and receiving, but ye only.
For even in Thessalonica ye sent once
and again unto my necessity.
Not because I desire a gift; but I
desire fruit that may abound to your account.
But I have all, and abound; I am full,
having received of Epaphroditus, the things which were sent from you, an odor
of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing to God.
But my God shall supply all your need
according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
Now, unto God and our Father be glory
forever and ever. Amen.
Salute every saint in Christ Jesus. The
brethren which are with me greet you.
All the saints salute you, chiefly they
that are of Caesar's household.
The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with
you all. Amen.
Now, this morning I left off preaching
at the twelfth verse:
For I have learned—I have learned in
whatsoever state I am, there with to be content.
I know both how to be abased, and I know
how to overflow; everywhere and in all things I am instructed. I have
learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.
That's
where we left off this morning.
Now, tonight the message is the next
verse, Philippians 4:13: “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth
me.” And I am to speak tonight about Spiritual Omnipotence,
Christian omnipotence: “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth
me.”
Now, the first part of that text is
sheer unadulterated presumption. It's absolute, unmitigated, egotistical
boasting without the interpretation of the last part of the text.
How many times have we seen
vainglorious, prideful and ambitious men say that: “I can do all things?”
And their destruction has been swift and sure and certain.
For example, I read today, here in the
fourth chapter in the Book of Daniel, the great king, Nebuchadnezzar, spake and
said, “Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the honor of my majesty,
by the might of my power?” I can do all things. And you look, and,
in that hour, while he had spake, the Word of the Lord fell upon him
… and he was driven from men and did eat
grass like an ox, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven, his hairs were
growing like eagles’ feathers and his nails like birds’ claws.
“I
can do all things.”
It reminds me of Xerxes, King Ahasuerus,
who took a million men and, when he sought to cross the Hellespont and a storm
destroyed his bridges, he commanded with chains the waters be lashed, then, in
vain, Hellas, ancient Greece. And the great proud monarch built a high
throne to see all western Hellas destroyed. “I can do all things,” but,
instead, his armies melted away and he returned to his Persia dishonored,
disintegrated, destroyed.
In our recent history, of the last
century, Napoleon, bid the star that Prussia sent and Napoleon destroyed the
son of Austria. And the whole civilized nations of the world were dashed
to pieces against that prevailing and conquering monarch. “I can do all
things.”
He came to the place where he defied the
very elements themselves. He invaded Russia. Across the snow of
those burning and terrible plains, he saw the palaces of the Kremlin afire,
then marched back to his France, destroyed and broken.
And in our time, we have heard the
Fuhrer, Hitler himself, full of pride, full of egomaniacal boastings. “I can
do,” he said, “all things.” And he talks and he boasts and he lifts up
himself and he blasphemes God and he curses the church. “I can do all things.”
I say, how many times in history is that
story written large on the page of the Book? Could you imagine, then,
one's surprise to read it here in the Bible, and from the Apostle Paul?
He says, “I can do all things,” this apostle.
Well, what a strange thing, Paul, for
you to say. Maybe Gamaliel taught you an eloquence by which you can
confound all of your opponents. Or, maybe in rabbinical lore you have
learned some secret and clandestine, miraculous incantation. Maybe there
is some kabala that you know. Maybe there's a wizardry by which Merlin
has taught you in the dark magic of life.
“I can do all things,” says the Apostle
Paul. Isn't that what I just said?
The
first part of that text is sheer presumptive boasting without the last to
interpret it: “I can do all things through Christ."
What
a difference! “I can do all things through Christ who strengtheneth
me.” I can do all things in heaven's name, in Christ's name, in God,
through Jesus.
It
is a stupendous thing for a man to say, but a Christian has a right to say it: “I
can do all things through Christ who strengtheneth me.”
And in the power of that unction, and
that heavenly visitation, Paul arose to face the most perilous odds, to face
the most difficult of tasks, withstood Peter to the face, and then gave himself
to missionary journeys, the repercussion of which blesses and leads our lives
today. “I can do all things through Christ, in Jesus, who helps me and
who strengthens me.”
Now, may I say some of those things that
Paul included in that word—“I can do all things through Christ?” Here's
one. I can bear the trials and the perplexities and the burdens and tasks
of life—I can do it in Christ.
We're not going to escape, not one of
us. You remember that thing in Job when the children of God, when the
sons of the morning came to present themselves to the Almighty, Satan came
along with them.
Isn't that what the Bible says?
And Satan came also. He's always there. And he's by your
side. When we gather, he's with us. When we work, he watches.
He is always by, our adversary, our great opponent and our great enemy, Satan,
standing at the right hand of God to accuse us and standing in front of us and
by the side of us and around us and back of it—always, Satan, and you'll not
escape.
In the story of the temptation of our
Lord Jesus, it says after those 40 days of trial Satan left Him. But, the
sentence isn't done. After the 40 days of trial, Satan left Him “for a
season,” for a season to come back in the night and back in the day and back at
the Cross and back at the mouth of Galilee, and back by the sea—back everywhere
and all the time. We have a trial in this life and not one of us shall
escape it.
Now, how shall a man bear it? And
how shall a man face it? He can do it in the name of Christ and in the
strength of the Lord: “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth
me.”
Everyone of us has a burden.
Everyone among us has a hurt, a disappointment. All of us have it—all of
us.
What's the matter with us, so many
times, that lends itself in our hearts for an opening for discouragement and
despair is that we look at somebody else, and we think, “Oh, you know, if I
could just be like him, how happy I would be. If I could be done with
this burden and just have the burden that one had, wouldn't that be
glorious?” And we look around and we think, “Our burden and our trial is
so much heavier than another's burden and another's trial. And if I could
just be with them, or in their stead, then I wouldn't have this great trial of
my life and this great burden on my soul.”
It reminds me of a fable told by
Aesop. Aesop said that the children of men came to Jupiter and all of
them were very unhappy about the burden that he had, about the trial on his
life, about the hurt in his soul.
And so, Jupiter said, “Why, then we'll
just rearrange that. You bring your burden and your trial and dump it
here at my feet and then pick up any other burden that you want.”
So, they all agreed. And so upon a
day, the children of men came and there, at the feet of Jupiter, they dumped
all their burdens and they poured out all of their trials. And then, each
one picks up somebody else's burden, anything to change.
There was a lame man, and he thought, if
he could have that blind eye, he'd be a lot more happy, felicitous in his
life. So, he traded his lame leg for a blind eye.
And then, there was a man who came with
that blind eye and he thought that, if he had poverty instead of that blind
eye, he'd be happier. So, he cast down his blind eye and he picked up poverty.
And then, there was the man who was
afflicted with poverty. And he thought that, if he could have the
sickness of the rich man and also his riches, that he would be happier.
So, he traded his poverty for the sicknesses of the rich man and also his
riches.
And the fable says, it was not an hour
until the children of men were all back at Jupiter's feet, clamoring each man
for his old burden. And when Jupiter allowed it, each man went away happy
in his heart.
Well, that's just the way we are.
I look at you and I think, “Oh, brother, if I could just be you, wouldn't I be
happy?” Why, if I could be you, I'd be the most miserable critter in the
world.
Some of these people look at me and they
think, “Oh, if I could just be like that pastor, how happy I'd be.” And
you'd be the most miserable wretch in the world. Yes, sir. Yes,
sir. You just need not to think in those terms.
“I can do all things through Christ
which strengtheneth me.” What God hath assigned to you, bear it
gloriously and triumphantly. I got a blind eye or maybe two blind
eyes. I have a lame foot or two lame feet or no feet at all. Or,
I'm poor or I'm sick. Or, I'm wretched or I'm happy. However it is,
God gives you strength to bear it nobly and wonderfully and triumphantly.
And you can, because you must.
There are providences inscrutable, over and beyond our lives, into which you
cannot enter. You can't go back to those days and live them over
again. You can't go back to those years and change them again. You
can't go back of the providences of God. They are inscrutable.
If
I could be Christian and say it, they are inexorable. Our lives are in
the hands of an omnipotent God. And these choices are made for us beyond
our knowing and beyond our understanding.
And our task and our commitment and our
duty is this: to bear them bravely and nobly. “I can do—I can do all
things through Christ which strengtheneth me.” And that means I can bear
this burden victoriously. I can in Christ.
Now, it means another thing. I can
overcome the conflicting furors in my own soul and in my own heart. And
we all have them. You don't have a heart like a placid lake. If you
do, you don't know yourself. If you are a normal human being, you are a
civil war at times on the inside.
There are raging storms that burst upon
you, like out of the blue of the sky on the little Sea of Galilee. And
the winds blow and the waves are high and the furor. And your heart is
subject to the conflicting vicissitudes of every fortune that blows. You
can't help it.
Well, what do you do with the inside of
you? And what do you do with the soul of you and the heart of you and the
life of you? What do you do?
This is it: you can bravely and
courageously and victoriously meet and overcome those conflicts in
Christ. “I can do all things through Christ who strengtheneth me.”
Now, this is a typical story from my
country pastorate. I tell you, those people, they just can say things and
see things and illustrate things better than anybody in the world.
One of those fellows told me—he said, “You
know, there's a member in this church and he has the most violent temper.
He just flames at anything.”
He
said, “When his stock didn't do just right, he'd curse them and beat
them. It was just awful.”
You can imagine that. I've seen
that. I've seen men take sticks and
bullwhips
and planks and boards and two-by-fours, and nearly beat mules and beat horses
and beat cows half to death. I've seen them, and just curse as they did
it.
Oh, it makes your blood run cold.
Well, this is one of those fellas with a violent temper and he curses and beats
his stock.
Well, he got religion. He got
converted. And everybody was wondering how it was going to be the next
time he got mad.
All right. This is the
story. He was out milking the cow—had that bucket down there, you
know. He had that bucket down there, and his head stuck in his
flank—anybody here ever be on a farm?—head stuck in the flank, you know, that
old cow—just a milking that old cow. And lo and behold, why, he had her
about half-milked and that bucket about half-full, and she stuck her foot in
the bucket and kicked, and the milk went all over him and all over everything.
Well, brother, they were looking for an
explosion. You know what he did instead? He got out his
handkerchief. I never heard of a farmer having one. But, they said
he got out his handkerchief. They said he got out his handkerchief.
And he said, as he was wiping the milk out of his hair, and wiping out of his
eyes, and wiping it out of his ears and brushing it off of his clothes, and as
he did so, he was singing a song:
‘Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus
Just to take Him at His Word.
Just to rest upon His promise.
Just to know, “Thus saith the Lord.”
Singing
like that will make that old cow do better, wouldn't it?
Well, the Lord can do that. He can
do that.
There are a lot of us here tonight that
could stand up and say, “Were it not for the grace of God, I don't know what I
would do when I get mad—curse and beat, howl and blaspheme—but, by the grace of
God, I've overcome that.”
How many of you could stand up here
tonight and say, “Pastor, back there in those years and in those years, I fell
a prey into this and into that and into the other thing? But, by His
grace I've overcome. I can do all things through Christ that
strengtheneth me.”
There's another thing he meant by
that. “I can do—I can do all things through Christ who strengtheneth
me.” I can do God's assigned work that He's placed on my hands. I
can do it.
It may be a tremendous task. But,
if God has called me for it, I can do it.
Or,
it may be a very humble, menial task. But, in God's grace, I can do that,
too. If it is something God has given for me, I can do it. It doesn't
matter what it is. If God says it and if the Lord assigns it, it can be
done. God helps us to do it.
That's the reason we have a never-ending
campaign in this world, a battle that never stops and never ceases. It
sways back and forth. But, we're never discharged from it—never.
In that wonderful story of the Lord
about the pounds, this man had a gain of 10 pounds and the lord said, “Well
done. Now, you can retire.” No, he says, “I'll make you ruler over
ten cities.”
You don't ever get discharged from
service. This work of God goes on and on and on and on and on and on and
on. We're in it until we die. But, whatever our task is and
whatever our assignment is, along with it comes straight from heaven to do it,
whatever God says for us to do.
I was reading over here this week in the
life of David. And that ruddy-faced young fellow—he was a teenager—that
fellow, that boy, came out from the sheep, goats, came down there to bring his
brothers who were in the war, to bring them some food. And while he was
there, down on the other side of that mountain, just beyond the Vale of Elah,
there stood Goliath—great big fellow, nine feet tall.
And he came down there with a staff as
big as a weaver's beam and a shield so large it took a man to carry it.
He came down there and lifted up his voice and defied the armies of God on the
other side of the other vale and cursed Jehovah. He said, “if there
is a man here that's got enough intestinal fortitude to face me, let him step
out, and I'll feed his body to the beasts of the field and the birds of the
air. Let him come, if he dares. I dare him.” And he cursed
God.
Well, that boy heard him. And he
said, “Isn't there anybody that will accept the challenge in the name of the
Lord?”
Not a one.
That boy said, “Then, I will.”
They took him to Saul the king.
And Saul looked at him and he said, “You? You meet that man of war who,
from the days of his youth, has been a fighter? You?”
Do you remember what David said?
That boy answered and said, “O King, when I was out there on the other side of
the pasture on the back end of that wilderness, keeping my father's flock,
there came a lion to take a lamb out of the flock. And there came a bear
to take a lamb out of the flock. And I pursued him and seized him and I
slew him. And the same Lord God that delivered the lion and the bear into
my hand will deliver that uncircumcised blaspheming Goliath of the
Philistines.”
And that little fellow went out there, just
a small boy compared to the stature of that giant. And he said to him,
“You come to me with a staff. You come to me with a spear and a shield,
and defying God. But, I come to you in the name of the Lord God, whom
thou hast blasphemed.”
And you know the story. “I can do
all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.” And the slingshot from
that boy sank into the forehead of Goliath and he fell down dead—dead.
That's God.
“I can do all things through Christ
which strengtheneth me.” If it is a task God has assigned, there is grace
and strength and unction from heaven to do it whatever it is, whatever it is.
I think Paul meant there in that text, “I
can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me”—I think Paul meant
there in that text, also, that I can face the future with whatever they
hold—and certainly, it held for him martyrdom and death—I can face it
triumphantly. I can do it in Christ, whatever the unfolding years may
bring. T
hat is the universal testimony of the
children of God. Whatever, however, in Christ, there's boldness and
fearlessness and courage and victory and triumph. “I can do all things
through Christ which strengtheneth me.”
Ignatius was called to be pastor at the
church at Antioch at about 70 A. D. I'd say about maybe 23 years after this
epistle was written. And he was so mighty a preacher, and so blessed of
God in his ministry, that he emptied the temples and was taking the whole city
of Antioch to the feet of Jesus.
Because of the effectiveness of that man
of God, he was condemned by the Emperor Trajan to be exposed by the lions in
the Roman Coliseum—first martyr, they say, who was ever exposed in the
Coliseum.
In Paul's day, it was not
completed. The first Christian martyr, they say, is this great preacher of
Antioch, Ignatius. And they say that when Ignatius stood in the Roman
amphitheater, and those wild beasts were turned out of their cages, that a
ferocious lion made his way toward Ignatius. And unafraid and
undisturbed, absolutely fearless, Ignatius stood until the lion approached and
reached forth his hand and his arm and thrust it into the mouth of the panting
and hungry beast.
And when the lion crunched the bones in
his hand and in his arm, Ignatius said, "Now—now, I begin to be a
Christian." “I can do all things through Christ who strengtheneth
me”—unafraid—“I begin—think of it—to be a Christian.”
Now, in just a moment—and I'm done, I
want to take from the Apostle Paul—and I'll do it in just a moment, listen to
it. I want to take from the Apostle Paul, out of his own life, how the
strength of Christ is mediated to a child of God.
First, how he can be strong in the
Lord. First, in the ninth chapter of the Book of Acts, all of this is
found. First, the strength of Christ is mediated to us through our
submission to the Lord: “Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" That's
first: “Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?” That's the sixth verse of
the ninth chapter of the Book of Acts. That's first: “Lord, what wilt
thou have me to do?
“Do you want me to come down that aisle
and confess my faith in Jesus? Then, here I am, right down that aisle.
“Do you want me to be baptized in that
baptistry, buried with the Lord and raised with the Lord right there?
I'll be baptized.
“Do you want me to be in this church?
Then, Lord, in this church I am, and here I come.
“Do you want me to preach the
gospel? Do you want me to be a layman?
Do
you want me to go or to come or to say or to be quiet or to teach and to sing?
“Lord, what wilt Thou have me to
do—what?”
That's first: “Lord, here I am.
You say the word. Give the command. And here I am, to obey.”
That's first: “Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?”
All right. Second. Look in
that eleventh verse. Second, it comes through prayer: “Arise, go into the
street which is called Straight. Inquire in the house of Judas for one
called Saul of Tarsus, for behold, he prayeth”—he prayeth.
“I can do all things through Christ who
strengtheneth me.” There is power in the name of Jesus. And we're
to pray in the name of Jesus.
First, “Lord, what wilt Thou have me to
do?” And then, praying in the name of Jesus. As Paul wrote in the
last chapter of his 1 Thessalonians letter, “Brethren, pray for us.”
Pray. And it comes through prayer—“Lord, Lord”—and God answers prayer.