THE STRONG DELUSION
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
2 Thessalonians 2:8-11
5-11-58 7:30 p.m.
This sermon
tonight is the most terrible that I have ever prepared in my life. In the
second chapter of the second Thessalonian letter, 2 Thessalonians the second
chapter, if you would like to read with me the passage, we shall begin at the
eighth verse; 2 Thessalonians the second chapter, beginning at the eighth
verse. The title of the sermon tonight is THE STRONG DELUSION. The text
is the eleventh verse, “For this cause God shall send them strong delusion,
that they should believe a lie, that they all might be damned who believed not
the truth" [2 Thessalonians 2:11, 12]. Now let us read the context, if you
would like. Second Thessalonians 2, beginning at the eighth verse, and we will read
the chapter.
And then
shall that wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the Spirit of His
mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming,
Even him
whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying
wonders,
And with all
deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish, because they received
not the love of the truth, that they might be saved.
And for this
cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie,
That they all
might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in
unrighteousness.
But we are
bound to give thanks always to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord,
because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through
sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth,
Whereunto He
called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
Therefore,
brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught,
whether by word or our epistle.
Now our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself, and God, even our Father, which hath loved us, and hath
given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace,
Comfort your
hearts, and establish you in every good word and work.
[2 Thessalonians 2:8-17]
Nor would I
preach on a thing like this were it not so eminently before me as we go through
the Bible and were it not also so much a fabric of the texture of the gospel. A
great part of this sermon tonight I do not understand, I do not know, I—it is
beyond me. But it is in the Bible, and I see it not only in the Book God has
written with His hand, but I see it in the book all around me of human life and
human story.
The text is
that these who oppose God in Christ, "with all deceivableness of
unrighteousness in them that perish, because they received not love of the
truth, that they might be saved" [2 Thessalonians 2:10]—“no” to God, and
"no" to Christ, and "no" to Jesus—“for this cause,” turning
down the appeal, “for this cause,” saying "no" to Christ, "For
this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie,
that they all might be damned, that they all might be judged, who believe not
the truth.” And the text, “For this cause God shall send them strong
delusion."
Now it is a
different translation. I mean, the actual words are not "strong
delusion"; it means the same thing, "For this God shall send them energeia."
You have got an English word like that Greek word energeia. The best way
to translate it would be "working," “God shall send them a working,”
an energeia planē. Ninety-one times in this New Testament do
you find that word and cognate words and words that mean the same thing. Ninety-one
times will you find that, translated in many places, "deception,
deceiving, a working of deception." Planaō means "to
wander," or "to cause to wander," and finally “to lead astray,”
and then “to deceive.”
That is an
interesting thing, that word “planet" comes from that. It is from the
Greek word planaō, "wandering, to make to wander, to deceive,
to lead astray." Planētēs, one of the forms of the verb,
a planētēs, and your word "planet" comes from it.
And that came because in the ancient world the so-called astronomers—they were
not astronomers, they just did the best they could, looking up there in the
sky. Some stars seemed to wander, to move around, so they called them planētēs,
“planets.” They moved around, and some stars seemed to be fixed. That is what
the ancients looked at up there in the sky.
Well, that
is this word here, “a wandering, a causing to wander, a leading astray,” and
then finally the meaning, "a deception, an illusion, a deceiving." And
it is so much in the Word of the Lord. As I turn the page here, Paul traces the
fall of humanity, all of it, to a deception, to a deceiving. “Adam was not
deceived,” he knew what he was doing, “but the woman, being deceived, was in
the transgression” [1 Timothy 2:14].
You know
another interesting thing about words? Most of the time a word that is used
first back here in the beginning will have the same use and the same significance
all the way through the Holy Scriptures. And back there in the third chapter of
the Genesis and in the thirteenth verse, Eve says to God, “The serpent beguiled
me”—there is that word again, “deceived me”—“and I did eat" [Genesis
3:13]. "Adam was not deceived, but the woman, being deceived,” beguiled—same
word. "Satan beguiled me,” deceived me, led me astray, “and I did
eat."
I heard one
time of a boy in England on the countryside walking down a lane, followed by a
pig. Had he been followed by a dog, no one would have thought of it, but it was
unusual to see a boy walking down the lane followed by a pig. And a man passing
by, noticing it, said to the lad, "How do you get that pig to follow
you?" And he said, "I do it with a bag of beans. I drop a bean here
and a bean there and a bean there, and the pig comes along and he follows me,
eating the beans." And the man said, "Where are you taking the
pig?" And the boy said, "To the slaughterhouse." Deceived!
“For this
cause God shall send them strong delusion,” an energy, a working of deception,
led astray, “that they might be damned who believe not the truth.”
Now I said
there is a tremendous revelation of this thing in the Word of God. "The
Spirit speaketh expressly, that in these latter times," and all times are
latter times for us. Brother, fifty years from now you will not be here;
twenty-five years from now most of us will not be here, outside of these young
people. A score, a decade—these are latter times for us. “The Spirit speaketh
expressly,…shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing”—there is that
word again—“deceiving spirits, and doctrines of demons, speaking lies in
hypocrisy.” That is the strangest, "in hypocrisy," a pseudologos,
pseudologōn. Pseudo is "false," logos is
"word," “in hypocrisy,” people who speak false words. The true logos—and
it is translated "Word"—the true Word is Christ, and here he speaks
of pseudologos. Here is the true Christ and the true gospel and the true
message, and here is a false word and a false hope and a false appeal and a
false invitation and a false gospel, called here—this is only place you will
find that word—a pseudologos, a “false word.”
Turn the
page, and here in 2 Peter there are coming and have been, 2 Peter 2:1, “false
prophets,” pseudoprophētai, “Even as there shall be false teachers,”
pseudodidaskoloi, “who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, denying
the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction"; pseudodidaskoloi,
pseudodidaskolos, "a false teacher"; didaskolos, “didactic,
teacher," didaskolos; pseudo, "a false one." This
is speaking of the day when we come to our highest intellectual capacities, our
greatest achievements in science and research, when psychology has plumbed the
depths of the human soul, when culture and knowledge and training and education
are on every hand. Thus, instead of the teacher and his science and his
knowledge leading and bringing to God, it brings to grosser materialism and
atheism, and a spurning of the great spiritual values of life, and a doing away
with the necessity of a personal commitment to Jesus Christ—a pseudodidaskolos.
And they are everywhere and in every institution. And our institutions become a
little more grossly material, grossly infidel—not just our state institutions. More
and more and more people, they say, who are religious, who are converted, who
are saved, are that way because of intellectual aberration. They are
ecclesiastical nuts; if they knew better, they would not be that way—didaskolos,
"teachers," pseudo, "false."
Then it
said, “false prophets.” You know, when you read and you are thinking of a
thing, everything you read seems to point in that direction. Times are coming,
says the Bible, when there shall fall upon this world fire and blood and furor
and smoke, war. And it is in those days that people turn to any kind of a
savior, anybody that could lead them out.
Now this is
from Josephus in that famous, famous account of the fall of Jerusalem in 70 A.
D., as he writes of it in the sixth book of The Wars of the Jews. Josephus
was the general of the Hebrew army and he was captured in Galilee. He headed
the army in Galilee, and he sat there in the tent of the commanders of the
Roman legion, and he saw the destruction of Jerusalem. You will not find in
literature anything more vivid than as he describes the blood that flowed in
the streets of the city of God. And this is the paragraph of its final
destruction,
A false
prophet was the occasion of these people's destruction. He had made a public
proclamation in the city that very day. God commanded him to get up on the
temple, and that there they should receive miraculous signs of deliverance.
Now there
was then a great number of false prophets suborned by the tyrants to impose
upon the people, that they might be buoyed up above fear and carried by such
hopes.
False hope! “You
do not need to worry; we are not going to have another war. You do not need to
worry; things are getting better and better and better. You do not need to be
concerned; we are all going to be saved. God is good. God is full of love. He
is not going to damn anybody to hell. Do not you be concerned or troubled or
agitated”—false prophets.
Then he
spiritualizes; Josephus was always doing that. "Now a man"—he is
telling why they were such dupes, why they followed these false teachers and
prophets,
Now a man
that is in adversity does easily comply with such promises; for when such a
seducer makes him believe that he shall be delivered from those miseries which
oppress him, then it is that he is full of hope for such deliverance.
Thus were
the miserable people persuaded by the deceivers;
—he uses the same Greek word there—
while they
did not attend, nor give credit, to the signs that were so evident and did so
plainly foretell their future desolation; like men infatuated, without eyes to
see, or minds to consider, did not regard the denunciations that God had made
to them.
Josephus
believed that Jerusalem was committed by God to destruction, and he is speaking
of the false prophets who say, "There is a deliverance; God is not going
to damn you, He is not going to destroy you." And they were buoyed up in
false hopes by false doctrines, by false prophets. I had a great deal prepared
that I am going to leave out.
False
Christ, you had one in recent days. Have you ever gone to Chicago and seen that
Baha'i, [the] big temple of Baha'ism? They have got one in Haifa, all over this
world. In our day, Abdul Baha’i, the originator of Baha'ism, said, "I am
all these early messiahs together. I supersede all previous teachers. Christ
was the highest until I came; and now it is the duty of men to listen to
me."
And this
Book says, in this text that I am preaching from, that that kind of a thing
shall find its ultimate in this final Antichrist, this final wicked one, this
final man of sin, the son of perdition. Our world shall be in such stress, such,
such heaviness and misery, such war and blood, that they will look to anybody
who will say, "I can lead the way out; I am your savior." And turning
aside from God and the true Christ, and repentance and faith in Him, the
multitudes flock to this false Christ and are led to ultimate damnation and
destruction—which brings me to the heart of this message and this text: turning
aside from the truth, and turning aside from the saving gospel of the Son of
God, the true, the alēthēs logos, the true logos, the
true Word, therefore, God shall send them this energizing of delusion that they
might be damned who believe not the truth.
A thing like
that strikes you dead. How is it that God, God would do a thing like that? "For
this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie,
that they might be damned who turn aside from the truth” of Jesus Christ. I do
not know, I do not understand; I just see it everywhere.
There is a
principle, like God runs His universe by gravity, by the laws of light, there
is a spiritual law principle that when a man says "no" to God and
"no" to Christ and "no" to the appeal, that finally he
becomes a negation himself. God confirms him in that rejection. I can
illustrate it endlessly in the Bible. In the days of Noah He said, "My
Spirit shall not always strive with man" [Genesis 6:3]. And at the end of
the hundred-twenty years of the preaching of righteous Noah, God shut him in
the ark. And that young evangelist, Buckner Fanning, preaching one night on
that, described a thing that I have heard several times, and always it is the
truth of God. He described the rain as it began to fall and the waters as they
began to rise, and then the people went to the door of the ark and pounded on the
door, "Noah! Noah! Noah! Open to us." Why did not Noah open the door?
Because the Bible says God shut that door. God shut the door.
You find the
same thing in the parable of the five foolish virgins. While the five who were
wise entered in, the five who were foolish went to buy oil for their lamps; and
when they came back, the door was shut. And they said, "Lord, Lord, open
to us" [Matthew 25:11]. And God shut that door and said, "Depart, I
never knew you"; God did it.
You have the
same confirmation in the life of Esau. Though he sought it carefully with
tears, he could not undo those decisions that he made. You have the same thing
in the story of Pharaoh. Pharaoh hardened his heart, and Pharaoh hardened his
heart, and Pharaoh hardened his heart. Then the Bible says, and then God
hardened his heart, confirmed him in the decision that he had made. "God
shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a, that they should
believe a lie, that they might be damned." Hardened his heart, hardened
his heart, hardened his heart; then God hardened his heart. The same Scriptures
describe Saul, who turning aside from the appeal of Samuel, the prophet of God,
and turning aside from the expressed and manifest will of God—finally it says,
"The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from the
Lord troubled him" [1 Samuel 16:14].
You have the
same thing graphically described here in the first chapter of the Book of
Romans, three times. Did you hear that symphony of Beethoven? Is it the ninth
one? “Ta, ta, ta, da.” That theme all through that sounds like a death knell. “Wherefore
God also gave them up” [Romans 1:24]. Romans 1:26, “For this cause God gave
them up." Romans 1:28, “God gave them up." You say "no" and
"no" and "no" and "no", and some day it is a
confirmed negation in your life. You will die in that negative, “No, no.”
I cannot
enter into it, “If any man see his brother sin a sin which is not unto death,
he shall ask, and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death. There
is a sin unto death; I do not say that he shall pray for it" [1 John 5:16]. There is a sin unto death, "No; no; no,” and God says, "No."
“Preacher,
why I can repent any time. I can give my life to the devil, and then at the end
of it, I can come and be saved. Do not try to scare me. I have heard the
preacher say, ‘And He is a God of mercy.’ I have heard him say, ‘He delights
not in the death of anyone.’ I have heard him say, ‘And whosoever will may
come.’ I have said ‘no’ to Him forty years. I am going to say ‘no’ to Him
thirty more years. And at the end of seventy years, after I have given my life
to the world, I am coming down that aisle and be saved.” Are you? Can you? Will
you? "For this cause God shall send them a strong delusion, that they
might be damned who reject the truth."
I just do
not know whether you can do it any time or not—deathbed repentance the
old-timers used to preach about. And the thief on the cross, nailed there, just
before he died, turned his face to Jesus, and Jesus saved Him. So far as we
know, being a malefactor, he was not a cheap robber or thief; he was an
insurrectionist, he was a patriot, he was leading armies against Rome. So far as we know, that political leader, that is the first time he ever saw Jesus. And
the first time he ever had an opportunity to accept the Lord, he did it. And so
far as I know, there is no instance in the Bible where a man has rejected God
and then, on his deathbed, turned and has been saved. So far as I know, I do
not know of any. There is something about when you say "no," there is
something about it, that your heart becomes that negation. “I do not care what
the preacher says, I am not going down that aisle. I do not care how many
people pray, I am not going to respond. I do not care how earnestly they plead
or how many times they visit in my home, I am not going to respond.” “And God
sends a strong delusion, that they might be damned who receive not the truth.” You
become that, you are that, and you die that way. As the eleventh chapter of the
Ecclesiastes says, "As the tree falls, so shall it lie" [Ecclesiastes
11:3].
Oh these
things, they are awful. The damnation and the judgment and the condemnation of
God upon men who refuse Christ, it is awful to contemplate: forever and ever,
and always and forever, and in unending eons of eternity, always and forever in
torment, in darkness, in loneliness. “Is that not funny? Do not you be
disturbed, Preacher. If I go down to perdition and damnation, most of the world
will be there with me.” Is that not a strange thing? The Bible's picture of
perdition is not that you are in the crowd; you are by yourself, you are alone,
you are in darkness, you are not going to have a frivolous, tripping, like some,
good time. Brother, you are in hell, you are in torment, you are damned, you
are shut out from God, you are by yourself. There is no light there; there is
no glory there; there is no fellowship there; there is no communion there. You
are by yourself, shut out in utter darkness, forever and forever and forever
and forever. These things bow you to your knees. O God.
You know,
reading the lives of some of these Scots preachers, I came across one not long
ago. He said—he died when he was in his twenties—they were trying to get him to
spare himself, and his answer was very humble and very temporal. He said,
"How can I sleep at night when there are three thousand souls in this
village, and I know not how it is with them and God?" No wonder he spent
his life!
A fellow
went to the church to find out the secret of the young pastor's tremendous,
tremendous effect in preaching. Was not anybody there but the janitor, and he
asked the janitor, "How is it that this young man was so effective in his
preaching?"
And the
janitor said, "Why, I can show you easily." He said, "You come with
me."
And he
followed the janitor to the pastor's little cubbyhole of a study. He said,
"That is his chair. Sit down in it." And the visitor sat down in the
preacher's chair. He said, "Now that is his desk." He said, "Put
your hands on it." He put his hands on it. He said, "Put your face in
your hands." The visitor put his face in his hands. He said, "Now
weep." He took him to the auditorium. He said, "Mount up into the
pulpit." And he mounted in the pulpit. He said, "Now stand there
behind the sacred desk." And he stood there behind the sacred desk. And he
said, "Now cover your face with your hands and weep." That is the
fellow who said, "How can I sleep when there are three thousand souls in
this village, and I know not how it is between them and God?"
I say of me—not
speaking of you, of me—that I act as though this message were a travesty. Where
is the blood-red earnestness? “Man, if you reject this appeal, you are lost. And
if you continue to reject this appeal, God will confirm you in that rejection. Your
heart becomes insensible, your soul is callous, your life is dragged down, you
are lost, and you will die that way, barring the miraculous intervention of
God.” Oh, oh, oh, let us pray.
Our saving
Lord, the same blessed Jesus who took up into His arms the little children as
lambs and blessed them, that same loving Lord is the One who taught us almost
all that we know of the fires of damnation, of the awful day of judgment, He
was the one who wept looking over a lost city, "Oh, how oft would I have gathered
thy children together, as a hen gathereth her brood under her wing, and you
would not! Behold, your house is left unto you desolate" [Matthew 23:37, 38]. No other way, no other hope, no other truth. Our salvation lies in Thee, O
Jesus.
Then, Lord, why cannot I preach like it? Why cannot I persuade like it? Why
could people come to these services and go out these doors lost, "No, I
will not"? O merciful and compassionate God our Father, intervene tonight.
Stand in the way of a man's headlong plunge into that final death and judgment,
and turn him around; may he come in faith to Thee. We pray in Jesus' name. Amen.
While we sing this song of appeal, would you turn tonight and, in simple
and humble faith and trust, come to Jesus? Would you? Would you? You may not
understand it at all; I surely don’t. But no small part of the glory of being a
Christian is its continual unfolding and revelation. Even the angels looking to
it, desiring to understand it, and they cannot. How much less could a man?
But I know enough to know that Jesus died for me. I know enough to know
that He has saved other people. Did you have a Christian mother? Did you know a
Christian father? Have you seen a Christian mother or father? Have you seen
godly people? Let them be a testimony what God can do for you. What He has done
for somebody else, He can do for you and will. In simple faith, “Not that I
know it all or understand it all or can explain it all, but I know enough to
know that Jesus died for me. And I can be saved by a look at the crucified one.”
There is life for a look, for thee. Would you look tonight and be saved? Would
you?
In this balcony around, in this lower floor, into this aisle and down
here to the front, "Here I am and here I come. By the help of God, tonight,
I look to Jesus in faith. May He save my soul from hell, may He forgive my sins,
may He take me to Himself now and forever." Would you come? Would you make
it now, while we stand and while we sing?