GUARANTEED
SECURITIES
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
Matthew
6:19
03-28-83
Guaranteed Securities. In the
Sermon on the Mount, the middle chapter, chapter 6, beginning at verse 19:
Lay not up for yourselves
treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break
through and steal:
But lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where
thieves do not break through nor steal.
For where your treasure is, there
will your heart be also.
And beginning at verse 25 in
chapter 6 of Matthew:
Therefore I say unto you, take no
thought for your life, what you shall eat or what you shall drink nor for your
body what ye shall put on.
Behold the fowls of the air: they
sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father
feedeth them.
And why take ye thought for
raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not,
neither do they spin:
And yet I say unto you, that even
Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
Wherefore, if God so clothe the
grass of the field, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?
Therefore take no thought saying:
What shall we eat? Or what shall we drink? Or wherewithal shall we be
clothed?
(For after all these things do the
heathens seek.) Your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these
things.
You seek first the kingdom of God
and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.
Take therefore no thought for the
morrow: For the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself.
Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
If you listen closely, you notice
a word that is six times used in this brief passage translated here
“thought”—”take no thought.” Could that mean that the Lord deprecates our
foresight and our anticipation and our planning ahead? Not at all. Far be it
from Him, as practical as our Lord was, to gainsay our preparation for any
exigency or any providence on any tomorrow.
For example, in the sixteenth
chapter of the third gospel, the Gospel of Luke, He tells the story of a
dishonest, unjust steward. And in the eighth verse, He says: “And the lord
commended the unjust steward because he had done wisely. For the children of
this world are in their generation wiser than the children of light.” That’s
an astonishing thing. This fellow is a scoundrel. He is a crook. He’s a
cheat and an embezzler of the first order. Yet the lord in the parable
commends him. Why? Because he was smart. He took arrangements and
providences on the morrow for his own security and his own advantage. So this
word “take no thought” cannot refer to our forethought, or our anticipation, or
our planning, or our arrangements for the morrow.
Well, then what does He mean when
He six times repeats in this brief section: “Take no thought for your life,” or
“Take no thought for raiment,” or “Take no thought for food,” or “Take no
thought for the morrow”? What does He mean by that?
Well, our problem lies in the
translation of the word merimnao. Merimna is the word for
anxiety, for perturbation, for destruction of mind. And in 1611, “thought,”
“take no thought,” “thought” referred to that. For example, when this
translation, the King James Version was made in 1611, Shakespeare was at the
height of his glory. So was Francis Bacon. Now in the Shakespearean play Julius
Caesar, he says, “Take thought and die for Caesar.” Then in the
Shakespearean Anthony and Cleopatra, Cleopatra says to Enobarbus, “What
shall we do Enobarbus?” And Enobarbus replies, “Take thought and die.”
Francis Bacon in his History of
Henry the VIII speaks of a man who, and I quote, “died with thought and
anguish before his case was heard.” An historian of the period refers in
describing Queen Catherine, the first wife of Henry the VIII, “Queen Catherine
died of thought.” To us, that’s an unthinkable thing, to die of thought. But
in 1611, the word thought referred to the anxiety and destruction of mind that
could take one’s life. So when he says, “Take no thought,” He is referring to
a cankering care, to a corroding anxiety. We are not thus to distrust our
heavenly Father in His guaranteed security for us.
Then our Lord speaks of it—the
security by which He takes care of us in this life. First, He speaks of the
tragedy of one who gives himself to a corroding anxiety when all of the lessons
of nature teach us it is unnecessary. We don’t have to be that way. God will
take care of us. And He refers to the birds of the air and to the lilies of the
field. God takes care of them, and we are far more precious in His sight, and
we are far more advantageous in our talents and in our gifts.
Said the
sparrow to the robin:
I would
really like to know
Why these
busy, anxious human beings
Run around
trusting God not so?
Said the
robin to the sparrow:
I think
that it must be
That they
have no heavenly Father
Such as
cares for you and me.
[“Overheard in and
Orchard,” Elizabeth Chaney, 1859]
Busy about our work, but without
anxiety and care, for God will take care of us. He will see us through and I
don’t need to worry. If I give myself to my task, if I work diligently and
faithfully, God will reward me and take care of me.
And He says a second thing here.
Cankering care and corroding anxiety deny the Word of God, the Revelation, the
Book of the Lord, because it makes us out to be heathen who are filled with
fear, and superstition, and dread, and foreboding. And we’re not to be like
the heathen.
One time in the heart of Africa, I
was the guest of a petty African king. He was the king of Oyo. There was a
large, very large compound, a large square with a building on all four sides.
And the first—the front part of it was where he received his guests. And then
the other three sides of that long, large compound was where his many wives
lived. I think he had something like forty. And the wives with children lived
in those large quarters back of the front of the square, the compound.
Well, when I went in and was
presented to him and was seated, I looked around. First time I had ever been
in a place like that. And to my astonishment and amazement, the room, that
front room there where he received his guests of state was filled with every
kind of a fetish that you could imagine. Some of them were hanging from the
ceiling. The walls were covered with them and the doorframes were framed by
them, a superstition and a fear beyond anything that I had ever imagined. And
I noticed in front of the compound there was a shrine, and I asked about that.
It was called the devil’s house.
I asked, “Why don’t you worship
the true God?”
And he replied, “God will be good
to me, but the devil could hurt me and so I worship the devil, because I
placate him lest he harm me: “
Such heathenism is unthinkable and
unspeakable in our lives. Every kind of a superstition is an abomination unto
God. We’re not to live in any kind of dread or fear or foreboding. We are to
live in the confidence that God will take care of us—a guaranteed security in
this life.
There’s one other thing that He
speaks here, and that is we’re not to have an anxious care, and a perturbation
of mind, and a distraction of life because of the possibility of providences
that may happen tomorrow. “Therefore take no thought, be not anxious and
disturbed for the morrow: For the morrow shall take thought for the things of
itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.” Trouble will come into
every life; it will into your life. Darkness and some disaster is a common
denominator of all mankind. You will not escape it. There will be trouble,
and sorrow, and heartache, and death that enters your life. But, we are taught
by the Lord that our anxiety and cankering care before such providences is
futile. It is coming, says the Lord. Sufficient unto any day is the evil
thereof. No life escapes it.
Do you remember in Greek
literature the story of Thetis the nymph who gave birth to a child by Jove and
called him Achilles? And Thetis the nymph took the little child, and held it
by its heels, and dipped it in the River Styx in order that Achilles might be
invulnerable and invincible. And in the Trojan War, Achilles the great warrior
slew Hector, the champion of the Trojans, and was unconquerable and
unassailable. But Paris the Trojan took an arrow, a poisoned arrow, and shot
him in the heel, where Thetis had held him by her hands and dipped him. And he
was invulnerable in every part of his body except the heels where Thetis held
him. And Achilles, the great champion of the Greeks, died by a poisoned arrow
from Paris.
Which is another way of telling
the story in the Book of Kings: Ahab puts on his armor to go into battle invulnerable,
unassailable, invincible. And the Scriptures say that a warrior drew back his
bow in a venture; that is, he didn’t aim, and let fly the arrow without aim.
And it entered a joint in the harness, in the armor of Ahab—pierced his heart, and
he fell in the bottom of the chariot there dead.
We will not escape, the Lord says,
the providences of trouble and disaster in our lives. But we are not to be
anxiously disturbed by the providences that inevitably come. God is with us,
and God will stand by us, and God will take care of us. We are His children.
We’re far more precious in His sight than all of the creatures over which He
takes care by day and by night.
Then the Lord says one other: Our
guaranteed security is not only in this life and in this world, but in the
world to come. “Lay not up for yourself treasures in earth, but lay up for
yourself treasures in heaven. For where your treasure is, there will your
heart be also.” Guaranteed securities, not only in this world and life, but in
the world and in the life to come.
It is a beautiful verse in
Colossians 3:2, “Set your affections upon things above, not on the things of
the earth.” There is no security in any of our possessions down here. Our
guaranteed security is up there where God is.
You know, when I came to Dallas in
my early thirties, when I came to Dallas there were tremendous men here in this
city. Nathan Adams was the president of the First National Bank. Bob Barton
was the president of the Mercantile National Bank. Fred Florence was the
president of the Republic Bank. Woodall Rogers, my neighbor right across the
street, was the mayor of the city. In those days the Readers Digest published
an article entitled, “The Dydamic Men of Dallas. “Dydamic,” a word that Uncle
Bob Thornton used, mispronouncing the word “dynamic” on purpose. “The Dydamic
Men of Dallas.”
When I came here in my early thirties,
it seemed to me that those men were so great and so giant, that they were
invincible and eternal. They were great men of business, of corporate life.
They built this tremendous, queenly city of Dallas. Today, there is somebody
else who owns that bank. There is somebody else who is seated in that office.
There is somebody else who is living in that house.
I am amazed when I talk to this
younger generation, they never heard of Nathan Adams, or Bob Barton, or Fred
Florence. And the only reason they recognize Woodall Rogers is because of a
freeway named for him close by the church.
Earthly
treasures are like poppies spread,
You seize
the flow’r, the bloom is shed;
Or like
the snow falls on the river,
A moment
white—then gone forever.
Or like
the borealis race
That flit
ere you can point their place;
Or like
the rainbow’s lovely form,
Vanishing
amid the storm.
[from “Tam O’Shanter,”
Robert Burns]
How temporary, and transient, and
ephemeral are earthly treasures. Our eternal securities lie up yonder with God
in heaven. Our home is not here; it’s there. Our inheritance is not here;
it’s there. And our eternal reward is not here; it is there.
So how do I get my treasures?
Through somebody who is going there. That’s why when I speak of the Lord to
the friend, the neighbor and family, it’s laying up treasures in heaven.
That’s where, if I can win them to Christ, they’re going. How do I send
treasures up there? By filling God’s book of life with works and deeds of
service to my wonderful Lord, and listening to His welcoming voice: “Well done,
thou good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of the Lord.”
In my first pastorate out of
school, there was right down the street from me, one block away, a sainted old
Baptist preacher, country preacher, all of his life, pastored little churches
in the country. I was with him when he died. He raised his arms to heaven and
said, “Is this death? This? The angels sing, the beautiful city, and the
throne of God. Oh, glory, glory, glory!” and died.
Dear people, sweet friends, here
we have no abiding place, our treasures here are effervescent, ephemeral, and
our eternal securities that can never fade are in heaven. That’s why our Lord
says, “Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven.” Eternal securities.
And our Lord, wise, and taught
from the very mouth and heart and mind of Jesus Himself, may we give ourselves
to the true great mighty, wonderful, things of God, to be rich toward Thee, and
Thy wonderful name, amen.