WEIGHED
AND FOUND WANTING
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
Daniel 5:
25-28
4-18-71 10:50
a.m.
On the radio and on
television you are sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas
and this is the pastor bringing the message entitled Weighed and Found Wanting.
In our preaching through the prophet Daniel we have come to the conclusion of
the fifth chapter, chapter 5. And I read the text:
This is the writing that
was written, mene, mene, tekel, upharsin.
This is the
interpretation: mene; God hath numbered thy kingdom, and finished it.
Tekel; Thou art
weighed in the balances, and art found wanting.
Peres; Thy
kingdom is divided, and given to the Medes and the Persians.
[Daniel 5:25-28]
There is a great number,
a great number of visitors here this morning. So just to capsulate the sermons
of the last two or three Lord’s Days: the kingdom of Babylonia has been invaded
by the armies of Cyrus. And the whole earth has fallen prey to the conquering,
onrushing armies of the Medes and the Persians. Nabonidus, the king of
Babylonia, has been overthrown and conquered by Cyrus and is shut up a refugee
in the city of Borsippa.
Nabonidus had no
particular interest in politics. He was an antiquarian; He was an
archaeologist. And many of the things that have been preserved for us of those
ancient empires of antiquity before the days of Babylon, we owe to Nabonidus.
He loved to dig into the foundations of temples and there write out the kings
and the dynasties of those centuries and centuries before. He certainly was
not a great soldier. Before the genius of Cyrus, who was one of the great
generals of all time, he wilted like snow melts under a burning sun.
Now because of that, Nabonidus—most
of his time he did not even live in Babylon; he lived in Timan in Arabia—the
reigns of government, he left in the hands of his son Belshazzar, a young man.
But here again is an instance of something you see so often in life. You’ll
have a fine father and a dedicated man, but his son is profligate and sensual
and carnal and prodigal. And it was so with Belshazzar.
At the very moment that
his father was fighting for his life and for the kingdom and for the throne, at
that very moment Belshazzar has called together a thousand of his sycophantic
lords and he has introduced them into a carnal orgy. They are there with their
concubines, and they are there with their bevies of dancers, and on a raised
dais he leads them in desecration and in blasphemy. Finally sending to a
shrine somewhere in the city, where for seventy years they had kept those holy
vessels that Nebuchadnezzar had taken out of the temple of Solomon, he brings
them into the banquet hall and there blasphemes the name of the living God.
Well, as long as their
tongues were loosed with wine and it flowed freely, like streams sinking into
the sand—why, everything is just great. It’s the way life is, you know, eat,
drink, be merry. As long as it continues that’s just fine, but there is
something about life that always follows: a pattern of judgment.
And in the midst of that
orgy there appeared a hand; and the fingers of the hand wrote in the plaster on
the wall and the writing was so strange. The king followed the writing of the
hand. He turned ashen and pale. His loins were loosed. His knees knocked
together; he was literally terrified. And the great throng of orgiastic
revelers watching the eyes of the king followed them to the writing on the
wall. And they looked back at the king to find meaning and strength but he
himself was more terrified than his drunken subjects. And it was then that
they asked for a man, anywhere in the kingdom that could interpret the strange
writing on the wall.
In the apartment in the
palace lived the queen mother, apparently the daughter of Nebuchadnezzar. And
in the days of her father there had been a prophet from Judea by the name of
Daniel who had guided her father through those seven years of insanity; a
great, godly, good man. So she comes before her profligate son, thinking that
maybe that same seer from heaven might guide that profligate back into a way of
peace and righteousness.
So Daniel is sent for. He
speaks sternly, truthfully. His words are unsheathed. They are naked. Could
have cost him his life, but he’s a prophet of God and he delivers faithfully
the message of the Lord. Then after his rebuke to the king he turns to the
writing and then my text, “This is the writing that is written, mene, mene,
tekel, upharsin.”
Well, why could not the
astrologers, and why could not the magi, and why could not the enchanters and
the sorcerers and all the king’s counselors, why could not they read it?
Because the wisdom of this world can never comprehend the ways of God: never,
ever. God says the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God. Paul wrote
most succinctly, “For the natural man, in all his human wisdom, receiveth not
the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him. Neither
can he know them because they are spiritually discerned.” [1 Corinthians 2:14]
And without the
illumination of the Holy Spirit of God, no man can know the Lord, he can not.
A man by seeking cannot find God. No philosopher, no researcher, no scientist;
no man in his own ableness, or genius, or endowments can know God. It is a
spiritual revelation. So the wise men and the magi and all the counselors of
the king looked in astonishment upon those strange words—had no idea what it
meant—they don’t have any idea what anything means.
Don’t you ever persuade
yourself that the men of this world are able to explain things to us. No man
does that. All any man can ever do is just observe what God does. Which God,
if he’s not a Christian, he denies. He cannot explain anything. He just
observes it and describes it, but he can’t explain it. And so the men looked,
nonplused, blanch, stupid; as mankind in itself is apart from illumination of
God, ignorant, unlearned. Without the illumination of the Spirit of the Lord
the mind of men is darkened, and without any understanding. Those men looked.
Well as you study the
passage you know, there are speculations concerning why the magi could not
understand those words. Some say they were written in dark mysterious
hieroglyphics. There are others who say it is written in ancient Hebrew script
or the script of the Hebrew Bible, the alphabet of the Hebrew Bible and the
alphabet that modern Israel uses is the Aramaic alphabet, written in square
block letters. But that could have been written, they say, in ancient Hebrew
which was before the day when they used those Aramaic alphabetical forms.
However it was written, they could not understand it. So Daniel, God’s man,
with illumination from heaven, gives a meaning. He explains it. You see, the
man in his natural mind and eye can see it because it stayed there on the
wall. We can observe things, but what they mean comes only from God.
So Daniel gives the
meaning: “This is the interpretation, mene, mene, tekel, upharsin.” Now
when he interprets it he will say, “mene, God hath numbered thy kingdom
and finished it, mene, numbered, numbered; tekel, thou art
weighed in the balances, and art found wanting, tekel, weighed;” but the
next one, upharsin means, “divisions, upharsin”. And when he
comes down to explaining it, “peres,” he says, “thy kingdom is divided,
and given to the Medes and the Persians.” What became of that word upharsin
? Well, it’s the same word, it is the word; but you have to see how the
Hebrews will build a word. The “U” is “and”; “U”, the way the Hebrew language
makes an “and” is put a “U” there in front of it, “U”, upharsin ; so
take off the “U.” All right, let’s lop off the last syllable, “IN.” “IM”, or
“IN” is plural; like “cherub, cherubim…seraph, seraphim.” upharsin ,
that’s plural, so we’ll lop that off. Now, you have left the basic word
itself, and Hebrew is written with consonants, and usually three. So you have pe
and resh and samech, “P”, “R”, and “S”. Now in the upharsin,
the “P” is soft, pe; but when the syllables are taken away from it, the
“U”, why it becomes a hard “P”, “P.” So you have got, pe, resh, samech
peres; and that’s why it is changed from upharsin to peres.
Now do you understand that? Have I gone to all that trouble for nothing?
Leroy understands everything; he says, “Yes, Sir, I understand that now,"
my scholar. Anyway, the peres is the same as that upharsin .
“This is the
interpretation: mene, God hath numbered thy kingdom and finished it.”
Here again, and once more are we introduced to one of the great revelations of
God. There is a number, a measure and a time to everything, everything, to
you. So let’s start with you, with you, with us. “It is appointed unto men
once to die, and after that the judgment” [Hebrews
9:24]. There is a set time in which you will certainly die. There was
a set time when you were born, there is a set time when you shall certainly
die; and between those two termini there is a set number of days, and that’s
you.
That’s why the psalmist,
the prayer of Moses—the ninetieth Psalm says, “So teach us to number our days,
that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom for it is a foolish man," it is a
fool "who wastes the very substance of being,” [Psalm 90:12] of existence. You have so many days, they are
numbered. And there is an appointed time known to God when they shall cease.
I don’t care who you are, how strong you are, how well you are, where you are,
when that time comes you shall certainly die.
In the Book of the Kings
you read about Ahab. He thought to disguise himself, so he put on his armor
and over it a peasant’s rags and went into the conflict. There couldn’t be any
possibility of his not coming out alive. Yet Elijah the prophet and Micaiah
the prophet said, “You shall die.” And in the battle, as it raged an archer
pulled back the bow at a venture—that is, without aiming it—and let fly that
arrow and it entered a joint in the harness of his armor, pierced his heart and
the blood flowed out in the chariot. When that time comes you shall certainly
die [1 Kings 22:29-40]. “Thy kingdom is
numbered and finished…And in that night was Belshazzar, the king of the
Chaldeans, slain.” [Daniel 6:30]
Well, when you look at
that, you’d say, “Well is that unique, or peculiar? Is that something God does
just with us, that our lives are mathematically proportioned, set out here,
there, and those days numbered in between?” No, there is a mystery of numbers
in all God’s universe, all of it. It is put together like that, all of it.
What you see, the entire phenomenon of life, of substance, of matter, of
existence, all of it exhibits that strange creative affinity for number, all of
it. Well for example, matter: substance is a matter of numbers. There are few
elements, not very many, and God will take a few molecules of this element and
a few molecules of this one, put them together and that’ll be a substance.
Change those little molecules, just one, and it’s an altogether different
substance. And the whole world of matter is nothing but those numerical
formulae; that’s all it is.
Take the world of sound,
music. These numerical vibrations make the sound. That’s what it is. Low
sound, not so many vibrations; more vibrations, higher sound—more, more, more,
more, more, until finally it gets beyond what the ear can catch, can hear;
can’t catch them, gets so low the ear can’t catch them. Sight is like that,
color is like that. Color is nothing but mathematical numerical proportion.
When the wave length is long it’s down there where the reds are and infrared,
where you can’t even see it, the wave length is long; but up there in the
ultraviolet the wavelengths are fast and they’re short and you can’t eve see
them. But color and sight is nothing but mathematical formulation, how many?
The whole astronomical
universe is like that. You can reduce it to mathematical proportion by mass
and by motion and by distance. Why, I don’t know how many years, the
astronomers knew that Pluto, the planet Pluto was out there. Hadn’t ever seen
it, but by mathematical laws they knew it was there; then finally invented the
telescope and could see it. The whole universe is like that; it is numbered.
And we are a part of it: numbers. And those numbers are in your life and when
you come to that certain day and time, that certain number, it is appointed—you
don’t live here anymore. You’re gone, “Thy kingdom is numbered and finished.”
Well what applies to us
applies to the kingdoms of the Earth. In the second chapter of Daniel, that
tremendous fore-view, that sweep of human history, the head of gold, the
empire, didn’t last throughout even Daniel’s lifetime and it was finished. And
after that, that silver of the Medes and the Persians the two arms, and it was
finished. And after that that Greco world; it was finished. And after that
the Roman world, and it was finished. These kingdoms have their certain
numbers; and when that day ends it is finished. Isn’t that an amazing thing,
how God judges?
America, our nation, the
sinews of America are its Christian people. The great battlements of America
are its principles. And the genius of life in America lies in its dedication
to God. And when our people turn away from the Lord and give themselves to
carnality, and sensuality, and worldliness, and infidelity, and desecration,
the days are numbered. For whether we live or die lies in the imponderables of
Almighty God. He judges, as He's going to say in a moment, “Thy kingdom is
numbered, and it is finished.”
“Tekel; thou art
weighed in the balances and art found wanting”; the balance. And on this side,
God puts Himself, and His Word, and His revelation so plainly written; God puts
that revelation on this side. And on this side He puts the man, or He puts the
kingdom, or He puts the church, and He weighs it. And let’s look at what
happens. The man is weighed; on this side, God’s Law and God’s revelation, the
expectation of God; and on this side, the man. And what happens to the scale?
They go like that. The man drops, found wanting, wanting. So, from the
beginning it has been man’s goal and aim and striving to pull that up, to pull
that up. He’s so down in the scales to measure up.
Well, what does he do?
Oh, what does he do? For one thing, he gives himself to rubrics and to
rituals. He observes with exact punctiliousness all these things that pertain
to formalized religion. He’ll be baptized, and he’ll be "catacuminized,"
and he’ll be confirmed, and he’ll be consecrated, and he’ll be absolved. On
Friday he’ll wear black, and on Sunday he’ll wear white; and he’ll fast while
others are feasting; and he will observe those punctilious exactitudes of
religion down to the finest minutiae. Try to lift himself up on the scales in
the measurement of God.
Or he may be of a turn
not to observe all of those exactitudes of ceremony and rubric, so he gives
himself to moral persuasions. He is a sincere moralist, or he is a sincere
philosopher, or he is a sincere seeker after truth, or he is a sincere
researcher. When he gives himself in sincerity to the study of whatever he
feels might elevate him, might lift him up. Don’t you wish that would work?
Like Saul of Tarsus, when
he was converted he said to the king, King Agrippa II, he said, “I verily fought
within myself, but ought to do everything contrary to the name of Jesus of
Nazareth” [Acts 26:9]. Sincere, just as
sincere as he could be, but add sincerity to heresy, that doesn’t make it
orthodox. Sincerity never, ever lifts a man up. Why? Because he needs
something else, he is a fallen creature and apart from the regenerating power
of the Holy Spirit, and apart from the forgiveness, redemption, the washing,
cleansing in the blood of the Lamb, he can’t be saved. He can’t lift himself
up by himself. He’s weighed and found wanting.
I would to God that the
man could be, that he could save himself. My, my, my, my! Let him study, and
study, and study, and study, and then he’ll just study himself into the kingdom
of God. Or let him be good, good, good, good, good, and finally he’ll just be good
enough to enter the kingdom of God. Or let him save, save, save, and save, and
then finally buy himself into the kingdom of God. Or then work, work, work,
work, and finally he worked himself into the kingdom of God. Don’t you wish it
could be done like that? Well, why can’t it be done? Because the man is
fallen himself; it is not sins that damn us. We ourselves are damned by sin.
That is the state in which we are. That’s why a man doesn’t do this, and he
doesn’t do that, and he doesn’t do that, and he will commend himself. That’s
not the point: whether he does this or this or that, or doesn’t do this and
this and that; has nothing to do with it at all, for the man himself is fallen,
in a state of sin. You’re fallen in your mind. You’re fallen in your heart.
You’re fallen in your soul. You’re fallen in your thinking, your emotions, and
your actions.
“Oh, but preacher you
don’t, know me. Beginning this minute, right now, beginning this minute, from
now on I’m going to live a perfect life and commend myself to God.” Well bless
you, I wish you good luck; but you won’t get out this house until you have
fallen into some kind of an error, either in thinking, or in goal or vision, or
ambition or thought, you cannot do it. And what would you do from that back,
these back sins? There is no way for a man to come up in the measure of God
except as the Lord pulls him up. He can’t pull himself up. He can’t save
himself.
I don’t know of a better
illustration than that, than for me to come by as I do so often, and watch you
die—just watch you die. Let’s see you save yourself. “Oh preacher, you don’t
know the depths of my abilities. You don’t know the genius that’s in my
hands. And you don’t know the endowments with which I can grapple with
problems.” Well, fine, fine, I wish you marvelous success. So I just stand
there, like Chaplain Bennett does every day of his life, and he watches the
people die. They are helpless.
Oh but pastor, you don’t
understand, my mother loves me and she’s going to stand there by my side. My
father loves me, he’s going to stand there by my side. My family loves me;
they’re going to stand there by my side. And I got influential friends;
they’re going to stand there by my side.
Fine, I hope it works.
But when they all stand around you, let them join hands; all they’ll do is just
watch you die. And then, make a telephone call and say, “Let’s bury him out of
our sight, for he is corrupt.” That’s nothing but what God says. We are
corrupt. We are fallen, and there’s no man in the world that can pull that
scale up. You can’t be saved in yourself or through any genius or any love or
offering of those around you; it has to be God. That’s why the prayer of the
sinner is always in order, “God in heaven be merciful to me, a sinner. God
help me. If God doesn’t help me, I am helpless.” Weighed in the balances and
found wanting.
“Peres; thy
kingdom is divided, and given to the Medes and the Persians.” Well, how we try
to hide ourselves from that agonizing and painful judgment. And as I look
around I see the whole world doing it. Drown, drown themselves, “I can’t face
it. It is too awesome to me.” So they give themselves to—and you can just
name them off–they give themselves to frivolity, anything except to face the
judgment of God. Give themselves to amusement—why, there are people that have
to be entertained all the time; they could not conceive of existence without
some kind of entertainment. One of these city dwellers, flat-landers way out
here in the west, little old town, like I grew up in, we didn’t have a radio.
It wasn’t invented. We didn’t have any television. It wasn’t invented.
That’s why, little Chris, when he was a little kid at the dinner table asked
me, he said, “Daddy, did you know Noah?” He asked me that. We never had any
automobiles, didn’t have any roads to run them on. We never had anything.
Well it was a community like that. And this flat-lander out there, no radio,
no television, no anything, this flat-lander said, “What do you do? I would just
die!" Isn’t that strange?
To this day, I don’t need
to be entertained. I can have the best time you ever saw in your life, just me
and God and the Bible, or a marvelous book, or just talking to the Lord, and
thinking about the things of Jesus. I don’t need to be entertained. You don’t
need entertain me. I can just live fully, fulsomely without it. But that’s
not this modern world. What they’re doing, they’re drowning themselves in it.
And then there are those, they couldn’t even carry on a good conversation
without drugs of some kind, liquid pot, called “liquor”, marijuana, drugs.
Why, the whole earth is kind of like that: rather than face the inevitable
they drown themselves, they hide their faces from it.
Well, here’s Belshazzar,
isn’t that exactly what he was doing? His father defeated and shut up in Borsippa,
and those great walls of Babylon on every side, surrounded by the encampments
and the battalions of the armies of Cyrus, “Let’s drown it in wine and
desecration and blasphemy; let’s forget it.”
That night, I’m just
following the Book—that night noiselessly, silently, those conspirators
gathered while that banquet was going on, while that orgy was at its height.
They noiselessly gave a signal. And at a signal, the great brazen leaves of
the giant unassailable, invincible doors, gates of Babylon were thrown open
wide and the armies of Cyrus marched in. And at that same signal, certain of
those conspirators, seized the royal palace. “And that night was Belshazzar,
the king of the Chaldeans, slain.”
Heroditus, who visited
that city seventy years later, said that Cyrus entered it by turning the course
of the Euphrates River. But commentators from the beginning have always felt
that Babylon really fell by treachery, by defection. And in these recent years
they have discovered what they call the “cylinder of Cyrus” the great big
thing, and Cyrus recounts how he took Babylon. And it is exactly as it is here
in the Bible, exactly. In the revelry and the orgy of Belshazzar, conspirators
open the gates and Cyrus marched in and took the kingdom without a battle. And
that glorious head of gold finds it's inglorious and debauched end.
What does the ninth Psalm
and the seventeenth verse say? It says, “The wicked shall be turned into hell,
and all the nations that forget God.” How infinitely better just to face God
honestly, openly. As the Scriptures say, “Him before whose eyes all of us are
naked,” [Hebrews 4:13] all of us; just
stand before God whose eyes search our souls. Say:
Lord, you know all about
me. Master, in love and mercy remember me. Forgiveness, Lord, and
understanding, sympathy, Master and redemption; my heart needs Thee, Lord. Nor
can I live without Thee. And here I come, Master, I bow in Thy presence, both
knees; and I humble my soul, Lord, before Thee, and ask that God shall extend
His golden scepter and touch me that I might live.
Would you do that today,
would you? In a moment we’re going to stand and sing our hymn of appeal, and
while we sing it, a family you, a couple you, or just you. In this balcony
round, there’s a stairway at the back and front, and on either side, down that
stairway and here to the front, “Here I come.” On this lower floor, into the
aisle and down here to the front, “Here I am, pastor. I choose today. I’ve
decided for Christ, and here I come.” Do it now. Make the decision now. On
the first note of the first stanza, standing, come. God bless and keep and
strengthen you in the way as you come and as we stand and sing.