THE GOVERNMENT OF
GOD
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 5:30-31
4-25-71 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: The Government of God. In our preaching through the Book
of Daniel, we come to the end of an epoch, of an era. The fifth chapter of
Daniel closes with these words: “In that night was Belshazzar the king of the
Chaldeans slain. And Darius the Median took the kingdom, being about
threescore and two years old.” That is all that is said.
And the message this morning is framed in keeping with the
closing of that first great world empire. The head of gold has fallen and
never again—not in days past, nor in ages future—never again is the seat of
empire in the Mesopotamian Valley. It had been located there in Nineveh’s
Assyria, in Babylonia’s Babylon, for centuries and for centuries. But in this
little passage I just read, the aegis, the scepter, passed away forever. And
in describing it, it’s done in one verse—just one sentence!
How rapidly and how catastrophically do the great empires
pass across the horizon of history in the pages of the Bible. There is the
empire of the Hittites that have just in recent years come to light—but in the
Scriptures, the empire of the Egyptians, and the Assyrians, and the
Babylonians, and the Persians, and the Medians, and the Greeks, and the
Romans. Then in our modern day, we read of it in history and watch of it in
modern story. The kingdoms of Spain, and of Germany, and of Austria, and of
France, and of Great Britain, and of America, and of Russia, and China, and
Japan, how swiftly, how rapidly do the great courses of history move across
God’s horizon. But in it all, the Lord reigns supreme and king forever.
The sovereignty belongs to the Lord God. This is the lesson
that the Lord sought to teach Nebuchadnezzar. His madness came to the intent
that the living may “know that the most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth
it to whomsoever He will and setteth over it the lowest of men.” [Daniel 4:17] It is God who alone reigns
supreme and eternal. “Once did I hear God say, and twice have I heard it, that
power belongeth to the Lord.” [Psalm 62:11]
In the fortieth chapter of Isaiah: “In His sight all the
nations of the earth are but as a drop in the bucket.” [Isaiah 40:15] What insignificance. Out of the depth of a
well, a pail of water is drawn up. As it is lifted up, a drop falls back into
the well. How inconsequential! As the pail is poured out, a drop falls by the
wayside. How small, how inconsequential—all the nations of the world are as a
drop in the bucket or as the dust in the balance—the fine, fine dust that could
not even be weighed—the whole course of human history, in God’s sight, as the
dust in the balance.
Or as the same fortieth chapter of Isaiah describes, all of
the people are as grass. Where are the marching hosts of Shishak, and Nimrod,
and Sennacherib—of Nebuchadnezzar, and Cyrus—of Xerxes and Alexander, or the
legions of Caesar? Their very sons were born to bury them, as our sons and
daughters are born to bury us today. The great moving mass of humanity through
its centuries are like a series of fallen leaves. It is a cipher, and a
cipher, and a cipher, and a cipher, and a cipher, and a cipher, and a cipher.
And the only unit that gives significance to it is God. He alone has the
overview of all meaning and purpose in history.
Our vision is so limited, circumscribed; we see but so small
a part. In the ages of the ages, we are but so insignificant and
inconsequential a part. He doesn’t live with just one generation, but with all
the previous and succeeding generations. And He deals not only with this
world, but with the world that is to come; and with all the created hosts of
heaven and the whole infinitude of the genius of His hands! And it would be
only in the wisdom of an eternal overview such as that, that we could ever
really read the meaning of what happens—both in our lives and in the
development of history.
I could easily imagine a fly lighting on a cornice of the
great St. Paul’s cathedral in London. And as he looks around and crawls around
on the cornice, I can easily see him and hear him say: “What a miserable paltry
contemptible place this is.” For he’s not cognizant of the great overview—the
dome, and the pillars, and the vast proportions of that glorious house of God!
Have you been to New York City? Have you seen the Chrysler
Building? To me, that’s one of the most beautiful edifices in America—the
Chrysler Building. And one of the architectural monstrosities—but it’s
beautiful—of the Chrysler Building are those gargoyles on the corners. They
are grotesque. But as you look at them, they remind you of the architects in
days past who invented them and put them up there for spouts. And I can easily
imagine a fly lighting on one of those gargoyles. Then as he crawls around and
inspects it, he says: “What lack of symmetry and beauty is this? How manifestly
monstrous!” Because he’s not able to see—in a fly’s perspective—the gorgeous
rising proportion of that glorious building!
We’re that way, like flies, see so small a part, and
sometimes it’s difficult for us to fit it into the great plan and purpose of
God. But He does—the end from the beginning. And all of the sovereign
choices and decisions of God are certainly worked out through human history.
It is He, and He alone who sits as judge over all of the nations of the world.
Now, there are those who say that there is no meaning and
there is no purpose in history. It came from nowhere; it is going nowhere; it
is blind and fortuitous. There are those who say that if there ever was a God,
and if He made the universe, then He wound it up and He left it to its own
purposes; He’s retreated from the universe. And there is nothing left but what
the philosophers would call “second causes” or what the infidel would call
“blind accident.” Such is not so! The Lord reigns, and the Lord rules, and
the Lord judges the nations—Earth! And there is no such thing as a nation
denying God, blaspheming God, and continuing to live. For God is active in
human life and in the nations of the earth, and the nations that forget God
have in them the seeds of internal decay and destruction.
The same thing that we find in the life of the denomination
and of the church: Wherever there is a church that forsakes the preaching of
the gospel and the winning of souls, and gives itself to decorum, and rubric,
and ritual, God comes and takes the lamp of that church and that denomination
away. The whole history of Christendom is one story after another of the decay
and the decadence of churches and denominations.
And that same Lord God sits in judgment upon the nations of
the world. And there is no nation that lives and continues to exist that
dethrones God and blasphemes God and gives itself to a carnal and sensual
life. We have that here in the Book of Daniel. Babylon was built in carnality
and sensuality. And it died in the feast of Bel-shazzar. And it never rose
again.
Let’s don’t talk about Babylon. Let’s talk about America!
Let’s don’t talk about the great city of Mesopotamia, let’s talk about our
great city. Did you see this on the front page of the Dallas News two or three
days ago? Did you see it? The mayors gathered in New York City and
breakfasted at a residence for former narcotics addicts and visited a Brooklyn
Hospital where heroin addicts are treated with methadone, an addictive that is
relatively harmless. Mayor Lindsay of New York said it would cost millions of
dollars to rehabilitate New York’s narcotic addicts who, he said, number about
one hundred thousand.
Quote: “Mayor Lindsay said the drug problem could be the
number one problem.”
Quote: “These cities that don’t have it as bad as New York,
will have. They’ll have it tomorrow.”
The mayors walked past empty shells of buildings and vacant
lots littered with the rubble of buildings torn down to make room for federally
financed housing projects for which funds never became available. The visitors
were shocked by the sight of the devastated area. And it was Boston’s Mayor
Kevin White who had the final word—quote: “This could be the first tangible
sign of the collapse of our entire civilization.”
The judgment of Almighty God—not dead nor has He retreated,
but He holds the nations in the balance. As in my text last Sunday morning, He
weighed Babylon and its king and found it wanting. The mayor says what is
happening to New York will happen later to every city in America. New York is
the richest city, in the richest state, in the richest country that ever
lived. And it is bankrupt and faces insoluble problems! I wonder why—one
hundred thousand narcotic addicts in that one town.
And you remember when I came back from New York one time,
going up to my room, while I was undressing to get ready to go to bed, I
listened to a TV panel in New York City. And one of the panelists said there
are two hundred thousand alcoholics in New York City—helpless problem
drinkers. And then as they discussed it, another panelist said there are one
million family members in New York City that are grievously affected by the two
hundred thousand alcoholics. Mayor Lindsey says what is happening in New York
City will happen in every city in America, just a little later.
One of the strangest characteristics in God Almighty is that
to me inexplicable way that God does through the ages; He never changes—that
inexplicable way of God in raising up sinner nations to punish those who defy
His name. That’s what happened in the days of Assyria and the northern ten
tribes. Nineveh, under its king, came down and destroyed the northern kingdom,
destroyed Israel and shut up Judah like a vice. And the great prophet Isaiah
came before the Lord and asked him why. And God replied: “Assyria is the rod
of Mine anger and the staff of My indignation.” [Isaiah
10:5]
And the same thing happened again when the Babylonians came
and destroyed Judah, and Jerusalem, and Solomon’s temple. This time Habakkuk
the prophet asked God why. And the Lord replied: “These bitter and hasty
Chaldeans, I have ordained them for judgment. And I have established them for
correction.” [Habakkuk 1:12]
Don’t you think God’s dead or retreated up there in that
sky! Right now, right now, up there in that sky. The Bolshevik Muscovites,
the Russian communists, have cosmonauts fly over America. And in a rendezvous,
they’re building platforms up there. Do you think, do you suppose that America
can give itself to desecration, and drunkenness, and debauchery, and
blasphemy? He that sitteth ruler and judge of the nations will let us escape?
Why, the Lord God would have to recreate the world and apologize to Sodom and
Gomorrah, and Ninevah, and Babylon. The same God who holds the nations of the
world in the balance, the Sovereign, rules over all!
There is a kingdom that shall abide forever. It is not
America. It is not Russia. It is not China as it was not Greece, and it was
not Rome; and as it was not the Assyrians and the Babylonians, or the Hittites,
or the Egyptians. There is a kingdom that shall abide forever. It is the
kingdom of heaven, the kingdom of God. Daniel said, as he interpreted the
great image and the stone cut out without hands that smote it on the feet, and
like chaff on the threshing floor, the nations were scattered away, great
marching armies in the dust of the grave. Out came this great stone that grew,
and grew, and grew until it filled all the earth. And Daniel said that is the
kingdom of God, the dominion of heaven that abides forever and forever.
Singer, let me read you another passage. You sang this
morning about: “For Thine is the Kingdom.” And I like to hear a big bullfrog horn
like you fill his lungs full of air and its diaphragm taut, and sing it like
that. “For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever and
forever, amen!” All right, let me read you another passage; long time ago,
that sounds kind of like that here in 1 Chronicles 29:
Thine, O Lord, is
the greatness, and the power, and the glory, and the victory, and the majesty:
for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is Thine; Thine is the kingdom,
O Lord, and Thou art exalted as ruler above all.
Both riches and
honor come of Thee, Thou reignest over all; and in Thine hand is power and
might.
[1 Chronicles 29:11, 12]
The Government of God—I love to hear the choir sing this
passage:
For unto us a
child is born. Unto us a son is given. And the government shall be upon his
shoulder: And his name is called Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.
And of the
increase of his government, to establish it upon the throne of his father
David, there shall be no end, for the zeal of the Lord of hosts shall perform
it.
[Isaiah 10:6, 7]
How do you like that? I wish we could sing it and sing it
now—the kingdom of God.
Now, we’re going into an altogether different area, speaking
of the government of God, the sovereignty of the Lord Almighty. To anyone who
lives, to any thinking, rational, somebody you, when we speak of the eternal,
immutable, unimpeachable sovereignty of God, immediately questions press into
your minds. Let’s answer them according to the Bible.
Here’s the first one: then why the entrance of sin—if God is
sovereign, if God rules over all, then why the entrance of sin? The answer lies
in us. I am not free if I am not free to choose. I am an automaton if
somebody chooses for me. I am a gadget. I am a wheel. I’m a mechanical
contrivance. But if I have personality of my own and responsibility of my own,
then I must be free to choose.
Now, let me illustrate that pointedly in the lives of you
who are fathers and mothers. I speak for all of us when I say, as we watch
those little fellows come up, and they grow up and up, oh, Lord, how I wish we
could make the decisions for them. You see—I’ve been at it a long time. I’m
experienced. There’s an old head on these shoulders and I know how things
are. I’ve seen it in my own life. But that little fellow, he doesn’t know.
He hasn’t experienced it. And I would to God that I could make the decisions
for the little fellow as he comes up, and up, and up. But if I keep doing
that, he will never stand on his own. He’ll never mature. He’ll be an
emotional sick cripple all of his life, leaning on his mother or leaning on his
father.
There has to come a time when he has the privilege of making
his own mistakes. And we who are parents can see it. Sometimes we weep over
it, and sometimes find our heart broken by it. But if the child is ever to
become a man or a woman, the lad, the lass, must be free to make his or her own
mistakes, to choose. That’s exactly what God has done with us. We are
persons, just as God is. And we can choose. That’s why sin came into the
world. We choose to do wrong. It’s a part of our being free.
Second, if God is sovereign, then why does He visit on
children the sins of the fathers, the successive generations? They bear the
hurt of these who have preceded them. Why that? Why does God do that? That
is because of our personalities again. We are responsible people. And they
measure, and the burden of that responsibility becomes increasingly apparent as
I see what I am reflected of in the life of a child and what you are reflected
in the homes and lives of your families. Oh, Lord, how it makes you pause. That’s
why the baby is born so helpless. That’s why the period of infancy in the
human species is longer than for any other kind—in order to cultivate us and to
teach us responsibility. This child is in my image, a part of me, soul, mind,
looks. The child is in my image, as I am in the image of God. And these years
of feeding, and nursing, and caring, bring that responsibility to my soul, here
again, I am free. I can dash it and destroy it and deface it.
I often think—talking about Nebuchadnezzar—about one of
those bricks. Nebuchadnezzar had a habit of putting his name in every brick
that was made in Babylon. They’ve got them over there by the millions, bricks
with Nebuchadnezzar’s name in them. Well, here is a brick—and it’s in the
British Museum—here is a brick, and it has the image and name of Nebuchadnezzar
impressed in it. And while it was soft and malleable, a dog stepped on it.
And that brick in the British Museum has the image and the name of the great
king and a dog’s track on it. That’s exactly what has happened to us. The
image is broken and defaced. But that’s a part of our human responsibility and
freedom.
If God is sovereign and He reigns over all, then why do
children die? These little innocent ones—why do innocents die? Why do
children die if God is sovereign? That is a part of the blight of this fallen
race. It touches not only the flower and the fruit, but the bud. All humanism
is alike—all of it! It makes light of sin. Sin, to the humanist, is the drag
of our evolutionary ancestors. Sin, to the humanist, is just a stumbling
upward. It is a slight thing. But not in the Bible: In the word of God, sin
is an awesome curse. If sin is slight, a pebble, then He that could heal is a
slight Physician and Savior, the Lord Jesus. But if sin is an awesome and
damnable thing that curses the race, then He who could deliver us from it is
nothing but God Himself. And however the humanist may present sin, slight, a
peccadillo, a pebble, the Word of God presents it as an eternal death. And
it’s here, and it’s here, and it’s here; and we see it most poignantly as it
strikes in a broken family.
And the suffering of the righteous: If God is sovereign, why
should the righteous suffer? And we always have a habit of putting the other
side to that question: “And why do the wicked prosper?” God’s people suffer
and the wicked people prosper and live in felicity. First of all, may I take a
moment to point out: You be careful in judging that. For God’s Word says the
way of the transgressor is h-a-r-d—“hard.” And I can spell that in many ways.
The way of the transgressor is h-e-l-l. God says that! The way of the
transgressor is hard.
I grant you, there was a time when I looked upon people, and
there they are, and there they are, affluent and rich, sometimes famous. And,
seemingly, so happy, but they are as vile in their lives. Then I think how
happy they are and how blessed they are and how felicitous their days. Then,
as I became pastor of this church, and came to know some of those people intimately,
there is no exception to it. If there is an exception to it, then God doesn’t
live. A man cannot live in sin, and in gross carnality, and in rejection of
God, and in unbelief, and in atheism and be happy. He cannot! Inside of that
man is a misery that is unspeakable. That goes for the whole human race.
When carnality, and sensuality, and debauchery, and atheism,
and rejection swept over France in the 1700s, it swept over England in the same
century. But there were two different ways. Robespierre bathed France in a
godless bloodbath. And John Wesley to preach and Charles Wesley to
sing—brought England to a great revival to the feet of God. Don’t you persuade
yourself that the wicked, prosper. Their way is hard.
“But, God’s people suffer!” One: We don’t see it all. Our
vision is so limited. Let me illustrate that from the Book. Do you remember
when the sons of Jacob came to their father, and they laid before him Joseph’s
a coat of many colors? They sold the boy to the Ishmaelites, who took him down
into Egypt and auctioned him off on a slave block. But in order to hide their
monstrous crime, they took Joseph’s coat of many colors and dipped it in the blood
of a goat, of a kid. They laid it before Israel and said: “Is not this the coat
of your son Joseph? Is this not the coat of the many colors? Look at the
stains of blood. Something terrible has happened to him.”
[Jacob] picked up the bloodstained coat and said: “This is
my son’s coat. And my son is dead. I’ll go down to my grave in sorrow.” And
then he added a sentence. Do you remember that sentence? “All of these things
are against me. All of these things are against me,” said Israel in his grief.
[Genesis 38] All right, let me turn the
page of the Bible. Do you remember what Joseph said to his brethren when they
came and they were saved and spared out of a devastating famine? Do you
remember what Joseph said? “God meant it for good.” Isn’t that what the Book
says? “God meant it for good.” [Genesis 50:20]
All these tragedies that overwhelm us temporally, in a short
view they seem so tragic and so awesome. But God in His great overview, God
means it for good. “It is good for me,” said the Psalmist, “that I have been
afflicted.” [Psalm 119:71] Paul started
in a place that the Lord refused to move saying: “My grace is sufficient for
thee.” Led Paul to say: “Therefore, I take pleasure in reproaches and
infirmities and in necessity, for when I am weak (when I am bowed under the
heavy hand of God), then am I strong.” [2
Corinthians 12:9, 10]
Now, I summarize this third part of the sermon. I have but
a moment left. The sovereignty of God, the government of God: First, He takes
the deeds of evil men and He turns it to His glory. Don’t you be upset, don’t
you be filled with anxiety about evil men, God takes their deeds and He turns
it to His glory. You have a verse here in Simon Peter’s sermon at Pentecost
that is astonishing: “Him (Jesus) Him, being delivered by the determinate
council and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have
crucified and slain.” [Acts 2:23]
The most dastardly deed that any power or government or
rulers of men ever did, take the gentle Jesus and crucify Him. But Simon Peter
says that happened according to the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of
God. The Lord knew all about it, and He turned that tragic hour to the saving
of the world; the sovereignty of God
Second, the immutability of God; the unchanging God does not
preach, or speak, or prove, or present His retreat from the earth. But rather
it confirms our confidence and our assurance in Him. What God says we can
stand by and on forever, for God is unvarying and unchangeable. He is
immutable and unimpeachable. Why, bless you, look. Think! The dignity of
God’s laws speak of the marvelous confidence we can have in Him. What if the
sea was sometime liquid and sometime solid? What if things sometimes fell up,
and sometimes fell down, and sometimes fell to the side? What if winter and
summer were irregular and you couldn’t tell when the seasons might come? The
fixedness of God’s immutable laws speaks of the immutability of God. We have
confidence in Him. That’s the Lord. He rides in the trickle of the little
stream as well as on the bosom of the great sea. He’s in the atom as He is in
the fixed star. He’s today as He was yesterday and forever. We can have
confidence and assurance in God.
And last, the purpose of God, in all time and tide of
history, is that better thing for us. God hath given us the kingdom. And all
that happens, all of it—every headline of every paper, every page of every
history, every incident in your life and in the development of the world—all of
it is for you, getting ready for that great glorious consummation of the age
when we shall inherit the kingdom. Look at that a second.
Paul says in the eighth chapter of Romans: “For we have not
inherited, received the spirit of fear…” and cringing, and cowardness, as
though what happens in history, and what happens in death, and what happens in
life bring stark, paralyzing terror to us. We have not received the spirit of
fear. Not we. “But we have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry,
“Abba (Abba—Father)… And if we are sons, then we are joint heirs with Christ.”
[Romans 8:15, 17]
What does that mean? When you get to glory, when you walk
down those golden streets, and when you appear before the Judge of all the
earth, shall it be that you appear before God like a forgiven criminal who
barely is tolerated in the presence of the judge who sentenced him? Will that
be the way it is, or shall it be when we stand before the Judge of all the
earth it will be as a son received by the Father? Which one? A criminal, the
judge tolerates, or a son, washed, cleansed, reconciled, forgiven, adopted and
welcomed into the household of the king—that’s what God proposes for us! Oh,
dear fellow traveler, lift up your heads; raise your eyes and look to heaven.
It is glory, glory, glory every step of the way!
We must sing our song of appeal; and while we sing it, a
family, a couple, or just you to give your heart to Jesus and put your life
with us in the fellowship of our dear church. In the balcony you, on this
lower floor, you make the decision now. In a moment when you come, come
believing that God will see you through. He’ll open the door. He’ll welcome
you and receive you. In Christ He died for us. He bids us come. God invites
us. Answer with your life, “Here I am, Lord. I’m coming.” Down one of these
stairways, into the aisle, down to the front, “Pastor, I’m giving you my hand.
I’m giving my heart to the Lord. I don’t have all the answers but He does. I
don’t see the end of the way. He sees it and I’ll trust Him for a victory.”
Come. Come. Come. While we stand and while we sing.