ANGELS AND LIONS
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 6:16-24
5-16-71 10:50 a.m.
On the radio and on television, you are sharing
with us the services of the First Baptist Church of Dallas. The title of the
message today is Angels and Lions. In our preaching through the Book of
Daniel, we are in chapter 6. There will be one more message delivered next
Sunday morning then the long series will stop for a while. When we come to
Daniel chapter 7, we enter an altogether different portion of the book. We
even enter another language. We go back into Hebrew from Aramaic when we come
to chapter 7. So the sermon next Sunday morning will close this series on the
Book of Daniel. The message today is an exposition of verses 11 through 23 in
the sixth chapter of the Book.
First of all we look at the deceived Darius, who
finds himself in a den of his own; a den of dilemma and agonizing frustration.
He has signed and sealed a decree that no one in his kingdom can pray or make
appeal to any god except to him. And if anyone is found who violates that law,
he is to be cast into a den of lions. So this Daniel is found, as he did
aforetime, praying to the true Jehovah Lord of heaven. And verse 11 begins
with that open, unashamed commitment of Daniel to his God:
The
men assembled, found out Daniel praying and making supplication before God.
Then
they came near, and spoke before the king concerning the king’s decree, and
they said, Didn’t you sign the decree, that any man that should ask a petition
of God or man for thirty days, save of thee, O king, shall be cast into the den
of lions?
And the king had to
answer, "Yes, yes, the thing is true, according to the law of the Medes
and Persian, which altereth not." Then they drive home their covert
scheme:
Then
answered they and said before the king, This Daniel, which is of the captivity
of Judah, regardeth not thee, O king, nor the decree which though hast signed,
but he makes his petition, to his God, three times every day.
Then the
king, when he heard these words, was sore displeased with himself.
What a change! The day before, he had attained
the giddiest heights of his ambition. He was declared a god; he was deified
before the Medes, the Persians, and the Babylonians. And now he’s a dupe; his
courtiers have made a fool of him. They have made him look ridiculous. Isn’t
that a portrayal of our humanity? From god down to dupe, falling in a trap set
for us by our archenemy and adversary. You have just one more illustration
here in the king of our awesome and total apostasy. We are a fallen people, all
of us! Our minds, our hearts, our thoughts, our visions, our dreams, our
ambitions; everything about us is fallen. We are apostate and lost. If such a
postulate were presented in a book, we might argue against it with vehemence,
but our problem lies in the bitterness of our own experience. There’s nobody
under the sound of this pastor’s voice, but finds places in his life of which
he is abysmally ashamed.
There is no more dramatic story in the Bible than
the story of the Lord God sending Elisha to anoint Hazael, king over Syria.
And after the anointing of Hazael, Elisha the prophet looks at him, and looks
at him, and looks at him. And as he looks at him, the prophet begins to weep.
And Hazael, answering Elisha says, “Why does my Lord weep?” And Elisha replies,
“For I see what thou shalt do to Israel.” Then he describes it. And after the
description, Hazael answers Elisha and says, “But my Lord, is thy servant a
dog, that he should do such a thing?” But he did it. He did it. And all of
us do. [2 Kings 8: 10-15]
There is no one of us but that finds himself
entrapped. We are dupes. We are fallen. We are apostatized. We are
depraved. We are sinners. We are lost; all of us. So this Darius; at heart,
one of the finest noblemen and monarchs, but he is a prey of those who seek to
snare his feet. And he finds himself in the pit, in the den; agonizingly,
frustratingly so:
Then the
king, when he heard these words, was sore displeased with himself.
—and all
of us have those experiences in life—
And he
found himself sore displeased with himself, and he set his heart on Daniel to
deliver him:
and he
labored till the going down of the sun to deliver him.
[Daniel 6:14]
But these men were constitutional
lawyers. They were impeccable; they knew that law to the letter.
The Book says, “the letter killeth, it is the spirit
that maketh alive.” And all through our courts of justice will you find shrewd
lawyers, driving home the letter and violating the intent and spirit of the
constitutional framers who sought to deliver us from such mechanisms. These
men are shrewd and constitutional; they are impeccable, unassailable. And they
say, when the king tries to deliver Daniel, “Know, O King, that the law of the
Medes and Persians altereth not. No decree nor statute which the king
establisheth may be changed.”
Here it is, written and signed and sealed. You
couldn’t help but pause before a thing like that. Why should the king have
done such stupidity? Well, trying to explain the situation, maybe it was
because they thought that it would give the monarch pause before he made a
decree if he realized that it couldn’t be changed. Certainly, it could have
been a blessing to the people because it delivered them from constant change.
What was done, they could count on and live by. But there is also a thing in
this that is so true of a man. That debatable pride that makes him carry
through a wrong action, just because he has sworn it or taken an oath to do it.
You have an identical instance of that in Herod
Antipas. When Salome danced before the king, he was so enamored with it, he
was so delighted, he was so pleased that he said, “I’ll give you anything to
the half of my kingdom.” And Herodias, her mother said, “Ask for the head of
John the Baptist.” And when Herod heard that request, he was grieved. He had
great respect for the noble prophet, John. But for his oath’s sake and for the
men who were around him, he gave commandment and the executioner chopped off
the head of the Baptist.
That isn’t strange in human nature until recent
days. Until recent days, no officer in the army and no nobleman could live
with himself if he refused to accept the challenge to a duel. Alexander
Hamilton, one of the most brilliant men of America—the first secretary of the
treasury under George Washington—the man who so largely through his federalist
papers, created the government, the constitutional government of America; he
was killed in a duel by the unspeakable Aaron Burr. Isn’t that a strange
thing? That streak in men, in pride to do wrong rather than lose face? There
are whole nations like that: go to war, go to any extremity rather than lose
face.
So Darius, as the lawyers stood before him and
drove home that constitutional point, the letter of the law, the king bowed in
acquiescence. Displeased with himself, set his heart to deliver Daniel, couldn’t
do it. Then the king commanded and they brought Daniel and cast him into the
den of lions. And a stone was brought and laid upon the mouth of the den and
the king sealed it with his own signet, with the signet of lords that the
purpose might not be changed. But he did one other thing, God bless him, “Now
the king spake and said unto Daniel, Thy God whom thou servest continually, He
will deliver thee.”
Isn’t that something? This heathen monarch is
turned preacher, and comforter, and exhorter. “Daniel, thy God whom thou
servest continually, He will deliver thee.” Ah, isn’t it great that a heathen
king stand on tiptoe to see the dawn of the gospel? “Thy God will deliver
thee.” His heart is in every syllable: “Thy God, personal Lord, whom thou
servest continually.” What an impact and what an impression did Daniel make
upon that heathen king, “Whom thou servest continually.” He was so persuaded,
the king was, that the Lord God of Daniel could not but deliver, so faithful,
and so noble, and so steadfast a servant.
I wonder what kind of impression that we make upon
people? I imagine as they look upon us, and our commitment to God, they think
we’re poor pickings even for the lions.
So they take Daniel and they cast him into the
dungeon. This is exactly as the shrewd, clandestine courtiers thought it would
come to pass, exactly! Daniel refused to change his habits of worship. He
refused to change his praying to God. He refused to close his windows, open
toward Jerusalem. And he refused to obey the decree that would separate him
from the Lord God in heaven.
And I can see the old man. He’s over ninety years
of age, now. I can see the old man—with his hair so white, in dignity and calm
self-assurance—I can see the old man under the decree of death. I can see him
in state and in dignity, walk into the den and the dungeon. Can’t you? Can’t
you?
The man who fears God only, need fear none else!
And with that same spirit of martyrdom, that was the admiration and the rage of
the Roman world, persecuting the Christians. So Daniel walked in the den with
the lions.
And the Lord God sent an angel and shut the lions’
mouths and Daniel spent the night in quiet rest. Why, Daniel was more at rest
in the den of lions than Darius was in the palace with all its comforts and
luxuries; for is not the night for rest? In the day we work; at night we
rest. In the day we are abroad, at night we are at home. The day, God fills
with light and with stimulated activity. But the night God hushes the sounds. And
He stops the song of the birds. And He draws the curtains of tenderest, soft
darkness. And He says, “Hush.” And in the one hundred twenty-seventh Psalm
avows, “He gives His beloved sleep” [Psalm
127:2]
And the Lord God not only sent an angel to watch
over Daniel, they also whispered into the ears of those savage and ravenous and
carnivorous beasts. He said, “Listen, one of My servants is coming down to
spend the night with you. Receive him cordially and hospitably; make him
comfortable. Hurt not a hair of his head. And lay your shaggy mane that he
might use it for a pillow.
At the end of this chapter these lions ravenously
destroy the enemies of Daniel, but Daniel they watch over, and care for, and
guard, and keep. The angels and the lions, angels and lions: and I can just
see Daniel as he lays his head upon the shaggy mane of one of those giant kings
of the forest. And he sings a lullaby as he goes to sleep:
Angels
and lions a watchin' over me.
Angels
and lions a watchin' over me
Angels
and lions, watchin' over me.
[from "Angels
Watches over Me"; African-American Spiritual]
And God’s servant is
asleep.
I can’t help but think of Simon Peter in the
twelfth chapter of the Book of Acts. Herod Agrippa I had cut off the head of
James the brother of John, the disciple. And because he saw that it pleased
the leaders in Jerusalem, he arrested Simon Peter, put him in that iron prison
to execute him the next day. Then follows the story of the angel coming down
and knocking off the manacles and the chains and the stocks that incarcerated
Simon Peter, opened by itself, the great iron door, and let him out into the
street and set him free. When the angel came down to liberate Simon Peter,
what was Simon Peter doing? Do you remember? He was sound asleep between
those two guards, chained—sound asleep. And so sound was he asleep, that the
Book says that the angel came and smote him and said: “Wake up, Simon! Don’t
you know you’re going to have your head cut off in the morning? Wake up!”
"Angels and lions a watchin' over me," and
he fell asleep in the love and confidence and guardian, shepherdly care of the
Lord. Now I call that real preaching! All of you in the choir, that think so
say, “Amen!” [RESPONSE: "AMEN!"] All you staff members that think so
say, "Amen!" [RESPONSE: "AMEN!"] That’s right! Oh, dear, “my
God hath sent His angel and shut the lions’ mouth.”
Well, this is a type and a figure of all of our
lives. We all are in some den of lions. And I’m not speaking of stuffed
animals that have the name and not the nature. The trials of a Christian are
not sentimental; they are real. The way is never and always silken and smooth
and soft; it is sometime hard and rigorous. We ought never to speak to
youngsters and young people as though the Christian life were nothing but a
primrose path and a bed of roses; it is sometimes difficult. The writing has
been signed against us and the progress of the Christian is always through
antagonism, and trial, and temptation.
That song:
Am I a
soldier of the cross,
A
follower of the Lamb,
Must I
be carried to the skies
On
flowery beds of ease.
While
others fought to win the prize
And
sailed through bloody seas?
Sure, I
must fight if I would reign;
Increase
my courage, Lord.
[“Am I a Soldier of the
Cross,” by Isaac Watts, 1740]
That is the Christian way. All of us find ourselves
in some den of lions. Here in the Book of Daniel, in the first chapter, he’s
battling with drink. In the second chapter he is to be liquidated. In the fourth
and the fifth chapters, he takes his life in his hands, speaking bluntly and
truthfully, delivering God’s message to the king. In the third chapter, his
friends have been thrown in the fiery furnace. And in the sixth chapter—in all
six of them, it’s just the same—here he is in a dungeon of lions. That is the
Christian faith.
If Abraham is called to go out, he moves, not
knowing whither he goes; take his whole family with him, not knowing where he’s
going. When Moses is called, he leads his children through a wilderness of
burning furnace. And when Elijah stands before Jezebel and Ahab, not to speak
of the seven thousand whose names are not chronicled, but whose names are in
heaven. When the apostle Paul wrote, “Yea, all who would live godly in Christ
Jesus shall suffer trial, persecution.” The apostle, the Lord’s brother James,
the brother of the Lord starts his epistles with Christians that fall into
heavy trial. It is for all of us; we all face the lions, we are in some den.
The whole world is that way. They also, out in
the world face trial and trouble and lions, but there is a difference between
them and us. And the difference is found, and it lies in the possession of the
presence of God. He makes the difference. You go behind the Christian’s back
to stab him, and God is behind his back. You go in front of him to ambush him,
and God is in front of him. You waylay him by the side of the road, and God’s
on his right hand and God’s on his left hand. As the apostle Paul said in the
twenty-seventh chapter of Acts, in that awesome storm that wrecked the ship, he
said: “For there stood by me this night the angel of God” [Acts 27:23]. As he wrote in the Mamertine
Dungeon, in the fourth chapter of his last letter, the second letter to
Timothy, he said, “When I stood before the court, no man stood by me. But the
Lord stood by me and delivered me out of the mouth of the lions” [2 Timothy 4:17]. It’s God that makes the
difference.
But immediately when we read this story, the
question cannot but come to our minds: what if the lions had eaten him up?
What if they had broken his bones and shredded his body? What if the lions had
devoured him? He still would have lost—he still would’ve won! He couldn’t
lose. He still would have triumphed!
It may be God’s will that he died. It could be
God’s will that he will be delivered. But the important thing is not the
deliverance or the death, the important thing is God’s will. It may be God’s
will that the servant die. God did not deliver John the Baptist; they cut off
his head and he lay in a pool of his own blood. It was not God’s will that
Jesus be delivered; they nailed Him to the cross. It was not God’s will that
James, the brother of John be delivered; Herod Agrippa cut off his head. It
was not God’s will for Stephen to be delivered; they beat his life with stones
into the dust of the ground. It was not God’s will that Paul be ultimately
delivered; the executioner on the Ostian Road outside Rome cut off his head.
Because he was a Roman Christian—because he was a Roman citizen, he could not
be crucified. But by the side of the apostle Paul there was a throng of them
crucified.
Some of us in a few days will be looking at the
great Coliseum in Rome. When you go in that Coliseum and look down, remember
that in that place there were thousands and thousands of Christians that were
fed to the lions. Sometimes, it is not God’s will that the Christian be
delivered. But this is God’s will: that for us there is a triumph and a
victory—via crucis, via lucis!
The way of the cross is the way of life. The Christian is never
defeated.
Down is up to the Christian, and black is bright,
and light, and glory. “Well,” you say, “John the Baptist with his head severed;
is not that a disaster?” A disaster? No! It was his entre, and his introduction,
and his presentation in glory; he went to heaven, just like that. Why, you
might as well speak of a man who strikes a ship by casting it into the waters.
He just launches it! But the ship, though it is made on the land, is built for
the sea. And the child of the Christian is not at home until he is in heaven;
that is the Christian home.
I am a
stranger here,
Heaven
is my home;
Earth is
a desert drear,
Heaven
is my home;
Sorrows
and dangers stand
Round me
on every hand;
Heaven
is my fatherland,
Heaven
is my home.
[“I’m But a Stranger
Here,” by Thomas R. Taylor]
And had he lost his life, the angels would have
carried his soul to Abraham’s bosom. Doesn’t the Book say so? If it’s God’s
will for us to live we are delivered, as the three Hebrew children and as
Daniel. If it is not God’s will we are brought up to be with the Lord in
glory, as Stephen, as Antipas, an unknown martyr in Pergamos in the second
chapter of the Revelation. But whether it is to live—we’re under the guardian,
shepherdly, loving care of God; or whether it is to die—the angels watch over
us to bear us on snowy wings to glory:
Oh, come
angel band come and around me stand.
Oh, bear
me away on your snowy wings to my immortal home.
[“My Latest Sun is Sinking
Fast”; Jefferson Hascall, 1860]
“Angels and lions are watching over me,” in the
purpose and will of God for our lives; hid with Christ in the Lord; kept
forever by His omnipotent hand; doing His will in His holy purpose for us as He
shall choose, as God’s best, His purpose for us.
In this moment that we sing our song of appeal, a
family you, a couple you, or one you; there’s a stairway to the right, to the
left, at the front and at the back. There’s time and to spare. If you’re
seated on the topmost row, make the decision now and come. On this lower
floor, into the aisle and down here to the front, “Here I am, pastor, I decide for
God and here I come.”
No greater decision could you ever make than to
offer your life to the keeping care of the Lord. Make a partner of Him in your
business. Invite Him as a guest into your home. Rear, in His love and
admonition, the children God places in your arms. It’s just a glory way; it’s
a heavenly road. Whether it leads to the valleys or over the mountaintops;
whether it is in the dark of the night or in the meridian sun, if God is with
you, it’s just God that makes the difference.
Come, come, make the decision now and come; the
family, the two, or just you. In a moment when we sing, and you stand up,
stand up coming down that stairway or into the aisle and here to the front, “Here
I am, pastor, I make it now.” Do it while we stand and while we sing.