BUT SATAN HINDERED US
Dr. W. A. Criswell
12-15-57
1 Thessalonians 2:18
You are sharing with us the services of
the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the Pastor, bringing the
morning message from a text in the second chapter of the 1 Thessalonians
letter, the seventeenth and the eighteenth verses:
But we, brethren, being taken from you
for a short time in presence, not in heart, endeavored the more abundantly to
see your face with great desire.
Wherefore we would have come unto you,
even I Paul, once and again; but Satan hindered us.
And,
the text is the title of the sermon: But Satan Hindered Us.
The inability of Paul to visit his new
Christians and the new church at Thessalonica was not because of a lack of
desire. The church, even though it was new, and the converts, even though
they had just been saved, were very dear to the heart of the apostle. He
prayed to visit them. In the next chapter, he says, “For your sakes
before our God; night and day praying exceedingly that we might see your
face.”
He wanted, he wished, he longed to visit
them. It was not from any lack of desire that he could not go and did not
go. Nor was it because of any providential interdiction from
heaven. In the sixteenth chapter of the Book of Acts, it says, “And we
were forbidden of the Holy Spirit to preach the Word in Asia.” And, a
little further along it says, “And when we assayed to go into Bithynia, the
Holy Ghost forbade us.”
But, it does not say that here.
Any desire, any assaying to visit the dear people in Thessalonica was not
interdicted by any providence, any special word, any special prohibition from
God.
But, Paul does say that the reason for
his inability to visit the people—to see their face, though he prayed night and
day that he might visit them—he does say that he was hindered by Satan: “But
Satan hindered us.”
I do not know what it was. Was it
persecution there in Thessalonica, and the people who led it said to Paul, “We
just dare you to return. We'll feed you to the lions. We'll crucify
you. We'll throw you into a boiling cauldron of oil. We will
incarcerate you in a dungeon, in a dark prison?” I do not know.
“But Satan hindered us.”
Was it because of the problems in the
church at Corinth,where he was laboring and from which city he wrote this
letter? The church was filled with divisions and racked with
philosophical heresies. Was that the way Satan hindered him and he
couldn't leave Corinth?
Was it because of other things that you
could name or you could think of? Was he sick? Was he unable to
attend? Had Satan struck him down? We do not know.
But, he does say, “Wherefore we would
have come unto you, even I Paul, once and again; but Satan hindered us.”
There, whatever it was, is the prince of all evil, interdicting the prayers and
the desires and the longing of the apostle of God. Here is the master of
all evil, watching intently the journeys and the preaching of three humble,
outcast men, and watching them more scrupulously and minutely than he was
paying attention to Tiberius or to Nero.
Isn't that a strange thing? The
fear that Satan has for the least of His saints, and how bitterly opposing and
how fiercely interdicting. “But Satan hindered us.” That's not the
only time you'll find such a thing mentioned by the Apostle Paul.
In the twelfth chapter of the 2
Corinthians letter, he describes a thorn in the flesh. Again, I do not
know what it is. But, he was afflicted and he referred to the thorn in
the flesh as “a messenger from Satan to buffet me.” And, thrice he
besought the Lord to remove it. It was a painful, grievous thing: “A
messenger from Satan to buffet me.”
He said in the Ephesians letter, “For we
wrestle not against flesh and blood.” If your enemies were those you
could lay your hands on, you might take guns, or double up your fist, or a
knife, or in some way fight and oppose. But, what do you do against an
enemy that is not flesh and blood, but principality and power, they that rule
the darkness of this world? “But Satan hindered us.”
In his preaching in the fourth chapter
of the same 2 Corinthians letter, in the fourth verse he says, “The God of this
world hath blinded their hearts.” “But Satan hindered us.”
Nor is Paul the only one who has found
that formidable opponent and that fierce and assailing adversary. Every
saint in heaven repeats that same refrain: “But Satan hindered us.” Every
child of God that has written any line on the sacred page testifies to the same
thing: “But Satan hindered us.” Every man and woman who has ever written
a consecrated name on the rock of immortality avows the same thing: “But Satan
hindered us.” All the life long, all the centuries through, that same and
repeated text: “But Satan hindered us.”
And the great dragon... that old serpent
called the devil and Satan... was cast out -- he was cast into the earth and
his angels were cast out with him.
And I heard a great voice say, ...the
accuser of our brethren is cast
down...
But woe to the inhabitants of the earth
and the sea, for the devil is come down unto you having great wrath because he
knoweth that he hath but a short time.
And,
any child of God shall know the fierce assailing of that terrible
adversary.
Job was buffeted and beat and bruised
and hurt and ruined by Satan. One messenger trod on the heels of the
other with tales of woe. Nor did his sorrow cease until he was cast in
the ash heap, bereft of life and help and children and home and property.
Satan did it.
When Moses stood up, the messenger and
apostle of God to lead God's people, Jannes and Jambres stood up to oppose him:
The messengers of Satan.
When
Nehemiah, God's layman, took his hands to build up the wall of Jerusalem and
laboring and toiling to restore the city of God, there was Sanballat and Tobiah
to hinder and to buffet him: the messengers of Satan.
And, that fierce adversary opposed the
Lord Jesus Himself: stood over His manger with a bloody sword; when He entered
His ministry there in the wilderness, thrice tempted him away from His high
messianic commission from heaven; then it says, “And Satan left Him for a
season.” Throughout His ministry, by attack through Sadducees and
Pharisees and Herodian and Zealot, finally encompassed His death. And,
then, into the fire through His disciple: “Simon, Simon, Satan hath desired to
have you but he may sift you as wheat.”
Then, the thing continued. The
story of the infant church: Satan hindering it and fighting it and warring
against it by fire and flame and fagot and persecution. Then, when that
failed, by heresy and false doctrine and false teachers and divisions, and
then, finally, overcame it and vanquished it—the church of Jesus Christ.
He overwhelmed it and drowned it when he persuaded the church to accept the
temptation that Jesus refused. And, the church and the world were
identified, and the church and the Roman Empire were one and the same
thing.
The precious sons of Zion, pure gold,
became earthen vessels made with a potter's hand, raised and lowered by
politicians. Those who had preached the glorious gospel of the Son of
God, lifting high the Cross of Jesus, were now raising high a crucifix, painted
and adorned. They who before had preached the sacrifice of Christ were
now preaching the sacrifice of the mass. And, they who once pointed to an
infallible leader, the church's head, Jesus Christ, were now pointing to an
infallible head of a hierarchy, the bishop and vicar of Rome.
And, you can't believe. You can't
understand. As tinsel might counterfeit gold, as a piece of glass might
simulate a jewel, as the candlelight might rival the sun, as a drop in the
bucket might be comparable to the ocean, so finally the church became a
counterfeit of God's masterpiece: the Son of the heaven and the gospel of the
Cross. “Satan hindered us.” Satan encompassed us. Satan hurt
us. Satan compromised us. Satan cut us down.
“Wherefore we would have come unto you,
even I Paul, once and again; but Satan hindered us.” Any time we think that
our adversary is small and weak and we have not battles to fight and sorrows to
wade through, the heartaches and burdens to bear, and awful and vicious times,
and trials and troubles and tribulations, you're underestimating the power of
the enemy. “Even Michael, the archangel, dared not bring against him a
railing accusation, but said, God rebuke you. Even Michael, the
archangel, couldn't stand in the presence of Satan, nor did he dare dispute
him, but said, God, God rebuke you.”
What Satan can do and how he does
it! I look down on this bed and there is a child, 11 years old. The
child has wasted away. It's a skeleton, and soon to die of polio, the
dread disease. “Satan has hindered us.”
Here is a beautiful fellowship: a church
of Jesus. And, they're divided and torn asunder. “Satan has
hindered us.”
Here's a fine, strong, and beautiful
Christian working for the Lord, and now cut down and in pain and in misery and
in ill health. “Satan has hindered us.”
And, here's a noble and wonderful family
all torn apart. The thing doesn't fit and it doesn't work and it doesn't
go. “Satan has hindered us.”
How many areas and in how many
ways? There he stands and there he is, our adversary, and the accuser of
the brethren, who accuses them day and night. But, Satan hinders
us.
If you are not a Christian and you're
listening to this preacher this morning, either on that radio or out here in
this auditorium, if you're not a Christian, Satan will hinder you, if you turn
your face and faith to the Lord. He'll tell you a thousand reasons why
you ought not to come down that aisle and give your heart to Christ.
Satan hinders
us.
And, if you become a Christian and come
down this aisle and give your heart to Jesus and stand down here with the
children of the Lord, there by your right hand stands Satan to hinder
you. “And he showed me Joshua, the high priest, standing before the Angel
of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him.” There's
the preacher, Joshua, standing in the sacred place of God, and at his right
hand, Satan standing to resist him, in the pulpit, in the church, before the
very throne of God.
And, when you come to offer your
sacrifice to the Lord, like Abraham did in the fifteenth chapter of Genesis,
there swoop down upon it all the vultures and the carrion crows of heaven.
And, Abraham has to stand by his sacrifice and fight off the dirty and
unclean birds.
And, that's the way it is with
you. You give your life and your heart to Christ; Satan will be there to
hinder you. All up and down the battle line, in the rear and in the
vanguard, at dawn and at dusk, at midday and at midnight, there will you find
that adversary, like a roaring lion, devouring whom he may consume, opposing
all good and all right and everything of Christ and of God. “But Satan
hindered us.”
In the face of an adversary so unusually
potent and ingenious, what do you do? His ways are beyond us. For
one thing, he never strokes the feathers of his birds the wrong way. His
appeal is always what appeals to us. He woos us and entices us and wins
us. He baits his cast for the fish he's to catch. All of those
things that pull you away from the Lord and from your church and from devotion
to Christ—all of those things, that's Satan hindering us.
And, he opposes the work of God
outright. There and there and yonder and yonder does he rise up.
And, in opposition to God, He says words and he bides time and he advertises in
the papers. And, in how many ways does he build up the kingdom of
darkness against the kingdom of glory and light, and poor saints of God down
here in this earth, we, with a little in our hands; and he, with the wealth of
the world? We, so frail and fragile made out of dust; and he, the prince
and the power of the air, cut down and destroy the health, like he did
Job. Take away and oppose and entice and compromise, like he did Demas,
with the awe of the tinsel and tinfoil of this world; sift, as he did Simon
Peter; and finally, crucify, as he did the Savior Himself.
What are we against so great an
enemy? My dear people, were it not for the power of the Lord that
sustains His people, we all would utterly fail and fall. All of us would
be cut down. All of us would be damned. All of us would be lost.
All of us would be destroyed.
The power by which we oppose our
adversary and our enemy is never in us. We're so weak. But, it lies
in the hands, in the heart, in the ableness of Almighty God.
That's why—two things first: That's why
God's children must pray. Satan trembles when he sees the least saint
down on his knees. God's people must pray, “Lord, the battle is not to
the strong nor the race to the swift, but God chooseth them who are victorious,
and the battle lies with Thee, Lord.” May God give us sustaining grace
and continuing strength.
“In Thy will Lord, keep away, keep away
the darkness of disease and death. Lord, may Thy hand bar, may Thy hand
intervene, O Lord, in Thy goodness and in Thy mercy.”
“Oh, Lord, save these for whom we pray.
Our words fall to the ground. Our arguments are nothing. Our
reasoning and our sentences are but sound and fury, cymbal and clanging
gong. But, Lord, in Thy power and in Thy strength, convict the
heart. Lead to the blessed Savior, Christ Jesus.
“And, our Lord, remember the
church. Remember the church. Don't let Satan sow seeds of heresy
and division and diversity among the people of the Lord. O Lord, keep out
the tares. Don't let them be planted and rooted, Lord.
Lord,
keep our fellowship wonderful and precious and sweet.”
On and on, the child of God praying for
the mercy and the intervention of heaven: “Lord, remember us. Help
us. Be good to us. May our lives be precious in Thy sight.
May our souls be kept in the hollow of Thy hands. Lord, Lord, don't let
Satan cut us down or destroy us. Don't let Satan hinder us. With a
free spirit, Lord, remember us. Help us.”
That's the first thing in our pilgrimage
here: We're to cast ourselves in prayer, in supplication, upon the mercies of
God: “O Lord, remember us. Remember me.”
The other thing is this: The Book says
that Satan is a defeated person. We don't have to be afraid.
Jesus says, “And I saw Satan as
lightning fall from heaven.” And, He said again: “And now shall the
prince of this world be cast out.” And, in the great Revelation, it said,
“Woe to the earth and the inhabitants thereof, for Satan has come down...
having great wrath.” “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and
by the word of their testimony.”
Then, you have this great and final
revelation: “And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key to the
bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand. And he laid hold.”
Oh, what a day. What a day. “And he laid hold on that old dragon,
the serpent, Satan... the devil, and bound him a thousand years, and cast him
in the bottomless pit.” When the thousand years were expired and Satan
was loosed for a season to deceive the nations of the earth, then that same
incomparable messenger from heaven seized him and, this time, cast him into the
fire of the furnace. And, there is he imprisoned and tormented and
punished day and night, forever and ever. And, then it was that John saw
the new heaven and the new earth and the tabernacle of God among men.
Brethren, it's a temporary thing that
he's here. It's a temporary thing that he makes us sick. It's a
temporary thing that he tears up our homes with death. It's a temporary
thing that he sows tears and discord among the brethren. It's a temporary
thing that he hinders and interdicts. It's for the moment.
Our victory is final and forever.
Blessed be the name of the Lord, Who saves us, Who sustains us, and Who keeps
us now and to the end of the way.
If you've been listening on this radio,
and you've never put your trust in Jesus, this morning would you bow your head
and say, “Lord, today, I own my unequalness, my inability, my feebleness
against the powers arrayed against me. I'm no match for Satan, but I'll
trust Jesus, Who is able to bring victory to the humblest heart, and the
weakest, youngest believer.”
And, in this great throng of God's
people in the Lord's house this morning, is there somebody—you, who'd say, “Preacher,
today, I take hands off of my own life. I'm not equal. But, I put
my life in the hands of Jesus. I'll trust Him for the victory?”
What hinders? What keeps you
away? Trust Jesus for it and come. I may not be able to answer all
the questions, but He knows the answers. There may be inability and
feebleness among us in our frame, but there's great strength and power in our
Lord.
“Trusting Jesus, here I come and here I
am.” Somebody—you, put his life in the church; a family—you, would you
come? It's still early. Nobody leave ‘til our benediction.
Standing here, praying, singing, making this appeal; calling out of darkness
into light; calling out of perdition and damnation into heaven and the glory
that is to come, calling out of the world into the fellowship of the children
of God.
Would you come? Out of self, into
Jesus; from weakness to strength; from darkness to light; from death to
life. Would you come? Would you come, while we stand and while we
sing?
.