THE FINAL DICTATOR
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 8:9-27
2-13-72 10:50 a.m.
On
the radio and on television, you are sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor preparing to bring the morning message from
the Book of Daniel. The title of the sermon is The Ultimate, Final Dictator:
Satan’s Masterpiece, The Final Antichrist. There is so much about him
here in the Bible that all I am able to do in the brief period of time, such as
an hour like this, is to summarize some of the things that the Bible presents
concerning him.
Just
as a beginning text, in our preaching through the Book of Daniel, we are in the
eighth chapter, and in chapter 8, verse 9:
And
out of one of them came forth a little horn, which waxed exceeding great,
toward the south, toward the east, and toward the Pleasant Land—toward
Palestine.
And
it waxed great, even to the host of heaven; and it cast down some of the host
and of the stars to the ground, and stamped upon them.
Yea,
he magnified himself even to the Prince of the host, and by him, the daily
sacrifice was taken away…
And
so it continues for verse after verse.
Then
out of the passage that we read together in Revelation 13, “And they worshiped
Satan, the dragon,” the serpent, Lucifer, “who gave his power unto the beast,”
the Antichrist, the ultimate and final world dictator, “saying, Who is like
him, and who could make war against him?” [Revelation 13:4] That presentation in the
thirteenth chapter of the Book of Revelation is something that Satan has done
through all the continuing ages. He uses intermediaries to war against the
people of God.
In
the garden of Eden, sheltered in Edenic bliss, in innocence, in supernal
happiness God placed our first parents; but outside the gate of the garden there
is a sinister being. And he uses the serpent to accost the woman. What did
that serpent look like? We only know him now, cursed, crawling on his belly,
eating dust. But in his unfallen nature, he must have been the most glorious
creature God had made. Beautiful, appealing to the woman; he could talk to
her. And Satan used the serpent to destroy our first parents. You see that
again in the story of Job. When Satan was given permission to afflict Job, [Satan]
took Sabeans and destroyed all of his livestock. And Satan took the Chaldeans
and destroyed all of his camels.
You
have that same thing in the story of the betrayal of Jesus. At the Last Supper
when John asked Simon Peter asked the Lord, “Who is it that betrays You?” The
Lord replied, “It is he to whom I shall give the sop.” So He took bread,
dipped it in broth, and handed it to Judas. And the Scriptures say, “And Satan
entered Judas,” he used Judas to betray the Lord. You have that same
intermediary use on the part of Satan in the eleventh chapter of the second
Corinthian letter. There Paul says that Satan transforms himself into an angel
of light. And he sends forth "false apostles," false emissaries,
that he might bring to destruction those who otherwise would embrace the
truth. This has been a program of Satan through the ages: he uses people to
destroy the saints of God.
But
there is no character and there is no personality that appears in all biblical
story or human history like the ultimate and final dictator, who is Satan’s masterpiece.
He is the great, final Antichrist, the last great, awesome, terrible tyrant who
shall rule over this earth. In the second chapter of 1 John and in the fourth
chapter of 1 John, the apostle speaks of many antichrists and of the spirit of
antichrist. But they are all preparatory to the great, final, "the Antichrist."
And there is so much about that final dictator in the Bible.
For
example, in the seventh chapter of Daniel and the eighth verse, he is the
little horn. In the story of human history, after the empires and the breaking
up of the Roman Empire into the nations of the world, there comes finally, a
“little horn” who rules over all mankind. In the ninth chapter of the Book of
Daniel and the twenty-seventh verse, he is there: “the great desolater.” In
the twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew, he is there: the “abomination of
desolation.” In the second chapter of 2 Thessalonians, he is there: the “man
of sin,” who presents himself in the temple of God, in the house in Jerusalem, as God Himself. And in the thirteenth chapter of the Revelation, he is there,
presented as “the beast.”
What
is he like? In great and meticulous detail—the prophetic descriptions of the
beast, of the Antichrist, of the great, final dictator—in great detail the Bible
presents his description. In the thirteenth chapter of the Apocalypse, he
says, “I stood upon the sand of the sea, and saw a beast rise up out of the
sea.” That is, he comes out of chaotic, turbulent world conditions when the
whole mass of mankind seems to be plunged into irretrievable, irrecoverable,
insuperable despair. They are weary of war; they have no answers to their
problems. The thing seems insoluble. It is out of the turbulent sea of
mankind that he arises, and he arises swiftly and powerfully and gloriously.
This
is described here in the Bible, “And the beast which I saw was like a
leopard.” In the seventh chapter of the Book of Daniel, that describes
Alexander the Great. And it refers to the quickness, the swiftness, the
alacrity with which he conquered the world. This great final dictator will be
like a leopard, like Alexander the Great. He will suddenly rise and will
conquer the whole earth! He is like a bear. In the seventh chapter of the Book
of Daniel, the bear refers to Cyrus and the Medo-Persian Empire. The bear with
great strength, he is invincible in his conquest. And he is like a lion. In
the seventh chapter of the Book of Daniel, again, the lion represented the
golden kingdom of Nebuchadnezzar. And this final dictator will be regal in his
demeanor, in his stature, in the way he walks, in the way he carries his head,
in all of his gestures and life. He will be the king! And the Scriptures say
this lion-like man, wounded unto death, but miraculously recovered—the whole world
will wonder after him. And the dragon, the Satan, Lucifer, will give unto him
his power, his throne and his authority. The glory of the whole world will be
placed in his hands.
In
the fourth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew, do you remember, that Satan
offered the kingdoms of the world and their glory to Jesus, if He would bow
down and worship him? What Jesus refused, this ultimate and final dictator
shall accept. The glory of the kingdoms of the world will be placed in his
hands. Now, the reason for such a thing is very obvious. When the world is in
turmoil, men turn in any direction for an answer and for a solution.
I
would hardly have believed that, had I not lived to see the rise of Hitler. In
those days, the German people was one of the great cultured peoples of the
world. If a man sought a degree in a university, especially an especial
degree, studying in a field separate and unique, he went to a university in
Germany. They were a cultured, educated, civilized people. But they were also
depressed. They lived in poverty and shame after World War I and in their
necessity and need, Hitler came and promised them victory, a place in the sun,
the super race with super men. And to the astonishment of the world, Hitler
became the absolute Führer of Germany!
That
is the kind of a thing that will happen at the end time. As the world becomes
more turbulent and involved, and finally plunged into terrible, indescribable
war, they will turn to anybody who will promise peace and unity and prosperity.
The Pax Romana was not something nearly so much as forced on the
civilized world in the days of the Caesars, as it was something that the
nations of the civilized world accepted themselves. For example, the Attalid
kings of Pergamon gave the Attalid Empire to Rome, gave it to the Caesars,
because they saw no other way out for security and defense. Now, just another Pax
Romana, the Bible says, will obtain when the great dictator comes. He
comes in the sixth chapter of the Revelation, riding on a white horse, and the
whole world bows before him. It is in such turmoil and such agony, such
bloodshed and war, that they seek somebody who can bring a way out.
I
think of that in the world today. I just wonder, if these processes now
continue that we are watching in our newspapers and in our daily magazines,
what is the ultimate outcome? To what does it lead? On the radio this
morning, I listened to the broadcaster as he described the agony of England.
And from every side the newscaster said, “Prime Minister Heath is being
assailed and attacked.” There are hardly answers. They are shutting down the
light plants. The whole nation is being plunged into distress. You haven’t
seen in your lifetime, the sorrow of a nation, such as you read in Ulster, the
five counties of Northern Ireland.
What
would you say of the outcome of the turbulent situation in which the great
powers are involved in the Middle East, and now in the Indian Ocean? And what
would you say is the ultimate answer to be found in the great, moving monster,
the red dragon of China and all of southeast Asia? And as though this were not
enough, I heard a newscast this morning in which the man was describing the
lengths to which some of the organized groups in America are going to turn to
make this nation a veritable caldron against President Nixon, as the coming
election approaches. It is out—and the Book says here—it is out of the sea of
turmoil, and trouble, and trial, and tribulation, and terror that he arises.
And he comes as the answer to all of the problems of mankind. In the days of
the French Revolution, their watchword was “liberty, fraternity and equality.”
This man, this ultimate, final Antichrist and dictator will come with the
watchwords of “peace, and unity, and prosperity.” And the whole world will
receive him as a way out, an answer to the problems of mankind.
Now,
the Bible begins in great detail to describe what happens. For the first part
of Daniel’s seventieth week, described in Daniel [9]:26-27, for the first part
of Daniel’s seventieth week, he is indeed all that he promised to be. He gives
to the Jews their homeland. He makes a covenant with the Jewish nation. He’s
their defender, benefactor, and protector. And he brings unity and prosperity
and peace to the earth. Then suddenly, as the Book of Daniel describes, then
suddenly he changes, he turns. He is something else; he is a fright, he is a
fury, he is a terror. Now the Bible is written from the standpoint of God’s
chosen people, the Jew. And Daniel describes in detail how, in the midst of
that seventieth week, that this ultimate dictator, this final Antichrist,
breaks the covenant with the people of God and he turns into a fiend and a
persecutor; he plunges the entire earth into war.
First,
in the sixth chapter of the Revelation, he comes riding a white horse, the
great, marvelous answer to humanity’s need, to governmental necessity. Then,
he is followed by a red horse of war and a black horse of famine and a pale
horse of death! The whole earth is plunged into a maelstrom of blood, leading
up, of course, to the battle of Armageddon. And in the trying, troublous
tribulation—that’s what the Bible calls it, “the great tribulation”—in those
trying days, there is persecution of the Jew unexcelled and unparalleled. Here
is something else that you find in the Bible, repeated again and again and
again. Over and over again, the Bible says that as the end time approaches, as
the great consummation of history draws nigh, it says that the Jew will suffer
unparalleled trouble and persecution.
For
example, here in the [thirtieth] chapter of the Book of Jeremiah, he is
describing those awesome days, and he uses it in a picture, in a sentence that
is overwhelming. He says it will be as if every man has his hands on his loins
in travail as a woman and in paleness and pain [Jeremiah 30:6]. Can you imagine a whole
people, every man in it as though he were giving birth to a child? And in pain
and in agony and in suffering? And he says, “Alas! for that day; it is even
the time of Jacob’s trouble” [Jeremiah 30:7]. This is just one passage
out of a multitude that depict, toward the end time, Israel will find itself in
unparalleled trouble and sorrow and persecution.
Now,
the Bible no less says that about the Christian faith. My dear people, there
is no such thing as persecuting the Jew until, just a little later, you find
that same bitterness and venom poured out toward the people of Christ. There
is no exception to that. Don’t you ever think otherwise! If the Arab hates the
Jew, give him time, he’ll hate the Christian. If the Mohammedan hates the Jew,
give him time, he’ll hate the Christian. If the Islamic world despises the
Jew, the Islamic world will despise the Christian. If Egypt is an enemy of the Jew, he is also an enemy of the Christian and an enemy of America. There is no such thing as persecution of the Jew without also persecution of the
Christian.
And
that’s why in the seventh chapter of the Book of the Revelation, you have the
description of the great tribulation. There, it is mostly described concerning
the people of Christ. And they are so innumerable who have suffered under the
iron hand of that final dictator until John says, when he saw them, he could
not count their number, they were so many. Our Lord says that, "were it
not that those days were shortened, no flesh would be saved." Then He
added, “But for the elect’s sake, those days shall be shortened” [Matthew
24:22]. They
are in biblical prophecy, whatever that means. They are one-half of Daniel’s
seventieth week; forty-two months; 1,260 days; time, times and a dividing of
time. It will not last forever. But those awful, awesome days of horror and
tribulation under earth’s final dictator will find an answer in the
intervention of Christ from heaven at the battle of Armageddon, which is fully
described in the ninth chapter, the fourteenth chapter, and the nineteenth
chapter of the Apocalypse.
Now
here in the Book of Daniel, let me take a large section and summarize it. In
the Book of Daniel, in chapter 8, verses 9 through 14, and again in verses 23
through 25, and then again in chapter 11, verses 21 through 26, and in verses
36 to the end, you have the description of the Antichrist himself. But in the
two passages I referred to, Daniel 11:21-35, you have a detailed description.
In minute detail, you have a detailed description of the prototype of this
final dictator. The description in Daniel, in chapter 8 and in chapter 11, the
description concerns Antiochus Epiphanes. Now this is a tragic era of
persecution in the life of Israel that was fulfilled years ago, but it is
presented in the Bible in meticulous detail because Antiochus is a prototype, a
picture of the great final Antichrist.
What
is Antichrist like? What does he do? You will find it in Antiochus
Epiphanes. More than any other human who ever lived, more than even Judas
himself, is Antiochus Epiphanes presented in the Bible as a prototype, a
picture of the final dictator who shall rule over this world. Antiochus
Epiphanes actually is Antiochus IV. He was the eighth in the long line of the
Seleucids who governed Syria, who built their capital at Antioch, named by
Seleucus I in honor of his father. He reigned from about 175 BC to about 163.
What is he like? For what he is like is what the ultimate dictator is going to
be like. Now, let me say two things about him, among a multitude that are
presented. One: he is inordinately proud and lifted up and ambitious. He is
Satan’s true copy. He is Satan’s true incarnation. He is Satan’s true
instrument; just a prototype of the final dictator.
For
example, when Antiochus came to reign, he coined the money of the realm of the
kingdom, and he wrote on his coins: Theos Antiochus, Theos Epiphanes;
Antiochus, God manifest. I don’t need to stagger that such a thing will be.
According to the second chapter of 2 Thessalonians, this final dictator
presents himself as God manifest, Theos Epiphanes [2
Thessalonians 2:4].
I don’t have to stagger at that, because I read that in human story. This is
what these men are like. This is what these men do. That is the spirit of
Hitler. It is the spirit of any great dictator. And he has that spirit:
proud, lifted up, regal, lion-like.
Second
thing about him: he is given to bitter and intractable persecution. Down in Egypt, when Antiochus was on his way to the conquering of the world, he was stopped by Rome. And in fury and frustration, he turned his forces away from Egypt and back up
through the maritime border of the Mediterranean. Then to vent his anger, he
took his army to Jerusalem and sacked it. He killed eighty thousand men,
women, and children. He sold forty thousand of them into slavery, and he
plundered the temple, even taking the golden altar of incense that stood before
the inner veil. Then he decided to extirpate and to destroy the Jewish
religion forever and to substitute for it, Greek worship and Greek culture. He
took the temple at Jerusalem and dedicated it to Jupiter Olympus. He took a
sow and offered it on the great, brazen altar and took the juice of it and
spread it all over the temple and over the sacred vessels. In that way, he
defiled everything in the eyes of a Mosaic Jew.
He
forbade the Jewish festivals and feasts. Instead of Tabernacles or Passover or
Pentecost, they celebrated in the temple the Bacchanalia, worshiping Bacchus,
the god of pleasure and wine, and the Saturnalia, worshiping Saturn, and used
harlots in the temple itself for those feast days. He forbade the observance
of the Sabbath. He forbade the reading of the Scriptures and burned them. He
forbade the institution of circumcision. There were two mothers who
circumcised their babies. They took those two babies, slew them, hung each one
around its mother’s neck, drove the woman through the streets of Jerusalem up to the highest wall, and flung them headlong to death beneath.
In
2 Maccabees, as in Josephus, you have the dramatic story of a mother with seven
sons. First, they cut out the tongues of the seven boys. Then, before the
mother’s eyes, they fried those boys to death, one at a time in frying pans
heated, and last of all murdered the mother. This is just somewhat of the long
story of the agony of Israel under Antiochus Epiphanes, the prototype of the
great suffering and persecution yet to come under the earth’s final dictator.
Now
in those days there was a priest at Modin, a town just outside of Jerusalem.
There was a priest at Modin named Mattathias, and he grieved over the sorrow of
his people. And Mattathias had five boys: John, and Simon, and Judas, and
Eleazar, and Jonathan. And upon a time when an emissary from Antiochus came to
Modin to make the Jews there bow before the altar of Jupiter, a Jew came to
worship. And when Mattathias saw him, the aged priest, like Moses of Egypt, slew
him and slew the officer, and the Maccabean revolt was on.
Mattathias
died soon after that, being an aged man. And he gave the torch of liberty and
revolution to Judas, his third son. And Judas carried it to victory.
Thereafter in the story, as each boy was slain, the other boy picked up the
torch, all five of them carried it on. And in 164 BC Judas Maccabeus, "Judas
the Hammer"—like Charles Martel, who turned back the Mohammedans, the
Saracens, at 722 AD, in Tours, France, had it not been for that all Europe and
possibly we might have been Islamic: Charles Martel, "Charles the
Hammer"—Judas Maccabeus, "Judas the Hammer" in 164 BC, Judas won
a victory over Antiochus and independence for his people Israel.
The
first thing they did was to reconsecrate and to rededicate the house of God.
It lasted eight days, and tradition says that when Judas Maccabeus sought for a
cruse of oil, he could find just one small cruse—enough to last for one day.
But he took the oil, lit the little lamp, and it burned steadily for eight
days. That was the twenty-fifth of Kislev, our December. And for eight days,
the Jewish people celebrated that feast of reconsecration and dedication. It
meant more to them than the dedication of the Solomonic Temple itself. They
call that today, the Feast of Hanukkah. And on the first day, they light a
candle and the second day, a second one, until finally, in the eight days there
are eight candles burning. It is a sign of victory and deliverance and
dedication; the Feast of Lights.
And,
in God’s Holy Word, is it strange that it is at that feast itself, the Feast of
Lights, the Feast of Hanukkah, that our Lord is standing on Solomon’s porch in
Jerusalem? [John 10:23] And He says three things in John 8 and 9 that come
out of that feast. First: it was the feast of deliverance, of victory, and
assurance. It gave God’s people back God’s house and God’s land. The promises
to Abraham and Jacob were confirmed to the people forever. And that was a sign
of the pledge. And at that feast, the Lord said to us, “I give unto My people
eternal life, and they shall never perish” [John 10:28]. It is a feast of
deliverance and victory and assurance.
The
soul that on Jesus hath leaned for repose,
I’ll
never, no never, desert to his foes;
That
soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
I’ll
never, no, never, no never forsake.
[Rippon,
“How Firm a Foundation”]
A
feast of deliverance, assurance, and victory: we shall not lose this war. We
shall win it. God will crown us with ultimate and final victory.
Second:
it is a feast of lights. And upon that occasion Jesus stood and said, “I am
the light of the world” [John
8:12]. They
who sat in darkness have seen a great light. And we who do sit in the shadow
of the valley of death, upon us light has shined, for He hath brought life and
immortality to light. There’s no victory in the grave or in death, for Christ
has won that victory for us. It is a feast of light, and in the gloom and the
darkness of death, there do we see the glorious light and the promise of Christ
shining forever.
Last:
it is a feast of dedication. In the story that gave the introduction to His
Word, “I am the light of the world,” the story is the healing of a blind man.
And they cast him out because of his words of witness to Christ. When the Lord
heard that they cast him out, He found him, the Lord, finding him, said to him,
“Dost thou believe on the Son of God?” And the man who had been born blind
said, “I don’t know Him, Lord that I might believe in Him. Who is He? Where
is He?” And the Savior replied, “Thou hast both seen Him, and it is He that
speaketh unto thee.” And the man who was healed, fell at the feet of Jesus and
said, “Lord, I believe,” and he worshipped Him [John 9:35-38]. It is a dedication. It
is a commitment. It is a worship. It is a belief. It is an acceptance. It
is a trust. It is a giving of one’s soul and heart and life in faith and in
hope, in life and in death, in youth and in age, in time and eternity to the
blessed Jesus.
And
that’s our appeal to you today, to accept the Lord for all that He said He was:
a Deliverer, a Conqueror, a Prince, a Savior, a forgiver of sins, a seeing us
through, a preserving us, a keeping us—to accept the Lord for all that He said
He is, to trust Him, and to give your heart and life to Him, today, would you
make that open and public, unashamed? “I stand before men and angels to
confess my faith in the Lord.” In the balcony, you; on the lower floor,
somebody you, trusting Jesus, accepting Him for all that He has promised to be,
“Here I come and here I am.” A couple you or a family you or just one somebody
you, to put your life in the fellowship of the church, on the first note of
this first stanza, come. Make the decision now in your heart, and in a moment,
when we stand up to sing, stand up, coming down that aisle, “Here I am, pastor,
I answer with my life.” On the first note of the first stanza, come, while we
stand and while we sing.