THE FAITH OF OUR MOTHERS
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Timothy 1:1-4
05-09-82
This
is the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas bringing the message
entitled: “The God Of Our Mothers,” The Faith Of Our Mothers.
Turning
to the last epistle of the apostle Paul for his martyrdom, 2 Timothy, and
beginning at the first verse—2 Timothy: Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the
will of God, according to the promise of life which is in our Lord Jesus, to
Timothy, my dearly beloved son: Grace, mercy, and peace from God the
Father and Jesus Christ our Lord. I thank God, whom I serve from my
forefathers that without ceasing, I have remembrance of thee in my prayers
night and day, greatly desiring to see thee, being mindful of thy tears, that I
may be filled with joy when I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith
that is in thee, which dwelt first in thy grandmother Lois, and in thy mother
Eunice, and I am persuaded that in thee also.
I
have never been pastor of a church that did not have in it a T‑E‑L
class, a Timothy, Eunice, and Lois class. The very thought of our mother
brings us in humble adoration before Mother's God. As a youth, I visited
the Pacific Garden Mission in Chicago. I wanted to see where Billy Sunday
was converted and where so many had been brought to the Lord. And
as I walked into the mission, I was surprised to see the two big, large,
expansive writings on each side, beyond the pulpit, here and there, against the
back wall. On one side was John 3:16. All of us learned the
beautiful verse in childhood. And on the other side was a question, “When
last did you write to Mother?”
And
as I sat there in the service and looked at those two disproportionate
words, this one a summation of the whole dispensation of grace, the love of God
in Christ Jesus, how we can be saved, John 3:16; and on the other side the
sentence—the question: "When last did you write to Mother?" And
as I tried to think through why the people who built that mission should have
written those two things so disparate, then I came to a realization. When
a wayward boy of the flotsam and jetsam of humanity came into the chapel and
looked at that query, "When last did you write to Mother?" it
would immediately bring back to the heart of the reader Mother's God, Mother's
faith, Mother's church, Mother's Lord, Mother’s prayers, Mother's
intercession. Mother sort of stands for God and the faith. After
all, it is a faith so largely shaped by her.
One
of the great rhetorical questions of Isaiah, in the 51st Chapter of his prophesy,
verses 1 and 2. He calls his nation back to a great, deepening
consecration to the God of their fathers. And he does it in these
resounding words: Look unto the rock from whence you are hewn, and unto the pit
from whence you are digged. Look unto Abraham your father, and unto Sarah
who bore you. After all, the story of the chosen people of God is largely
the story of a woman—of a mother. The story of the beginning of the
Hebrew race is the story of a woman. Sarah was barren, and God visited her
and she became the mother of Isaac. Rebekah is a beautiful, precious,
marvelous type of the church of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the story of her
betrothal to the child of Sarah is one of the most beautiful love stories in
the Bible. And Rebekah became the mother of Israel, or Jacob. It is
no less the story of a woman in the birth of Joseph, whose mother was Rachel,
whom Jacob loved.
The
story of the beginning of the nation is the story of a woman. When she
could no longer hide her little child, she placed him in an ark, and along the
flags growing by the side of the river Nile where Pharaoh's daughter came down
the bathe, there was the little child discovered. And the sister of the
baby asked Pharaoh's daughter would she like a nurse who could take care of the
child for her. And when Pharaoh's daughter acquiesced, Miriam, the older
sister, ran and fetched Jochebed, the baby's mother. And Jochebed, the
wife of Amram, nursed the child for Pharaoh's daughter.
It
is said in the Bible that Moses was learned in all of the arts, and all of the
wisdom of the Egyptians. But when he became heir apparent to the throne
and looked upon the travail of his brethren, he chose rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures and exultations
of the throne of Egypt. Where did he learn that? He learned that in
the days of his upbringing as a small child, nursed and taught by his
mother.
The
story of the beginning of the prophets is the story of a woman. Hannah
prayed to God in the presence of old Eli, the pastor of the church, the high
priest in the tabernacle, that God would give her a son. And if God would
answer that prayer, she would lend him to the Lord all the days of his
life. And when, according to the time of life, God gave to her a little
son, she named him Samuel, “asked of God,” and brought the child to the
tabernacle where old Eli presided as high priest. And there, Samuel, the
first prophet, grew up in the presence of the Lord and delivered to his nation
the prophetic messages from heaven.
The
story of the beginning of the kings is the story of a woman. Ruth was a
Moabitess. But as she gleaned in the fields of Boaz, in the providence of
God, they married and built their home in Bethlehem. And Ruth became the
great, great grandmother of David. She was the mother of Obed, whose son
was Jesse, whose son was David. Throughout the whole story of the chosen
family of God, it is almost astonishing to see. It is the story of a
woman.
When
I turn to the book of the new covenant, of the new dispensation of this age of
grace in which we live, the first sentence of the first book, Matthew, reads
like this: The book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the
son of Abraham. The book of the “genesis.” The Greek word
translated here “generation” is “genesis.” The first book in the old
covenant is Genesis—the beginning. The word that describes the
introduction of this age of grace is the Greek word “genesis,” the book of the
genesis of Jesus Christ.
And
here again, the beginning is the story of a woman. The angel Gabriel is
sent to Elizabeth. And her husband, Zacharias, is told that in an old
age, Elizabeth shall have a child that will be filled with the Holy Spirit from
his mother's womb. And six months later, the same angel, Gabriel, is sent
from the courts of heaven to Nazareth to announce to a virgin Jewish—a girl—by
the name of Mary, that she is to be the mother of this foretold, foreordained
child. “For the Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest
shall overshadow thee; therefore also that holy thing that shall be born of
thee shall be called the Son of God.” It is the story of a woman.
The genesis of—the beginning of, Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of
Abraham, the Son of God.
When
he was raised from the dead, the genesis, the story of his resurrection,
his immortality, is the story of a woman. Mary of Magdala, standing
before the open tomb, wondering at what had happened. Who had rolled the
stone away? Why was it empty? Surely, she thought someone had
stolen his body and taken it away. And as she stood there, grieved, the
risen, resurrected, glorified Lord spoke to her. And she, supposing him
to be the gardener, said, "Where have you laid him that I may take him
away?"
And
the Lord pronounced her name as he had in the days of his Galilean ministry,
and she recognized him. The first one to see the Lord raised from the
dead. And making her way at the commandment of the Savior, she ran to the
apostles, saying, "He is alive. I have seen him, Jesus lives."
It is the story of a woman.
When
I read in history of the course of Western civilization, it is the gift to
Christ, of the faith, the Christian persuasion, commitment of the Western
world. And the genesis, again, is the story of a woman. When Paul
and his companions went across the Hellespont into Macedonia, they found there
a woman, a professional and businesswoman. She was from Lydia. In
Asia Minor, in the Roman province of Asia, she was a seller of cloth to make
beautiful garments out of. Lydia. And she, with her women down by
the riverside, held each Sabbath day a prayer service of women. And she
was the first convert in the Western world, the first convert in Europe.
It began in the story of a woman.
And
when I read the letters of the old and sainted apostle John, all of the
disciples, all of the apostles long since martyred, and John alone
remains. He's now a hundred years old. And he writes in the
second epistle of John: The elder; John, unto the elect lady and her children,
whom I love in the truth; and not I only, but also all that have known the
truth say grace be with you, mercy, and peace, from God and Jesus, the Son of
the Father.
Who
is this elect lady? And whose children have been won to the faith and
walk in the truth of our Lord? I don't know. It but represents the
preaching of the gospel in unknown places throughout the Greco‑Roman
empire. And entering into the heart of a devout woman, the gospel grew
and flourished and brought life and light and salvation to humanity, to an
elect lady, to a glorious woman somewhere, and her children.
In
return, the Christian faith has elevated womanhood and motherhood beyond
anything that we who live in Christendom could ever realize. It is hard
for us to go back into those ancient days and to be sensitive and aware of how
a woman was considered and treated and looked upon in that ancient world.
For
example, Socrates, whom I would think would be chosen as representative of the
finest in Greek culture, Socrates said, "I thank the gods that I am a
Greek and not a barbarian.” All of those people back there divided
themselves from others. To the Roman, all others were provincials.
To the Jew, all others were Gentiles. To the Greek, all others were
barbarians.
“I
thank God—I thank the gods,” said Socrates, “that I am a Greek and not a
barbarian. I thank the gods that I am a free man and not a slave,
and I thank the gods that I am a man and not a woman." He had cause
to be grateful. She was chattel property.
In
the Muslim world, a vast, vast, vast area of this globe, I was talking in the
Levant to a wealthy Muslim Mohammedan merchant. And I said to him,
"How many wives do you have?" He said, "Four. That’s
the limit of the law in the Koran. I have four. But my son there”—he
pointed out to him—“my son, he has just two. But he will be prosperous
also. And when he is, he’ll be able to have four."
So
I asked that Mohammedan merchantman, "You have four? Do you have
just four, or can you divorce them and you can have another four?"
He said, "Yes. I am limited to four at a time."
Well, I said, "What do you do when you divorce one of the four?
You're tired of her, weary of her, and you divorce her." He says,
"All I need to do is to say ‘You get the’”—and he used a curse word, H‑E
double L ‑‑ “‘out of here.’ And that's all." And
he can divorce that woman with a curse and get him another woman. That is
the whole Islamic world.
Have
you been to India? The Hindu and its faith is no better. They
believe in the transmigration of the soul. And if you've been bad, you'll
come back into this world a monkey. If you've been worse, you'll come
back as a spider. But if you’ve been terrible, you'll come back as a
woman. Hinduism today.
And
so much of this national life in America, and we're seeing it over here in the
new world, so much of it is colored by the onslaught and the colonization and
the spread of communism—When the plane landed in Leningrad, I stood there and
watched the building of the airport. A big, heavy truck loaded with
paving material dumped out; and the concrete being spread for the runways and
the taxi aprons. And as I looked at the drivers of the truck and looked
at the laborers with their shovels, pouring concrete, every one of them was a
woman.
I
have been so brought up in the faith and in the church that when I ever
see a woman doing hard, manual work, there is something on the inside of me
that rises up against it. I have been so brought up in the Christian
faith that somehow I look upon a woman as being above, somebody to reverence,
to fight for or die for or help or stand for, but not to be common and doing a
hard man's labor.
Well,
where did I get that idea and that attitude toward womanhood? Somehow it
is sacred and holy and set apart, the finest of God's creations, the last and
the dearest and the sweetest, the most beautiful and the best. Where'd I
get that idea?
It
was to a woman that the Holy Spirit revealed the wonder and beauty of this
Christ child. She was a prophetess by the name of Anna. And the
Holy Spirit revealed to her that this child should be the savior of the world,
to a woman.
It
was to a woman—and they can be unworthy, and this one was, she was a harlot of
Sychar in Samaria. But to her, to her, to an audience of just one, the
Savior preached the greatest sermon on spiritual worship in the history of
human literature. To a woman. To a woman.
It
was to a woman that the Lord called the attention of his apostles and said,
“look at her. These who are more affluent out of their abounding
superfluity have given to the work of the Lord. But she, look at her, she
has given everything she has, even all her living.” She was so poor, her gift
was two little pence. Half of a modern penny. "Look at
her," said the Lord. Look at her, a woman.
It
was for a woman that he stopped the funeral procession in Nain and gave back to
her broken widow's heart this only son. It was for a woman whose brother
had died that he returned Lazarus, raised from the grave. It was for a
woman that the Lord said: Wherever this gospel is preached, this also shall be
told of her as a memorial, breaking the alabaster box. A woman.
And
it was for a woman that the Lord spoke from the cross, addressing her,
"Look, this is your son,” pointing to John. And saying to John,
"This is your mother." And from that moment on, John took her
to his own home and cared for her. That's the Lord. In the agony of
his dying, seeing before him the cry and the heartbreak of his mother, he gave
her into the care and keeping of the sainted apostle John, who from that moment
on, took her to his own home. That's our Lord.
And
he's no different today than he was then. He's just glorified
today. But he has the same heart, and the same love, and the same
abounding grace, and it includes beautiful motherhood and precious
womanhood.
It
is hard for us to realize today there was a time in Roman history when it
looked as though the entire Roman civilized world would follow Mithra,
Mithraism. You never heard of Mithra; you never read about
Mithraism. Yet there was a time when it looked as if the god Mithra would
be the universal religion of the civilized world.
Why
did it fail? Because it was only open to men. The Roman soldiers
spread the faith of Mithra from one side of the world ruled by Rome to the
other side. But it failed because it excluded mothers and sisters.
Woman.
The
Christian faith is a woman's faith. It's a woman's religion. And
all of us who grew up in a Christian home—for I say it—a thousand, thousand
memories come back to our hearts. This is my mother. This is
Mother's God. This is Mother's church. This is Mother's
faith.
I
talked one time to a brilliant scholar. I asked him, “How is it that
these around you are infidels and atheists, but you, in the same intellectual
world, are so Christian and so devout? How is that?” And his reply
was one into which I could personally so deeply enter: “With all of the
arguments and all of the forensics and all of the reasonings, I can never get
away from the faith of my mother.”
By
the thousands we witnessed to that everlasting persuasion. Whatever the
splendid arguments of infidelity, somehow we can never forget the faith and the
God and the prayers and the love of our mothers. And to pay tribute to
them today is one of the wonderful things I would love to do. And I am
just your spokesman. If you were here, you'd say the same: “I praise God
for my Christian mother.”
Now,
may we stand together?
Our
precious Lord in Heaven, you had a mother, and in loving care, dying on the
cross, said words of a—of an affection that would move any heart, however
hardened. And the beautiful example that we have seen in our own mothers
bows us in deepest, humblest gratitude to thee for their love and care when we
were helpless, our upbringing when we were small, and the goodnesses by which
our lives have been enriched in their sacrifice and in their beautiful
remembrance.
And
our Lord, what a wonderful day. If this could be an hour when we praise
God and show gratitude to our Lord for a Christian mother, some of us accepting
Jesus as our savior, some of us following him to the waters of the Jordan, some
of us coming into the fellowship of his church.
And
in this moment when our people pray and wait, make that decision in your heart,
“Pastor, today, we have decided for God, and here we stand.” In the
balcony round, down one of those stairways, in the press of people on this
lower floor, down one of these aisles, “Pastor, we're coming. The whole
family of us, we’re coming.” Just a couple, you, “We're coming.” Or
just one, somebody, you. As the Spirit shall open the door and lead them
the way, make the decision in your heart. And on the first note of this
first stanza, that first step will be the finest you’ve ever made in your
life.
And
our Lord, thank thee for the sweet harvest you give us and for angels attending
our way and for the joy and gladness of a commitment to Christ.
Unashamed, open, public, here we stand.
God
bless. In thy wonderful name. Amen.
Come
and welcome, while we sing.
.