BOOKS
AND THE BOOK
Dr.
W.A. Criswell
2 Timothy 4:13
9-21-80 10:50 a.m.
And this is the first message in
the series on bibliology, and it is entitled, BOOKS AND THE BOOK. The
background, the source of the title is in 2 Timothy 4:13. Paul, from the Mamertime
dungeon in Rome, just before he's beheaded is writing to Timothy, his son in
the ministry, who is pastor of the church at Ephesus across the Mediterranean
in the Roman province of Asia.
And writing to Timothy in 2
Timothy 4:13 he says: The cloak they left at Troas with Carpus, when thou
comest, bring with thee, and the books, but especially the parchments. Mala,
that's a Greek adverb meaning very, and the superlative form of it is malista—especially,
above all, particularly, especially—when you come bring ta biblia , “the
books”.
Those are the scrolls that are
made out of papyri; our word paper comes from that, from the papyrus
plant, flattened out, woven together;Papyri, the books. They were
doubtless Talmudic and rabbinical commentaries and discussions, bring ta
biblia and “the books”.
“But especially the membrane”—
membrana. Our word, “membranes” come from it, “…but especially
the membrane”. That's a Latin word, and it means parchments—writing on
skins of animals, usually sheep skin: writing on sheep skin. “Bring ta
biblia” —the books, the commentaries, the rabbinical discussions—“but malista,”
above all, especially—”the membrane”, the membranes; the Bible.
These great classical effusions of
the Greco-Roman world were usually written on something substantial such as
parchment, and the Word of God was written on parchments. So that gave rise to
the subject, books and the book.;
all of the books of the world and the Bible.
In the twelfth chapter of the Book
of Ecclesiastes and the twelfth verse, the wisest of all the men who ever lived
said, "Of making books there is no end and much study is a weariness of
the flesh."
He wrote that in a day when books
were laboriously wrought by writing on scrolls, all of it by hand. And if he
thought there was a proliferation and a multiplication of books when he lived
about nine hundred fifty BC, think what he would say now with the printing
press making these volumes by the thousands and the millions, so much so that
there's no man ever that lives who even knows all of the knowledge in his one
division of science, such as a chemist.
A chemist cannot know everything
that is published now about chemistry. The only way the world moves today in
its vast, vast illimitable store of knowledge is because of the modern computer.
They can place that knowledge in these computers and bring it to mind and at
their fingertips.
The vast multiplication of books
today is almost incalculable and immeasurable. But out of all of them—the
millions, and the millions, and the millions of books and the hundreds of
thousands of them that are being constantly published by these unending
publishing houses—there is still one Book.
Books, ta biblia and the membrana,
the Book and that's the subject this morning: why the Book? I have, as time
will permit, three reasons why it is unique, set apart—the great unlike and
incomparable.
Number one: only here, just here
are to be found the answers to the questions that we want to know. Only here
the true revelation of the knowledge that is desperately needed by us in our
souls, just here. Only here can I find the knowledge that really matters in
human life, in no other place but here.
Where did I come from and the
whole universe that I see created around me? Where did it come from? Where did
I come from? Again, what is the meaning of my existence? Does it have any
reason or purpose or destiny? Is my life like an autumnal leaf that falls to
the ground? Millions of those leaves fell last autumn, other millions are
beginning to fall now. Is my life any different from one of those leaves
falling to the ground? Does existence have any meaning, any purpose, any
destiny, does it? Or again, where am I going beyond the grave? Into the
darkness of the eternity that is yet to come, is there a light that shines? Is
there a life beyond the dark river?
Plato, I suppose the most
incomparable mind outside of the Scriptures, Plato pathetically and pointedly
cried saying, "Oh, that there were some sure word that like a raft could
bear us across the seas to that unknown shore." Is there such a word?
That is why I think you find an explanation for the kind of a revelation you
have in the Bible.
All of these modern things that
science has discovered in our generation, God knew them from the beginning. The
secrets of the atoms, of the stars, of physics, of chemistry, all of that was
known to God. He made it; He created it. But it wasn't vital that the Lord
reveal it to us. We could learn those things in their day and in their time,
but it was all important and vital that God show us Himself—reveal His truth to
us; show us how to live, how to die—to give us assurance as we face the
eternity that is yet to come, and that is the Book.
What a compass is to a mariner,
what the radar screen is to an airplane pilot, what a blueprint is to a builder,
the Book is to us in our lives. As Isaiah wrote in the thirtieth chapter of his
prophecy: Thine ears shall hear a voice behind thee saying, “This is the way,
walk ye in it.” Thus it is that God speaks to us. There is purpose; there is
reason; there is a godly plan for each one of our lives, and the Lord speaks to
us in His Holy Scriptures.
It's a remarkable thing to me when
I study the Bible and I run across a statistic like this. The phrase that the
Lord said, “…thus saith the Lord”—God speaks, the Word of the Lord—that kind of
a phrase is used more than two thousand five hundred times in the Bible.
You look at that minute. God
speaks directly to us in His Holy Word. The truth of God is objective, outside
of ourselves—it is objective, it is propositional truth, that is, it is not
subjective—it is not the introverted, psychological speculations of man.
God speaks and His objective truth
is declared to us in the Book. The mighty weight and meaning of the Word of God
in that revelation is all important, and all significant and all vital to us in
our lives.
In the one hundred nineteenth
Psalm, verse 89, the Psalmist singer says, “Forever, oh God, Thy Word is fixed
in Heaven.” But I'm not in heaven, I'm down here walking on this terrestrial
globe and something has to be done if God makes known to me the Word that He
has established forever in Heaven, and the bringing down of that Word of God in
heaven is in the Book.
Paul writes it like this in Romans
chapter 10, verses 6, 7, 8, and 9. He says: “Say not in thine heart, Who shall
ascend up into Heaven, to bring it down to us.” Paul says, “For the Word is
nigh thee. It is in thine heart that is the word of faith which we preach,
namely . . .” and then he tells us how to be saved. As Paul wrote in I Thessalonians
2, verse 13:
We thank
God without ceasing because when you received the Word of God, which you heard
of us, you received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth the Word
of God, which effectually worketh also in you that believe.
That Word in Heaven is brought
down to us and given to us in this Earth in the Book. That's why the early
Christian preachers in those first Christian centuries, that's why they always
stood before their people and preached with the Book in their hand.
Now, what do you mean by that,
Pastor, “With the Book in their hand?”
Well, heretofore, in all of the
centuries and ages past—in all of them—a book was a scroll. And as you read the
scroll, you turned those rods, and you turned the rods and you read as the rods
turned the Law or manuscript.
But those Christian preachers
preaching the Book didn't have time to carry around a wheelbarrow full of
manuscripts, and when they picked out the right scroll—of Isaiah, or Moses, or
the Psalm—they didn't have time to turn those rods and find the passage. So
what they did was, they took the scrolls and cut them up into leaves and bound
them at the back. And that's the first time the world ever saw what we call “a
book.” Heretofore through all of the ages and centuries they were scrolls that
you turned. But those first Christian preachers, announcing the good news of
the evangel of Christ, cut up those leaves and bound them at the back in what
you call “a book.”
And wherever they went, they stood
with a book in their hand, proving from the Scriptures that Jesus is the
Christ. This is unique, I say—alone, and separate, and apart—because it
reveals to us the answers to the questions that really, actually, vitally, we
want to know: Books and the Book.
Second: only here will you find
the full revelation of Christ, the Word of God, the glorious redeemer, Savior
of the World, only in the Book. It's a remarkable thing to me when I read
ancient history and think of the beautiful, marvelous, incomparable life of our
Lord, and yet, there are only three references to Him in secular literature in
the first 150 [years] AD.
One, in about 80 to 90 AD,
Josephus in his Antiquities wrote a little paragraph about the Christ,
and I suppose the whole academic, scholastic world thinks it is spurious—it
isn't genuine. Well that's one, a little paragraph, a little thing referring to
Christ.
Second, in Tacitus in about 100
AD, there is one sentence about the Lord. Tacitus in his Annals felt
compelled to explain who the Christians were, because in his history of Nero,
when Nero burned Rome, he laid the blame of it on the Christians. So Tacitus
says these Christians were named for a malefactor, a felon that was crucified
under Pontius Pilate, the Roman procurator of Judea and that's all.
Now, in 150 AD, Suetonius, another
Latin historian, says the same thing. Telling about Nero, he took one sentence
to describe where these Christians got their name: from a Christ who was a
felon, and a malefactor, and an evildoer, who was crucified by Pontius Pilate
in Judea. That's all, that's the whole spectrum and gamut of the story of
Christ in secular literature.
This Book, the Book, reveals our
Lord in a marvelous and incomparable presentation: He lives on its pages. Look
at this, Erasmus, the great Greek scholar published the first Greek New
Testament. It is called the Textus Receptus. It's the basis of the translation
of the King James Version, out of which I preach.
Now when Erasmus published his
first Greek New Testament in 1516, these are the words that he wrote in the
preface, quote:
These holy
pages will summon up the living image of His mind. They will give you Christ Himself
talking, healing, dying, rising, the whole Christ in a word. They will give Him
to you in an intimacy so close that He would be less visible to you if He stood
before your very eyes.
Erasmus says that on these holy
and heavenly pages you will see Jesus, our Lord, more fully and gloriously and
completely than if He stood before your very eyes: The Book, the revelation of
our Lord. You see, He is identified with His Word. In the Bible, the spoken Word,
and the written Word, and the incarnate Word are all the same. They're referred
to alike as “the Word.”
In John 1:1, “In the beginning was
the Word and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”
In Revelation 19:11 to 13:
I saw
Heaven open and behold a white horse, and he that sat upon Him was faithful and
true. His eyes were as a blame of fire, and on His head were many crowns. He
was dressed in a vesture dipped in blood, and His name is called the Word of
God.
All three are the Word, and Jesus
lives in the Book, the Word. For me spiritually to know the Word is to know
Christ. To obey the Word is to obey Christ. To preach the Word is to preach
Christ. If I impugn or dishonor the Word, I disgrace and dishonor my Lord. But
if I magnify the written Word, I glorify the incarnate Word. It is unique; it
is the Book. And the whole sum and substance of the Book reveals His redemptive
mission. That's the Book. I can say it's divided into three great parts: The
first part announces His coming— He is coming; the middle part describes He is
here; and the last part, the apostolic part—He is coming again.
That's the Book: The prophets, the
announcement—He's coming. The Gospels look at Him in all of His beauty and
glory—He's here. And the apostles—He is coming again. That's the Book, and the
unfolding of that redemptive story is the unfolding of the purpose of God; His
redemptive love for us in Christ Jesus, the Word of God.
In the Beginning, in the Garden of
Eden, the Seed of the woman—not of the man—the Seed of the woman shall crush
Satan's head. In the days of the Deluge, the Seed is preserved when Noah found
grace in His sight. In the days of universal idolatry, the Seed is promised to
Abraham through whom all the families of the world will be blessed, and that
same promise of the Coming One is given to Isaac, then to Jacob, whose name is
Israel.
And to David, he shall have a son
to sit upon his throne forever and ever. And the Psalmist singer sings about
Him, “Thou will not leave His soul to see corruption. He shall be raised from
the dead.”[Psalm 16:10] And the prophets describe the Holy One of Israel:
He shall
grow up before Him as a root out of dry ground, as a tender plant. He hath no
form nor comeliness, and when we see Him, there's no beauty that we should
desire Him. He is despised and rejected of men. A Man of sorrows and acquainted
with grief.
Yet we
beheld Him smitten and afflicted, and we hid our faces from Him. Surely he hath
borne or griefs and carried our sorrows. All we like sheep have gone astray,
turn every one to his own way and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us
all. Thou shalt see the travail of His soul and be satisfied and by His
knowledge shall many be redeemed.
[Isaiah
53:2-11]
All that is what the prophet said.
And when He came the Gospel
writers said, “These things are written that you might believe He is the Son of
God and that believing you might have life in His name.”[John 20:31] And the
apostles preached:
We are
ambassadors from the courts of Heaven beseeching you that you be reconciled to
God for God hath made Him to be sin for us. Him who knew no sin that we might
be made the righteousness of God in Him.
[2 Corinthians 5:20-21]
And the
glorious apocalyptic announcement, the unveiling of the coming of our Lord, and
the glory of His person:
I heard an
angel sweeping across the expanse of Heaven saying, the kingdoms of this world
are become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and He shall reign
forever and ever.
[Revelation
11:15]
And I
heard then thousand times ten thousands of angels, and thousands of thousands
saying: Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power and glory and
honor, and He shall reign forever and ever and ever…Amen!
[Revelation
5:11-12]
Amen! That is the Book.
The world story is history. That's
why, when I read these German rationalists, and these higher critics and they
take that holy Word and they say this, “that's a forgery.” Then they turn to
the next one, and they say, this, “that's fakery.” Then they say this, “that's
fraudulent,” and they say this, “that's spurious.” And the whole Book they cut
in pieces like Jehoiachin cut it with a penknife and burned it in a fire.
That's what they do.
But what I can't understand is
this: Woven throughout the Bible in every syllable and sentence, in every verse
and paragraph, in every chapter, woven throughout the Bible—interwoven in it, a
part of the warp and woof of the Scriptures—is this plan of redemption, this
story of our redeeming Lord. Now what I can't understand, if it's forgery
here, and spurious there, and it's fakery yonder, and it's fraudulent there,
where did that come from?
How was it that in fraudulence,
and in spuriousness there is found this scarlet thread that binds us to the
heart and the throne of God. I don't understand them, and they couldn't explain
it themselves. The reason is obvious. The Holy Spirit wrote the Book and His
story of redemption and salvation is found in every part of it. That's God. I
must hasten.
One other out of forty others that
I could name—I just need somebody with patience to listen to me—why the
uniqueness of this Book? The Book, a third: alone here will you find that
phenomenon that we find prophesy, the unveiling, the unfolding of the future.
The Greek word is apocalypse, Revelation.
There are many religions in the
world, both dead, and a few that still live. And so many of them have religious
books—Bhagavad gita, the Vedic hymns, the sayings of Confucius, the Writings of
Mohammed; the Koran of the Islamic world—but in no religious book in existence
do you find the phenomenon of prophesy. What the future holds. And the reason
why you don't find it in Gautama Buddha or Mohammed is very obvious. They
don't know the future, and if they did try to unfold it, it would be obvious; their
abysmal and inexcusable ignorance.
But the God who wrote this Book
sees the end from the beginning. And tomorrow, is as today before His
omnipotent sight. And in this Book, you have thousands and thousands of years
before it comes to pass. The exact prophesy is minute detail, what God shall do
in these centuries yet to come. And that's why it is so meaningful for us
today.
We live in awesome times,
confusing times, disastrous times. We live daily in fear that any time somebody
who hates us might rain livid death from the skies upon us.
And what
of the future? We would be of all men, lost, lost, were it not that in the Book
there is revealed to us a great elective plan and purpose of God. Nothing
happens adventitiously, without meaning and purpose: God's directive
omnipotence is guiding the destiny of the nations.
And in this Book we read what it
is God purposes in the Middle East. In the Book we read of the rise of Russia.
In this Book we read of the Western Confederacy to which we in America belong.
In this Book we read about the Jew and his destiny and the church and its
glory. All of it in this Book; God has a purpose in it all.
“The bud may have a bitter taste,
but sweet will be the flower.” [“Olney Hymn 35” 1779, William Cowper] There is
a great purpose toward which all history is ultimately moving. “Count Down,” as
one volume has it. “to Armageddon.” And to conclude, as we face an inevitable
future, it is this Book with its holy promises and its comforting words that
sustain us in that ultimate and final hour.
Did you ever hear of a man, I mean
in the history of the world, did you ever hear of a man dying—facing that
inevitable world to come—and on his death bed he cried saying, “Bring me my
book of anthropology, and open it, and read to me again how we descended from
apes, and anthropoids, and marsupials, read it to me again! I'm facing that
great eternal unknown; tell me how we're descended from apes!” Did you ever
hear that in your life?
Did you ever in your life hear of
a man anywhere in history, as he lay dying, saying, “Bring me my book of
chemistry and read to me again all of those formulae that make of these
chemical analysis, or bring me my book of physics, or bring me my book of economics,
and read to me these great theories and speculations of men!” I never heard of
it in my life.
I tell you what I have heard: world
without end have I heard of those God‑sainted people who, facing the
ultimate and final end say, “Bring me that blessed, old Book filled with the
promises of God, and read to me once again of that beautiful land that is
fairer than day.”
I hear that all the time. One of
the most moving things in literature, when Sir Walter Scott lay dying, he said
to his son-in-law, Lockhart, “Bring me the Book.”
And Lockhart said, “Father, the
library has thousands of books. What book?”
And Sir Walter Scott said, “Son,
there's just one Book, bring me the Book.”
And Lockhart brought to the great
Scottish bard and novelist the Bible and he died with this Book in his hands.
“There's
just one Book,” cried the dying saint,
“Read me
the old, old story.”
And the
winged words that can never fade,
Wafted his
soul to glory.
[Author
and work unknown]
There's just one Book, God’s Book,
and it charts the way from this life to
the life
to come; from this world to our Heavenly home. May we stand together?
Our dear Lord, what a comfort to
know that when we hold this Book in our hands, and when we read on its sacred
pages about Thee, we are looking upon the very face of our Savior. This is His
life and love speaking, walking, talking, inviting, loving, dying, rising,
interceding, and some glorious and consummating day, coming again. O Lord,
that we might treasure its words, accept it’s Savior, listen to His voice. Make
Him Lord of our lives, our hope in this world and the world to come.
And while our people wait this
moment in quiet prayer, a family you, a couple you, or just one somebody you, “Today,
Pastor, I've decided for God. And we're on the way.” In the balcony round, down
one of the stairways, in the press of people on this lower floor, down one of
these aisles, “Pastor, the Spirit has spoken to my heart today, I'm accepting
Jesus as my Savior,” or “I'm putting my life in this dear church,” or “I'm
coming to be baptized,” or as the Spirit shall press the appeal on your heart make
that decision now.
And in a moment when we sing, make
that first step and may angels attend you in the way. So bless the appeal, our
Lord, with the gracious harvest in Thy saving Name, amen.
While we wait, while we pray,
while we sing, “Here I am, Pastor, I'm on the way.”