HOW CRITICS FARE IN THE FIERY FURNACE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 3:19-27
9-24-67 10:50 a.m.
On the radio and on television you are sharing the
services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. And this is the pastor
bringing a third in a series of messages, a long series of messages, on the
Book of Daniel. The first one, the second Sunday in September, was entitled Why
the Critics Assail the Book of Daniel. And the message last Sunday was Daniel
in the Lion’s Den. The message this morning is How the Critics Fare in
the Fiery Furnace. And the message next Sunday morning will be Will the
Real Daniel Stand Up? Who was he like? What was he like? When did he
live? How did he write? Why did he write? Will the Real Daniel Stand Up?
That’s next Sunday morning.
Now, today How the Critics Fare in the Fiery
Furnace. In the third chapter in the Book of Daniel, as you know, they put
the three Hebrew children, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah…Meshach, Shadrach,
Abednego…they put them in the fiery furnace. But they were children of the
Lord. They were faithful to God. They believed in the marvelous presence of
the holy Jehovah in life. And God blessed them.
Now, the critic and the modern rationalist, how
will they fare in the white, burning heat of historical truth and spiritual
fact? Now, last Sunday morning, Daniel in the Critic’s Den, they ate
him up alive. Under four great categories does the rationalist and the liberal
attack the Book of Daniel.
They say, first, that it is filled with historical
errors and inaccuracies, mis-guesses, misrepresentations, full of fiction and
imagination. Then second, they attack it, philologically. They say it is full
of linguistic language irreconcilables. Then they attack it prophetically.
They say it’s full of prophetic impossibilities. Then they attack it
doctrinally. They say it’s full of doctrinal aberrations.
Now, I haven’t time even to begin to discuss these
things by which we would see whether or not the critic is right. Many of the
things will appear in the sermons that are delivered in the future. This
morning, we shall take one. We are going to look at it historically. The
rationalist, the critic, the liberal…and this is the attitude and the approach
of every liberal in the world. There is not a liberal in the world that
believes in the integrity and the authenticity of the Book of Daniel. Every
one of them says that it’s a forgery, that it’s a fake, that it is a spurious
writing. They classify it in the Pseudepigrapha, false writings, of the people
who lived before Christ in the second century, mostly, who took assumed names
and wrote history under the garb of prophecy.
So they say, “The Book of Daniel is a Pseudepigrahic
writing. It was written four hundred years after it was supposed to have been
written. Not prophecy at all; it is a history in the garb of prophecy. All
those things had already come to pass that were supposed to have been
prophesied in the Book of Daniel.” And not only that—and we haven’t time even
to discuss that—not only that, but they say the book is filled with historical
errors, inaccuracies, gross fiction.
Now, we’re going to take one. The reason for just
one is lack of time, and second, because I have picked out the one historical
error that these historical high critics say is a sure-fire water-tight
attack. There’s no possibility to deny it. So we shall take one this morning;
and that’s Belshazzar. In the fifth chapter of the Book of Daniel, it opens: “Belshazzar,
the king.” “Belshazzar, the king.” Then you have the story of the handwriting
on the wall and the slaying of Belshazzar that night, and the taking of the
kingdom by the Medes and Persians.
All right, let’s start off. The high critic says,
the modern liberal says, the rationalist says, “There is never once any such
person as Belshazzar. He never lived. He was not a king. He didn’t die as
the Book of Daniel says. There was no history of him. That Belshazzar is pure
fiction and imagination!”
Well, that ought to be plain enough. So let’s see
how the critic and the rationalist in his attack on the Bible and his attack on
Daniel, let’s see how he substantiates what he says. I tell you, listen to
him, you would think he had an invincible and an impregnable argument. Well,
here’s what he says,
In plain
history we have a list of all of the kings of Babylon, all of them. First,
there was Nebuchadnezzar. And he reigned over Babylon. He built the
Neo-Babylonian Empire and he built the glorious city of Babylon. There was
first Nebuchadnezzar, and he reigned forty years, and he died 562 BC. First,
Nebuchadnezzar. Second, Evil-Merodach the son of Nebuchadnezzar. He reigned
two years from 562 until 560. And in 560, after Evil-Merodach had reigned two
years, he was slain by his brother-in-law, Neriglissar. And Neriglissar
reigned for four years, from 560 to 556. And Neriglissar died after he had
reigned four years. Neriglissar died in 556 BC. He was followed by his infant
son, Labashi-Marduk. And Labashi-Marduk, the infant son of Neriglissar reigned
nine months and he was deposed by Nabonidus. And Nabonidus, who began his
reign in 556 BC, reigned seventeen years until 539 BC when Babylon was
conquered, and Nabonidus was captured by the Medo-Persians.
And that, well, that’s plain enough and simple
enough. All of the kings of Babylon are well-known: Nebuchadnezzar,
Evil-Merodach, Neriglissar, Labashi-Marduk, and Nabonidus, then the Medes and
the Persians. Yet, Daniel says the last king of Babylon was Belshazzar. There
is not an ancient secular source that indicates there was any other king beside
the last king, Nabonidus. But Daniel says Belshazzar was the last king. There
is not ancient historian, not one, who names Belshazzar. Everyone of them
names Nabonidus as the last king of Babylon. But Daniel says Belshazzar is the
last king of Babylon. All of the chronicles of ancient history say that the
last king of Babylon, Nabonidus was not killed, that he was captured, and he
was entreated friendly, graciously by Cyrus the Persian, and he was given a
pension for the rest of his life, and that he died a normal death. But Daniel
says the last king of Babylon, Belshazzar was slain the night that Babylon
fell.
Well, that’s plain enough. So the critic comes
and the rationalist comes and he says, he thinks upon an invincible foundation,
there was no such person who ever lived by the name of Belshazzar. And he was
certainly not king of Babylon. And he was certainly not killed the night that
Babylon was taken. Well, that’s very plain, I say. Do you understand that?
All right, that’s what the critic says. And it
looks like a sure-fire, watertight argument as he says. And that’s why I have
chosen it. The critic says, the rationalist says, that this story of
Belshazzar, like all the rest of the stories and all the rest of the people in
the Book of Daniel, are sheer unadulterated fiction, pure imagination. Good!
Now, let’s see how the critic fares in the fiery
furnace of truth, and light, and historical revelation. You see, the spade has
done a great deal to Daniel. And the archeologist went over there to those
vast and extensive mounds under which are buried the ruins of ancient Babylon.
And the archeologist began to dig and turn spade. And as they dug down in
those vast and extensive ruins, and they have barely begun, for every place
they have excavated, there are ten thousand others they haven’t touched. But
as the archeologist began to dig with his spade he unearthed thousands and
thousands of cuneiforms, that’s the ancient way of Chaldea writing, Babylonian
writing, he unearthed thousands of tablets of pottery pieces inscribed of clay,
baked clay, on which they wrote their contracts, and their letters, and their
histories. They unearthed thousands of those! And they sent them all to the
British Museum in London. And the Assyriologist studied them. A man who is
learned in the ancient civilizations and languages of Mesopotamia, that
Tigris-Euphrates River district, ancient Assyria, Babylon, he’s called an
Assyriologist.
So the Assyriologists began to study those
cuneiform inscriptions recording the ancient life of Babylon. And “one,” they
found a cuneiform tablet in which was the name of Belshazzar. First time his
name had ever come to light. So there was somebody at that time who lived by
the name of Belshazzar. First.
Second, then they discovered a cuneiform
inscription, one of those tablets, and it put together the names of Nabonidus,
the last king, and Belshazzar. So there was some connection between Nabonidus,
the last king, and Belshazzar. Interesting!
Three, then they found a cuneiform tablet, one of
those ancient Babylonian inscriptions, and it said that Belshazzar was the king’s
eldest son. Well, it is really getting interesting? So Nabonidus had a son.
And his eldest son was called Belshazzar.
Four, then they discovered one of those cuneiform
tablets, and it was a contract, a business contract. And the men were taking
an oath. And the oath was made in the names of Belshazzar and Nabonidus. Now,
in ancient Babylonia, oaths were taken in the name of the reigning king. So
when that business contract was recorded, and the men who recorded it took
their oath in the name of Nabonidus and Belshazzar, it showed that Belshazzar,
the eldest son of Nabonidus was co-king, and co-regent, and co-sovereign with
his father, Nabonidus.
Then as they dug, and as they continued to dig,
my, my, the things we are learning about Belshazzar. He has come to stand
before us not only as a great personality, but as one of the leading spirits of
his age. He was born in 575 BC. When he was fourteen years old,
Nebuchadnezzar died. When he was twenty years old, his father ascended the
throne. When he was twenty years old, we know that he had a house of his own
in the city of Babylon. When he was twenty-five years old, one of his
secretaries is referred to. When he was twenty-seven years old, the steward of
his house is referred to and several other secretaries. When he was thirty
years old, he was commander-in-chief of the armies of northern Babylonia. And
when he was thirty years old, he sent a gift to the temple of Shamash at Sippar
up the Euphrates River. And about the same time, he built a house for another
sister at Ur, which is down the Euphrates River in the women’s compound, so she
would have a place to live by herself. And another thing about him, among a
multitude of others, when he was twenty-six years old, his grandpap died at the
old age of one hundred four years. Well, we just know a whole lot of things
about Belshazzar. Isn’t that amazing? Isn’t that astonishing?
Now, why was it that he was left king in Babylon?
Well, that’s very apparent. His father, Nabonidus, was one of the most unusual
men of ancient history. Nabonidus was an archeologist. Isn’t that
astonishing? The king of Babylon, he’s an archeologist. And he is highly
sensitive to cultural and religious interests. He loved to go around and to
rebuild old temples and to worship their gods. And he would dig into
foundations and cornerstones and he would find ancient documents and he’d copy
off the list of the names. He was interested in archeology, and in culture,
and in religion. And he was not interested in affairs of state. So he left
the affairs of state to his eldest son, Belshazzar.
All right, a second thing about Nabonidus: He did
not live in Babylon. He was king there seventeen years, but for ten of those
seventeen years, he lived in Tema, an oasis in northern Arabia. And an
inscription has been found which says that when Nabonidus left Babylon, he left
the kingship in charge of his eldest son, Belshazzar. So all of those years
when Nabonidus was king of Babylon he lived for the most part in Tema, and his
son was the actual titular king of the empire.
Now, that explains this unusual and strange
reference in the fifth chapter of Daniel and in the sixteenth verse, in the
fifth chapter of Daniel and the twenty-ninth verse: Belshazzar says that he’s
going to make Daniel third ruler in the kingdom. Well, that’s a strange
thing. Why not the second? Because the first ruler in the kingdom was
Nabonidus, and the second ruler in the kingdom was Belshazzar. And the third
ruler in the kingdom is to be Daniel.
Now, we have found out how the empire ended. As
the archeologists dug up, they found the Annalistic Tablet of Cyrus. This is
Cyrus, the Persian’s personal description of the fall of Babylon. And we learn
from that Annalistic Tablet of Cyrus that Nabonidus was captured four months
before Babylon fell, which left the entire government in the hands of
Belshazzar, the king of Babylon. And it says that when Cyrus took Babylon, he
did it easily. It fell quickly and easily, which agrees exactly with what
Daniel says in the last verses of the fifth chapter. And then the Annalistic
Tablets of Cyrus also says that, that night the king’s son died, which agrees
exactly with what Daniel writes: “In that night was Belshazzar, the king of the
Chaldeans slain.”
There is no syllable, there is no part, of Daniel,
of Belshazzar, but has been confirmed by the cuneiform inscriptions dug up by
the archeologist. And yet, the most amazing thing they I know in historical
literature is this: that the name of Belshazzar fell out of history. There is
not an ancient historian, Berossus, Alexander Polyhistor, there is not an
ancient historian that ever mentions him or ever heard of him.
Look at this: Herodotus, who wrote literature, oh,
how Herodotus could write. I took a course one time in Herodotus and read his
history in Greek. How he could write and how interestingly! Herodotus, the
father of history, born at Halicarnassus, there on the Greek coast, Herodotus
visited Babylonia in 560 BC. That’s within eighty years after Babylon fell.
Herodotus visited in Babylon in 560 BC, and he wrote of her kings and he wrote
of her queens. And he wrote of her great palaces and described the magnificent
city and the hanging gardens and the ziggurats and all of the rest. Yet, Herodotus
never heard of Belshazzar, nor was he ever mentioned by any other ancient
historian. His name literally and completely fell out of history. And the
only place he was ever mentioned was in Daniel, the Book of Daniel.
How did Daniel know him? The critic says that
Daniel was written four hundred years later. How did Daniel know Belshazzar?
For this very simple reason, the critic says he is a mis-representer. Daniel
lived in that day. Daniel was a contemporary. And when Daniel wrote, Belshazzar
was still alive. And when Daniel wrote, Belshazzar was the king in Babylon.
And Daniel was there when Belshazzar was slain. And outside of Daniel, his
name had fallen out of human history.
How Does the Critic Fare in the Fiery Furnace?
Look at him. Look at him. Who is right: the impregnable, invincible attack of
the modernist and the rationalist, or the enduring Word of God? Now, we have
spoken of history in the Book of Daniel, and we’ve taken one typical incident
of it. And there will be many others that will appear as the days go on by.
Now, for a moment, let’s take the Book of Daniel
in history. For the higher critic, and the rationalist, and the modernist, and
I repeat, the entire liberal world, which is practically all of modern Christianity
in its academic form, the entire liberal world follows this belief that Daniel
is a forgery, a spurious Pseudepigraphic writing. Now, they say that the Book
of Daniel was a forgery, written in 165 BC, upon the death of Antiochus
Epiphanes, in the days of the Maccabees. Now, that’s what they say. And they
all believe it.
Now, we’re going to follow the Book of Daniel in
history. Where does it appear? All right, first, first, and above all, it’s
in the canon. It’s in the Bible. It’s in the Jewish Old Testament sacred
writings. It is there. Open your Bible and look and you’ll find Daniel in
it. Open your Bible and look, you will find Daniel there. Open your Hebrew
Bible and you’ll find Daniel there. They divided their Bible into three parts:
the Torah, the Law, the Nevi’im, the Prophets, and the Ketuvim, the Writings, the
Hagiographa, the sacred writings. And there you will find Daniel in the canon
of the Old Testament.
Now, you look at that for a minute. There were a
hundred marvelous writings, glorious writings that were refused canonicity,
refused a place in the Hebrew Old Testament. 1 Maccabees is one. 1 Maccabees
is one of the most glorious pieces of literature in the world. 1 Maccabees is
one of the finest writings ever from the pen of man. Martin Luther said that 1
Maccabees deserved to be among the Holy Scriptures, and I agree with him. I
would love to see 1 Maccabees in the Bible. But the ancient synagogue refused
1 Maccabees because it was not old enough. It was written about 100 BC.
Another, Ecclesiasticus: Ecclesiasticus was
written 300 BC, and it represented Jewish thought at that time. And it is one
of the finest writings in all literature. But it was refused canonicity
because it was not old enough. The ancient synagogue had a severe test, and
that’s the word “canon.” “Canon” in Hebrew, “canon” in Greek, “canon” in
English, spelled alike, pronounced alike. Canon, it means a measure; it means
a test. And for a book to be in the Bible, it has to meet the canon. It has
to meet the measure and the test.
Now, the ancient synagogue, those old Jews back
there in the hundreds of years before Christ, had a severe, and pious, and holy
idea about inspiration and about canonicity. And their canon was this: that a
book to be in the Bible had to be inspired. But no book was inspired since the
days of Nehemiah and Malachi because there were no prophets. And they believed
there were no prophets inspired that had arisen since Nehemiah and Malachi. In
order, therefore, for a book to meet the canon, it had to be inspired, it had
to be written before Nehemiah and Malachi.
Now, when you study this, and if any of you are
interested, you can intertwine the life and times of Jesus the Messiah and you
will find it meticulously discussed. That old synagogue challenged, those old
pious Jews, learned, erudite, they challenged whether the Proverbs should be in
the Bible or not. They challenged the canonicity of Ecclesiastes, whether it
be in the Bible or not. And some of them challenged Ezekiel, whether the
prophet Ezekiel should be in the Bible or not. But there never was a time
then, today, or any other time, when that old ancient synagogue challenged the
canonicity of Daniel. Never. Never. It’s in the Bible. And those old
ancient synagogues accepted the inspiration and the canonicity of the Book of
Daniel, which meant, they believed it was written in 550 BC.
Now, the critic says that in 165 BC, those same
pious and learned Jews, those great rabbis back there, that they taught a fraud
written in their own day, in their own age, in their own time, and added it to
the Word of God. And they want us to believe that! It is the same grotesque
ridiculous idea as if we had a convocation of theologians today and decided we
were going to put Giovanni Papini’s “Life of Christ” in the Bible. The same
kind of an idea as if we tried to put Papini’s “Life of Christ” in the Bible
along with the four gospels, the same idea as if those old ancient rabbis in
165 BC took a romance, a fiction written in their own day and own time and
added it, smuggled it into the Word of God. That’s what the critic wants us to
believe. I say he stretches my credulity beyond what it is stretchable. It
just doesn’t give that much. Now, I don’t see how he believes it; but he
does. And all of them believe it. And it’s the academic presentation of
Daniel in practically every school in the world today.
Now, we got to go on. We’re following the history
of the Book of Daniel. First, it’s in the canon, it’s in the Bible, which
meant those old and ancient rabbis believed that it was written before
Nehemiah, and in the days of the sixth century BC.
All right, second, it is in the Septuagint, LXX, seventy.
The Septuagint, the most famous and most influential of all of the translations
in the world is the Greek Septuagint. In Alexandria, in the days of the
colonies, some Jewish scholars gathered together, that’s where it gets its
name, Septuagint, seventy, there were supposed to be seventy of them, and they
translated the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek. And the Septuagint translation of
the Holy Bible is the one that the apostles used when they preached the gospel
of the Son of God.
When it says in the Bible at the beginning of the
same Scriptures, he preached unto him Jesus, he was preaching out of the
Septuagint. And when it says that Apollos, that eloquent preacher from
Alexandria, who was over in Ephesus, that he took the Scriptures and mightily
convinced the Jews out of the Scriptures that Jesus was the Christ, he had in
his hand the Septuagint. The Book of Hebrews in the New Testament is based
upon the Septuagint. The Septuagint is the most famous and significant of all
of the translations in the history of the world.
Now the Septuagint was translated in Alexandria
about 300 BC. And many scholars say that by 275 BC, that the translation was
complete. Yet, these critics say that the Book of Daniel was written in 165
BC, when the Book of Daniel is in the Septuagint, which was supposed to have
been translated 300 BC.
Well, let’s go on. 1 Maccabees, that I have just
said, 1Maccabees, one of the noblest, one of the noblest pieces of literature
in the world. In the first chapter of 1 Maccabees the author quotes the Book
of Daniel. And this is the time when Daniel was supposed to be forged. He
quotes the Book of Daniel as being inspired Scripture.
And, in the second chapter of the Book of
Maccabees, old, venerable, dying Mattathias, the priest who moved in and
challenged the Greeks under Antiochus Epiphanes who was trying to make the
temple of Jerusalem a part of Jupiter’s temple and offered a pig, a sow, on the
altar and spread its juice, took its juice and carried it all over the temple
and spread it around to defile it all, old Mattathias, an aged venerable
father, dying in the second chapter of the Book of Maccabees, calls his boys
around him, and he addresses Judas Maccabaeus, from whence it gets its name the
Maccabees, “the hammer”, he addresses his son, Judas Maccabaeus, and Simon and
the rest of his brethren, and he urges them to be true to the faith. And he
cites, as an instance of loyalty unto God to death the three Hebrew boys named
in the Book of Daniel. He cites Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah and he tells
the story of Daniel in the lion’s den. That’s in 1 Maccabees, written about
the time they say the forgery of Daniel was composed and pawned off.
All right, we’re following down through the years,
Josephus. Josephus was a contemporary of the apostle Paul and of the apostle John.
And about 80 AD, he wrote a history of the Jews from the time of Abraham to the
destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD. And one of the most beautiful stories in
the world is the story of Alexander and his proposed destruction of Jerusalem
and how Jerusalem was saved. I wish I had time to tell that story. When
Alexander, who was infuriated against the Jews because they wouldn’t send him
provisions when he was besieging Tyre, when Alexander the Great had burned Tyre
to the ground, and when Alexander the Great had burned Gaza to the ground, he
took his army to go to Jerusalem to destroy Jerusalem and to make an ash heap
out of it.
And Jaddua, the high priest took it to God. God
revealed to him how to do. And the people were dressed in white. Every citizen
in the old Jerusalem was dressed in white. And Jaddua, the high priest, put on
his high priestly garments, the scarlet and the purple and the golden miter and
the breastplate, and followed by his fellow priest. When Alexander the Great
approached with his great army to destroy the city, he was met with a glorious
procession of Jaddua, the high priest and his fellow priests; and then all of
the people of the city distressed in pure white. And when Jaddua met Alexander
the Great, he had in his hand a copy of the Word of God. And Jaddua opened it
at the Book of Daniel and showed Alexander the Great, out of the Book of Daniel,
how Daniel had prophesied his coming and his great victories.
Then Josephus tells how Alexander the Great bowed
and then went up to the temple and called on the name of Jehovah God and
offered sacrifices in His name. And when was that? 330 BC. Yet the critic
said the Book was written in 165 BC, as a forgery. Just following the history
of the Book of Daniel. Of course, they say Josephus is a liar. And that this
is fiction, too. But this fact remains that can’t be denied, Alexander the
Great burned to the ground every city in Syria that was friendly to Darius, the
king of the Persians. But he spared Jerusalem and favored honored upon it.
Why? There has to be some answer. And the answer is found in Josephus and the
story that Josephus told.
We must hasten. Qumran, just a few years ago,
they discovered the Dead Sea Scrolls in those caves at the north end of the
Dead Sea. And the oldest copies that we had of the old Bible were written
about 900 AD; and they found there scrolls of the Bible that were written
before Christ, which took back the Old Testament Scriptures more than a
thousand years. And in the Qumran Scrolls, they found Isaiah. And in the
Qumran Scrolls, they found Daniel. And those scrolls date back in their
writing and in their copies, you know, when they were copying, those scrolls
date back to the time when they say the forgery of Daniel was composed. There
it is upon the Word of God.
Allow me one other word by summary. We have had
thousands, and we have had thousands of years to see for ourselves whether or
not the prophecies of Daniel are true. We’re not shut up to what a critic
says. We have thousands and thousands of years to test whether or not the
prophecies of Daniel are true or not. Are they true? Daniel said the head of
gold is Babylon. And the arms and the breast are Media and Persia; and the
thigh is Greece, Alexander and his kingdom; and the legs of iron are Rome, east
and west. And thereafter, Daniel says, there’ll never be another world
empire. It is broken up into clay and iron in the toes of the image. Is it
true? Or is it not? We have had thousands of years to fix it. Is it of God
and only God could know the future? Is it or is it not?
One other thing and I must quit. Daniel says in
the ninth chapter that wars and desolations are determined to the end. Wars
and desolations are determined to the end. And there have been periods of
scores of years when the whole academic world has scoffed at such an idea.
Daniel said that wars and desolations are determined to the end. Is it true?
In February of 1914, there was a prophetic conference that was called: “The
Prophetic Conference.” There was a prophetic conference held in Los Angeles,
California. And in that prophetic conference, those men of God pointed out
that Daniel, and Jesus, and John, and Paul described for us that nation shall
rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom and there shall be wars and
famine and pestilence. And when the editor of the Christian Advocate, got hold
of what those men in that prophetic conference had said, he scornfully said: “It
ought to be called a “pathetic conference” not a “prophetic conference.” Such
an idea that war will continue!
That was in February of 1914, within six months,
the archduke of Serbia had been assassinated and the entire civilized world was
in the grip of war. I can remember as a boy when the headline came out: “President
Woodrow Wilson says we’re entering a war to end all war. There will never be
another war when we win this war.”
And after World War I, away went those flights of
fancy. And then Hitler, and Stalin, and Tojo, and the World War II, and the
Korean War, and the Vietnam War, and Daniel says: “And wars and desolations are
determined to the end.” Is he right, or is the mouthing critic right? Which
one? Just look for yourself, that is all. Just see for yourself. Is this the
Word of God or is it pure fiction, as the rationalist would have us believe.
“The flower fadeth, the grass withereth, but the Word of God shall endure
forever.” [Isaiah 40:8] And a part of
that Word is the revelation of the Lord God to the Prophet Daniel.
Now we must sing our song. And as we do a family
you, a couple you, to come into the fellowship of the church, somebody you to
give himself to Jesus. While we sing our song on the first note of the first
stanza would you come. In this lower floor into the aisle and down here to the
front, “Here I am preacher, and here I come. I give you my hand, see I have
given my heart to God, and here I stand.” In the balcony around and to the
stairway to the front and to the back and to either side and time and to
spare. Come. “Pastor this is my wife, these are our children, all of us are
coming.” Or just one somebody you; decide now, decide now. And when you stand
up in a moment, stand up coming. Make it now. Come now. And God bless you in
the way as you come. Do so as we stand and sing.