ARE OUR
YOUTH WORTH IT?
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
2 Timothy
1:1-7
03-16-86 10:50
a.m.
Are Our Youth Worth It? Are our young
people worth the sacrifice? Second Timothy, chapter 1, the first seven verses;
now, before the Lord, let us all stand and we will read God's Word together; 2
Timothy, chapter 1, verses 1 through 7. Now, together,
Paul, an
apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, according to the promise of life
which is in Christ Jesus,
To
Timothy, my dearly beloved son, Grace, mercy, and peace, from God the Father
and Christ Jesus our Lord.
I thank
God, Whom I serve from my forefathers with pure conscience, 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 thy mother Eunice; and I am persuaded that in thee
also.
Wherefore
I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God, which is in thee
by the putting on of my hands.
For God
hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound
mind.
[2 Timothy 1:1-7]
Remain just for a minute. Our Lord, in all the
years that I have been an emissary, we have never faced a more critical moment
than this. So bless the pastor and our people as we open our hearts Godward,
and may the Lord speak to us, in Thy blessed name, amen.
In the seventeenth chapter of the Book of John, the
fourth gospel, is recorded the high priestly prayer of our Lord, and in the nineteenth
verse our Lord says, "For their sakes—for their sakes, I"—and then
the Greek New Testament, it is hagiazo. Had He spoken it in Hebrew, he
would have said qadosh. They are congruent, equivalent words, whether
Old Testament or New Testament. Translated in our King James Version,
sanctify, "For their sakes, I sanctify Myself." That is, "for
them, I set Myself apart. I dedicate, I consecrate my life for them." And
that raises the question, are our youth worth that consecration? This message
concerns us in the church. It is not an exposition of a great doctrinal
revelation. It concerns the ministries of our congregation.
As I read the Bible, there is great precedent for
what the pastor seeks to do today. For example, in the first Corinthian
letter, Paul does not write exclusively about atonement or the deity of our
Lord or regeneration or eschatology, the coming again of Christ. But he writes
about things concerning the life of the people. He writes, for example, about
their petty divisions. He writes about a court case. He writes about the
unmarried life. He writes about food offered to idols. He writes about women
covering themselves with a veil or cutting their hair. He speaks of a case of
incest, where the son of a father is living with his father's wife, his
stepmother. He speaks about getting drunk at the Lord's table. And he finally
speaks about the collection, the raising of money for the church. Sometimes,
we can be so heavenly minded that we are of no earthly use. We don't face the
actual realities of a congregation whose life is centered in the earth.
So this morning, we are going to speak about us.
On Sunday, April 20 through Sunday, April 27, through May—Sunday, May 4—two
weeks, Sunday and a middle Sunday and a concluding Sunday—on that Sunday, we
are to raise four million dollars for our young people, for our teenagers, ages
thirteen through eighteen or nineteen. And the purpose of the offering is to
pay for, to remodel and to furnish our youth building, four million dollars.
When we think of a project like that, do we also suppose they are worth it?
That is a very large offering, four million dollars. And as we look at these
boys and girls, we must conclude they must be costly. Are they worth it?
I one time heard of a father. He was complaining
of what his son was costing him. The boy was always wanting something, and
what he wanted, his father had to pay for. The boy wanted a football or he
wanted a basketball or he wanted to go on a retreat or he had to have new
shoes. And this father was complaining about what his boy cost. And the man
to whom he was complaining said, "Well, I also had a boy, but now he
doesn't cost me anything. My boy was like yours. He was always wanting
something, and it was always costing. But he doesn't cost me a cent now, for
you see," said the father, "last week, we buried my boy."
They cost because they are ours. They are given
to us. They belong to us. They are blood and soul and fiber and bone and life
of us. They are we, tomorrow, and the investment we make in them is like an
investment in the soul of life itself.
It can be easily asked, "Why do you present
such an appeal this Sunday, March 16, when the actual offering will begin on
the twentieth of April? Why do you begin this early?" The answer is
two-fold. First, we must prepare for it, and there is so little time because
of the intensity of our church program. The life of the church is filled every
day, all the weeks, but especially now.
For example, just a moment ago, Lee Hunt made the
announcement that this coming Thursday, we are having prayer meetings over the
metroplex for our revival. Then the next day, on Friday, we are having an
all-church missions banquet. Then the next week, we have our seventieth annual
pre-Easter services here in this sanctuary. Then comes Easter Sunday, and like
these beautiful girls sang, I always prepare a sermon on the resurrection of
the living Lord on Easter Sunday. Then immediately follows our revival meeting,
the first Sunday in April, April sixth through the second Sunday in April,
April 13. And then is this offering. There is no time except now to present
it to our people.
A second reason is we need to pray for such an
offering as that. I could not pick out in the course of the year a more
unfelicitous, insalubrious, more difficult time than the one that we are going
to assign ourselves for this four-million-dollar offering. It is income tax
time, and that is the most unhappy moment of the year. Nobody hates to pay
interest and nobody hates to pay income tax more than I do, and right in the
middle of that income tax time, we are taking up a four-million-dollar offering
here in the church. That is why I got to pray for myself, and I got to pray
for our appeal. Actually, we don't get any further in any of our work than
what we ask God to bless, to pray for it, to make it an object of prayer, to
ask God to work with us in it.
There is not anything that we face that is of more
vital importance than that we succeed in this offering. I heard of a man, a
well-to-do man in one of our great cities who was standing on the street
corner. And right there, also, was standing a ragged urchin, a poor boy of the
street. He was hocking his newspapers. At that day, they sold for five cents
apiece, and he was selling his newspapers. And the rich man standing there on
the corner looking at the boy turned to the lad and said, "Son, I'll match
you whether I pay you double for your paper or nothing."
And the boy said, "No, mister. I can't do
that."
Then the man said, "Well, son, I'll tell you,
I'll match you whether I pay you twenty-five cents for your paper or you give
it to me."
And the boy said, "No. No, mister. I can't
do that."
And the man upped it. He said, "Well, son,
I'll match you whether I give you fifty cents for your paper or nothing."
And by that time, there was a little crowd that
gathered around the boy. And the boy said, "No, mister. I—I can't do
that."
Then the man finally said, "Well, son, I'll
match you whether I give you a dollar for your paper or nothing."
And the boy considered it and then finally
answered, "No, mister. I can't do that, for I can't afford to lose."
That is the exact way that we are. We cannot
afford to lose. We have a four—four-million offering to make, and we cannot
afford to lose. Now, why?
The first reason is there is a
dear-God-blessed-prayer-partner in our church by the name of Mrs. Ruth Ray
Hunt, and she has given us two million dollars and asks that we match it dollar
for dollar. Mrs. Hunt is one woman, a dedicated one woman in our congregation,
but she believes in our young people. She believes in their destiny. She
believes in their work, and because of that consecrated commitment, she has
given to us two million dollars, asking that we match it dollar for dollar.
There are thousands of us. There is one of her. And
if the thousands of us do not respond, how can I lift my head from shame and
ignominy and embarrassment before the Lord? And how shall I come here to be a
pastor of this congregation when we are not willing to match what that precious
Christian woman has done? To me, I could not stand here in gratitude and in
thanksgiving and in praise to God if the thousands of us would not answer an
appeal like that. "I need to give!" exclamation point and period.
"I ought to give."
When the Lord said to David, "You go to Mount
Moriah, and there, where Araunah has his threshing floor, build an altar to the
Lord God." That is the place where, later, the temple was built. It is
the place today toward which all of the Jewish people at that Wailing Wall,
where they face in prayer, that place. God said to David, "You go and
build an altar there." And when Araunah saw the king coming, he bowed
himself to the ground and said, "My lord, O King, you take it. I give it
to you. You take it." And King David replied, "I will not offer
unto the Lord my God that which doth cost me nothing." [2 Samuel 24:24] I do not think that it is
right for our people to accept a great building like that, and we pour nothing
of ourselves into it. It costs us nothing.
The Lord is interested in how we reply and how we
respond. In the twelfth chapter of the Gospel of Mark, there the Bible says
that Jesus sat over against the treasury and observed how the people cast—gave—into
the treasury. The same Lord in heaven is no less interested now than He was
then in how our people give. "I ought to give. If our church has that
youth building, I ought to have a part in paying for it. I ought to do it. I
am morally obligated to do it. And if I don't, it is because I am not true to
my faith and to my commitment to the Lord."
May I point out a second thing? Not only are we
given two million dollars for these young people, and we have been asked to
match it dollar for dollar, but we can liberate our church in a—in a host of
marvelous blessings for our people if we will respond. What is happening now
at this moment in our church is this. That Salvation Army building cost four
million, six hundred thousand dollars. It will cost nine hundred thousand
dollars to remodel it. It will cost a hundred thousand dollars to furnish it.
What we're now doing is we are taking the money from the rentals of our parking
buildings, and we are buying that Salvation Army building. That's where the
money now comes from. But that money that comes to us from our rentals is to
be used for and is dedicated to the upkeep of our properties. And because we
are consuming that money in buying that building, our properties and our
facilities are rapidly deteriorating, and a thousand other things that is
desperately needed we see pass by in tragedy because we are giving nothing to
the purchase of that youth building.
Let me give you an example. This last week, an
appeal was made to me for our kitchen. That kitchen, just as you see it now, has
been used down there for years and years and years, and it needs to be remade.
It needs new equipment, and it will cost fifty thousand dollars for that
kitchen.
And I have been asked as of last week for fifty
thousand dollars for the kitchen. Where do I get fifty thousand dollars? Take
again. The week before that, our young women met, and they made an appeal to
me for one hundred thousand dollars for our lodge at Mount Lebanon. We have a
spacious lodge out there, but there's no plumbing in it that will work, and the
thing leaks, and it is rotting down. And they tell me we will use that lodge
as a retreat every week, we and the other areas in our church. We will use
that, and we desperately need to do it, but it is unusable now. It is
uninhabitable now. And we need one hundred thousand dollars for that lodge.
They asked me for it. Where do I get one hundred thousand dollars?
Or take again our Burt Building—that's that
eleven-story building right there—our Burt Building, the windows are rotting,
and they will fall out unless we do something to that Burt building. And not
only that, but our juniors, all of our children, our boys and girls, meet over
there in that building. For us to ignore them, to forget them, is
unthinkable. The elevators in that building were placed in there sixty years
ago. So old are those elevators, you cannot find parts for them, and it will
cost five hundred thousand dollars to replace those elevators. And the men
come to me and say, "Pastor, we need five hundred thousand dollars for
those elevators, and we need thousands of dollars to replace those windows.
And we need other thousands of dollars for these children, these juniors that
meet over there."
What is the matter? I cannot come to the
congregation and, every Sunday, I make an appeal for money; fifty thousand
dollars for the kitchen, a hundred thousand dollars for the lodge, five hundred
thousand dollars for the elevators, other thousands of dollars for other areas
in the church. I cannot do that. It doesn't please God to do that. Now, what
do we do? We planned this thing in a way that God would help us take care of
all of our needs. We have an income from our parking buildings of over a
million dollars a year, and the purpose of that income is that we take care of
the Burt Building, we take care of our kitchen. We take care of our lodge. We
have the income. It is provided for. What has happened is, rather than our
people responding to the need of our young people, we are taking our money and
buying the building with the money that ought to be used for the care of our
facilities.
May I point out, if I may, just one other? This
building in which we worship was erected in 1890. There is a big, beautiful
plaque out there, a cornerstone right there at Ervay and San Jacinto dedicating
this building in 1890. It's an old house of worship. I have a reaction on the
inside of my soul to the oldness of this building and the oldness of our
facilities. I'm proud of it. I'm glad for it. It thrills my heart before God
as I thank Him for this church, one hundred seventeen years old. And I thank
the Lord for this sanctuary that is old. I—I rejoice in it. Dr. Truett stood
back of this very pulpit desk and preached here for forty-seven years. During
his ministry, President Woodrow Wilson of the United States came and worshiped
God in this place. I am in my forty-second year as his successor preaching
behind this sacred desk. In my pastorate, Gerald Ford, President Ford, came to
Dallas to worship here in this church.
Nor could I have time to describe these that have
been saved, families that have found the Lord, many of you here in divine
presence. "This is the very place—that's the very seat where I was when I
opened my heart to the Lord Jesus." I do not mind the age of our church.
I love to look at it. It's an old, old building, soon to be one hundred years
old. But I don't mind that. I rather rejoice in it. The only thing is, I
think, we ought to keep it clean and beautiful and furbished and nice and
repaired. And for the building to fall into deterioration dishonors God and is
a reflection of our own unhappy and unwilling response. I love to think of our
men seated down in these different committees, and we have the money. It's
been arranged for.
We have the money coming in month after month after
month to take care of all of our facilities, all of them, the lodge, this
building, every other building, our kitchen, everything. It is provided for.
We just need to do what, under God, we ought to do; namely, when we buy a
building and when we project a program, that we share in it. I need to do it.
We need to do it. I am morally obligated to do it. And for me to try to come
before God with nothing, "Shall I offer to God that which doth cost me
nothing"—is not right.
And for me and for us to respond to this appeal is
the rightest thing that I could ever, ever think for. We have in our
programming, we have a card that will be sent to each member of our church, and
it reads like this, after about a month, you will receive a card, and it reads
like this; on the back side, "An investment in youth," and in
parenthesis underneath, "Our church and our hope for tomorrow." Then
it reads, "We have a great group of young people. Thank God for them,
every one. We have a great church. Praise God for His blessings upon our
people. We have a great youth building, the purchased Salvation Army building.
Now, we need to pay for it, to renovate it, and to furnish it. The total cost
is four million dollars, which is our exciting, inspiring youth challenge. God
has given us a double blessing through Mrs. Ruth Ray Hunt. She has pledged to
match dollar for dollar every penny we give to our youth building."
Then on the other side is, "Our investment in
youth, our church and our hope for tomorrow. Ecclesiastes 12:1, Remember now
thy Creator in the days of thy youth. Luke 2:52, And Jesus increased in wisdom
and in stature." And "Psalm 127:3, Lo, children are an heritage of
the LORD."
Then the pledge, "Because I believe in the
dynamic young people of our First Baptist Church and because I desire to be a
vital part of their spiritual growth and future and because I can double my
offering through the matching gift of Mrs. Ruth Ray Hunt and because I love
Jesus, accept my pledge of—" and then in parenthesis, "To be paid
during the ten months of April 1986 to January 1987," which equals two tax
years.
Haven't you heard me say ever since you've been
here, "I believe in confirming signs?” If a thing is of God, God will
confirm it by a sign from heaven, always; always, a confirming sin. This is a
confirming sign. I do not even know this man, except I found out that he was a
Catholic. His name is Clayborn Johnson, and this is the note that he wrote,
"This isn't much for a First Baptist contribution, but I intend to do it
again later. Anyhow, the youth center is a wonderful plan, and I am delighted
to start with this little bit." And he encloses a check for five hundred
dollars; a Catholic. I don't even know him, but he heard about what we were
doing, and he says, "I want to start with this gift of five hundred
dollars, and I'll add to it later." To us, this is a thousand dollars.
It will be matched dollar for dollar by Mrs. Hunt. Anything we give will be
doubled, a confirming sign from heaven. The Lord is with us, and the Lord is
working for us.
I could not think of a more happy assignment than
that. "Pastor, these young people, they are to be loved and to be cared
for." The world makes a bid for them beyond anything that I ever knew
when I was growing up, drugs and alcohol and promiscuity and worldliness.
Everything that Satan could think for has he come up with to woo away our young
people. And God says, "They belong to Me, not to darkness; to life and
light, not to promiscuity and drugs." Dear God, and if we have any hope
for our church at all, it lies in these young people that God hath given us.
I was interested in the strangest kind of a story,
kind of a little funny thing that I read last week. Long time ago, there was a
lord bishop of the Anglican church, and his diocese was in London. His name
was Dr. Winnington Ingram, and this lord bishop of the Anglican church of
London was on a vacation in Scotland. And while he was walking around the
hills of Scotland, he came across a shepherd and his sheep. So the lord bishop
began walking by the side of the Scottish shepherd. And as they walked, why,
the bishop said to the shepherd, sort of playfully, he said, "I am a
shepherd also."
The Scotsman looked at him incredulously and said,
"You are a shepherd?"
Then he asked, "How many sheep do you
have?"
And the bishop said, "Oh," and he
thought about his London diocese, and he said, "about a million."
And the Scotsman gulped in amazement and said,
"A million? You have a million sheep?"
"Yes," said the lord bishop. "I am
the shepherd of over a million sheep."
Then the shepherd asked, "Well, sir, what do
you do in lambing time?"
You know, I have been turning that question over
in my mind, oh, ever since I read that little story. It is a good question,
don't you think? It is a good question. "What do you do in lambing
time?"
What do you do about your children? What do you
do about your young people? They pass by on the sidewalks. They drive by in
their cars. You see them every day that you live. What do you do about your
children? What do you do in lambing time? And that is our heavenly answer.
Lord God, as I live before Thee and as Jesus has touched my heart, Lord God, I
do sanctify myself to be responsible for them; they are our hope and our church
of tomorrow. If we have any hope, if we have any church, it lies in them. For
their sakes, I sanctify, I consecrate, I dedicate myself.
May I make one last observation? God looks down
from us—upon us. God sees us, and how we respond. He writes it in His book,
and it becomes our destiny and our eternal future. Dear Mrs. Hunt with two
million dollars, "I give it to you," she says, "for our young
people and their work." All we are asked to do by the thousands of us is
to match the gift dollar for dollar. And if we will respond—if we will
respond, God will bless it. We will make it a marvelous and incomparably
precious victory for Him, for us, and for our boys and girls,
And the
Lord God whispered
And said
to me,
"These
things shall be,
These
things shall be.
"Nor
help shall come
From the
scarlet skies
'Til My
people rise,
'Til My
people rise.
"My
arm is weak,
I cannot
speak
'Til My
people speak.
"When
men are dumb,
My voice
is dumb.
I cannot
come
‘Til My
people come.
From
over the flaming earth and sea
The cry
of My people must come to Me
Not till
their spirit break the curse
May I
claim My own in the universe
But if
My people rise
If My people
rise
I will
answer them
From
these swarming skies
[author unknown]
If there is in our hearts and souls the
disposition to respond, the consecration to care, the thousands of us to have a
part, we will lay at the feet of Jesus the most incomparable victory that our
church has ever won.
As you know at the 8:15 service, they sing, these
kids sing. Our teenagers sing. They sing up here in our choir. And while I
was preaching, I turned around and looked at them, just looked at them. And I
thought as I looked at them, “There is not one of them but that is worth
millions and millions of dollars, not one.” Everyone of them, just pick
anyone of them, just pick anyone of them; anyone of them is worth a fortune,
any one of them. And God has given us hundreds of them. O Lord, how could I
stumble, or fail, or hesitate, or tremble before so great a blessing? Our
young people and our marvelous opportunity to help them; to grow them up in the
Lord; to provide for them, and if each one of us, thousands of us; if each one
of us will respond, we will lay at the feet of our Lord the finest victory we
have ever won.
I do not know of a church in the world that has a
six million dollar youth building dedicated just for them but we can have,
right there. And we are building a wonderful staff to guide them; a
marvelously group of gifted men. Lord in heaven may it be that when the time
comes and we offer our people this appeal, they rise by the thousands and say, “Lord,
thank you for the opportunity to help. It is a privilege. It is not a
burden. It is a gladness in my soul to respond.”
We must close and always with an appeal to give
your heart to the Lord Jesus, to come into the fellowship of this precious
church, to answer a call to the Holy Spirit in your heart. In a moment when we
stand to sing our invitation hymn; in the balcony round, down one of those
stairways; in the press of people on this lower floor, down one of these aisles,
“Pastor, God has spoken to me today in my heart and I am answering with my
life.” May angels attend you and the Spirit of God encourage you come.
We are going to pray and after the prayer we will
stand and sing our hymn of appeal. Our wonderful Lord in heaven, when we look
upon our children here in the church and when we see these young men and women,
these teenagers, Lord God in heaven, there is not one of them but is of
infinite value and worth and the Lord has made us rich in giving us these boys
and girls. And our Father in heaven, as You look down upon us, may You find us
worthy, the trust You place in us in committing our young men and women to us.
We pray for the congregation in Thy presence even now and when we sing this
hymn of appeal, may the Holy Spirit do His office work of inviting, convicting,
guiding, winning, saving, regenerating, encouraging. And may the angels of
heaven rejoice in the sweet, sweet harvest God gives us. Thank you for it Lord
in Thy saving and keeping name, amen.
As the Spirit of the Lord shall open the door and
lead in the way, answer with your life while we stand and while we sing.