REVIVAL OR REVOLUTION
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Deuteronomy 30:11-20
4-21-68 10:50 a.m.
On the radio, on KIXL,
and on television, on channel 11, you are sharing the services of the First
Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the message entitled Revival
or Revolution; one or the other, revival or revolution.
The reading of the text
is in the thirtieth chapter of the Book of Deuteronomy. If I had time we would
read most of that chapter; every syllable and sentence, every word and
paragraph is pertinent to our day and our generation. I read my text, verses
19 and 20:
I call heaven and earth
to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death,
blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may
live:
That thou mayest love
the LORD thy God, and that thou mayest obey His voice, and that thou mayest
cleave unto Him: for He is thy life, and the length of thy days: that thou
mayest dwell in the land which the LORD sware unto thy fathers…
“See, I have set
before thee life and death: Therefore choose life, that thou and thy seed may
live.” It is no strange or unusual departure from the Word of God to avow that
in religion we handle the very lives of the people, the nation, our families,
and our children. The destiny of a nation lies in the imponderables of
Almighty God. Whether we live, whether we die lies in His sovereign
judgments. I could not think of a more poignant or apropos or emphatic
illustration of that than an incident every schoolboy has studied in world
history. In 1789 to 1794, there occurred what up until that time was the most
bloody revolution the world had ever seen: the French Revolution.
The godless and atheist Robespierre
and men like him plunged the nation into a bloodbath. They took a harlot, a
prostitute, and placed her on the high altar in Notre Dame and said, “This is
our god and this is our freedom,” and they brought to the guillotine in murder
and in blood the finest flower of the French nation. It was one of the most
horrible spectacles the world ever saw.
At that time and in that same century
and in that same generation, the same problems and social pressures that
brought to pass the revolution in France also obtained in England: the
oppression of the poor, the effete and ephemeral and gaudy life of a kingly
court, and the spirit of rebellion on the part of an oppressed people. The
same economic and social pressures that brought to pass the revolution in
France also obtained in the life of England.
But in that generation and in that
century in England, there came out of Oxford a man by the name of Charles
Wesley, and he taught England to sing,
Hark, the herald angels
sing!
Glory to our newborn
King.
Peace on earth and
mercy mild.
God and sinners
reconciled.
And Charles Wesley taught England to sing,
Jesus, Lover of My
Soul,
Let me to Thy bosom
fly
While the nearer
waters roll,
While the tempest
still is nigh.
Charles Wesley taught England to sing,
Lo! He comes with
clouds descending,
Christ for favored
sinners slain.
Thousand thousand
saints attending
swell the triumphs of
His train.
Charles Wesley taught England to sing,
O, for a thousand
tongues to sing
My great Redeemer’s
praise,
The glory of my God
and King,
The triumphs of His
grace.
And God looked down from heaven and saw England
singing the songs of Zion.
And there came out of Oxford John
Wesley and George Whitefield. The churches were closed to them; the
indifference and the hardening of heart and the disillusion and dissipation of
the faith in the pulpits of the churches is inexplicable and unimaginable to
me. It is always been. It is today. It was then. And John Wesley and George
Whitefield, denied a pulpit, went out into the squares of the city, on the
riverbank, wherever people would congregate together, and there preached to
them the gospel of the great Son of God.
And England experienced
in that eighteenth century one of the greatest revivals of all time, and
England was spared the horrors and the bloodshed of a terrible French
Revolution. Revival or revolution: and I am avowing that that sovereign grace
and choice of God is found in all national life and in all history. And for
these few moments we shall follow it this morning. We shall compare city with
city and nation with nation.
In the days of Sodom, God sent two of
His angels that He might see if the sin of it and the iniquity of it was as it
had come up before God’s throne of grace. And those two angelic figures,
angels in the form of men, entered into the city of Sodom, and Lot entertained
them in his home. And the men of Sodom gathered around the door and said to
Lot, “Those are handsome men. They are interesting men. They are attractive
men. Bring them out to us that we may enjoy them.”
And Lot said, “Oh, oh! not so. Here
are my daughters. Take them, and violate them, and abuse them, and do as
pleases thee with my daughters, but with these men, no, no!” And the men of
Sodom said, “This man tells us what to do. Bring those men out, for they are
attractive and appealing, that we may know them.” And the men pulled Lot back
into the house, lest Lot himself be destroyed. And the Lord God looked down
from heaven and said, “It is enough. It is enough!” And He wiped Sodom off
the face of the earth and buried it in the depths of the Dead Sea: the judgment
of Almighty God [Genesis 19:1-29].
We shall compare
Nineveh. Nineveh was the capital of the most bitter and ruthless scourge that
the world had ever seen. There have never been armies that were as merciless
and cruel as the wing bulls of Asshur. And the Lord God looked down on the
iniquity and the sin of Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrian Empire, and in His
mercy—God always warns—and in His mercy God raised up Jonah against his will,
sent him to preach, and Jonah entered the city and said, “Yet forty days, and
Nineveh shall be destroyed” [Jonah 3:4].
And the king heard the
message and stepped down from his throne, and the king called his people to
prayer and to repentance. He dressed himself and his city in sackcloth. They
sat in ashes. They even dressed the beasts of the field in sackcloth, and the
king said, “Let every man turn form his evil way, for it may be that God will
spare us that we live” [Jonah 3:5-9].
Then occurs one of the most poignant, one of the most significant trusting
sentences in the Word of God: “And when God saw that Nineveh repented, God
repented.” When God saw that Nineveh turned, God turned, and He spared the
city and the nation; revival or revolution. By the way, Jesus pointed back to
revival in the days of Jonah as the greatest the world had ever seen, repenting
at the preaching of Jonah.
We shall now compare two
nations: Israel, to whom God sent Amos—and Israel stubbornly continued in their
idolatry and in their iniquity and in their rebellion. And in 722 BC the
Assyrian army came and destroyed Israel’s kingdom forever and plowed up
Samaria, the capital, into heaps. And in that same day and in that same time,
that conquering Assyrian horde came down into Judah and shut up Jerusalem like
a vise. And the king of Assyria, Sennacherib, sent a letter to Hezekiah, God’s
king and God’s faithful servant, and said, “Deliver to me your people, and your
women, and your children, and your nation, or thus and so; as I have done in
destruction to other nations who refused to bow before me, so I will do to
you.”
And Hezekiah took the
letter and laid it before God in the house of the Lord. And in those days
there was a great, mighty, gifted court preacher by the name of Isaiah, and God
said to Isaiah, “Go tell King Hezekiah I have seen his tears, and I have heard
his prayers, and My hand shall guard and keep this city and this nation.” And
that night, and that night one angel of the Lord passed over the great armies
of Assyria—one angel, not two; one angel—and when Sennacherib, the marshal, the
chief of staff, the general, the king of the nation, when Sennacherib awoke the
next morning, one hundred eighty-five thousand of his soldiers were corpses [2 Kings 19:35].
Revival or revolution; in
the days of the Lord Jesus, repudiated by His own and crucified in Jerusalem,
the Lord said, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often would I have gathered thy
children together, as a hen gathereth her brood under her
wings, and ye would not! Behold, your house is left unto you desolate” [Matthew 23:37-38]. And in 70 AD the Roman
legions came as the Lord had prophesied, built embankments against the walls of
the city, and destroyed Jerusalem and the nation.
In 390 AD there was riot
in Antioch. There was treason and sedition and sacrilege in Antioch, and word
came of the rioting in Antioch to the ears of the emperor. And Theodosius
prepared an army for the destruction and the chastisement and the punishment of
Antioch. And in those days and at that time there was a mighty preacher, a
pulpiteer of superlative gifts by the name of John Chrysostom, John the golden
mouth. And John stood up in his pulpit. He said he had in his church one
hundred thousand members, a vast edifice, and the people stood shoulder to
shoulder listening to the flaming evangelist.
Like a Savonarola who
lived a thousand years after him in Florence, so John Chrysostom called those
rioting and seditious and sacrilegious people to repentance and to confession.
And when the Roman Caesar with his legionnaires came to Antioch, what they
found was a great revival. The people were singing God’s praises, the people
were importuning the blessings and the presence of the Almighty, and
Theodosius, the emperor, spared them and saved them. It is revival or
revolution.
And in my own day and in
my own time, I have lived through and I have been old enough to remember
through some of the same unfolding of God’s sovereignty in human history. I
can remember the socialist revolution in Russia in 1917, and I can remember the
story written in human blood all through the years since; the civil war between
Stalin and Trotsky, and the murder of Trotsky with a pickax in Mexico City. I
can remember all of the millions and the millions and the millions that died
under the inhuman hand of Soviet atheism.
And our nation in this
same century and in this same generation also faced disastrous and threatening
attacks. Soviet Russia is not the only nation that has faced terrible internal
problems and pressures from the outside—only Russia faced their problems in
atheism, without mercy, in cruel exile and murder, firing squads. Never before
in human history has there been so much bloodshed at the hands of a people’s
own government as has been shed in Russia.
Our nation has lived in
the same generation, and in the same century, and at the same time. And all of
us who are old enough can remember the dark and trying days when we were
attacked to the west and our navy was sunk to the bottom of the sea and we were
attacked in Europe. And when we assumed arms against so entrenched a foe, we
had no army, we had no navy but the one at the bottom of the sea, and our
people were unprepared. And I remember in those days that there were calls to
prayer and calls to intercession and godly calls in the pulpits, in places of
government, in Congress, in legislature. And the appeal was made that when the
word was sent out that our American forces were storming the bastions of Hitler
in continental Europe, when D-day came, the moment we heard, we were to find
our ways to God’s house and pray for the armed might of America.
Word came to me, where I
was pastor, at 2 o’clock in the morning. When I got up at 2 o’clock in the
morning and went down to the church, to my surprise, the church was filled.
For the size of the city, the church would be very much larger than this. Had
a balcony all the way around like this, and at 2 o’clock in the morning when I
went down to pray, the church was filled. And the Lord God that judges the nations
of the earth looked down, looked down and gave into the hands of America the
greatest military victory the world has ever known.
The reason Russia was
triumphant was because of the uncounted billions of dollars of military
equipment that we placed in their hands. It was an American victory. It was a
gift from heaven. And God bestowed upon our people a place of influence and
power and glory as the world had never seen! And since the crowning glory of
God’s blessings and benedictions upon our nation, since that day of triumph,
something has happened to the soul of America.
Something has happened to
our nation and to our people. I don’t recognize it. Large sections of its
young people are strange to me, and the preachments from the pulpits of America,
I cannot believe: men mocking God’s words, men avowing that God is dead. And
there is a tidal wave of materialism and secularism that is engulfing America
that is indescribable were it not so tragic. So sad; America is losing its
soul. And some of the strangest persuasions of our people—where do you find a
voice in responsible quarters calling our nation back to God, pleading for a
return to the Lord, expectantly waiting for a great revival? Where? Instead,
we have persuaded ourselves with those cheap propositions we can solve our
problems. We will solve them with money: we will get our federal government to
pour into the hands of the poor all of the money they need. So they have a
poverty program.
One of the things that,
thank God, I have been able to do in this much going around and much traveling
is to compare peoples with our own nation. Did you know that there are
millions, and millions, and millions, and millions of people in this world who
live on less than $100 and $200 a year? The whole increment from a man’s toil
and labor will be less than $100 or $200 a year; millions of people! Yet in
America a family is described as poor if they don’t have an income of at least
3500 dollars a year.
And America sets itself,
sets itself, through government agencies, to solve all of the problems of the
so-called poor by monetary programs! Compared to the millions and the millions
and the millions of the poor of this earth, the poorest in America live as
kings and as rich men. Yet, because we face internal problems, we think, with
the power of the government to tax, we can take and give to the poor and that
will solve all of our problems.
I had so much to say. I
will close. Do you see what I am driving at? Can you see what I am
preaching? Power, governmental agencies, all of these approbatical programs,
they don’t solve our problems. Whether we live or die lies in the sovereignty
of God, and the same Lord God that judged France in the days of the French
Revolution, and the same Lord God that judged Sodom in the days of the sins of
the plain, and the same Lord God that judged Israel, and the same Lord God that
judged Jerusalem, and the same Lord God that judged Nazi Germany and the Tojo
of Japan is the same Lord God that sits sovereign above the nations of the
world today, and that includes America.
The strength of a nation
lies in the moral fiber of its people. And God judges a nation by their doing
God’s will in the earth. And when we turn aside from the Almighty and when we
are disobedient to the mandates of heaven there is not anything that awaits us,
but insurrection and riot and internal decay and final disastrous
disintegration and defeat. It is everlastingly true: “Except the Lord build the
house, they labor in vain that build it; except the Lord keep the city, the
watchman waketh but in vain [Psalm 127:1].
Far-called our navies
melt away;
On dune and headland
sinks the fire:
Lo, all our pomp of
yesterday
Is one with Nineveh and
Tyre!
Judge of the nations,
spare us yet,
Lest we forget, lest we
forget.
[Recessional-- Rudyard
Kipling]
Oh, that we might see in our day and
in our time a great turning to God, a great outpouring of the Spirit of mercy
and grace, that our eyes might see it, that we might experience it, that our
children might be introduced to it. Lord, do it and begin here in this dear
church. Begin here, Lord, with us. Revival, Lord, revival, a great turning to
God, and let it start here, Lord, with us, with our families and with our
children. Do it, Lord, do it.
We are going to sing our hymn of appeal,
and a family you, to put your life with us in this dedication, would you come
this morning and stand by me? A couple you or one somebody you, in the great
throng of our people, in this balcony round, on this lower floor, as God shall
say the word, as the Lord shall lead in the way, as the Spirit shall make the
appeal, would you come and stand by me? “Here I am, pastor, this is my wife,
these are our children. All of us are coming today,” or just you by yourself:
“I have decided for Christ and here I am.” In the balcony round, there is time
and to spare, if you are in that topmost seat, come. On this lower floor, into
the aisle and down here to the front, make it now. As God shall say the word
and lead in the way, as the Spirit of Jesus shall make appeal to your heart,
come this morning. Come now. Do it now. Decide now, and when we stand up in
a moment, stand up coming. May the angels attend you as you come. Do it now,
while we stand and while we sing.