THE OVERWHELMING
CHRIST
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 10:1-12
03-19-72 10:50 a.m.
On the radio and on television you are sharing with us the
services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing
the message entitled The Overwhelming Christ. In our preaching through
the Book of Daniel, we have come to chapter 10, and I shall read the first four
verses.
In the third year
of Cyrus king of Persia a thing was revealed unto Daniel, whose name was called
Belteshazzar;—a name given him by the Babylonians seventy years earlier—and the
thing was true, but the time appointed was long: and he understood it, and had
understanding of the vision.
In those days I
Daniel was mourning three full weeks.
I ate no pleasant
bread, neither came flesh nor wine in my mouth, neither did I anoint myself at
all, till three whole weeks were fulfilled.
And in the four
and twentieth day of the first month,—of Nisan—as I was by the side of the
great river, which is Hiddekel;—that is the ancient Akkadian name for the River
Tigris—then I lifted up mine eyes, and looked, and behold a certain man clothed
in linen.
[Daniel 10:1-4]
And then follows a description of
the glorious Christophanic, Theophanic appearance of the angel of Jehovah, the
Uncreated Messenger of the covenant, the Son of God, whom we know as
Jehovah-Jesus.
These things have transpired between the ninth chapter, out
of which I completed preaching last Sunday morning, and the tenth chapter in
which we begin today. In the previous chapter, in chapter 9, Daniel was
reading the prophet Jeremiah, especially chapters 25 and 29. And there he
found the Lord had said by the mouth of the holy prophet that the captivity of Israel would be for seventy years. And at the end of the seventy years, they would have
opportunity to return home. Daniel was taken captive in 605 BC, and Cyrus
overwhelmed the Babylonian empire about 536 BC. So Daniel could see that the
seventy years was about up—it had passed. And depending upon the time in which
God computed the first year of the seventy, the day was drawing nigh when the
captives could return home.
So he gave himself in confession in sackcloth and in ashes
to an importunate intercessory prayer in behalf of the people—that God might
bring it to pass they be liberated and allowed to go back to Canaan, the
Promised Land. Now, Cyrus had written the decree in the first year of his
reign. He had done it, and the people were at liberty to go back and rebuild
their sanctuary. But the response was disheartening in the extreme. The
people had settled down in Babylon. They were prosperous and comfortable.
They were immersed and enmeshed in the world. And the decree of Cyrus to
return to Judah was greeted with indifference and unconcern.
Out of the multitude of the Jews who had been led away
captive, there was an insignificant number of just forty-two thousand, six
hundred that deigned to go back home. They were led by Zerubbabel, who was of
the line of David but unable to restore the monarchy, and by Joshua, the high
priest—their spiritual leader. And not only was the reception of the decree
discouraging and disheartening, but the exiles who returned found their work
difficult in the extreme. They were opposed and harassed by Tobias and Sanballot
and by all of the local population. The exiles were greeted with contempt and
scorn and disfavor. It took them seven months just to clear the rubbish and
rubble away from Mt. Moriah and to find a level place on which they could base
the restoration of the new sanctuary on the site of the old Solomonic Temple.
Daniel therefore, in mourning, has given himself to prayer
and fasting. After two full years, and now almost three since Cyrus placed his
decree in writing, there still is no measurable response to the call of God for
the people to return home. He prays two weeks before God, beginning on the
first day of Nisan. He prayed through the time of the Passover sacrifice. And
there was still no answer from heaven. He continued his intercession for one
more full week—that is, through the Feast of Unleavened Bread to the
twenty-first of Nisan—and there still was no response. God did not answer and
the heavens were brass. Daniel prayed three more days in fasting and evidently
had been sent by the state on some national mission sixty miles away to the
Hiddekel—to the Tigris River. And on the twenty-fourth day, there came an
incomparable vision, an answer, an explanation from heaven. And the rest of
the Book of Daniel—chapters 10, 11, 12—all the rest of Daniel concerns this
final vision that is introduced here with this Christophany. For he writes, As
I stood by the side of the great river Tigris,
I lifted up mine
eyes, and looked, and behold a certain man clothed in linen, his loins were
girded with fine gold of Uphaz—Ophar, Arabia
His body also was
like the beryl, and his face as the appearance of lightning, and his eyes as
lamps of fire, and has arms and his feet like in color to burnished polished
brass, and the voice of his words like the voice of a multitude,—like the sound
of many waters.
And when I saw
this great vision, there remained no strength in me: for my comeliness was
turned in me into corruption, and I retained no strength
[Daniel 10:5, 6, 8]
And Daniel is prostrate with his face toward the ground.
This is a description of the pre-incarnate Lord. This is a Christophany, it is
a theophany. It is an appearance of God in the similitude of a man, in the likeness
of human form; the morphus of God in the flesh. John saw the glorified Christ
on Patmos after His incarnation. Here, Daniel sees the same glorified Lord
before His incarnation—on the banks of the Tigris River.
This is the third time that the Lord has appeared in the
Book of Daniel. In the third chapter, in the story of the fiery furnace, as
the three Hebrew children were walking free in the midst of the burning flames,
Nebuchadnezzar looked and saw a fourth walking with the three. And the
countenance and the face of the fourth was like the Son of God [Daniel 3:25]. The second time the theophany
is seen is in the seventh chapter of the Book of Daniel when in the vision of
the throne of the Ancient of days there comes one like the Son of man, and to
him is given an everlasting kingdom that shall never pass away [Daniel 7:13, 14]. And the third theophany is
here in this vision—the glorious countenance, His face like the sun, of
lightning, His eyes like flaming fire, His feet like polished, burnished brass,
and His voice like the sound of roaring waters [Daniel
10:6].
This theophany, this pre-incarnate appearance of our Lord,
is seen all throughout the Old Covenant again and again. In the fifteenth
chapter of the Book of Genesis He appeared to Abraham. In the thirty-second
chapter of Genesis at Peniel, He appeared to Jacob and changed his name to Israel. In the thirty-third chapter of the Book of Exodus He appears to Moses when He shut
the great lawgiver in a cleft of a rock, covered him there with His hand, and
passed in glory before him, took away His hand and Moses saw the afterglow of
the glory of the pre-incarnate Christ. He appears in the sixth chapter of
Isaiah when the great prophet saw Him high and lifted up, and His train filled
the earth. He appears again in the first chapter of Ezekiel, the glory, the
indescribable glory of God on His throne—a theophany, the pre-incarnate
Christ. And now the statesman prophet Daniel sees Him here and looking upon Him
is overwhelmed by the glory of His person. For this is God manifest in human
form—in the likeness and in the similitude of a man. And as such, we see him
incomparable, indescribable. The words cannot bear the weight of the glory and
the majesty of His person.
We have this morning then, this moment to look at the glory
of the person of the Lord Christ—the angel of Jehovah, the uncreated Messenger
of the covenant. Not a superman, not a superhuman, but God Himself manifested
in the likeness of human flesh and human form. Here seen before He took our
nature in Bethlehem in the days of His flesh. What an incomparable person He
is; a somebody. God is not an “it,” He is not a “force.” He is not an
“element.” He is not a “first cause.” He is not the “great unknown and
unknowable.” He is somebody. He is a Person. And He has revealed Himself in
the Old Covenant and in the New Covenant as being a man—in the form and
likeness of a man and in heaven our great God and Savior—and a man. Here
looked upon, revealed as in the other Theophanies of the Bible in the similitude
and likeness of a man but oh what a glorious personality. What an incomparable
person. What a marvelous, indescribable Lord. There is no fault in the Him.
In one of the beautiful passages that I read in Spurgeon, he
described a visit to Trinity College Library in Cambridge, England. And there in the library is a statue of Lord Byron—the famous and dissolute English poet.
The man who was taking Spurgeon through the library and showing him this
particular statue said, “Come and look at it from this point of view.” And
when Spurgeon looked at the piece of bronze from this point of view, he saw the
nobility of that English poet; so gifted—a magnificent representative of the
finest literary genius of English literature. Then the man said, “Now come and
look at it from this point of view.” And from this point as Spurgeon looked,
he saw the blasphemous, wicked, dissolute, debauched soul that given himself to
everything except devotion, reverence, and honor before God. That was Lord
Byron.
And Spurgeon pointed out that all of us are somewhat like that.
There are points of view where we can be seen and we would exclaim how
admirable, and how fine, how noble. But in all of us—look at us from another
point of view—alas, and alas, and alas, there is fault and failure and
mistake. All of us are like that. But however you look at the Lord
Christ—from any vantage point, always He is perfect and flawless in His
childhood, in His ministry, in the good of the deeds of His life, in the
gracious words of grace that He spoke, in His suffering and death, in His
resurrection, and finally His reign, returning to glory. However you see Him,
there is no fault in Him. As Pontius Pilate announced the final verdict, “I
find in Him no fault at all.”
And when we classify the great Lord-God-Christ-Messiah with
other men, somehow the Christian heart is offended. To us it is not only
wrong, it is bad taste. I cannot help but sympathize with this word from Ian
Maclaren—quote—
When one seriously
recommends Jesus to the notice of the world by certification from Rousseau or
Napoleon or when some lighthearted man of letters embroiders a needy paragraph
with a string of names, where Jesus is wedged in between Zoroaster and Goethe,
the Christian consciousness is aghast. This treatment is not merely bad taste,
it is impossible by any canon of thought. It is as if one should compare the
sun with an electric light bulb or the color of rouge with the bloom of a
rose. Christ is not a subject of study. He is a revelation to the soul. He
is that or nothing.
As one man said,
IF Jesus Christ is
a man,—
And only a man,—I
say
That of all
mankind I cleave to him,
And to him will I
cleave always
But if Jesus
Christ is a God,
And the only God,—I
swear
I will follow Him
through heaven and hell,
The earth, the
sea, and the air!
[Richard Watson Gilder, “The
Song of a Heathen”]
He is the unique. He is the separate. He is the great
unlike. He is the Messenger of Jehovah. He is the God-Christ in the likeness
of human form.
Now, the reaction of any who have ever looked upon the Lord
in His glory is always like this of Daniel: “And when I saw him, I found no
strength in me. And my comeliness was turned into corruption” [Daniel 10:8]. When a sinful man stands in the
presence of God, he immediately finds himself bowed do the ground. That was
true with Isaiah. When he looked upon the, when he looked upon the Lord high
and lifted up, he said, “mine eyes have seen the Lord of hosts”; and “I am
undone: for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell amidst people of unclean
lips” [Isaiah 6:5]. When Simon Peter saw
the miracle, he fell at the feet of Jesus and said, “Lord, depart from me; for
I am a sinful man” [Luke 5:8]. When Saul
of Tarsus met Him on the road to Damascus, he was blinded by the glory of that
sight and fell down to the earth. And in the first chapter of Revelation and
in the passages that you read, when John the sainted disciple saw Him on the
isle of Patmos, he fell at His feet as dead; the overwhelming Christ.
But He is also the Lord God of compassion, and mercy, and
sympathy. Three times does it say here in this tenth chapter of Daniel, in
verse ten, in verse 13, in verse 19, three times does it say that that glorious
Lord Christ reached forth His hands and touched him. He touched him. He
touched his lips. And he touched him once again. Three times He touched him.
He is kin to us. His heart is with us. In the first
chapter of the Revelation, when John fell at His feet as one dead, the Lord
stretched forth His right hand and touched him—the same blessed Jesus. For His
glory had made no difference in His heart. Could there be a richer, a deeper,
or a finer comfort than to know that our Lord God in heaven has a human heart
and has human understanding, and was at all points tried as we are, though He
was without sin [Hebrews 4:15]? A
sympathetic high priest to whom we are invited to come and find grace to help
in time of need. What a marvelous revelation that our God in heaven is a man
with a human heart, not that He is not God.
He is God as though He were not man. But He is man also as
though He were not God. His Godhead is complete. His manhood is complete. We
are not to separate the Persons or to confuse the natures. He is the God-man,
the Jehovah-Jesus, the Angel of the Lord, the Son of God, who also is the Son
of man. And His sympathies, His kinship is with us. And seeing Daniel
prostrate on his face, He reached forth His hand and touched him and lifted him
up, raised him up.
There was a historian who was seeking to illustrate why the
soldiers of Alexander the Great loved him so much and followed him so
faithfully. And the historian said that when the soldiers marched, always
Alexander marched before them. Their sufferings he shared. And the historian
said that marching through Asia Minor, Turkey today—some of you have been
there, under the broiling sun and the endless dust and heat—marching before
them the army all lacked water and suffered with thirst. And when they came to
water, the first refreshing cooling draft was brought to Alexander himself.
Was he not their king and their general? But always Alexander would take it
and asked, “Is there one of the soldiers who is sick? Alexander will not drink
until first the cooling water is shared by that soldier who is sick.”
Our Lord is like that. As long as one of us is sick, He is
not well. As long as one of us is in want, He is not full. As long as one of
us is in prison, He is not free. He has identified Himself with us. He is one
with us. And our great Mediator, and Intercessor, and Savior, is the God-man
Christ Jesus, revealed here in the theophanic form before His incarnation. And
in those days, and years since, glorified in heaven, the same Person in the Old
Covenant; in the New Covenant, the God-man, Christ Jesus.
Now, we have here an explanation brought to Daniel of why
the delay in the answer to his prayer. He prayed two weeks and the heavens
were brass. He prayed another full week—there was no reply from God. He
prayed three more days, until the twenty-fourth day of the month, and then the
answer came—and with it the explanation. This glorious person that looked like
beryl, and His face that was like the sun, and His voice like thundering,
falling waters, He says to Daniel, “On the first day thy words were heard” [Daniel 10:12]. When you prayed the first day,
God heard. But he says, The prince of the king of Persia withstood me,. And
it was only when Michael, your chief prince, who guards the fortunes of Israel when he came to help me, that the message came through” [Daniel
10:13].
Now, in my studying, I found what I suppose most—seemed to
me it was most—most of the men who comment on this tenth chapter of Daniel say:
that this glorious person could not be the Lord Christ because he could not be
hindered. He could not be thwarted. And yet, this person speaking says that
“on the first day thy words were heard. They came before God. But the prince,
the fallen angel that guides the destinies of Persia withstood me. So they say
that this could not be the Christ—this could not be the Lord God, for He is
omnipotent and could not be thwarted or hindered. I wish that were so. Or
maybe, not having infinite wisdom I cannot understand why it is so. I think it
is true. I think the Lord God is omnipotent. I would be the last to deny
that. All authority is in His hands. But I also am the first to avow that I
also think that the purposes of God can be hindered. And that our prayers can
be thwarted. I think there is another will in this universe beside the will of
God. And I think God can be opposed. And I think our prayers can be hindered
and frustrated. And I think God’s people can be harassed and attacked. And
were it not for the sovereign grace of God, destroyed.
I find that in the Lord Himself when He came to Nazareth, where He had been brought up. The Scriptures say “he did no great work there
because of their unbelief” [Matthew 13:58].
He was hindered and thwarted by their unbelief. When he came to Gadara, the swine keepers and the pig sty owners begged Him to leave, and He left. In the
story of the parables in the thirteenth chapter of Matthew, it says He was
speaking in parables because” the hearts of the people have waxed gross, and
their eyes they have closed, and their ears they have stopped; lest they should
see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and feel with their hearts, and
be converted” [Matthew 13:15]. God’s
will can be thwarted and hindered and frustrated.
And I suppose from what I can read here that the same
frustration that is found in praying and in living in this world. I think I
read in this text also that that is true in the unseen, invisible angelic
world. There is opposition to God at the heart of the universe. Civil war and
strife and division is at the very center of existence in creation and heaven
itself. And there was war in heaven. There is a divided will in this
universe. And here it is again. Satan opposes, and it took three weeks for the
answer to come from God, three full weeks and three days besides.
Why, I read that in the Scriptures, Satan opposes. Satan
attacks. Where the good seed is sown, he oversows it with tares. He even slew
the Lord. He entered in Judas and betrayed the Lord. There is such a thing,
these commentators and scholars to the contrary, there is such a thing as
opposing God and hindering God and thwarting the will of God. But it is
temporary. Always there is ultimate and final triumph. We are not to be discouraged
as though the battle is lost—that Satan has won and that the prince of the
darkness has taken over the reigns of government out of the hands of God, and
we have nothing but frustration and despair for us.
He says, Michael, one of the chief princes, the archangel
Michael who stands for thy people, came to help Me [Daniel
10:13]. Now is that unusual? In the temptation it says: “and the
angels ministered unto Him” [Matthew 4:11].
And in the Garden of Gethsemane it says, “and an angel came down and encouraged
Him, ministered to Him” [Luke 22:43]. In
the fourteenth verse of the first chapter of Hebrews it says “That the angels
are ministering spirits to encourage us and to help us who are the heirs of
salvation” [Hebrews 1:14]. That is not
unusual. Michael came, who stands for the people of Israel, to help him and
stand by him. And then the Lord avows an unusual thing. “And there is none
that holdest with me in these things, but Michael your prince.”
The whole world seemingly was filled with discouragement
against the plan and program of God for his people. And seemingly, from what I
can understand, the whole world of darkness, the fallen world of Satan and
Lucifer, also opposed the programming of God. It was His will—and I haven’t
time to expatiate—for His people to return. It was out of that return that the
great Messianic hope was to be born and find fruition and realization in Bethlehem. And it is God’s will that, oh, so many things in the future are yet to be
given to Israel. So much was involved. But in that involvement he says, there
is none that stands with me in these things, but Michael your prince but what a
noble and singular exception.
It is as if a young man were a musician and the world looks
upon his compositions with contempt. There is no sale, there is no appreciation.
And the young man writes, “There are none that hold with me in these things but
Beethoven—just Beethoven.” But his signature and his approval and approbation
would be worth more than a whole world of contemptuous rivals. Would it not?
Or a young man is an artist and the world is blind. There is no sale for his
pictures. There is no appreciation for his genius. And he could write, “But
there are none that hold with me in these things but Raphael.” But having the
love and approval and encouragement and approbation of Raphael would be like
having the world above and below. That is the way it is with us. “If God is
with us,” cried Paul in the eighth chapter of Romans, “who could be against us?
. . . Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect? . . . All things
work together for good to them that love God” [Romans
8:28-33]. As the forty-second Psalm says, “Why art thou cast down, O my
soul? And why art thou disquieted within me? Hope thou in God” [Psalm 42:11].
I have to close. That is why at the beginning of the
verse—in the first verse of the Revelation, if the thing was true—but the time
appointed was long. Ah, the weary waiting. Would it ever come to pass? Will
it? Will we ever see the day? Will we? The thing is true, but the time
appointed was long, long, long. And to us, the division of the two is so
needless and so severe and so grievous. It is not to God. To us it is two
different things; this that we pray for and ask and believe and its fruition.
The time is long. But it is not to God. To him it is an everlasting now. It
is an everlasting present. He looks upon it all. And He bids us, “Be of good
courage and of good cheer. For the divine will can never be ultimately and
finally frustrated—never.” God shall bring it to pass and we shall live in
hope and in assurance and in victory and in optimism, praying, “Thy will be
done—in me—in this earth, as it is in heaven” [Matthew
6:10].
And that is our appeal to your heart—to open your soul God-ward
and heavenward, to give yourself to the work and purpose and plan and program
of God for you and for your life. Will you do it today? In a moment, we shall
stand to sing our hymn of appeal. And in the balcony round; a family, a
couple, or one somebody you; there is a stairway at the front and at either
side of the auditorium, and there is time and to spare for you to come. If you
are seated on the last row of the top of the second balcony, come. Come. Make
the decision now and come. The throng and press of people on this lower floor
into that aisle and down here to the front, “Here I am and here I come. I make
the decision now. I open my heart and my life to the purpose and plan and
program of God for me. I accept it. If the Book says He died for my sins, I
accept that forgiveness. If He said He was raised for my justification to
present me some day to heaven, I accept it as a free gift of grace. I open my
heart God-ward and heavenward, and here I come.” Families of you putting your
life in the fellowship of this dear church, or a couple, or just you as we sing
our song and as the Spirit of God shall press the appeal to your heart, make
the decision now and come. On the first note of that first stanza, come now.
Do it now. Make it now. While we stand and while we sing.