FACING THE FUTURE WITH GOD
Dr. W.A. Criswell
Deuteronomy 11:10-12
1-4-70 8:15 a.m.
In
this first Sunday of the new year, you who are listening to the radio are
sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. And this is the
pastor presenting the outline of the work that God has laid upon us for this
and these immediate years. The title of the message is Facing The Future
With God. And as a background text, but just that, in no wise is this a
sermon of exposition. It is a background text. In the eleventh chapter of
Deuteronomy, God says, through His servant Moses, as His people face the
Promised Land:
For the land, whither thou goest in to possess it, is not as the
land of Egypt, from whence thou camest out, where thou sowedst thy seed, and
wateredst it with thy foot – by irrigation raising the water out of the Nile
and so irrigating –
But the land, whither ye go to possess it, is a land of hills and
valleys, and drinketh water of the rain of heaven:
It is a land which the Lord thy God careth for: the eyes of the Lord thy
God are always upon it, from the beginning of the year, today, even unto the
end of the year
[Deuteronomy
11:10-12].
God’s eyes look
upon it, and they like thought, expressed so many years later by David, is in
the thirty-second Psalm, “I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which
thou shalt go: I will guide thee with Mine eye” [Psalm 32:8]. What a
magnificent and wondrous and yet awesome revelation of God as we read it here
in this Holy Book. Look up there. God is above us. Heaven is always above
us. And God sees us, and His eyes are upon us from the beginning of the year
to the end of the year. Isn’t it a tragedy that when time came to trust that
same Lord Jehovah God and to enter in to possess the land, that at Kadesh-
Barnea they failed, they forgot, and for forty years they wandered aimlessly
without purpose in the wilderness. But having learned that lesson at the
Jordan and at Jericho, their trust came to fruition, and God honored and
blessed them.
Well, we have
come to the time that God has struck for us, sounded for us a trumpet call, a
plain assignment, and one part of it I speak of today. This year we’re going
to fling dirt, we’re going to dig holes, we’re going to pour concrete. We’re
going to build buildings, and the time is now. There is never a perfect time
for any kind of work, never. There’s either a war going on, or there are
strikes, or there are labor difficulties, or the market is depressed, or
interest rates are high, or money is scarce, or there are difficulties and
discouragements. It is never a perfect time. But, we are not proposing to
take counsel with our fears and our difficulties. God’s Word says, “He that
observeth the wind shall not sow, and he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap”
[Ecclesiastes 11:4]. You look for that exact and propitious moment to sow your seed
or to reap the fields, and it’ll never come. There’s always a cloud in the sky
or a wind over the horizon.
T.J. Jackson,
Stonewall Jackson of whom Robert E. Lee said, “If I had had Stonewall Jackson
at Gettysburg, I would have won the war,” T. J. Jackson, one of God’s greatest
men, a great Christian man, T. J. Jackson said, “At dawn we storm the
ramparts.”
But one of his
aids said, “But General, it is raining.”
And Stonewall
Jackson said, “But it’s raining on the enemy, also.”
We’re not
looking at our difficulties or at the times. We’re looking at God’s work and
assignment for us. Its amazing thing about human psychology, you can talk
yourself into anything or out of anything. One of the stories that intrigued
me was of an immigrant from Italy who was selling hot dogs. Being an
immigrant, he had difficulty with the language, and having difficulty with his
language, being hard of hearing, he didn’t listen to the radio. And having
trouble with his eyes, he didn’t read a newspaper. But he knew how to make
good hot dogs. So he put his stand on the side of the road, and he put him a
sign saying what good hot dogs he had to sell. And he stood on the side of the
road, and anyone came by, he said, “Mister, want a hot dog? It’s-a so good!”
And he flourished. And he doubled his order for bread, and he doubled his
order for meat, and he put in an order for a new stove. “Business was-a so
good.”
He sent his boy
to college. And his boy came home from school. And he listened to his father
putting in those orders on the telephone. “Double the bread, double the meat,
and a bigger stove.” And the boy from school said, “Why, Father, you don’t
understand these times. We’re in a great recession. The international
situation is tragic, and the domestic situation is worse. Halve the order for
the bread, halve the order for the meat, and cancel the order for the cook
stove.” So the hot dog immigrant, the Italian took down his sign, didn’t stand
any longer on the highway, and business fell off precipitously. And the old
man said, “This-a me boy, he’s-a smart-a. Indeed we are in a great
depression.”
As long as
there are mouths to feed, the grocery man has a great opportunity. As long as
there are babies to be born, the people who sell bottles and diapers have a
great opportunity. Even the guy that makes safety pins has an open door. And
as long as there are people any day, anytime, any hour, in any condition, we have
an open door. The time is now.
As I thought
through this message—and these last two weeks I’ve had plenty of time to think
it through—lying there in bed staring at the ceiling, I made an acrostic of our
proposed program. G-O-A-L; goal. G for goal, O for objective, A for our
available resources, and L, locating our strengths and our weaknesses.
“G,” our goal: that’s
the great vision, that’s the dream. And our vision and our dream is the
fulfillment of God’s heavenly mandate for us, the Great Commission [Matthew
28:18-20]. We’re to win the people to Jesus. We’re to baptize them in the
name of the triune God, and we’re to teach them the mind that was in Christ
Jesus, everybody. God never overlooked or excluded a soul anywhere. That is
our great goal. Here in our Jerusalem, in our Samaria, in our Judea, in our whole earth, that’s our program, our great goal, G, goal, our great goal is
reaching people for Christ.
“O,” objective;
the difference between a goal and an objective is this. The goal is the dream,
the vision, the great mandate and assignment. An objective is a measurable
piece of the goal. Our objective, measurable piece of the goal, in some areas,
it’s a new department; in some areas, it’s another choir; in some areas, it’s a
ministry in a mission. And in the area that I’m talking about now, that
measurable objective, it is a vast building program. There on the San Jacinto side
it is an eight story educational building, there. On this side, on the St.
Paul side, it is a parking building and a ministry for our teenagers. This
building costs three million dollars. The parking building costs about a
million dollars. And our teenage expansion program costs a million dollars.
You kids are million dollar babies. Reckon you’re worth it? We think so. And
that’s why we’re doing it.
With regard to
the parking building, we can erect it in a subsidy to this church of twelve
thousand dollars a year, and we pay more than that this minute for our present
parking building. We will make it self-parking, build another parking building
on the St. Paul, Federal side as large as the one we now have. You go up in
one and down in the other, and its self-parking. We can do it for twelve
thousand dollars a year. Why haven’t we already done it? There’s no man in
the church that can answer that question. It is lethargy and confusion and
lack of direction. We’re going to do it. We have dillydallied, and waited,
and discussed, and committed long enough. We’re going to fling dirt now.
We’re going to pour concrete. We’re going to get started. G, O, A, L, our
goal which is our dream, our objective which is a measurable part of that goal.
“A,” our
available resources; you have to have wherewith to do it. They’re larger than
you realize, and most and always that’s true. It is astonishing what plain,
ordinary common people can do. Our available resources, we, you, the multitude
of us. Isn’t it an astonishing thing in the disciples of Jesus there is no
priest, there is not theologian, there is no man of the schools or of the
seminaries? Isn’t it an amazing thing no man of influence, or means, or
wealth? Isn’t that astonishing? Have you been to Europe? Have you looked at
those cathedrals in Europe? They are the most awe inspiring, physical masonry
pieces of structure the world has ever seen. Who built them? Nobody knows.
Nobody knows. They were built by plain, common, ordinary people. Our
available resources are vaster than we realize, you.
G, O, A, L;
locating our strengths and our weaknesses, looking at it, comparing it,
checking on it. For example, a strength, the Median Adult Division said we can
reach more people. They went over the Cotton Exchange building and rented a
large area and beautified it, embellished it. It’s a beautiful place, just go
over there and visit it. So they took a Median Adult Department and put it
over there and made five instead of four. And I visited the new department. I
visited the one they put in the Cotton Exchange building. There’s another unit
praying, working, visiting, teaching God’s Word, reaching people for Christ.
That’s a strength!
Looking at us,
locating our strengths and our weaknesses, this is a possible weakness. As I
hear our people discuss the program and especially the building on the San
Jacinto side, some of them say, “I am afraid that we may be making a mistake in
building a large dining hall.” Well, let’s look at it. There are five reasons
for a tremendous dining hall. One; when you build it there are to be many
smaller dining halls. There are many times half a dozen different groups
meeting down here at the same time. We ought to have at least six or eight
smaller dining halls. They ought to open out to make a great dining hall.
That’s one reason for it to be large.
Second; if you
have a dining hall, it has to be high, the ceiling has to be high. If you
don’t, when you get to a low ceiling in a big room, you feel like you’re in a
gun barrel, feel like the thing is going to fall on your head. It has to be
high. But instead of wasting the height, build you a mezzanine around it and
use the mezzanine just as you use the lower floor. That’s what we’ve done in
this auditorium. The modern church house almost always is without a balcony.
I say that’s a colossal waste of money and space. Look at this auditorium,
there’s a balcony swung all the way around it. And there are more than a
thousand individual seats in that balcony. It was smart to build it that way.
It is smart to build that dining hall that way. Put a mezzanine around it,
then our people can be seated here, and they can be seated all the way around
it.
Why build it?
The third reason: if we’re not going to make it larger than the one we now
have, which is kind of like a postage stamp to our present work, then two other
tremendous reasons. One: when you study the New Testament Church, it was a koinonia,
and they called it that. It was a communion, it was a fellowship—sometimes
translated communion, sometimes translated fellowship—the church is a koinonia,
it’s a fellowship. And when you read that New Testament, you will find a word
in the New Testament—agape—and in these latter days, I’m beginning to
see it once in awhile spelled out in English, agape. Agape is the Greek
word for “love feast.” When the people met together, they broke bread, they
loved one another, and they ate together. I would love to have a place in this
church where once a week at least the whole congregation could gather together
and break bread with the pastor. At least every Wednesday night there is an
open agape koinonia, and our people bring their families and break bread
with the pastor. And around those tables we have our prayer meeting service,
our midweek hour. One of the sweetest opportunities, as I read God’s Book that
I could ever imagine, when you build your church like it says in the Bible, you
will have a marvelous congregation.
Then one other,
a fifth reason why the largeness of the dining hall: someday, someday you’re
going to have to build a new church auditorium, you’ll have to. The floor on
which you now are seated is made out of wood. All of that work above us, the
ceiling is made out of wood. All of these frames were made out of wood. Had
we not gone into those frames a year or so ago, every one of those windows you
see would have been falling out into the street. Someday you’ll have to build
a new church auditorium. What are you going to do when that time comes? In
two years that it would take you to build that auditorium, the church could
lose its very momentum, come to a grinding halt. I don’t know what could
happen to us in two years.
But if we have
a great hall over there, the church can meet over there and do just as well, as
prolifically, as felicitously as we do here, never stop a beat or a march. Then
over there, we can have all of our dramatic programs, and our great musicals,
and our choirs use it ten times as much as we do now. Whenever you have those
things in this auditorium, you have to tear up the front of the auditorium. I
don’t like that, I think God’s place of sanctuary and worship ought to be set
in a certain way and left that way. But over there you could do as you please,
have a great stage and a great commanding performance of any kind. These are
things of the wisdom of God. When we do this, let’s do it magnificently and
wisely and well, G-O-A-L, our goal, our measurable objectives, looking at our
available resources and locating in God’s wisdom our strengths and our
weaknesses, checking on ourselves.
Now, such a
program demands of us a financial ability. We have to measure up. Well, how
do you do a thing like that? Do you know of any church in the earth that is
proposing a five million dollar building program? I do not. I do not. Well,
how do you think we could face such a stupendous outline such as that? I think
we can do it in the power and the resources of Almighty God. I don’t think we
can do it in ourselves, but I think with God’s help, looking to God, looking to
God, I think we are well able. I am like Caleb and I am like Joshua, in that we
are well able to possess the land.
Now, there are
two ways that I want us to do it. We already have a finance committee
appointed. I want to divide that finance committee into two working units.
One a unit, a committee to lead us in a giving program, and second, a committee
to help us prepare and sell first mortgage debentures. I speak of each one of
them briefly.
The committee
of the finance appointed in our giving program, this year in the months of
March and April, we give everybody in this church and every friend of the
church an opportunity to help us raise these buildings to the glory of God.
This coming March, this coming April, and the card will be a three year pledge
card, over these three years, seventy, seventy-one, and seventy-two, these
three tax years, this is a pledge I will make to give to that building
program. Then each year, we will review it in the spring. Every year there
are but a thousand new people to join the church, and every spring for those
three years we’ll review it in the spring. If I made a pledge, maybe I can add
to it, maybe I have to take away from it, maybe I have to change it, but review
it each spring, but the pledge is for three years. Then there will be
memorials, any number of them in these buildings, and many of us in memory of
someone we love or in honor of someone we love, we can make a worthy gift and
dedicate a hall, a department, a great program to that someone. This is the
giving part of the work.
Now the other
committee concerns our debentures, our bonds, our first mortgage notes. It is
my proposal that the five bank presidents who belong to our church form a
committee, and they prepare these first mortgage notes, and we sell them at
five and a half percent interest. I have through the mail yesterday, from the
savings company in which I am putting aside money for this building program, I
have a note from them. If I have a passbook savings account compounded every
day, it will yield 4.86% a year. If I buy a savings certificate, they will pay
me compounded interest 5.38% a year. What I want us to do is to sell these
first mortgage notes paying 5.50%, just a little above what you can get at the
bank and what you can get in the savings account. Now that’s not as much as
you’ll be able to get out in the speculative market, but we’re not in the
speculative market, and we’re not making money. What we’re doing is doing this
for God. So the appeal to every member of the church and every friend of the
church is twofold. One, will you give something, and second, will you save
something and invest it in God’s program?
Now, when they
buy these notes, I think we ought to make it possible for them to cash them in
at any time. If you needed the money, bring it to the church. But in order to
do that, to be solvent, to be liquid like that, we have to give. For
ultimately, every one of those notes has to be paid, and that’s why we must do
both. We must give, and we must save for God. There’s a genius in that. Look
at this. The Young Adult director came to me and said, “If I have five
departments, we will give you ten thousand dollars a year on the building
program for each one of the five departments. If I have six departments, we’ll
give you ten thousand dollars a year. If I have seven departments, we’ll give
you ten thousand dollars a year. If I have eight departments, we’ll give you
ten thousand dollars a year.”
Well, how in
the earth do you have the departments and you don’t have the departments? How
do you get the money when you don’t have the departments? That’s why you go in
debt. We go in debt, and build a building, and organize the departments, then
with the help of the new people, and the new partners, and the new prayers, and
the new families we’re able to pay the debt. They share it with us. That’s why
going in debt.
Now, I must
close. To me, in my praying and in my devotions, as I bow my head before God,
I have the deep personal conviction as the pastor, and as a Christian, and as a
believer in Jesus, I have the deep personal conviction that I have the right to
expect God’s blessings upon us when we do our best for Him. It is no longer to
me a prayer, “Now, Lord, if. Now, Lord, perchance. Now, Lord, possibly. Now,
Lord, maybe.” I have no feeling like that when I take it before God. I have
this kind of a conviction. “Lord, we are doing our best for Thee. It is a
great program, and a great ministry, and dear God, we have a right to claim the
promise that the Lord will be with us, and that His presence will work with us,
and that God will see us through. And Lord, offering to Thee our best, we have
the right to expect God’s Holy Spirit to work with us.”
And in this
common intercession, I think we are unbeatable and invincible. Prayer is the
union that binds us together with cords of gold to the throne of God. Prayer
is the great transmission line to the powerhouse in heaven. Prayer are the
hands that are lifted up for God to fill. Prayer is the great moving genius
that knits us together in one great heavenly fellowship. That’s the
communion. That’s the koinonia. That’s the binding cord that puts us
in lock step. Today, every day of this year, from the beginning of it as God
looks down upon us to the end of it at the time of the consummation when
victory and triumph crown our faithfulness, I am ready, I’m committed. It is
now for God to bless, to guide with His eyes.
Our Lord, in
these days past we have been frightened at what the Lord seemingly was leading
us to do, but we’re not afraid any longer. There are giants to overcome.
There is a land to possess, but God is with us, and He makes us well able. So
thank Thee, Lord, for the victory even before it comes to pass, to the glory of
Jesus and to the saving of souls, in His dear name, Amen.
Now let’s sing
our song of appeal. And while we sing it, a family you, a couple you, a one
somebody you in the balcony, on the lower floor, to give your heart to the
Lord, to come into the fellowship of the church, if for any reason the Spirit
of Jesus presses upon your heart the appeal, you come. On the first note of
the first stanza, step into that aisle, and down here to the front, and by the
side of the pastor, “We’ve decided, pastor, and we’re coming.” God be with you
as you answer with your life, while we stand and while we sing.