CONFLICT AND CONQUEST
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 11 and 12
4-30-72
10:50 a.m.
Sharing
with us on radio and on television is a multitude of people in five different
states and we welcome you at this hour of adoration and praise in the First Baptist
Church in Dallas, Texas. In our preaching through the Book of Daniel, we have
come to the last great vision. In chapter 11 and in chapter 12, the
prophecy is consummated and the message this morning is an exposition of the
eleventh chapter. It is entitled Conflict and Conquest, our
tribulation and triumph. It is by far the longest vision, the longest
prophecy in the book, and it is written in great and minute detail. It is
divided into three parts. The first part, verses 1 through 20, is a presentation
of the Persian and Greek world, and especially the wars between the Ptolemies
and the Seleucids, between Egypt and Syria, and the nation Israel that was
caught in between those warring kingdoms. The second part, versus 21
through 35, the second part is a delineation of Antiochus Epiphanes, who is a
prototype of the ultimate, final great dictator of the world, the
Antichrist. And as the prophecy continues, it fades; the picture of
Antiochus Epiphanes fades into a portrayal of that Antichrist. And the
third part—versus 36 through 45—the end of the chapter is a prophecy of that
ultimate final dictator whose destruction and doom coincides with the end of
history and the end of the world.
Now
before I begin, could I make 2 comments about the prophecy? First, the
interpretation that I have just given it, that the prophecy largely concerns
the wars between the Ptolemies and the Seleucids, a war that precipitated the
Maccabean Revolt; this traditional interpretation—the one that has usually been
followed through all of the centuries and is followed by practically everyone
now—this traditional interpretation is not accepted, it is challenged by
Ellicott in Ellicott’s Commentary. And as he
comments on the prophecy through the eleventh chapter of Daniel, he points out
many places that create great difficulties when you accept the traditional
interpretation of the prophecy. Ellicott, therefore, looks upon the
eleventh chapter of Daniel as Eschatological; that is, it has to do with the
last days. And what he sees here is Israel, as it is oppressed and caught
between two great powers at the consummation of the age.
Now
as I study, there are innumerable diverse and conflicting opinions and
interpretations. But the reason this one appealed to me is Charles John
Ellicott was born in 1819, and when he looks upon this chapter, this prophecy
as being Eschatological—that is, it refers to the consummation of the age at
the end time; at which time, he says “Israel with be caught between two great
powers.” Now, he was born in 1819 and wrote his commentary in maturity
somewhere around, say, 1850. As I look at history and the development of
the powerful nations of the world, I find that, exactly. On one side is
America, the great superpower that befriends Israel and on the other side is
Russia, a second great superpower who is seeking to espouse the cause of the
enemies of the Israeli state.
So
as I read the prophecy and study it, I am much inclined to believe either that
it is Eschatological altogether; it is a prophecy of the conditions of the
world and of the nations and of God’s holy people at the consummation of the
age, at the end times, or—and this I am certain of—at least it is a type, a
prototype. It is a delineation of a situation that developed in Israel in
history and it is a harbinger, it is a picture of what shall come to pass at
the end of the age.
Now,
my second comment about the prophecy: in it, Antiochus Epiphanes has a very
large part. Verse after verse after verse is a portrayal of the person
and the character of Antiochus Epiphanes. Not only here, but you find it
elsewhere in the prophecies of Daniel. Now when you look at a person like
that, so largely portrayed and delineated on the sacred page, you would think
he must be some tremendous and notable character. Actually, he is
not! Antiochus Epiphanes is a diminutive ant in history. He’s a
bubble in the boiling caldron of the story of humanity. Then why is it
that he occupies so large a space here in the prophecy? Well the answer
is very plain; and the answer lies in something that if we do not know it and
remember it, the Bible becomes enigmatic and inexplicably to us. The
reason for the delineation of Antiochus Epiphanes is because he touched Israel,
the Holy family of God, at a most tragic part and period in the history of God’s
people. It was Antiochus Epiphanes who precipitated the Maccabean
rebellion, and the Jewish nation over the earth celebrates that victory of
independence in their Feast of Lights—the Hanukkah, the Feast of Dedication, as
it’s called in the New Testament; The feast of the cleansing of the temple under
Judas Maccabeus.
Now
the principal to remember in it is this: the Bible is not a history of the
Gentile Nations of the earth, nor does its prophecies, as such, concern the
Gentile Nations of the Earth. But the Bible is a story of the redemptive
purpose and plan of God thru Israel, and the prophecies concern God’s
people. The whole Old Testament prophecies center around the holy chosen
family of God—the Jew, the Hebrew, the Jew—and even the New Testament, in its
final consummation in the revelation, in the apocalypse, returns back to that
great purpose of God with His people. God is not done with the Jew; the
Liberal says so, but God doesn’t say so, nor does the Bible say so. And
if you want to know what time it is on God’s clock, look at the Jew. Therefore,
when you read the prophecy, you will find the prophecy concerning the family of
God, the Jewish people, and the Jewish nation; even though in the course of
Gentile history, the man—as Antiochus Epiphanes—may be very small and
diminutive in it.
When
I got through preaching here—about, oh, 3 weeks ago, preaching thru the Book of
Daniel—I was standing right there, and a man came down to talk to me. He
was a Muslim, he was a Mohammadan and he was from the Middle East, and he’d
come here to the services. And he asked me, “Are you a Jew?” I said
“No, I would like to be. I wish I were. I’d love to belong, by
blood, in the chosen family and people of God.” But I said, “No, I am not
a Jew.” Well he said, “I listened to you preach, this morning, and from what I
heard, I thought you must be a Jew.” Well, what he’d listened to was an
exposition of the prophecies of God, and the prophecies of God concern the Jewish
people. And they concern the Gentile nations of the Earth only and
insofar and insomuch as the Hebrew people, the Jewish people, touched the
Gentile nations of the Earth. And that’s why, when you read a prophecy
such as the eleventh chapter of Daniel, you will see these figures such as
Antiochus, so largely loom in the fore view and the foreknowledge of the
revelation of God, given here to His statesman, Daniel.
Now
having said those two things, let us look at the prophecy itself. And
could I—because sometimes I’m discouraged in trying to present these things—could
I say something that encouraged me? I spoke about forty-five
minutes this morning, at the early service. And two of my compatriots up
here, my fellow pastors on the platform said, “Pastor, why didn’t you just
continue on through the Sunday school hour?” Oh, I like that! So
they said, “Now at this hour, when you see that clock go around there to twelve
o’clock, well don’t quit, you just keep on going.” When the weather’s bad
outside, we have an hour earlier, so let’s just make ourselves at home.
And
listen, oh I just, I try and whether it is meaningful or not, is in God’s
hands. But may the Lord bless it. The prophecy begins—it is a
revelation of an angel—this is an angel who is talking to the statesman-prophet
Daniel. And as the angel unfolds the future, he begins where they are at
that time, in the Persian Empire. And Cyrus is the king, the founding and
first great king:
Now
I will show you the truth.
Behold,
there shall stand up yet, three kings in Persia, and the fourth shall be richer
than they all.
And
by his strength, and thru his riches, he shall stir up all Greece, all Hellas
against him.
[Daniel
11:2]
Well
Cyrus, the reigning King when the angel is speaking, and then four kings to
follow after: the first is Cambyses, the son of Cyrus, who reigned from about
529 to about 522 BC. The second one is pseudo-Smerdis; that’s an unusual
thing about him, he was a usurper, an imposter—he looked so much like the son
of Cambyses that he said he was the son of Cambyses and in that deception,
secured the throne of the Persian Empire. Didn’t last long, it was in a
period of turmoil. And the second king Smerdis reigned from 522 to
521.
Now
the third king, according to the prophecy, the third king reigned from 521 to
485; and that’s Darius Hystaspes. It was Darius that sought to conquer
the Kingdom of Hellas, the Greeks. And he was defeated by Miltiades with
a small Greek army of ten thousand at the battle of Marathon in 490 BC.
The Persian army numbered far beyond 100,000 but Miltiades, with that band of
Greeks, overwhelmed the Persian string and Darius returned back to Asia a
defeated man. Xerxes is the fourth; he’s the rich king, here. You
know him, in the book of Esther as Ahasuerus. Xerxes—one of the great
oriental rules of all history—fabulously wealthy, and he sought to avenge the
Persian defeat at Marathon. So he gathered together the largest, by far,
the largest army the ancient world had ever seen. It numbered up to 2
million men. And he gathered together the greatest fleet of ships that
the world, up to that time, had ever seen. And, he cast the entire force
of the Persian Empire against Hellas; against the ancient Greek kingdom.
There is the battle of Thermopylae and there is the battle of
Salamis in which Xerxes was ignominiously defeated and went back to Asia, never
to cross the Hellespont again.
The
prophecy says that these rulers of Persia shall stir up all Hellas against
them; all the Greeks against them. It was a century and a half before the
retaliatory stroke was made. And it came in the person—and here is the
next prophecy, “and a mighty king shall stand up; that shall rule with great
dominion; and do according to his will,” [Daniel 11:3] this is Alexander, still
called “The Great.” One of the geniuses of all time, and a man that
affected and changed the course of civilization more than any man who ever
lived: Alexander, the son of Philip of Macedon. Alexander, when he was
about 20 years of age, with lightening strokes, swept the entire civilized
world before him and in 12 brief years, subjugated the whole eastern Asia
world. He finally came to the Indus River, on the borders of India,
and would have swept on around the Earth, I suppose, had it not been that his
army refused to go any further.
Then
the prophecy is made that the kingdom is broken up and divided into 4 parts to
the 4 winds of heaven, and that is the foretold division of the Greek Empire of
Alexander. And the reason I mention this is that the whole after-prophecy
concerns the leadership and the rulers of the Greeks. For the Ptolemies were
Greeks, and the Seleucids were Greek; and when you go to the picture show to
see Cleopatra, you’re looking upon a Greek. There never was anything that
ever happened in history that changed civilization and culture as Alexander the
Great, with his Greek conquests: Greek architecture, Greek drama, Greek
poetry Greek artistry, Greek philosophy, Greek science—the atomic theory is
Greek—Greek methods of warfare, Greek patterns of thought, Greek
everything. The world, the civilization as we know it in the Western
world, is Greek! After 2,500 years, if you see a beautiful column, it’ll
be Greek. There has been no advancement in that column or in that architecture
for 2,500 years. Nor has there been any philosopher to arise who goes
beyond Aristotle or Plato.
Let
me read to you a quotation that I took out of a book, The Direction of Human
Evolution, by a professor at the University of Princeton. I quote
from him. Listen to it, “It is the opinion of those, who have studied the
subject most, that no modern race of man is the equal intellectual of the
ancient Greeks race,” of course the article comes out of a book—quotation comes
out of a book that says, we’re not evolving upward, that’s what he’s talking
about but I’m talking about something else. He’s talking about evolution;
I’m talking about the intellectual capacity of and superiority of the ancient
Greek race. Now, listen to him: “In the two centuries between the 50 and
300 BC, the small and relatively barren country of Attica,” that’s little
Athens, with an area and total population about equal to that of the present
state of Rhode Island, but with less than one-fifth as many free persons, that
little place. Now remember, he’s talking about contemporaries of Alexander, and
all the rest of those great Greeks. He’s not going to mention them, he is
going to mention just that little place of Athens:
That
little place produced a galaxy of illustrious men.
Among
statesman and commanders were Miltiades, the great leader of Marathon;
Themistocles, who won the battle of Salamis; Aristides and Pericles, who
doubtless were the greatest statesman of all time.
Among
poets; Aeschylus, Euripides, Sophocles and Aristophanes; among
philosophers and men of science, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Demetrius and
Theophrastus.
Among
architects and artists, Phidias, who made the beautiful statue, one of the
Seven Wonders of the World of Pallas Athena in the Parthenon; Phidias and
Praxiteles.
Among
historians, Thucydides, one of the greatest historians who ever lived, and
Xenophon—there’s no boy who went to school that did not have to study Xenophon.
Among
orators Aeschines, Demosthenes, Isocrates, and Lysius.
In
this small country, in the space of two centuries, there appears such a galaxy
of illustrious men, as has never been found on the whole earth, in any two
centuries since that time.
Now,
the reason I mention that is, not only is it the prophecy here, but all of the
prophecy that follows after concerns those Greeks, because when Alexander’s
empire was broken up into four parts, one part fell to the Greek Ptolemy. And
the other part fell to the Greek Seleucids—Seleucus Antiochus, that
hereditary chain of kings. What we read here then, is Greek. Now
Antiochus Epiphanes was one of those Greeks, and he is taken here as a
prototype. That is, a prototype is a person, a character, who lives in
this age, this one here. But he is a picture of, he is a harbinger of a type of
another person, another character who will live in another age, at another
time.
Antiochus
Epiphanes here in this prophecy is a type of the ultimate and final Antichrist;
the great ultimate dictator of the world. And as the prophecy continues,
Antiochus Epiphanes gradually fades back into the background and the
delineation of the character of the ultimate Antichrist comes to the
foreground. Therefore, if you would like to know what it will be like at the
end of the world and how we can somehow sense God’s hand as history moves to the
end of the world, then what you do is to read the prophecy and find in Antiochus
Epiphanes and in the prophecy, a prototype of the ultimate consummation of the
age, because the end of this king is identified and it coincides with the end
of the age; where the denouement will be, what it will be like, and the
country and land in which these great and ultimate conflicting armies gather, do
muster.
Now
when I look at the prophecy, one of the first things—and of course the thing
that led to the mentioning to the presentation of Antiochus Epiphanes—one of
the first things is his tragic persecution of God’s people. And this is a
delineation of the whole history of Gods people and the world and especially of
the end time.
The
apostle Paul, himself, said that “all who will live Godly in Christ Jesus shall
suffer persecution”. [2 Timothy 3:12]
Oh,
Blessed Christ. If I were more like Thee,
I
would no doubt, more persecuted be.
The
world and formal church would see far less
To
tolerate in me and not to bless.
The
toleration that is shown to me
Is
proof that I, my Lord, am less like Thee
Than
Peter, John, and Paul and all who died
For
likeness to the Christ, the Crucified.
[Author unknown]
When
you get along easily with the world, it is a sure sign that you are that much
less like Christ, and that much less like the true and sainted people of
God. For in the world you shall have tribulation. This world, the
scriptures say, is not a friend to Christ, and to God. So in this
prototype, there is first a persecution—bitter unto death—of the people of
God. I see that in the world with increasing terror. I see it today;
I see it in the headlines of the papers. More than one-third of this
world has already passed under the rulership and the dominion of governments
that are openly and avowedly and statedly atheistic. And when you see the
Christian in Russia, he is a deprived second-rate citizen. His children have
no privileges for education, he is practically an outcast. And if he
shows himself too zealous, too evangelistic, immediately he comes under the
thumb, the heavy iron fist of a communist government. And of course the martyrs
of the Christian faith in China are known but to God. They are suffering
today; and with increasing rapidity do we see the harsh arm of the
atheistic governments of the world reaching out.
Who
would have ever thought that Russia is obtaining what the Czars could never
attain; bases in the Mediterranean? Who would ever have thought that
Russia stands on the verge of making that great inland sea a Russian sea? Who
would ever have thought she’d been reaching down into the Indian Ocean and to
the Subcontinent of India herself? Because of this last war, India has an
open heart toward Russia, and America of course, chose the wrong side, if we
did. In any event, the whole course of history is moving against the
people of God; the Jew, the Christian. It is not more so, we are not more
so encompassing the World; we’re not more so making converts and building up
the kingdom of our Lord. We are desperately, in most places, fighting for
our very existence, both theologically in a world of freedom such as we enjoy,
and in the very life of the church, under governments that are oppressive and
dictatorial, and annihilistic. This is exactly what is presented here in
the prototype. As the thing moves forward, the people of God increasingly
come under duress under coercion and under tragic persecution.
Finally,
as the prophecy progresses—and it hurts my heart not to be able to accept just
a generalized. What you find here in the eleventh chapter of Daniel, in the
ultimate rise of the Antichrist, the world’s last great dictator; you find it’s
spelled out meticulously in the second chapter of 2 Thessalonians; and in the
thirteenth chapter of the Apocalypse, the Revelation. There he is
presented—what is prophesied here in prototype, there he is presented in minute
detail. There is coming finally, on the stage of the world, on this scene of
historical action, there is coming the incarnation of Satan himself.
There will be a man at that time and it could be anytime; there will come a man
who will give himself—his competence, his ability, his genius—he will give
himself to the use as a tool, as a pigeon in the hands of Satan. And
Satan will seek, in that last traumatic development of history, to strike the
final blow against the kingdom of Christ and the chosen people of God. That is delineated
specifically in the Scriptures.
I
saw a cartoon in Russia: on the Earth beneath, the churches lying in shambles; a
ladder from earth leaning against a cloud in the sky. And on the cloud, a
banquet table at which sat God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy
Spirit. And there’s a Russian workman on the top of that ladder with a
raised hammer in his hand, like this!. And I had them read for me the caption
that was written in Russian that I could not read, and the caption in Russian
read: “As we have destroyed God in the Earth,” all of those churches in
shambles, “so shall we destroy God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy
Ghost in heaven.”
Now,
that is exactly the prototype here and the prophecy of that final world dictator.
He is coming as the anti-Christ. He is coming suddenly on the world
scene; in imitation of Christ. For thousands of years, then the Messiah
appears; in obscurity thirty years, then there He is. He is coming with
the baptism of hell, and with the credentials of miracles and lying wonders.
He is coming, the antithesis of the Lord, who came, not to do His will,
but the Father’s. He is called the willful king, and his subjects, all
things under his iron hand. And his ministry, his terrible reign is
exactly the length of the Lord’s ministry here on Earth. A time, time and
half a time–three and a half years, 42 months, 1,260 days—called in the Bible,
the Great Tribulation.
Now
he comes in, as the scriptures say here, he comes in and he shall come in
peaceably and attain the kingdom by flatteries; then follows the description
here, in the eleventh chapter of the Book of Daniel, of his deceit, of his
deceiving the people. You see that in the sixth chapter of the Revelation: there’s
the white horse, he comes—the true Prince of Peace does not appear until the
nineteenth chapter of the Revelation—but in the sixth chapter, there he
comes. The world will be in turmoil and he promises answers to all the
problems of the nations. He’s a peacemaker and he can bring affluence and
prosperity, and he befriends Israel. He makes a covenant with Israel according
to the ninth chapter of the Book of Daniel and he espouses their call and he
wars with them against the king of the south, which is Egypt. And he
gathers them back into the homeland. They can return and build their
nation.
And
in the midst of that covenant—Daniel’s seventieth week after the first three
and a half years—in the midst of that covenant, this Antichrist turns; he
changes. And here is the delineation again, the prototype again: in the
eleventh chapter of Daniel, he becomes a vile and a vicious and a violent
person. Then in the sixth chapter of the Revelation you have it followed
through: first there is the white horse as he comes in peace, deceiving
the nations of the Earth. Then, and here in the Book of Daniel he is described
as a king who worships the god of force, and gives to that god honor and silver
and gold and stones and everything precious. That is, he pours into the
coffers of war and conflict; all of the might and wealth and strength of the
whole world. That’s why, in the sixth chapter of Revelation, the white
horse is followed by the red horse of war, and the black horse of famine, and
the pale horse of death. And that leads— according to the eleventh chapter of
the book here in Daniel and according to the Apocalypse and according to the
whole Bible—that leads to the great final confrontation in the Earth.
And
the destruction of that king, the Antichrist, coincides with the end of the
world. And the place of that confrontation is described in Ezekiel, is
described in Joel, is described in Zachariah, and it is described here and
elsewhere in the Bible. The place of that is meticulously, precisely,
delineated: it is in the Holy Land and it is called the Battle—it would be
better to say, “The War of Armageddon.” And it is in the midst of that
awesome confrontation, the great final battle of the day of God, that Christ,
God, intervenes from heaven and the end of history has come.
Well,
as you read these things, and I’ve just skimmed it, I’ve just generalized on it,
as you read these things, your heart is filled with terror! “O God in heaven!
What lies ahead for Thy people? What lies ahead for the nations of the
Earth? What lies ahead for civilization? What lies ahead?” It
ends in a catastrophe, in a maelstrom, in a blood bath, in destruction!
And
as we look at history, as we read it in the papers today, and read it in the
news and in the magazines—O Lord. Why do you think the nations are stockpiling
these hell bombs and these H-bombs, these atomic weapons? Why do you
think they’re running a race with one another building these Polaris submarines
and their atomic-headed missiles; any one of which can be shot out of an ocean,
and destroy a great city like New York or like Moscow or like Leningrad?
And they’re beginning to build these platforms—the United States, government has
announced they’re going to build one—they’re building these platforms in space
to circle the Earth, down on which they can reign livid, flaming death!
All of that is in the Bible; all of it is meticulously delineated here.
The world is moving toward that great final Battle of Armageddon, the Day of
the Lord.
Now,
the reason that God prophesies it here is not only the truth, “This is the way
it shall be,” but here, and here, and I marked the passage—1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6—6
times here in this eleventh chapter of the Book of Daniel does the prophet say
that these things are appointed, that they’re at the sovereign hand and will of
God. That is, no development in history is without the surveillance of
the Almighty. It is not a panic that is torn loose, and has gone wild, but
it is according to the will and sovereign purpose of God. And the Lord is
keeping watch above His own and He’s taking care of His own.
That’s
what the prophecy is about, lest we fall into despair and into discouragement,
as though God had forgotten us and as though the Lord had lost control of the
universe and has no part or hand in the development and destiny of human
history and human life. No! The prophecy is that we might
understand that when these things happen it is not that God has forsaken us or
God has for forgotten us or God has withdrawn, but rather it is that we might
remember that these things are under the surveillance and sovereign mighty hand
of the Lord, and He will deliver His people out of it. For example—and
this belongs to the next sermon—in the twelfth [chapter] it starts off like
this:
There
shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even at
that same time.
But
at that time Thy people shall be delivered, everyone that shall be found
written in the book.
[Daniel
12:1]
The
reason for the prophecy is that we might know that God controls. And as
the Lord said, “for the elect’s sake, those days shall be shortened.” [Matthew
24:22] It is God who keeps it in His hand. And it is God who
controls the destiny in the development of human history. And that is why
we are to be filled with assurance and with triumph, conflict and conquest,
Tribulation. And triumph, “In the world, you shall have tribulation, but be of
good cheer. I have overcome the world.” [John 16:33] And God’s
people are always to be filled with hope and optimism for a more glorious,
conquesting, triumphant tomorrow.
I
close. From Robert
Louis Stevenson, one of the sweetest English authors—from Robert Louis Stevenson
comes a story: there was a ship that in a powerful storm at sea was being driven
against the rocks. Any moment it might be dashed to pieces. The
passengers in the ship were huddled together in terror, facing certain
death. And in that agony of that moment, one of the men said, “I’m going
up—perilous though it is—I’m going up to the pilot’s house and see the pilot.”
He made his way up and up and up, and finally to the pilot’s
house. And there he found the pilot, chained to his post, with his
hands on the wheel guiding little by little, turning little by little, the ship
away from the rocks, and out into the deep of the open sea. And when the
pilot saw his intruder and looked at his terror-stricken face, the pilot looked
at him—with his hand on the wheel— the pilot looked at him and smiled.
The man turned around, went back down to the deck below and shouted as he went “All
is well! All is well! I saw the pilot’s face, and he smiled.”
That’s
exactly what God means in the prophecy for His people. In the storms of
life that are raging in the story of nations that are violently in conflict—
in that ultimate denouement of the age in a blood bath in a maelstrom in the
Battle of Armageddon—God’s people are to rest as that little man did when that
man came back. In assurance and in quiet, their terror and their fear
turned into optimism and confidence. “When these things begin to come to
pass,” our Lord said, “Look up! Look up, for your redemption draws nigh.”
[Luke 21:28] It is the Lord who reigns and He alone. It is God who
has us in His hands and He alone. And in faith we believe: He will bring
it to pass, the sweetest the best the dearest for us.
Ah,
sweet people, what an assurance God hath written on that page that we might
live in hope. Could I apply this just today? Not only is
that written in assurance, and in blessedness, and in hope, as history develops
around us, but that’s to be ours, in all of the turns and fortunes and vicissitudes
of life; in all of it, in all of it.
I
think of that especially because yesterday, in visiting at the hospital, some
of the dearest, sweetest people we have in this church are dying, and some of
them an agonizing death. Oh, they face such insuperable pain, and
problem, and heartache, and the dissolution of life. But is it
that? Is that it? No. Beyond the tribulation and beyond the agony
and beyond the death, there is this hope and promise of Christ, of God. And
we are to live in that assurance and that victory and in that triumph, beyond
any of the sorrows we know in life, beyond the pain and the death, there is the
Kingdom of God, the Lord coming in glory. Is not that what you
read?
I
saw Heaven open and behold a white horse; and He that sat upon it was faithful
and true. His eyes were as a flame of fire and on His head were many
crowns. He was dressed in a vesture dipped in blood: and His name is
called The Word of God. And out of His mouth went a sharp two-edged
sword, that with it He should smite the nations of the earth and rule them with
a rod of iron. And He hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name
written, King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
[Revelation
19:11-16]
That’s
our coming and reigning Christ. And to that hope and victory, we give our
souls in full and complete assurance resting in God.
Now
we must sing our hymn of appeal. And while we sing it, a family you, a
couple you, or just one somebody you; in the balcony round, down a stairway, on
this lower floor, in the aisle and down near the front, “Pastor, today, I have
made this decision for God and here I come and here I am.” On the first
note of that first stanza, step out into that aisle or down that
stairway. “Here I am, pastor and here I come. I make it now.” Make
the decision now in your heart. And in a moment when we stand up to sing,
stand up walking down that aisle. Do it now, make it now, come now,
while we stand and while we sing.