CHRIST BEYOND
THE CRISIS
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
2 Thessalonians 2:1-13
5-4-58 10:50
a.m.
You are listening to the services of the First
Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the eleven o'clock
morning message entitled Christ Beyond the Crisis. This day is
Baby Day, this week is National Family Week, next Lord's Day is Mother's Day, and
I do not have it in my heart to preach twice at this hour on family and baby
and mother and home, so the sermon next Sunday morning will be on Mother's Day,
dedicated to that precious and blessed subject.
This morning, we continue in our place in the
Bible to which we have come after these many years. We are in the second
letter of Paul to the church at Thessalonica; and last Sunday morning and
evening, we concluded the first chapter, the latter part of the first
chapter. And this morning, we enter the second chapter. It is in the
midst of an apocalyptic discourse, one of the most difficult in all the Bible,
but one that is spoken of elsewhere in the Scriptures. This subject that
Paul is writing of to the church at Thessalonica was not a peculiar thing or a
strange thing; it was something with which they are altogether familiar.
It was merely their misunderstanding of it that caused Paul to write as he did.
Now, the message this morning will be a general
introduction of the whole theme of it. Then beginning tonight, we shall
pay attention to the particular. Now this is the passage. After he
concluded in the first chapter that they who were in persecution and trouble
were to rest in the hope that the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with
His mighty angels:
In flaming fire taking vengeance on them that
know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall
be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord …When He
shall come to be glorified in His saints, and to be admired in all them that
believe.
[2
Thessalonians 1:7-10]
—then he continues—
Now we beseech you, brethren, concerning the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and [by] our gathering together unto Him, That
ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word,
nor by letter as from us, as that the day of the Lord has already begun
—it is right now—
Let no man deceive you by any means: for that Day
shall not come, except there come first an apostasia
—a falling away—
and the man of sin be revealed, the son of
perdition; Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or
that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, showing [himself]
that he is God. Remember ye not, that, when I was with you, I told you
these things?
[2
Thessalonians 2:1-5]
From Josephus, from the Old Testament, from current apocalyptic
literature that we have, and Paul says, And I myself, this thing was something
that they were much familiar with.
And now ye know what restraineth that he might be
revealed in his time, For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only He
that restraineth, restrains
—until that restraining One—
be taken out of the way. And then shall that
wicked one be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His
mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming: Even that one whose
coming
—he also a coming—
whose parousia is after the energeia—the
working—of Satan,
with all power and signs and lying wonders.
[2
Thessalonians 2:6-9]
Now you wade into an ocean when you come to an
apocalyptic passage like this, and tonight we shall speak of it in particular,
these things that he says. This morning we shall look at it generally, and
by generally, I mean a subject, this thing that Paul writes of here,
which is not isolated or peculiar or unique; it is in the Scriptures all
through the Word of God.
Now, the Bible is not only a Book of the world to
come, but it is a Book also of the here and now. It has to do with what
we see, with what is developing before our eyes. If it has no pertinency
to us, if there's no revelation in it concerning us, why, then let's just let
it go because it has no reference to anything that touches our lives. But
that's not true. The Bible is not, I repeat, just about yonder, just
about the far away and the future, but the Scriptures are of the world
now. It is of the present. And to one who will open his heart and
read, he will find some marvelous things, and all of them are great
encouragement and illimitable, immeasurable hope.
Now, the here and now: in our day, in my
lifetime, in our generation, we have seen the working out of epochal things,
tremendously important things. For one thing, we have seen with our eyes
the dissolution of the British Empire, the greatest empire in all of the world
and its history. The empire of today is a fragment of what was in the
last century. We have not only seen the dissolution of the British
Empire, we have seen the destruction of the great nations of Europe. They
are second- and third- and fourth- and fifth- and tenth-rate powers. We
have seen their disintegration and their destruction. Not only that, but
we have seen in our day, we have seen the rise of the masses of the uncounted
millions of the Far East under the spell of socialism and communism.
We have seen in our day and in our time the rise
of a unique government which is avowedly and supports atheistic, militaristic,
materialistic, economic determinism. There never was in all the history
of the world any government that was ever atheistic or that supported
atheism. Now the government might support Jupiter and Juno, it might be
influenced by Baal and Beelzebub, it might have been given to the worship of
Shinto or of Buddha or of Zoroaster, it might be a devotee of Islam, but there
never was a government—until you saw it rise in your lifetime—that gave itself
to materialistic, economic, atheistic, determinism. That's a unique thing in
the history of the world.
Another thing, in our lifetime, we have seen six
hundred million more people in this world who don't know the Lord. There
are six hundred million more people in this earth who now live, who are not
Christian, who don't know Jesus; that many more since the turn of the century,
and of course, you are seeing in your lifetime, in your day, the great, vast
mass and majority of humanity live under the domination of atheistic,
militaristic determinism. All of that has brought indescribable fear in
depth and paralysis of soul to the Christian and the free world.
All you have to do is to take your tax dollar and
look at it. A very insignificant part of it goes to government.
Practically all of it goes for the preparation of war. This great emphasis that
we have today on science comes out of the fears of man. We are
afraid. Last night at one o'clock in the morning, this morning at eight
o'clock, at this very second, eleven twenty-five, there are bombers of the
stars and stripes deployed over this earth who are carrying atomic bombs. All
it would take is a radio wire. All it would take is a word from the
Pentagon, and those bombers change their courses to certain specified targets;
they're in the air all the time. Is all of this strange? Oh, no!
Not to the man who would read the Bible. There's nothing new in that to a
man who would open his heart to the truth and the revelation of God. For
all of these Scriptures are of the same import, and the message this morning is
that import.
All of these Scriptures point toward several
things. One of them is this: the Scriptures without variation point
towards the day and the time of a great worldwide federation of power.
They all do. There's no exception to that. This passage that I have
read is no different. This passage I have read speaks of a world
dictatorship called here, "the wicked one, the man of sin, the son of
perdition." In many other places called "the Antichrist,"
the final Antichrist; they all point in that direction. There is a
movement in this world described by the Scriptures toward a great federation of
power, every kind of power. There's no such thing as “one world” without
sooner or later, one ruler. It all moves in that direction.
I could illustrate it endlessly as I read the
newspaper. When your labor unions get big, and big, and big, and big, you
have bosses and tyrants and dictators that rule them. You don't have big
labor unions without big labor bosses. They go together. It's
inherent. All you have to do is to call to mind these vast social
movements that we have seen rise in our day—fascism, Nazism, communism—without
exception, they all carry with them tyrants, dictators, great superheroes; that's
inherent in it! There's no such thing as great federated power and
authority without also somebody who wields it. And this is the
description you have in the Word of God. We are caught in those
things. You just stand by the great tidal wave of humanity and see it rise
and rush onward. I do not choose to have it that way, you do not, it is a
part of the great movement of human history. And in it, we are
inextricably connected. So the Scriptures—as this one—reveal that great
movement toward a great, final dictator and tyrant and ruler, one who holds in
his hand almost illimitable power.
I came across a thing: you say, "The
kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His
Christ." [Revelation
11:15] When you see that thing in
Greek, it is singular, "the king-dom of this world is become the king-dom,”singular,
“of our Lord and of His Christ.” What this thing is is a modern Babel.
In the ancient time, on the plain of Mesopotamia,
they sought to pull together and to hold together all of the races of mankind,
and they built the tower to gain them a name and to keep them together. [Genesis 11:1-9] You have that same thing today in modern
history, the creation of a modern Babel. Communication makes it
that. You can talk to your neighbor on the other side of the world, talk
to him and he could talk to you. Transportation does that. World
psychology in politics and religion do that. Now this is just a feeble,
human judgment on it. I do not think that in the thing, there would be
anything particularly wrong at all were it in God—but that is what the Bible
reveals, this Scripture here—this great federation of the world, as it grows in
politics, in economics, in militarism, in leagues, in United Nations, all of
this thing, as it grows and it grows, it does not grow towards God! It is the
same thing as you had in the days of Babel. It was an affront to God!
It was in blasphemy of the name of God! It was in contradiction to God!
So it is the growing power of this world, and the
federation of the resources of this earth are not godly. They are ungodly
and becoming increasingly, fearfully so. I don't have to speak of Russia.
I don't have to speak of China. I look at my own country of
America. There is something wrong with America when the radios, plural,
the radios, plural, of Dallas—the only time I hear them is driving my car over
the city—when they have radios that by the hours, and the hours, and the hours,
and hours play nothing but the sorriest, sorriest, most inexcusable type of
rock 'n roll. Cat—I don't know what they call that stuff, but it is an
abomination, the whole drift of it is down and down. I don't have to
describe us, anybody who thinks there is a great revival of real religion in
America, all they have to do is to just to begin to count up the drunks—they
say alcoholics. Just count them up. America is becoming a drinking,
sodden nation! I don't want to take time to expatiate on those
things. I am just pointing out that, as we move toward great federated
power, you're not moving to God. You're moving to godlessness—when I say
that for us, much less for the slave world beyond us.
Now, you have here in this presentation, of which
this is just a part, I repeat, when Paul wrote this, he was noting not uniquely
or in isolation—they were very familiar with these things he was talking about—you
would be if you read the Bible too. There is a movement toward the
federation in religion, as well as in the federation of military and economic
and political power. For example, this man here who is to be the final
tyrant and dictator, he is a religious figure. Isn't that the strangest
thing? He is worshipped as God. Now what all of that means is this—that
the ultimate in the development of the course of history, the ultimate in
religion is human. We have a name for it--humanism. That is the
denial of the supranatural, and the denial of the supernatural, and the
exaltation of the human, the mundane, the terrestrial, the earthly. That
thing that you see back there in the story of Nebuchadnezzar, when he made a
great golden image, and the whole nation was to worship it. That's a
picture of the same thing; human worship, human religion. centered here
in this world. It is visible, it is overt, it is outward. It is attended
with great ceremony and decorum. It is united. It has great majesty;
the monarchy is there. It's seductive—all kinds of beautiful music and
ritual. That's human religion! It is human worship. It is the
exaltation of man. It is a denial of the true God! The religion that
shall develop in history will not be like you know it and like you think about
it. When we think of religion, we think of conversion, and loving Jesus,
and giving your heart to God. The movement of this world that goes on and
on will be more and more and more away from that. But it will be a
religion of humanism. They will trade—say, and for example, this thing of
personal conversion and personal commitment to Christ, they will change it for
the social gospel, amelioration of problems, and slum clearance, and all of the
things that go with it. And I haven't—take me five hours even to
enumerate it. It'll be centered in this world. It'll be a
humanistic religion.
Now, it portends, it darkly describes one other
and one awful thing. There is no exception in the Word of God but that
this is true, that there will be increasingly, darkly, terrible and frightful
conflicts of power. All the way through, there's no exception to that in
the Word of God. In Daniel, the Gabriel revealing to Daniel says, "And
wars are determined unto the end." [Daniel 9:26]
In the twenty-fifth chapter, for example, of Jeremiah, the Lord says to
Jeremiah, "Jeremiah, take this cup and make the nations of the world drink
it," [Jeremiah
25:15] the cup of the fury of God,
the cup of war and blood, the cup of destruction by the sword. Now, you
look: and God says to Jeremiah, "And if a nation says, 'We will not drink
it,' thou shalt say unto that nation, 'Thou shalt surely drink it!'" [Jeremiah 9:28] What does that mean? That means
this. You're not going to come together in any legislative assembly and
say, "Let's fight." You're not going to come together in any
plebiscite and say, "Let's vote for war." But God's Book says,
"Thou shalt surely drink it!" Whether you will or no, you're going to
be caught in the maelstrom of this conflict of power. You don't have any
choice. You're born into it; it's here, and it's coming, and it's fiercer,
and it's fiercer and it's fiercer. Our Lord Jesus Christ said in the
twenty-fourth chapter of the Book of Matthew, "Ye shall have wars and hear
of rumors of wars." And the Book of the Revelation is a book of conflict
and of war. From the ninth to the nineteenth chapters, it is nothing but
conflict and war. The most war-filled chapter in the Bible is the ninth
chapter in the Revelation. In the twelfth chapter of the Revelation,
there is war in heaven. In the thirteenth chapter of the Revelation, you
come to the nadir, the darkest midnight of human history. And the
seventeenth chapter carries on the great theme of that final world dictator. War,
conflict, strife; and it becomes more frequent and more terrible and more
destructive all the time.
Is that pessimism? No. That's
realism. That's just looking at what God says in human history, and
that's just reading your daily newspaper. If you take Time or Newsweek
or United States News and World Report , that's just the daily commentary,
that's all. Jeremiah said to Judah, "Babylon shall surely invade
this nation, and Nebuchadnezzar shall surely destroy Jerusalem." And
they called him a warmonger and a prophet of doom and put him in the pit; laid
him down in the mire. But Babylon came, and Nebuchadnezzar plowed up
Jerusalem into heaps.
Winston Churchill—at the turn of century—Winston
Churchill said, "On the horizon is war. War with Germany!" And
they said, "He's an orator of doom. He's a black pessimist." He
was right! These men, whom I am beginning to find out—never heard of them
before, but they wrote books on the Bible—years and years and years ago, they
read the Bible and said, "Russia shall rise as a great, dark, and
foreboding power in the world." And it has come to pass just like they
say, reading the Bible.
I want to show the other side of that. In
1913, William E. Wilson, a great author, theologian, wrote a book entitled, Christ
and War, with a subtitle, A Peace Study Textbook. When Jesus
says about these wars and rumors of wars, this theologian wrote, discussed it
on a whole page, here's a sentence, "The events Jesus foresaw and spoke of
happened eighteen hundred fifty years ago. And we have, therefore, no
right to apply His words to the present or future . . . Not going to have any
more wars."Jesus said "wars." The theologian said,
"Eighteen hundred fifty years ago, that might have been true, but it's not
true today." He said that in 1913.
All right, another one: in 1913, December 6, in
the Saturday Evening Post, one of the most illustrious senators the
United States ever had, Theodore E. Burton of Ohio, wrote an article entitled,
"The Day of International Peace;" in 1913! I quote from that
article, "Wars for the aggrandizement of rulers have ceased."
Amen. "Conflicts caused by popular uprisings against an existing
order and for freer government and more liberal institutions are becoming less
frequent." No sooner had the ink dried on the pen than the great First
World War, and a few years later, the great and awful, convulsive revolution—he
said, “There’s not going to be any more revolutions”—called Soviet communism, and
at a few years after that, the most terrible war of all!
Well, I quote just one more: I could continue
this by the hour. In 1919, after the First World War, Dr. James H.
Snowden, illustrious professor of systematic theology in the Western
Theological Seminary, wrote 1919, I quote:
This war, colossal and terrible as it is beyond
anything the world has ever seen in all the centuries of the past, is a work of
general destruction, but preparing the way for a general reconsecration of the
world. Out of all this storm of fire and wreck will arise a new heaven
and a new earth wherein dwelleth social righteousness. The sword in this
war will go far toward ending the work of the sword. And then all the
visions and dreams of prophets and poets will be fulfilled when the battle
flags are furled in the federation of the world—1919.
The world safe for democracy; the war to end all
wars,but God said, "It's war." Now, in a minute to sum up an hour, in
this little passage, short, that I read, it says there is a final, final
conflict. There is a Hinderer now in the world, and we shall speak of
that tonight. And when He's taken out of the way, there will be revealed
that final one:
Whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of
His mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming; Even him whose
coming is after the energizing of Satan with power and signs and lying wonders.
[2
Thessalonians 2:6-9]
What he's referring to there is that final, final battle. You have
a name for it over here in the last book of the Bible:
And I saw the unclean spirits—demons—going forth
unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to gather them to the
battle of the great Day of God Almighty. . .
And he gathered them together into a place
called, in the Hebrew tongue, Armageddon
[Revelation
16:14-16]
Har Megiddo, the Hebrew, The Mount of Megiddo—the low-lying hills overlooking
the Valley of Esdraelon—the most war-soaked, blood-stained of all of the
sections of the world; up here is Mount Tabor, then the Hill of Moreh, Little
Hermon, then the hills of Gilboa, then Mount Carmel, and back up to Tabor; about
fourteen miles this way, about twenty-four that way, and fourteen that way, the
Plain of Esdraelon at the foot of the Mount of Megiddo, Armageddon. I
have stood there, and as I stood there, there went through my mind the
marching, marching, millions of the world. Thutmose III, king of Egypt,
1497 BC, in battle overcame a confederacy of Asiatics at Armageddon.
Barak, fighting against the hosts, when the stars in their courses fought
against Sisera, the battle of Armageddon, there. Gideon, with his
faithful three hundred fighting the hordes of the Midianites, there Armageddon.
That awful and tragic battle of the Philistines against Israel when Saul was
slain and Jonathan and his sons, there Armageddon. When good King Josiah
went out against Pharaoh Necho of Egypt and was slain, there, in the battle
of Armageddon. And down that pass and in that plain and on those hills,
marching, marching, the armies of Alexander the Great, the armies of the
Crusaders, the armies of Napoleon. The armies of General Allenby, there
in the great battle that turned back the Turkish Empire, the battle of
Armageddon.
And Paul says that that final enemy of God,
marching at the hosts of the confederated powers of the world shall be defeated
and slain by the presence and appearing of the Son of God, and it will come to
pass in a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon. That final
conflict will reach its zenith and its ultimate and its final denouement in
Palestine in a place called in the Hebrew tongue “Armageddon,” the battle of
Megiddo.
"Well, what does that have any meaning for
us?" you say. Why, just this, just this. Paul wrote that,
Paul wrote that, the conclusion, “Bound to give thanks to God...that God hath
chosen us from the beginning of the world through sanctification of the Spirit
and salvation unto Him” These things are seen by a Christian. They are
witnessed by a Christian. They are read by a Christian. These dark
headlines, these terrible and awful conflicts, these vast, moving,
marching nations with their millions and their millions they are read by
Christians, but they're not read in despair. They're not read in
hopelessness and helplessness. They are read in the light of the Word of
God. And when we read them and when we see them, we're not to be
afraid. We're not to lose courage. We're not to fall into despair
or helplessness or hopelessness. There is One who's on our side, who's
marched away to another part of the field of battle, but He hasn't forsaken His
people, and He hasn't forgot His children. We're in a conflict, and death
slays us, and war is on every horizon. And Satan plows us under.
But He is Captain of the hosts of the Lord's army!
And I may not live to see it. I may die
before that chapter of final denouement is open, but He comes, and He comes,
and He comes, and He rides, and He rides, and He rides, and He wins, and He
wins, and He wins! "And, though, through my skin worms destroy this
body, yet in my flesh shall I see Him, whom I shall see for myself and not
another." [Job
19:26-27] We shall live and reign
with Him in victory, in a new world, without death and without sin, a world
where God is open and visible, to whom we may speak face to face and still live
in His sight. I haven't time. I must close, but the Christian hope
is like Peter said, the one we've just read. It is unfading and never
passes away. Above the smoke, and the battle, and the death, and the
grave, and the war, there He stands victorious now and forever.
Now we sing our song of invitation and
appeal. Somebody to give his heart to the Lord, would you come?
Somebody to put his life in the church, would you come? A family you, one
somebody you, as the Lord should say the word and lead the way, would you
come? In this great throng and host in the balcony, down these stairwells
and up here by the side of the pastor, into these aisles, down to the front,
however God should lead the way and the Spirit should say the word, would you
come today? "I put my trust in Jesus,” or, "Today we put our lives in
the fellowship of the church," while we stand and while we sing.