THE COMING CHRIST
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 7:9-14
01-23-72
On the radio and on television, you are sharing
the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor
bringing the message entitled, THE COMING CHRIST or THE GREAT INTERVENTION.
In our preaching through the Book of Daniel, we’re in the seventh chapter.
And in the middle of the seventh chapter, in the middle of the vision of the
great sweep of human history, he sees the coming Christ.
I beheld till the thrones were cast down, and
the Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of
his head like wool: . . .
A fiery stream issued and came forth from
before him: thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten
thousand stood before him: the books were, the judgment was set and the books
were opened. . . .
And I saw in the night visions, and, behold,
one like the Son of Man came with the clouds of heaven, . . .
And there was given him dominion, and glory,
and a kingdom, that all people, and nations, and languages, should serve him:
his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his
kingdom that which shall not be destroyed for ever” [Daniel 7:9-14].
In the seventh chapter of Daniel, as in the second chapter
of the prophecy, God gave to him in interpretation and in vision, the whole
story of human history to the end of the age. In the seventh chapter, he sees
the nations of the world as vicious, ferocious, carnivorous animals. There is
the lion, the first one. There is the bear, the second one. There is the
leopard, the third one. There is the nondescript with great iron teeth, the
fourth one. Thereafter, there are no world-wide dominions, empires. But the
empire is broken into separate nations, represented in the second chapter by
the ten toes of a great image of a man, and in this chapter, chapter seven,
represented by ten horns out of which one comes up separate, diverse, apart,
the antichrist who shall be the last, final world dictator. Now in the midst
of that prophecy of the course of human story, he sees the coming of the Lord.
And He comes as a great interposition, intervention, catastrophically,
cataclysmically, in the twinkling of an eye, as the lightning flashes across
the bosom of the sky. In this revelation of the coming of our Lord, there are
several facets that are dramatically and vividly portrayed here in this passage
I’ve just read. And I speak of them now.
First, the coming of Christ is judgmental. The
judgment was set and the books were opened. In the fifth chapter of John, we are told that “the
Father judges no one, but has committed all judgment unto the Son: . . .” [John 5:27]. When Christ comes; therefore, it
shall signal the gathering together of the nations and peoples of the earth: “and
the judgment is set and the books were opened” [Revelation 20:12]. All of us some day
shall stand in the presence of Almighty God. And our proximity to that hour is
as near as the day of our death. All of us are moving toward that vast assize.
The astronomers say that the entire universe is rapidly moving through space.
Going where? To that ultimate, final, confrontation with God. All of us are
enmeshed in history. Our destiny is here. We are buried in this planet, and
destiny, and history. And the planet itself is moving toward that great final
consummation, the judgment day of Almighty God. However diverse our paths may
be here, they shall converge at that one common center when we stand in the
presence of Almighty God. The baby in the cradle reaching up its tiny arms is
reaching up to the great Judgment of God. The youth striding by with elastic
tread is moving to the great Judgment of Almighty God. That old man tottering
with his cane is falling toward the Judgment of Almighty God. That rich man
driving by with splendid equipment is driving to the Judgment day of Almighty
God. That poor man dressed in rags, barefoot, is walking to the great Judgment
of Almighty God.
The Christian, with songs on his lips and
praises in his heart, is pilgrimaging to the great assize. And that lost man,
doing despite to the spirit of grace, treading under foot the blood of the
covenant wherewith Christ was sanctified, is moving to the great Judgment day
of Almighty God. All of us shall stand in the presence of the Lord some day.
And the judgment was set and the books were opened. In the twentieth chapter
of the Book of Ezekiel, there is the judgment of Israel,—God’s chosen family. In the twenty-fifth
chapter of the Gospel of Matthew is the foretelling of the judgment of all of
the Gentiles of the earth. In the fifth chapter of the Second Corinthian Letter
is described the judgment of the Christians who shall stand before the bema
of Christ. And in the twentieth
chapter of the Apocalypse, there is described the great white throne judgment
before which every lost man shall appear. All of us shall stand some day
before the judgment seat of Almighty God. The judgment was set and the books
were opened.
There are three Books that are everlasting.
One is the Bible: “The flower fadeth, the grass withereth, but the word of God
shall stand for ever” [Isaiah 40:8]. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but
God’s words shall never pass away. The second Book that is everlasting is the Book
of Reward. Up there in glory, there is a recording angel. And on the pages of
that Book are written all the deeds of our lives. And when we stand at the
judgment seat of Christ, we shall be rewarded
according to what we have done in the days of our flesh. The third Book that
is everlasting is the Lamb’s Book of Life. And on those pages are recorded the
names of all those who are the heirs of salvation. “On the page, bright and
fair, are our names written there?” The judgment is set and the Books are
opened.
Not only is the coming of Christ judgmental, but the
coming of our Lord is also premillennial. It is never presented in any other
way in the Bible. And if you preach the Bible, that is what I shall preach.
Always there is the coming of Christ and the establishment of the kingdom. Never the
establishment of the kingdom and then the coming of Christ. The millennium and
not the dawn that ushers in the glorious appearing of our great God and
Savior. But Jesus rather, is the Sun of
righteousness, rising above the horizon and flooding the world with His
unshaded, undiminished glory. Always it is that. First, there is the coming
of the Ancient of days. Then the thousands of thousands who gather to minister
before Him. First, there is the coming of the Son of man with the clouds of
heaven, and then there is given to Him dominion and glory and a kingdom. There
is the great image, down to the ten toes, smitten by the Rock, cut out of the
mountain without hands. And then there is the growth of the stone to fill the
earth, the kingdom of God. Always, it is that.
There is nothing separating us from Christ. No intervention
between us and the coming of the Lord. We are not to look for a great
tribulation, or the battle of Armageddon, or the development of the social
fabric of national life, or some system whereby men are ameliorated in their
pain, or in their suffering, or desire in prayer for peace. Rather, we are to
look for the great God and Savior, the Lord Jesus. Even as Paul wrote in Philippians 3:20: “For our
citizenship is in heaven; from whence we look for the Jesus our Christ.” Always in the
Bible, the coming of the Lord is premillennial. First, the Savior, and then
the establishment of the kingdom.
Not only is the coming of Christ judgmental, and not
only is it premillennial, but it is also interventional. It is the great
interposition of God in human history. If there is any one thing that the
prophets teach us, it is this, that the restoration of humanity is never found
in itself. But it is found in a power beyond itself, outside itself, above
itself. And that power always is in God. And in the prophecy of the
consummation of the age, always it is the intervention of Christ in human history, the
coming of the Lord from heaven down to earth. For example, here in the vision
he beholds, he says, I watched the panorama of human history and then, “the
Ancient of days did sit, whose garment white as snow, and his head like pure
wool: . . . and the stream of fire issuing before him: and the thousands and
thousands ministering unto him” [Daniel 7:0, 10]. There is the course of human
history down to that great, final, cataclysmic day. And always, it is that
intervention in human history that brings amelioration to mankind.
It is thus here. These great beasts, which
represent the nations and kingdoms of the earth, they reigned and they followed
their course in history, but the saints of the most high, shall take the
kingdom and shall possess it forever and ever. How do they take it? How is it
transferred from terrestrial to celestial? How are the times of the Gentiles
changed into the possession of the saints? How is it that these vicious
governments suddenly are made docile, and domestic, and peaceful and joyful?
It comes not from the nation itself. Or the human stream of life itself, but
always it comes as an intervention from God. And in the scriptures it is
always the second coming of our Lord. Without exception, the apostles and the
prophets and the apocalyptic visions present the course of human history as
continuing as it is, full of murder and blood and war and trouble and sorrow
and death, until the great cataclysmic intervention of Christ from heaven. The
reason for that to me, apart from the Bible, is most explicit and plain. We
are helpless before the providences that overwhelm us. We have no power
against them. Death—God calls death an enemy. Death is so final. And we are
so helpless before it. Abraham said to the sons of
Heth, Sell me the cave of Machpelah for a burying place
for my dead [Genesis 23:9]. Who is his dead? It is his beloved Sarah. And he says, that I
might bury my dead out of my sight. Who can resurrect the dead? It is not in
us. It is only in the power of God. If there is a resurrection, it comes from
an intervention of heaven. Our death in trespasses and in sin.
Who can resurrect us spiritually? Who can give
us a new birth? Never in ourselves. We are lost and fallen. If we are born
again, if we are saved, if we are forgiven, it must be an interposition from
God. God must do it. So in the stream of human history, there is no
indication in the thousands of years of history, of civilization, of culture,
of the development of human life, there is no indication that we get better and
better. Rather, we exchange a club and a stone ax for weapons that fall upon
us from the sky in horror. Instead of a man deceiving another man by word of
mouth, now we have great networks by which nations deceive other nations. How
is it that the stream of humanity ever rises to peace or joy or felicitousness
and blessedness? It lies in the intervention of God. And without exception,
that is the prophetic message of the holy Scriptures. The restoration of the
race, the amelioration of mankind; the hope we have for any better world, never
arises in us. We are incapable of it. But it arises from God and is expressed
in the great, triumphant appearing of our Lord. This is what the apostle Pauls calls “that blessed
hope” [Titus 2:13]. There shall appear
without announcement, without herald, there shall appear suddenly as the, as
the lightning cleaves the bosom of the sky, like a great sudden flash, there
shall suddenly appear the coming of the Son of man from heaven, interposing in
human history. Setting up the kingdom of God. “Behold, he cometh
with clouds” [Revelation1:7]. And there in the vision was one like the Son of
man coming with the clouds of heaven. And there was given Him the dominion and
the glory and the kingdom. It is set up by God Himself and not by the genius
of man.
When the Lord stood before the high priest and
was tried before the Sanhedrin, the high priest put him on oath and said, “I
adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us whether thou be Christ, the
Son of God” [Matthew 26:63]. And on oath the answer of the Lord was this: “I
am. . . . And hence forth shall ye see the Son of man sitting on the right hand
of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven” [Matthew 26:64]. There the Lord
is quoting this vision in the seventh chapter of the Book of Daniel. Ah, what
an overwhelming and astonishing and unbelievable thing. He who was despised
and rejected, spit upon and scorned, crucified and mocked, nailed on a cross
between malefactors, He shall come in glory and in power. I think that is why
the apostle John, when he wrote the
text of the Revelation: “Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see
him, and they also who pierced him” [Revelation 1:7]. John stood that day by the
cross. He saw the bitter, bitter faces, and the scornful words, and the hard
hearts of the Roman soldiers, and they who
mocked him. And he is saying that some day, at the great judgment seat of God,
these who crucified the Christ, who mocked Him, they
shall be forced to face Him—“they also who pierced him.” And the families of
the earth shall wail because of Him. These who look to other sources of hope
and salvation and amelioration but don’t look to God, when the Bible says, and
the Scriptures say, that all of our hope for any better tomorrow lies in the
intervention of Christ from heaven.
Not only is His coming judgmental, and not only
is it premillennial, and not only interventional—the intervention, the coming
down, suddenly, cataclysmically, the coming down of God from heaven—but it is
also triumphal. Think of the diverse complexity of this millennial kingdom.
In it, the angels, the redeemed, the saints of the Old Testament, the saints of
the New Testament, all of them there. But the saints of the most High shall
take the kingdom, and possess it for ever and ever. And the Ancient of days
came, judgment was given to the saints of the most high. And the times that
they should possess the kingdom—And the kingdom and the dominion and the
greatness of the kingdom of the whole heaven, shall be given to the people, of
the saints of the most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom.
Think of the diversity in it. And in the
passage and in the vision, he describes some of that diversification, that
diversity. I think of the creation first. This birth and creation, how
diverse it is. There is a sky above us and the earth beneath us. There are
the stars and the moons and the sun. There are the bird in little meadows.
There is the autumnal foliage, clothing of the tree. There is the water in the
land. There is the day and the night. There are the seasons. There are
colors and sounds and dimensions. Not two leaves are alike out of the untold
billions that fall to the earth. There are not two snowflakes that are alike.
Think of the diversity of God in the great creation.
Then it is no less so the diversity, the
complexity, of the diversity in millennial kingdom in the new creation when
Christ shall come again. Some of these things are spoken of in the text, in
the vision, and in the Bible. For example, in the complexity of the kingdom,
it is both angelic and human. All of them, and all mingle and all have a part
and all praise God the Savior. In the fifth chapter of the Book of the
Revelation, for example, there praising the Lord are the four zoa, the
four cherubim, representing the creation. There, praising God in that
millennial kingdom, there you will find the twenty-four elders, the twelve
patriarchs and the twelve apostles. There you will find the myriads upon
myriads of angels. And there you will find the redeemed, the blood-bought of
all ages, mingling together in the kingdom of Christ, singing, “Worthy is the Lamb to receive honor
and glory and dominion forever and ever” [Revelation 5:12]. Ah, think of it. These angelic and
celestial spirits do not disdain to look upon us as their brethren, even though
we are so poor, and degraded, and made of the dust of the ground. What could
be more beautiful and more precious than in the twenty-second chapter of the
Apocalypse, when John has seen through the
angel the vision of the consummation of the age, and seeing those visions, he “fell
down at the feet of the angel to worship him. And the angel replies, See thou
do it not. For I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and
of those who keep the sayings of this book” [Revelation 22:9]. The angels do
not disdain fellowshipping with us as fellow-servants in the great kingdom and
glory and city of our Savior.
The complexity, the diversity. Not only that,
but the nations and the inter nations that are there. Ah, what God has wrought
in gathering together all of these who share in the kingdom. “And there was
given unto him dominion and glory and a kingdom that all people, and nations,
and languages, should serve him” [Daniel 7:14]. In the kingdom of our Christ, the people, you will
be you. And I shall be I. And we shall be we. If that is not true, the
resurrection and the glorification mean nothing at all. If it is not I who is
resurrected, if it is not I who is glorified, if I am not I in the kingdom,
then resurrection has no meaning. If it refers to something else, if there is
another man, if there is another entity, if there is another person and it is
not I, then resurrection has lost its meaning. And the word has no promise at
all. But if resurrection has any meaning, it must be that I must be
resurrected. It is I who senses and feels and knows, who loves. It is I who
is resurrected. People, we’re not going to be gobs and gobs. You will be
you. And we shall be we in the kingdom, the people who love the Lord. And the
nation. As flower differs from flower, as the star differs from star, so
country and nation shall differ from country and nation. The nations will be
there. Each, as the Bible says will bring into the glorious city the glory and
honor of its history. The nations will be there.
Not only people and nations, but also
languages. I realize that a part of the curse was the breaking up of the one
common language. But the reversal of that curse does not mean that we shall
have just one tongue with which to speak. Rather, it means that each nation
possessing its own language and own tongue, each nation can understand every
other nation. The miracle of Pentecost was not that they all spoke one tongue,
but the miracle of Pentecost was that each one understood whatever the tongue
in which the message was presented. So it shall be in the kingdom of our
Savior, each one speaking his own language and his own tongue, but all of us
will understand. What is the language of heaven? Spanish? Italian?
English? Greek? Latin? It shall be all of it. Our Lord spoke to Saul on the way to Damascus in the Hebrew tongue.
In the days of His flesh, He spoke the Aramaic language. Languages—we shall
all be speaking in our tongue and all of us shall understand everyone else. In
that kingdom there are many peoples, but one sentiment. There are many
nations, but one Lord. And many languages, but one harmonious understanding.
It shall be like a beautiful orchestra. It is not all violins. It is not all
woodwinds. It is not all percussion instruments. In a, in a—in an orchestra,
it is all of the instruments making a glorious contribution—each one. So it is
in the kingdom of our Savior. Each one has his part to contribute. Each one
brings a glory into it, every nation, every land, every tongue, every people,
every gift, you. And without you, it is just that much lacking.
And one other thing. In that diversity, it is
also nondestructive. As it is now, so many times black people hate white
people. So many times poor people are envious of affluent people. So many
times nations are greedy and covetous. And they hate, and rape, and rob, and
destroy, and overrun other nations. So many times the diversities in the human
family bring sorrow and conflict, and altercation. But in the kingdom of God, the diversity is
nondestructive. “The wolf will dwell with the lamb”—they will both be there—“the
leopard shall lie down with the kid”—they will both be there—“the lion shall
eat straw like an ox” [Isaiah 11:6]. He will be there. All Edenic primaeval
pristine beauty and form. No animal was made carnivorous, to eat another
animal. But as it was in the beginning, in domestic tranquility. The whole
creation diverse, shall move in the pattern, and the purpose, and the plan, and
the glory of God. “And they shall not hurt or destroy in all God’s holy
mountain” [Isaiah 11:9].
Civilization in history goes back about six
thousand years before Christ. Isn’t it a strange thing? That is what the Book
says, and that is exactly what the archeologist says. And as far back as we
can trace the story of the nations of the world, the story is blood-red. It is
marred with murder, and blood, and war. The immortal names that are on that
story Book, Cyrus, Alexander the Great, Caesar, Charlemagne, Tammerlane,
Genghis Khan, Napoleon—those men were made immortal not because they were
philosophers, but because they were fighters; not because they were statesman,
but because they were warriors. Blessed is the nation whose history is short,
for the story of mankind is one of blood, and of avarice, and of greed, and of
violence, and of invasion, and of war. Nor is there any indication or any hope
that as civilization progresses, our wars will become less fierce, or less
ferocious or less destructive. It is the opposite. As the story of mankind
progresses, our wars become more ferocious and more fierce. We just trade a
stone ax or a wooden club for a submachine gun or a bomb that falls out of the
sky.
Does that continue for ever? In the diversity
of the kingdom of Christ, nation shall not lift
up sword against nation. Neither shall they learn war anymore. The sword will
be used for plowshares. And these spears for pruning hooks. And in that
millennial kingdom, there will be no internal strife. Judah will not vex Ephraim
and Ephraim will not envy Judah. And in that millennial kingdom, there will be no more
those who sit helpless in the valley of the shadow of death, but upon them, the
light shall shine. And they need no candle, neither light of the sun, for the
Lord God giveth them light in their helplessness and hopelessness and
darkness. And they shall live and reign with God forever and ever. And there
will be no more sorrow and no more crying. For these things are all passed
away.
Lo, He comes, with clouds descending,
Once for favored sinners slain;
Thousand thousand saints attending
Swell the triumph of His train:
Alleluia, alleluia!
God appears on earth to reign.
Yea, amen, let all adore Thee.
High on Thine eternal throne;
Saviour, take the power and glory,
Claim the kingdom for Thine own:
Oh, come quickly, oh, come quickly!
Everlasting God, come down.
Charles Wesley, “Lo, He Comes in Clouds Descending”].
This,
Paul says, is “that blessed
hope” [Titus 2:13]. When sorrow and
strife flee away, and there is no more sorrow or death. Behold, he says, I
make all things new.
Do it, God, for me. For the people. For all
of us, that we might live in faith and in hope and in the love and goodness and
mercy of Christ our Lord. In a moment
we shall stand and sing our appeal. And while we sing it, a family you or a
couple you, or just one somebody you, while we sing this song, would you answer
God’s call with your life and come and stand by me? Pastor, I give you my
hand. I give my heart to the Lord. We’ve decided in our hearts and we’re
coming now. Do it on the first note of the first stanza, while we stand and
sing.