WHAT OF THE PROMISE OF
HIS COMING?
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Peter 3:4
10-16-60
Our faith in 33 A.D. Now, would you turn
with me to the third chapter of Second Peter? Last Sunday morning, we
left off at the end of the second chapter of Second Peter. And this
morning, we begin at the—at the first verse of the third chapter, the last
chapter of Second Peter, Second Peter three:
This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto
you; in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance:
That ye may be mindful of the words which were
spoken before by the holy prophets, and of the commandment of us the apostles
of the Lord and Savior:
Knowing this first, that there shall come in
the last days scoffers, walking after their own lusts,
And saying, Where is the promise of his coming?
for since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the
beginning of the creation.
For this they willingly are ignorant of, that
by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of the
water and in the water:
Whereby the world that then was, being
overflowed with water, perished:
But the heavens and the earth, which are now,
by the same word of God are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day
of judgment and perdition of ungodly men.
But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one
thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years
as one day.
The Lord is not slack concerning His promise,
as some count slackness; but is longsuffering to us‑ward, not willing
that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in
the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the
elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are
therein shall be burned up.
Seeing then that all these things shall be
dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy living and
godliness,
Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the
day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the
elements shall melt with fervent heat?
Nevertheless we, according to His promise, look
for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness [2 Peter
3:1-13].
On
those texts, your pastor intended to preach four sermons. The sermon this
morning: WHERE IS THE PROMISE OF HIS COMING? The sermon
tonight, WHEN THE WORLD IS ON FIRE; the sermon next Sunday
morning, THE TIME ON GOD'S CLOCK ; and the sermon next Sunday evening, THE
NEW HEAVENS AND THE NEW EARTH.
The first sermon: “knowing this first, that
there shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own shallow,
empty persuasion, saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the
fathers fell asleep everything is just as it was” [2 Peter 4:3, 4]. There
is not a cloud in the sky, therefore it is not going to rain, could not rain,
“all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation” [2 Peter
3:4]. Where is the promise of His coming? You have not seen Him
yet. It has been a long, long time, and because of that long delay—now
almost two thousand years—there shall come, and there are in the last days, in
this day, scoffers who look up to the heavens, and there is not any God. And
there is not any returning Lord. And the promise is empty and vague and
has turned to ashes in our hands. You notice he uses the word
"coming”—“Where is the promise of His coming?” [2 Peter 3:4]. The
two words “second coming” are never found in the Bible. It is always the parousia,
“the coming,” “the presence.” It has so overshadowed all the other events
in time and in history that it was significantly set apart and alone. The
parousia, “the presence, the coming of the Lord”; but what of that
promise and what of that coming? It has been long, and those who have
looked for it have fallen asleep. And the promise has never been
validated; and the hope, thus far, is in waiting. What of it?
First, by the word of God, in the teachings of
our Lord, this blessed promise is inescapable. The apocalyptic discourses
of our Savior cover pages of this Book. Chapter twenty-four, chapter
twenty-five in the Book of Matthew and beyond; the little Apocalypse, the
thirteenth chapter of Mark; and then again in the seventeenth chapter of the
Book of Luke. The apocalyptic discourses of our Lord are pungent and
pertinent; not only those discourses that I have no opportunity even to look
into; the great, final parables of our Lord are in reference to that same
final, ultimate presence of His coming. However homileticians and
preachers may draw rich material from these parables with regard to other
subjects and other matters, it can never be denied that they had one great,
infinite purpose; and that was to emphasize the suddenness and the mightiness,
the all and infinite purposiveness, and the admonition for watchfulness in the
presence, in the parousia, in the coming of our Lord. For example, he
closes the twenty-fourth chapter of the Book of Matthew with two parables:
The good man in the house, who would never allow his place to be broken into
were he awake and watchful; so we are to be watchful. Then the second
parable in that chapter by which he closes this great apocalyptic revelation,
the parable of the wicked servant: Because the master delayed his coming,
therefore he is not coming, and he beats his fellow servant and he wastes his
life in sinful and riotous drunkenness and boisterous living. Then,
immediately—you did not have any chapters when Matthew wrote this first gospel—immediately,
the twenty-fifth chapter, you have the parable of the wise and the foolish
virgins. Five of them saying, “We do not know when he is coming”; and
they fall asleep and their lamps go out. And five who are prepared and
waiting with lamps trimmed and burning. Then you have the parable of the
talents, which is a parable of the coming of our Lord.
How many times do we even take the word
“talent” and take it out of its meaning? A talent was a weight of
money. It never had any reference to a man's being—a man's ability to
sing or to draw—a talent. It shows you how we spiritualize the gospel and
take away from its actual, literal, real meaning. A talent was a piece of
money, a weight of money, and God gave it to His servants to trade with.
And then, of course, the purpose when He comes back to reckon with us, who had
been told to occupy ‘til He comes. And then, the last great parable in
that twenty-fifth chapter: “When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and
all the holy angels with him, then he shall sit upon the throne of his glory:
and before Him shall be gathered all the nations: and he separates them as a
shepherd separates the sheep from the goats” [Matthew 25:31, 32]. On and
on did our Lord continue in these great teachings of the ultimate and
consummation of all history and all time. And when our Lord sought to
comfort His apostles, His disciples in his going away, it was with that same
blessed hope: “If I go, . . . I will come again, and receive you unto
myself” [John 14:3]. And when the Lord was taken up into glory and the
disciples, in amazement, stood watching as He ascended up into heaven, after a
cloud—after the Shekinah glory had hid Him away. Just where is our
Lord? After the Shekinah cloud, the glory of God hid His face, they just
stood there looking up until the messengers from heaven, the angels, not with a
rod of correction or rebuke, but reminding them of their assignments, said:
“why stand ye looking up into heaven? this same Jesus, who is taken away, . . .
shall come in like manner as you have seen him go” [Acts 1:11]. And then
back to their tasks did they turn.
The comfort in the word and spirit and promise
of Jesus: And when we break bread together, “for as often as ye eat this
bread, and drink this cup, you do declare, you show forth, you dramatize His
death—achri hou elthe,-“till he come” [1 Corinthians 11:26]. Till
he come, till he come. In the prayer: “Our Father who art in heaven,
Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come” {Matthew 6:9, 10]. No kingdom
without a king; Thy kingdom come. And that same spirit and that same
emphasis and that same expectancy and upward-lookingness will you find in the
lives and the teachings of the apostles. Simon Peter, that first
preacher, both in his sermons and in his letters; the last—second of which I am
preaching out of this morning—is that same blessed hope. And in the
writings of the apostle Paul, for example, in the two letters he wrote to the
church at Thessalonica, every chapter of both of the letters ends with the
description of the coming of our Lord. And time would fail me to speak of
the writings of John, who closes the Revelation with the Apocalypse. And
the answer to that final prayer: “Even so, come, Lord Jesus” [Revelation
22:20]—will mark the end of the ages and of all history.
Woven into the very woof and warp, an integral,
constituent part of the very thing itself. In the apostolic Christianity
is that hope, that lifting up of the face, that opening of the heart, that
watchfulness and waiting; He is coming. The apostles, the early
disciples, were men whose backs were to the wall and whose faces were toward
heaven. Because He is coming, we are not to forsake the assembling of
ourselves together. Because He is coming, we are to endure suffering and
persecution. Because He is coming, we are to live godly, sober lives in
the world. Because He is coming and will bring with Him our beloved dead,
we are to comfort our hearts against vain and infinite sorrow. Every
great doctrine of the New Testament somehow is infinitely and intrinsically and
intimately associated with this doctrine of the parousia of the coming
of the presence of our Lord. Some body has said there are three hundred
eighteen verses here in the Bible where it is mentioned. And another has
said that every twenty verses in this Bible you will find somehow connected
with it the hope of the coming of our Lord. If you were to take it out,
you would have a mutilated gospel and a mutilated Bible. And the optimism
and the faith and the spirit of conquest and victory on the part of the
apostles would be absolutely, utterly inexplicable. This is the heart of
the faith as we lift our faces to the day that is yet to come. But where
is the promise of His coming? There shall come in the last days scoffers
saying, Where is the promise of His coming?
That day has long been fulfilled. For you
see, men have become persuaded that there is another avenue, there is another
approach, there is another answer to the hope that men have in their hearts
that someday we shall have a golden age. And they exclude the presence of
the Lord from it. They love the virtues and the byproducts of the
Christian faith—its morality, its honesty, its decency, its citizenship, its
thrift, its dedication. They like these things, but they like them
without Jesus. They like them without the appearing of the Lord, and they
substitute for Christ progress and advancement and attainment and
amelioration. They like the kingdom, but not the king. They like
the millennium, but not the coming. Men have always hoped for the day
when righteousness would prevail and justice would cover the earth and men
arrive at a golden era. You read it in Plato's Republic.
That is what the Republic is about. And you read in Sir Thomas
More's Utopia, and you hear of it today in our “Shangri-La.” And
that hope has been greatly advanced and furthered by the unconscious—whether we
receive it—by the unconscious acceptance of the Darwinian theory of evolution
and inevitable progress. Somehow, the wave of the future is always up and
up and up and out and on. And somehow, we shall find an answer in
technology and in scientists erudition for all of the problems of life.
And that persuasion of the inevitable progress of the human race has gone
beyond the anthropologists and beyond the paleontologists. And it is the
background of the teaching of the professor and of the scientist and of the
lecturer. And finally, it has become the unconscious persuasion of the commentator
and the editor and the man of the street.
And finally, it has come into the persuasion of
the preacher himself in the pulpit. Give us time, and we will breathe out
of us and we will educate out of us and we will culturize out of us the tiger
and the ape, the claw, the tooth and the fang. Some day in our own
ableness, the wolf will dwell with the lamb and the leopard shall lie down with
the kid. And this whole earth shall come to its ultimate and final
perfection. For example, I copied out of two of the greatest preachers of
all time in this modern generation—I quote from one: "To bring Jesus into
the control of human affairs is the real coming of the kingdom of God upon
earth. That is what the pictures and the apocalyptic symbols used by the
early Christians really meant. This is the coming of Christ."
Then another, the greatest preacher of this modern generation: “When they say
Christ is coming, they mean that already it may be, but surely and slowly His
will and principles will be worked out by God's grace, human life, and in human
institutions.” Now, may I make a few comments about that before I go
on? First, men are not quite so sure of the inevitable progress of the
race as they were just a few years ago. Some of these very preachers have
resigned their pulpits. They have quit. And in many quarters, the
spirit of cynical despair has overwhelmed those who look into the future.
I repeat, they are not quite so sure of the inevitable age that is
golden. And they are not so dogmatic as they used to be about the
inevitable wave of the future.
You know, somehow—and I do not see how men
blind themselves to these things—somehow, when you—when you eradicate an evil,
when it is done away with, when we have matched and mastered it, somehow,
another one twice as vicious comes in its stead. Doctor, you will have an
antibiotic for a germ, and by and by there will come a germ twice as vigorous
and twice as virulent. And that antibiotic will have no effect upon that
germ at all, twice as bad in its place. We will go to war here, and we
will stamp out Hitler from the face of creation. And look what we have
got in his stead. Isn't it a strange thing? Piracy, for example,
has been driven from the seas. I do not ever read of any buccaneers and
any pirates out there threatening these vessels that ply the deep. But we
have got a thing a thousand times worse out there. Just beyond the
territorial limits of our America are submarines that the Lord only knows how
they are powered and what awful missiles that they could launch in a matter of
seconds. Isn't that strange? Isn't that strange? Slavery has
been wiped from the face of the earth almost, and yet, in the place of that
slavery is a racial tension that is a thousand times worse. And I do not
see the solution of it in the foreseeable future. Isn't it a strange and
an unusual thing how these evils multiply?
Women’s suffrage has been accepted. No
body questions it. Lord me alive, the woman now that she has come into
her own. When I landed in St. Louis last week, I could not find my
bags. They could not find my luggage. And there was one other, and
they could not the find the luggage of that one, and she was a female. So
I stood there at that big terminal in St. Louis waiting for them to find my
luggage. And there to my side stood this female. I want you to know
when they looked for her luggage and they couldn't find it, she made the earth
turn blue. There she was, blowing smoke in my face and damning every body
under high heaven. And I thought, How do I know but all these folks
around here might think that's my fifth cousin or my tenth aunt? So I
said to the fellow from Granite City, Illinois, that came to pick me up, I
said, "Would you take my ticket, and would you stay down here and try to
find my luggage? I am going upstairs where I can breathe and where I can
be rid of all these blue words." Isn't that the beatenest thing you
ever saw? There is not a man that ever lived [who] can cuss like a woman,
or tell as filthy a story, or get drunk as sickeningly, or wear pants as
offensively. Oh, we have arrived, haven't we, in womanhood? Haven't
we? In place of that old-fashioned girl, look what you have
got. And I haven't time to speak of a thousand other things.
Our technology and our science has made one great neighborhood out of all this
earth. And we live in it in stark dread and in holy horror and
terror. Right over the way used to be a thousand times—a thousand miles,
but right over the way, there is a man with a gun in his hand. Or he has
got a missile, or he has got a hydrogen, atomic‑headed weapon. And
this whole world lives in dread and in fear. I repeat. We are not
quite as sure as we used to be that the wave of the future carries us to the
golden age.
My time is going, and I have just begun.
I must conclude this within the next four, five minutes at the most. I
will just take time to mention one other thing about this persuasion of our
humanity—that we are going to evolve; that we are to advance by economic and political
legislation and cultural amelioration and all the other instruments of human
education and training; we are going to grow into that golden age. I just
have one other comment to make about it. Briefly, it is this. What
I want to know is this: if we are going to grow into it, and we are going to
evolve into it, and it is coming about by legislation and economic amelioration
and all the other instruments of training; what I want to know is, what about
these who have already died? And if it delays beyond my age, what about
us? What about you? That is why the Thessalonians sent word to the
apostle Paul: You said He was coming, and He is taking us to Himself, and we
were going to live in that new heaven and that new earth. But He has not
come, and my mother has died. And He has not come, and my child has
died. And He has not come, and our family has broken up. What about
them? That is why he wrote the first and second epistle to the church at
Thessalonica. It was to answer that question; to tell them that the dead
also have a part in the great, final age that is yet to come for the
dead:
For this we say unto you by the word of the
Lord, that we who are alive and remain . . . shall not precede them who are
asleep.
For the Lord shall descend from heaven with a
shout, with a voice of the archangel and with the trump of God, and the dead in
Christ shall rise first:
Then we who are alive and remain—unto the
coming of the Lord—shall be gathered with them to meet the Lord in the air: and
so shall ever be with the Lord [1 Thessalonians 4:15017].
They
also have a part.
I would just like to ask any man who believes
in the gradual evolvement of our society and the golden millennial age, What
are you going to do to evolve death away? And if you were able to evolve
it away, What are you going to do with the beloved who already have fallen
asleep in the grave? My dear people, there is not any final answer except
the answer of God: “Behold,” He said, “I make all things new” [Revelation
21:5]. “And I saw a new heaven and a new earth” [Revelation 21:1].
Alpha and Omega, all things new; “and there shall be no more death” [Revelation
21:4]. “For he must reign, till He hath put all enemies under his
feet. The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death” [1 Corinthians
15:25m 26]. There shall be a resurrection of the dead, and there shall be
the binding of Satan with chains of iron and a bottomless pit. For he
cannot hurt or destroy or slay or accuse or cast down any more. I have to
close. No wonder when the Lord announced to the sainted apostle John: “He
which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come quickly” [Revelation
22:20]. No wonder John bowed in the concluding prayer of the Book: “Even
so, even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with
you all. Amen” [Revelation 22:20, 21]. Until we see Him face to
face.
While we sing our song this morning, some body,
you, give his heart to Jesus; a family you, put your life with us in the
fellowship of the church—in the throng, in this balcony round, on this lower
floor; into the aisle and down here to the front. Pastor, I give you my
hand, I give my heart to God; or, Pastor, this is my family, we are all coming
into the fellowship of this precious and beloved church this morning.
Make it now. On the first note of the first stanza; down one of these
stairways at the front or the back; at the aisle on this lower floor, Here I
come, Pastor, and here I am; while we stand and while we sing.
.