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I was on a bus trip some time
ago in the mountains, and the bus broke down right in front
of a typical hillbilly grocery store. There was a mountain woman
there who apparently had never been anywhere else. My wife said,
I don't believe she knows what's going on in the world outside.
Well, I said, don't tell her. Let the poor soul die in peace. I wouldn't want her to know what
is going on. But we must not keep silent in
an evil time and so I speak to you now as an individual and
not as representing any clique or group or movement. I'm an
American by birth and a Christian by the second birth and a Baptist
by conviction. I'm not interested in theological
fads that change like women's fashions and by which spiritual
adolescence and the immature are carried away with every wind
of doctrine. I'm tired of Neo-Orthodoxy and
Neo-Evangelicalism and Neo-Romanism and Neo-Universalism and Neo-everything
else. I'm tired of hooting anti-religion,
that new brand of Christianity whirling us under church auspices
by which pagans will not feel so embarrassed to join the church.
I'm tired of Batman and the Beatles and the beatniks and the new
morality and existentialism and situation ethics and the latest
theological aberration out of Germany. I'm tired of hearing
that God's dead. If my faith was so weak that
a professor down in Georgia could shake it, I'd get some other
kind. I'm tired of hearing about the New Deal and the Square Deal
and the Fair Deal and the Raw Deal and the Great Society. I'm
tired of Supreme Court decisions that outlaw prayer and dignify
communism and enhance the status of infidels and pretudiums like
daffodils. I'm tired of hearing that our
denomination must get away from its humble beginnings and shake
the hayseed out of our hair and come of age. I hear a lot about
grandstand feasts and glory, but I don't hear much about the
baptism of his suffering. We're wearing a lot of medals
these days, but not many scars. I'm tired of all modern efforts
to force a counterfeit kingdom of God on an unregenerate society. I'm tired of all these schemes
to bring in a millennium through education, legislation, reformation,
by which we sweep out the house and seven devils return, and
the last stage of that house is worse than the first. I'm
tired of bragging about how sophisticated we are in America. Actually,
we're the most gullible generation that ever has come along. We've
bought more gold bricks and white elephants than any crowd that
ever has lived since Adam. I'm tired of the new freedom
that throws the Ten Commandments out the window and doesn't know
the difference between love and lust. My Bible still says thou
shalt not commit adultery, but now we have situation ethics
and the new morality, and the churches of England took a stand
lately that led Billy Graham to say, I never thought I'd live
to see the day when church leaders would make it easier for young
people to deny the moral law of God. I read in my Bible, thou
shalt not steal, and yet over Christmas six hundred million
dollars of shoplifting took place in this land. I heard of a family
on a picnic some time ago in the summertime and a boy stole
a watermelon out of a patch nearby. His mother said, now don't you
get another one, you don't know what they've been sprayed with. See what I mean? Nothing about
stealing, nothing about the Ten Commandments. Love does not annul
the Ten Commandments, love obeys them. Love has no other gods,
makes no graven image, does not take God's name in vain, keeps
the Lord's day, honors father and mother. does not commit adultery,
steal, kill, bear false witness, or covet. You can't break the
law of God anyhow. You can break yourself against
it. You jump off the Empire State Building, you don't break the
law of gravitation. Break your neck, but not the
law of gravitation. You might as well attack your
brother with a pop gun as to attack the moral law of the universe
and the God who rules in righteousness. I'm tired of little professors
who brainwash young students into disbelieving the Bible.
I'm tired of popular commentaries that either doubt or deny all
the miracles. I'm tired of hearing the stars
and stripes being dragged in the dust and maligned, and the
great heroes of the past smeared in patriotism junked in favor
of an internationalism which is part of the program of antichrist.
I'm tired of cold and skin sickness. Everybody's sick today. Alcoholism
is just a disease. The only one I know of that we're
spending $350 million a year to spread. We're trying to conquer
the rest of it. My Bible does not say no leper
shall inherit the kingdom of God. It does not say no paralytic
shall inherit the kingdom of heaven. It does say no drunkard
shall inherit the kingdom of heaven. I'm tired of hearing
about criminals just being sick. We are more sympathetic with
the criminal now than with his victim. A liar is just an extrovert
with a lively imagination. A murderer is just a victim of
a traumatic experience. His mother wouldn't let him push
the oatmeal dish off of the tray when he was little, so now he
pushes his wife off Brooklyn Bridge. We recognize adultery in the
slums, but not in Hollywood. Illegitimacy has become respectable
and desubsidized by the welfare state. I'm tired of experts who
know all the answers when they don't even know what the question
is. I'm tired of all this excitement about living on the moon when
we've never learned how to live on earth. We are not going to
last long enough morally to do what we're going to do spiritually.
I'm tired of this artificial wealth with America riding to
the poorhouse in the Cadillac. I got along pretty well in the
depression of the 30s, but I'm having a rough time in the prosperity
of the 60s. I'm tired of this joke that we
call progress. Oh, I know we've learned how
to lengthen life, but we don't know how to deepen it. You'd
have to live twice as long to live half as much as your father
did. It has been said birthdays tell
how long you've been on the road, but they don't tell how far you've
traveled. Oh, I know we have wonder drugs. Take them and wonder
what's going to happen next. But their misuse and long-range
effects raise problems as great as they solve. I know we've licked
smallpox. Now everybody's going crazy.
It's moved up to the head, where there's more room, I suppose.
I'm tired of wading through second-hand tobacco smoke from a generation
of lung cancer prospects, while the Surgeon General warns the
nation and pulpits keep silent. I've heard a lot about, I'd rather
fight than switch. What bothers me is this crowd
that would rather die than quit. I'm tired of hearing about temperance
in drink and liquor instead of abstinence just to please the
cocktail tip in the church congregation. I'm tired of the stupidity of
our smartness. We've polluted the very air we
breathe until we wheeze our way through smog. We've polluted
the waters until our rivers have become sewers. Our cities, and
especially Washington of all places, have become jungles of
crime until no decent woman walks the streets at night. We live
in a madhouse of earsplitting noise that has become a national
problem. The experts tell us that teen city residents will
have to wear gas masks and hearing aids. When automobiles came out,
Ray Stanard Baker said it'll be almost as quiet as a country
lane now. All the crash of horses hooves
and the rumble of steel tires will be gone. Now we have a problem
of traffic that has no answer. I'm 65 years old. I bought my
first automobile this week. I'm just a little bit behind
the times. My wife's going to drive, and I'm going to pray.
Brother, you'd better pray because you're safer on a battlefield
than you are on a highway. Before World War I, you, old
Dwight Hill, have said, laws are becoming more just, rulers
more humane, music sweeter and books wiser, homes are happier,
and the individual heart more just and gentle. And then came
the First World War, when we made the world safe for democracy,
you remember? And it hasn't been safe for anything
since. Of all the illusions and the phantasms and the parathas
of human history, the biggest is the mirage we call progress.
Just because we spoke to Adam and are headed for the moon,
we've given God his wilkin papers. But sin has gotten us into more
trouble than science will ever get us out of. The scriptures
tell us that history will end in catastrophe, abounding lawlessness
and abating love, perilous times in a world that's lost its way.
There is not one area today, you name it, there's not one
government law observance safety, the new morality, international
debt, Vietnam, world peace, family life, art, literature, theology,
you name it. There's not one area that is
not in one hopeless mess where we have boxed ourselves in and
locked the door and lost the key. Even so, come Lord Jesus. We've invented TV, but what is
there to tell of that? We have computers to do our thinking,
but who's thinking? We've got more leisure than ever,
but have you looked around lately at the way we use it? Men used
to have visions of God, now they see another world only when they
eat a sugar cube of LSD. I'm tired of a lot of things,
but thank God there are some things I'm sure about. What can
a man be sure of? And my friend, I'm not dead sure. I don't believe in being dead
sure about anything. I believe in being alive sure.
And I'm alive sure about a lot of things. I agree with Josh
Billings, who said, I'd rather know a few things for certain
than be sure of a lot of things that ain't so. I thank God for
a few things for certain. I believe the Bible is the word
of God. Every word of it. I don't understand
all of it, but I stand on all of it. It does not need our vindication,
although the archaeologist's faith digs up evidence every
day to shut the mouths of critics. They've buried the old book long,
many times in the past just as they've tried to bury God, but
somehow the corpse always comes to life in the midst of the interment
to outlive all the pallbearers. We're hearing a lot today about
myths, myths, myths. The creation story is a myth.
The resurrection is a myth. The second coming of Christ is
a myth. If I had to believe that, I'd
be mystified and mistaken and miserable. What more can he say
than to you he hath said? I believe Jesus Christ is the
Son of God. I believe he was born as a Virgin
Mary, otherwise he was born out of wedlock, and I'm not interested
in that kind of a thesis. Some people say the virgin birth
recorded only in Luke. I don't agree with that, but
even if it were, how many times does God have to say it before
we believe it? I believe the record God gave
of his Son, and on that rock I stand. I believe Jesus Christ
died for my sins. He did not come down here merely
to teach, to be an example, or to die a martyr. He came to do
something about our main problem, which includes all other problems.
You'd never know it's the main problem today. Nobody in Congress
is going to stand up and say the trouble is sin. Nobody in
the Union, nobody in the universities, nobody in the scientific laboratories,
nobody in the war capitals. We're all trying to sweep out
the cobwebs, but we never do anything about the spider. And
that spider is sin, and Jesus Christ died for our sins, according
to the scriptures. And on that rock I stand. I believe Jesus Christ rose bodily
from the grave. I'm not worshiping a ghost. The
world knows he died, and the church knows he rose, and search
books says the Passover plot, to the contrary, not my sense.
We should have a purge of Herod and Pilate and put on a demonstration
in Jerusalem and created the greatest sensation of all time. But he revealed himself only
to his disciples. We have the greatest secret,
and the Church is the greatest secret order in all the universe.
I accept the fact of his resurrection. I've entered into the experience
of it. I'm living in the power of it, and I'm awaiting the final
fulfillment of it, up from the grave he rose and upon that rock,
I think. I believe Jesus Christ is coming
back personally and visibly to reign on this earth. It could
be any day and the sooner the better. When Jesus came the first
time, neither the Roman world of government or the Greek world
of culture or the Hebrew world of religion would receive him.
When he comes back, neither government, culture, nor religion will hang
out a welcome sign. Why, even the church is so busy
puttering around down here. that she scratched with her eyes
toward heaven to pray, even so come Lord Jesus. Wouldn't you
think that it would be on all our lists and the subject of
many a happy conversation? But you try bringing it up with
a group of church members even, and see how suspicious and hesitant
and embarrassed some of them look. The Lord's return is the
unwanted stepchild in the family of church doctrine. But on that
rock I stand. I believe the church, the true
church, is the good, not the great, but the good society of
all people who've been born twice. I'm not talking about that ecclesiastical
octopus, the world church, which along with the world state is
shaping up before our eyes and will end under Antichrist and
will be the only church officially recognized in that day. I'm talking
about another church whose statistics are in heaven, whose scholarship
is in the spirit, whose faith is in Jesus Christ, and on that
rock I stand. There's a remnant of humble,
hard-working, good Christian people still left in America
who are longing for old-fashioned preaching. Some of them don't
speak out on some of these issues. They're afraid of being identified
with off-brand groups they wouldn't be caught good in. Well, the
devils believe there's one God and tremble. Now, that's one
place where I agree with the devil, and I'm not going to quit
believing there's one God because the devil does. Nor am I renouncing
inwardly old simplicities because some crackpot's twisting the
future for me. I believe Jesus Christ is the
answer to every problem, F-A-I-T-H, for all I take Him. For all He is, I take Him. For
all my needs, I trust Him. And for all His blessings, I
thank Him. I believe that all who trust
Him have everlasting life, and that all who reject Him will
live in conscious torment. When I had a country church a
long time ago, an infidel in the congregation said, I don't
like this preaching on hell. Why don't you preach more about
the meek and lowly Jesus? I said, my friend, most of the
information that I have about hell I got from the meek and
lowly Jesus. He took the last verse of the book of Isaiah and
the garbage heap outside Jerusalem and put them together in a blood-curdling,
hair-raising, spine-chilling picture of eternal torment. I've read books and sermons trying
to say that my Lord's belief in hell was an accommodation
to the ideas of his time. But no amount of exegetical sleight
of hand can change the fact that Jesus Christ saw the future abode
of the wicked as an endless horror beyond the great gulf forever
fixed. I believe there's a hell because
he did, and on that rock I stand. I believe there's a heaven Long
ago, when I was a little country boy, I carved one day an inscription
on one of the outside bricks of the old-fashioned chimney
back home. It read, Heaven, I hope to win. I'd been told about a beautiful
city at home and in Sunday school. I'd read Pilgrim's Progress and
how through all his trials and tribulations he crossed over
the river into that heavenly home. I used to swing under the
old oak trees and look toward the distant mountains and try
to sing, there is a land that's fairer than day, and by faith
I can see it afar. I made up my mind to go to that
place, and I heaved heavenward indeed. I wanted to get off to
an early start. I visited that sacred spot a
few weeks and a few months ago. The little old house and the
chimney still stand. There came to me the memory of
that inscription I carved on it over half a century ago. I
looked for it, and I found it. Fifty-odd years of wind and weather
had battered it. Most of it was erased by the
rains and the snows and the steady erosion of heat and cold. But
I could still make out two words, heaven and hope. I, too, have stood beguiled in
the summers and the winters of all these years. But the ravagance
of life's seasons have not removed the hope of heaven from my heart.
It's embedded there tonight, dear friends, more securely than
my boyish fingers ever carved it under that old chimney. The
infidels have blown their blankets. Bible critics and even prophets
and some seminary chairs have tried to dim that hope. There
was a time when, as with the poet, heaven seemed farther away
than when I was a boy. But tonight that hope burns brighter
than ever before. Some of the dearest in this world
have taken up their residence over there. When I carved that
on the old brick chimney, most of my loved ones were living
here. Now most of them are living there. The population's shifted,
and I'm more interested in another world. But I've got my Savior's
word full. If it were not so, I would have
told you. Thank God he'd let us know. Elish
every fond ambition, all I've sought and hoped and known. Yet
how rich is my condition. God and heaven are still my own. And say that's awfully old-fashioned.
Yes, sir, the stern's old-fashioned, but without it, men grow up in
darkness. Air is old-fashioned, but without it men gasp and die. Water is old-fashioned, but without
it men go mad. How dependent we are on these
great simplicities for all our gadgets. The other day, back
in the summer, a thunderstorm knocked out the lights in our
apartment. There we sat, victims of gadgetry. The food might thaw,
the ice cream might melt, the clocks wouldn't run, the TV wouldn't
work, the electric stove was out. Now, when I was a boy, a
thunderstorm wouldn't have made a bitter difference in Newark. Why, the milk was down in the
spring, and the meat was salted down, and we wound up the clock,
and we didn't have television. How we ever did without it, I
don't know. But we managed. They had a power phaser in New
York State in that part of the country, you remember, and there
sat all that city just waiting for the sun to rise. Just as
simple as that. They had a big smog out in Los
Angeles, and there was a great city waiting for the wind to
blow. Just the wind to blow. They had a drought, and all the
meteorologists and the agricultural experts were just waiting for
it to rain. So today, for all his science
and all his gadgets and all his gimmicks, man's a helpless poor
creature still dependent on sun and air and water, and still
dependent, if he's to get to heaven, on the old-time religion
and the only thing that is good in earth. The greatest hindrance
to any a man's salvation is not his badness, his goodness, the
good that's not good in earth. Jesus said, except your righteousness
exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees, you won't get to heaven.
Well, it would have to be pretty good. They went to church, they
read the Bible, they prayed in public, they were tithers, they
were separated from the world, they tried to win others to their
beliefs, but it wasn't good enough. Education is good, but it's not
good enough. Moral character is good, but
it's not good enough. Reformation is good, but it's
not good enough. Such membership's good, but not goodness. But there
is a green hill far away without a city wall, where the dear Lord
was crucified, who died to save us all. There was no other goodness
to pay the price of sin. He only could unlock the gate
of heaven and let us in. Long ago Joseph Parker, that
great English preacher, preached a mighty sermon on the stupidity
of the specious. And his text was, the stone which
the builders rejected. The builders, mind you, of all
people, the experts, the specialists, the stone which the builders
rejected, has become the head of the company. We're living
in the day of the experts, the day of the builders. That may
be the cause of most of our trouble. But our civilization is crumbling
because the experts have rejected the only foundation that will
endure. And all other ground is sinking
sand. If the foundations be destroyed,
what can the righteous do? Thirdly, foundation can no man
lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ, and upon that
rock.
Havner At Breakfast
Series Vance Havner
Havner For Breakfast
| Sermon ID | 9308654380 |
| Duration | 23:36 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Language | English |
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