Transcript
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Welcome to Faith of Our Fathers. Today we feature a favorite Southern preacher, Vance Abner. After writing his first book by the Still Waters, Vance Havner took to the road. In 1940, he says, I got as far as Chicago, came down with the flu and wound up in a hospital. The devil sat on the foot of the bed and laughed at my discomfort. The doctor told me to go south. I wired the Florida Bible Institute and accepted an invitation I had declined earlier. I recuperated, met a great little lady who became my wife, and has meant more to me than anyone else on earth. The Lord knew I needed to go south instead of north. Today, Vance Havner presents a sermon on discerning the Truth. The following material is copywritten by and provided courtesy of the Moody Bible Institute.
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As has been announced already, beginning tonight, the Lord willing, we want to thank together for the rest of this conference. On the subject of discernment, there are five verses, or really six, one about the word of God being a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. That applies to all the other five. So I sort of make it an auxiliary to all of them. We will be thinking about discerning the truth, discerning the times, discerning the spirits, discerning the Lord's body and discerning good and evil. Tonight, discerning the truth. In all these years, I have never seen so much bewilderment and confusion and uncertainty has plagues the church today, even evangelical Christianity. I've never seen so many preachers and Christians in general, shaking their heads and wringing their hands and saying, I don't know what to think about this, and I can't make up my mind about that. I can't decide what's true and what's false. We've developed a tolerance and a permissiveness and an acceptance and an acquiescence that was unthinkable only a few years ago. I like to read sometimes what one great preacher says about another, and this is what Joseph Parker said about Spurgeon. The only colors Mr. Spurgeon knew were black and white. With Mr. Spurgeon, you were either up or down, in or out, alive or dead. As for middle zones and graded lines and light compounded with shadow in a graceful exercise of give and take, he only looked on them as heterodox and the implacable enemies of the metropolitan tabernacle. Evidently Mr. Spurgeon knew what he believed and knew where he stood. Today. In this Laodicean age, when we're neither cold nor hot, we've been brainwashed into a pleasant middle of the roadism, trying to be neither nor in a world that's either or middle of the roaders. But the middle of the road is a poor place to drive, poor place to walk, poor place to be. Anytime then. We've had two wars that we neither won nor lost. That's strange for American history. Paul Harvey said we were afraid to win them and ashamed to lose them. But Douglas MacArthur said there is no substitute for victory. And that still holds. There is no peaceful coexistence with communism or the devil. It's like cancer. If you don't get the cancer, the cancer will get you. And it seems to me, beloved, that we ought to know where we stand. We are not of the night or of darkness. If we're Christians, we have a Bible, we have the Holy Spirit, we have the testimony of the Church, we have the witness of history, we have our hope sanctified, common sense. And if with all that we don't know, who does? We lack a very rare ingredient in evangelical Christianity. Discernment. There are several words that mean almost the same thing. We say distinguish or differentiate or discriminate. But I think the best word is discern. A lot of difference between guessing at a matter and presuming. When Paul started toward Rome on that ill fated, if you want to use such a term, trip by sea. I read that the captain of the ship said everything would be lovely, but Paul said there will be a storm. And they listened to the mariner instead of to the minister. They listened to the skipper instead of to the seer and sailed away to shipwreck. And today we're listening to the skipper, the expert, he ought to know. I'm sure some of the passengers on that boat must have said, well, what would a preacher know about navigation? That's the business of the captain of the ship. So away they went through a storm. And we read that the moor part in your King James said let's go. It says Paul perceived and the rest of them presumed. And when the south wind blew softly and that's the sort of wind that's blowing today pretty generally over the land. In some ways they sailed away to shipwreck. You see, the expert thought he knew and didn't. That's the trouble with experts. Somebody said if you laid all of them in a row they never would reach a conclusion. I believe that's a pretty fair description. These discussions on television, don't they just wear you down? These experts get together, you know, and have a symposium. That's where we pool our ignorance and they decide what's the matter with this and what's the matter with that. Had one the other day on alcoholism. Never said a word about alcohol. You know, I may be a country preacher, but I've always thought that the real trouble with alcoholism was alcohol. I thought that's what caused it. But then, I'm not an expert now, discernment is just about the scarcest commodity in the church today. The first verse, the one we want to think about, is the familiar First Corinthians 2:14. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him. Neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned. Now, the natural man means the sons of Adam, what we have by our first birth. And no matter how high his intellectual capacities and moral qualities may be, he simply cannot comprehend spiritual truth. You might as well try to describe a sunset to a blind man, play music for a deaf man. You might as well try to discuss nuclear physics with a wooden Indian in front of a cigar store as to talk about the things of God to a man that never has been born again. He doesn't know what you're talking about. The trouble with Nicodemus was that although he was a religious teacher, he was ignorant of the kingdom of God and impotent to enter it. You just don't arrive at spiritual truth by the normal faculties. They have their place to be sure. But if that's all you have, and if that's all a man preaches what he has learned by his natural wits, without the illumination of the Spirit of God, it's casting holy things to dogs and pearls before swine, as our lord said. A PhD degree does not improve old Adam's apprehension of God. It may help later on as he studies about it. But if all he has is the PhD then in his case, that just means phenomenal. Dud. You just don't have what it takes with that. We have a lot of light today. But, beloved, what this world needs is not light. We never had more light, nuclear and otherwise. What we need is sight. All the light in the world won't do a blind man any good. We need sight. It's so difficult for us pompous Americans, so proud of learning to believe that the commonest day laborer may apprehend divine truth while the literati utterly miss it? How many times have you heard some humble preacher with a limited library preached nuggets of truth and gospel gems while some scholar missed it a mile you don't have to belong to who's who to know what's what. Now, if this little preacher had the scholar's library. And the scholar had the little preacher's discernment, they'd be in business. Blessed is the preacher who has both. And some do, thank God. Discernment is just as important in hearing the truth as it is in preaching it. Somebody has said that the reason we don't have many great preachers today Is we don't have many great listeners. That's quite true. I used to think that with all this education. The modern congregation ought to be an easy crowd to preach to. It's never been more difficult to preach than today. And after 63 years of it, I think I can offer a few observations. It's not easy today. How we hear is as important as what we hear. Some dear souls can listen for 25 years to the sound of preaching and to sound preaching. And then the next preacher will come along and preach error. And they listen with equal satisfaction. As long as he makes some nice references to Jesus. They don't know the difference. There is no discernment. There is the preparation for the sermon as well as the preparation of the sermon. Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness. And receive with meekness the engrafted word which is able to save your souls. You see, there is a preparation for the sermon. I wonder how many people heading for church over America. Ever make preparation to hear the sermon. They barely make it on time getting ready to go to church otherwise. I wonder how many ever prepare their minds and their hearts for the message. Everybody expects the preacher to be ready to preach. Who thinks of the congregation's preparation for the sermon? I realize today that we live such a fast life that we don't have time for a lot of things. But we certainly ought to take out time for that. Think how little discernment is exercised in congregational singing generally. I've shuddered as I've watched some crowds of comfortable Americans on Sunday morning singing. Faith of our fathers Holy faith We will be true to thee to death and they weren't even faithful enough to get back for the evening service. To the old rugged cross I'll ever be true it's shame and reproach gladly bear and I shudder. Why, most of them wouldn't bear it any kind of way, let alone gladly. Break down every idol Cast out every foe Wash me and I shall be whiter than snow. I find myself saying, lord, help me. Some of them have a Truckload of idols. And they're not about to give up any of them whatsoever. If we honestly checked on what we sang, I think we'd choke up sometimes before we got to the chorus. I doubt whether we'd ever make it through the first verse. The Bible says I will sing with the Spirit and with the understanding. Also. We are exhorted to make melody in our hearts unto the Lord. The trouble with a lot of singing today is to begin with is not melody. Some of the music that creeps into some of our churches today, I don't know what it is that isn't music may be an excuse for not being able to make music, but it isn't music. And it's not from the heart. It's not unto the Lord. So it fails on all three counts. Have you thought about the superficiality of our dedication? Sometimes I think we Southern Baptists have rededicated ourselves to death. We've gone down more church aisles and made God more promises and done little or less about it than any crowd I can think of. Sometimes the Old Adam Improvement Society having begun in the Spirit, we would perfect ourselves in the flesh. And people who have never died to sin nor risen to walk in newness of life march down aisles and promise God things they don't really intend to do. They that are in the flesh cannot please God. That ought to be placarded in every church. You can't do it. I read that not many wise, mighty and noble were called. Why? That no flesh should glory in his presence. That was God's purpose. There are four kinds of people in the New Testament that are not going to heaven in big numbers. Not many rich people are going to make it. That's not because God has anything against rich people. But it's pretty hard for a rich person to become poor in spirit. Now there are some, thank God, but not many. Jesus said that how hardly shall they that be rich enter in the kingdom. And then Paul added three more to the catalog. Wise, mighty, noble, wise. They are the intellectuals. They're trying to get to head first. And you don't get there. That way. You get their heart first. The only thing I know of that's got its head and heart in the same place is cabbage. And you're no cabbage. That's not the way you get. And then the mighty. How many presidents of the United States can you think of that you believe are born again? Spirit filled New Testament Christians. Sort of discouraging, isn't it? Now we've had a few. The surgeon, the doctor who attended William McKinley after his assassination said, I always said that a man couldn't be a Christian and a politician until now. Mr. McKinley died as a Christian with a Christian spirit and attitude. And we've had others, but not many mighty, not many noble. They're the aristocrats, proud of their ancestry. Trouble with this ancestry business is it's a lot like potatoes. The best part is usually under the ground. You don't get there that way. So God just doesn't accept old Adam. I don't care if he dedicates himself a thousand times. We are dead and our lives are hidden. With Christ in God, put on the new man. That's what baptism signifies. Neither the natural nor the carnal man can glorify God, only the spiritual man. You remember Ezekiel's vision of the valley of dry bones? Bones, body, breath. That will make good outline for a sermon. Three points. You don't even have to have a poem. Bones, body, breath. A church may have the bones of orthodoxy and be sound theologically, and every joint may be in place and the organization. But that's not new. It may have body, may have a big membership. To all appearances, strong and successful. So was Sardis. Sardis had a name to be alive. Church. A mortician can make a dead man look better than he ever looked while he was living. And church experts can do that too. If you have the bones and you have the body and you don't have the breath, if the spirit of God doesn't blow through that church, church is dead. That was the trouble with Sardis. That must have been a shock to that congregation when they read that letter on that Sunday morning. Thou hast a name that thou livest. That's the diagnosis of our law. In Exodus 30, 32, 33, we are told about the anointing oil that was poured on the priest. And there were three. It could not be poured on man's flesh. You cannot anoint old Adam for the service of God. There must be no imitation. You cannot compound it in the apothecaries of this world. And it could not, must not be poured on a stranger who did not belong to the priesthood and today to the priesthood of believers. No wonder we have so many dry meetings, because we have so many who don't belong to the priesthood. Oh, last night when you sang my song, I'm so glad I'm part of the family of God. I preach on that sometimes. All this in heaven, too. But I think one trouble today is we've got a lot of people in the church. Who are not members of the family of God. And they don't understand what I'm talking about this morning. And no wonder to them the meeting is dry. And no wonder. If there are enough of them, they produce a dry meeting. I heard of a preacher who met one of his delinquent members downtown and said, well, I haven't seen your church in quite a while. No, he said, you know how it's been. The children have been sick and then it's rained and rained and rained. The preacher said, well, it's always dry at church. Yeah, he said, that's another reason why I haven't been coming. No wonder the meeting starts 11 o' clock sharp and end is 12 o' clock dull. Anybody in here? How many of you folks ever heard Billy Sunday? And I know we haven't got many survivors anymore, but if you heard him describe the average midweek, weekly W E A K L Y weekly prayer meeting, that was worth going to the tabernacle here. She had to get there 15 minutes late to start with nobody to play the piano. Finally, some dear sister feels moved upon to play the piano. Then they got up and sang, throw out the lifeline. Haven't got strength enough to put up a clothesline. And then the leader gets up and says, friends, I'm sorry, but I didn't have time to prepare anything. Said, you didn't need to say that. You could have told you hadn't prepared anything. Then they stand and sing, day is dying in the West. Say, that's not the only thing dying. I think I've been in a few like that. Then in order to offset that, they go too far the other way. Now, I like the singing we had here last night. I tell you, there was exuberance in it and ecstasy and joy. But sometimes, and I'm in a different church nearly every week, and I get in some situations where they try to produce, they try to work up, get a song out that isn't there. You know what's down in the well. It'll come up in the bucket. And if you haven't got a song down there, it's not coming up. I was in New England somewhere and the dear brother who was trying to get him to sing, he was a whirling dervish, believe me. So now we're going to sing his power in the blood four times power. Four times this verse. Next time. Six times. We got around to six times, you know, power, power, power, power, power, power. You'd have thought you were listening to gun smoke. That's not the way you do it. Clovis Chapel went to one of those meetings, that grand old Methodist preacher, and he had a sly humor. Said the young fellow tried to work up the spirit. Said, shake hands of five people down this way and shake hands of five people down this way and all the rest of it. Clairvoyant Chapel said, you might as well try to boil water over the picture of a glow worm. It's not done that way. People with discernment realize that only by the spirit of God can we sing songs that are acceptable to him and edifying to anybody else. Now, Paul says that spiritual truth is foolishness to the natural man, moronic to the old Adam, for he has no discernment along that line. May be able to discern good poetry and chemical solutions and answers to problems in big business or how to locate bugs in engineering, but such ability is of no value in comprehending the things of God. Suffering from an awful ignorance of divine truth today because too many don't have the discernment. Consider the shallowness of our worship. Now, I know that the emphasis and I'm changing this morning because tonight I assume we have more people. There are some things I want to say about evangelism that I think would be more suitable. But this morning I'm switching about and taking one of these. Because you're sort of the cream of the crop here this morning. And I think this is more suitable. But you are aware, I'm sure, of the shallowness of our worship. There are three kinds of worship. Ideol idol, idol worship. A man from Africa who comes over here will find more idols here than he ever found over in Africa. And then there's idle idol worship. In vain do they worship me. My Lord said, and you've sung it. I was brought up on that old song. Brethren, we have met to worship and adore the Lord our God. Won't you pray with all your power While we try to preach the Word? Word, all is vain unless the spirit of the Holy One come down. How true that is. Isaiah 1 He ridiculed the worship of his time. Honestly, a full church on Sunday morning doesn't always exhilarate me. Sometimes it worries me because I'm reminded that in Isaiah 1 he spoke to a crowd that would be comparable to Sunday morning saints these days and were proud of their religion and what a scathing message it was from God himself. Then old Amos went up to Bethel. That country preacher from Tekoa. Come to Bethel and transgress at Gilgal Multiply transgression bring Your tithes. You better not say that now in your offerings. He's making fun of the whole business. For this liketh you the rest of that chapter. Every verse nearly ends. Yet have ye not returned unto me, saith the Lord. Yet have you not returned unto me, saith the Lord. That's the peril of Idealia worship. But there's another kind, the ideal worship. What's that? In spirit and in truth. If you don't have that, all you hear is vocal sounds emanating from the. But if we don't have ears to hear what the Spirit is saying, we don't have the right equipment. You might as well try to catch sunbeams with a fish hook as to try to lay hold of the truth of God with the faculties of the old Adam. You can't be born again except by the Holy Spirit. You can't confess Jesus as Lord, but by the Holy Spirit. You cannot understand the Bible, but by the Holy Spirit. You cannot worship God, but by the Holy Spirit. You cannot serve him, but by the Holy Spirit. It's not a do it yourself religion and never forget that it is still foolishness. And the word. There is the word from which we get moron. If the preaching of the gospel is moronic to this world, if it is foolishness to this world, one grand old saint has said, then of necessity the preachers of the gospel are to the world fools. That's logic. If you're preaching something that's foolishness to the world, that sort of makes you a fool in the eyes of the world. But we are fools for Christ's sake. The notions going around today that we must make the gospel acceptable to the wisdom of this age, we're plainly told that this world regards the gospel as nonsense. When Billy Graham preached at Princeton some years ago, Princeton University, they complained. Somebody did that he did not sufficiently relate the ambiguities of the New Testament to the complexities of modern life. That sounds real intelligent, doesn't it? And young Peter Marshall, the son of the famous Washington preacher, himself a minister, said, well, that could have been said about Peter and James and John. What do these ex fishermen know about the problems of the Roman Empire? What do they know about Greek philosophy? Paul was educated, but he counted everything but refused to know. Christ thought out his message in Arabia and that's where you get Romans. Natural man can't receive it. He never went back to Athens. He made one trip to Athens and they said, well, we'll hear what this seed picker has to say next time. But there Wasn't any next time. He didn't have any time to waste on that crowd now. He went back to Lystra where they dragged him out of town dead. You couldn't keep him out of a place like that. But he had no time to waste on Athens and that sort of a reception. They tell us today that we must use the new language of the times. We must brush up on all this used to be a problem, you know, and now it's a hang up used to be a blessing and now it's a meaningful experience, whatever that is. We must be relevant and communicate and dialogue with the now and then. We must get down to the nitty gritty. I've often wondered what is the nitty gritty that we're all supposed to get down? I don't worry about it. They used to call it itch and now they call it allergy, but you scratch just the same. I don't intend worrying about that. Isaac Watts wrote some wonderful hymns. And they're saying now that the young people cannot comprehend the idiom of Isaac Watts, that we've got to get some new songs out in the language that they can understand. I think that's an insult to the intelligence of this young generation, to say nothing of if the Holy Spirit guides them. I have a better response today at 75 from young people than I've ever had in my life. All this talk about a communications gap and a generation gap, that's a lot of eyewash. If they think you're not a phony and mean it and down to business, you'll get a reception and generally you'll get a response. These kids today, perfectly capable of comprehending. Majestic sweetness sits enthroned upon the Savior's brow. And all the rest no mortal can with him compare among the sons of men. They know what that means. If they don't, we ought to tell them if we know. You don't have to change the idiom. They're not changing the idiom in Shakespeare and the kids are studying Shakespeare and they don't change the language of the medical profession. And medical students have to learn that. And that's a load, believe me. And the legal language that the lawyers, the young lawyers are studying, that's pretty rough. They're not getting it down to a new idiom for the young law students and the young medical students. I thank God that it is profound and we'll spend all eternity understanding some of it, but. But we can get enough of it without dragging it through the dust of the vernacular. Of this age to make it acceptable in such a time. So beloved, we must remember that God has his own way of illuminating our minds and clearing us up. It's through the foolishness of preaching and through the spirit led study of the word of God. I rode along that lovely highway, as many of you no doubt have done, along by the Aegean, lined with its oleanders and its vineyards and orchards on the way from Athens to Corinth. I don't know how Paul made that trip, but to him it was a lot more than a journey between two points on a map. When he got to Corinth, he was sold out on one conviction. He was committed to one message. Jesus Christ, and him crucified the foolishness of God. Some preachers have never made that trip. They're trying to please the intellectuals in Athens. Blowing a fuse. Trying to be highbrows. Dressing up the foolishness of God and the wisdom of man. Trying to fortify the weakness of God with the power of man and modernize religion and give Jesus a new look. I grew up in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Old Corinth Church. My father wasn't an educated man. He loved the things of God. Our home was always the staying place for the preachers. We only had one Sunday preaching a month, one sermon. Some of them were long enough to last a month. But we only had one sermon a month there at Old Corrie. The preacher always stayed at our house. And those plain men of the horse and buggy days, they weren't intellectuals, but they knew God and they knew their Bibles. My father would keep the preacher up until midnight. I tell you, that preacher earned his bed and board. Every time he stayed in upland, Father would pump him for all the Bible information he could get. I've thought many times since, and I've heard some pretty smart ones and thank God, I've heard some great ones who do combine intellect with great dedication. But I've listened to some that made me long to go back for a change and sit in the old car in church and hear some of those old expounders of the Word who loved it more than their necessary meat and who walked with God sometimes wore one old blue serge suit till it glistened like shining armor. But they knew God and they had learned somehow how to extract from this book precious things that men who had a string of degrees hadn't been able to find. Because it takes more than that, thank God. It's available to all of us. Discernment of the truth by the Holy Spirit shall we pray. Our Father, we are so glad that thou hast kept these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes. Thou hast said, except ye be converted and become as little children, ye won't enter the kingdom of heaven. And while certainly there is enough to keep the keenest intellect studying the rest of his days, the treasures of God's word as illuminated by the Holy Spirit, we're glad that it's available to all kinds of folk and that the Holy Spirit, the one called alongside to help, can take this blessed book and make it real and experiential to the humblest Christian. We rejoice in that and thank thee for this marvelous provision of Thy grace. Grant to us today and grant to thy people in the churches a zeal for the study of the word of God and a discernment to understand it when they read it. We pray in Jesus name. Amen.
