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The
weather in the Texas
panhandle and southern Oklahoma can be fierce and unrelenting.
From searing heat in the summer to blasting cold winds in
the winter it is fickle and unforgiving. Life itself could
be the same way at the beginning of the 20th century.
There were great joys for the settlers of that land but there
also were plenty of sorrows. Wally Amos Criswell saw the joy
of his family of a wife and three children suddenly blasted
by the killing winds of Typhoid fever. With great sorrow he
laid to rest his dear wife and a newborn son. Hundreds of
miles away in New Mexico, Anna Currie experienced a storm
of her own. Against her father’s wishes she married a man
who eventually left her deserted and the young single mother
of two children. But things can bloom and grow even in that
barren land. After some time Criswell and Currie found each
other. They fell in love and married. W.A. Criswell brought
three children and Anna two to their new union. And so it
was that in 1909 they brought a son of their own into the
world and they named him Wally Amos Criswell, Jr.
Young
Criswell’s life was fairly normal for children of his day
living with his family on the Oklahoma and Texas border. His
father was a barber and part-time farmer. His mother was a
committed mother, determined to see her children excel. Her
father had been a doctor and she dreamed of seeing her youngest
son follow in those footsteps. As soon as Criswell began to
read it, was obvious that his face was going to be set in
a different direction than most. The lad loved to read, devouring
Zane Grey and Horatio Alger stories. He also loved to read
the King James Bible. So at the age of six, W.A. Criswell
read the entire Bible through in one year. He loved the Bible
so much that other children taunted him with names such as
“little Bible reader” and “holy roller.”
Criswell’s
parents were committed Christians and Baptists. W.A. senior
was a deacon in the church and his mother led them in daily
devotions. Sundays were an adventure. The family would rise
early, pack their picnic basket and head off in the wagon
for a day at church. Along with other believers they gathered
to sing hymns and hear God’s Word preached with gusto. It
was no real surprise when W.A. Criswell made a profession
of faith in Jesus Christ and was baptized at the age of ten.
Elementary
School began in a miserable way for Criswell. At times the
wind chill factor dropped temperatures to forty and fifty
below zero. The ride of one hour each way by wagon was bone
chilling. Criswell's grades suffered as a result and he had
failing grades at the end of his first year. Thus began a
series of times when Criswell's mother moved away with her
children to afford them a better education. She rented a house
in Texline and took up baking to pay the rent. [1]
Criswell often wondered why his mother would give up being
with his father and sacrifice so much to make sure he was
educated. Perhaps she was driven by the memory of her father
who had been a physician in the Confederate Army. Perhaps
she secretly wished she could pursue being a doctor and lived
vicariously through her children. Whatever the reason, Anna
Criswell played a crucial role in planting the seeds of learning
in her son.
While
his mother looked forward to her son becoming a physician,
Criswell had other ideas. He announced his intention to become
a preacher as a young teenager and his parents were less than
thrilled. While his mother was set on W.A. being a doctor,
his father had different reasons for his disapproval. He had
seen the hard life Baptist preachers endured. He was proud
of his son but his remark was, "Anything but a preacher
... I don't want to see you starved and cheated and embarrassed
like so many pastors have been."[2] Both parents were
well meaning. Like so many, they wanted their children to
livea better life than they had. If they could have only known
what a life their son would have as a preacher of the Gospel
perhaps they would not have hesitated as the did!
The
pastor that made the greatest influence on Criswell during
those early years was a man of God by the name of Campbell.
He had fought in World War One and loved to read. The young
hopeful preacher was invited over often to the pastor's home
to read from his library. There he discovered theology as
well as Aristotle, Aquinas, Napoleon and others. Pastor Campbell
admitted that a pastor's life was difficult but he also encouraged
W.A. to pursue God's call. "Don’t do anything halfway,
Criswell," he said, "What you start, finish!"
[3] Finishing became one
of W.A. Criswell’s greatest attributes. An associate who knew
him well in later years said: “If the whole world were one
game of musical chairs with all four billion people involved
and only one chair, when the music stopped no one would have
to guess who would be in the chair: it would be W.A. Criswell.”
[4]
Years
passed and Criswell entered Texline High School. He continued
his pursuit of preaching and won awards as a debater. This
is not to imply that the youthful “Texahoman” didn’t care
about normal High School activites. He played basketball as
a freshman and became very proficient with his beloved trombone.
One of Criswell's fondest memories of High School was when
John Philip Sousa came to town. Sousa led the area bands in
one of his great marches and all were thrilled by that great
event. Education, however, was everything to mother Criswell.
She learned that the Texline School was not accredited and
promptly moved away from her husband again to see that the
children were in a proper school. This time the move was to
the “big-city” of Amarillo, Texas. In 1925 Anna and her children
made the one hundred twenty five mile move and began a new
chapter in their life. This is not to imply that Criswell’s
father was against this. His barbershop was stable and it
was not uncommon for families to separate at times after this
manner.
Amarillo
was not totally cut off from the world. As a senior in High
School, Criswell heard Will Rogers speak. He listened on the
radio to the likes of Woodrow Wilson and William Jennings
Bryan. Babe Ruth was in his prime and Criswell listened with
fascination to accounts of his heroics. Criswell's real heroes
were preachers. While attending the First Baptist Church of
Amarillo, he heard L.R. Scarborough preach. On a number of
occasions through those years his family heard none other
than George W. Truett preach. Truett was “Mr. Baptist” and
pastored the First Baptist Church of Dallas for forty-seven
years.
In
1927 Babe Ruth set the home run record; Gene Tunney defeated
Jack Dempsey as the Heavy Weight Boxing Champion; Al Jolson
appeared in the first talking movie; Charles Lindbergh was
the first man to fly solo across the Atlantic; and W. A. Criswell
graduated from Amarillo High School. [5]
His mother's heart was still set on him being a doctor but
he was already set like flint toward a higher calling. Ruth
and Lindberg set records in their respective fields and Criswell
would one day set records of a different kind.
It
was time for college, so at the age of seventeen W.A. Criswell
headed off for Baylor University in Waco. As before, his mother
moved with him to ensure he excelled in his education. Not
long after arriving at Baylor, Criswell took a walk in Waco
and found himself in Sand Town which was the slum of Waco
and populated with the poorest of the poor of every color
and background. While walking he passed by an old woman, sitting
in a rocking chair with a large Bible in her lap. As he passed
her yard she asked him to come sit by her. "You've come
to talk about Jesus, haven't you" she asked? Criswell
told her had no church or pulpit in which to preach. The old
woman encouraged Criswell to preach right there in her yard.
For many weeks after that Criswell would go to Sand Town and
share Jesus from noon till sundown. He wrote of that experience:
"I
walked up and down the streets of Sand Town, knocking on
doors, introducing myself and asking if the person would
like to talk about Jesus ... And so many people, young and
old, men and women, black, white, and tan, gave their lives
to Jesus as we talked ... When I was just seventeen in Sand
Town ... I discovered that nobody needs a church to preach.
Nobody needs a pulpit to stand behind. The world is waiting
to hear the Good News of the gospel. And what a glorious
thing it is to share that Good News wherever God may place
us!" [6]
W.A.
Criswell was now a bona-fide “God-called” preacher and it
was obvious to everyone who knew him. After his ordination
in 1928 mother Criswell returned to live with the rest of
her family. After thirteen years of hoping her son would become
a doctor she yielded to the higher call of Jesus Christ. Both
mother and father became Criswell's biggest supporters as
he went off into the gospel ministry. During the remaining
years at Baylor the young preacher excelled in his studies
while pastoring small rural churches. Many hours were spent
in study and then many more in driving in a borrowed car to
little churches to preach wearing the one suit he owned. The
hardships didn’t’ matter. W.A. Criswell was preaching the
Bible and that was the highest honor known to man!
Along
with graduation from Baylor came the decision as to where
to go to seminary. That decision was a difficult one for Criswell.
His best friend advised him to go to a more liberal seminary
such as Brown or Princeton. His friend contended that Criswell
needed to broaden his horizons and quit being so narrow-minded.
In the end Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville,
Kentucky was his choice. Once at Southern, Criswell again
pastored small churches. He was first and foremost a preacher
of the Gospel but his education remained a high priority as
well. He studied under the likes of A.T.
Robertson and came to love Greek and Hebrew. Criswell’s
command of the original languages permeated his preaching
throughout the rest of his life. On the same day that Bonnie
and Clyde met their demise near Shreveport, Louisiana, W.A.
passed his exams to graduate from Southern Seminary. Right
after graduation Criswell met the love of his life, Bettie
Marie Harris who would come to simply be known as Mrs. C in
later years. She was much more than Criswell's right hand.
She was his spiritual mooring. Everything was now complete.
Criswell had his education, his ordination, and a helpmeet
for the rest of his life.
The
Criswells were determined to follow God wholly in their new
life together. They served in churches in Oklahoma from 1937
till 1944. These were maturing times. Every experience became
a building block for future years of ministry. Near the end
of this period, just three weeks after D-Day, W.A. and his
wife read in the paper of the death of Mr. Baptist, George
W. Truett. The impact of that news was great. Truett had made
a deep and lasting impression on Criswell. He must have mused
as to who would be able to fill those big shoes. Much to
his surprise the person asked was W.A. Criswell himself. Criswell
couldn't believe God had led him to fill the pulpit that for
forty-seven years had been supplied by George W. Truett.
Criswell
began his ministry at First Baptist Church of Dallas in 1944.
As he preached his first sermon, Dr. Criswell looked down
into the eyes of Dr. Truett's widow. He mentioned many good
things of the past, his own hopes for the church and then
quoted some words from the late pastor, "God buries the
workman, but the work goes on!"[7]
Mrs. Truett looked back with approval. She later put her arm
around her new pastor and told him she would see him as her
son from then on. Before and since there have been very few
churches which have known a century of preaching to be supplied
by only two pastors. First Baptist Church of Dallas was truly
blessed.
Many
changes occured during the new pastor’s years in Dallas. Truett
was a great preacher but he was also absent from this church
for long periods of time as a denominational leader. Criswell
began to move the church toward a fuller ministry. Rooms that
had gone unused for years were opened and painted, ministers
were assigned to specific age groups, and what is now called
a Family Life Center was built. The church grew dramatically.
Most responded well to the changes but a few did not. The
one dark period of these early years was when Criswell led
the church to disfellowship two families because of their
rebellion and gossip. But the work moved on. The young boy
who learned to preach the Gospel in Sand Town was now leading
the largest church in the Southern Baptist Convention.
If
anything marked Criswell it was his preaching. Not long after
coming to Dallas he announced that he intended to preach through
the entire Bible. Some members of the church worried that
such an approach would not be appealing and that attendance
would fall. Nothing could have been farther from the truth.
Almost eighteen years later, in 1963, Criswell had indeed
preached through the entire Bible from Genesis to Revelation.
Timothy George notes that "Criswell recaptured a pattern
of preaching first modeled … by the great reformers ... men
like Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin." [8] This was no accident.
Criswell consciously was seeking to return to the Reformation
model of preaching. Part of that model included preaching
the Bible from a grammatical-historical viewpoint. He quotes
Luther: "Every word should be allowed to stand in its
natural meaning and should not be abandoned unless faith forces
us to it. The literal sense of Scripture alone is the essence
of faith and of Christian theology."[9]
It
is apparent from reading Criswel'sl sermons and books that
he had a great affinity with Charles
Spurgeon He noted that Spurgeon preached over four thousand
sermons that covered almost every verse of the Bible. While
their preaching style was different the effect was similar;
they both preached the whole Bible and preached the whole
Bible as true. In his book, Why I Preach the Bible is Literally
True, Criswell said: "We frequently hear discussions
concerning whether the Bible is the Word of God or only contains
the word of God. If, by the former, it is meant that God spoke
every word in the Bible, the answer, of course, is not. But
if it is meant that God caused every word in the Bible ...
the answer is yes." [10] This author remembers hearing
Criswell preaching on this subject at the First Baptist Church
of Euless, Texas in the late 1970's. He was commenting on
the increasingly common use of Redaction Criticism among Bible
scholars. Criswell quipped: "They believe the Bible is
inspired in spots and they are inspired to spot the spots."
To Criswell, the Bible was inspired from Genesis to Revelation
and he preached the whole counsel of God.
Criswell
was by now the most listened to preacher in America and that
was not without its dangers. In the early 1950’s the Civil
Rights movement was just getting in to full swing. While in
South Carolina to preach at the state evangelism conference
Dr. Criswell was asked by the Governor of South Carolina to
speak to the State Legislature. With only an hour to prepare
Criswell accepted. In later years he regretted that decision.
Here are some of excerpts from that speech:
"It
is just this -- that one of the glories of a democratic
society, we can choose our friends, we can choose our companions,
we can choose the mates that share with us the building
of our homes. We can choose our lives. It's a free country.
It's a free nation and that thing of ... they don't like
the word segregation -- but call it that ... that thing
enters all of the realms of our lives and there is no escaping
from it if a man has the liberty of choice."
"I
just can't sing like those colored folks sing. And my folks
can't do it and my choir can't do it. If I'd tell them to
sing a Negro spiritual for me, why you'd never heard such
a sorry Negro spiritual singing in your life. They can't
do it. But the colored folks can do it over there at their
church. They've got lots of things over there. I've never
seen a white preacher in my life preach like a colored preacher.
But it is better for them to be over there in their way,
in their church, with their preacher, carrying on like they
do, and then I'm over here with my flock and my kind and
we are carrying on like we want to do. And everything is
just fine."
"If
you want this group, or that group, or that group, or that
group, brother, it's a free country. If I want my group,
let me have it. Let me have it. Don't force me by law, by
statute, by Supreme Court decision, by any way that they
can think of, don't force me to cross over in those intimate
things where I don't want to go. Let me build my life. Let
me have my church. Let me have my school. Let me have my
friends. Let me have my home. Let me have my family. And
what you give to me, give to every man in America and keep
it like our glorious forefathers made it -- a land of the
free and the home of the brave. "[11]
Criswell
recalled in his autobiography his motive and intentions during
that speech. His concern was the church not politics. From
a church growth viewpoint, Criswell sincerely believed that
black and white church could best reach people by being black
and white churches. The media misinterpreted his comments
on segregation. Newspapers repeated allegations of racism
and saw Criswell as proof of white Southern Baptists' disdain
for other races. Hear Criswell's own words concerning this incident:
"
Racism was, is, and always will be an abomination in the
eyes of God, and should be in the eyes of God's people ...
we have sinned and need to beg God's forgiveness ... At
that time it seemed pragmatic that the best way to reach
black people was with a black pastor ... it seemed the same
for white churches as well ... During seminary, I had attended
black Baptist meetings regularly ... I had visited the great
black Baptist churches in Dallas.. In fact it was a black
Baptist pastor in Dallas, Reverend Ernest C. Estell, pastor
of St. John's Baptist Church, who defended me even as the
press was misquoting my South Carolina speech." [12]
Criswell
came to regret his words in South Carolina even though they
were misquoted. He said: "In the following weeks, months,
and years, as I prayed and searched the holy Scriptures, preached
the gospel, and worked with our people, I came to the profound
conclusion that to separate by coercion the body of Christ
on any basis was unthinkable, unchristian, and unacceptable
to God."
Several
years later in 1968, Criswell preached a landmark sermon in
his Dallas church called The
Church of the Open Door. In that message Criswell
publicly acknowledged how God had changed his mind on segregation.
Criswell recounted stories of people of many colors and nationalities
joining the church. He told of children, black and white,
visiting from the Buckner Home. Then he recounted something
he had recently told his deacons:
"And
finally, as I spoke to my brethren and compeers in the church,
our deacons, I said, “And I bare my personal soul to you.
I cannot describe and I have come to feel the weight of
it and the burden of it. I cannot describe to you how I
feel when I preach the gospel of the Son of God and call
men to faith and to repentance, and then stand there afraid
that somebody might respond who has a different pigment
from mine. It is though I were living in denial of the faith,
to preach and be afraid that somebody might respond.” What
if there came down the aisle a Buckner child who was colored?
How would I explain to that child? In ten thousand years
I couldn’t explain to that child, I couldn’t do it. But
that’s not so much the point, how can I explain to God?
You tell me how. You give me the words. What do I return
to say to God? “This child, Lord, out here at the Buckner
Home found Jesus today.” What would I say? "[13]
To
this day Criswell is still painted as a racist by those who
are unaware of the real man, his message or his ministry.
Thankfully our judge is not man but God!
1960
found Criswell right in the middle of another controversy.
John F. Kennedy was the first Catholic to make a serious run
for President of the United States of America. Criswell spoke
in caution against Kennedy’s election. While his words may
have been more measured, Criswell spoke from a conviction.
He had seen the influence of the Catholic Church in South
America and the Philippines and feared the same results if
Kennedy was elected. [14] As a Baptist, Criswell’s concept
of a church free from government control was paramount. Though
Criswell was one of the first to send sincere condolences
to the Kennedy’s on the day a nation mourned his assassination
some never forgave Criswell for his comments.
In spite of controversies
the preacher from Texline kept right on preaching the Book.
All was not seriousness with him however. Criswell loved a
story and even a good joke. He wrote in one book "I think
of that old codger who married at the tender age of 87 and
immediately began to look for a bigger house close to an elementary
school. That's the spirit.” In a TV debate in Dallas a female
minister of the United Methodist church said: ""The
bastard heresy of the 20th century is the teaching that the
Bible is the Word of God." The man who presided over
the session said to me, "Pastor, what do you think about
that? You talk to her. What do you think about that?"
And afterwards over a thousand of my people said, "Why
didn't you answer her?" I said, "For two reasons.
One, my mother taught me to respect a woman. Second, my brethren
say I'm not supposed to cuss in the pulpit!"[15]
Criswell became president
of the Southern Baptist Convention in 1963. He had turned
down the position many times but finally felt the time was
right. That same year he wrote Why I Preach the Bible is
Literally True. This book proved to be the opening shot
in a war that would rage in the Southern Baptist Convention
for another twenty years. Criswell had experienced first-hand
the devastating effect of liberalism on preachers of other
denominations. While in seminary, he and some friends attended
the services of a liberal pastor. To their amazement he used
Shakespeare as his text for his message. When they asked why
he did not use the Bible as his text the minister replied,
"I preached the Bible last year and finished it..."[16] Criswell concluded his book with
these prophetic words:
"If
our preachers ... churches and institutions are true to
that expression of faith (the infallibility of Scripture)
we shall live. If we repudiate it, we shall die. God will
remove our lamp stand from its place ... As theological
liberalism that denies the Word of God has destroyed other
churches; the same theological liberalism will destroy us.
There is no exception in this judgment, whether in individual
congregations or in denominational associations." [17]
He didn’t seek it but
W.A. Criswell became the spiritual father of the stand against
liberalism in his denomination. Many of a more liberal persuasion
genuinely resented Criswell and his teaching. The response
from professors of religion in Southern Baptist Seminaries
was chilling. Sixty-four Baptist professors wrote a resolution
condemning the book and protesting the publication of it by
the Southern Baptist Sunday School Board. Richard Land said:"
There is no question that they loathed Criswell, because Criswell
is the living, breathing denial of all of their straw men,
and their caricatures. Here was a man with a Ph.D. from Southern
Seminary, a man who was an honor graduate at Baylor University,
and man who was pastor ... of the most sophisticated church
in the history of the SBC. He was a man of culture ... and
he believed every word of the Scripture to be inerrant and
infallible...." [18]
In 1985 Criswell preached
a watershed sermon at the Pastors Conference of the Southern
Baptist Convention. Criswell commented afterwards that Whether
We Live or Die was the most important sermon he
ever preached. With all the passion a Texan could muster,
Criswell warned his fellow pastors to learn from the life
of Charles Spurgeon and the Down
Grade controversy.
"I
comment on the sad condition of Baptist churches in England
as found in the latest biography of Spurgeon written by
Dr. Arnold Dalamore, entitled: C. H. Spurgeon, a New Biography,
published this last year. The comment concerning English
Baptists is this: “Where there is no acceptance of the Bible
as inerrant; there is no true Christianity. The preaching
is powerless, and what Spurgeon declared to his generation
one hundred years ago is the outcome.” And that statement
is followed by this paragraph: “The failure of the new theology
or higher criticism, call it what we will, is forcefully
brought out by E. J. Bouconner in his Evangelism in England.
He tells of a conversation between the editor of an agnostic
magazine and a neo-orthodox minister. The editor told the
minister that despite their different vocations, they had
much in Bible, in common. “I don’t believe the Bible,” said
the agnostic, “but neither do you. I don’t believe the story
about creation, but you don’t either. I don’t believe any
of these things, but neither do you. I am as much of a Christian
as you. And you are as much of an infidel as I.”[19]
Criswell catalogued the
demise of great Baptist schools such as Brown and warned of
similar fates for Southern Baptist schools if the tide was
not turned back to the authority of God’s Word. "The
trouble is, the self-styled superior religionists do nothing
but preside over a dying church and a dying witness and a
dying denomination. No minister who has embraced a higher
critical approach to the gospel has ever built a great church;
held a mighty revival or won a city to the Lord. They live
off the labor and sacrifice of those who paid the price of
devoted service before them. " [20]
Many
pastors, including this author, remember those addresses at
the Southern Baptist Convention. More than that we remember
a man who loved the Word of God. He wasn’t a perfect man but
he was God’s man. FBC Dallas grew consistently throughout
Criswell’s half-century there. The church grew from 7800 members
to 25,000 members in the mid-80's. The church baptized thousands,
started dozens of mission churches, established education
systems from Pre-School to Graduate School, and began radio
and television ministries. The impact of W.A. Criswell’s life
reached far beyond numbers. Here was a highly educated man
who preached with deep passion when he spoke of his beloved
Savior and Lord. At the end of his autobiography, Standing
on the Promises, Criswell wrote:
"There
is only one joy greater than preaching or teaching the Word,
and that joy is this: One day soon we will see the Author
of the Word face to face ... In the meantime, all He asks
of us is that we go on loving the Word and sharing it in
our own ways, that we remain faithful to the Word, that
we win the lost to Christ. And when our trials come, when
we feel pain and suffering, when our tears flow again, it
is our joy and comfort to lift our faces heavenward and
to go on standing on the promises of God."[21]
On
January 10th, 2002, W.A. Criswell finally saw his
Lord face to face. At the age of 92 his life had spanned almost
a century of service to the King. While at Baylor he was called
the preacher you could hear from five miles away. His earthly
voice is silent now but his faith and influence are still
heard loud and clear.
[1] Standing on the Promises (p. 31)
[2] Standing on the Promises (p. 42)
[3] Standing on the Promises (p. 43)
[4] Why I Preach the Bible is Literally True (p. 13)
[5] Standing on the Promises (p. 58)
[6] Standing on the Promises (p. 67)
[7] Standing on the Promises (p. 172)
[8] Why I Preach the Bible is Literally True (p. 8)
[9] Why I Preach the Bible is Literally True (p. 200)
[10] Why I Preach the Bible is Literally True (p. 95)
[11] See The Nationalist Web Site (http://www.nationalist.org/speeches/religion/free.html)
[12] Standing on the Promises (pp. 202-203)
[14] Standing on the Promises (p.204)
[16] Why I Preach the Bible is Literally True (p. 217)
[17] Why I Preach the Bible is Literally True (p. 224)
[18] The Baptist Reformation (p. 66)
[19] The Criswell Legacy Web Site (http://www.wacriswell.com/Transcripts.cfm?sermon=1517)
[21] Standing on the Promises (p. 250)
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