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"With A Bible In My Hand": The Preaching Legacy Of W.A....
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"With A Bible In My Hand": The Preaching Legacy Of W.A. Criswell
By David L. Allen

Criswell’s preaching combined with his incredible 56 published books had a significant theological impact in two ways.  First, through his expository preaching ministry and his study of the Scripture, he became a committed Premillennialist. Postmillennialism had begun to be shaken after WWI and with the aftermath of WWII the Amillennial perspective came to ascendancy in Southern Baptist life.  From 1944 on Criswell’s espousal of Premillennialism became increasingly influential in the Southern Baptist Convention and beyond. 

Second, the most powerful influence he exerted within his own denomination and beyond, and for which he will be remembered, is his unswerving commitment to the inerrancy and infallibility of the Scriptures.  In his preaching and writing, he inveighed against the liberalism, which had infected Protestantism as well as his own beloved Southern Baptist “Zion” (as he loved to call it).  He was a key player in the conservative resurgence of the Southern Baptist Convention in the last quarter of the 20th century. 

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Criswell has often been compared to his favorite preacher, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the famed London Baptist pastor of the nineteenth century.  There are indeed a number of similarities between the two.  Both were Bible expositors, both built great churches, both founded schools to train preachers, and both were embroiled in doctrinal controversy in their denominations surrounding the issue of liberalism in the later years of their ministry. 

As the author of Hebrews noted about Abel, “he being dead yet speaks,” so the influence of W. A. Criswell’s preaching ministry continues.  It continues in his fifty-six books; it continues in the school he founded known as The Criswell College which exists to train expository preachers; it continues in the recently released Criswell Legacy Project on the internet website www.wacriswell.com where more than 2000 of his sermons can be downloaded; and it continues in the countless men filling pulpits around the world whose expositional approach to preaching was somehow encouraged by W. A. Criswell. 

He was the living example of Phillips Brooks’ definition of preaching as truth through human personality.  The pulpit could do with a little more “Criswellian” preaching.

______________________________

David L. Allen is Criswell Professor of Expository Preaching at Criswell College, Dallas, and is newly-elected Dean of Theology at Southwestern Baptist Seminary.

______________________________

1. Criswell’s Guidebook for Pastors (Nashville: Broadman, 1980), 41. See especially 27-57, the chapter entitled “The Pastor in the Pulpit.”  This is a must read for all preachers.

2. Why I Preach that the Bible is Literally True (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1969), 86-87.

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