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Home » TRANSCRIPT: David Wilkerson Sermon: Death of Compassion

TRANSCRIPT: David Wilkerson Sermon: Death of Compassion

Read the full transcript of evangelist David Wilkerson’s old sermon titled “Death of Compassion.”

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Opening Prayer

DAVID WILKERSON: The death of compassion. Lord, this is a night about compassion. The preaching this afternoon was about compassion. And Lord, You’re speaking to us. Evidently You’re trying to say something very strong to us.

I pray for a spirit of anointing and the unction of the Holy Ghost. Oh God, I don’t know how to get this out of my heart unless You pull it out. I don’t know how to speak it unless You speak the words in and through me. Sanctify me, purge me, let me stand here as a holy vessel with clean hands and a pure heart, sanctified by the word and the blood of Jesus, I pray. God, give us compassion. Teach us what it means to be compassionate in these hard, cruel days. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Recent Tragedies

A crack-addicted mother killed her six-year-old daughter, Alyssa, suffocated her by putting a pillow over her head. Four-year-old Nadine was starved to death in her mother’s house in the Bronx. Did you read about it just a few weeks ago? I think the child was seven years old when the police found her locked in a bedroom. She hadn’t been fed in weeks. Starved to death, emaciated and in a fetal position. Her cries for food went unheard and unanswered by her crack-addicted mother.

A 20-year-old mother took her three children to the rooftop three weeks ago, if you remember. Systematically, one by one, threw them screaming off the rooftop to their death. Then she jumped. A man right near who was having breakfast, the window was open, heard the screaming children. And the daily news caught a picture of the people who lived in the apartment complex and some people who had just passed by, and they were doubled up in agony at the sight. They were absolutely terrified and screaming, “What are we coming to? What is happening to America?”

A 16-year-old girl last week jumped off the elevated train in Brooklyn. Sixteen years old, and she jumped down and fell on a little boy. The little boy had just been given a toy his mother had bought. He was so excited, rushing home to play with his little toy. And she fell on the boy, and he’s in the hospital in a coma. She’s dead.

A mother last week took her little six-year-old girl into the bedroom, pulled a sweater over her head, went in the kitchen, got a butcher knife, came in and stabbed her to death. And she can give no explanation. Doesn’t seem to have any sorrow.

A distraught mother two days ago got stone drunk, got in the car, put her two little children in the car, and began to scream wildly down the road. And while she was driving, she ran into two children, killed them instantly, smashed into a divide, and killed herself and her two. Four children wiped out suddenly in a drunken stupor.

God’s Compassion

Now, I could go on and on. These are just news stories from the daily news in the New York Coast, here in New York in the past few months. And you could go on and on. There’s no end to it. And I will never believe, as long as I live, that our God is some benign spirit who is not moved and not concerned about what’s happening. And I feel in my heart it’s everything God can do to constrain Himself from moving in before the time to put an end to it all.

Because we know the Bible said His compassions fail not. Jesus was the embodiment of the compassion of God. He is the human form and the essence of God who came and was moved deeply by compassion. “For Thou, Lord, art a God full of compassion, and grace is longsuffering, and plenteous in mercy and truth.”

Understanding True Compassion

Now, most Christians, most of us would like to believe that we too are moved like Jesus was with compassion. I would like to think that about myself when I hear these stories, when I see what’s happening to our society, to be moved with compassion. You know, even the worldly, the ungodly, are moved by compassion.

I was driving my car recently, and I listened to some of the radio talk shows, and it’s incredible the calls that come in, and people trembling and weeping even, saying, “What’s happened to America? They ought to get all these crack mothers and lock them up.” And you should hear them say, “Our society’s gone crazy.” And the concern and the compassion.

And one of the radio commentators said, “America’s still full of compassion.” But folks, pity and sympathy is not compassion. That may be a part of it, those are ingredients of compassion, but that’s not what compassion is at all. Compassion is, very simply, it is pity and mercy for the hurting, accompanied by a desire to change things. It has to be accompanied by a desire to do something about it. And not just disclaim it, not to talk about it, and not to mourn about it, but saying, “God, what can I do about it?”

Jesus’s Example of Compassion

This is illustrated in the compassion of Jesus all through the New Testament. Jesus, remember one day, retired into the wilderness to pray, and the multitudes discovered his whereabouts, and so the Scripture says, “And Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude, and was moved with compassion toward them.” They had brought, the Scripture said, their cripples, their lame, their blind, their dying. They brought the demon-possessed, they brought them to Jesus, and the Bible said he was moved with compassion toward them.

Now, if Jesus had our modern mindset, when that great multitude gathered around him, cripples and demoniacs sloughing at the mouth, children that were being dragged to him because they couldn’t walk. If Jesus had been hampered by our modern theology, he would have gathered his disciples together for a committee meeting, and he would have discussed how wicked Judean society had become, and he would have pointed out to his disciples, “I want you to come to me to the edge of this mountain, I want to show you what I’ve been teaching you, that the wages of sin are death.”

He could have said, “Now look at that demoniac over there, and I want you to see the wages, look what sin does.