Revelation 3, Letter to Sardis
55The Spiritually Dead Church
This
letter is a call to the congregation to wake up to the person of the
Holy Spirit, and thereby be made alive to the things of God. It's the
first church to which Jesus has nothing good to say.
3:1
"And to the angel of the church in Sardis write, 'These things says He
who has the seven spirits of God and the seven stars: "I know your
works, that you have a name that you are alive, but you are dead.
The
great but tragic problem with Sardis lay in the fact that they had the
name of Christ without the quickening influence of His divine Spirit.
“A name in contrast with reality”, as one commentator puts it. So let’s
look at the title of Jesus and see how it applies, and keep in mind
that the “seven spirits” are interpreted to mean the fullness of the
Holy Spirit and the “seven stars” are the pastors (see notes
Rev.1:4-6,20).
“These things says He who has the seven spirits of God and the seven stars”. The
idea here is that Christ Jesus holds as His possession both the Holy
Spirit (without measure and in perfection) and the church leadership
(as the Authority over the church). Therefore, by Him and through Him
both are indelibly joined. Whereas He has sent forth the Holy Spirit to
influence and empower the church (Jo.16:13-15), He has also commanded
the church to walk and live in the Spirit (Rom.8:14).
What
Sardis had done, was fraudulent. They were calling themselves a church,
yet denying the Person of the Holy Spirit by not teaching soundly that
He is the appointed power by which Christians are brought to faith and
helped in their walk with God. In other words, they were not teaching
that one must be “born again”. So they had a form of godliness in that
they looked like a church, but because they were denying the power of
the Spirit, they had no manifestation of life by the Spirit. By all
accounts, Sardis was little more than a corpse with a nametag or as
Jesus tells them “…you have a name that you are alive, but you are dead.”
3:2-4
"Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to
die, for I have not found your works perfect before God. Remember
therefore how you have received and heard; hold fast and repent.
Therefore if you will not watch, I will come upon you as a thief, and
you will not know what hour I will come upon you. You have a few names
even in Sardis who have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk
with Me in white, for they are worthy.
Allow me to paraphrase this admonition.
Wake up, Sardis! While you’ve been carelessly slumbering, you’ve come perilously close to a point of death. So wake up, stay wide-awake, and listen carefully.
Strengthen what little trace of the Holy Spirit that still remains in your congregation, otherwise, when that goes, you will have nothing of His grace abiding in you. And you will die off as a church, and be of no further use to me. For I have diligently searched through, and carefully examined, every effort and work you have done in my name, and have not found them perfect before God (though they appear godly before man). So those things will not help you.
You will find what you need for recovery in those few spiritually pure ones you have been neglecting to hear in your congregation; for I find them worthy, and they shall walk with me in white, because they haven’t denied my Spirit (as you have).
So listen attentively to what they have to say concerning the Spirit. But act quickly, because those members won’t be around long.
Reconsider your ways, Sardis: humble yourselves before God, and start paying closer attention to those precious doctrines deposited into your care; as in the beginning, when the truth came to you with the demonstration of the Spirit, and you heartily received it. Because I must warn you, that unless you do, I will come upon you when you least expect it, and judge your church for its neglect of my admonition.
3:5-6
"He who overcomes shall be clothed in white garments, and I will not
blot out his name from the Book of Life; but I will confess his name
before my Father and before His angels. He who has an ear, let him hear
what the Spirit says to the churches."
"He who overcomes shall be clothed in white garments…" This
refers to the glorified bodies we'll be given in heaven (2 Cor.5:1-4).
The word "white" is taken to mean "brilliant". So the idea is, having
been made the righteousness of Him, we will shine as brightly as the
sun in the kingdom of our Father (check—Matt.13:43).
"…and I will not blot out his name from the Book of Life; but I will confess his name before my Father and before His angels." In
other words, because our name is written in the Book of Life we are
given the assurance that it will not be blotted out. Christ Jesus will
claim us as one belonging to Him, before the Father and before all the
angels.
Okay, let's
pause here a minute and examine the Book of Life, and see if we can
understand what it means to be "blotted out" of it.
The Book of
Life is a "heavenly book" both held and kept by God. Its purpose is
singular: To register the names of all who are redeemed by the blood of
Jesus Christ and in turn have become citizens of heaven, joint-heirs to
innumerable blessings, and future recipients of eternal life
(see—Phil.4:3; Luke 10:20; Rev.21:2, 27).
It
will be the Book of Life, therefore, when the condemned stand before
Christ in the court of final judgment and must give a final account of
their sins that ultimately convicts them to death. It will be opened in
their sight, the names written therein carefully reviewed, and by the
omission of their name, serve to prove their refusal to accept Christ's
gift of salvation and the forgiveness of sin (Rev.20:12, 15).
The
word "blot out" is as it sounds. It means to erase, which carries with
it the idea to wipe out or to obliterate. Therefore, if someone’s name
is blotted out of the Book of Life, it means that the name is no longer
contained in the Book, and ever again shall be. Unfortunately, this has
caused some to suggest that a believer can lose salvation. They reason
that because the Book of Life contains no other group of names but
those of the redeemed, therefore this blotting out of names must apply
to the redeemed alone. But Scripture contradicts that notion; clearly
stating that it’s not the redeemed, made righteous in Christ (Eph.1:7;
2 Cor.5:21), whose names are blotted out, but those who are not
redeemed. (See—Ex.32:33; Ps.69:27-28).
Okay,
but how do we reconcile the idea that the Book of Life, a record of the
redeemed in Christ, could at the same time contain names belonging to
the condemned that will be divinely obliterated? I have a suggestion
based upon another scripture in Revelation.
“And if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part from the Book of Life" (Rev.22:19).
Okay, let's look at this passage. The word "part" is a Greek word meaning "to get as a section or allotment".
In other words by its use of that specific word "part" that passage can
be interpreted to suggest that it’s one's “section” in the Book of Life
that's blotted out and not one’s “name”. Let’s consider an example.
When you reserve a room in a hotel, management allots you a room in
your name. But until you actually arrive and claim the room, your name
is not officially recorded in the registry as an occupant. You only
hold a reservation. If you fail to claim the room, then your name is
deleted, and you forfeit your reservation.
In
my opinion, the Book of Life is both a reservation and registry. I
believe that God, Who is "not willing that any should perish but that
all should come to repentance” (2 Pet.3:9) has “reserved” a space
inside His Book for the names of all who are born. When a person
receives Christ Jesus as Savior, that person's name is registered
permanently as the occupant of that space. Whereas, when God determines
in His infinite wisdom that one will not be saved, an allotment of
space is “blotted out" and the reservation made to include that name is
forever forfeited.
It's only a suggestion, dear ones. But it's
certainly not a contradiction to the immutable gift of salvation freely
offered to us in Christ Jesus our Savior, and seems in perfect harmony
with the riches of the grace of God.
Historically: Ancient
Sardis was the capital city of Lydia in the province of Asia Minor, and
in fact was one of its oldest and most important cities of its day.
It's said that silver and gold coins were first minted here. Moreover,
during its days as a Roman city, Sardis became an important Christian
center that evidently became complacent due to a reliance on its past
glory. At the time of this letter, Sardis was comparatively
insignificant. Successive earthquakes, and the ravages of the Saracens
and Turks, have reduced the city to a heap of ruins. Today the site
(part of Turkey) is occupied by a village named Sart, which is said to
be “A miserable village, comprising only a few wretched cottages,
occupied by Turks and Greeks”.
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