Sermon Tone Analysis

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The Churches of Revelation
The Church That Compromised
week 2
Introduction
Thyatira was noted for its numerous guilds (roughly the equivalent of today’s labor unions).
Thyatira’s main industry was the production of wool and dyed goods (especially purple goods).
The pressure faced by the Christians in Thyatira came from the guilds.
To hold a job or run a business, it was necessary to be a member of a guild.
Each guild had its patron deity, in whose honor feasts were held—complete with meat sacrificed to idols and sexual immorality.
Christians faced the dilemma of attending those feasts or possibly losing their livelihood.
How some in the Thyatira church were handling the situation caused the Lord Jesus Christ great concern.
The Correspondent who writes to the church
Revelation 2:18 (ESV)
18 “And to the angel of the church in Thyatira write: ‘The words of the Son of God, who has eyes like a flame of fire, and whose feet are like burnished bronze.
His general title here is Son of God, that is, the eternal, one and only Son of God.
This denotes that he has the same nature as the Father but a distinct and subordinate manner of subsistence.
That his eyes are like blazing fire signifies his piercing, penetrating, perfect knowledge.
He has a thorough insight into all people and into all things.
I am he who searches hearts and minds (2:23).
He will make all the churches aware that he does this.
His feet are like burnished bronze.
He is characterized by steadfastness, purity, and holiness.
As Christ judges with perfect wisdom, so he acts with perfect strength and steadiness.
The Church is commended
Revelation 2:19 (ESV)
19 “ ‘I know your works, your love and faith and service and patient endurance, and that your latter works exceed the first.
The believers at Thyatira were showing love for God and for one another.
—although that love was apparently fragile, since there was not a strong foundation of unified sound doctrine.
In some ways, Thyatira was strong where Ephesus was weak; in fact,
Thyatira is the first of the seven churches to be commended for its love.
Christ commended them for their faith.
The true Christians in Thyatira were dependable, reliable, and consistent.
Not only did the Thyatiran Christians possess these virtues,
Their deeds of late were greater in number than at first.
Their loving service was becoming more consistent, and their faithful perseverance growing stronger.
They were growing in grace, maturing in their Christian lives, and advancing the cause of Christ (cf. 2 Pet.
1:8).
For that behavior they were to be commended.
Jesus is going to criticize the Thyatirans but he did not brush aside their achievement and their virtues.
James Hamilton writes:
“Sometimes when we go to address problems, even ones that are not so serious, we fail to see and acknowledge the good things that may be happening.
Jesus is encouraging this church.
They have problems, but those problems don’t keep him from seeing and commending the fruits of the Spirit in their lives.”2
Following Jesus’ gracious example, when we are dealing with people who need to be corrected, we would be wise to notice their strengths and praise their virtues, in this way opening a door for the harder message that they may thus be more willing to receive.
Given our own weakness and tendency toward failure, how wonderful it is to learn that Jesus knows, cares about, and appreciates all the good things taking place in our lives as his people.[3]
The church at Thyatira had many people that loved God and served his people.
They had faith in his word, and they persevered.
They helped many, and they kept it up.
As others then got involved, the church grew.
The deeds, or the works, of the church were far more when this letter was written than when it first began.
That is the way a church grows.
If you and I had been there at Thyatira, we would have been greatly impressed by this church.
It was a busy, bustling, active church with some wonderful people in it who obviously manifested love and faith, concern and care for others.
It must have seemed a very attractive church.
The Concern for the church
Revelation 2:20–23 (ESV)
20 But I have this against you, that you tolerate that woman Jezebel, who calls herself a prophetess and is teaching and seducing my servants to practice sexual immorality and to eat food sacrificed to idols.
21 I gave her time to repent, but she refuses to repent of her sexual immorality.
22 Behold, I will throw her onto a sickbed, and those who commit adultery with her I will throw into great tribulation, unless they repent of her works, 23 and I will strike her children dead.
And all the churches will know that I am he who searches mind and heart, and I will give to each of you according to your works.
The meetings of the guilds were devoted to licentious debaucheries which were connected with the worship of erotic idols of the Greek world.
These guilds met frequently, and they met for a common meal.
Such a meal was, at least in part, a religious ceremony.
It would probably meet in a heathen temple, and it would certainly begin with a libation to the gods, and the meal itself would largely consist of meat offered to idols.
The official position of the church meant that a Christian could not attend such a meal.”
William Barclay
As a result of false teaching of the prophetess Jezebel the servants of Jesus are engaging in sexual immorality and idolatry.
This woman might have been justifying participation in the Roman Imperial Cult, with the result that the Christians in Thyatira engaged in idolatrous, immoral activities that accompanied pagan celebrations[4]
Jezebel has been called to repentance, but she has refused to repent.
Those who belong to Jesus repent of sin.
The refusal to repent of sin identifies someone as unregenerate.
its as if they are bullet proof - everything that should make them repent bounces right off of them
How do you respond when you are confronted with your sin?
Does it make you angry?
Or does it make you humble, contrite, and more grateful that Jesus died to pay the penalty for sin?
Does it make you more zealous to turn away from sin in the future?
Or does it make you feel like you need to be more careful not to be caught in the future?
If you get angry when people call you to repentance, or if you feel yourself scheming about how to avoid being caught in the future when you plan to commit those same sins again, you are not acting like one who has been born again by the power of God’s Spirit.
When a person hears the news that God is holy, that God calls people to account for the ways they offend his holiness, that the punishment for sin is infinite and eternal, but that Jesus took that punishment when he died on the cross, if the Spirit gives life, they hear this news and are simultaneously born again and believe in Jesus.
If you believe this news and you repent of your sin—that is, you want to confess your sin and turn away from it so that you never do those evil things again—you have been born again.
If you claim to believe this news, but you do not want to turn away from sin but want to keep right on committing those same sins,
you should call on the Lord to send his Spirit to give you life.
“Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved” (Romans 10:13).
There is good news: "unless they repent of her ways."
Behold, I will throw her onto a sickbed, and those who commit adultery with her I will throw into great tribulation, unless they repent of her works, 23 and I will strike her children dead.
Our Lord always gives an opportunity for repentance.
I have often thought that natural disasters -- earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, etc. -- are opportunities being given men to think again, to stop and look at what we are doing, and to change our ways.
It is opportunity to repent, a slap in the face that says, wake up! "
But," Jesus says, "she was unwilling."
And so the judgment must come.
By refusing to repent, Jezebel declared that she did not belong to the people of God.
Once she made this plain, the church in Thyatira had a responsibility to tell her the truth—she was not right with God.
They had a responsibility to protect the flock.
They had a responsibility to exclude her from the church.
Instead of telling Jezebel the truth they were tolerating her, and as a result of the church’s failure to act, she was leading the servants of Jesus into sin.[5]
The church was about forty years old when John wrote, so that her false teaching had been around long enough for a second generation of errorists to have arisen.
How seriously does God take such things in his church?
As he did with Ananias and Sapphira,
The Lord threatens to kill these errorists with pestilence (literally “kill them with death”).
It was too late for Jezebel; her heart was hardened in unrepentant sin.
The Lord Jesus Christ mercifully warns her disciples to repent while there is still time.
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