The Letters to the 7 Churches - Part I
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Intro, Background, Letter to Ephesus
Intro, Background, Letter to Ephesus
Intro
This morning we are going to start the first part of a 3 week series studying the letters to the 7 churches in the book of Revelation
Each week we’ll cover a few of the letters, and each week will build upon the previous week, so I encourage you to be here for all the studies
If you miss one, you can go to our website or to our Facebook page and catch up on past messages
Now, what I’m about to say may disappoint you, but our study over the next 3 weeks is not going to be about the future.
These letters cover the past and the present, and they will offer us great application into our own lives
Yes, we will talk some high level overviews of the future and what the Bible has to say about it
And as much as I am a student of eschatology (the study of the end times) and can spend a lot of time talking about that, that’s not really what we’re going to talk about the next few Sundays
Now don’t check out on me if you were hoping for a crash course on the book of Revelation
But I believe the Lord is going to give us a message for today
You see, what’s amazing about these letters is that you can apply them in 4 different ways
These were real letters written to actual, physical churches back in the day
We’re going to also see that they were written for 7 primary types of churches that exist today
They are for 7 different types of Christians
And they represent 7 primary periods in church history
Before we get into these letters, we need to spend some time talking the background of Revelation and studying Chapter 1
Chapter 1 of this book gives us the key to the entire book of Revelation, and is especially important for the 7 letters that we’ll study.
Background
Alright, a little background on the book of Revelation
It was written by the apostle John, brother of James, one of Jesus’ 12 original disciples
This was one of 5 books of the NT that John wrote, the Gospel of John, 1, 2, & 3 John, and Revelation
John, after walking with Jesus during His earthly ministry, and then leading the early church in Jerusalem with Peter, eventually became the pastor of the church in Ephesus and pastored there for many, many years (40+)
He was nearly 90 years old when he wrote Revelation in probably 95 AD
At the time of writing this book, John was the last of the apostles that was still alive
There was a strong wave of persecution going on at this time, and all of the other apostles had been martyred for their faith
Church history tells us that the Roman Emperor Domitian had thought he could end Christianity once and for all by murdering the last living apostle, John, and put him in a pot of boiling oil
But God miraculously saved him
So the Romans sent him to the island of Patmos instead in ~ 90 AD
Patmos wasn’t a Mediterranean island vacation, it was a prison where those who went were basically slaves, and anyone sent there almost never came back
John would be released from Patmos in ~ 96 AD after Domitian was murdered and succeeded by Emperor Nerva
Like I mentioned before, the book of Revelation was written in ~95AD
It was the last of the NT books to be written
And canonically, it is placed last in the NT (& the Bible) for a very good reason - b/c you need to have a good understanding of the other 65 books of the Bible to properly understand Revelation
There are a lot of different interpretations of the book of Revelation
One big reason for the different interpretations are all the signs and symbolism that are in the book
For instance, numbers have a lot of symbolism
The most famous is the number 666, the mark of the beast found in Rev 13:18.
Another number you see a lot in this book is the number 7
7 churches, 7 trumpets, 7 bowls, 7 seals
7 in the Bible is the number, not of perfection, but completion
It represents a full, complete picture, or the end of something that has been completed
Because of the signs and symbolism, there is a lot of debate among Christians as to how to translate this book
Here at Calvary, we take what is known as the Futurist View
That view holds that the events from Chapters 4 on take place in the future and speak of the time right before the 2nd coming of Jesus
We also would say we have a premillenial view, meaning that we say that the 1000 year reign of Jesus described in Rev 20 is yet to come, it’s in the future
There are 3 other primary views of this book
The Preterist View
Holds that John wrote this in 70 AD before the destruction of the 2nd temple in Jerusalem and that it spoke of events in his own day
Too much evidence from early church history that John wrote it in mid 90s AD, and you have a hard time lining up how Rome destroyed the temple with how the antichrist is described to desecrate the temple, as well as the apparent death and then resurrection of the antichrist
The Historical View
This holds that John was writing about events in church history. The millennial reign has already happened and we can look back on history and see the events described here
You have to abandon a literal interpretation of Revelation and really get liberal with your symbolism to make that view fit
The Poetic/Spiritualist View
Everything in this book is symbolic and is meant to encourage and comfort persecuted Christians in John’s day
John makes it clear in Rev 1:1 that the things described in the book must take place, they aren’t symbolic
With our Futurist view, we take this book literally. Yes there are many symbols, but we take God’s word for what it says instead of trying to put our own meaning behind things
Which is how we should be reading scripture anyways!
Now the book of Revelation is not primarily about the future or end times, its about Jesus
Look at Rev 1:1a
Revelation 1:1a (NKJV)
1 The Revelation of Jesus Christ...
It doesn’t say Revelations with an “s”
It says The Revelation
The world “revelation” in the ancient Greek is “apokalypsis” where we get our modern day word “Apocalypse”
Don’t think of this in the sense that we think of the apocalypse though, this doesn’t mean doomsday or the end of the world
This Greek word literally means, “uncovering” as it to reveal something that was once hidden or unknown
So this book is the revelation or uncovering or revealing of Jesus Christ - it’s all about Jesus!
I heard a pastor say of the book of Revelation that we need to be careful that we don’t focus too much on the signs in this book that we miss the Savior
This book carries a special blessing for those who read it
Revelation 1:3 (NKJV)
3 Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written in it; for the time is near.
So we are going to read part of this book the next few weeks, you’re going to hear it as we teach it, and the encouragement is for you to keep it, or to put into practice the things that you learn from it
Let’s go ahead and read the first 8 verses just to make sure we don’t skip out on them
Verses 1-3
The revelation of who?
Of Jesus Christ
John tells us that he received this revelation or uncovering/revealing of Jesus and he wrote it down
And there’s that special blessing we just talked about
Verses 4-8
John writes this book to the 7 churches in Asia
Asia = Asia minor = modern day Turkey
Those 7 churches are the same that Jesus wrote the letters to in Chapters 2 & 3
They are Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamos, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, & Laodicea
They were connected on this trade route called the Circular Road
We’ll spend a lot more time talking about them the next 3 weeks
We notice here an example of the trinity
Grace & peace from Him who is and was and is to come (Rev 4:8 shows us this is God the Father); the seven Spirits around the throne is the Holy Spirit (speaks of the 7 aspects of the Holy Spirit found in Is 11:2
Isaiah 11:2 (NKJV)
2 The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon Him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, The Spirit of counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord.
And from Jesus Christ, the Son
Another cool thing about this greeting, God the Father is described as Him who is, and who was, and who is to come. He is the God of the present, the past, and the future. The Holman NT Commentary says on this verse that, “Although the Greek grammar is awkward here, this is a development of God’s Old Testament name, “I AM WHO I AM” (Exod. 3:14).”
God doesn’t change!
John reminds us that Jesus is going to come back one day, and everyone will know (vs. 7)
Something we can hope in and trust that it will happen
Why? Because God never changes. He was, and is, and is to come, He is always the same!
Lesson - Revelation 1:9-2:7
Verses 9-11
John describes how he received this revelation from the Lord
He was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day
He was spending time with Jesus on Sunday.
Think about this one for a minute
John was there for 5 years before Jesus showed up to give him this revelation
That had to have been so hard for John
He had been faithfully shepherding his flock in Ephesus, but with this exile, he had 0 communication with the outside world
He probably expected to die there, all alone
He could have given up, quit, said he was done with ministry and growing deeper with the Lord and waited for God to take him home
But he was faithful to still pursue Jesus. He was faithful to spend time with Him and to pray.
He didn’t let his circumstances take that away from him. He didn’t let the wave of persecution that had put him on this prison island discourage him.
What a great lesson for us today. I think there are a lot of Christians worried that what’s coming down the road from the government or from society is getting more and more anti-Christian and that we should be worried that God’s work is going to stop because of potential persecution.
Yet it was in the very middle of that intense persecution of John’s time that as he was seeking the Lord, he got an amazing revelation of Jesus
So John is there seeking the Lord and all of a sudden he hears a loud voice behind him, like a trumpet blast
And that voice told him, “I am the Alpha and Omega, the First and the Last. Write down what you see”
Most of you know that in Greek, the first and last letters of their alphabet are alpha and omega, so Jesus is telling John that He is the First and the Last, the beginning and the end. All reason for everything is encompassed between those two points.
It reminds me of what John wrote about Jesus in his gospel
John 1:1 (NKJV)
1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
Word = logos = the ultimate reason for everything
Jesus is the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End, the Logos, the Word, the Ultimate Reason for everything
Verses 12-16
John turns around and sees Jesus
He gives this pretty amazing description of Jesus
He had this long robe that had a golden band on it, symbolizing the priesthood of Christ, and His authority
His hair was as white as snow, symbolizing His timelessness, wisdom, and purity
His eyes were like a blazing fire, speaking of God’s judgement
His feet were like brass, showing that Jesus had been through a fire of judgement and came through pure
His voice was like the sound of rushing waters, showing His power and majesty
He had a double edged sword coming out of His mouth, symbolizing the power of His word, a reference to Hebrews 4:12.
His face shined like the sun, speaking of Jesus’s divinity
We also learn two other things about Jesus
He is standing in the middle of 7 golden lampstands
He is holding 7 starts in his right hand
We’re going to see in verse 20 that Jesus tells us what these symbols mean so there is no confusion
The lampstands represent the 7 churches (7 = completeness, so the lampstands represent the complete church) - Jesus stands in the midst of His church
The stars represent the angels of the 7 churches
There is more debate on what the word “angel” really means.
Some say it’s a literal angel, guardian angels who protect the church
Others say the word angel was a poor translation, and that it should have been translated “messenger”
Therefore the messenger would be the pastors/overseers of the 7 churches
I think it’s cool how Jesus has those messengers in His right hand, the hand that symbolizes strength
This part of the vision tells us that Jesus is in the middle of His complete church, and He holds them in strength
Verse 17a
John’s reaction to all of this is to fall down at Jesus’ feet like he was dead
It was overwhelming I’m sure to see Jesus in all of His majesty like this
John had been one of 3 disciples who had seen a glimpse of this before
Remember on the Mount of Transfiguration, it was Peter, James, & John who got to go up with Jesus and saw Him transformed into His glorious appearance, and got to see Moses & Elijah show up too
Even though John had seen that, he still falls on his face when he sees Jesus in His glory again
We’re never going to be able to compare to the awe and wonder of our Savior.
And a true encounter with His majesty should cause us to do the same thing that John did, the same thing that Isaiah did in Isaiah 6 when Isaiah got a vision of the throne room of heaven, to fall on our faces before Him in humility.
Verses 17b-20
Jesus comforts John - don’t be afraid
That’s a message we see repeated over and over again in the word
Abraham, don’t be afraid, I’ll be your shield, your great reward (Gen 15:1)
Joshua, don’t be afraid, I’ll be with you wherever you go (Josh 1:9)
Elijah, don’t be afraid, I will protect you from your enemies (2 Kings 1:15)
Jeremiah, don’t be afraid of persecution, I’ll be your voice (Jer 1:8)
Shepherds, don’t be afraid, for unto you a Savior is born (Luke 2:10-11)
Disciples, don’t be afraid, go and tell others about me (Matt 28:10)
John, don’t be afraid, I am eternal, and I hold the power over death (Rev 1:17-18)
Then Jesus tells John the key to the entire book of Revelation in vs. 19
Verse 19
John, write down three things
The things which were (past) -> Chapter 1
The things which are (present) -> Chapters 2 & 3
And the things which will be (future) -> Chapter 4-22
We are currently living in the Chapters 2 & 3 era, also known as the church age
Alright, time to get into our first church, the letter to the church in Ephesus
Remember that these letters were written to 7 actual churches that existed at the time
They are for 7 7 primary types of churches that exist today
They are for 7 different types of Christians
And finally, they represent 7 primary periods in church history
Chapter 2, Verses 1-7
The format of this first letter is the same format that Jesus will use for all of the letters
Intro
A picture of Jesus from the vision John had in Chapter 1
A commendation - praise for what they’re doing right
Condemnation - Jesus pointed out where they are missing the mark
A command
A promise to those who overcome
Again, remember our 4 applications for each letter
This was a real church in a real city
This was John’s church that he had pastored for 40 years
Ephesus was a major center of the Christian faith during this time period.
The city itself was the capitol of Asia Minor, and it was the regional hub of commerce since it was a port city
Paul had a big part in the early days of this church as seen in Acts 19 where he started witnessing to people and stayed there for 2 years teaching them. The church went from just a few people to being a force for Christ in the city
Acts 19 tells that the church had grown so much and was making such an impact on the city, that there was a revolt over lost business in the worship of Artemis (Diana is the Roman version - so pretty much one and the same)
There was a temple to Artemis, who was the goddess of fertility and hunting oddly enough. That temple was one of the 7 wonders of the ancient world
She was the most popular of all the Greek goddesses at the time
Those who had made little idols to Artemis had lost a lot of business b/c the church had grown so much and become such and influence.
They start this riot, drug Paul and his companions into the theater to put him on trial. When he tries to speak to defend himself, the whole arena chants, “Great is Artemis of Ephesus!” for 2 hours.
It takes the government to come in and calm the riot and dismiss everyone
Eventually Timothy would take over the church, and then John
They had great leadership, and they did great things
You can see that in verses 2 & 3 - “I know your works, your labor, your patience”
The period in church history this represents is the Apostolic Church, from 30 AD to ~ 100 AD
This is the time of the church from the ascension of Jesus while all the Apostles lived
The time period is marked by evangelism and a rapid spread of the church, as well as a lot of signs and wonders
But it wasn’t without it’s problems. If you read Acts or the letters in the NT, you see that many of the apostles had to confront false teaching that was creeping into the church.
Don’t forget the other two applications as we go through this letter, it applies to different types of churches today, as well as different types of Christians today.
So what does Jesus say about Ephesus?
Verse 1
Here’s the introduction, the message to the angel (or messenger/pastor/overseer)
Then Jesus reminds the church about some of the characteristics we saw last chapter
He holds the 7 stars in His right hand, and walks in the middle of the 7 lampstands
We just read what those represented in Rev 1:20
The starts were the angels/messengers/pastors of the church
And the lampstand represented the churches (7 = completion, so the complete worldwide church)
Jesus is reminding them that He holds the leadership of the church in His strength, and that He is involved in His church
He doesn’t run it from afar, or leave it up to others to run, Jesus is all about being in the midst of His church
Following our outline of each letter, next Jesus praises them for what they were doing right
Verses 2-3
This church was known for their works and their laboring for the Lord
They were doing things for God
And they labored tirelessly to do those works
Patience = steadfast endurance
Again, speaking to the hard work, and enduring in that hard work for the Lord
Serving the Lord is a sacrifice, and it is a labor
I know this is a sacrifice b/c of how my flesh likes the opposite of laboring for the Lord.
My flesh likes to be lazy, and watch another episode of What If on Disney + instead of staying up to study for a Sunday message or for Wednesday night Youth Group
But serving the Lord is work, it is sacrifice.
Realize your flesh is going to crave to do the opposite, we should remain steadfast (endure) in serving the Lord
Don’t just serve Him on your own terms. Ask God what He has for you, and if He calls you, do it!
Don’t make excuses b/c it’s inconvenient or costly, that’s what it should be, a sacrifice of your time or talent or treasures for the Lord.
So when you’re tired of coming to worship practice to get the songs down to lead the people in worship, or your tired of always having to take the trash out or how messy the bathrooms are when you clean, or you just don’t feel like working in the nursery today, you can call and get a last minute replacement, right? - remember that God is calling us to sacrifice us to serve Him
To follow after Him, we must deny self, take up our cross and follow Him
The church in Ephesus knew that and their works were known to others and to Jesus
They also protected the flock from evil and from false teachers/apostles
This temple to Artemis in the midst of the city that drove so much of the local economy, they didn’t stand for it
They didn’t try to justify it (“It’s good for business”) and they didn’t dabble in the sin associated with the temple
There was a lot of prostitution surrounding this temple, and evil worship of this false goddess
The Ephesian church didn’t say, “That’s just how things are in our culture” - they stood up to it and would not stand for evil
And like we talked earlier, this period of church history started to have false teachers rise up to get the people’s eyes off Jesus and onto man
There were those falsely claiming to be apostles to get people to follow after them
There were the Nicolaitans in verse 6 who started to establish this priestly order where to communicate to God, you had to talk to the priest first
God said He hated what the Nicolaitans were doing, b/c it cut off the very thing He died for, which was a personal relationship w/ each one of us
When Jesus died on the cross, the veil in the temple which separated the holy of holies where the ark of the covenant was, the place where God’s presence dwelt, and the rest of the temple was torn in two
That was an area only the high priest could go in once a year on the day of atonement before Jesus, and only after a bunch of rituals and sacrifices, but by that veil tearing, God was telling the world that all could come into His presence
And the Nicolaitans were trying to get in the way of that
Be wary of any ministry or church that makes things about a man or woman, rather than about Jesus
We live in an era of celebrity pastors now, and many people follow a church or a ministry b/c of the person in charge, not b/c of the call of God to get involved there
That is a dangerous thing. Don’t idolize man, worship the Savior
Again, the Ephesian church had this right, they were doing good in this area
But there was one thing where they were missing the mark
Verse 4
They had left their first love
He didn’t say they had lost their first love like they weren’t saved anymore, but He said that they had left or forgotten Him
They had all these things happening at church, this study, that event, this small group, that outreach ministry
They were busy in doing ministry, but the heart and the reason for the ministry wasn’t there anymore
I know this is something I struggle with
I can get caught up in “I’ve been doing this for a long time” or “I know what I’m doing” or even just showing up at church week in and week out b/c I work hard and I’m laboring for the Lord, but the love is not there
If this describes you, think back to the time when you first got saved, or maybe the first time you started serving in a ministry at the church, and how excited you were about it.
You were signing up to help at every open slot on the calendar, you were telling people about Jesus any chance you could get, you were reading your Bible every day to see what God had to show you that day
But have you fallen into a pattern of “I’m on the schedule, so I better show up” or “I just don’t have time anymore” or “I know the program”?
What does Jesus give as the correction to the Christian or the church that is in a loveless state?
Verse 5
Three steps, remember from where you fell, repent, and return to your first works
Remember
Remember back to that time that you first got saved, and how amazing God’s grace was and how in awe of Him you were and how thankful you were that He had washed all of your sins away
Remember back to that time you started serving and how excited you were and how you didn’t know what you were doing so you prayed about everything all the time and God was leading you step by step
Repent
Jesus doesn’t say “remember the good ol’ days and then take some time off”
He says remember, then repent for leaving your first love. Confess that sin before God and stop working w/ love
Then repeat
“…do the first works” - repeat how you had started out
Get back to work, but do it the way you were serving before, with Jesus in the midst of things
If you don’t, the warning Jesus gave was that He would remove their lampstand
Jesus remains in the midst of His church, but if our church or we as Christians try to walk in a loveless state, He’s going to remove that lampstand
Looking back at church history, both the actual church of Ephesus, as well as the church of this era, listened to this warning
The early church leader and writer Ignatius (generation after the apostles, contemporary of Polycarp and Clement of Rome) would praise the Ephesian church in the early 2nd Century for their love
And the next era of the church that we’ll cover next week, Jesus didn’t have anything bad to say about them - there was massive growth in that church
For us, Jesus will always be in the midst of His church, its up to us whether we want to come be a part of that and serve Him in humility and love, or if we want to rely on ourselves or elevate a man over our Savior and have our lampstand removed. God will not stay in a loveless church.
Last verses as we close out
Verses 6-7
Here Jesus talks about the Nicolaitans again which we previously discussed
Then He gives a promise to those who overcome
Each letter has this promise to those who overcome either the sin or the struggles of that church
So for this church, those who overcome a loveless walk of faith, He promises that they will be able to eat from the tree of life in heaven
This speaks to the promise of eternal life
I’ll close on this out of Rev. 2:7 “He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches."
God has put His inspired word in our laps to read and to study and to apply to our lives
These are more than just historical letters to ancient churches, they describe types of Christians and types of churches
We are called to have ears that are open to what Jesus is saying
Jesus will say that to every church at the end of every letter
For every period of church history, for every church throughout history and today, and for every Christian, God has written down His Holy word for us, are we going to hear what the Spirit says?
Don’t make your walk about you. Don’t make it about following after a person or a ministry. Don’t get caught up in the labor and the works if there isn’t a relationship
Love God, love others, serve Him out of that love.
And if you’ve left your first love, remember, repent, and repeat those first works
Closing
Alright, so Part I of III done and we only made it through the first letter
Next week we’ll read the letters to the churches at Smyrna, Pergamos, and Thyatira, don’t miss it
Prayer