The fourth church of the seven singled out for a revelation
of Jesus Christ as our God, was in the city of Thyatira. Historically, the city was renowned for its
artisans related to the making of clothing, particularly of royal clothing,
dying of purples and blues. The city
itself is said to have been renamed to Thyatira upon the announcement of the
birth of a daughter to the old king Seleucus while he was away in battle in the
year 290 BC, though the name itself may have had more meaning to the Lydian
culture of the day. Paul and Silas
encountered a woman who was actually named Lydia in Acts 16:14 who was a dyer
of purple from the city of Thyatira, who became baptized and a devout
Christian. It may be that these
historical and cultural references added meaning to the message the Jesus would
reveal of Himself through John to this particular church. The message begins with a focus on yet a
different characteristic of how Christ looked to John during that initial
encounter of Him walking among the seven candlesticks.
In revelation chapter two, in verse 18 John begins … “And
unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write; These things saith the Son of
God, who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet are like fine
brass;” The eyes of Christ are alive and
brilliant and as the Son of God, they see everything. Nothing can be hidden from our God who is
able to read the desires of our hearts as well as the things we display in
public. His feet are like fine brass,
they reflect the image of service and love, and inform us that He is more than
human, but still walks amidst His church.
Jesus then exhorts his followers and reassures them that He is well
aware of the fruits of His Spirit that have been poured out in this church
community. John continues in verse 19 …
“I know thy works, and charity, and service, and faith, and thy patience, and
thy works; and the last to be more than the first.” The works prompted by His Spirit were listed
twice, with an accentuation of the latter being even more than the former. This may have more significance if we
consider its application to be over a wider time span than just the audience of
the day who composed that particular church community. If each of the seven churches were to
represent the church of Christ’s followers over a corresponding period of time,
the works done in the beginning of the time period in this case, might have
been out-shown by the works done in the latter part of the time period.
But none-the-less as with the previous messages revealed to
the other churches, Thyatira was in need of a message of redemption as John
continues in verse 20 … “Notwithstanding I have a few things against thee,
because thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which calleth herself a prophetess,
to teach and to seduce my servants to commit fornication, and to eat things
sacrificed unto idols.” This message may
have both literal and spiritual application.
First you will notice what is under attack once again is intimacy. Christ uses the idea of a woman, the most
corrupt in Old Testament writings who was named Jezebel. In Old Testament days Jezebel was an evil
queen married to King Ahab of the northern 10 tribes who broke away worship
from Jerusalem that held the true sanctuary of Israel’s God. This woman inspired Ahab to destroy intimacy
with God thru the worship of sexual promiscuity. This would eventually degenerate into the
sacrifice of the unwanted offspring of unprotected sex with temple
prostitutes. Girls would be preserved to
make a new crop of temple prostitutes, boys would be slain in the fires of
Molech, or Baal, and an assortment other false gods. The first casualty of spiritual infidelity
however was not the results of infidelity, it was the original intimacy between
ourselves and our God. As we begin to
entertain other “loves” outside of our God, we find what we “love” most is
ourselves, and our gratification, not our God, and the needs of others.
Jezebel of old was forever trying to kill the real prophet
of God, Elijah. Elijah had the message
of truth for the people of God in his day.
But the queen would not allow for truth to be spoken to the people of
God, lest she lose her power and control over the people. So Jezebel was forever hunting Elijah to be
killed. And in her day, she did not do
the hunting personally, a woman had no real power. Instead she would have the power of the king
(her husband), and his soldiers and army to do her bidding. In spiritual terms this would equate to a
false church using the power of the state to maintain control and power over
the people, with its origins of denying access to the truth of the word of
God. Attempting to supplant the true
word, with false words of her own.
Notice too, that Jezebel is not out to convert the world itself to her
ideas and false doctrines, but instead is looking to “seduce my servants”. She tempts the servants of God with the
seductive ideas of power, control, and self-gratification. The idea that we can please self while still
claiming to please God, is at the core of Jezebel’s false seductive message to
the church of Christ.
It may not have been lost on the members of the Thyatira
community that Jezebel and many other women of a royal class wore garments of
fine purple’s and blue’s and in general were used to living with the excesses
that wealth provides. Perhaps even some
of the workmanship done by members in Thyatira would be used by Jezebel to make
herself happy. The literal piece of this
message was very similar to the churches that preceded it. A destruction of intimacy through sexual
immorality, followed by the symptom of eating to please self without regard for
the consequences or implications to those in need; were indicators that true
reformation of the heart had not yet been experienced by those who purport to
follow Christ. If anything, wealth is
here identified as NOT being the goal of the follower of Christ, in that the
danger of using wealth on self rather than on the needs of others seems to
outweigh its benefits. Jezebel, as a
queen, had wealth but used it to hold control over others, not to love and meet
their needs. That the church of Christ
did not denounce Jezebel and expose her as having nothing to do with the real followers
of Christ was the fact Jesus was revealing to His church that He was not happy
with. Jezebel and her teachings were
wrong, and associated with the most evil woman in the scriptures, yet the
church of Christ “suffered” her. The
church made no separation from her, or denunciation of her. Instead it seemed the church embraced her as
a part of it. This was the revelation
Christ was pointing out that was in error.
John continues the message of reformation to Thyatira in
verse 21 … “And I gave her space to repent of her fornication; and she repented
not.” Even Jezebel is offered redemption
through repentance. Even the most wicked
woman penned in scripture is not without hope, or opportunity, or a chance to
repent and become part of the fold of Christ.
But repentance and humility cannot be forced, just as love cannot be
forced. If the church who uses the name
of Christ, is unwilling to submit and have the heart of Christ created in it,
what follows is the destruction that is inevitable in our choice to embrace the
pain and death of sin. This is not a
choice our God takes lightly. So He does
not have us make it instantly, but instead he offers us time to consider
it. During this time, He makes every
effort to reach out to us in love, and hopes to lure us back to Him, through
the power of His so great love. But for the
heart that will not yield, that will not submit, that will not see its own
need, He cannot force it to comply for the use of force is not His tactic, but
that of His enemy. Despite giving
Jezebel herself time to consider her decisions and repent, she does not repent.
John continues in verse 22 … “Behold, I will cast her into a
bed, and them that commit adultery with her into great tribulation, except they
repent of their deeds. [verse 23] And I will kill her children with death; and
all the churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the reins and hearts:
and I will give unto every one of you according to your works.” Ouch.
The rebuke here is severe. The
punishment for her refusal to repent, is to bear the weight of her own choices
and actions. The “works” of evil that
will result in pain, are to be allowed to be experienced. We sometimes do not know the full weight of
our sins, because as we repent, the Lord is generous and protects us from the
pain our choices should have resulted in.
We therefore miss the full weight of our sins and choices, because of
the mercy of our God. The punishment
identified here for Jezebel however, is simply a removal of that
protection. Those who embrace the ideas
of self-love and self-gratification are going to be allowed to see just what
pain and death accompany those choices.
The hand of mercy will be removed, and the full weight of our embrace of
pain and death will be experienced … “except we repent.” Even in our disaster, the hand of repentance
remains outstretched from our God. But
while we refuse it, the results that come upon us, will reflect that God does
denounce the sins we embrace, that His hand of mercy will not forever spare us
from the pain of our un-repented sins.
It is not only our actions that are allowed to bear fruit, but our motives
as well, both the “reins” and “hearts” are known of our God. The weight of our sin is to be a clear
message to the world and the church of where sin leads, and what it truly
means, if we continue to refuse to repent.
John continues in verse 24 … “But unto you I say, and unto
the rest in Thyatira, as many as have not this doctrine, and which have not
known the depths of Satan, as they speak; I will put upon you none other
burden. [verse 25] But that which ye have already hold fast till I come.” Here again is hope outstretched. Notice Jesus begins by addressing “you”. “You” who is reading this message, by virtue
of reading and reaching out to God, He identified “you” as being separate from
those who have refused to repent and suffer the fate of their choices. “You” are different than them, because this
message has not been lost on “you”. He
continues “and unto the rest” in Thyatira, and in the space and time associated
with this period of church history. Both
“you” and “unto the rest”, and “as many as have not this doctrine”, in effect
to everyone who has refused to adopt the false doctrines of control and
self-gratification, there is to be a promise.
This group which has refused to embrace the false prophecies
and doctrines and teachings of Jezebel, this is a group which in so doing has
not known the “depths of Satan as they speak”.
Those who would compel conscience, and put to the sword any who should
disagree with them, and in the name of our God, have truly come to know the
depths of Satan in what they say. For
since the war in heaven began, Satan has blamed all death on God, taking no
responsibility for it himself. Satan has
forever attempted to enslave and compel the minds and hearts of men, for he
does not desire the choice of love, but instead the mindless compulsion of
slavery. Satan wishes to rule the
universe on pain of death. Whereas God
rules it because we choose to return the love to us He has already offered.
The promise given to those who have remained faithful to
their intimacy with Christ, who have not abandoned Him through love of other
gods, or of self, to them is given the promise that they shall bear none other
burden but that which we already have.
This is the essence of salvation itself.
A submission of our will, a repentance born of humility, is already the
“hardest” part of our salvation. It is
after all a refusal to repent that has seen Jezebel and those who would commit
adultery with her bearing all the pain of their choices. A stubborn refusal to repent is why Jezebel
is being allowed to bear the weight of her sins. If she, and we, would have repented, the
mercy of our God would have kept us from seeing the full weight of the choices
and sins we had embraced. But the
outstretched hand of mercy is consistently rejected, and so what comes,
comes. But “you” were not meant to
suffer the fate of Jezebel. “You” were
meant to refuse her false words and instead embrace the words of Christ. “You” were meant to know the freedom of repentance
and submission, and salvation by being remade by Christ. “You” were meant to be saved from yourself
and your natural inclinations.
John continues in verse 26 … “And he that overcometh, and
keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations: [verse
27] And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a potter shall
they be broken to shivers: even as I received of my Father. [verse 28] And I
will give him the morning star.” Now the
giving is going to just get ridiculous, as usual. The works of Christ in His ministry were
works of love for others, healing for others, meeting the needs of others. He did these works without condemnation, or
judgment, but to redeem, to save, to reconcile us to Himself. These acts of charity we are charged with
keeping until the end. Notice this is
the ONLY doctrine, the doctrine of His actions of love to others, that He
charges us to remain within. For it is
love alone that accomplishes our salvation, and leads others to want that same
salvation with our God. It is not our
hate, or judgmentalism, or legalistic views of right and wrong that inspire
salvation in others, instead it is ONLY our unconditional love for them. What must be overcome then, is the idea that
we can compel the conscience of others, that we can deny others access to the
true word of God, that we can put faith in our wealth and fineries rather than
in Christ alone, that we can corrupt our intimacy with God through the false
doctrines of self-gratification. These
things can only be overcome as we submit our will in repentance and humility to
Christ, who alone can remake and recreate us in His image.
The power that comes over nations, the iron rod that
splinters the vessels of potters clay, is the steadfast love that is given
unconditionally to everyone we encounter.
Think of it, Christ took no violent actions in His day, yet the entire
Roman empire was brought to its knees by the fundamental doctrines of love and
submission in the hearts of true believers.
Pagan Rome is a thing of the past, despite its iron grip in the time of
Christ. No dictator, including Satan, is
able to maintain control over a people who embrace love of others as their
primary premise. Evil itself, will be
forever removed from the universe, by the free-will choice of sentient beings
in the universe, including us, because we choose to embrace love of others
instead of love for self. This is the
truth that shatters evil and cannot be broken.
Love wins. Love conquers all,
including evil, and Love will see evil finally and fully defeated. As Christ received love from His Father, so
we are to receive Love from Christ who we follow and submit our will to. Christ was forever doing the will of His
Father, not of Himself. So we are to do
the will of Christ and not of our own.
And in so doing, we are further promised the “morning star”. We are promised the gift of Christ Himself,
poured out in our lives, in our families, in our churches, in our communities,
and in our world. The gift of Christ is
the greatest gift God could make to us, and is the basis of our salvation from beginning
to end.
Jesus concludes his message of revelation to the church of
Thyatira as John writes in verse 29 … “He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit saith unto the churches.”
Once again the message to the church is joined by the power of His Holy
Spirit. For without the power of His
Spirit, we will be unable to overcome, unable to understand, and unable to be
removed from the power of our choices and sins.
But as we submit to our God, we come to know the power of His salvation
to us. This is the promise to Thyatira,
and of way more importance, the promise Jesus makes to “you”.
And the messages were not over yet …
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