The last church to receive a revelation of the nature of
Christ and a special message from the author of Christianity was to be
Laodicea. Historically the city of
Laodicea was along a major trade route in the Roman Empire and was one of only
a few cities declared to be a “free” city by the Roman Emperor. The wealth of its residents was so great that
even after an earthquake had destroyed the city, the residents declined
imperial funding and rebuilt the city themselves with their own means. Traveling merchants were common visitors to
the region and the residents seem to have amassed a good degree of wealth
trading with them on a regular basis.
The city had a thriving medical school, and enough means to have an
interest in the arts. Paul mentions the
church at Laodicea in his writings to the Colossians, and even a letter he had
for them which appears to be lost in antiquity.
So perhaps the church of Laodicea was thought to be the jewel of the
Christian church, located in a place of commerce where wealth would offer means
to fund the ministry throughout the world.
Sound familiar?
Jesus begins His message through John in Revelations chapter
3 and verse 14 saying … “And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans
write; These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the
beginning of the creation of God;” He
begins his message with a reference to the end of all things, “the Amen”. The end of our salvation is to be Jesus
Christ alone. He begins by reminding us
that all things are asked in His name.
Our final state will be determined by what we ask for from Jesus
Christ. He proceeds to identify Himself
as “the faithful and true witness”. The
Word of God can only be properly understood by the faithful and true witness to
it, Jesus Christ. The Word, absent
Christ, can never be fully comprehended or understood. The life of Christ shows us the depth of love
and care of the Father. It was a living
example of what His Word was to reveal to us.
When Christ is removed from scripture, false interpretations are
possible, as was the case with the Pharisees who reasoned it was “work” to show
love and healing to those in need on the Sabbath day. The author of Love did not see it this way
and so began their quest to eliminate these radical ideas brought by the
Messiah Himself. But the witness
remained faithful and true in the form of Jesus Christ.
Lastly, Christ identifies Himself was being “the beginning
of the creation of God”. Strange that
the sequence begins with the ending of all things, followed by the middle, and
concludes with our Genesis. But how
relevant to the church of today, that the revelation we need most of Jesus
Christ, is one of being our Creator. How
many a modern believer has succumbed to the ideas of evolution, relegating the
story of our Genesis to mere allegory, without scientific fact. How many forsake the idea of our God having
the power to create, and worse, the power to re-create by His sheer will and
command. This central tenet tears at the
fabric of our very salvation, for if we are to be remade, it must be by the power
of a God who is able to create and re-create in the first place. If all our God did was offer a spark of life
that evolved dinosaurs into primates into man, then what hope do we have, that
is He is able to will us into the creations He intended us to be. Our enemy attacks our origins because he
understands this very well. Satan wishes
no finer achievement than to eliminate the hope of re-creation out of the
capabilities of our God. So he attacks
the ideas of the story of our Genesis, followed by a full assault on the literality
and accuracy of the Bible itself, to which Jesus Christ is the faithful and
true witness. The war our enemy wages is
to cause us to set aside the Bible as accurate, and the idea that our God is
our creator. Should he win, he robs us
of hope, and the only way to see our salvation fulfilled. So to the Laodiceans, and to us, Christ
reminds us, and reveals to us, that He is the Amen, the faithful and true
witness, and the beginning of the creation of God.
The revelation continues in verse 15 … “I know thy works,
that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. [verse 16] So
then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out
of my mouth.” Again Christ reveals that
He has an active knowledge of the goings on in the church belonging to Him in
Laodicea. And His assessment is that
this church is neither dead nor alive in Him, but somewhere in the middle; in
mediocrity. The condition is not
hopeless, but it is far from where He intended the church to be. His preference would have been to be either
cold, or hot. It is the state of
mediocrity that appears to cause Him to want to spue us out of His mouth. He explains the reason behind this state of
the church in verse 17 … “Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with
goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and
miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:”
Ouch. There it is. The reason behind our condition is that
commerce has blinded us to our true spiritual state.
We, like the Laodiceans who preceded us, live in a vibrant
free economy. We trade, and conduct
commerce, and have a higher standard of living in this world than in any that
preceded us. We have the most modern
medicine. We have the ability for
leisure and an interest in the arts. We
are made rich by our trading with merchants from around the world. We mint our own currency and trade it for low
cost imports for the value added skills and innovations we bring to the
world. In so doing, our employment makes
us see ourselves as wealthy and in need of nothing. And we carry this attitude into the church; for
we are rich with the printed word of God at our disposal. The availability of the Bible has never been
so prevalent as it is today. It is
printed in nearly every language, in multiple versions, accessible online, and
taught in a wide variety of denominations each with a particular view on how it
is to be interpreted. Our latest gospel
of success, teaches us that the favor of God is available to us in this world,
in this life, through the acquisition of material blessings, God is longing to
give us. In short, we have determined to
serve both God and our lifestyle of success.
We labor for our “survival” and define the term according to our
means. We then also “go to church” and
attempt to “serve God” as we are able, allowing for the fact that we must work
in order to eat and fund the ministry.
We consider ourselves the jewel of the Christian church, able to fund
with our means, the ministry that must be spread into all the world before He
returns.
But this is not the reality in which our God sees us. He reveals to us that our true state is one
that begins with wretchedness. Our
modern medicine has not prevented our degeneration, nor has our modern
Christian teachings prevented us from becoming truly wretched before our
God. We have too often abandoned the
salvation of Jesus Christ that begins with our full submission and dependence
on Him alone, with a trust in ourselves and our will power, and our Biblical
knowledge and doctrines. We have
determined to partner with God to enact our salvation, doing our best first,
and trusting Him to make up the difference.
We believe our own actions must happen “ahead” of the transformation He
offers. We believe our salvation depends
first upon us, and is only made up for, by Christ who bridges the difference in
our self-made-holiness and our God. In
so doing we turn ourselves away from His Holy Spirit and real reform, choosing
to continue wrestling with our sins, and our desires to sin. In this we have become wretched creatures
completely unaware of our true state of being.
We fail to see that we are miserable in this state of
constantly fighting within ourselves the losing battle of wanting to sin all
the time. Our lives are spent in misery
and guilt over what our hands find to do, in spite of the knowledge they should
not. We struggle and lose against sin
over and over again, knowing we should not sin, yet choosing to do so, again
and again. We have no joy in our
Christianity, for we are not living the life of freedom, but still stuck in the
mire of what we know we should be doing.
This state of misery is made worse for us, because we have not the time
to see it corrected. We must get back to
work, in order to “survive”. Our American
dream is founded in the idea that we can pull ourselves up by our own
bootstraps, work hard, and reap the rewards of success. We bring these ideas into the church and
believe if we but work harder on ourselves, we will become better people. But like the alcoholic that remains an
alcoholic all of his life, we reject the fundamental healing Christ would bring
to us. We reject His longing to see the
desire for sin itself, removed from who we are.
So we remain in misery and deceive ourselves as to our true condition.
We are in fact, poor, blind, and naked. Our spiritual condition is one of poverty,
not one of riches He so longs to give us.
We are blind, in that we do not see what it is like to love others like
He loves them. We are naked in that we do
not have His robe of righteousness to cover us, instead trying to knit leaves
from our garden to hide our shame, and failings. We stand naked before our God, because we
have refused to take up His covering. We
want our own. We continue to approach
God trying to wear righteousness of our own making, instead of accepting His
for ourselves. We continue to try to
reform our actions with an unreformed heart and we fail miserably at it. But to compound our error, we are blind to
our failures. We hold fast to the ideas
of partnering with God, and so offer Him a measure of dependence, but not
enough as to see us completely changed.
For while we hold on to the ideas of self-reliance, we hold on to our
wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked state. We deceive ourselves that our financial
success is mirrored in our spiritual lives.
It is not. Our money no more
makes us pure, than does our determination to see ourselves made pure. Only Christ can make us pure, only Christ can
change who we have become.
The remedy begins in verse 18 for our state … “I counsel
thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white
raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do
not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.” Christ likens Himself to a traveling merchant
who frequents the city of Laodicea. He
counsels us to buy of Him the commerce that alone is important. We are to acquire “gold tried in the fire”,
or gold that has been made pure by the fire of affliction and trials. Pure gold is gold without other
contaminants. The gold or currency
Christ offers is not mixed with a desire for wealth in this world, but for wealth
in the life He offers. His currency is
faith that transforms how we love others.
To be rich is not to be found in the acquisition of partial impurity,
but in the pure service of love to others, made possible by a faith that He
will re-create us to be who we are supposed to become, instead of who we
are. The white raiment He offers is to
give us His righteousness instead of our own.
It is not bridging the difference between our best intentions and
actions and our God that He offers, it is the full distance. As we have no righteousness of our own, He
offers us His instead. Our victories
will never be our own, they will be His wrought within us. We can ONLY be clothed, if we accept His
clothing to cover our shame. Lastly, He
offers us eyesalve to anoint our eyes to see truth. He does not wish us to remain blind to our
condition whether as it is, or as it should be.
We are offered His Spirit to bring to life the Word of God within
us. We are offered an end to our
self-deception, and our self-reliance, and to be made free by our Creator. Our eyes are to be opened to the truth of
Jesus Christ, this is the beginning of wisdom.
Our reliance on self has kept us blind, but as we rely on Him for our
salvation, we begin to see clearly what it means to love others and not
ourselves.
As with the six revelations to the churches that preceded
Laodicea, the message and intent of our God is ever to see us redeemed and
saved. He again reiterates the reason
for His admonitions in verse 19 … “As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be
zealous therefore, and repent.” Christ
does not reveal the truth of our condition to see us wander into
depression. This by contrast is a
message of hope. It is His so great love
for us, that He reminds us, it is the motivation for the hard news of our true
spiritual state. We may endure His
rebuke, because it comes with love and with a means of our salvation. We are to be zealous and repent. Zealous not in ourselves and in our own
strength, as that has just been revealed to be of no value. We are to be zealous in our submission and
dependence on God. It leaves us free
from the burden of judgment, allowing us to live in the joy of loving
others. We do not need to purge others
of sin, but instead are free to love them while God enacts the reforms they
need in their hearts, and does so likewise with us. Our repentance deserves our zealous
attention. We cannot repent for others,
but we can repent for ourselves. Thus is
the basis for His ministry revealed, we are to love others, and repent for
ourselves.
Christ again likens Himself to a traveling merchant visiting
the city of Laodicea in verse 20 … “Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if
any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup
with him, and he with me.” This reveals
to us, that Christ does not take a passive stance in the work of our
salvation. He is not sitting in His
house, waiting for us to find Him.
Instead He is standing right outside the door of our home, knocking to
try to get in. We must open the door,
but need go no further to find Him, for He is right there waiting. He does not kick down our door (despite times
when I wish he would). It is left to us
to open it, or ignore it. The door of
our hearts is not much different than the door of our homes. While Christ remains outside of our home and
our hearts, the inside remains unchanged, unaltered, and struggling between
what we know to be right, and what we want and do. This is the condition He proposes to
change. He proposes to bring into
harmony our desires with what is right.
He proposes to change what we want, from the inside out, and therefore
what we do. He proposes a level of
intimacy with us. He wishes to eat with
us, and we with Him. We receive of Him
the gifts of pure gold or love made pure by faith. He proposes to offer us His purity in
exchange for our corruption, His white raiment for the shame of our nakedness. He proposes to have us see the truth of who
He is, instead of remaining blind to who we are. And He is actively pursuing us, for no other
reason that He loves us just that much.
Then, as if all the previous promises were not enough, the
gifts again just begin to boggle the mind as in verse 21 we find … “To him that
overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame,
and am set down with my Father in his throne.”
What must be overcome then? The
desire to serve our lifestyle of success while trying to serve God, the belief
in ourselves that we may partner with God to see ourselves saved, the idea that
we can craft our own righteousness instead of just accepting His; all these things must be overcome the same
way in which Christ overcame. Christ
was victorious because He ever submitted His own will fully to that of His
Father. Christ did not trust His own
humanity or strength, but instead trusted fully the Love of His Father to see
Him through this world. We are to
overcome by no other means. We are to
trust to Christ, that He will reform who we have become. We are to trust to Christ, that He will offer
us His gold of love made pure by faith in Him.
That He will clothe us with His righteousness and white raiment. That He will anoint our eyes that we may see
the truth of who He is and stay focused only on Him. This reliance alone on something outside of
ourselves is the same method He used, and the only method that will work for
us. There are no alternatives. If we are to be saved from ourselves, it will
be Christ alone who saves us.
Upon allowing that salvation to take place, we are to be
granted the privilege of entering His home, and sitting down at His throne with
Him, just as He did with His own Father.
No longer is He standing outside the door of our pitiful homes asking to
gain entry to see us saved. Instead we
are brought to His home, to be invited to go into His very throne room, and
have a seat with our God of the universe, and of love itself. This is an elevation for us that we do not
deserve. But then, nothing of our
salvation is something we deserve, it is ALL a gift. We are to see and sit near the very throne of
Christ Himself. For me, I would be happy
to curl up under His seat and find the blissful sleep of a child at rest. It is enough to know you are near Him, and
are so safe in His presence. But it is
not merely rest He offers, He offers fellowship, interaction, and a continued intimacy
with us we have yet to begin to understand.
Even the very throne of God is not to be restricted from us, we are to
be able to enter that room and fellowship with Christ because of the gift and
promise He offers to us. Nothing is
withheld from a love so great for each of us.
The final revelation to the church of Christ is concluded in
verse 22 … “He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the
churches.” The Holy Spirit once again
joins in the message to us and to the churches in the day of John. The final time period to which Laodicea
belongs is not clear, other than to believe it is the final time period before
His returning to us. Its beginning is
unclear, perhaps in the mid 1800’s, but its ending is marked by His return to
take us home. However, the condition our
church finds itself in today; is much like the characteristics that marked the
church of Laodicea in its time. We are
affluent. We have modern medicine. We have the luxury of an interest in the
arts. The conditions that plagued
Laodicea plague us today. It is not our
affluence, or medicine, or interest in the arts that is our enemy. It is our belief that these luxuries somehow
make us spiritually ready and spiritually wealthy. Only a reliance on Christ can do that. Only He offers us true wealth. Only He offers us real healing. Only He can reveal to us the truth of who He
is, philosophies and ideologies based in Him exceed any found in the art of our
day. It is Christ alone who remains our
hope and our salvation. This was the
common theme throughout all the messages to each of the churches that composed
His perfect church. His admonitions,
exhortations, and promises remain all centered on our redemption. Despite our state, none is without hope, or
beyond the reach of His redemption. We
need but accept what He so longs to give us, and we see His salvation
re-created in who we are, and who we are to become.
This concluded the first revelations to the church of Jesus
Christ in book John relayed.
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