Verse 1
The Seven Messages
The chapters 2 and 3 are extraordinarily interesting. Therefore I first would like to make some introductory remarks before we deal with the text itself. In these two chapters seven churches are being addressed with regard to their actual spiritual condition. It is however clear that the meaning goes beyond what happened then.
It is also clear that you can draw spiritual lessons from their spiritual condition for our time. But these two chapters show in the seven churches also seven sequential stages in the church history, from the beginning of the church until its rapture. They contain a prophetic outline of the history of Christianity, for the whole book is after all prophecy (Revelation 1:3), thus including both of these chapters.
You read here the history of the church as she has behaved and developed on earth through the ages. Therefore it is all about her responsibility. On other places in the Bible you read about the church as how she has been formed and seen by God. In that case we speak about the church in accordance to the counsel God, wherein everything is perfect. That is not the side from which the church is presented in this book. In this book of judgment the house of God, Christianity, is the first to be judged (1 Peter 4:17). This judgment takes place in accordance to the way she has fulfilled her duty to be a testimony (a ‘lampstand’) in the world. After the judgment over Christianity, from chapter 4 the judgment over Israel and over the world follow.
Briefly said you can see in the sequential missives the following periods in the church history:
1. Ephesus (means: lovely) is the time that followed right after the death of the apostles when outwardly a lot of things were in order, but the first love had been abandoned.
2. The time of Smyrna (means: bitterness) corresponds with the time of the Christian persecution by the Romans. Of all these persecutions there were ten that took place under ten Roman emperors (probably the tribulation of ‘ten days’ refers to that, Revelation 2:10). That period comprises the end of the second century and the third century.
3. The time of Pergamum (means: fortress) runs from the fourth up to the seventh century. It begins with the acceptance of Christendom by emperor Constantine. Christendom became the state religion. It was advantageous to become a Christian.
4. The time of Thyatira (means: incense or sacrifice) covers the period of the seventh to the sixteenth century. In that period the (roman) church dominates in the person of the pope over the world, the contrary of Pergamum, where the church sought protection from the world. As the dominating church the roman church has been dismissed (for the time being), but as an institution it still exists and it will exist until the coming of the Lord.
5. In the time of Sardis (means: remnant) the protestantism originates from the roman church and exist next to it in the sixteenth century. Also the protestant churches will remain to exist till the coming of the Lord.
6. During the period of the protestantism which is being characterized by a confession without life, the period of Philadelphia (means: brotherly love) arises in the nineteenth century. God’s grace causes in the dead protestantism a strictly biblically grounded revival movement that separated itself from it. As well as the roman-catholicism and the protestantism also Philadelphia will remain till the coming of the Lord.
7. The final stage of the church history is characterized by Laodicea (means: people’s government) which also finds its origin in the nineteenth century. The characteristic of Laodicea is lukewarmness. There is the high confession of Philadelphia, but the Lord is outside. We find that spiritual condition in various churches and denominations that have come forth from the revivals of Philadelphia, but which are today often spiritually worse than Sardis. Also Laodicea remains till the coming of the Lord.
As a conclusion of these introductory remarks on the chapters 2 and 3, I would just like to draw your attention to the structure of the messages, which is almost the same in all of them:
1. The command “write”.
2. A feature of the description of the Lord Jesus from chapter 1 followed by “says this”.
3. The judgment “I know”.
4. The judgment (except for Smyrna and Philadelphia) “but I have … against you”.
5. The admonition (threat or exhortation) “repent”.
6. The appeal “he who has an ear”.
7. The promise “to him who overcomes”.
It is also remarkable that in the last four messages the promise is first given and then the appeal follows.
Revelation 2:1. The first message regards the church at Ephesus. This church has played a major and typical role in the early church history:
1. Paul has worked there during his third missionary journey for over three years (Acts 19);
2. he has spoken out his most important farewell speech to the elders of Ephesus with a warning for the oncoming decay (Acts 20:17-Habakkuk :);
3. he wrote to them his letter with the highest Christian truths (the letter to the Ephesians);
4. after Paul also Timothy worked there (1 Timothy 1:3); to him Paul wrote his farewell letter concerning the decay in the last days and about the path of the believer in that time (the second letter to Timothy);
5. and now the Lord addresses the church in Ephesus as the first of the seven churches.
John does not receive the order to write to the church in Ephesus, but to the angel of the church. As I already remarked earlier, angel means ‘messenger’ or ‘representative’. To think of a literal angel will cause more troubles than solutions. As a matter of fact, there is nowhere an example to be found that an angel fails in doing his duty and even less that an angel is called to repent. The angel represents people who are responsible for the condition in the church.
You could think of persons who have a special responsibility in a church, like elders. But that doesn’t alter the fact that also the rest of the people have a responsibility. Each member of the church is responsible to ensure that the church is faithful to God’s Word and that there is faithfulness in testifying of the truth. You can compare this with the people of Israel and the king who ruled over them. God held the king responsible for the condition of the people, but He did not decrease the guilt of the people in that way.
The Lord Jesus presents Himself here as “the One who holds the seven stars in His right hand”. All stars are in His hand. He “holds” them in His hand (cf. Revelation 1:16) and has them ‘in’ His hand (Revelation 1:20). That indicates power and authority, protection and support to prevent her from total decline, but also to exercise control over her. This authority He exercises in all local churches and He checks up on it whether His authority is taken into consideration in the right way. Therefore He walks “in the middle of the seven golden lampstands”. He, as it were, goes around to see whether the lampstands are burning clearly, whether they spread the light which He has kindled.
Now read Revelation 2:1 again.
Reflection: Learn the order of the seven messages by heart and try to relate them to the sequential periods in the church history.