Thursday, December 26, 2024

2024.12.26 Hopewell @Home ▫ Revelation 2:8–11

Read Revelation 2:8–11

Questions from the Scripture text: Whom does Revelation 2:8 address? How does Jesus identify Himself to them? What three things does He know about them (Revelation 2:9)? But what is their ultimate condition? What does He know about whom else? What do they call themselves? What does Jesus call them? What does He tell them not to do (Revelation 2:10)? What are they about to do? Who is about to do what to them? So that what may be done to them? For how long? What must they do? Until what happens? And who will give them what? Whom does Revelation 2:11 address? What is he to do? Who is speaking? To whom? About whom? By what will he not be hurt?

What comfort is there for suffering Christians? Revelation 2:8-11 looks forward to the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In these four verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that the Lord’s fellowship with us and knowledge of us is the sweet, sustaining comfort for suffering Christians.

The Lord Himself has suffered. Smyrna was a hotbed of the cult of the emperor. Jews were exempt from having to worship him, so it was profoundly harmful when they disowned the Christians, and believers lost that protection. But the Lord Jesus knew what it was to be turned upon by the Jews and betrayed unto the Romans. He is not only the Living God (“the First and the Last,” Revelation 2:8). He is also a true man “who was dead and came to life.” This is important, because of the saints in Smyrna are about to die for the faith: “be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life” (Revelation 2:10). He is both the God Who can give them this life and the Man Who has been there before.

The Lord knows their suffering. It is important that He also knows their works. Believers who suffer may wrongly conclude that they have brought their suffering upon themselves. It is possible that these faithful believers were being shamed as overzealous or foolhardy by those who saw offering a pinch of incense as a small, wise compromise. By coming and speaking pure comfort to them and noting that He know their works (Revelation 2:9), the Lord affirms that they have not brought their suffering upon themselves.

The Lord knows their true condition. Jesus says to them, “but you are rich.” This is their true condition in the Lord. Often, we ourselves do not know our true riches, our true blessedness, our true peace. We can be overwhelmed by visible, palpable circumstances. We forget our riches. We need to be told by Christ. When He Who tells us this is Himself more riches than all creatures taken together, it rings true. They were truly rich. If you are a believer, you are truly rich!

The Lord knows what the wicked are doing. Jesus’s denunciation of the Smyrnian Jews is scathing. By disavowing the Christians, they have rejected Christ. This is not just treachery against man but blasphemy against God. Like all churches that abandon the truth about Christ, they “are  synagogue of Satan” (Revelation 2:9)—making them the equivalent of some Jews whom Jesus encountered in His earthly ministry (cf. John 8:44). What  comfort to know that, even if the whole world sees nothing wrong in their behavior, the Lord Himself knows it and condemns it.

The Lord knows what the wicked will do. He tells them not to fear. But it’s not because there isn’t anything fearful in front of them. Indeed, it’s not just the Jews or the people of Smyrna who are against them; it is the devil himself (Revelation 2:10). Some of them will be imprisoned, but others will have to be faithful unto the death. But in either case, the devil’s purpose is secondary to Christ’s superintending purpose. Those who are imprisoned are being tested—having their genuineness proven and displayed. Those who die are receiving the crown of life. And “ten” being one of the numbers of completion, the implication is that this suffering is for a predetermined, set, limited time. We don’t know what the wicked will do. But the Lord knows. In fact, they will do whatever He has intended for good.

Live twice, so that you may die only once. Having told them all of these things, the Lord puts all of this into an eternal context for them. If they are born again, if they have “ears to hear” (Revelation 2:11), the new ears of the new life, then they will be those who overcome by virtue of the life of Christ in them. We must live twice; we must have this new life, because there is a second death coming in which those who have suffered the first death outside of Christ are cast into the lake of fire (cf. Revelation 20:14). It would be eternally, infinitely foolish of us to try to escape the harm of persecution in this life, or even of death, only to suffer the harm of the second death.

So Jesus, by His Spirit, through His ministers, speaks these things to the churches. He speaks these things to you. Dear suffering Christian, the Lord knows all about it, and He sends you this word of comfort. And if you are not currently suffering, note that Your Savior still sends you this word. Take it to heart, so that if the day should come in His good and wise providence, you will be prepared to suffer well: not fearing, being faithful until death, and overcoming by faith.

What have you suffered? What are you suffering? How have you coped with it in the past? How are you doing so now? What can you do to bring this passage to bear upon that suffering? How can you be praying for other Christians who are suffering?

Sample Prayer: Lord, thank You for reminding us that You Yourself have suffered and overcome. Forgive us, for we have sometimes been unwilling to suffer. And we have been forgetful of Your sympathy, fellowship, and compassion. So, we have been fearful, or we have wavered in our faithfulness. But You have come, in Your Word, and comforted us by Your intimate, personal knowledge of our circumstances. Forgive us our sin, and strengthen us in Yourself we pray, in Your Name, AMEN! 

 Suggested songs: ARP59A “Free Me, My God” or TPH509 “Why Should Cross and Trial Grieve Me?”

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