Friday, June 20, 2014

"Ephesus: Return to Love." Revelation 2:1-7 June 15, 2014

- I want to begin this morning message with a question that I think is appropriate for Father's Day.
- Do you remember what it was like when you first fell in love?
- It's a question that hangs over Jesus message for the church of Ephesus.
- As we begin thinking about Ephesus, we start to wonder: What was Ephesus like?
- Ephesus was the capital of the Roman province of Asia, a bustling center of trade & commerce & was well known for its temple dedicated to Artemis (Diana), which was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world & a popular tourist attraction.
- Some 30+ years before the writing of Revelation, on his third missionary journey, the apostle Paul spent 2 1/2 years there preaching & teaching, publicly & privately.
- Finally, however, the silversmiths started a riot because so many were becoming Christians that they could no longer profit from selling silver replicas of the idol of Artemis.
- Previously the city depended on the tourists who worshiped Artemis & the sale of idols for much of this prosperity.
- Artemis was a fertility goddess & there was an active sex cult associated with her which promoted all kinds of sexual immorality.
- Later, Paul appointed Timothy as chief elder, & wrote the church of Ephesus a letter during his detention in Rome as well as two letters to Timothy.
- History also records that the apostle John served as chief elder after Timothy & remained in the city to his final days. His constant word to the Ephesian Christians, even when he had to be carried out to speak, was simply: "Little children, love one another."
- The apostle John was utterly convinced of the power of love, as he wrote in first John:
- "This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. & we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers." (1 John 3:16, NIV)
- That brings me to our passage & the questions we need to ask about it.
- Why was Christ pleased that the Ephesian church did not give up?
- The Lord Jesus knew their toil & patient endurance; He knew how they could not tolerate false teaching; he saw how they tested false apostles; he saw that they endured for Christ's sake & not their own; he also knew of their intolerance for the teaching of the Nicolaitans, which translated means, destroyer of the people.
- These false teachers compromised their faith to enjoy the sexually immoral practices of the cult of Artemis.
- The Ephesians were busy with good works & willingly suffering for Christ. Also to their credit, they knew evil & false teaching when they saw it & refused to put up with it.
- How can we spot false teaching?
- When it promotes controversy & division rather than reaching others for the sake of God's kingdom in Christ.
- When the motive is for the teachers to make names for themselves.
- When the truth of what the Scriptures teach is contradicted.
- What one thing did Christ say the toil & patient endurance of the Ephesian church lacked?
- The church of Ephesus lacked love. They cared more for right-thinking & right believing than they cared for the Greatest Commandments.
- According to John's gospel, which was written in Ephesus, the Lord Jesus said, "By this all will know that you are my disciples if you have love for one another." (John 13:35)
- Later, John also wrote to them, "This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. & we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers." 1st John 3:16
- Again, to his dying day, John kept reminding the Ephesians, "Little children, love one another."
- But even with all these reminders, they forgot.
- How easy it is to forget love.
- How easy it is to lose sight of what is most important.
- The apostle Paul tells us the fruit of the Holy Spirit is love.
- Love is the evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit.
- Love is the energy which drives the church.
- Love is the energy of renewal in the church.
- Love also fuels the church's vision.
- Without love, Paul wrote, I am nothing.
- Without love, all our toil & labor, all our patient endurance will amount to nothing.
- What did Christ say was the solution to the Ephesians' lack of love?
- The Lord Jesus told them to do two things:
- First, Remember: "remember from where you have fallen."
- He called them to check the past & remember.
- At one time, the apostle Paul had commended them for their love in his letter to them.
- 30+ years in the past, Ephesus was a loving church, glowing brightly with the love of Christ.
- But now God had called on them to remember, remember the way it once was when they first loved the Lord.
- In calling the church of Ephesus to remember from where they had fallen, the Lord Jesus was not giving them permission to embrace a nostalgic longing for the good old days because in the mind of our Lord the best days are yet to come.
- Checking the memory of how it used to be is not an invitation to dwell in the past, but to recall the spiritual high points in the life of the church to cause the church to evaluate where she stands in the present.
- We also need to remember our spiritual high points that remind us what we stand for, who we are in Christ & where we have been.
- The only way to keep from forgetting our first love is to practice remembering & the best practice is rediscovering love every day.
- The second thing the Lord Jesus told the church of Ephesus they needed to do was: Repent.
- "Repent & do the works you did at first," he said.
- Repentance involves a change of mind which includes a change of action.
- The Ephesian church needed to repent & return to its first love because a church without love is going the opposite direction God wants it to go.
- A church without love is traveling down the road away from God.
- Repent, he said, & do the things you did at first.
- This is why I think this is such a crucial instruction for us on Father's Day & why I asked the question I did at the beginning: Do you remember what it was like when you first fell in love?
- Fathers & husbands those things you used to do to show your wife & your children that you loved them, & have stopped doing, remember, repent & do those things again. (The same goes for mothers and wives)
- Church, says the Lord Jesus, those things you used to do to show me, your great God, how much you loved me & have stopped doing, remember, repent & do those things again.
- When you are in love, you do certain things & they keep the fire of love burning strong & bright.
- Repentance, fixing & renewing love means doing the same kinds of things you did when you first fell in love.
- It doesn't always mean the exact same things, but it does mean doing similar kinds of things.
- Renewing love is a process of discovery & rediscovery.
- Renewing love means risking trying new things or doing old things in new ways, but always remembering where you've been, who you are in Christ & where you are going.
- The Lord Jesus, by instructing his church to repent, did not & does not want his church to have an emotional experience.
- He's not selling a feel good high.
- He is also not interested in the church waiting until she feels bad about her lack of love.
- He wants the church to get back to keeping the Greatest Commandments & the new commandment in the spirit they were given, a spirit of love & grace.
- In short, the renewal of love in the church requires one thing: hearts willing to obey the call to repentance.
- The Spirit of God calls the church to be renewed & the choice is left to us.
- We have to remember the forgiveness we have received & the serious nature of sin to keep the joy of forgiveness in our hearts.
- What would happen to the Ephesian church if they did not repent & obey Christ?
- The Lord said, "If not, I will come to you & remove your lampstand from its place, unless you repent."
- In chapter 1, the Lord Jesus said that "the lampstands are the churches."
- These lampstands also represent true Judaism, as the menorahs, the lampstands of the Temple, are light for the priests, so the church is a source of light for its community.
-To remove a lampstand from its place is to remove the church as a source of light to the community.
- The consequence of disobedience & unrepentance for the Ephesians is: they will cease to exist as a church.
- The lesson is that no church is permanent. Each church is only as secure as her continued loving devotion to Jesus Christ
- Ephesus obeyed Christ's warnings & was glowing with love in the early 100s A.D., but by the Middle Ages Christian witness had all but ceased to exist.
- One report tells of a traveler who visited the area meeting only three Christians who had little knowledge of either Paul or John.
- The church cannot have light without love.
- Like Ephesus, we need to obey Christ's warning before it is too late.
- We need to make love our top priority because our light shines most brightly when we love Christ passionately.
- Why was Ephesus being warned that their lampstand will be removed if they did not repent?
- The Lord Jesus was, in part, talking about natural consequences.
- The church shines the love of Christ as long as the church is energized by love. Without love, she cannot shine.
- A lampstand which does not shine is as useless as a fruit tree which doesn't bear good fruit.
- The church's purpose is to love the world like God loves the world, sacrificially & graciously.
- Jesus was saying that a lightless lampstand is only fit for removal.
- Why is the tree of life relevant?
- The tree of life was in the original Garden of God & humanity was prevented by God from eating its fruit.
- This tree represents eternal life, & what is eternal life?
- The Lord Jesus has already answered that question. "And this is eternal life that they know you, the only true God & Jesus Christ whom you have sent." (John 17:3)
- To know God is to know love. God's reward for love is more love, eternal love in his eternal presence, in heaven.
- Our light shines most brightly when we love Christ passionately.
- The One the church needs to love most is her Lord, Jesus Christ.
- He is the energy behind our love. As the apostle John wrote: "We love because he first loved us" (1st John 4:19) & "This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us & we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers."(1st John 3:16)
- Love is a fire that needs regular attention. Without continued fuel, the flames die & love grows cold.
- How can we rekindle the flames of our love for Christ?
- We must continually look to our Lord Jesus:
- keeping the meaning of his suffering, death, & resurrection before us;
- learning to follow the example he set of self sacrificial witness;
- & living in the light of the promise of eternal life by walking in love
- We must remember from where we have fallen; repent & do the things we did at first.
- As he promised, "to the one who conquers I will grant to eat of the tree of life in paradise of God."

- Our light shines most brightly when we love Christ passionately.

"The Lord Jesus Unveiled" Revelation 1. Sunday, June 8, 2014.

- Before we can jump in & start looking at the seven churches of Revelation & Christ's message for them, we need to ask, what is this book all about?
- In the opening verse of this book the apostle John declares it to be, "the revelation of Jesus Christ." So, this book is about Jesus Christ.
- But what is a revelation?
- A revelation is a revealing, uncovering or unveiling of something hidden or obscured from sight or understanding.
- What kind of literature is the book of Revelation?
- It is prophecy, John says, and it is in the form of a letter or epistle, but most importantly, it is apocalyptic literature.
- What is apocalyptic literature?
- Filled with numbers, symbols & descriptions, this style of writing is like a code which those who have the key can understand so that enemies would not understand its message.
- It is not written to conceal God's message, but to reveal it in profound ways which make the reader/listener think.
- Apocalypses like Revelation were written in tough times & always point to God & demonstrate his glory, anticipating his intervention, the destruction of evil, & the final ushering in of the kingdom of God.
- What was the church going through when John wrote this book?
What is the history behind the book?
- The church was persecuted throughout the Roman empire:
- First, by the Jews because the Jewish leadership decided a few short years before John's exile on Patmos that Christianity was unlawful & would not be recognized as a Jewish sect;
- Second, by Rome, since they were no longer a Jewish sect, Christians were no longer exempt from the Roman cult of Caesar, Rome would require Christians to offer incense to Caesar & declare, Caesar is Lord.
- Why did John write Revelation? For what purpose did Jesus give John this revelation?
- The persecuted Church of the Roman Empire needed the reassurance of Christ's sovereign lordship over the church & over history; the church needed to know that God was still in control.
- The entire book is most assuredly an unveiling of the Lord Jesus Christ as Lord of history & Lord of the church.
- Let's keep asking more questions so that we can continue to get a clear sense of what today's passage meant for the church of John's day & what it means for us today.
- How did John introduce Jesus & why is it important?
- John introduced Christ as the faithful witness, the firstborn from the dead, & the ruler of all the kings of the world. Let's look at these titles John gave Jesus.
- 1.) The faithful witness (martyr). It is no coincidence that the Greek word for witness is the same word we have borrowed for those who die for their faith, martyr.
- In the face of his own martyrdom, the Lord Jesus remained a faithful witness & He calls his church to the same faithful witness.
- Since the Lord Jesus came into the world to witness, martyr, to the truth, then we, the church, also must be faithful witnesses, martyrs, to the truth.
- 2) The firstborn from the dead.
- Faced with Jewish persecution & even death for their loyalty to Christ, the early church needed encouragement.
- Many Christians faced death because of their faith. They needed a strong reminder that the Lord Jesus who died is the firstborn of the dead, i.e., he is not going to be alone in His resurrection. All who die in him will be raised to life.
- Just as the churches of Asia, modern-day Turkey, needed the courage that only Christ's victory could bring, so to we need that same encouragement.
- Unless he comes again during our lifetime, all our lives will end. We will all face death.
- What does it mean to you that our Lord is the living one, alive forever & ever?
- When we are persecuted or even discouraged, we may be tempted to throw in the towel, but Christ's victory calls us to endure.
- 3) The ruler of all the kings of the world.
- The oppression carried out against the church by worldly rulers & authorities pales when compared to knowing that God rules the rulers.
- Jesus is King of kings & Lord of lords (Rev. 17:14; 19:16).
- He is Lord of history. When worldly authorities reign with injustice & oppression, the church needs to be reminded that God is in control.
- "He directs the affairs & destinies of nations" (Stott, Rev.1-3, 15).
- As Paul wrote to the Philippians, "every knee will bow ... & every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father." (Philippians 2:10).
- His faithful witness, his resurrection victory, & his rule remind us of his great love for us.
- When we are reminded of his continual love, our faith is sustained & we can live for him.
- How should we, the church, respond to the wonderful truth that Jesus Christ is Lord?
- First, we need to respond, as John did, with genuine worship. (Read 5b-8)
- We, the church, have free access to God's personal presence to bring to him spiritual sacrifices of worship & service to others administering the love of God.
- Second, we need to respond as witnesses, testifying about Jesus Christ.
- As priests to God freed from sin by Christ's blood, we the church are uniquely qualified to testify as star witnesses who have received & experienced the love of God.
- Because Jesus is Lord, I can obey him victoriously no matter what.
- With the beginning of verse nine, we come to John's vision of Christ & the final section of today's passage of Scripture.
- Before we go on, consider this: How do I see Jesus? How do I picture him? Is he gentle Jesus meek & mild? Is he the Jesus I used to picture in Sunday school when I was a child?
- Jesus reveals himself as he is to everyone who reads, hears and obeys the words of the prophecy of this book & the Jesus we find in Revelation is so much greater than the one we often imagine.
- It was Sunday, the Lord's day, & John was worshiping, in the Spirit, when all of a sudden he heard a voice like a trumpet blast:
- Write in a book everything you see, & send it to the seven churches in the cities of Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, & Laodicea. (Rev. 1:11).
- These seven churches represent all churches, & the seven also represent all that Jesus had to say as a last word to the whole church for the approaching days of trial.
- John turned to see who was speaking with such a voice & he saw seven golden lampstands & standing in the middle of them, someone like a son of man, a human being, but the person John saw was not just a man.
- Those words, son of man, call to mind the words of Daniel 7:13-14, "As my vision continued that night, I saw someone like a son of man coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient One & was led into his presence. He was given authority, honor, & sovereignty over all the nations of the world, so that every people of every race & nation & language would obey him. His rule is eternal – it will never end. His kingdom will never be destroyed.
- This Son of Man is none other than the risen Christ.
- How often do we picture Jesus as John saw him?
- The long robe & golden sash signify royal authority, as God's appointed high priest, king, & judge.
- His presence in the middle of the lampstands point to God's presence among the churches.
- His white hair shows his divine wisdom & fiery eyes the judgment of all evil.
- His feet like bronze glowing in a furnace represent his great power, & the voice like many waters portrays his authority. When he speaks, nothing but he can be heard.
- That he holds the seven stars speaks of his protection over the churches.
- The sharp two-edged sword represents the power & force of his message.
- His face, brilliant like the sun, points to his overwhelming holiness.
- John responds to this awesome vision of Christ by falling on his face in worship, as though dead, but the Lord Jesus said to John what God always says to those who trust him, fear not!
- Fear not, said Jesus, I am the first & the last.
- Fear not, said Jesus, I am the living one. I died, but look – I am alive forever & ever.
- Fear not, said Jesus, I hold the keys of death & the grave.
- Because of Christ's power & his declaration that he is the great I am, we must not fear when it comes to doing what he asks.
- Because Jesus is Lord, I can obey him victoriously no matter what.

- As he said to John, Write down what is now happening & the things that will happen.
- This is a message Christ wants John to share. It is a message for today & a message for the future.
- What of the mystery of the seven stars & seven lampstands?
- The stars, said Jesus, are the angels/messengers of the seven churches.
- These messengers are human beings because the messengers in chapters 2 - 3 receive some rebukes from Christ.
- We must understand these messengers as church leaders only in these first three chapters.
- The lampstands, said Jesus, are the seven churches.
- What Christ wants the churches to remember most keenly is that he is standing among them.
- He is present, & nothing is outside of his control.
- Because Jesus is Lord, I can obey him victoriously no matter what.
- Jesus declared his followers to be the light of the world.
- "But," as John Stott said, "the church's light is as borrowed as the moon's. If the stars are to shine & the lamps are to burn, they must remain in Christ's hand & in Christ's presence" (Stott, Rev. 1-3, 17).
- In verse two of our passage for this morning, the apostle John has claimed that this book is the word of God & the testimony of Jesus Christ.
- If that is true, & I believe that it is, then we must allow these words to penetrate our lives deeply, impacting our faith in Christ, & strengthening our will to follow him. No matter the cost!
- Over the next several weeks we are going to dig into what the glorified Lord Jesus had to say to seven churches & he not only spoke to them, but he is speaking to us & we must remember:

- Because Jesus is Lord, I can obey him victoriously no matter what.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

"What About the Sinful Heart?" Genesis 4:16-26. Sunday, June 1, 2014.

- This morning I want to discuss the sinful heart.
- Last week, we saw how Cain inherited Adam's rebellion & how his behavior was worse than his father's.
- While Adam sinned, he repented & turned back to God; but while Cain sinned & regretted it, he did not repent & turn back to God.
- This week, we will see how Cain's sin continued with his line & the downward spiral of the sinful heart with Lamech as the main example.
- Last week we saw that part of God's punishment of Cain was that he would be a wanderer, banished from the presence of the Lord; however, even though Cain did go away from God's presence, he didn't become a wanderer.
- He settled in a certain land, east of Eden; Nod, which means wandering, Cain wanders away spiritually, but not physically.
- Remember, Cain regretted killing his brother, but he did not repent of killing his brother & so, angry with God & angry with himself he sentenced himself to a life of spiritual wandering
- Cain remembers that God put a mark of protection on him & that mark reminds him of God's grace.
- By settling east of Eden, he settled outside of God's will for his life.
- How often in life do we do this?
- How often do we wander away from God spiritually, choosing to do the things that we want to do or that we think are best?
- The job we take, how we spend our money, the TV & movies we watch, the people we date & marry, the friends we choose...
- How often do we choose to settle just east of Eden, just outside of what God's will is for our life?
- After the birth of his son Enoch, Cain chose to build a city in honor of his son, naming it Enoch, "Dedication."
- Proud of his son & proud of the city he established, the unrepentant Cain settled down & dedicated himself to continuing his family line & legacy, a line that would continue to wander away from God.
- So we're starting to get a picture of why Cain settled & built a city, Cain was not only a jealous murderer, he was also proud.
- His pride drew him into the worship of self.
- We see this as he builds a city & names it after his son.
- Cain was focussed on celebrating his own accomplishments.
- By building that city, he was building a monument to man, to himself.
- We also do this by times.
- Don't get me wrong, it's important to celebrate successes in life, but in doing so we must point to God & give him the credit.
- If our successes are born out of sin & we have not repented, then we are only celebrating ourselves.
- If so, we are still living east of Eden, building monuments to man.
- Now, let's look at Cain's descendant, Lamech.
- Lamech represents the seventh generation descended from Adam through Cain.
- & we know that the number seven is significant in the Bible, it represents the number of completeness, so Lamech is meant to be an example of the heart that is completely ruled by sin.
- What do we learn about Lamech?
- He was a bigamist, i.e., he had more than one wife, & he was also a murderer, about which he bragged to his wives, Adah & Zillah.
- Lamech was shameless; he displayed no amount of shame or regret for his actions, unlike his ancestor Cain who displayed fear & regret, rather Lamech displayed a dangerous arrogance toward God & others.
- Lamech believed that his life was worth more than his ancestor Cain, 77 times more.
- He lived for himself alone, did as he pleased, shamelessly taking two wives, taking revenge on the young man who hurt him (by murdering him), & defied the living God.
- Despite being made in God's image, Lamech's heart was bent completely towards sin & away from God.
- A godless man, he represents the moral degeneration of Cain's line.
- Cain's sin degraded, degenerated beyond Adam's sin, & Lamech's sin beyond Cain's sin.
- The pattern of sin passing from one generation to the next produces more sin.
- Let's pause here for a minute.
- Cain turned from God & chose to celebrate the human accomplishments & as each generation passed, they became more self-centred, more sinful, as we see in Lamech.
- But we have another example.
- Let's look at Cain's brother, Seth; the Bible tells us: And Adam knew his wife again, & she bore a son & called his name Seth, for she said, “God has appointed for me another offspring instead of Abel, for Cain killed him.” To Seth also a son was born, & he called his name Enosh. At that time people began to call upon the name of the Lord. Gen 4:25-26 (ESV, italics added)
- Seth begins the line that is God centered rather than self-centered.
- Enoch, Seth's descendant, (not to be confused with Enoch, the son of Cain) is the seventh generation from Adam through Seth.
- Unlike Lamech, "Enoch walked with God", i.e., he had a close personal relationship with the Lord.
- Enoch walked with God after he fathered Methuselah 300 years & had other sons & daughters. Thus all the days of Enoch were 365 years. Enoch walked with God, & he was not, for God took him. Gen 5:22-24 (ESV)
- Without intervention, one faithless generation reproduces another faithless generation.
- An ungodly family will produce an ungodly generation.
- But the Bible also says: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates. Deut 6:4-9 (ESV, italics added)
- As we see in Scripture, we must pass on our history; our place in HIS story, telling the next generation of the great grace of God.
- When we share the answer to the sinful heart, lives change & God gets glory.
- Without intervention, one godless generation produces another godless generation.
- Humanity needs a great intervener & God has provided that intervention in Jesus Christ & he has created a new family.
- It takes a godly family to reproduce a godly generation & by the grace God has made available in Jesus Christ the church becomes that godly family.
- We are called to be that godly family & we are the ones to take the message of God's intervention in Christ Jesus to the ungodly.
- We, the church, are charged with the answer for the sinful heart.
- When we share the answer to the sinful heart, lives change & God gets glory.
- Although Lamech was such a greatly sinful man, God's image continued in the creativity & innovation of his sons, who pursued science & art through agriculture, metallurgy, & the invention of musical instruments.
- The people of our world today have that same image of God in their creativity & innovation.
 - & they too need the intervention of Jesus Christ so that God's image might be completely restored in them & their creativity & innovation bring glory to God.
- We, the church, are charged with the answer for the sinful heart.
- When we share the answer to the sinful heart, lives change & God gets glory.