Excerpt
from
Henry (Harry) Allen Ironside’s
commentary on
Revelation
covering chapters 2 and 3 of
The Revelation of Jesus Christ
an excerpt from
H. A. Ironside’s
commentary on Revelation
LECTURE III
THE SEVEN
CHURCHES
(Chapter 2)
We now turn to the letters addressed to the first four churches, as found
in chapter 2. In the last address I
tried to make it clear that the key to the structure of the book is the 19th
verse of the first chapter. We have
already been occupied with the things which the apostle John had seen -- that
is, the first vision of the book, where he beheld the glorified Lord in the
midst of the lampstands, as set forth on the chart.
The third division is clearly indicated in the opening words of chapter
4, where in the Revised Version we read, “After these things I looked,
and behold, a door was opened in heaven.”
Necessarily then, the second division must take in simply what we have in
chapters 2 and 3 -- “the things which are” (present, continuous tense) -- the
things which are now in progress; and this is the only part of the Apocalypse
that has to do specifically with the present, the church period, though it is
all written for our instruction, our warning, and our encouragement.
In fact, I believe that the real value of the Revelation consists in
this: that it gives us the full-grown trees which we now see as developing
saplings. We need this book in
order to judge aright the various movements that are now going on.
For myself, I am sure that if I did not know something of the teaching of
this book, I would long since have been identified with many movements which I
have come absolutely to distrust, because I believe I can see, by a careful
study of the Apocalypse, what the end of them will be.
Let me illustrate: Someone
asks concerning the so-called “Church Federation scheme.”
Wouldn’t it be a wonderful thing if all the churches united?
If we simply had one great organization, wouldn’t it be grand?
All could agree to accept a common creed so worded that everyone could
subscribe to it, and so the shame of Christendom’s divisions be at an end.
Now, why not go in for something like that?
Would not this be the fulfillment of the prayer of our Lord, “that they
all may be one?” Well, I might be
caught by such a proposal, but I turn to the Book of Revelation and I learn that
just such a religious federation is going to arise after the church of God has
been caught away to be with the Lord Jesus Christ; and it is designated in the
17th chapter as “Babylon the Great.”
This will be the big world-church.
The present movement is just a preparation for this, and when I have the
light from heaven shining upon it in the Book of the Revelation, I say, that if
that is the way it is going to end, the thing to do is to have no part in it
now. Separation from evil -- not
fusion of diverse systems -- is the divine order: and so we see that the
prophetic book throws the light of the future upon events and movements that are
in progress at present, in order that we may take warning and be preserved from
that which is contrary to the mind of God.
Before we begin our study of “The Things which are,” let me give you this
parable. Sometime ago, rummaging
through an old castle, some people came across a very strange-looking old lock
which secured a stout door. They
shook the door and tried to open it, but to no avail.
They tried one way and another to move the lock, but could not turn it.
By and by somebody picked up a bunch of old keys from some rubbish on the
floor and he said, “Maybe I can unlock it.”
He tried one key and it made no impression.
He tried another and it gave a little; another and it gave a little more;
and so on, but none would open the lock.
At last he came to a peculiar old key.
He slipped it into the lock, gave it a turn, and the lock was open.
They said, “Undoubtedly this key was meant for this lock.”
You will understand my parable if I draw your attention to the fact that,
in the 20th verse of the 1st chapter, we are told that there was a mystery
connected with the seven lampstands.
The seven lampstands are said to symbolize the seven churches of Asia,
but there was a mystery connected with them.
While some have tried one key and some have tried another (and there have
been all kinds of efforts made to interpret this mystery), no solution was found
until some devout students of Scripture weighing this portion said, “Might it
not be that inasmuch as this section of the book presents ‘the things which
are,’ God has been pleased to give us here a prophetic history of the church for
the entire dispensation?” But would
the key fit the lock? They compared
the first part of the church’s history with the letter to Ephesus.
Here it fitted perfectly.
They went on and compared the letter to Smyrna with the second part of the
church’s history, and the agreement was most marked.
They went on right down to the end, and when they came to Laodicea they
found that what is written to the church of Laodicea answers exactly to the
condition of the professing church in the days in which we live, and they said:
“There, the mystery is all clear.
The lock has been opened; therefore we have the right key.”
For myself, I have no question that this was in very truth the mind of
the Lord in sending these letters to the seven churches.
Seven churches were chosen because seven in Scripture is the number of
perfection; and you have only to read these seven letters, then take any good,
reliable church history and see for yourself how perfectly the key fits the
lock.
The very names are significant.
It would be impossible to reverse any of these names.
If the order were changed they would not apply.
Take the first one. Ephesus
means “desirable,” such a term as a Greek applied to the maiden of his choice.
Ephesus gives us a picture of the Church as it was in the beginning, when
the Lord held the stars (His servants) in His hand, and controlled their
ministry. He sent them here and
there, just as He would, to proclaim the glad gospel of His grace and to
minister to His saints. But human
systems have largely changed all that.
He walked in the midst of His churches.
His eyes were upon everything, and He was there to admonish, to correct,
and to control. Observe that in the
beginning His Name was the only centre, and unto Him was the gathering of His
saints. Read the second and third
verses:
“I know thy works and thy labour, and thy patience, and how thou canst
not bear them which are evil: and though hast tried them which say they are
apostles, and are not and hast found them liars: and hast borne, and hast
patience, and for my name’s sake hast laboured, and hast not fainted.”
The early church was walking in separation from the world.
The Greek word ecclesia, translated “church” in our Bibles, means
a called-out company. This is God’s
ideal, and every effort to amalgamate the church and the world is opposed to His
mind and must end in confusion, for the church will never convert the world in
the present dispensation. Someone
asked Dr. A.T. Pierson, on one occasion, “Don’t you really think that the world
is getting converted already?”
“Well,” he said, “I admit that the world has become a little churchy, but the
church has become immensely worldly.”
If it were possible that the church could convert the world, that would
be the end of the church. What do I
mean? Simply this, that the church
is a called-out company, and if the world were converted, there would not
be anything else left out of which to call the church.
Believers, in the days of Ephesus, could not bear those who were evil.
In our day, discipline in the church is almost at an end.
In many quarters, anyone is welcome to full participation in all
church-privileges, particularly if they have a good bank account; but in the
beginning it was very different.
That little Ephesian assembly said, “We don’t want growth at the expense of
holiness.” More than that, they
were loyal to the truth. They tried
those who claimed to be apostles, and if they found they were deceivers they
refused them as liars, instead of saying, “Oh well, you know Dr. So-and-so comes
with such good recommendations, he is such a lovely man and so cultured, and
though he doesn’t happen to believe in the virgin birth, the deity of Christ, or
His atonement, etc., still he has so many good qualities that we mustn’t be hard
on him.” The early church would
have said, “Are you a servant of the Lord Jesus Christ?” and put a few serious
questions to him. If he was not
what he professed to be, they soon unmasked him and refused his ministrations.
But in these days teachers can deny almost any truth of Scripture, and
the professing church never knows the difference.
Oh, for more of the zeal and piety of early days!
In verse three we learn that these saints were suffering for the Name’s
sake of the Lord Jesus. It was not
suffering for the name of any denomination, nor yet for some special theories or
usages. It was suffering for
Christ’s sake. For His Name’s sake
they bore trial and endured persecution.
And yet, even then, we have the evidence of early decline.
Fourth verse: “But I have
against thee that thou hast left thy first love.”
They had left their first love.
The heart was drifting away from Christ.
The decline that began in these first days of the church has continued.
There has been no corporate recovery.
That spirit of declension has gone on increasing until the present
Laodicean days.
In the next letter we see that the Lord, whose love never changes,
permitted something to take place to arouse His people from their lethargy.
“And unto the angel of the church in Smyrna write; These things saith the
first and the last, which was dead, and is alive; I know thy works, and
tribulation, and poverty (but thou art rich), and I know the blasphemy of them
which say they are Jews, and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan.”
Smyrna means myrrh. It is
frequently mentioned in Scripture in connection with the embalming of the dead.
Myrrh had to be crushed in order to give out its fragrance.
This sets forth the period when the church was crushed beneath the iron
heel of pagan Rome, yet it never gave out such sweet fragrance to God as in
those two centuries of almost constant martyrdom.
“These things saith the first and the last, which was dead and is alive.”
What a blessed thing to know that the children of God are linked up with
a resurrected Christ! The power of
His resurrection works in them. He
says, “I know thy works and tribulation and poverty, but thou art rich.”
This was the day when the church was hated, outlawed and persecuted.
Instead of worshiping in magnificent buildings, they gathered together in
caves, catacombs and other hidden places, with sentries posted to warn them of
the approach of their foes.
Despised by the world, condemned as enemies of the Empire because of their faith
in and loyalty to Christ, their lives were precious to God.
They were in His eyes rich.
They were poor in this world’s goods, but rich in faith.
But even then, all was not perfection; so He says, “I know the blasphemy
of them which say they are Jews and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan” --
referring to the Judaizing movement that came into the church in the early
centuries. It was the leaven of
Galatianism which had never been wholly judges, and which made astonishing
progress in the second and third centuries.
He says, “Fear not . . . thou shalt have tribulation ten days.”
It is significant that in the two centuries of Roman persecution, which
began with Nero and which terminated 312 A.D., there were ten distinct edicts
demanding that governors seek out Christians everywhere and put them to death.
The last was under Diocletian.
He was the tenth persecutor.
The early Christians believed he would be the last, and he was.
“The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church,” said Augustine.
The testimony of the dying again and again led their very persecutors to
receive the Lord Jesus Christ as their Savior because of the convincing power of
the truth manifested in the martyrs.
Satan’s effort to destroy Christianity by persecution was in vain.
But those were days when it meant something to be a Christian.
When God’s people were being crushed like myrrh, what a sweet odor of
devotion, what fragrance of Christian love was wafted up to the very throne of
God!
Pergamos has two meanings.
It means “marriage,” and “elevation.”
It speaks of the time when the church was elevated to a place of power,
and was married to the world. It
depicts the time when church and state were united, under Constantine and his
successors.
Read the 12th and 13th verses:
“And to the angel of the church in Pergamos write; These things saith he
which hath the sharp sword with two edges; I know thy works and where thou
dwellest, even where Satan’s seat is: and thou holdest fast my name, and hast
not denied my faith, even in those days wherein Antipas was my faithful martyr,
who was slain among you, where Satan dwelleth.”
The Lord Jesus judges everything by the Word.
The word that He spoke will judge the men in the last day.
If you reject it now
it will judge you then. “I
know where thou dwellest,” He says, even on “Satan’s throne.”
What was Satan’s throne? If
you had asked any of the Smyrna believers, they would have pointed you to the
Emperor’s throne in Rome. In
Pergamos you find the very church of God sitting upon the imperial throne.
How did that happen? Those
of you who are familiar with Roman history and church tradition will recall that
after the death of Diocletian and Galerius, Constantine and Maxentius contended
for the throne. Constantine is said
to have seen a vision of a cross of fire and to have heard a voice saying, “In
this sign, conquer.” He wondered
what the vision could mean. He was
told that the cross was the sign of the Christian religion, and that it must
mean that the God of the Christians was calling him to be the champion of the
Christian religion; that if he obeyed the voice he would be victor over the
hosts of Maxentius and become emperor of the world.
He called for Christian bishops and asked them to explain their religion
to him. He accepted the new
doctrine and declared himself to be its God-appointed patron and protector.
Some writers make a great deal of this so-called conversion of
Constantine, but it is questionable if he ever became a child of God by faith in
Christ Jesus. He won a great
victory over his opponent and thus became emperor of the world, and one of his
first acts was to liberate the Christians and to stop all persecution.
He bestowed unwonted honors on the bishops; they sat on thrones with the
nobles of the empire.
It was at this time that the truth of the second coming of Christ was
given up. Before the days of
Constantine the church was looking for Him.
That was their expectation and hope.
But after the great change in their circumstances, this truth was largely
lost sight of. Christian bishops
said, “We have been looking for Christ’s reign but we have been wrong.
Constantine’s empire in Christ’s kingdom.”
They thought the church was already reigning; so it went on until the
days of the Reformation, when the light began to dawn again.
But now note a most interesting thing:
At the very time that the Lord said, “I know where thou dwellest, even
where Satan’s seat (or throne) is,” He goes on to say, “Thou holdest fast my
Name, and hast not denied my faith,” etc. Here
is something very remarkable. At
the same time that Christ sees them sitting on Satan’s throne, He can yet
commend them for holding fast His Name.
It was at that time that the Arian controversy was fought out.
Arius denied the eternity of the Word.
John says, “In the beginning was the Word” -- He always existed.
When everything that had a beginning began, the Word was.
Arius declared that the Word was the greatest of all beings that ever
emanated from God. His opponents
insisted that the Word was one with the Father, in one eternal Trinity --
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit: one God in three Persons.
It was the most tremendous issue the church had ever been called to face,
and, for over a century, it was the burning question that provoked heated
controversy everywhere. For years
the church was almost rent asunder over two words, “homoiosian”
and “homoousian.”
The one word meant “of like substance,” the other “of the same
substance.” The first was the
battle-cry of the Arians; the second of the orthodox, headed by Athanasius,
Bishop of Alexandria. So
irreconcilable were the contending parties that Constantine at last decided to
take a hand in the matter himself, and he called a great church-council, which
convened in the city of Nicea, and there debated the question as to what the
apostolic teaching really had been.
Was Jesus truly God, or was He only the greatest being that God has every
brought into existence? Over three
hundred bishops met together, and Constantine, sitting on a golden throne,
presided as the acknowledged head of the Christian church, at the very time that
he still bore the title Pontifex Maximus, or High Priest of the Heathen -- the
same title that the Pope bears at the present time.
The matter in question was examined from all sides.
Again and again Constantine was called in to quell disturbances; feelings
ran so high. On one occasion it is
related that a brilliant Arian seemed to have almost silenced opposition, and
the great assemblage appeared to be about to cast its vote in favor of the
damnable unitarian heresy, when a hermit from the deserts of Africa sprang to
his feet, clad chiefly in tiger’s skin.
This latter he tore from his back, disclosing great scars (the result of
having been thrown into the arena among the wild beasts, and his back dreadfully
disfigured by their claws), crying dramatically, “These are the brand-marks of
the Lord Jesus Christ, and I cannot hear this blasphemy.”
Then he proceeded to give so stirring an address, setting forth so
clearly the truth as to Christ’s eternal deity, that the majority of the council
realized in a moment that it was indeed the voice of the Spirit of God.
Whether this story be actually true or not I cannot say, but it well sets
forth the spirit pervading many who were in attendance, most of whom had passed
through the terrible persecution of Diocletian.
The final result was that the council of Nicea put itself on record as
confessing the true deity of our Lord Jesus Christ, “Very God and Very God,”
“Light of Lights,” “perfection of perfection” -- God and man in one blessed
Person, nevermore to be separated.
Thus was settled once and forever, in a public way, the acknowledged faith of
the church of God, which held fast His Word, and did not deny His Name.
Did you ever stop to think what would have been the case if the council
had decided the other way? It would
have meant: Unitarianism would have henceforth borne the stamp of orthodoxy, and
the truth of the deity of Christ would have been branded as heresy.
We have no record as to who the Antipas was referred to in the latter
part of the verses above quoted, but it is singular that the word means “against
all.” Many years after the council
of Nicea, when the Arian party were again largely in the ascendency, Athanasius,
that doughty old champion of the truth, was summoned before the Arian emperor
Theodosius, who demanded that he cease his opposition to the teaching of Arius
-- who by the way, was long since dead -- and admit the Arians to the table of
this Lord. This Athanasius refused.
Theodosius reproved him bitterly for what he considered his insubject
spirit, and asked sternly, “Do you not realize that all the world is against
you?” The champion of the truth
drew himself up and answered the emperor, “Then I am against all the world.”
He was a true Antipas, a faithful witness to the end of his days, despite
banishment and opposition of various kinds.
Oh, my brethren, God wants to-day, just such men, men of God, who, for
the truth’s sake, are willing to stand, if need be, against all the world!
We now turn to consider another phase of things in the Pergamos period --
the introduction of the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes in the church.
Balaam taught Balak to cast a stumbling-block before the sons of Israel
by leading them to make unholy alliances with the Midianitish women, as recorded
in Numbers 25:1-9. In figure this
is the union of the church and the world.
During the Smyrna period, Satan sought to destroy the church by
persecution. In the next three
centuries he tried different tactics: he endeavored to ruin the testimony by
worldly patronage from without, and the introduction of false principles from
within. You know it is far more
dangerous for the church to be patronised by the world than when the world is
openly arrayed against it. Take any
of the different denominations in Christendom.
When were they shining most brightly for the Lord?
It was in the days of their first love, when they were suffering from the
world and were the object of its better persecution.
But when those had passed, when the period of persecution ended and the
world began to look upon them with complacency, to greet them with the
outstretched hand and the smiling face, instead of with the sword and the frown,
in every instance decline set in.
So it was in the Pergamos period.
Constantine’s patronage did what Diocletian’s persecution could not do.
It corrupted the church, and she forgot her calling as a chaste virgin
espoused to an absent Lord; then she gave her hand in marriage to the world that
had crucified Him, thus entering into an unholy alliance of which she has never
really repented.
In close connection with this we have the introduction of wrong
principles within -- the teaching of the Nicolaitanes.
Others have often pointed out that this is an untranslated Greek word
meaning, “Rulers over the people.”
Nicolaitanism is really clerisy -- the subjugation of those who were
contemptuously styled “the laity” by a hierarchical order who lorded it over
them as their own possessions, forgetting that it is written, “One is you
Master, even Christ, and all ye are brethren.”
In the letter to Ephesus the Lord commended them for hating the deeds of
the Nicolaitanes, those who, like Diotrephes, loved to have the preeminence
among them. But, in the Pergamos
letter, we have Nicolaitanism designated as a distinct system of teaching.
It was then that clerisy was accepted as of divine origin, and therefore
something that must be bowed to.
All this prepared the way for the Thyatira period, according to the
letter that follows.
I have already tried to point out that every one of these names seems to
be significant. Thyatira is perhaps
the most difficult of all to define.
Scholars tell us that it comes from two words, one meaning a sacrifice,
or an incense-offering; the other, that which goes on continually.
A suggested interpretation, therefore, is “continual sacrifice.”
And this is very significant, because Thyatira undoubtedly
sets forth the period which was the result of the union of church and
State, already noticed. It was in
the 7th century that the Bishop of Rome was first regularly recognized as
Christ’s vicegerent, and visible head of the church.
This was, properly speaking, the beginning of the papacy.
There was no Roman Catholic church, in the full sense, until the Pope was
the acknowledged head of Christendom.
It is important for Protestants to keep this in mind.
You will often hear papists say, “You know the first church was the Roman
Catholic church, and all the different branches of the Protestant church have
simply broken off from Rome. There
was no Protestant church until the days of Luther.”
That is an absolute sophistry.
There was no such thing as the papacy until the 7th century of the
Christian era. For six centuries
before that, the church was becoming more and more corrupt -- had been drifting
further away from the Word of God until, in the 7th century men professing
themselves to be servants of God were ready to acknowledge the Pope as head of
all Christendom. A Roman Catholic
once asked a bright Protestant school-girl, “Where was your church before the
days of Henry VIII?” “Why, sir,
where yours never was, in the Bible,” was her sensible and correct reply.
It is a far cry from the simplicity of early Christians, when in the 7th
century they were ready to own the pretensions of the bishop of Rome.
I said that Thyatira seemed to imply a continual sacrifice.
You will see the significance of this in the great fundamental error of
the church of Rome -- the sacrifice of the mass.
The Roman Catholic priests declare that, in the mass, they offer a
continual sacrifice for the sins of the living and the dead.
There are many things that Protestants might be able to condone.
This is the central, the root, blasphemy -- the denial of the finished
work of the Lord Jesus on Calvary’s cross -- the one, only and all
sufficient offering for the sins of a guilty world.
Every time the priest stands at Rome’s altar to offer the sacrifice of
the mass, he denies the unchanging efficacy of the work wrought by the Lord
Jesus on Calvary’s cross.
I have often pressed this question home to Catholic priests:
“What is your function as a sacrificing priest?”
They say, “It is my privilege to offer up the Lord Jesus from time to
time a continual sacrifice for the sins of the living and the dead.”
I generally put it like this:
“Well, Christ has to be slain that He may be offered up; doesn’t He?” --
“Yes.” “You claim then that every
time you pronounce the blessing, you are sacrificing Christ for the sins of the
living and the dead?” -- “Yes.”
“Well then, you kill Christ afresh every time you offer that sacrifice!”
Then they begin to hedge.
But there is no escape from the horrible conclusion.
The Roman priest says that when he offers the sacrifice of the mass he is
presenting Christ again for the sins of the living and the dead.
And the only way the Christ can be a sacrifice is to be put to death;
therefore, the priest kills Him afresh every time he offers.
They cannot get away from it.
The apostle Peter said at Pentecost, “Him, being delivered by the
determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands
have crucified and slain: whom God hath raised up, etc.”
If Christ has to be offered continually, then every priest is guilty of
murdering the Lord Jesus Christ in the sight of God.
God is going to judge Rome in a little while: so Christ’s letter to
Thyatira properly speaks of this central blasphemy of the church of Rome.
Continual sacrifice? Never!
No other sacrifice is needed.
The dignity of the Lord is so great, the value of His blood is so
absolutely infinite, that it is vain for you or any other man to speak about a
new sacrifice.
You may say, “I agree with you, sir.”
Well; now let me ask, How you a personal interest in that one
offering made once upon the cross?
Can you say, “Thank God, He gave Himself a propitiation for my sins, and He is
my Saviour. I need no other
sacrifice. My soul is resting on
the finished work of Christ. I
require nothing more on which to enter the presence of God.”
But let us turn to the Lord’s address to Thyatira:
“And unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write: These things saith
the Son of God, who hath eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet are like
fine brass.”
It is very significant the way the Lord presents Himself in each one of these
letters, so as to meet the special condition in which the church is found.
When He addresses Himself to the church of Thyatira, He speaks solemnly
as “the Son of God.” Why does the
Lord Jesus Christ emphasize the fact of His deity here?
Because Rome everywhere has accustomed people to think of Him as the Son
of Mary. I once talked with a woman
who told me she would sooner go to Mary than to Christ or the Father.
She said, “There is nobody that has so much influence with a son as his
mother, and if Jesus Christ is inclined to be a bit hard-hearted, I just go to
His good, kind mother, and I ask her to please say a good word to Him for me.”
What a caricature of our Lord Jesus Christ!
Think of having to go to anybody else to win His favor.
Who else could be compared with Him?
Thus Christ is degraded into the position of the Son of Mary, rather than
the Son of God, who came in infinite grace to save poor sinners.
But, observe, He has “eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet are
like fine brass.” This speaks of
His holiness and righteousness. He
must judge all that is evil. And
yet He never overlooks what can be commended.
He goes on to say,
“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 Lord gives Rome credit for a great deal that is good.
Remember from the 7th century on to the present time there has been a
great deal in the way of good works in the Roman Catholic church that cannot be
overlooked. There have been Roman
Catholic nuns and monks who have been ready to lay down their lives for the
needy and the sick. There were
centuries before Luther when every hospital in Western Europe was simply a Roman
Catholic monastery or convent. The
Lord does not forget all that.
Where there is a bit of faith, His love takes note of it all.
If there are hearts in the Church of Rome that, amid the superstition,
reach out to the blessed Lord Himself, He meets them in grace and manifests His
love to them. But having done this,
He then puts His finger on the sore spot:
“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.”
To understand this well, we need to go back to Israel’s history in the
days of King Ahab. Jezebel was an
adept in the art of mixing. She
undertook to unite in one the religion of Israel and the religion of Phoenicia.
That is just what Romanism is -- a mixture of Heathenism and Christianity
and Judaism. It is not Christianity
-- yet there is in it quite a little that is Christian.
Where did its superstition and image worship come from?
It was all taken bodily over from heathenism, under the plea that it
would help to convert the pagans.
The church became very accommodating.
In the 4th, 5th and 6th centuries you find the church compromising with
heathen rites and heathen ceremonies to such a degree that, by the 7th century,
one could hardly tell heathen from Christian temples.
The amalgamation is such that it is almost impossible to separate the one
from the other. Go to a Roman
Catholic church, and, after sitting through the whole ceremony, take you Bible
and search it from one end to the other, and ask yourself, “Is there anything
like that in the Book?” You will
say, “No.” Where does it come from
then? Go from there to a heathen
temple. Observe its ritual, and you
will say, “Yes, they are the same.”
Romanism is Christianity, Judaism, and Heathenism joined together; and
the Lord abhors the vile combination.
Note two things that He hold against Rome -- spiritual fornication and
idolatry. The first is the union of
the church and the world: and “the friendship of the world is enmity against
God.” Idolatry is the worship of
images, strictly forbidden in the second commandment (Ex. 20:4,5).
God gave her space to repent and she repented not.
Go back to the days of Savonarola in Italy, Wickliffe and Cranmer of
England, John Knox in Scotland, Martin Luther in Germany, Zwingle in
Switzerland, Calvin in France -- all those mighty reformers whom God raised up
throughout the world to call Rome to repent of her iniquity, but “she repented
not.”
Mark this, you could not transpose these churches.
You could not put Thyatira in the place of Smyrna.
it could not be said to the church in that early day, “I gave her space
to repent, and she repented not;” but it is fully applicable to the Church of
Rome. And, in our day, we have a
lot of foolish Protestants who believe that the old Rome is now a harmless old
pussy-cat sitting on the banks of the Tiber: she purrs so contentedly.
They say, “We never understood Rome.
What a pity we ever had that Reformation at all.”
And so efforts are being made to re-unite the various great bodies of
Christendom in one vast society headed by the Pope.
This is the avowed purpose of many leaders in the larger Protestant
bodies. What foolish people these
Protestants are! -- Protestants who have long ceased to protest against evil
doctrine, forgetting the millions of lives that were sacrificed for the precious
truth. Depend upon it, if the day
ever comes that the Pope gets into the saddle again, and gets control of the
proposed union, it will only by at the expense of life if people will worship
scripturally at all. But Protestant
leaders are dazzled with the thought of a great united church, and are hurrying
us on to a union with Rome which Scripture shows clearly enough will yet take
place. But, thank God, not until
the church of Christ has been caught up to meet the Lord in the clouds, to be
with Himself, according to His promise (Jno. 14:2,3).
God gave Rome space to repent.
If she had had any desire to get right with Him, she would have repented
in the 16th century.
Since the 16th century she has added to her blasphemies and errors the
declaration of the absolute sinlessness of the Virgin Mary, lifting her to the
position of a female God, and declared that she was caught up to heaven without
dying and crowned queen of heaven.
At the Council of the Vatican less than 75 years ago, the Church of Rome
produced another of her wretched dogmas -- the infallibity of her Popes.
This dogma was so utterly without reason that many bishops said, “This is
going too far. We know that Popes
have reversed each other over and over again.”
But Rome never repented; she has added sin upon sin to the heavy list God
had against her in the middle ages, and will remain the same to the end.
It behooves Protestants to keep clear of it all.
God says He is going to cast her into the great tribulation.
Ephesus is at an end; Smyrna at an end about 312 A.D; Pergamos at an end;
Thyatira begins in the 7th century, and goes right on into the Great
Tribulation, and manifests herself at last as Babylon the Great.
Her children are to be judged; but wherever there is a remnant found who
“have not known the depths of Satan,” the Lord own them as His, and exhorts them
to hold fast what they have until He come.
To the overcomer He promises what Rome has always sought -- power over
the nations. They will rule with
Him when He comes again. Thus the
hope of the Second Coming of Christ is put before them, and henceforth has a
large place in each of these church-letters.
Time has not permitted so full an exposition as I would have liked, but I
trust enough has been brought before us to stir our hearts to search the
Scriptures for ourselves, and to study as never before this marvelous portion of
God’s holy Word.
LECTURE IV
THE SEVEN
CHURCHES (Continued )
(Chapter 3)
None of you can have a keener sense than I of the cursory nature of these
addresses. Time forbids going into
that detail on all points which alone would enable one to give anything like a
complete exposition of this marvelous portion of the Word of God.
But if I can but whet your appetite for further study, and start
Christians searching the Word for themselves, and weighing, too, what others
have written and published on this theme, I shall feel that these addresses have
not been in vain.1
1It is always a pleasure to
me to commend the writings of trustworthy servants of Christ, who are true to
the Book. There are a number of
excellent expositions of Revelation, each one of which would, I am sure, be a
help in the further study of the subject:
“Exposition of the Revelation” by Walter Scott
“Lectures on Revelation” by Wm. Kelly
“The Book of Revelation” by A.C. Gaebelein
On the Seven Churches I especially commend, “The Prophetic History of the
Church” by F.W. Grant.
We now go on to look at the next part in the marvelous series of this
great annotated time-table of the church’s history.
“And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write; These things saith he
that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars; I know thy works, that
thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead.
Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to
die: for I have not found thy works perfect before God.
Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold fast, and
repent.”
Sardis means “a remnant,” or, “those who have escaped.”
This is surely very significant, and tells its own story too plainly to
be misunderstood. It brings before
us, prophetically, the great State-churches of the Reformation, who escaped from
Rome, only to fall eventually (alas, that it should be so) into cold, lifeless
formalism.
It is plainly to be seen, from the first verse, that there is a measure
of return to early principles. The
Lord’s introduction of Himself to this church is very similar to that in the
letter to Ephesus, and yet the difference is most marked.
Here He is said to have the seven stars; there He was said to
hold the seven stars in His right hand.
It is, at least, the recognition that ministry belongs to Christ.
Ministers are Christ’s ministers -- not the Church’s.
Yet, even in the glorious days of the Reformation, the truth was not
fully apprehended that ministers are to be controlled by, and subject to,
Christ, without any human intermediary.
While the Protestant ministry is very different from the Romish
hierarchy, unfortunately human ordination has done much to becloud a proper
conception of the servant’s responsibility to the Master.
The Lord declares solemnly, “I know thy works, that thou has a name that
thou livest, and art dead.” How sad
and solemn the indictment! One
might well ask in amazement, How can such things be after the blessing and
revival of Reformation days? But
when we remember that the State-churches were, from the first, intended to
include all the population of a given country, who were supposed to be made
members of the church and kingdom of Christ by baptism in infancy, one can
readily understand why such churches, though, possibly, strictly orthodox, may
yet be largely composed of persons still dead in trespasses and in sins.
Nothing can be much sadder than vast congregations of people, baptized,
banded together as Christians, “taking the sacrament” of the Lord’s Supper,
zealous for church and Christianity, and yet largely devoid of personal, saving
faith in Christ -- trusting rather in forms and ceremonies, and what some have
called “birth-right membership,” than in new birth through the Word and Spirit
of God.
What is needed everywhere is a great revival of decided gospel preaching,
pressing home on the consciences of men and women their lost condition, despite
church membership, if they have not personally received the Lord Jesus Christ.
The Word says, “Break up the fallow ground”; sow not among “thorns.”
We often hear people say they would like to see more old-time
conversions. Well, there must first
be the old-time preaching of the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the lost
condition of all men by nature as well as practice, until the old-time
conviction will seize upon the souls of Christless men and women, and then the
old-time gospel will be hailed as the only relief.
No wonder the Lord says to Protestantism, “Be watchful and strengthen the
things which remain, that are ready to die; for I have not found thy works
perfect before God.” And He calls
upon them to remember how they had received and heard, and to hold fast and
repent. Now, surely, it must be
plain to anyone who carefully examines the Scripture, that this message would in
no sense have been as applicable to the Thyatira as to the Sardis period.
Such word would not have the same force when addressed to Rome as when
addressed to the churches of the Reformation.
What did these latter receive and hear?
Clearly the great truths proclaimed so fearlessly in the days of the
Reformation, and embodied for the instruction of future generations in the
creeds of the 16th and 17th centuries.
And, may I say, I am not one of those who waste time denouncing creeds.
Credo means “I believe.”
Any man who believes anything has a creed.
All the great creeds of Protestantism were but the carefully drawn-up
declaration of the faith of those who had escaped from Romish superstition, who
desired to make clear to their children what they recognized as the truth which
they had received from God. We need
not be surprised if we find in these creeds some statements which fuller light
and knowledge would lead us to refuse or revise, but I think we may say that
there is not one of these symbols which does not hold within it every
fundamental truth of the Word of God.
Take the Augsburg Confession of the Lutherans; the Westminster Confession
of the Presbyterians; the 39 Articles of the Church of England; and others too
numerous to mention. Every one of
them insists on the true deity of Christ and the efficacy of His atoning work on
Calvary’s cross. All alike declare
that salvation is only through faith, apart form works.
Those creeds stand, I repeat, for the fundamental truths of Christianity;
and it is not to any minister’s credit to-day, if still attached to any such
denomination as I have just referred to, to stand up in the pulpits of such
churches and say, “I have thrown the creed of the church overboard.”
When a man reaches that point he either ought to be thrown out of the
church whose principles he no longer believes, or he should be honest enough to
take himself out. One of the worst
features of the present apostasy is that there are thousands of men occupying
supposedly orthodox pulpits, who would, if they could, destroy everything for
which their respective denominations are understood to stand.
And so we may thank God for the truths contained in these creeds; while,
on the other hand, we recognize that, where the Word of God is bowed to, no
humanly-drawn-up creed is needed.
Nevertheless, it is in view of these very confessions, I am persuaded, that the
Lord says, “Remember how thou hast received and heard.”
He calls upon Protestants to remember the great truths committed to them
at the Reformation, and hold them fast, and repent for the slack way in which
they have treated them in the past.
And now, for the second time in these letters, the Lord speaks of His
approaching advent: “If therefore
thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know
what hour I will come upon thee.”
How different this to the word in the 5th chapter of 1 Thessalonians.
There, the apostle speaking of the same wondrous advent, writes, “But ye,
brethren, are not in darkness that that day should overtake you as a thief.”
It is very evident, therefore, that the coming of the Lord should be the
daily expectation of His own beloved people.
It is only to the great mass of mere professors that His return will be
as the coming of a thief, that is, as the unexpected and unlooked-for One, whose
coming will spread dismay instead of gladness.
Blessed it is to know the declaration and promise of the Lord in verse 4.
Even in Sardis He beholds a few names which have not defiled their
garments, and such He declares shall walk with Him in white, for they are
worthy. His blood alone has made
them so. There are thousands in
Christendom who, though linked up with much that is unscriptural, and often
almost undistinguishable from the mass, are yet plainly discernible to His eye,
for it is written, “The Lord knoweth them that are his.”
To these overcomers the promise is made that they shall be clothed in
white raiment, nor will their names be blotted out of the Book of Life, when the
thousand of names, representing a Christless profession, will be expunged from
the records of those who profess to have life, in the day of manifestation.
It is not a question of people, who have been truly born of God, losing
that eternal life given them in Christ, for that, as many other Scriptures show,
is an impossibility. In fact, were
it otherwise, it would not be eternal life at all.
But the Lord is referring to those who have a name to live, but
are dead. Their names are
registered among those who profess to have life in Christ.
In reality they are, as Jude puts it, “twice dead” -- dead in trespasses
and sins, and dead to their profession of life.
So in the day of manifestation, their names will be eliminated, and only
those left who have proven by continuance in well-doing that they truly have
life in Christ. Such will be
confessed before the Father and the angels at the Lord’s second coming.
The next in order is the letter to the church in Philadelphia, which
means “brotherly love.”
“And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write; These things saith
he that is holy, he that is true, he that hath the key of David, he that
openeth, and no man shutteth; and shutteth, and no man openeth; I know thy
works: behold, I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it: for
thou hast a little strength, and has kept my word, and hast not denied my name.
. . . because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from
the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that
dwell upon the earth.”
This, I believe, brings us to what we may call the revival period.
Following the Reformation there came a time when a cold, lifeless
formalism seemed to settle down over all Protestant Christendom -- an era
in which men were content simply to confess a creed, and as we have already
mentioned, were supposed to be united to the church by baptism.
But in the 18th and 19th centuries there came over all those lands where
the Reformation had gone a great wave of blessing.
God began to work afresh in mighty power.
There were marvelous awakenings all over northern Europe and the British
Isles. A half century later the
same mighty power began to manifest itself in America.
Spirit-filled servants of Christ went through these various countries
like fire-brands of the Lord, calling on sinners to repent, and saints to awaken
to their privileges. A little
later, in the early part of the last century (1800’s), God, in a very special
way, began to arouse many of His people to a deeper sense of the value of His
Word, and its all-sufficiency for the guidance of His people in this scene.
This led to the recognition of the fact that Christ Himself is the
gathering centre for His people; and for His name’s sake thousands left all
human systems, and began to meet in simplicity, seeking to be guided alone by
the Word of God.
Now I do not mean to imply that we are to understand any special movement
or association of believers to be in itself Philadelphia, but, just as Sardis
sets forth State churches of the Reformation, so I believe Philadelphia sets
forth those in Protestantism who emphasize the authority of the Word of God, and
the preciousness of the name of Christ.
For any particular company to claim to be Philadelphia is but detestable
ecclesiastical pretension, and God has very evidently blown upon all such
conceit.
Notice what, in a special way, would mark those who seek to walk as
Philadelphians. In the first place
there is the very name of this church -- “brotherly love.”
This implies that those contemplated here, love as brethren.
They are born of God, and His love is shed abroad in their hearts by the
Holy Spirit given unto them, and they are characterized by love to all who are
Christ’s. Alas, how little is this
characteristic seen among many who make very loud pretensions to being the
testimony of the Lord at the present time.
There may be much high truth, and a great pretension to divine ground and
maintaining of scriptural principles, but if this first mark of brotherly love
be missing, depend upon it you have not yet found Philadelphia.
In the second place, observe the character in which the Lord presents
Himself to this church. “These
things saith He that is holy, He that is true.”
This is, in itself, a challenge to separation from evil in life, and
error in doctrine. If we would walk
in fellowship with the Holy One, we must remember the word, “By ye holy, for I
am holy.” And if we would enjoy
communication with Him who is true, we must refuse Satan’s lies, and love and
live the truth ourselves. Hence it
follows, as it has been put by others, that “separation from evil is God’s
principle of unity.” Not, indeed,
separation in a cold, pharisaic sense, but separation to Christ from that
which is evil.
In the next place the Lord speaks of Himself as “He that hath the key of
David, He that openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man openeth.”
In Isaiah 22:22, he who had the key of David was the treasurer of David’s
house. And the word used here is
clearly a reference to that passage.
There it is said of Eliakim, “The key of the house of David will I lay
upon his shoulder; so he shall open and none shall shut; and he shall shut and
none shall open.” The remainder of
the passage shows that Eliakim was but a type of the Lord Jesus Christ, the one
upon whom should be hung all the glory of His Father’s house.
He, by His Spirit, opens the great treasure-house of divine truth, and
none can shut it. On the other hand
where there is perversity of spirit, and an unwillingness to walk in the truth,
He shuts and none can open. So He
has said elsewhere, “If the light that is in thee become darkness, how great is
that darkness.”
And it is blessed to realize that, while Christ is said to have
the key of David, there is another sense in which we see that Himself is
the key, for it is by the presentation of Himself to the souls of His people
that He opens up the treasures of His Word.
Thus Christ is the key to the Holy Scriptures, and no other is needed.
To understand the Bible you need only to know Christ.
Perhaps there is another sense in which we might apply the words in
regard to opening and shutting; that is, they may have an application to
service. The Lord Himself opens the
doors for those whom He sends forth, and He it is who closes them when He so
wills. And this is one thing that
Philadelphian believers, generally, have found.
Acting on the truth that Christ is Son over His own house, and that He
has commanded His servants to go into all the world and preach the gospel to
every creature, thousands have gone forth, in dependence on Him alone, not only
in the home-land, but to lands beyond the seas, even among the heathen people,
without any organization or Board behind them and have found the Lord Himself
all-sufficient to meet every need, and to open and close just as He will.
“Faith can firmly trust Him, come what may.”
I think the 8th verse emphasizes this second application, for there He
says, “I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it, for thou
hast a little strength, and hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.”
Observe these important characteristics of Philadelphia.
His Word is kept, His Name is confessed.
The keeping of His Word involves a great deal more than just believing
the Bible, or reading and studying it.
It implies obedience to the revealed will of the Lord.
It is a blessed thing to realize that “All Scripture is given by
inspiration of God, and is profitable for reproof, for correction, for
instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly
furnished unto all good works.”
What immense scope is there here for faith to act upon!
This blessed book of God marks out all my path, and, so long as I seek to
walk in obedience, I will never be found in circumstances where this Book cannot
guide me. And this, I believe, is
what is involves in keeping His Word.
The denial of His Name is the increasing apostasy around us on every
hand. Those who have not denied His
Name refuse all fellowship with this God-dishonoring condition of things.
Christ is to them more precious than all else; even for the sake of
service, they refuse to link themselves with that which dishonors or blasphemes
that worthy name whereby they are called.
It is significant that, wherever Philadelphian truth has been proclaimed,
the devil has raised up a counterfeit to draw people’s hearts away from the
truth, and so, in verse 9, the Lord speaks of those who will be manifested as
the synagogue of Satan, “who say they are Jews, and are not, but do lie.”
The day will come when they will have to worship before the feet of those
who are faithful to the Lord, and shall know that He has loved them.
It is, undoubtedly, that false Judaizing system which is contemplated,
whose advocates everywhere oppose the truth of grace, and seek in every way to
hinder the carrying out of those principles which we have been noticing as
pleasing to the Lord. In their
ignorance, these teachers give up the true Christian position, claiming to be
the spiritual Israel, appropriating to themselves Jewish promises and Jewish
hopes, and would put the consciences of Christians under the bondage of Jewish
legalism, thus really doing Satan’s work.
The promise of verse 10, like all the promises to these different
churches, is for every true child of God.
“Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee
from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them
that dwell upon the earth.” This is
the Lord’s own pledge to those who love His Name, and seek to keep His word --
they shall not be left down here to pass through the appalling tribulation which
is just ahead of those who “dwell upon the earth.”
This expression is found frequently in the book of Revelation.
It does not simply mean those who live in the world, but a careful
reading of the various passages in which this peculiar term is found, will make
it manifest that “the earth-dwellers” are in contrast to those whose citizenship
is in heaven. They are persons who,
while professing to be Christians, refuse the heavenly calling, and prove by
their earthly-mindedness and worldly ways, that they really belong to this
world. All their hopes are here,
and their treasures likewise, and the Lord has said, “Where your treasure is,
there will your heart be also.” The
coming Great Tribulation will be, for them, a time of fearful trial.
Of this hour of turmoil the bulk of the book of Revelation treats, as we
shall demonstrate in later lectures.
But when that hour comes the church of the present dispensation will have
been caught up to meet the Lord in accordance with the promise in 1 Thess.
4:13-18. And to this agrees the
verse that follows in out chapter, “Behold, I come quickly; hold that fast which
thou hast, that no man may take thy crown.”
The Lord’s return is the hope of every Christian heart.
They long to see Him who loved them and gave Himself for them.
At His return, they will be manifested before His judgement-seat, and be
rewarded according to service here.
Then He will give out the crowns for service in this day of His rejection.
Observe that the warning is, “Let no man take thy crown.”
It is not, “Let no man take thy life,” or “thy salvation.”
That is eternally secure in Christ.
Being born of God, I cannot lose my salvation; but, if I am not a
faithful servant, I may lose my crown.
The overcomer will be made a pillar in the temple of God, the God of our
Lord Jesus Christ, and shall dwell in the Father’s house to go no more out
forever. Upon him will be written
the name of God, the name of the Holy City, and Christ’s new name.
All that is involved in this is beyond our poor, finite comprehension,
but it speaks of stability, of security, of fellowship, of intimacy with the
Lord Himself, which will make heaven to the believer -- his blessed and eternal
home.
Laodicea completes this septenary series, and brings us down, practically
to the last stage of the professing church’s history on earth -- the close of
the present dispensation.
“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; I know thy works, that thou are neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert
cold or hot. So then because thou
art lukewarm, and neither cold not hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.”
Laodicea is a compound word, and means “rights of the people.”
Could any other term more aptly set forth the condition of present-day
church affairs? It is the era of
democratization, both in the world and in the church.
The masses of the people are realizing
their power as never before. The
terrific slogan, vox populi, vox Dei (The voice of the people is the
voice of God), is ringing through the world with clarion-like distinctness.
Imperialism and every form of aristocratic government is disappearing --
at least for the time being. The
age of anarchy is almost upon us.
Bolshevism is not confined to unhappy Russia, it is making tremendous progress
in all Christendom. Statesmen and
capitalists never were more anxious and nervous than at the present time.
In the great war we were told our soldiers were fighting to make the
world safe for democracy. In a
little while statesmen will be attempting to raise armies to make the world safe
from democracy. The spirit of this
ultra-democratic age has invaded a large portion of the professed church.
The authority of God and His Word is rapidly being denied.
The spirit of the age is the spirit of a large part of the church; hence
the striking correspondence between this letter to the Laodiceans and the
latitudinarianism so prevalent about us.
In a day when faithful witnesses to God’s truth are becoming fewer and
fewer, the Lord addresses himself to the church as the Amen (that is, the
establisher of all God’s promises), the faithful and true Witness, who will
maintain to the last what is of God, though the great majority of those who
profess to follow Him be swept away by the apostasy.
He reproves the church for its lukewarmness and indifference to Himself
and the truth. He says, “because
thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I am about to spue thee out of my
mouth.” There is neither burning
zeal for His word, nor yet absolute repudiation of Christ and the Bible.
Instead there is a nauseating, lukewarm condition, that is abhorrent to
the Spirit of God. Lukewarm water
is, in itself, an emetic; and this is the figure the Lord here uses.
He cannot tolerate such conditions much longer, but will spue out the
whole disgusting mass in judgment.
Meantime the church goes on in its pride and self-satisfaction, saying,
“I am rich and increased with goods, and have need of nothing”; knowing not
that, in His eyes, it is “poor, and miserable, and blind, and naked.”
Never were church dignitaries and carnally-minded religious leaders more
satisfied with themselves and their great work than at the present time.
Anything and everything is advocated that will seem to make for the
church’s popularity. The rights of
the people alone must be considered; the right of the Lord Jesus Christ are not
even thought of. We have come to a
time when, in many places, it is easier to get on without Christ than with Him;
easier to carry on religious programmes without the Holy Spirit than if
He were working among us in mighty power.
No wonder He says, “I counsel thee to buy of Me gold tried in the fire
(that is, divine righteousness), that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment
(that is, practical righteousness) that thou mayest be clothed, and anoint thine
eyes with eyesalve (that is, the anointing of the Holy Spirit) that thou mayest
see.” Yes, there is lots of work,
much fleshly energy and human effort being put forth to reclaim the world, and
make it a comfortable place for men to live in, apart from Christ; but the great
things of God’s truth are largely neglected, and myriads of so-called
church-workers are utter strangers to the new birth, without which no one can
see the Kingdom of God.
And so we see the Lord standing at last outside the door of the
professing church, and saying so tenderly, “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.”
Ah, beloved friend, it is getting late in the dispensation: the night-shades are
fast falling; and the Lord who, in the beginning, was in the midst of His
church, stands outside that lukewarm system which calls itself by His
name, and He knocks in vain for entrance!
Yet, individuals here and there open to Him, and find His presence is
more to them than all else that the earth or the professing church can afford.
And so we have come down to the closing days of the present dispensation
of grace. The Ephesus period passed
away long ago, and the same is true of the Smyrna and Pergamos periods.
Thyatira, which, as we have seen, speaks of Romanism, and began properly
when the Pope was recognized as universal Bishop, is with us still, and will go
on to the end. Sardis, which began
centuries later, remains to the present time, and will remain till the Lord
shall come. Philadelphia, thank
God, is also here, and, though it has but a little strength, will also abide to
the end. But Laodicea is more and
more in evidence, and seems to be almost swamping everything that is of God.
The next great event is the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, and our gathering together unto Him. For this we wait, and our longing hearts cry, “Even so, come, Lord Jesus.”