The Church at Ephesus - A Love Lost

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A sermon delivered by Benjamin Searle at Snug Gospel Chapel, 21/6/[email protected]://www.raptureforum.net

Transcript of The Church at Ephesus - A Love Lost

  • The Church at Ephesus: A lost love Revelation 2:1-7 Snug Gospel Chapel: 21/06/2015

    Benjamin Searle

    [email protected]

    This morning were going to be continuing through our series in the book of Revelation, looking primarily

    at the letter written by Jesus Christ to the church at Ephesus, in Chapter 2. Before we open Gods Word,

    however, we need to come before the Lord in prayer. Lets pray.

    Father, I come to you this morning in the name of your Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. I pray that as we meet

    together this morning, as we study Your Word, that You would reveal yourself to us, and speak the words

    that we need to hear. Father, I ask this morning that my voice would fade into the background, that Your

    voice might be heard and that your Holy Spirit would be at work among us to give us listening ears and

    open hearts. Above all else, Lord, I pray that you alone would be glorified.

    In Jesus Name.

    Amen.

    Turn with me, if you would, to the book of Revelation Chapter 1. Although our primary text this morning

    comes from chapter 2, are details in that passage that we need in order to move forward. Bear with me,

    because this groundwork will be helpful for us not only today, but as we progress through the book of

    Revelation in the coming weeks and months.

    The last time we met, we looked primarily at the Revelation of the King from Revelation chapter 1. What

    we saw there was an amazing revelation of the person and the power of Jesus Christ. We looked first at

    the Jesus that John knew: a vision of Jesus Christ that John himself gave us a vision so amazing, in fact,

    that you might remember that the apostle John failed to keep tabs on his own language, and burst out into

    a premature doxology.

    After that point, we received what can only really be described as a vivid intrusion into the scene laid out

    by John. Jesus Christ Himself burst into full display, in all of His glory and majesty, as a terrible and radiant

    judge. This was the Revelation of the King, wherein Jesus Christ identifies Himself not as the Jesus that

    John knew, but as the risen, glorious judge of all the earth. This transcendent vision of Jesus Christ was so

    overwhelming that John said when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead.

  • The Revelation of the King, however, waits for no man and John was soon lifted up by the hand of

    Christ Himself - and commanded to write; and its here that we pick up our reading today. Look at verse

    19.

    Write the things which you have seen, and the things which are, and the things which will take place after

    this.

    This verse forms the framework for the entire book of Revelation. John is told to write the things that he

    has seen, the things that are, and the things that will be.

    The things that John had seen, weve already read and studied together. This, of course, is Chapter 1: the

    revelation of the King, in all of His glory.

    The things that are refers to the timeline of the churches in Revelation Chapters 2 and 3. Its my conviction

    that the things that are is a reference to the entire span of the Church Age, and its from this context that

    well be looking at the letters to the seven churches.

    The things that will be after this are laid out in Chapters 4 and beyond, and refer specifically to the events

    that occur at the end of the Age, in the time of Jacobs Trouble the Tribulation.

    Now, in case youre thinking that Im dictating where those breaks come myself, allow me to elaborate.

    When Jesus tells John to write the things that occur after this, He uses a specific phrase in the Greek.

    That phrase is meta tauta. This phrase occurs only numerous times after this point in the book of

    Revelation, but ALL of those instances are in Chapters 4 and beyond. Turn with me to Revelation 4, briefly.

    Revelation Chapter 4, and verse 1.

    After these things - (meta tauta) - I looked, and behold, a door standing open in heaven. And the first voice

    which I heard was like a trumpet speaking with me, saying, come up here, and I will show you things which

    must take place after this.

    So we can see that the Holy Spirit Himself announces when the things that occur after this begin to take

    place. Chapter 4 and verse 1 shows us a doorway open in heaven, a voice commanding come up here,

    and the reminder that the things that are to follow hereafter, meta tauta, are about to take place. When

    we do eventually reach this chapter, Ill be suggesting to you that this is a picture of the rapture of the

  • church; and likewise, to suggest to you that the things that the Rapture of the Church at this point brings to

    a close the things that are, ends the Church Age, and ushers in the things that shall take place after this.

    So, to put each of these things in context, we have:

    The things you have seen: the vision of Jesus Christ, seen by John, in around 90AD;

    The things that are: the Churches, spanning the entire church age, from the time of Johns writing until the

    Rapture; and

    The things that shall take place after this: the Tribulation the time of Jacobs trouble.

    Within this context, we have, as a subset of the things that are, the seven letters that Jesus Christ Himself

    wrote to the Seven Churches of Asia Minor. In this picture, the Church of Ephesus represents not only the

    literal church of Ephesus, which John himself knew well, but also the church of the apostolic age, from

    around 30AD to 100AD.

    Lets look now to our primary passage. Revelation Chapter 1, and starting at verse 20.

    The mystery of the seven stars which you saw in My right hand, and the seven golden lampstands: The

    seven stars are the angels of the seven churches, and the seven lampstands which you saw are the seven

    churches.

    To the angel of the church of Ephesus write:

    These things says He who holds the seven stars in His right hand, who walks in the midst of the seven

    golden lampstands: 2 I know your works, your labour, your patience, and that you cannot bear those who

    are evil. And you have tested those who say they are apostles and are not, and have found them liars; 3 and

    you have persevered and have patience, and have laboured for My names sake and have not become

    weary.4

    Nevertheless I have this against you, that you have left your first love. 5 Remember therefore from where

    you have fallen; repent and do the first works, or else I will come to you quickly and remove your lampstand

    from its placeunless you repent. 6 But this you have, that you hate the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which I

    also hate.

    7 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes I will give to

    eat from the tree of life, which is in the midst of the Paradise of God.

  • To begin at the beginning, lets look at who this letter is addressed to.

    Chapter 2 and verse 1 begins, to the angel of the church of Ephesus, write.

    Each of the letters dictated by the Lord Jesus begins with a directive to John to write to the angel of the

    church. Now, Ive read a number of arguments as to whom this reference refers, but I think the simplest

    answer is the one that is most apparent in the Greek text. The word angel here, in Greek, is angelos, and

    literally means messenger. So, the picture we have here is that the letters dictated by the Lord Jesus

    Christ are given to those in the churches who bear the responsibility of preaching the message to the

    people; in this case, the leaders of the church of Ephesus.

    Now by the time we reach the book of Revelation, the church at Ephesus has already featured heavily in

    Scripture. It was visited by Paul in Acts 19, was fed with the teaching of the word by Apollos, a prominent

    early Christian preacher, claimed Timothy and Tychicus as elders, and was known to be the church perhaps

    most linked to the Apostle John Himself. It makes some degree of sense that the Lord Jesus would write

    to a church like Ephesus in the first place its a veritable whos who of apostles, prophets and teachers.

    This is not, however, the only level of application in each of these letters. There are multiple layers evident

    here, and theyre defined in the text itself.

    The first, and most immediate application is to the individual churches themselves: in this case, Ephesus.

    The second is to the churches, plural, as Jesus Himself says in this verse let Him hear what the spirit says

    to the churches.

    The third layer of application is to the individual. He who has an ear, let him hear.

    These letters, written to real, historical churches, are nonetheless written to ALL churches, and to all

    believers - at all times, and of all ages throughout history. Obviously, that includes us and there is

    certainly a lot that we can learn from these letters today.

    Lets move on.

    These things says He who holds the seven stars in His right hand, who walks in the midst of the seven

    golden lampstands.

  • Here we have a reminder of the image of Christ that we saw in Revelation Chapter 1. As we progress

    through the book of Revelation, well see a series of these images in each of the letters, and the specific

    element of the Revelation of Christ chosen to represent Him in each instance is carefully chosen, and

    meaningful. In this letter, to the church at Ephesus, there is a single detail given that is not included in

    Chapter 1. Weve already seen from the Lord Himself who these seven stars are. They represent the

    angels of the churches. The seven lampstands, on the other hand, represent the churches themselves.

    The hidden detail here is placed subtly in between the two, and well find this image beautifully hinted at

    in the closing verse of this passage too. These things say He who holds the seven stars in His right hand,

    who walks in the midst of the seven golden lampstands.

    We saw this Revelation in Chapter 1. We saw the Lord Jesus amidst the lampstands, with the seven stars in

    His hands, but it is only here that were given this additional detail; only here that were told that the Lord

    is walking among the lampstands. What does that imply? Were going to take a slight detour here, but

    hopefully youll be as blessed by this as I was. Turn with me to Genesis 3.

    Genesis 3, and verse 8.

    and they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and Adam and His

    wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden.

    and now to verse 22:

    Then the Lord God said, Behold, the man has become like one of Us, to know good and evil. And now, lest

    he put out his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever therefore the Lord God sent

    him out of the garden of Eden to till the ground from which he was taken. So He drove out the man; and He

    placed cherubim at the east of the garden of Eden, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to guard

    the way to the tree of life.

    So with this small hint, this carefully placed word, what is the Holy Spirit conveying?

    What is the significance of Jesus Christ walking among the golden lampstands?

    Its fellowship. Fellowship!

    The same God who walked with Adam and Eve in the cool of the day, the God whose violent purity and

    impossible holiness was so clear, so apparent in Revelation 1, the God who drove man out of the garden,

  • out of paradise, out of the garden of Eden, moved heaven and earth, and took His own beloved son and

    crushed Him, and caused Him to suffer, to reconcile us to Him, that we might have fellowship with Him

    once more; that we might walk in the garden in the cool of the day with our God.

    What the Holy Spirit is drawing our attention to here is that in Christ, through His death, and in the church,

    for the first time since the garden of Eden the fellowship between God and man has been restored. Jesus

    Christ is in fellowship with His people, now, and forever. This is one of the things I love about Scripture. In

    placing this single word here, the Holy Spirit has linked the first book of the Bible to the last and

    everything in between.

    Turn back with me to Revelation 2, and verse 7.

    He who has an ear, let Him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes, I will give to

    eat from the tree of life, which is in the midst of the Paradise of God.

    Do you see the completeness of this picture? This is Jesus Christ in Genesis, walking in the garden, in the

    cool of the day in Revelation, walking among His people, His lampstands, His church and here, in verse

    7, in the full restoration of fellowship with them in paradise where it all began. This is precisely what

    Jesus meant when He left His disciples, saying behold, I am with you always, even unto the end of the

    world. He didnt mean this in some vague spiritual sense. He didnt even mean it in terms of the Holy

    Spirit though thats certainly true. He meant it literally, physically, powerfully. Do you understand what

    this is saying?

    Whenever two or three are gathered in my name, I am there in the midst of them.

    Do you hear it? Do you understand what this means?

    What do we call it when two or three Christians are gathered in the name of Jesus Christ?

    Its the Church! We are the church! And whenever two or three are gathered in the name of Jesus Christ,

    there He is among them, walking among the lampstands, in fellowship with the ones He loves. The

    implications of these verses alone are staggering.

    CHRIST IS HERE! He is here, among His people physically present among us as we meet together in His

    name by His Word, and by His promise in fellowship with His children.

    Amen.

  • Lets continue. Verse 2.

    I know your works, your labour, your patience, and that you cannot bear those who are evil. And you have

    tested those who say they are apostles, and are not, and have found them liars.

    To best understand this part of the letter, we need to understand where Ephesus was, and how the church

    there was formed. Luckily, were not in the dark on this one, as the events in question are detailed for us

    in the book of Acts. You would struggle, I imagine, to find a more hostile anti-Christian environment than

    the one facing the apostle Paul at Ephesus.

    For the sake of time, were not going to read the passage, but allow me to fill you in on the events of Acts

    Chapter 19. Paul spent two years in Ephesus, preaching and teaching. In that time, he encountered men

    that he refers to in the book of Corinthians as wild beasts. Occult practices were rife. What Scripture

    describes as itinerant Jewish exorcists were practicing in the city. Riots broke out, Christians were

    assaulted, and Paul himself was forced to withdraw from the city and take refuge in a school.

    More importantly, however, Scripture tells us that through all of this persecution, through the

    perseverance of the saints, the gospel took hold. Acts tell us that:

    many who had believed came confessing and telling their deeds. 19 those who had practiced magic

    brought their books together and burned them in the sight of all and the word of the Lord grew mightily

    and prevailed.

    The church at Ephesus, then, was established in extraordinary and difficult circumstances. Preaching the

    gospel alone must have been incredibly intimidating, while reaching those who had dedicated their lives to

    Diana required hard work, perseverance and serious tenacity. In fact, looking at Revelation, we can see

    that the church at Ephesus faced problems that even Acts didnt list! Verse 2 states that they were

    required to test those who say they are apostles and are not, and found them liars. So, in addition to

    all the conflict and chaos of the city of Ephesus, there was one more spanner to throw in to the works:

    false prophets and false apostles had emerged from within the church, to add to the conflict without.

    To their credit, the believers at Ephesus had remembered what so many of our churches have forgotten.

    In one of his earlier epistles, John had written from Ephesus, to the churches of Asia Minor, exhorting

    them, beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God; because many

    false prophets have gone out into the world.

  • The believers at Ephesus had taken this command seriously. They had tested the false apostles, comparing

    their works and their words against the standard of Scripture, and had found them to be liars. It is an

    absolute travesty that the very thing that Jesus commends the Ephesians for here in Revelation 2, in

    exercising their spiritual gift of discernment, is a practice at best marginalized, and at worst, mocked and

    rebuked in Christian circles today. The modern church, in stark contrast with Ephesus, is far too concerned

    with living its best life now to test the spirits - and if they did, theyd find that the Holy Spirit, whom they

    so freely sing about and spend so much time trying to summon with emotional music and practices that

    border on the occult is nowhere to be found. but thats an issue for another time, another sermon

    and another of the seven letters. Lets move on.

    Verse 3.

    You have persevered, and have patience, and have labored for My names sake, and have not become

    weary.

    I hope youre starting to develop a picture of this church. The church at Ephesus had been tried and tested

    by false prophets, by deceivers, by the occult, by demonic oppression - and yet had persevered, and had

    labored, and had not become weary.

    In a world of increasing darkness, where people seem to be more and more resistant to the gospel, we

    need to remember just how important it is to persevere. The Lord Jesus commends them on this. Make

    no mistake, the works of the church of Ephesus were above reproach. In fact, in many respects, this was a

    church that had everything going for it, and seemed to have it all together.

    In the same way, we, in these Last Days, we cannot allow the state of the world to drive us to

    discouragement. Instead, we need to realize the urgency of the gospel demands that we continue to

    devote ourselves to Jesus Christ not only in our adherence to good works, but primarily to prayer, and to

    the reading of the Word, as we see the Day approaching.

    and its here, on this point, that the Lords tone turns to rebuke. Look at verse 4.

    Nevertheless I have this against you, that you have left your first love.

  • You see, the church at Ephesus, the same church whose works were praised, and whose doctrine had

    enabled them to remain vigilant against false teaching, had become so consumed with works and doctrine

    that theyd forgotten that the Lord Jesus Christ demands devotion, too. Lets look at what He says.

    Nevertheless, I have this against you, that you have left your first love.

    Remember, therefore, from where you have fallen; repent and do the first works, or else I will come to you

    quickly and remove your lampstand from its place unless you repent.

    The Church at Ephesus, for all of their positive works, had lost their first love. That had sacrificed a

    relationship with Jesus Christ for the sake of working for Christ. and while those works were rightly

    commended by the Lord he chastised them for being so willing to devote themselves to the study of the

    things of God, while neglecting the person of God. To our own shame, I dont think anyone could claim

    that we live up to the standard that Ephesus set in works; and yet, In this late hour, many of our churches

    have become powerless and ineffectual; not through a lack of human effort or through a lack of desire, not

    even because the world itself has become darker (though it has). The church has lost its power before the

    world because it has largely forgotten that the only Light we have comes from reflecting the King of Kings

    and that demands that we spend time in His presence.

    I quoted these verses in my last sermon, but Im going to quote them again. You remember, dont you, the

    events of Acts Chapter 4. Peter and John, full of the Holy Spirit, had been teaching and preaching

    throughout Jerusalem. In this passage, they had healed a man that had been lame. That, to me, sounds

    like a pretty incredible event something that might make even the hardest skeptic raise an eyebrow. And

    yet, despite this, when the Sanhedrin approached Peter and John, were told, chapter 4 verse 13, that

    when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and perceived that they were uneducated men, they

    marveled and they took note that they had been with Jesus.

    Do you see what made the ministries of Peter and John so powerful and effective? Note what the

    Scripture says here. Peter and John were changing lives! They were performing miracles! Theyd turned

    Jerusalem upside down and yet when the Sanhedrin looked on, as furious as they were, they recognized

    that what made Peter and John truly revolutionary, truly dangerous, wasnt their miracles, or the power of

    their works but the fact that theyd been with Jesus.

    Tell me, when people look at you, do they take note that youve spent time with Jesus?

  • When the world looks in on the church, and dissects our works, and our doctrines, and our sermons, and

    our prayers when it takes the sum whole of our lives here in this world and reduces it to a single dot

    point hurriedly scrawled on a piece of paper, does the world take note that we have been with Jesus?

    For far too many of us, in these last days, the honest answer to that question is no.

    Its no!

    And men, women and children are living and dying and going to hell not just out there in the world, but

    inside the walls of the church

    because Christ isnt known, and Christ isnt taught.

    ...and you cant love someone you dont know.

    So whats the solution?

    Jesus Himself provides it. Look at verse 5.

    Remember, therefore, from where you have fallen. Repent, and do the first works.

    Theres a single key word in this verse, and its often neglected. Neglected, in fact, in the majority of the

    commentaries that I read. Repent. Brothers and sisters, we need to understand here what the Lord is

    saying. If youre not in love with Jesus Christ if youre not spending time with Him, every day, if youre

    not devoting yourself to prayer and the reading of the Word, if youre not wholly given over to a

    relationship with the transcendent, righteous King of Kings youre in sin.

    This is the relationship you were created for the relationship Christ died for, and the relationship He now

    lives for, and if youre not so deeply engrained in Christ that your very life and being radiates the fact that

    you have been with Jesus, youre in sin. and you need to repent.

    Brothers and sisters Is this your life?

    Is this my life?

    Are we so comfortable in the world that we think we dont need Jesus for every waking breath? or do

    people look at us and see Christ reflected in glory?

  • Listen to what Paul says in Philippians 3:

    7 But what things were gain to me, these I have counted loss for Christ. 8 Yet indeed I also count all things

    loss for the excellence of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all

    things, and count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ 9 and be found in Him

    Can you see what the Apostle Paul is saying here?

    The end of all things is Christ.

    Knowing the gospel isnt enough. Knowing the creeds of the church is not enough. Knowing traditions, or

    doctrines, is not enough. Even having good works, as important as that is, is not enough. But rather, Paul,

    who suffered the loss of all things, counted them as nothing that he might gain Christ, and be found in

    Him.

    I wonder today have you lost your first love?

    Is Jesus Christ the first thing on your mind when you wake up, and the last Name on your lips before you go

    to bed at night? Are you spending time in His Word? Are you spending time in prayer, locked away from

    the world, just you and Him, forging that relationship that He so deeply desires? And if not, why not?

    What are you waiting for? This is the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords, and He desires to be with you!

    He desires to be with me, of all people!

    and the apostle John, at the word of Christ and with trembling hands, reaches down to write and says,

    Remember, therefore, from where you have fallen. Repent, and do the first works.

    Brothers and sisters, we must get back to the things we did at first back to the days when our love was

    new, and our hearts were filled with gratitude to the Christ who died for us; the Lamb that was slain before

    the foundation of the world. because from now until eternity, the one who was, and who is, and who is

    to come is the only one that matters. Love Him. Love Him!

    and if you cant honestly say this morning that Jesus Christ is your first, your one great love put down

    what youre doing. Set the world aside. Set aside for a moment your works, your world, your life, and

    spend time with the King of Kings. because nothing matters more.

    Lets pray.