Thyatira: The Church That Tolerates Sin, Pt. 2
Revelation 2:18-29
Let's open our Bible to Revelation chapter 2. Chapter 2 of Revelation verses 18 through 29 forms the text of the letter to the church in Thyatira. And we'll dig into it by a way of a brief review and then to the new things and I trust God will bless you as we do that.
Let me say to begin, though, that it is certain that not all churches are alike. In fact, if you go from church to church, you will go through very different kinds of doors into very different kinds of environments. They will differ in worship style. They will differ in music. They will differ in liturgy. They will differ in theological emphasis. They will differ in doctrinal considerations, convictions. They will differ in programs.
But most significantly and sadly, they will differ in how they deal with sin. Though the Lord Jesus Christ has clearly called His church to be holy, called His church to be pure and intolerant of sin, to be a chaste virgin bride, and then having married, as it were, the groom a pure blameless, spotless wife without blemish, even though the Lord desires the holiness of His people and the purity of His church, even though the Lord says that if you know anyone in sin, go to your brother and tell him about his sin and ask him to repent, even though we are to be that direct in the church...still churches through history and even today have defied the will of the Lord of the church and tolerated sin in uncountable ways. It is, in fact, typical, I suppose, of churches, by that I mean the majority of churches are tolerant of sin to one degree or another.
Such a church was Thyatira. And so the message of this church is a very relevant message to any church that tolerates any kind of sin. It made it especially difficult to be in that church if you were devoted to holiness because it was the only church in town, as was the case in the early church...there was one church per city. And you went there because that was the only church. It wasn't like it is today where there are a myriad of options for everyone to take, most of them tolerating sin to one degree or another so you very rarely find one that confronts and deals with sin and is intolerant. But in that day if you were a serious Christian and you were pursuing holiness and you believed the church should be pure, you were sort of stuck if you lived in Thyatira because that church was the only place to fellowship.
Now this kind of church is still common today. There are more options, but most of the options probably aren't much better than where people find themselves because most churches tolerate sin to some degree. To do so, however, is to be in direct disobedience to the Lord of the church.
In the case of the church at Thyatira, they were tolerating false teaching. They were tolerating a woman who had usurped a place of leadership in teaching, preaching, called herself a prophetess. They were tolerating the evils of idolatry. They were tolerating sexual sin. Not only were they tolerating it in the church but there were certain people in the church who were advocating it. It wasn't just a mild tolerance, it was an advocacy. And thus the church had been significantly corrupted, and as I told you last week, it wasn't long until it went out of existence.
The seriousness of their involvement with their sin can be seen in verse 24 where you see the phrase, "the deep things of Satan." They had managed to plunge themselves very deeply into satanic things. This church with its problems, this letter to the church suits many churches throughout the history of the church and many churches today. It is a permanent word, as it were, to churches that compromise with sin.
And I want to note for you there can be much that is good as there was in this church. But the fatal tolerance will eventually destroy the church.
Now let me briefly review what we looked at last time. First of all, the introduction gives us the correspondent, or the one who writes, "To the angel, or the messenger, the one who had been sent by the Thyatira church to John the apostle to get this letter and take it back, to the messenger of the church in Thyatira, write:..." and here comes the correspondent, or the author. "The Son of God who has eyes like a flame of fire, and His feet are like burnished bronze, says this..."
It comes from the Lord. He is depicted in the terms of His description in chapter 1 in the vision of Christ, particularly noting verses 14 and 15 where He there is described with regard to eyes like a flame of fire, and feet like burnished bronze. We note for you that that is a picture of judgment. He is seen in His judgment character. His eyes like a flame of fire are like supernatural divine lasers that penetrate to the depth of the church and see the fatal flaws. Nothing is hidden to the lasers of His vision. And His feet like burnished bronze are the feet that trample out judgment.
It is interesting to note that here He is referred to as the Son of God where in the vision in chapter 1 He is called the Son of Man. That is a significant change. The "Son of Man" is a title that denotes His humility, His sympathy, His tender-heartedness, His love, His care for the church. The term "Son of God" sees Him rather in an unsympathetic way as the one who as God must judge sin, not the one who as Man demonstrates compassion on the sinner. So here He comes writing to Thyatira in a rather terrifying and threatening imagery.
Secondly, we noted last time the city. Thyatira was halfway between Pergamos and Sardis. It had been Roman since 190 B.C. or going on 300 years. For many centuries it was only an unprotected military outpost that stopped the ongoing armies that were coming after Pergamos and fought them off for a little while so the Pergamese folks could get ready to fight. And so it got destroyed and rebuilt over and over and over and over again. Then eventually when the Romans took over and brought in the Roman peace, it had a period of peace and under that period of peace became a commercial center developing crafts. It became the city with more guilds, that would be unions of craftsmen, than any other city in Asia Minor. It became a center for wool and a center for developing a beautiful purple dye, came out of a madras root and I told you it came out of a little sea creature. You will remember a lady by the name of Lydia, the first convert in Europe, who was from Thyatira who was a seller of purple goods.
Each of these guilds that developed in the city had a deity. The people were very religious in the ancient world, and as you know, it was a polytheistic world where there were many gods. And each guild developed a god of its own and they would not only do their craft but they would worship their deity. That would include feasts and festivals, that would include certain sacrifices that were offered at whatever temple served to worship this god, and it also included certain sexual orgies. And so the guilds were not simply labor unions or such, or amalgamations of people in a certain craft who were doing their trade, they had become religious organizations as well. And so here was a city with no dominant deity with rather many deities sort of fitting in to all the various kinds of trades that were there.
It was not a large city and even today only has about 25,000 inhabitants. As I noted last time, it was the smallest of the seven cities that have the letters here.
Thirdly, we had taken a look at the church. It just identifies the church in verse 18, doesn't tell us anything about it. There are two...two texts that we could look to...Acts 19:10 says that because of the ministry of Paul in Ephesus, the Word of the Lord sounded out through all Asia Minor. So during the time that Paul had those three great years in Ephesus, it's very possible that the power of the church in Ephesus that spread everywhere else hit the little town of Thyatira. And the church may have been born because some emissaries from Ephesus came to that town and planted that church. There is also that other possibility with regard to the lady named Lydia. She was from Thyatira. She went to Philippi. When she went to Philippi, according to Acts 16:15, she heard Paul and Paul gave her the gospel and she was saved. It may be that having been converted under Paul, along with her traveling companions, her household, that they went back to Thyatira and were, in fact, instrumental in starting the church. We don't know.
But this church was threatened not from the outside so much by persecution, but from the inside by compromise. The disaster in this church was not some onslaught from false teachers on the outside, but an onslaught of false doctrine on the inside. It wasn't evil men from the outside, it was evil people from the inside. This church was not suffering from being shot at, it was deteriorating on the inside.
And I shared with you last time that if you can understand the "guild" concept, you might get a little bit of a feeling of what was happening. If you wanted your job you stayed with the guild and they would have a pretty strong hold over you and you would be forced to engage yourself and all of the functions of the guild which meant the feasts and festivals and ceremonies and maybe even the sexual sin. And if you didn't do that, it wouldn't be unreasonable to assume you might lose your job. And so there was some pressure put upon these Christians in this regard. Satan wanting to see to it that the compromise was made had a woman in the church who is identified by the name Jezebel. This woman found a platform in the church and taught everybody that to commit sexual sins and to get involved in idol worship was okay. And so the church actually had an internal spokesman advocating this which took the monkey off of everybody's back and let them be free, they thought, to engage in the guild idolatry and immorality, while at the same time calling themselves Christians and attending the church. So this church was really struggling for survival because of the corruption on the inside.
Fourthly and lastly in our review we looked at the commendation in verse 19. It's quite remarkable. He says, "I know your deeds." That's the note of omniscience. He knows everybody's deeds, after all, His eyes penetrate like a flame of fire. He says, "I know your deeds, the record is clear, I am omniscient, nothing escapes Me and I know in knowing your deeds your love and your faith, or better, your fidelity, your faithfulness, your service and your perseverance." He identifies those four things. I know your love, that is you demonstrate sacrifice to one another out of love. I know your fidelity, your faithfulness, you have not abandoned Christ. I know your service, you're involved in activity, you're meeting needs, you're doing ministry. You may even be operating spiritual gifts. And I know your perseverance, or your endurance. You've hung in there. You've been faithful when there has been some hostility and some persecution. This is all very commendable.
And then at the end of verse 19, even more remarkably He says, "And your deeds of late are greater than at first." That probably means greater in number and not so much greater in kind, but greater in number. There are more of them now than before. You're doing deeds that demonstrate your love and faithfulness, your service and your perseverance. This church may have had in the community a very good reputation. In fact, it may well have been a very popular church. After all, if it tolerated people attending the feasts and orgies and festivals of the guilds, it certainly wasn't calling for any dichotomy between the church and the world. If they were busy meeting needs and doing deeds of sacrificial love and enduring hostility, they must have had a reputation as a somewhat noble bunch. And so He says, for these things I commend you.
What is noticeably absent in the commendation is sound doctrine and holy living. And here were the two fatal flaws. There was a lot of love and faithfulness to the gospel and to Christ in a personal way. There was service and there was endurance of difficulty and trial, but there is a very, very clearly diminishing interest, emphasis and conviction about sound doctrine and holy living. And that's really the key.
Now that brings us to the fifth point as we dissect our way through this letter and that is the condemnation. This is really remarkable...the condemnation. Verse 20, "But I have this against you," that in itself is a frightening statement, isn't it? I mean, if there's any one thing that would be to my mind unimaginable, it would be to get a letter from the Lord Jesus Christ Himself telling you that He was against your church. But that's the case. This was a church that named the name of Jesus Christ. This was a church that claimed to be identified with Him. This was a church that claimed to be sharing His love and being faithful to His gospel, a church endeavoring to serve Him and endure for His sake. This was the church of Jesus Christ. And the letter comes and say...I have to tell you, I am against your church.
And here's why..."I have this against you, that you tolerate the woman Jezebel who calls herself a prophetess and she teaches and leads My bondservants astray so that they commit acts of immorality and eat things sacrificed to idols." This is why I am against your church. You have this woman, Jezebel, and you tolerate her.
Now as I noted for you last time, I don't think her name was Jezebel. Nobody names their daughter Jezebel. Somebody got the point last week and I turned around to shake hands with a lovely lady tonight when Clayton told us to do that and I said, "I'm John, who are you?" She said, "Jezebel." But she was kidding, nobody names their daughter Jezebel. You didn't know whether to laugh or not, did you? You thought... Jezebel was not her name, Jezebel was a way to identify her. In one word it tells us everything we need to know. Jezebel was a woman in the Old Testament who led the people of Israel to commit sexual sin and worship idols. And this woman is identified as Jezebel because she did the same thing in the church. The end of verse 20 says that she led the bondservants of Christ to commit acts of immorality and eat things sacrificed to idols.
She was very effective. You will notice that phrase in verse 20, "leads My bondservants astray." I just need to note for you she was leading true Christians astray, that's a designation of believers...My bondservants, those who are My own slaves who belong to Me, true Christians. And it does pose the question...can true Christians commit acts of immorality? Of course they can, of course. In fact, in 1 Corinthians chapter 6 the apostle Paul says to Christians, "Do you not know," verse 15, "that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of a harlot? May it never be. Or do you not know that the one who joins himself to a harlot is one body with her, for He says the two shall become one flesh, but the one who joins himself to the Lord is one spirit with Him. Flee immorality, every other sin a man commits is outside the body but the immoral man sins against his own body." Probably a primary reference to venereal disease. Or, "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you whom you have from God and that you're not your own for you've been bought with a price, therefore glorify God in your body." He's telling Christians don't commit fornication, the assumption is it's very possible.
Can Christians also wind up eating meat offered to idols? Can they...can they go to an idol feast and eat that which is offered to a false deity and thereby...the implication here being...and thereby engage themselves in some kind of celebration of that deity? Of course they can. Paul says to the Corinthians, "How is it you think you can come to the table of the Lord after you've been to the table of demons?" 1 Corinthians chapter 10. They were doing it. They would go worship the idol and then come worship the Lord. They would go to the feast of the idol and then come to the table of Christ.
This woman had succeeded in leading true Christians to engage themselves in idol feasts and sexual sin...the sexual sin probably connected to the orgies going on in those idol feasts. This is very serious. This woman has committed a very serious sin.
To show you how serious, go back to Matthew 18, just to remind you of the seriousness of leading Christians to commit sins. In Matthew 18 verse 6, our Lord is referring here to Christians, not to little babies, but "little ones" here refer to His children, so identified in verse 4. Verse 6, "Whoever causes one of these little ones," that is Christians, one of the little ones who believes in Me, not babies, babies can't believe in Him, "but whoever causes one of the Christians who believes in Me to stumble," that is to fall into sin, if you lead a believer into sin, "it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck and that he be drown in the depth of the sea." You're better off dead. You'd be better off to die a painful, horrible death than to cause another Christian to sin.
Verse 7, "Woe," or curse, damnation, judgment, that's what the word means, "to the world because of its stumbling blocks." Listen, whenever the world does something to make a Christian sin, woe to that person who does that. This is serious. The world around us pumps out filth in music and in media whether it's books or television or films or whatever it is, the world tolerates all the sin and the filth and it pumps it out. And when it causes a Christian to stumble, God remembers who caused that Christian to stumble. And He says, "Woe to the world because of its stumbling blocks, for it is inevitable that stumbling blocks come, but woe to that man through whom the stumbling block comes." If you are doing anything to make a Christian sin, woe to you.
And then in verses 8 and 9 He says, "Before you do that, you better cut off your hand, your foot, or take out your eye," because if those are the things effecting your sin, you'd be better off without them. And then in verse 10 He adds, "Don't look down on or despise one of these little ones."