| |
THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
[17]
[18]
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
CHAPTER 3
@Re
3:1-22. THE
EPISTLES TO SARDIS,
PHILADELPHIA, AND
LAODICEA.
1. Sardis--the ancient
capital of Lydia, the kingdom of wealthy Croesus, on the
river Pactolus. The address to this Church is full of
rebuke. It does not seem to have been in vain; for MELITO,
bishop of Sardis in the second century, was eminent for
piety and learning. He visited Palestine to assure himself
and his flock as to the Old Testament canon and wrote an
epistle on the subject [EUSEBIUS
Ecclesiastical History, 4.26]; he also wrote a
commentary on the Apocalypse [EUSEBIUS,
Ecclesiastical History, 4.26; JEROME,
On Illustrious Men, 24].
he that hath the seven Spirits of God--that
is, He who hath all the fulness of the Spirit (@Re
1:4 4:5 5:6, with which compare @Zec
3:9 4:10, proving His Godhead). This attribute implies
His infinite power by the Spirit to convict of sin and of
a hollow profession.
and the seven stars--(@Re
1:16,20). His having the seven stars, or
presiding ministers, flows, as a consequence, from His
having the seven Spirits, or the fulness of the Holy
Spirit. The human ministry is the fruit of Christ's
sending down the gifts of the Spirit. Stars imply
brilliancy and glory; the fulness of the Spirit, and the
fulness of brilliant light in Him, form a designed
contrast to the formality which He reproves.
name . . . livest . . . dead--(@1Ti
5:6 2Ti 3:5 Tit 1:16; compare @Eph
2:1,5 5:14). "A name," that is, a reputation. Sardis
was famed among the churches for spiritual vitality;
yet the Heart-searcher, who seeth not as man seeth,
pronounces her dead; how great searchings of heart
should her case create among even the best of us! Laodicea
deceived herself as to her true state (@Re
3:17), but it is not written that she had a high
name among the other churches, as Sardis had.
2. Be--Greek.
"Become," what thou art not, "watchful," or "wakeful,"
literally, "waking."
the things which remain--Strengthen those thy
remaining few graces, which, in thy spiritual deadly
slumber, are not yet quite extinct [ALFORD].
"The things that remain" can hardly mean "the
PERSONS that are not
yet dead, but are ready to die"; for @Re
3:4 implies that the "few" faithful ones at Sardis
were not "ready to die," but were full of life.
are--The two oldest manuscripts read, "were
ready," literally, "were about to die," namely, at the
time when you "strengthen" them. This implies that "thou
art dead," @Re
3:1, is to be taken with limitation; for those must
have some life who are told to strengthen the things
that remain.
perfect--literally, "filled up in full
complement"; Translate, "complete." Weighed in the balance
of Him who requires living faith as the motive of works,
and found wanting.
before God--Greek, "in the sight of
God." The three oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac,
and Coptic, read, "before (in the sight of) MY
God"; Christ's judgment is God the Father's judgment. In
the sight of men, Sardis had "a name of living": "so many
and so great are the obligations of pastors, that he who
would in reality fulfil even a third of them, would be
esteemed holy by men, whereas, if content with that alone,
he would be sure not to escape hell" [JUAN
D'AVILA].
Note: in Sardis and Laodicea alone of the seven we read of
no conflict with foes within or without the Church. Not
that either had renounced the appearance of
opposition to the world; but neither had the faithfulness
to witness for God by word and example, so as to "torment
them that dwelt on the earth" (@Re
11:10).
3. how thou hast received--(@Col
2:6 1Th 4:1 1Ti 6:20). What Sardis is to "remember"
is, not how joyfully she had received originally
the Gospel message, but how the precious deposit was
committed to her originally, so that she could not say,
she had not "received and heard" it. The Greek is
not aorist (as in @Re
2:4, as to Ephesus, "Thou didst leave thy first
love"), but "thou hast received" (perfect), and still hast
the permanent deposit of doctrine committed to thee. The
word "keep" (so the Greek is for English
Version, "hold fast") which follows, accords with this
sense. "Keep" or observe the commandment which thou hast
received and didst hear.
heard--Greek aorist, "didst hear,"
namely, when the Gospel doctrine was committed to thee. TRENCH
explains "how," with what demonstration of the Spirit
and power from Christ's ambassadors the truth came to
you, and how heartily and zealously you at first received
it. Similarly BENGEL,
"Regard to her former character (how it once
stood) ought to guard Sardis against the future hour,
whatsoever it shall be, proving fatal to her." But it
is not likely that the Spirit repeats the same exhortation
virtually to Sardis as to Ephesus.
If therefore--seeing thou art so warned, if,
nevertheless, &c.
come on thee as a thief--in special judgment
on thee as a Church, with the same stealthiness and as
unexpectedly as shall be My visible second coming. As
the thief gives no notice of his approach. Christ
applies the language which in its fullest sense describes
His second coming, to describe His coming in special
judgments on churches and states (as Jerusalem, @Mt
24:4-28) these special judgments being anticipatory
earnests of that great last coming. "The last day is
hidden from us, that every day may be observed by us" [AUGUSTINE].
Twice Christ in the days of His flesh spake the same words
(@Mt
24:42,43 Lu 12:39,40); and so deeply had His words
been engraven on the minds of the apostles that they are
often repeated in their writings (@Re
16:15 1Th 5:2,4,6 2Pe 3:10). The Greek proverb was
that "the feet of the avenging deities are shod with
wool," expressing the noiseless approach of the divine
judgments, and their possible nearness at the moment when
they were supposed the farthest off [TRENCH].
4. The three oldest
manuscripts prefix "but," or "nevertheless"
(notwithstanding thy spiritual deadness), and omit "even."
names--persons named in the book of
life (@Re
3:5) known by name by the Lord as His own. These had
the reality corresponding to their name; not a mere
name among men as living, while really dead
(@Re
3:1). The gracious Lord does not overlook any
exceptional cases of real saints in the midst of unreal
professors.
not defiled their garments--namely, the
garments of their Christian profession, of which baptism
is the initiatory seal, whence the candidates for baptism
used in the ancient Church to be arrayed in white. Compare
also @Eph
5:27, as to the spotlessness of the Church when she
shall be presented to Christ; and @Re
19:8, as to the "fine linen, clean and white, the
righteousness of the saints," in which it shall be granted
to her to be arrayed; and "the wedding garment." Meanwhile
she is not to sully her Christian profession with any
defilement of flesh or spirit, but to "keep her garments."
For no defilement shall enter the heavenly city. Not that
any keep themselves here wholly free from defilement; but,
as compared with hollow professors, the godly keep
themselves unspotted from the world; and when they do
contract it, they wash it away, so as to have their "robes
white in the blood of the Lamb" (@Re
7:14). The Greek is not "to stain" (Greek,
"miainein"), but to "defile," or besmear (Greek,
"molunein"), @So
5:3.
they shall walk with me in white--The
promised reward accords with the character of those to be
rewarded: keeping their garments undefiled and
white through the blood of the Lamb now, they shall
walk with Him in while hereafter. On "with me,"
compare the very same words, @Lu
23:43 Joh 17:24. "Walk" implies spiritual life, for
only the living walk; also liberty, for it is only the
free who walk at large. The grace and dignity of flowing
long garments is seen to best advantage when the person
"walks": so the graces of the saint's manifested character
shall appear fully when he shall serve the Lord
perfectly hereafter (@Re
22:3).
they are worthy--with the worthiness (not
their own, but that) which Christ has put on them (@Re
7:14). @Eze
16:14, "perfect through MY comeliness which I had put
upon thee." Grace is glory in the bud. "The worthiness
here denotes a congruity between the saint's state of
grace on earth, and that of glory, which the
Lord has appointed for them, about to be estimated by the
law itself of grace" [VITRINGA].
Contrast @Ac
13:46.
5. white--not a dull white,
but glittering, dazzling white [GROTIUS].
Compare @Mt
13:43. The body transfigured into the likeness of
Christ's body, and emitting beams of light reflected from
Him, is probably the "white raiment" promised here.
the same--Greek, "THIS
man"; he and he alone. So one oldest manuscript reads. But
two oldest manuscripts, and most of the ancient versions,
"shall THUS
be clothed," &c.
raiment--Greek, "garments." "He that
overcometh" shall receive the same reward as they who
"have not defiled their garments" (@Re
3:4); therefore the two are identical.
I will not--Greek, "I will not by any
means."
blot out . . . name out of . . . book of life--of
the heavenly city. A register was kept in ancient cities
of their citizens: the names of the dead were of course
erased. So those who have a name that they live and are
dead (@Re
3:1), are blotted out of God's roll of the heavenly
citizens and heirs of eternal life; not that in
God's electing decree they ever were in His book of life.
But, according to human conceptions, those who had a high
name for piety would be supposed to be in it, and were, in
respect to privileges, actually among those in the way of
salvation; but these privileges, and the fact that they
once might have been saved, shall be of no avail to them.
As to the book of life, compare @Re
13:8 17:8 20:12,15 21:27 Ex 32:32 Ps 69:28 Da 12:1. In
the sense of the "call," many are enrolled among the
called to salvation, who shall not be found among
the chosen at last. The pale of salvation is wider
than that of election. Election is fixed. Salvation is
open to all and is pending (humanly speaking) in the case
of those mentioned here. But @Re
20:15 21:27, exhibit the book of the elect alone in
the narrower sense, after the erasure of the others.
before . . . before--Greek, "in the
presence of." Compare the same promise of Christ's
confessing before His Father those who confessed Him, @Mt
10:32,33 Lu 12:8,9. He omits "in heaven" after "My
Father," because there is, now that He is in heaven, no
contrast between the Father in heaven and the Son
on earth. He now sets His seal from heaven upon
many of His words uttered on earth [TRENCH].
An undesigned coincidence, proving that these epistles
are, as they profess, in their words, as well as
substance, Christ's own addresses; not even tinged with
the color of John's style, such as it appears in his
Gospel and Epistles. The coincidence is mainly with the
three other Gospels, and not with John's, which makes the
coincidence more markedly undesigned. So also the clause,
"He that hath an ear, let him hear," is not repeated from
John's Gospel, but from the Lord's own words in the three
synoptic Gospels (@Mt
11:15 13:9 Mr 4:9,23 7:16 Lu 8:8 14:35).
6. (See on Re 2:7.)
7. Philadelphia--in Lydia,
twenty-eight miles southeast of Sardis, built by Attalus
Philadelphus, king of Pergamos, who died
A.D. 138. It was
nearly destroyed by an earthquake in the reign of Tiberius
[TACITUS,
Annals, 2.47]. The connection of this Church with Jews
there causes the address to it to have an Old Testament
coloring in the images employed. It and Smyrna alone of
the seven receive unmixed praise.
he that is holy--as in the Old Testament, "the
Holy One of Israel." Thus Jesus and the God of the Old
Testament are one. None but God is absolutely holy (Greek,
"hagios," separate from evil and perfectly hating
it). In contrast to "the synagogue of Satan" (@Re
3:9).
true--Greek, "alethinos": "VERY
God," as distinguished from the false gods and from all
those who say that they are what they are not
(@Re
3:9):real, genuine. Furthermore, He perfectly
realizes all that is involved in the names, GOD,
Light (@Joh
1:9 1Jo 2:8), Bread (@Joh
6:32), the Vine (@Joh
15:1); as distinguished from all typical, partial, and
imperfect realizations of the idea. His nature answers to
His name (@Joh
17:3 1Th 1:9). The Greek, "alethes," on
the other hand, is "truth-speaking," "truth-loving" (@Joh
3:33 Tit 1:2).
he that hath the key of David--the antitype
of Eliakim, to whom the "key," the emblem of authority
"over the house of David," was transferred from Shebna,
who was removed from the office of chamberlain or
treasurer, as unworthy of it. Christ, the Heir of the
throne of David, shall supplant all the less worthy
stewards who have abused their trust in God's spiritual
house, and "shall reign over the house of Jacob," literal
and spiritual (@Lu
1:32,33), "for ever," "as a Son over His own house" (@Heb
3:2-6). It rests with Christ to open or shut the
heavenly palace, deciding who is, and who is not, to be
admitted: as He also opens, or shuts, the prison,
having the keys of hell (the grave) and
death (@Re
1:18). The power of the keys was given to Peter and
the other apostles, only when, and in so far as, Christ
made him and them infallible. Whatever degrees of this
power may have been committed to ministers, the supreme
power belongs to Christ alone. Thus Peter rightly opened
the Gospel door to the Gentiles (@Ac
10:1-48 11:17,18; especially @Ac
14:27, end). But he wrongly tried to shut the door in
part again (@Ga
2:11-18). Eliakim had "the key of the house of David
laid upon his shoulder": Christ, as the antitypical David,
Himself has the key of the supreme "government upon His
shoulder." His attribute here, as in the former addresses,
accords with His promise. Though "the synagogue of Satan,"
false "Jews" (@Re
3:9) try to "shut" the "door" which I "set open before
thee"; "no man can shut it" (@Re
3:8).
shutteth--So Vulgate and Syriac
Versions read. But the four oldest manuscripts read,
"shall shut"; so Coptic Version and ORIGEN.
and no man openeth--Two oldest manuscripts,
B, Aleph, Coptic Version, and ORIGEN
read, "shall open." Two oldest manuscripts, A, C. and
Vulgate Version support English Version
reading.
8. I have set--Greek,
"given": it is My gracious gift to thee.
open door--for evangelization; a door of
spiritual usefulness. The opening of a door by Him
to the Philadelphian Church accords with the previous
assignation to Him of "the key of David."
and--The three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C,
and ORIGEN
read, "which no man can shut."
for--"because."
a little--This gives the idea that Christ
says, He sets before Philadelphia an open door because she
has some little strength; whereas the sense rather
is, He does so because she has "but little
strength": being consciously weak herself, she is the
fitter object for God's power to rest on [so AQUINAS],
that so the Lord Christ may have all the glory.
and hast kept--and so, the
littleness of thy strength becoming the source of
Almighty power to thee, as leading thee to rest wholly on
My great power, thou hast kept My word. GROTIUS
makes "little strength" to mean that she had a Church
small in numbers and external resources: "a little
flock poor in worldly goods, and of small account in the
eyes of men" [TRENCH].
So ALFORD. I
prefer the view given above. The Greek verbs are in
the aorist tense: "Thou didst keep . . . didst not deny My
name": alluding to some particular occasion when her
faithfulness was put to the test.
9. I will make--Greek
present, "I make," literally, "I give" (see on Re 3:8).
The promise to Philadelphia is larger than that to Smyrna.
To Smyrna the promise was that "the synagogue of Satan"
should not prevail against the faithful in her: to
Philadelphia, that she should even win over some of "the
synagogue of Satan" to fall on their faces and confess
God is in her of a truth. Translate, "(some) of the
synagogue." For until Christ shall come, and all
Israel then be saved, there is but "a remnant" being
gathered out of the Jews "according to the election of
grace." This is an instance of how Christ set before her
an "open door," some of her greatest adversaries, the
Jews, being brought to the obedience of the faith. Their
worshipping before her feet expresses the convert's
willingness to take the very lowest place in the Church,
doing servile honor to those whom once they persecuted,
rather than dwell with the ungodly. So the Philippian
jailer before Paul.
10. patience--"endurance."
"The word of My endurance" is My Gospel word, which
teaches patient endurance in expectation of my
coming (@Re
1:9). My endurance is the endurance which I
require, and which I practice. Christ Himself now
endures, patiently waiting until the usurper be cast
out, and all "His enemies be made His footstool." So, too,
His Church, for the joy before her of sharing His coming
kingdom, endures patiently. Hence, in @Re
3:11, follows, "Behold, I come quickly."
I also--The reward is in kind: "because thou
didst keep," &c. "I also (on My side) will keep thee," &c.
from--Greek, "(so as to deliver thee)
out of," not to exempt from temptation.
the hour of temptation--the appointed
season of affliction and temptation (so in @De
4:34 the plagues are called "the temptations of
Egypt"), literally, "the temptation": the sore
temptation which is coming on: the time of great
tribulation before Christ's second coming.
to try them that dwell upon the earth--those
who are of earth, earthy (@Re
8:13). "Dwell" implies that their home is earth, not
heaven. All mankind, except the elect (@Re
13:8,14). The temptation brings out the fidelity of
those kept by Christ and hardens the unbelieving
reprobates (@Re
9:20,21 16:11,21). The particular persecutions which
befell Philadelphia shortly after, were the earnest of the
great last tribulation before Christ's coming, to which
the Church's attention in all ages is directed.
11. Behold--omitted by the
three oldest manuscripts and most ancient versions.
I come quickly--the great incentive to
persevering faithfulness, and the consolation under
present trials.
that . . . which thou hast--"The word of my
patience," or "endurance" (@Re
3:10), which He had just commended them for keeping,
and which involved with it the attaining of the kingdom;
this they would lose if they yielded to the temptation of
exchanging consistency and suffering for compromise and
ease.
that no man take thy crown--which otherwise
thou wouldst receive: that no tempter cause thee to lose
it: not that the tempter would thus secure it for himself
(@Col
2:18).
12. pillar in the temple--In
one sense there shall be "no temple" in the heavenly city
because there shall be no distinction of things into
sacred and secular, for all things and persons shall be
holy to the Lord. The city shall be all one great temple,
in which the saints shall be not merely stones, as
m the spiritual temple now on earth, but all eminent as
pillars: immovably firm (unlike Philadelphia, the city
which was so often shaken by earthquakes, STRABO
[12 and 13]), like the colossal pillars before Solomon's
temple, Boaz (that is, "In it is strength") and Jachin
("It shall be established"): only that those pillars were
outside, these shall be within the temple.
my God--(See on Re 2:7).
go no more out--The Greek is stronger,
never more at all. As the elect angels are beyond
the possibility of falling, being now under (as the
Schoolmen say) "the blessed necessity of goodness," so
shall the saints be. The door shall be once for all shut,
as well to shut safely in for ever the elect, as to shut
out the lost (@Mt
25:10 Joh 8:35; compare @Isa
22:23, the type, Eliakim). They shall be priests for
ever unto God (@Re
1:6). "Who would not yearn for that city out of which
no friend departs, and into which no enemy enters?" [AUGUSTINE
in TRENCH].
write upon him the name of my God--as
belonging to God in a peculiar sense (@Re
7:3 9:4 14:1; and especially @Re
22:4), therefore secure. As the name of Jehovah
("Holiness to the Lord") was on the golden plate on the
high priest's forehead (@Ex
28:36-38); so the saints in their heavenly royal
priesthood shall bear His name openly, as consecrated to
Him. Compare the caricature of this in the brand on the
forehead of the beast's followers (@Re
13:16,17), and on the harlot (@Re
17:5; compare @Re
20:4).
name of the city of my God--as one of its
citizens (@Re
21:2,3,10, which is briefly alluded to by anticipation
here). The full description of the city forms the
appropriate close of the book. The saint's citizenship is
now hidden, but then it shall be manifested: he shall have
the right to enter in through the gates into the city
(@Re
22:14). This was the city which Abraham looked for.
new--Greek, "kaine." Not the
old Jerusalem, once called "the holy city," but having
forfeited the name. Greek, "nea," would
express that it had recently come into existence;
but Greek, "kaine," that which is new and
different, superseding the worn-out old Jerusalem and
its polity. "John, in the Gospel, applies to the old city
the Greek name Hierosolyma. But in the
Apocalypse, always, to the heavenly city the Hebrew
name, Hierousalem. The Hebrew name is the original
and holier one: the Greek, the recent and more
secular and political one" [BENGEL].
my new name--at present incommunicable and
only known to God: to be hereafter revealed and made the
believer's own in union with God in Christ. Christ's name
written on him denotes he shall be wholly Christ's.
New also relates to Christ, who shall assume a new
character (answering to His "new name") entering with His
saints on a kingdom--not that which He had with the Father
before the worlds, but that earned by His humiliation as
Son of man. GIBBON,
the infidel [Decline and Fall, ch. 64], gives an
unwilling testimony to the fulfilment of the prophecy as
to Philadelphia from a temporal point of view, Among the
Greek colonies and churches of Asia, Philadelphia is still
erect,--a column in a scene of ruins--a pleasing
example that the paths of honor and safety may sometimes
be the same."
13. (See on Re 2:7).
14. Laodiceans--The city
was in the southwest of Phrygia, on the river Lycus, not
far from Colosse, and lying between it and Philadelphia.
It was destroyed by an earthquake,
A.D. 62, and rebuilt by its wealthy
citizens without the help of the state [TACITUS,
Annals, 14.27]. This wealth (arising from the
excellence of its wools) led to a self-satisfied, lukewarm
state in spiritual things, as @Re
3:17 describes. See on Col 4:16, on the Epistle which
is thought to have been written to the Laodicean Church by
Paul. The Church in latter times was apparently
flourishing; for one of the councils at which the canon of
Scripture was determined was held in Laodicea in
A.D. 361. Hardly a
Christian is now to be found on or near its site.
the Amen--(@Isa
65:16, Hebrew, "Bless Himself in the God of
Amen . . . swear by the God of Amen," @2Co
1:20). He who not only says, but is, the Truth.
The saints used Amen at the end of prayer, or in
assenting to the word of God; but none, save the Son of
God, ever said, "Amen, I say unto you," for it is the
language peculiar to God, who avers by Himself. The
New Testament formula, "Amen. I say unto you," is
equivalent to the Old Testament formula, "as I live,
saith Jehovah." In John's Gospel alone He uses (in the
Greek) the double "Amen," @Joh
1:51 3:3, &c.; in English Version," Verily,
verily." The title happily harmonizes with the address.
His unchanging faithfulness as "the Amen" contrasts with
Laodicea's wavering of purpose, "neither hot nor cold" (@Re
3:16). The angel of Laodicea has with some probability
been conjectured to be Archippus, to whom, thirty years
previously, Paul had already given a monition, as needing
to be stirred up to diligence in his ministry. So the
Apostolic Constitutions, [8.46], name him as the first
bishop of Laodicea: supposed to be the son of Philemon (@Phm
1:2).
faithful and true witness--As "the Amen"
expresses the unchangeable truth of His promises; so "the
faithful the true witness," the truth of His revelations
as to the heavenly things which He has seen and testifies.
"Faithful," that is, trustworthy (@2Ti
2:11,13). "True" is here (Greek, "alethinos")
not truth-speaking (Greek, "alethes"),
but "perfectly realizing all that is comprehended in the
name Witness" (@1Ti
6:13). Three things are necessary for this: (1) to
have seen with His own eyes what He attests; (2) to be
competent to relate it for others; (3) to be willing
truthfully to do so. In Christ all these conditions meet
[TRENCH].
beginning of the creation of God--not he whom
God created first, but as in @Col
1:15-18 (see on Col 1:15-18), the Beginner of
all creation, its originating instrument. All creation
would not be represented adoring Him, if He were but one
of themselves. His being the Creator is a strong guarantee
for His faithfulness as "the Witness and Amen."
15. neither cold--The
antithesis to "hot," literally, "boiling" ("fervent," @Ac
18:25 Ro 12:11; compare @So
8:6 Lu 24:32), requires that "cold" should here mean
more than negatively cold; it is rather, positively icy
cold: having never yet been warmed. The Laodiceans
were in spiritual things cold comparatively, but
not cold as the world outside, and as those who had
never belonged to the Church. The lukewarm state, if it be
the transitional stage to a warmer, is a desirable state
(for a little religion, if real, is better than none); but
most fatal when, as here, an abiding condition, for it is
mistaken for a safe state (@Re
3:17). This accounts for Christ's desiring that they
were cold rather than lukewarm. For then
there would not be the same "danger of mixed motive and
disregarded principle" [ALFORD].
Also, there is more hope of the "cold," that is, those who
are of the world, and not yet warmed by the Gospel call;
for, when called, they may become hot and fervent
Christians: such did the once-cold publicans,
Zaccheus and Matthew, become. But the lukewarm has
been brought within reach of the holy fire, without being
heated by it into fervor: having religion enough to
lull the conscience in false security, but not religion
enough to save the soul: as Demas, @2Ti
4:10. Such were the halters between two opinions
in Israel (@1Ki
18:21; compare @2Ki
17:41 Mt 6:24).
16. neither cold nor hot--So
one oldest manuscript, B, and Vulgate read. But two
oldest manuscripts, Syriac, and Coptic
transpose thus, "hot nor cold." It is remarkable that the
Greek adjectives are in the masculine, agreeing
with the angel, not feminine, agreeing with the Church.
The Lord addresses the angel as the embodiment and
representative of the Church. The chief minister is
answerable for his flock if he have not faithfully warned
the members of it.
I will--Greek, "I am about to," "I am
ready to": I have it in my mind: implying graciously the
possibility of the threat not being executed, if only they
repent at once. His dealings towards them will depend on
theirs towards Him.
spue thee out of my month--reject with
righteous loathing, as Canaan spued out its inhabitants
for their abominations. Physicians used lukewarm
water to cause vomiting. Cold and hot drinks
were common at feasts, but never lukewarm. There
were hot and cold springs near Laodicea.
17. Self-sufficiency is the
fatal danger of a lukewarm state (see on
Re 3:15).
thou sayest--virtually and mentally, if not
in so many words.
increased with goods--Greek, "have
become enriched," implying self-praise in self-acquired
riches. The Lord alludes to @Ho
12:8. The riches on which they prided themselves were
spiritual riches; though, doubtless, their spiritual
self-sufficiency ("I have need of nothing") was much
fostered by their worldly wealth; as, on the other hand,
poverty of spirit is fostered by poverty in
respect to worldly riches.
knowest not that thou--in particular above
all others. The "THOU"
in the Greek is emphatic.
art wretched--Greek, "art the
wretched one."
miserable--So one oldest manuscripts reads.
But two oldest manuscripts prefix "the." Translate, "the
pitiable"; "the one especially to be pitied." How
different Christ's estimate of men, from their own
estimate of themselves, "I have need of nothing!"
blind--whereas Laodicea boasted of a deeper
than common insight into divine things. They were
not absolutely blind, else eye-salve would
have been of no avail to them; but
short-sighted.
18. Gentle and loving
irony. Take My advice, thou who fanciest thyself in
need of nothing. Not only art thou not in need of
nothing, but art in need of the commonest necessaries of
existence. He graciously stoops to their modes of thought
and speech: Thou art a people ready to listen to any
counsel as to how to buy to advantage; then,
listen to My counsel (for I am "Counsellor,"
@Isa
9:6), buy of ME"
(in whom, according to Paul's Epistle written to
the neighboring Colosse and intended for the Laodicean
Church also, @Col
2:1,3 4:16, are hidden all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge). "Buy" does not imply that we can, by
any work or merit of ours, purchase God's free
gift; nay the very purchase money consists in the
renunciation of all self-righteousness, such as Laodicea
had (@Re
3:17). "Buy" at the cost of thine own self-sufficiency
(so Paul, @Php
3:7,8); and the giving up of all things, however dear
to us, that would prevent our receiving Christ's
salvation as a free gift, for example, self and
worldly desires. Compare @Isa
55:1, "Buy . . . without money and price."
of me--the source of "unsearchable riches" (@Eph
3:8). Laodicea was a city of extensive money
transactions [CICERO].
gold tried in, &c.--literally, "fired
(and fresh) from the fire," that is, just fresh
from the furnace which has proved its purity, and
retaining its bright gloss. Sterling spiritual wealth, as
contrasted with its counterfeit, in which Laodicea boasted
itself. Having bought this gold she will be no
longer poor (@Re
3:17).
mayest be rich--Greek, "mayest be
enriched."
white raiment--"garments." Laodicea's wools
were famous. Christ offers infinitely whiter raiment. As
"gold tried in the fire" expresses faith tested by
fiery trials: so "white raiment," Christ's
righteousness imputed to the believer in justification
and imparted in sanctification.
appear--Greek, "be manifested,"
namely, at the last day, when everyone without the
wedding. garment shall be discovered. To strip one, is in
the East the image of putting to open shame. So also to
clothe one with fine apparel is the image of doing him
honor. Man can discover his shame, God alone can cover it,
so that his nakedness shall not be manifested at last (@Col
3:10-14). Blessed is he whose sin is so covered.
The hypocrite's shame may be manifested now; it must be so
at last.
anoint . . . with eye-salve--The oldest
manuscripts read, "(buy of Me) eye-salve (collyrium,
a roll of ointment), to anoint thine eyes." Christ
has for Laodicea an ointment far more precious than all
the costly unguents of the East. The eye is here
the conscience or inner light of the mind. According as it
is sound and "single" (Greek, "haplous,"
"simple"), or otherwise, the man sees aright spiritually,
or does not. The Holy Spirit's unction, like the ancient
eye-salve's, first smarts with conviction of sin, then
heals. He opens our eyes first to ourselves in our
wretchedness, then to the Saviour in His preciousness. TRENCH
notices that the most sunken churches of the seven,
namely, Sardis and Laodicea, are the ones in which alone
are specified no opponents from without, nor heresies from
within. The Church owes much to God's overruling
Providence which has made so often internal and external
foes, in spite of themselves, to promote His cause by
calling forth her energies in contending for the faith
once delivered to the saints. Peace is dearly bought at
the cost of spiritual stagnation, where there is not
interest enough felt in religion to contend about it at
all.
19. (@Job
5:17 Pr 3:11,12 Heb 12:5,6.) So in the case of
Manasseh (@2Ch
33:11-13).
As many--All. "He scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth. And shalt thou be an exception? If excepted
from suffering the scourge, thou art excepted from the
number of the sons" [AUGUSTINE].
This is an encouragement to Laodicea not to despair, but
to regard the rebuke as a token for good, if she profit by
it.
I love--Greek, "philo," the
love of gratuitous affection, independent of any
grounds for esteem in the object loved. But in the case of
Philadelphia (@Re
3:9), "I have loved thee" (Greek, "egapesa")
with the love of esteem, founded on the judgment.
Compare the note in my English Gnomon of BENGEL,
@Joh
21:15-17.
I rebuke--The "I" in the Greek stands
first in the sentence emphatically. I in My dealings, so
altogether unlike man's, in the case of all whom I
love, rebuke. The Greek, "elencho," is
the same verb. as in @Joh
16:8, "(the Holy Ghost) will convince (rebuke
unto conviction) the world of sin."
chasten--"chastise." The Greek, "paideu,"
which in classical Greek means to instruct,
in the New Testament means to instruct by chastisement
(@Heb
12:5,6). David was rebuked unto conviction,
when he cried, "I have sinned against the Lord"; the
chastening followed when his child was taken from him
(@2Sa
12:13,14). In the divine chastening, the sinner
at one and the same time winces under the rod and learns
righteousness.
be zealous--habitually. Present tense in the
Greek, of a lifelong course of zeal. The
opposite of "lukewarm." The Greek by alliteration
marks this: Laodicea had not been "hot" (Greek, "zestos"),
she is therefore urged to "be zealous" (Greek, "zeleue"):
both are derived from the same verb, Greek, "zeo,"
"to boil."
repent--Greek aorist: of an act to be
once for all done, and
done at once.
20. stand--waiting in
wonderful condescension and long-suffering.
knock--(@So
5:2). This is a further manifestation of His loving
desire for the sinner's salvation. He who is Himself "the
Door," and who bids us "knock" that it may be "opened
unto" us, is first Himself to knock at the door of our
hearts. If He did not knock first, we should never come to
knock at His door. Compare @So
5:4-6, which is plainly alluded to here; the Spirit
thus in Revelation sealing the canonicity of that mystical
book. The spiritual state of the bride there, between
waking and sleeping, slow to open the door to
her divine lover, answers to that of the lukewarm
Laodicea here. "Love in regard to men emptied (humbled)
God; for He does not remain in His place and call to
Himself the servant whom He loved, but He comes down
Himself to seek him, and He who is all-rich arrives at the
lodging of the pauper, and with His own voice intimates
His yearning love, and seeks a similar return, and
withdraws not when disowned, and is not impatient at
insult, and when persecuted still waits at the doors" [NICOLAUS
CABASILAS in
TRENCH].
my voice--He appeals to the sinner not only
with His hand (His providences) knocking, but with
His voice (His word read or heard; or rather, His
Spirit inwardly applying to man's spirit the lessons to be
drawn from His providence and His word). If we refuse to
answer to His knocking at our door now, He will refuse to
hear our knocking at His door hereafter. In respect to His
second coming also, He is even now at the door, and
we know not how soon He may knock: therefore we
should always be ready to open to Him immediately.
if any man hear--for man is not compelled by
irresistible force: Christ knocks, but does not
break open the door, though the violent take heaven by the
force of prayer (@Mt
11:12): whosoever does hear, does so not of himself,
but by the drawings of God's grace (@Joh
6:44): repentance is Christ's gift (@Ac
5:31). He draws, not drags. The Sun of
righteousness, like the natural sun, the moment that
the door is opened, pours in His light, which could
not previously find an entrance. Compare HILARY
on Psalm 118:19.
I will come in to him--as I did to Zaccheus.
sup with him, and he with me--Delightful
reciprocity! Compare "dwelleth in me, and I in Him," @Joh
6:56. Whereas, ordinarily, the admitted guest sups
with the admitter, here the divine guest becomes Himself
the host, for He is the bread of life, and the Giver of
the marriage feast. Here again He alludes to the imagery
of @So
4:16, where the Bride invites Him to eat pleasant
fruits, even as He had first prepared a feast for her,
"His fruit was sweet to my taste." Compare the same
interchange, @Joh
21:9-13, the feast being made up of the viands that
Jesus brought, and those which the disciples brought. The
consummation of this blessed intercommunion shall be at
the Marriage Supper of the Lamb, of which the Lord's
Supper is the earnest and foretaste.
21. sit with me in my throne--(@Re
2:26,27 20:6 Mt 19:28 20:23 Joh 17:22,24 2Ti 2:12).
The same whom Christ had just before threatened to spue
out of His mouth, is now offered a seat with Him on
His throne! "The highest place is within reach of the
lowest; the faintest spark of grace may be fanned into the
mightiest flame of love" [TRENCH].
even as I also--Two thrones are here
mentioned: (1) His Father's, upon which He now sits, and
has sat since His ascension, after His victory over death,
sin, the world; upon this none can sit save God, and the
God-man Christ Jesus, for it is the incommunicable
prerogative of God alone; (2) the throne which shall be
peculiarly His as the once humbled and then
glorified Son of man, to be set up over the whole
earth (heretofore usurped by Satan) at His coming again;
in this the victorious saints shall share (@1Co
6:2). The transfigured elect Church shall with Christ
judge and reign over the nations in the flesh, and Israel
the foremost of them; ministering blessings to them as
angels were the Lord's mediators of blessing and
administrators of His government in setting up His throne
in Israel at Sinai. This privilege of our high calling
belongs exclusively to the present time while Satan
reigns, when alone there is scope for conflict and for
victory (@2Ti
2:11,12). When Satan shall be bound (@Re
20:4), there shall be no longer scope for it, for all
on earth shall know the Lord from the least to the
greatest. This, the grandest and crowning promise, is
placed at the end of all the seven addresses, to gather
all in one. It also forms the link to the next part of the
book, where the Lamb is introduced seated on His
Father's throne (@Re
4:2,3 5:5,6). The Eastern throne is broad, admitting
others besides him who, as chief, occupies the center. TRENCH
notices; The order of the promises in the seven epistles
corresponds to that of the unfolding of the kingdom of God
its first beginnings on earth to its consummation in
heaven. To the faithful at Ephesus: (1) The tree of
life in the Paradise of God is promised (@Re
2:7), answering to @Ge
2:9. (2) Sin entered the world and death by sin; but
to the faithful at Smyrna it is promised, they shall
not be hurt by the second death (@Re
2:11). (3) The promise of the hidden manna (@Re
2:17) to Pergamos brings us to the Mosaic period, the
Church in the wilderness. (4) That to Thyatira, namely,
triumph over the nations (@Re
2:26,27), forms the consummation of the kingdom in
prophetic type, the period of David and Solomon
characterized by this power of the nations. Here
there is a division, the seven falling into two groups,
four and three, as often, for example, the Lord's
Prayer, three and four. The scenery of the last three
passes from earth to heaven, the Church contemplated as
triumphant, with its steps from glory to glory. (5) Christ
promises to the believer of Sardis not to blot his name
out of the book of life but to confess him before His
Father and the angels at the judgment-day, and clothe him
with a glorified body of dazzling whiteness (@Re
3:4,5). (6) To the faithful at Philadelphia Christ
promises they shall be citizens of the new Jerusalem,
fixed as immovable pillars there, where city and temple
are one (@Re
3:12); here not only individual salvation is promised
to the believer, as in the case of Sardis, but also
privileges in the blessed communion of the Church
triumphant. (7) Lastly, to the faithful of Laodicea is
given the crowning promise, not only the two former
blessings, but a seat with Christ on His throne, even as
He has sat with His Father on His Father's throne (@Re
3:21).
|
|