Sermon # 13 Series:
Revelation
Title: Christ’s Letter To The Church At Sardis
Text: Revelation 3:1-6
Reading: Psalm 27:1-14
Subject: Spiritual deadness in the church
Date: Sunday Morning - January 14, 1996[1]
Tape # S-13
Introduction:
In ancient times Sardis was the
capital of Lydia. Its people were proud, arrogant, over-confident. It was a
relatively small city, but it was rich and strong, situated on what was thought
to be an inaccessible hill, and protected by what was thought to be an
impregnable fortress. But it had one unobserved, unguarded weak point, a small
crack in the rock wall that surrounded the city. One night, in an unsuspecting
hour, the enemy came as a thief in the night, and Sardis was conquered. Later
the city was partially destroyed by an earthquake. And by the time John wrote
the Book of Revelation, Sardis was in decay, experiencing a slow but sure
death.
The condition of the city was a vivid
picture of the spiritual condition of the church in Sardis - proud, but decaying. The church at
Sardis was proud, arrogant, over-confident. The enemy had come, and by degrees
had silently destroyed the life of this once magnificent church. The church
existed in peace. Neither the Jews nor the Gentiles bothered the church at Sardis,
because the church at Sardis did not bother them. There was no persecution in
Sardis. The church enjoyed great peace. But it was the peace of a cemetery. The
church was dead. Here our Lord calls for Sardis to remember the past, and
recall their former vitality, faith, obedience, and zeal. And he calls for them
to return, to strengthen the things that remain, to hold fast that which they
had, and to repent. If they refused, he would come upon them as a thief in the
night to destroy them.
How descriptive this letter is of the
condition of Christ’s church at the hour! In general, the church of Christ
appears to be in a state of decay. But remember, this letter is not just
addressed to the church in general. It is addressed specifically to each local
church. Its message is to us. May God give us the wisdom to apply it directly
to our own hearts as individuals as well. The epistle to Sardis is a letter of
reproof and warning. Let it be read with weeping eyes and received with broken
hearts. “He that hath an ear, let him
hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches.”
Proposition:
Spiritual decay is the forerunner of spiritual death, total
apostasy, and eternal ruin.
Divisions:
I am going to present the message of this letter to you
under four points:
1. A prevailing reproach
2. A plain recommendation
3. A precious remnant
4. A promised reward
I. Our Lord rebukes us and lays at our door the charge of a prevailing reproach.
The corruption at Sardis was a general corruption. In
Pergamos a few of the congregation had followed the doctrine of Balaam and the
doctrine of the Nicolaitanes. In Thyatira a few had followed Jezebel. But in
Sardis the congregation as a whole was corrupt, and only a few were faithful.
The
church was sinking into a spiritual stupor. Therefore, Christ describes
himself as “He that hath the seven
Spirits of God, and the seven stars.” He is able to revive the dead church.
He has the Spirit of life and he can cause the angel of the church to preach
the gospel with renewed power and fervency.
The reproach of this church was
fourfold. Christ charges them with four faults.
A.
The first charge is this: They had a
name that they lived, but they were dead (v. 1).
Sardis had a good reputation. They
were admired and applauded by many. But it was a reputation which they did not
deserve. “Thou hast a name that thou
livest, and art dead.” They were big on profession, but little in
possession. They were long in ceremony, but short in commitment. They were
precise in doctrine, but negligent in devotion. They had great activity, but
little worship. Shall I be thought harsh and uncharitable if I say, “This is
the deplorable condition of the church today?” I travel almost every week up
and down the country, preaching somewhere almost every night. And if I were to
describe the condition of the churches I preach in honestly, I would have to
use these words - “Thou hast a name that
thou livest, and art dead.” And these are the best of churches, the most
orthodox, the most well-grounded, well-disciplined, and well-instructed
churches in the country. God have mercy upon us, when it must be said of these
churches, “Thou hast a name that thou
livest, and art dead!” We have a form of godliness. But where is the power?
I seldom ever meet a man who is not
religious, who does not profess to be a Christian; but I seldom ever meet a man
who is committed to Christ! By-in-large, even in our churches, I see nothing
but deadness.
·
Our meetings
are poorly attended.
·
The Word of
God is seldom studied, or even read.
·
Prayer is
seldom heard.
·
Our religion
is a convenience.
·
“Ichabod”
might be written on the doors of most of our church buildings.
B.
The next charge against Sardis is this: They were negligent in the most important matters (v. 2).
Sardis should have been a lighthouse.
It should have been a beacon. It should have been a pillar and ground of the
truth. But they failed in the most important matters. And those things that
remained were ready to die.
Like the others, this letter was
addressed first and foremost to the pastor, the angel of the church. And
usually, not always, but usually, the church is but a reflection of her pastor.
The pulpit is the greatest strength, or the greatest weakness in the church.
And here the pastor was negligent, the elders were negligent, the deacons were
negligent, and the people were negligent. No one was watchful for the faith,
earnestly contending for it, wrestling against the wicked one, laboring for the
souls of men, and laboring for the spread of the gospel. Christ saw in this
church nothing but slothfulness, coldness, lethargy, and death. Is it not so
today?
·
Where are
those men who have hazarded their lives for the gospel?
·
Where is the
man who counts not his life dear unto himself, so that he may finish his course
with joy?
·
Where is the
man whose heart burns with zeal for Christ?
1.
Truth had
fallen in the streets, but Sardis did not care.
2.
Chrsit’s lambs
were starving for lack of bread, but Sardis did not care.
C.
The third charge against Sardis is this: They were formalists, ritualists, ceremonialists, and no more.
They had many works, but Christ says, “I have not found thy works perfect before God.” The forms were
there. The religious customs were there. The ceremonies were kept up. The
religious traditions were maintained. The services were there. But the essence
was lacking! There was no genuine, sincere love, faith, and hope. There was
lots of activity, but no faith, lots of parade but no power. In the sight of
other people Sardis was a splendid, prosperous church, but in the eyes of
Christ it was an empty corpse.
D.
The fourth charge against Sardis was this: They were careless about the things they had heard.
The Lord called for them to “Remember how they had received and heard” the gospel (v. 3). If I
am wrong about other things, I am sure that the evil of the church in this age
is impurity of doctrine and laxity with regard to the truth of God. Today, we
are expected to accept any religion as long as it is sincere. We are supposed
to believe that everyone is right, no matter what they believe. And if one
dares to assert that there is a real difference between the truth of God and
the lies of hell, he is branded a bigot, a fanatic, a narrow minded, hard
hearted instigator of strife. My friend, there can be no alliance between truth
and error.
·
Those who
preach divine sovereignty and those who deny it are not brethren.
·
Those who
preach electing love and those who denounce it are not companions.
·
Those who
preach effectual redemption and those who despise it are not friends.
·
Those who
preach salvation by grace and those who preach salvation by works are not
children of the same household and the same family.
II. Secondly, in order for Sardis to recover from her terrible
condition, our Lord gives a plain
recommendation.
- “Be
watchful” - Over your own souls.
- “Strengthen
the things that remain” - The people of God.
- “Remember”
- The past.
- “Hold
fast” - The truth (Jer. 6:16).
- “Repent_
- Turn to Christ.
“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” - Apostasy will bring judgment!
·
Isaiah 63:9-10
III. But then, our Lord graciously calls our attention to a precious remnant.
“Thou hast a few names even in
Sardis which have not defiled their garments.” Blessed be God, there is always a remnant according to the
election of grace!
A. They were a
few.
B. But they
were known of God.
C. They had
not defiled their garments...
·
By departing
from Christ.
·
By licentious
behavior.
·
By embracing
false doctrine.
IV. Fourthly, to those few who persevere in the faith of the
gospel, Christ gives a promised reward (vv.
4-5).
A. “They shall walk with me in white.”
-
Communion
- Justification
- Acceptance
- Joy (Eccles. 9:7-8).
B. “For they are worthy” - Made
worthy by grace (Col. 1:12)
C. Those who persevere and
overcome at the last shall live forever (v.
5).
- “They
shall be clothed in white raiment.”
- “I will not
blot out his name out of the book of life.”
- “I will confess his
name before my Father, and before his angels.”
Application:
Here is a point of examination.
·
Are you among
the many who have a name to live but are dead? (Rom. 13:11)
·
Are you among
the few who have not defiled their garments? (II Tim. 1:13)
·
Are you yet
without Christ? (Isa. 55:6)