• About Us
    • Our Vision
    • Our Beliefs
    • Our Staff
    • Our Calendar
    • Leadership
    • Durham
  • Easter
  • Worship
    • Online Worship
    • Messages
    • Worship Music
  • Connect
  • Grow
    • Life Groups
    • Starting Point
    • Garden Kids
    • Youth Ministry
    • Precious Lambs
  • Serve
  • Give
Gethsemane Church in Raleigh
  • About Us
    • Our Vision
    • Our Beliefs
    • Our Staff
    • Our Calendar
    • Leadership
    • Durham
  • Easter
  • Worship
    • Online Worship
    • Messages
    • Worship Music
  • Connect
  • Grow
    • Life Groups
    • Starting Point
    • Garden Kids
    • Youth Ministry
    • Precious Lambs
  • Serve
  • Give

DEAR CHURCH: That's Lukewarm

11/24/2019

0 Comments

 
Thanksgiving is less than one week away. Maybe you already started on the stuffing about three days ago! Because one of the greatest parts of Thanksgiving is the food.
 
There’s hot food.
Hot turkey, fresh out of the oven.
Hot potatoes, mashed with a butter melted down the top of the mound.
Even hot green bean casserole with the crispy things at the top acting as some kind of barrier.
 
There’s cold food.
Cold cranberries sauce – with just the right kick of tang.
Cold desserts each more delicious than the last.
A cold drink to wash it all down.
 
But…
How many of you are looking forward to a lukewarm Thanksgiving meal?
Lukewarm turkey.
Lukewarm cranberry sauce.
Lukewarm potatoes
And a lukewarm drink.
 
Gross.
 
Today’s letter is to a church that was lukewarm. (And to Jesus – it’s just as disgusting as lukewarm mashed potatoes.)
 
Today’s goal is to determine what it means to spiritually lukewarm and to ask the difficult question: “Are we lukewarm?” Before we begin, a prayer: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth, your Word is truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see, our ears to hear what you want us to hear and our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.
 
I. Lukewarm Laodicea
 
This letter starts in Revelation 3:14, “To the angel of the church in Laodicea write: These are the words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the ruler of God’s creation.
 
Laodicea was located just south of the Lycus river. It was a fertile area lush with green landscapes. It was great for sheep and led to an impressive wool industry in the city. This industry made Laodicea into one of the wealthiest cities. In fact, in 60 AD an earthquake destroyed the city. But Laodicea didn’t need Roman help to rebuild. They paid for the rebuild on their own.
 
Within Laodicea was a church. This church is mentioned four times in the letter to the Colossians. In that letter, Paul even mentions a letter he penned for the Laodicean church that never made it into the Bible. Laodicea was an important center in early Christianity.
 
Similarly to the other letter, Jesus begins by introducing himself. He reminds the church that he is Faithful and true. This prepares the people for what he’s about to tell them: whether they see it or not, whether they believe it or not, whether they want to believe it or not, he speaks the truth.
 
It matters too! Because Jesus is the Ruler of God’s Creation! He’s the one who provides the fertile land for their rich sheep and wool industry. He’s the one who cares for the sheep that are grazing. He’s the one who gave the merchants the abilities to develop this industry. If it wasn’t for him, their wealth wouldn’t exist. And if it wasn’t for his loving kindness, he’d just send another earthquake to destroy Laodicea.
 
This truthful, powerful God is the one speaking to them. He says:
 
“I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth.” (Revelation 3:15)
 
Another well-known feature of Laodicea was the natural springs of water that occurred there. The water bubbled up from within the earth. It was warm. It was clean. It came packed with minerals. The water relaxed the muscles, melted stress away and promoted healing.
 
And the temperature was just right.
Not freezing like an ice bath.
Not hot that it’d burn their skin.
 
Warm.
 
But imagine for a moment that instead of soaking in the lukewarm bathwater, you decided to drink it.
 
How’s it taste?
You’d spit it out?
So would Jesus.
 
Only he’s not talking about bathwater in Revelation 3.
He’s talking about the spiritual temperature of the Laodiceans.
 
TRUTH:
Jesus hates a LUKEWARM spiritual temperature.
 
Because when the Bible speaks about faith, it lauds faith that’s on fire for Jesus.
On fire with love for the Savior.
On fire for his teachings.
On fire for sharing his message.
 
Cold? That’s a reference to unbelief. It’s the cold heart of someone who has never come to faith and never been on fire for the Gospel. Don’t get this wrong – Jesus is not saying that he wishes the Laodiceans were unbelievers. But rather, that a cold heart might know it needs something – a warmth that only the Gospel can provide.  
 
But the Laodiceans…they couldn’t care less.
They knew the Gospel and…were APATHETIC.
 
They were APATHETIC about their need for a Savior.
They were APATHETIC about their Savior.
They were APATHETIC about their spiritual state.
 
And Jesus? Was disgusted by it.
 
TRUTH:
Jesus hates spiritual APATHY.
 
It’s easy to understand why:
 
Apathy leads his people away from faith.
Apathy leads his people away from their savior.
Apathy leads his people away from heaven.
 
And…
 
Apathy leads his people away from sharing their faith.
Apathy leads his people away from people who need the Gospel.
Apathy leads people, that he wants in heaven, away from heaven.
 
Apathy kills his church.
 
II. Causes of Apathy
 
As we start thinking about whether or not we are apathetic, I think it’s helpful to identify what leads to spiritual apathy. Look at what Jesus says:  Revelation 3:17, “You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked.”
 
The text reveals a few things that lead to spiritual apathy.
 
(1) Being Presently Cared For
 
Laodicea was one of the wealthiest cities in the ancient world. The church was blessed by the economic boom. The people were physically, temporally, and presently cared for. They had enough things and stuff that they began to think – “Do I really need Jesus?”
 
Of course, Jesus said: “You need me.”
Laodicea said: “I think I’ve got all I need in this big old bag of money.”
 
Jesus said: “I’ll give you nourishment.”
Laodicea said: “No worries. I can pay for a night at the Angus Barn on my own.”
 
Jesus said: “I’ll quench your thirst.”
Laodicea said: “I’m not actually that thirsty Jesus. I just got done with my second glass of Merlot. It’s from 17 AD. A good year, no?”
 
Being presently cared for isn’t bad. (That’s why God takes care of us.)
But…be careful…
 
As a pastor, I’ve seen it often.
Someone comes seeking God’s help in time of trouble.
Low on funds.
Job was lost.
Relationship issues.
Sick, in need of prayer.
 
We counsel.
We study God’s Word.
We seek God because the person feels poor and in need of Jesus.
 
But then, life turns around.
Finances are ok.
Job is ok.
Relationship is ok.
Health is ok.
 
And…
It isn’t long…
Before…
 
I mark absent on their worship attendance record for the 12th week in a row.
 
(2) Past Accolades  
 
Past accolades can also lead us into a lukewarm faith. Look at the brag of the Laodiceans. They said: “I have acquired wealth.” That’s past tense. The Laodiceans had worked hard for their money and success – even making their church a success.
 
So now, when they were reminded that God called them to share the Gospel, they responded: “Why? We did that 10 years ago.”
 
Try to tell that to your boss sometime:
“Boss, I don’t think I need to come into work today. I worked a Monday in 2016.”
That won’t work.
 
It doesn’t work with Jesus.
He doesn’t care about past accolades.
And your past accolades cannot get you to heaven.
 
(3) Future Needs
 
The final brag in verse 13 says, “You say…You do not need a thing.” There’s a future sense in that implication. The Laodiceans looked at their wealth, at the 70” HD TVs, at their brand new iPhones linked to their Apple Watches, at their kids being in the number 1 academic school in Laodicea and said:
 
“Thanks for getting me here Jesus, but I can’t fathom having any need for you anymore.”
 
It’s almost as if the Laodiceans couldn’t foresee life happening.
Worse --- they couldn’t see death happening.
 
The warning is for you too.
If you think you’ll never need Jesus.
If you think you’ll never get sick…
…never lose a job…
…never lose a home.
…never die.
 
You’re wrong.
Your faith will grow lukewarm.
 
This is a big deal because…
Jesus isn’t APATHETIC about APATHY
 
I think that’s important to hear.
Because usually, the Christian church, even apathetic Christians, can find some sins they aren’t apathetic towards:
Since that we are convinced Jesus would love to spit out:
 
Sexual sins.
Drug Use.
Violence.
Terrorism.
Racism.
 
And to be fair – these things are sin.
God is not apathetic about them.
 
But he isn’t apathetic about apathy either.
He violently spits the apathetic out.
Because to the Savior who cared so much for you that he came out of heaven, lived in this sin filled world, and suffered a violent death for you...
 
Apathy...?
 
…is disgusting.
 
III. The Solution for Apathy
 
Because Jesus is not apathetic towards apathy so he offers the solution in verse 18, “I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see.
 
Take a look at the ways that Jesus provides the solution for apathy.
 
(1) Spiritual Gold
 
The Laodiceans were so rich that they had their own mint to mint their own money. To take copper and silver, to melt it, to mold it, and to put little designs on it.
It’s cute.
It’s nice.
It’s historic.
 
But…
None of this money would be a valid payment for forgiveness.
None of it could earn heaven.
None of it could buy eternal life.
 
But gold from Jesus?
It is refined in the fire.
It has been purified from all impurifies.
It is righteous.
 
That’s important. Because righteousness is the payment required from heaven.
God says, “You want to get in? Pay me righteousness.”
But righteousness means perfection.
So…we are fresh out of righteousness.
 
That’s where Jesus’ comes in.
He has righteousness.
He has no problem making the payment for us.
 
Meaning:
If you’ve been apathetic towards Jesus and need righteousness to pay for that sin…
…the very one that you’ve been apathetic towards is the one who will make the un-apathetically make the payment for your apathy.  
 
(2) Spiritual Clothing
 
Jesus said, “You think you’re rich…but you’re naked.”  
 
You think that the Versaci dress can cover your vanity. It can’t.
You think that your Gucci watch can cover your greed. It can’t.
You think that your Slim fitting suit can cover your sin. It can’t.
 
God can see your heart.
God can see your being.
God can see the ugliness of your sin.
 
But the clothing Jesus’ offers? It covers your completely.
It covers all of your sin.
All of your ugliness.
All of your pride.
All of your greed.
All of your lust.
All of your really big sins that you figure everyone knows about!
 
Jesus death and resurrection covers our sins completely.
So well…
…that when God looks at us –
People who are wretched with sin.
 
He says, “My you look nice tonight.”
 
Praise God for covering us!
 
(3) Spiritual Salve
 
Another thing documented about Laodicea is that they would use water from the natural springs to make ointment salves. The natural minerals were helpful in healing all kinds of ailments in the body. The purity of the water went well with medicines to heal people – especially when it came to eyesight.
 
Yet even the finest Laodicean salve could fix the fact that the Laodicean church couldn’t see its own sin.
 
But Jesus?
His salve is eternal.
His salve is perfect.
His salve is healing.
 
His salve is God’s Word that gives us the proper spiritual eyesight – to see our great need for our Savior and the eternally important value of sharing his message.
 
Because of Jesus’ salve…
 
I don’t just see a clerk at Food Lion. I see a soul in need of saving.
I don’t just see a snotty nosed kid next door. I see a soul in need of saving.
I don’t just see a friend who was mean to me that one time on Facebook. I see a soul in need of saving.
 
IV. What Now?  
 
Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest and repent. Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with that person, and they with me. (v.19-20)
 
Understand what Jesus means.
He loves his people.
He wants to be with them.
Yet our apathy threw Jesus out of the church.
 
Yet…
 
He knocks.
He speaks through these words to the apathetic Laodiceans.
He says:
“Repent! And I will come in and dwell with you.”  
 
And,,,
 
If you’re apathetic…
 
He is knocking.
He is speaking.
He is saying to you right now…
I want to be with you.
Repent or your apathy.
Turn back to me.
 
Because when we do, he promises to sit down with us.
 
That’s the intimate part of Thanksgiving. Everyone sits down and eats together.
Friends.
Family.
Uncle Bob.
Aunt Peggy.
Camella Sue.
 
They eat with you because you love them.
You love them because they eat with you.
 
Look at what Jesus says to the formerly apathetic, now repentant:
“I’ll sit with you.”
“Even though I found you so gross that I spat you out, because of my love – I’ll sit by you.”
 
Through the good times.
Through the bad times.
Through all the times.
 
I’ll sit with you now.
And in the future..?  
 
To the one who is victorious, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I was victorious and sat down with my Father on his throne.
“Whoever has ears, let them hear what the Spirit says to the churches.” Amen.
0 Comments

DEAR CHURCH: That's Feeling Weak

11/17/2019

0 Comments

 
0 Comments

DEAR CHURCH: That's Falling Asleep

11/10/2019

0 Comments

 

Today’s letter is to a church that needs to wake up! Our goal is to examine what Jesus means by that, consider if our church is sleeping, and learn from God’s Word what to do to wake up. Before we begin, a prayer: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth, your Word is truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see, our ears to hear what you want us to hear and our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.
 
I. Looking Alive
 
This letter starts in Revelation 3:1 “To the angel of the church in Sardis write: These are the words of him who holds the seven spirits and the seven stars.”
 
Sardis was a city situated on the Hummus River valley. Records indicate that gold dust was found in the Pactolus River which surrounded the city. Historically, it was the first city to mint its own silver and gold coins. As a result, the citizens of Sardis could afford investing in military might and protection.
 
At the time, it was one of the greatest military strengths of the ancient world. It was an impressive fortress which had only been conquered twice in its history. Because it was so impressive, the ancients thought it has been founded by the sons of the mighty Hercules.
 
Yet amid this unconquerable city, a small church had formed with the goal of conquering hearts with the Gospel. Jesus writes this letter to that church.
 
He introduces himself as the one who holds the seven spirits and the seven stars. The spirits are a reference to the Holy Spirit. The stars represent the churches. With this illustration, Jesus is saying:
 
I am the one who holds the church in his hands.
And I hold the Holy Spirit who strengthens those churches.
 
Finally, Jesus opens with what seems like a compliment, but isn’t.
He says, “I know your deeds, you have a reputation of being alive…”
In the town, in the community, among other churches, the church at Sardis had it together!
 
Maybe they had programs.  
…for the kids, programs for the adults, programs for the youth, the divorced, the teens, and the singles.
 
They probably had events. Things like…
Trunk or Treat. Pie Social. Food Drive. Clothing Exchange. Advent by Candlelight, Christmas for Kids, and Kids’ Christmas Program.
 
It’s possible they even had impressive places. Like…
A state-of-the-art Early Childhood Center, a freshened up fellowship hall, beautiful landscaping, and a Sanctuary Update Committee working towards updating their sanctuary.
 
They were alive…
…looking.
 
Jesus said, 
You have a reputation of being alive, but you are dead. (v.1)
 
It’s like someone approaching me while I’m eating a bag of Doritos and saying, “You have a reputation…of being healthy.”
They don’t mean it.
 
Jesus doesn’t mean it here either.
 
Think about it.
Every other church that Jesus wrote a letter to was under attack.
Some from outward persecution.
Others from inward false teachings.
 
The church at Sardis? It’s getting along fine.
 
The community lets it do its thing, because it wasn’t really preaching the message of Jesus.
Community leaders weren’t upset, because it wasn’t really rebuking sin.
No one was clinging to false teaching, because no one really cares what was preached.  
 
It’s like one of those really intimidating spiders. Have you seen them? An orb weaver. If you ever come face to face with one of those, it’s terrifying. It happened to me once. They spin such impressive webs that he was right there when we opened the door to our house. He was at face level. His web spun between the roof line and the top of our railing.
 
Looking at that thing. It looked alive, deadly, and ready to take me out.
But then…I blew on it.
And it fell off the web…
…Dead.
 
Jesus says this church is like that spider.
It looks alive;
But really…
It’s dead.
 
TRUTH:
Religious ACTIVITY does not prove spiritual LIFE.
 
Just because a church has a busy calendar, lots of Facebook photos, and cars in a parking lot on a Sunday, does not mean it is spiritually alive.
 
Case in point:
There’s a Jewish Synagogue on this block. Granted, you won’t find any cars there on a Sunday, but on Saturday’s when they run worship – it’s packed. It’s bustling with activity. People are present, engaged, and excited.
 
But they don’t teach Jesus.
And Jesus says, “I am…the Life; no one comes to the Father except through me.” (Jn. 14:6)
And Jesus proved it by rising from the dead.
 
So…
Their church looks alive.
But it’s dead.
 
Granted – that’s with a church that publicly confesses that they do not believe in Jesus.
The church at Sardis publicly confessed to believe in Jesus.
 
And so do we...
 
So…
 
How do we know if we’re spiritually alive or dead?
 
II. Symptoms of a Spiritually Dead Church
 
If you look at the text, you can find some of the symptoms of spiritual death in a church:
 
(1) Members STRAYING
 
In verse 2 Jesus says, “Wake up! Strengthen what remains and is about to die…” (v.2a) The indication is that some people in the church still have a living faith in their Savior, but others have a faith that is dying.
 
They never attend worship.
They never attend group study.
They couldn’t care less about serving at church.
They’re just happy that their name is on the member list, because they figure – that’s good enough.
 
Essentially, their faith is no longer in Jesus, but in the fact that they are a member of the church.
 
Did you know at Gethsemane Church we were recently blessed to grow to over 300 members. That’s 300 people who, at some point, heard the Gospel, came to faith, grew in understanding and wanted to become a part of our mission.
 
But…
 
Did you know that we only average 160 people in worship on a Sunday?
In any given month we serve about 300 souls, but…
About 1/3 in that number are guests and visitors.
Meaning…
 
We average about 200 members in worship each month.
 
Where did the other 100 go? There’s reason for concern.
 
Jesus said, “I am the Vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me, you will bear much fruit; apart from me, you will do nothing.” (Jn. 10)
Just like a branch that’s fallen off the pine tree will quickly die, so will the person who is disconnected from Jesus.
 
Here’s the concern about straying members:
If they aren’t connected to Jesus, how are they going to grow in faith?  
They aren’t.
 
And how do we know they’re connected to Jesus, if we don’t see them?
We don’t.
 
And this is pastor’s job, yes!
And it is the elder’s work, absolutely!
 
But this letter was written to the church at Sardis.
Not just the pastor.
Not just the elders.
The church.
 
Do you know someone who used to attend here, but doesn’t anymore?
Do you have a family member who no longer worships?
Do you know someone who belonged to your group study, but hasn’t come in weeks?
 
Check in them.
Care for them.
Share Jesus with them.
 
Because Jesus is the Life who gives life to the dead.
Physically.
And spiritually!
 
Share Jesus and you could will be sharing LIFE!
 
(2) Personal Faith Activity DECREASING
 
Jesus said: “Wake up! Strengthen what remains and is about to die…” (v.2a)
Sure, he was probably referring to straying members of their church family.
But also, couldn’t he be referring to staying members with a straying faith?
 
I need you to listen good right here.
These are Jesus’ words.
These are the words of your Savior.
He’s speaking to you.
 
Think back on your spiritual journey:
Did you used to be in Bible study?
Did you used to be an every Sunday person?
Did you used to be involved in serving?
Did you used to care about other members of this church family?
 
Did you used to, but not anymore…?
 
Sure…
Life gets in the way.
There’s things.
There’s stuff.
There’s things and stuff, but…
 
Remember the passage about the Vine and the branches from earlier.
Same truth applies to you.
 
If you aren’t staying connected to Jesus, your faith isn’t growing.
And if it isn’t growing…
 
It’s dying.
 
(3) Mission UNCARED FOR
 
Jesus says this, “I have found your deeds unfinished in the sight of my God.” (v.2) The church at Sardis hadn’t finished what they set out to do. And what did they set out to do? Follow Jesus’ mission. Jesus said, “Go and make disciples of all nations…” (Mt. 28:19) That included the people of Sardis! Not everyone was a believer.
 
And how did the church at Sardis feel about that?
 
“Meh!”
 
At Gethsemane, we’ve completed a lot of work. We just completed a big task in building that brand new Precious Lambs Early Learning Center. It’s a 1.4 million dollar project. To be fair, this church worked hard on it.
 
People gave lots of money.
People prayed lots of prayers.
People planned lots of plans.
Teachers taught lots of lessons.
 
When we were done, we breathed a sigh of relief.
 
Except…
We aren’t done.
Our goal is to Plant the Message of Jesus in the Hearts of North Raleigh…and Beyond!
 
If we’re content to say:
Welp, we built the building.
We did the Trunk or Treat.
We tried our best.
 
Time to sit, back relax, and be done.
 
We’re wrong! We need to keep sharing the Gospel.
If we stop sharing the Gospel, that’s evidence of a dying church.
 
Because…
If you have a living faith, you know Jesus is the Savior.
If Jesus is the Savior, you know people need him to be saved.
If people need Jesus to be saved, people need to hear about him.
 
III. What Now?  
 
Members straying.
Personal faith activity decreasing.
Mission uncared for.
 
These are the symptoms of spiritual death.
 
So…Jesus says this to the sleeping, dying church: “Wake up!...If you do not wake up, I will come like a thief, and you will not know at what time I will come to you. (v.3)
 
Because most thieves do not announce themselves.
They don’t call you up on the phone to say, “Is this Saturday convenient for a robbing?”
They don’t text you to say, “Be there in a second. Can you leave the crowbar outside?”
They don’t check in on social media, “@PastorPhil, excited to rob you tomorrow. Hope you can make it.”
 
When a thief comes, it’s swift.
It’s unexpected.
It’s a shock.
 
It will be the same with Jesus.
 
If we don’t wake up on our own, Jesus will return to wake us up.
And if Jesus wakes us up, it will be too late.
 
Wake up!
And how do you do that? Listen to Jesus. He says, “Remember what you have received and heard…” (v.3a)
Remember your Savior.
Remember his forgiveness.
Remember the faith that the Holy Spirit worked in your heart.
Remember that you received a place in God’s kingdom.
Remember you received the Gospel.
Remember that you received a mission.
 
Remember…
Hold it fast! (v.3b)
 
Because that is the Gospel message.
It’s what connects us to Jesus.
The reason that a dying church happens is that a church disconnects from the Gospel message.
But when we reconnected?
 
Jesus gives nourishment.
Jesus strengthens our faith.
Jesus gives us spiritual life.
 
And we Repent!
 
We turn from not caring for straying members and we turn to caring for them.
We turn from not growing our faith and we turn to growing our faith.
We turn from not sharing the message of Jesus and we turn to sharing the message of Jesus.
 
And we turn to Jesus, to his Word, to his work, because…God has some amazing promises to those with living faith:
 
(1) Dressed in White
 
Specifically, Jesus says, “Yet you have a few people in Sardis who have not soiled their clothes. They will walk with me, dressed in white, for they are worthy.” Not that their worthy on their own, but they are worthy because of what Jesus has done. He lived, he died, and he rose for them. With a living faith in Jesus, they were actively wearing the robe of righteousness that Jesus provides.
 
And no look at God’s promise.
To the one who was dying in faith.
To the one who was sleeping.
To the one who repents and turns to Jesus:
The one who is victorious will, like them, be dressed in white.” (v.4)
 
You won’t have to wear dirty clothes!
You won’t have to walk around in the stench of selfishness.
You won’t have to wear those pants with that prideful stained.
You won’t have to put on that awful ascot of apathy that smells awfully apathetic.
You get to wear clean clothes.
Clean from sin.
Clean from guilt.
Clean from shame.
 
(2) Active in Heaven
 
Jesus says about those people dressed in white, “They will walk with me.” (v.4)
 
Think about that.
When you die, it seems like you’re sleeping.
It seems like you’re not moving.
It seems like you’re dead.
And that’s it.
nothing to do but decompose.
 
But not according to Jesus.
 
According to Jesus, those with a living faith, will live; even though they die.
They will walk with him.
They will job with him.
They will sprint with him.
They will jump with him.
Hop with him.
Skip with him.
They will tap dance with him.
Spin in place with him.
And do a whole session of Zumba with him.
 
Those with a living faith in him,
Will live with him…
Because of him.
 
(3) Name Actively Used by God Himself
 
Finally, Jesus says this, ““I will never blot out the name of that person from the book of life, but will acknowledge that name before my Father and his angels.
 
Because sometimes you might be embarrassed to be associated with someone.
I remember when I and a friend met up for lunch. We were enjoying the meal, having a good time, telling jokes. But then, some people from his work stopped by.
 
He got up.
Slapped high fives.
Greeted them.
 
Finally, he got around to introducing me:
“This is Pa…….his name is Phil.”
 
I’m fine with that intro so I shook hands with his friends.
But afterwards, he confessed to me:
I’m sorry, I felt embarrassed to introduce you as my pastor.
 
Fair enough.
 
Maybe you’ve had a similar experience.
 
Here’s the truth:
Jesus is not ashamed of you.
In heaven, he won’t pretend he doesn’t know you.
He will speak your name.
Often.
To the Father.
 
He will look you in the eye.
Shake your hand.
And say:
 
Loved one, welcome home.
 
Whoever has ears, let them hear what the Spirit says to the churches. (v.6)
Amen.

0 Comments

DEAR CHURCH: That's Attacked from Within

11/3/2019

0 Comments

 
We’ve been studying letters from Jesus to various 1st century churches. Often these churches are dealing with persecution from the outside. Whether it was ridicule, violence or temptation towards idol worship, the attack always came from the outside.
 
But…
 
Sometimes the greatest attacks come from somewhere else.
 
I was playing soccer with some of the preschoolers. We divided up teams and I ended up on red team. We were trying to score against the blue team. And to be fair, it started with me doing that thing where I just dribble the ball by myself and let this entire wave of kids chase after me.
 
But eventually I decided I should let a kid from my team score. So, I passed the ball to him and…
 
He turned around and scored…
 
In our goal.
 
SABOTAGE!
 
Today we are continuing our series called Dear Church. We’re going to hear about a church that was being attacked from within. Our goal is to identify how they were being attacked, hear God’s warning for our church, and learn what we can do to defeat attacks from within.  
 
Before we begin, a prayer: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth, your Word is truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see, our ears to hear what you want us to hear and our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.
 
I. Thyatira’s Problem from Within
 
This letter starts in Revelation 2:18 “To the angel of the church in Thyatira write: These are the words of the Son of God, whose eyes are like blazing fire and whose feet are like burnished bronze.”
 
A couple of notes:
 
Thyatira is to the east and south of Pergamum, the home of the last letter recipients. It’s located in the middle of modern Turkey.
 
It was the home of a woman named Lydia. If you remember from this summer’s sermon series, that’s the name of a purple dealer who was doing some work by the river when she heard the message of Jesus from Paul. She believed, was baptized, and then became part of the church’s mission work. As a result, it’s conceivable that she was one of the founding members of the church in Thyatira.
 
In this letter, Jesus introduces himself as the Son of God. It’s the first time in the book of Revelation. Using that name here, communicates that the letter isn’t from some bumbling human, but from God himself:
 
And the Son of God has eyes like blazing fire. That means he has divine vision. It’s better than 20/20 vision, better than X-ray vision, better than hawk-like vision.
 
He sees us…
 
Our thoughts.
Our souls.
Our hearts.
 
Finally, he has feet of burnished bronze. If you’re an NFL running back, that isn’t the best footgear. With bronze, you can’t move quickly. If you’re in the NBA, bronze footgear won’t win the Dunk contest.  
 
But if want to stand still without moving, bronze footgear is perfect.
 
Jesus has bronze footgear.
Because he doesn’t move.
And his Word is unshakeable.
 
Look at what the unshakeable Son of God who sees into the very hearts of his people had to say:
I know your deeds, your love and faith, your service and perseverance, and that you are now doing more than you did at first.  (v.19)
That’s good. They’ve been increasing their faith filled acts amid a challenging environment:
 
A Roman government that hated Christians.
A Jewish influence that hated Jesus.
False god worship that led people away from following Jesus.
 
Yet, that isn’t all Jesus sees:
Nevertheless, I have this against you: You tolerate that woman Jezebel, who calls herself a prophet. (v.20)
 
Have you ever heard of Jezebel before? She’s an Old Testament queen of Ancient Israel. She’s most famous for being wicked. During her regime, she organized more idol worship in Israel than ever before, she commanded soldiers to murder God’s prophets, and led hundreds of thousands her subjects away from the true God.
 
One-time Jezebel’s husband Ahab was sad because he wanted this nice vineyard that a neighbor owned. He had asked the neighbor to buy it, but the neighbor wanted to keep it because it had been in his family. As a result, Ahab pouted.
 
“I want it.”
“It’s not fair.”
“I’m the king.”
 
When Jezebel hears his tantrum, rather than giving him a time out or a lecture on how, “You can’t always have what you want, and pouting won’t get you anything anyway…”
 
She had the neighbor killed.  
 
Scholars doubt whether the New Testament woman at Thyatira was called Jezebel. The reality is that thanks to OT Jezebel, the name wasn’t that attractive. Most parents didn’t want to name their children after a villain. (It’s why there aren’t a lot of Darths, Maleficents, or Voldemorts—although Jezebel would have made a very scary Halloween costume.)
 
Rather than being her real name, this could simply be Jesus’ way of describing how similar this woman was to that ancient queen. Both found joy in challenging God’s authority and leading people away from truth.
 
Both attacked from within:
Old Testament Jezebel tried to attacked God’s kingdom from within the palace of Ancient Israel.
New Testament Jezebel did it from within the pews of the Thyatiran church.
 
Both used deadly weapons:
Old Testament Jezebel attacked God’s kingdom with actual swords.
New Testament Jezebel? With false teachings.
 
She was misleading God’s servants into sexual immorality and the eating of food sacrificed to idols. (v.10b)
 
It’s as if she’d gather her small group together and say: “I know pastor says that we shouldn’t sleep around, but…that’s unrealistic.”
Or she kept raising her hand during adult Bible study and said, “False God worship is just as good as fair as worship of Jesus. Equal rights!”
Or she wrote her own song to sing for meditation, “The church’s one foundation is illicit immorality.”
Or she taught the Sunday School Lesson, “The Bible says God created the world, but…that’s really not true kids. We’re all accidents evolved over billions of years. You don’t really matter.”  
 
Jezebel was teaching falsehood within God’s church.
 
II. The Truth about False Teaching
 
That’s the difference from last week. If you remember, some of the people of the Pergamum church were holding to the same teachings of sexual immorality and false God worship. But none of them felt comfortable enough to teach them. 
 
Jezebel, on the other hand? 
She took every opportunity to teach falsehood within God’s church.
 
And Jesus?
He takes this opportunity to express his opinion on false teaching:
 
TRUTH:
God hates FALSE TEACHING in his church.
 
It’s like being a vegan. If you were a vegan and went to a healthy restaurant to get a Quinoa Burger. But then, as you took a bite of that Quinoa burger and it tasted like beef…You’d be upset.
 
But do you get the point? God is 100% for the truth.
In fact, Jesus said, “I am the truth.” (John 14:6)
That means God can have anything to do with falsehood.
 
And if his church, which is his body deals in falsehood, which he is against…
God isn’t happy.
 
He hates false teaching in his church.
And he hates it because…
 
TRUTH:
False teaching is DANGEROUS.
 
Look at what was happening in Thyatira. The teachings of Jezebel were leading other members of the church into a sinful lifestyle and away from their Savior Jesus.
 
It’d be like driving along I-540 to the East. You go to the end of it where you’re supposed to segue onto 87. But instead of having you segue onto 87, Siri simply said, “Go straight.” And if you listened, Siri’s false teaching would lead you off the road to death.
False teaching does the same thing.
False teaching can lead people to hell.
It’s dangerous.
 
And doubly so, when it comes within the church.
Because if you hear that teaching from someone in the church, you’ll probably trust it. You’ll think:  
 
It was a church person who posted that message on Facebook…must be true.
It was a long-time member who said that thing in Bible study…must be accurate.
It was a big-time giver who wanted that thing in the leadership meeting…must be correct.
 
Now you might not think this is all that important for you.
You’re not a pastor.
You’re not a teacher.
But it absolutely is.
 
An example:
 
Sometimes people drop off books for us at Precious Lambs. And since we’re a Christian center, they often drop off Christian books. Seems safe, right?
A while back I was reading through a book all about Jesus’ life. It had cute little Jesus’ pictures. It had cute little rhyming words. It even had a child friendly picture of the cross.  
 
But at the end of the book, it said this:
 
Jesus rose on Easter Day.
Following him is the way.
If we truly do what we should.
We’ll have heaven which is good.
 
Except…
We don’t do what we should.
 
Meaning…
We won’t have heaven by doing good.
 
And the point of Easter isn’t: Do good to earn God’s love.
The point of the Gospel is: You couldn’t do good, so Jesus earned heaven for you.
 
Can you imagine if a kid grew up hearing this?
The constant burden and weight of the law?
The guilt and shame of never being good enough?
The false teaching that they need to earn God’s love?
 
Rather than knowing her Savior.
Rather than knowing his love.
Rather than knowing forgiveness.
 
Be careful.
False teaching is dangerous.
Watch out for it in “Christian” books.
In “Christian” music.
In “Christian” friendships.
In “Christian” Facebook posts.
 
And if you find something that’s false, do something about it!
Because…TOLERATION of false teaching is a sin. 
 
Look at whom Jesus is speaking to in this letter. It isn’t Jezebel. It’s the people that are tolerating her message.
And understand. Tolerate simply means, “to allow.”
And it can be a good thing.
 
It’s good to tolerate your country music.
It’s good to tolerate your kids’ TV shows.  
It’s good to tolerate your coworker’s lunch smells.
 
But…
If you tolerated an alligator, that had gotten into your living room….
If you didn’t call 911.
If you didn’t call Animal Control.
 
And that alligator bites your kid…
That’s on you!  
 
God doesn’t just want you to not teach falsehood, but he also doesn’t want you to knowingly tolerate it.
Because he doesn’t tolerate it.
Because it will lead people to eternal danger.
 
TRUTH:
Jesus will DEFEND his church.
 
That’s why Jesus speaks up. In fact, look at what he says about Jezebel:  
I have given her time to repent of her immorality, but she is unwilling. So, I will cast her on a bed of suffering, and I will make those who commit adultery with her suffer intensely, unless they repent of her ways. I will strike her children (most likely a reference to people who followed her teaching) …I will strike them…dead. Then all the churches will know that I am he who searches hearts and minds, and I will repay each of you according to your deeds. (v.21-23)
 
This is one of those parts of the Bible that, maybe, sound harsh.
But it isn’t.
REMEMBER:  
Jezebel was leading people to hell.
God wasn’t going to stand back and let that happen.
 
Think about it:
Jesus already went through hell to save us.
He lived perfectly on this earth.
He died innocently in your place.
He rose triumphantly for the forgiveness of our sins.
Through the Gospel, he has brought us into his kingdom.
 
God didn’t do all that to allow some false teaching to take us away from him.
He will defend his church.
And he will defend you.
In fact, that’s what he’s doing right now.
He’s calling out false teaching.
He’s warning us of its danger.
He’s calling his people to act against it
Because of his love for his church.
Because of his love for you.
 
III. Hold onto Truth
 
Look at what Jesus tells his church:
Now I say to the rest of you in Thyatira, to you who do not hold to her teaching and have not learned Satan’s so-called deep secrets, ‘I will not impose any other burden on you, except to HOLD ON to what you have until I come.’  (v.24)
And what they had was the truth.
Don’t cling to falsehood.
Don’t search for some ‘better’ teaching.
Don’t scour the internet for a more socially acceptable doctrine.
 
Hold onto truth.
Hold onto Jesus.
Hold onto God’s Word.
 
Hold onto the Son of God.
Hold onto the one with blazing eyes.
Hold onto the one with feet of burnished bronze.
 
Because.
TRUTH: The Truth will DASH falsehood to pieces.
To the one who is victorious and does my will to the end, I will give authority over the nations—that one ‘will rule them with an iron scepter and will dash them to pieces like pottery’—just as I have received authority from my Father.”
He mentions that falsehood, is a lot like a clay jar. It’s fashioned by humans. It’s shaped how they like it to be. It’s frail and fragile because a human put it together. You’ve got to be careful to handle it gently lest it fall to the ground, smash, and be exposed for the short-lasting thing that it is.
 
But that’s not the only metaphor in these verses.
 
There’s also an iron scepter. It’s bold. It’s strong. It’s intense. That’s what God gives his people to fight against falsehood.
 
The iron scepter?
It’s truth.
 
And truth?
Smashes falsehood.
 
TRUTH:
Truth-holders are promised the MORNING STAR
A morning star is a scientific phenomenon. It’s not really a star. It’s a planet, like Venus, that on certain days can be visible from earth. Usually it’s visible just before morning. Hence, it’s called the morning star.
 
Because the morning star means…
…the night is almost over.
…the day is almost here.
…newness is about to star.
 
The morning star in the Bible?
Jesus said, “I am the morning star.” (Rev. 22:16)
Because of Jesus, the night is almost over.
Because of Jesus, the darkness will eventually end.
Because of Jesus, will experience something new.
Because of Jesus, we will shine…forevermore.
Amen. 
0 Comments

    Archives

    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013

    Picture
    Pastor Phil Kiecker and his wife, Julianna love serving the community of North Raleigh.

    Categories

    All
    500
    ACTS
    Adiaphora
    Advent
    All Powerful
    Alone
    Anger
    Anxiety
    Ascension
    Ash Wednesday
    Atheism
    Attitude
    Authority
    Back To Church
    Backwards Thinking
    Baptism
    Barabbas
    Battleground
    Being Selfless
    Believe
    Betrayal
    Bible Study
    Blessed
    Bold
    Bread Of Life
    Breathe
    Building Project
    Caiaphas
    Caring
    Chapel Hill Shootings
    Charleston
    Chosen
    Christian Living
    Christmas
    Church
    Clean
    Combative
    Comfort
    Commission
    Commitment
    Compassion
    Complete
    Complicated
    Confession
    Confidence
    Confirmation
    Confusion
    Counter Culture
    Courage
    Creed
    Crucifixion
    Danger
    Dark Arts
    Dear Church
    Death
    Debt
    Deep
    Demons
    Depression
    Disappointment
    Disciple
    Diversity
    Divorce
    Don't Be Afraid
    Doubt
    Drowned
    Easter
    Education
    End Times
    Enough
    Entitlement
    Eternal Life
    #EternalLivesMatter
    Evangelism
    Everyone
    Evil
    EYEWITNESS
    Faith
    Faithful
    #FaithTest
    False Teachings
    Family
    Family Matters
    Father
    Fear
    Fighting Temptation
    Firsts
    Fixer Upper
    Follow
    Forgiven
    Forgiveness
    Foundations
    Freedom
    FRESH
    Friendship
    Fufilling
    GIVE
    Giving
    God
    God & Country
    Godly Wisdom
    God's Family
    God's Great Exchange
    God's Not Dead
    God's Will
    God's Word
    Good
    Good Friday
    Good Shepherd Sunday
    Gospel
    Grace
    Greed
    Grow
    Guilt
    Hallelujah
    Hallowed
    Healing
    Heart
    Heaven
    Heavenly King
    Hell
    Help
    Holy
    Holy Spirit
    Homosexuality
    Hope
    Humility
    Hurt
    Idolatry
    Impossible
    Inclusive
    Intimacy
    Jesus
    Joy
    Judgment
    Last Day
    Leaders
    Lent
    Life
    Light
    Love
    Love One Another
    Lust
    Marriage
    Martin Luther
    Maundy Thursday
    Meditations
    Mercy
    Messiah
    Messy
    Ministry
    Miracles
    Mission Work
    Nehemiah
    NEW
    New Life
    New Year
    North Raleigh
    Opportunity
    Outreach
    Palm Sunday
    Parable
    Patience
    Patriotism
    Peace
    Peer Pressure
    Pentecost
    People Of God
    Plan
    Pontius Pilate
    Popularity
    Pornography
    Prayer
    Prepare
    Present
    Priorities
    Promise
    Prophecies Of Isaiah
    Psalms
    Punishment
    Purity
    Race
    Racism
    Raleigh
    Reformation
    Rejection
    Renewal
    Repentance
    Rest
    Resurrection
    RETURN
    Revelation
    #RiseUp
    Runaway
    Salvation
    Satan
    Savior
    Seriousness
    Serve
    Sex
    Sickness
    Simple
    Sin
    Sola
    Son Of God
    Special
    Stand Firm
    Stranger
    Submit
    Substitute
    Suffering
    Surprising Grace
    Thankful
    Thanksgiving
    The Crowd
    The Joshua Program
    The Kingdom Of God
    The Lord's Prayer
    The Lord's Supper
    The Word
    Time With God
    Transfiguration
    Trapped
    Trinity
    True Heart
    Trust
    #TrustGod
    Truth
    Unfaithfulness
    Unity
    Urgency
    Valentine's Day
    Value
    Victory
    Visions Of The End
    Voting
    Walking Together
    Wisdom
    Work
    Worship

    RSS Feed

Gethsemane Lutheran Church
1100 Newton Rd.
Raleigh, NC 27615
  • About Us
    • Our Vision
    • Our Beliefs
    • Our Staff
    • Our Calendar
    • Leadership
    • Durham
  • Easter
  • Worship
    • Online Worship
    • Messages
    • Worship Music
  • Connect
  • Grow
    • Life Groups
    • Starting Point
    • Garden Kids
    • Youth Ministry
    • Precious Lambs
  • Serve
  • Give