- Dressed in white. During the reign of King Croesus in Sardis, no temple worshiper was allowed to approach the temple of the gods with unclean garments. Worshipers were required to wear clean, white robes to approach their gods. Their physical garments may have been white, but their lives were soiled with sin. Unfortunately, that was true in the church as well, with the exception of those who had remained faithful. Christ said those few would “walk with me, dressed in white” (v. 4). White is the symbol of purity and the faithful were seen as worthy to wear white. In Christ, we are made pure through the blood of Christ. It is Christ who has made us worthy to walk with Him.
- Permanently listed in the book of life. Jesus promised the righteous saints in Sardis that their names would appear in the Lamb’s book of life. Jesus’ affirmation, “I will never blot out the name of that person from the book of life” (v. 5), is to be read as a promise, not a threat. We cannot imply from this that it is possible, once your name is recorded in the book of life that it can be erased. Rather, it is a promise that the believers whose names are entered in this book will spend all of eternity with Christ.
- Acknowledged before the Father. When we faithfully stand with Him and for Him, He does the same for us. “Whoever acknowledges me before others, I will also acknowledge before my Father in heaven” (Matt. 10:32). Even now, He stands at the Father’s side, interceding for us as our Advocate (1 John 2:1).
- Celebrate. Thank God for salvation and the way He has worked in your life. Celebrate what He has done but ask God to keep you from resting on what He has done in the past.
- Create a timeline. Chart out your spiritual progress beginning with the moment you placed your trust in Christ. Note the high points and times you faltered in your walk with Christ. Use this to challenge yourself to continued growth in Christ.
- Stand Together. God never meant for the Christian life to be lived alone. Partner with another Christian to help one another stay faithful and focused on Christ. Set aside specific times when you can meet, discuss victories and challenges, and pray for one another.
Video: Church of Sardis
Vigilant Against
Complacency
The Passage: Revelation
3:1-6
Point: Stay
alert and focused on the things of God.
The church in Sardis
had become complacent. We can benefit from the words Christ spoke to them: His
reminder to stay focused on what matters.
Synonyms for
Complacency: an instance of usually unaware or uninformed self-satisfaction
bighead, conceitedness,
egotism, pompousness, pridefulness, self-admiration, self-assumption,
self-conceit, self-congratulation, self-esteem, self-glory, self-importance,
self-love, self-opinion, self-satisfaction, smugness, swelled head, vanity
The Church God Desires
is one that is alert, vigilant, and relevant. The passage warns us against
self-deception, self-destruction, and self-deprivation.
What is being described
in the passage is a sleeping church. The church is said to have a reputation
for being alive, but Christ declares that it is really dead. The church assumes
that it is alert, but it is really oblivious to the fact that it actually on
life support. This sounds like some of our congregations today. We are doing
well by the world’s standards, but we are missing it by kingdom-standards.
The challenge for this
church—and the challenge for us today—is to Be Real Before God (v.1-2), Be
Responsive to God (v. 3), and Be Renewed by God (v. 4-6).
May the Lord help
us—through this message—to stay alert and focused on the things of God.
Revelation 3:1-2
1 “To the angel of the
church in Sardis write: These are the words of him who holds the seven spirits
of God and the seven stars. I know your deeds; you have a reputation of being
alive, but you are dead. 2 Wake up! Strengthen what remains and is about to die,
for I have found your deeds unfinished in the sight of my God.”
1. Be Real before
God. (v. 1-2)
The Lord tells this
group, “I know your works, you have a reputation for being alive, but you are
dead. Be alert and strengthen what remains, which is about to die, for I have
not found your works complete before my God”. What a stinging indictment. They
think that they are alive, but they are dead and the few things that has a
little life is actually about to die. Sounds like a classic case of consumer Christianity.
A consumer-Christian is
one who goes to church but is not changing. It is a Christian who may do
church-work but is not involved in the work of the church. It may be someone
who has good religion, but who lacks a good relationship with the Lord. The
consumer Christ is the casual Christian who is not walking by the Spirit, who
is not living by the Book, and who is not falling deeper and deeper in love
with Christ. The challenge for us is to be real before God—to confess our sins,
our selfish ambitions, and our success-driven service to God.
CHANGE REQUIRES MAKING
CHOICES. It’s not enough to dream of changing. It’s not enough to desire
change. To change, you need to make a decision. You must choose to change. Change
is intentional. Are you going to be any different in six months? Are you going
to be better a year from now? Are you going to be healthier, stronger, and more
mature? Are you going to be happier? Are you going to be less in debt? Are you
going to be more like God wants you to be? I can tell you the answer right now:
These changes will only happen if you choose to change—because change doesn’t
happen accidentally. Change requires a choice.
A lot of times we think
we’re waiting on God to change us. No! God is waiting on you. He’s waiting on
you to say, “Yes, Lord, I’m willing to make these changes.”
You will need to make
intentional choices in order to grow. There is no growth without change, there
is no change without loss, and there is no loss without pain. If you are going
to grow, you will have to change. And change means you let go of some old
things in order to grab hold of some new things.
It’s like swinging on a
trapeze. The trapeze artist swings out on one bar and then has to reach out and
grab the other one. At some point, he’s got to let go of one to grab on to the
other, or he’s not going to make it to the other side. If he thinks he can hold
on to both, what happens? He gets stuck in the middle, and he’s going to fall.
Some of you are stuck
in the middle, and you’re falling because you haven’t let go of the old
patterns, the old habits, and the old ways of thinking. You have to let go of
your old ways.
The Bible says, “Throw
off your old sinful nature and your former way of life” (Ephesians 4:22 NLT).
In other words, let it go. Those old habits, those old hurts, those old
patterns, those old sins in your life—let them go. The Bible says to throw them
off and trust that God is working in you “to will and to act in order to
fulfill His good purpose” (Philippians 2:13 NIV).
What does spiritual
complacency look like?
What words come to mind
when you think about being alive for Christ?
How do we let our guard
slip in matters of faith?
How would you describe
the reputation of Christians in today’s culture?
Revelation 3:3
3 “Remember, therefore,
what you have received and heard; hold it fast, and repent. But 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.”
2. Be Responsive to
God. (v. 3)
In verse two, He called
them to vigilance and alertness, but in verse three, He calls them to remember,
retain, and repent. He wants them to remember the Word that they have received
and heard. Then He wants them to retain the Word that they have received and
heard, and finally, He wants them to repent.
That’s a word for us.
Let’s remember what we have received from the Word. Let’s retain what we have
received from the Word. And, let’s repent of the things that have caused us to
get away from the things of God. Sometimes we can get too focused on what the
world says about us and forget or ignore what the Word says about us. We must
check our hearts and avail ourselves to the Lord so He can change our hearts.
What steps can we take
to maintain spiritual alertness?
What are the
consequences today of not being spiritually alert?
What are the benefits
of being spiritually alert?
Revelation 3:4-6
4 “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. 5 The one who is victorious will, like
them, be dressed in white. 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. 6
Whoever has ears, let them hear what the Spirit says to the churches.”
3. Be Renewed by God.
(v. 4-6)
The words in this
portion of the passage are very encouraging. Christ says, “But you have a few
people in Sardis who have not defiled their clothes, and they will walk with me
in white, because they are worthy.” Christ is saying that every Christian in
the congregation is not a consumer Christian, is
not a casual Christian, and/or is not a carnal Christian. There
are some who have kept themselves spotless from the world and in intimate
fellowship with Christ.
The question becomes:
which are you? Are you a committed Christian or are you a casual or consumer or
carnal Christian. Whatever your answer is, the good news is, you can be renewed
today. You can be reassured that if you rededicate to staying alert and focused
on the things of God, God will renew you now and reward you later.
How does our group help
us avoid spiritual complacency?
How do even Christians
defile their garments today?
What does a pure life
look like?
How do we model purity
in a culture that celebrates sexual impurity?
Conclusion: When
we’re real with God, we can be real with ourselves. And, when we are real with
ourselves, we can be real with others. When we are real with others, we can be
blessed and be a blessing. May the Lord help us to be real with Him, be responsive
to Him, and be renewed by Him.
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