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Sardis means “precious stone (i.e., the sardius stone), remnant.” Since a precious stone is rare, it carries the idea of a remnant, something not commonly found. Some teachers believe the word actually means “to escape,” but I cannot find any evidence to support this interpretation. The Greek word for “escape” is pheugo. This has no relationship to the name Sardis. The Remnant Church The Church of Sardis extends from 1517 to 1776 AD. It is essentially the Reformation Church, and they parallel the remnant of grace in Elijah’s day who had not bowed the knee to Baal during the reign of Ahab and Jezebel (1 Kings 19:18). So it is fitting that Sardis would come immediately after Thyatira, the Jezebel Church. Elijah apparently felt that he was almost the last true believer in the whole land. When he ran from Jezebel, he thought he must be the last believer left alive in Israel. In 1 Kings 19:10 Elijah tells God,
Being part of that Sardis remnant can indeed be a lonely walk. They must be willing to give up the security of being in the majority. The remnant will often be asked, “How can your beliefs be right when so many great theologians say you are wrong? Surely, if your teachings were true, there would be more people who believed them.” The reply is that for many centuries those who believed and thought differently were murdered and tortured for their beliefs. If they had not been systematically murdered by the Church, perhaps they would be in the majority. But, incidentally, there were very few times in the Old Testament where the majority actually did believe the teachings of the prophets that God sent to them. True believers have nearly always been in the minority. Why should it be any different today? People have not changed. Sardis Had a Partial Revelation In the message to the Church of Sardis in Rev. 3:1, 2, we read:
The Reformation Church had a revelation of justification by faith alone, apart from submitting to a priesthood of men. They had a revelation that one did not need to belong to an earthly organization that men called “the Church” in order to be part of “the Church” in the eyes of God. This was good, but it was as far as they went. They had little or no concept of what it meant to be an overcomer. Their revelation was primarily of the feast of Passover and its meaning. They had little or no revelation of either Pentecost or Tabernacles. And so even the Sardis Church of the Reformation was “dead.” And God did not find their deeds “completed in the sight of My God.” In other words, their teaching was incomplete. They had the gospel of justification by faith alone, but they did not know how to experience Pentecost or go all the way into Sonship. In order to attain the first resurrection at the second coming of Christ, one must qualify as an overcomer. As I showed in my book, The Purpose of Resurrection, most of the believers will inherit Life at the second (general) resurrection at the end of the thousand-year reign of Christ. Yet because so many in the Sardis Church were content with a mere Passover experience, they had fallen asleep, content to be “saved,” but did not know that they were incomplete. And so Rev. 3:3 says,
The implication of this seems to be that when the time of His appearance draws near, the overcomers will know enough so that His coming will not surprise them. He will not come to them as a thief. This idea is set forth again by the apostle Paul in 1 Thess. 5:1-6, which says,
In those days a band of thieves might ride into town in the middle of the night while everyone was sleeping peacefully, thinking they were safe in their homes. The thieves would essentially invade the town, plunder it, and then ride back to their hideout. This is the metaphor of Christ coming as a thief. It is not meant to picture a silent cat-burglar, but a band of thieves who come with “sudden destruction.” The Church of Sardis was warned not to fall asleep, lest they be overtaken by this destruction. In essence, it is their incompleteness that causes them to sleep and be caught unawares. This is a warning to those who are satisfied with being justified or “saved,” thinking that there is no further requirement to obtain the first resurrection and rule with Him for the thousand years in that coming age. Sardis Told to Repent Rev. 3:3 admonishes the Sardis Church to repent. Repent of what? That is the question. In general, it was to repent of not moving on into the revelation of Pentecost and the Feast of Tabernacles. Most of them thought that once they were justified by faith, they automatically received the infilling of the Holy Spirit. They did not realize that Passover and Pentecost were two different feasts. If they had known the story of Israel in the wilderness, they would have realized that Passover was the day Israel left Egypt, but Pentecost was the day God gave them the Ten Commandments. If they had contemplated this, they would have seen that Pentecost was intended to write the law upon our hearts as they were led by the Spirit—the pillar of fire by night and the pillar of cloud by day. Any time a Christian rejects a portion of the word of God, he needs to repent, that is, to change direction, or change his thinking. The Sardis Church was much like the Church in the wilderness under Moses. They had come out of “Egypt” out from the “house of bondage” (Rome), but they had fallen asleep on the way to Sinai. Yet God says in Rev. 3:4,
God has overcomers in every age. These are the few who will actually receive the rewards listed in the message to the seven churches. They will receive them at the first resurrection. The Reward of the Sardis Overcomer God says in Rev 3:5,
In those days white garments were made of fine linen. The meaning of the white garments is given in Rev. 19:8,
Fine linen is the garb of priesthood (Lev. 6:10). So the Bride of Christ is portrayed in Rev. 19 as also being the priesthood. From a New Testament perspective, we understand that this is no longer a Levitical priesthood, but one after the Order of Melchizedek. Thus, to be eligible for this priesthood does not require genealogy from Levi and Aaron, but a spiritual genealogy from Jesus Christ. More is said of these in white robes in Rev. 7:13-15,
There has been tribulation in every age, and overcomers in every age as well. But the point is that these in white robes “serve Him day and night in His temple.” In other words, they are priests after the Order of Melchizedek. These fulfill the prophecy in Ezekiel 44:15-19 of the “sons of Zadok.” These prefigure the Melchi-Zadok Order and must be distinguished from the Levitical priesthood that are forbidden (in the previous verses) to serve God in the temple. That these are the ones who inherit the first resurrection is plain from Rev. 20:6, which says,
Thus, the reward specified for the overcomers in the Sardis Church is that they will inherit the first resurrection and be part of that priesthood that can minister to God in the temple in heaven as well as minister to people in the earth, the “outer court” (Ez. 44:19). Most significant is the statement in Rev. 3:5 that “I will not erase his name from the book of life.” The implication of this is that it is possible for one to have his name erased from the book of life. The context shows that this is specifically referring to the person’s status as an inheritor of the first resurrection. This is the issue. The Church itself will be “saved yet so as by fire” (1 Cor. 3:15) at the second resurrection, but the overcomers will receive their reward at the first resurrection. The overcomers will receive a “better resurrection” (Heb. 11:35) than the regular believer in Christ. There is a greater reward for going beyond Passover and Pentecost all the way into the experience of the feast of Tabernacles. The Spirit of Wisdom The Church of Sardis correlates with the Spirit of Wisdom. Even as the Church of Thyatira lacked knowledge of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, the Sardis Church lacked the wisdom to move forward into a complete relationship with Christ. Wisdom is largely the ability to apply knowledge by the mind and character of Jesus Christ. In the Old Testament under Moses, Israel was told that the revelation of the law was their wisdom. Deut. 4:5-8 says,
The purpose of the wilderness was to teach Israel wisdom, so that they would qualify to enter the Promised Land. If they had not stopped their ears from hearing the Law (Ex. 20:18-21), God would have written it on their hearts, and they truly would have become “a wise and understanding people.” It appears, however, that only Caleb and Joshua qualified as overcomers in that day, and so they were the only ones of that generation who entered the Promised Land. Likewise it is with the Church in the Pentecostal Age, except for the overcomers. Most of the believers in the Church of Sardis fell asleep, content in their truth of justification. Like Israel, they all came out of Egypt at Passover—as justified believers—but they fell short at Sinai (Pentecost). Without the law written on their heart by the direct voice of God, they were left with only a written record of the law. Sardis was likewise a Church with a written record of the Word, and many translations were made during those years (1517-1776). But in refusing to go further into Pentecost and receive a direct revelation of Jesus Christ, the law was not written on their heart. The written word changed many of their doctrinal beliefs, but not their hearts. So much of that head knowledge that was learned by studying Scripture was misused and misapplied because of a lack of wisdom. Most were unqualified to receive the reward of the overcomers in the first resurrection. |
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