SPECIAL INTERLUDE

Revisiting Church History In Light Of The 500th Anniversary Of The Protestant Reformation

VII. Laodicea: Today's Evangelical Church -- Our Dire Need To Return To The Biblical Faith

(Revelation 3:14-22)

 

Introduction: (To show the need . . .)

            We face unrest and decadence in all kinds of institutions, secular and religious, and it is stressing a lot of people today:

            (1) Theodore Hayre of Prospect, Connecticut, in his letter to the Republican-American, November 11, 2017, p. 14A, wrote, "The problem with the world right now is . . . [that] we are experiencing social transitions, ideological renovations, philosophical instability all over the world and . . . moral manipulation [of] values." (brackets ours) 

            (2) It is little wonder then that "the National Institute of Mental Health" claims that "anxiety is the most common mental-health disorder in the United States, affecting nearly one-third of both adolescents and adults." (Jeannie Cunnion, "America's teen anxiety epidemic is heartbreaking.  Parents, here's the incredible thing you must do now," October 16, 2017; foxnews.com)

            (3) It affects us as believers locally: in the last three weeks, a head a household told me of a discipling crisis he faces in another evangelical church, another of a life-threatening crisis a member of his family faced in a business and another of a job-threatening crisis he faces due to governmental decisions, and three others have told of the general chaos they see in society!

 

Need:  So we ask, "From  God's perspective, what is going on in OUR era of Church History, and what does He advise?!"

 

I.                 The titles attributed to Christ in Revelation 3:14 identify the Laodicean Church as today's Evangelicals in crisis:

A.     Jesus is "the Amen," a phrase used elsewhere in the Greek N. T. only at (1) 2 Cor. 1:20 where the godly say "the Amen" if the Bible is taught of Christ's literal fulfillment of the Abrahamic Covenant, i. e., dispensationally, versus Reformed-Calvinist theology, and at (2) 1 Cor. 14:16 where the godly say "the Amen" if the speaker uses a known human language opposite Charismatic-Arminian theology. (Moulton & Geden, Concordance to the Greek Testament, 1974, p. 51-52; J. Dwight Pentecost, Things to Come, 1972, p. 65-128; Charles C. Ryrie, Dispensationalism Today, 1970, p. 43-47)

B.      Christ is also "the Faithful and True Witness," a title used elsewhere of God only in Jer. 42:5 with 43:1-44:30 where carnal people first promise to heed God's Word from His messenger only later to disobey it so that God punishes them.

C.      Jesus is the "Head of the creation of God," alluding to Col. 1:15-22 esp. of His sovereignty in evangelizing the unsaved.

D.     To explain, (1) around 1950, "new evangelicals" disobeyed Christ's Rev. 3:11 call to Philadelphian era Fundamentalists to hold firm to the truth, and they opted instead to "engage" the world with an alleged respected Reformed Theology [for doctrinal vitality]. (J. H. Armstrong, gen. ed., The Com. Evan. Crisis, 1996, p. 29-31)  (2) However, (a) this left them with Reformed Theology's figurative handling of prophecy from the Alexandrian School that yields amillennialism, postmillennialism and reconstructionism that in turn fuel ecumenism and anti-semitism and also (b) left them open to compromise with (i) all the past errors of Church History still in the world [like Catholicism's Babylonian Semiramis cult; Liberal Theology's subjectivism that leads to Postmodernism that inhibits Evangelicals from interpreting alleged "debatable" Bible verses; cults, etc.] and (ii) troubling secular ideologies like evolution, Marxism, globalism, paganism, etc. [that also corrupt "Christian counseling"]. (Ibid., p. 31ff; B. Howse, Rel. Troj. Horse, 2012, pp. 439; Martin and Deidre Bobgan, Psychoheresy, 1987, pp. 242)  (b) Also, Charismatic-Arminians reacted to the "new evangelicals'" promotion of their old nemesis Calvinism in Reformed Theology by promoting Arminian theology [for spiritual vitality] (Ibid., Armstrong; Quebedeaux, The New Charismatics, p. 30-31), but (i) Calvinism reflects Augustine's Pergamum era pagan Neo-Platonism where man as an extension of God sees God author his faith (B. B. Warfield, Calv. and Aug., 1974 [all, esp. p. 378]; G. Carruth, ed., The Vol. Lib., 1994, v. 22, p. 2025f; E. M. Burns, West. Civ., 1963, p. 395-396) and (ii) Arminianism reflects Pelagius' pagan Stoicism where man helps save himself (W. Walker, A Hist. of the Chr. Ch., 1959, p. 168ff).  (3) By thus not heeding and relying on Christ to "engage" the world, Evangelicals have sabotaged their ministry to everybody and afflicted God's flock with oppressive religious errors and secular ideologies in the world!

II.              Christ critiques today's evangelical plight by way of an illustration from ancient Laodicea itself, Rev. 3:15-17:

A.     Laodicea piped hot water from Heliopolis [illus. spiritual vitality] and cold from Colossae [illus. doctrinal vitality], but both pipes lay exposed to the weather and gave only lukewarm water fit as an emetic, The New Bib. Dict., 1967, p. 716f.

B.      Evangelicals' pollution with world errors makes it doctrinally and spiritually inept, so Christ is about to "vomit" (emeo, Arndt & Ging., A Grk.-Eng. Lex. of N. T., 1967, p. 254) it up as "adulterous" (Lev. 18:25), or idolatrous, Rev. 3:17a:

1.       "I am rich" alludes to Zech. 11:5 where Israel's leaders abused God's flock for material gain; "I have acquired wealth" points to Hos. 12:8 where Israel thought her wealth meant she was without sin and "[I] do not need a thing" refers to 1 Thess. 4:11-12 where one's material welfare aids in his reputation before the unsaved world.

2.       Thus, in compromising with worldly wickedness, Evangelicals cease trusting in Christ to disciple people and instead view money as their god, focusing on acquiring it as the measure of their ministry success, Ibid., Howse, p. 11.

C.      Jesus then revealed HOW errant Calvinist and errant Arminian BELIEFS have led to this dire crisis, Rev. 3:17b:

1.       "Wretched" (talaiporos) appears elsewhere only in Rom. 7:24 (Ibid., Arndt & Ging., p. 811) where one is carnal versus what he wills, Rom. 7:15-24.  Calvinists teach Total depravity, that both lost man's will and nature are fully corrupt and Arminians say both are partly corrupt so the lost can contribute faith to help save themselves.  However, Rom. 7:15-24 shows the will is not bound by the sin nature though the latter is fully corrupt opposite both views, and both groups fail to get saved men to rely on the Holy Spirit to live above sin in the Christian life, Romans 8:1-4!

2.       "Pitiful" (eleeinos) occurs elsewhere only in 1 Cor. 15:19 (Ibid., p. 249) of those who hope only in this life.  Calvinists say God chose who would believe (Unconditional election) while Arminians say He chose to save those He foreknew, with both making election result in justification.  Yet, Scripture (1 Pet. 1:2; 2 Thess. 2:13; Eph. 1:3-6) has election unto only post-justification goals.  Both groups lead believers to focus on this life, yielding worldliness.

3.       "Poor" in light of Rev. 3:18 and 1 Peter 1:7 is weakness in faith versus Calvinism that asserts Limited atonement, that Christ died only for the elect since only they are given God's "rich" saving faith, for true believers in Rev. 3:18-19 (in light of Heb. 12:6-8) are poor in faith!  "Poor" also critiques Arminianism that holds one's faith helps save him so that one loses his salvation if his faith falters, for in Rev. 3:18 (with 3:19) believers are still saved though poor in faith!  Calvinists as believers fail to live by faith as they rely on predestination to preserve their salvation and Arminians fail to live by faith by relying on a self-help faith that falters, so both theologies yield ungodly lives!

4.       "Blind" signals a lack of discernment versus Calvinism's Irrestible grace belief that God makes the elect discern the truth to believe the Gospel.  This "blind" state also counters the Arminian view that the lost on their own can discern the truth to be saved.  Christians in both groups thus fail to rely on God's Holy Spirit to convict the lost (Jn. 16:7-11) and for themselves as believers to rely on the Holy Spirit to discern God's truth, John 16:12-15; 2 Tim. 1:13-14.

5.       "Naked" via Rev. 3:18 and 19:8 is a lack of godly works versus Calvinism's Perseverance of the saints doctrine in its view that such perseverance is due to God's predestination and versus the Arminian view that failing to persevere means one lost his salvation.  In Rev. 3:18, the saved do not persevere due to carnality, and versus both theologies, believers are unconditionally eternally secure by means of the Holy Spirit's sealing ministry, Ephesians 1:13-14.

III.           Christ's solution is to use painful trials to separate believers from Evangelicalism for great blessing, Rev. 3:18-22:

A.     The Rev. 3:18 verb "counsel" exists elsewhere in the N. T. only at Jn. 18:14 (Ibid., p. 785) where Caiaphas advised the Sanhedrin to kill Jesus to save the nation Israel, and Jn. 11:47-52 shows that his advice via Christ's cross led to God's unifying His flock worldwide.  Evangelicalism's compromise with the troubling world is so corruptive (Ibid., Howse), for the good of believers worldwide, God calls overcomers to be "crucified" to worldly Evangelicalism itself, Gal. 6:14!

B.      To that end, Christ in Rev. 3:18b calls one to trust Him to "buy" [by grace, Isa. 55:1] in His sovereignty "gold" tried in the fire, alluding to 1 Pet. 1:7 with 2:12 [faith], "white garments" [perseverance in godly works] seen via Rev. 16:12-16 and "eyesalve" [discernment] via John 9:1-39.  Each of these contexts involve one's being slandered, so God calls one to let Him arrange that one to be slandered by Calvinists as an "heretical Pelagian" for rejecting their TULIP beliefs [II,C,1-5]! (Rev. 3:18)  The overcomer will thus be spurred to part from and be free of Evangelical Calvinists as (1) he lives by faith in God's help, as (2) he perseveres long-term in God's ministry assignment and (3) he discerns the truth!

C.      Then, Rev. 3:19 KJV uses Charismatic vocabulary to urge one to "repent," so he is to "buy" from Christ the same three items he did relative to Calvinists (v. 18b), i. e., to be slandered by Arminians as being "unloving" [contextually implied] for rejecting their views and works, leading to one's separating from and being independent of them.  "Love" is phileo, typical Charismatic emotional love (Ibid., Arndt & Ging., p. 866-867), and  "be zealous" (zeleuo, Ibid., p. 338) points to 1 Cor. 12:31, 14:1, 39, verses Charismatics use to urge others to be "zealous" to acquire their false gifts, Ibid., Quebedeaux, p. 13-18.  Zeleuo is the late form of zeloo in these 1 Cor. verses (Abbott-Smith, A Man. Grk. Lex. of the N. T., 1968, p. 195), so Christ here critiques the Charismatic claim that they are obtaining God's "latter day" gifts!

D.     Then, in righteous victory over the ["wretched"] sin nature, Christ in Rev. 3:20 [it points to James 4:13-5:9 via 'the Judge's standing at the door' phrase] calls esp. pastors to trust Him to meet their material needs not by faithlessly seeking another higher paying job or pressuring God's flock for money, and Christ will reward them in their Bible study (John 14:23) to glean abundant, rich information they can use to "feed Christ" [His people vicariously, cf. Acts 9:4-5] and Christ through His flock will [cause His people vicariously to] meet the pastor's material needs.

E.      For overcoming ["pitiful"] worldliness like Christ did (Rev. 3:21a  points to John 16:33) in not loving the world and its lusts to do God's will (1 Jn. 2:15-17), Jesus will set one "in" (en, U. B. S. Grk. N. T., 1966, p. 845) His earthly Davidic throne like He sat down "in" (Ibid.) His Father's heavenly throne [which contrast of these thrones critiques Progressive Dispensationalism that compromises regular Dispensationalism with Reformed Theology!].  This wording is clarified via Rev. 7:9-17 to mean (1) God will give him a nurturing Bible exposition ministry to God's flock worldwide that lives in an oppressive era akin to that of the future Great Tribulation.  (2) To explain, the phrase "as even I Myself" (hos ka'go) exists elsewhere in Rev. 2 & 3 only of Luther's era and "with Me" (met' emou) exists elsewhere in Rev. 2 & 3 only of Edwards' era (Ibid., p. 839-845), so our era's overcomer(s) like them will impact secular and religious realms by preaching and writings that nurture of God's flock worldwide (Rev. 3:18) from the oppressive, one-world, religio-politico-economico complex, with which complex errant Evangelicalism is converging, Ibid., Howse, p. 15-69.

 

Lesson: In violating Christ's call to Fundamentalists to hold to His truth, Evangelicalism is corrupting itself with troubling, futile ministries as it converges with the troubling apostate, one-world, religious-politico-economical complex!  God calls us to trust Him to purge us by trials from errant Evangelicalism and the world complex with which it is converging for blessing.

 

Application: May we heed Christ's call for our needy Laodicean Church era to enjoy His blessing and to be blessed of God!