05-V. EPISTLE TO THE CHURCH OF SARDIS.
V. EPISTLE TO THE CHURCH OF SARDIS.
Revelation 3:1 . “And unto the Angel of the Church in Sardis write.”—Sardis, now Sart, was situated on the side of mount Tmolus, and on the river Pactolus. The ancient capital of Lydia, the kingdom of Crœsus, it maintained a certain portion of its old dignity and splendour in the time of the Persians, and had not wholly lost it in the Roman period. For the things in which the Sardians gloried the most, see Tacitus, Annal. iv. 55.
“These things saith He that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars.”—There has been already occasion to speak of “the seven Spirits of God,” and to claim for these that they in this complex can set forth no other than the one Holy Spirit, the third Person of the ever-blessed Trinity, in his sevenfold operation (Revelation 1:4). All that remains tlhen is to consider the relation in which Christ, declaring that it is He “that hath the seven Spirits of God,” claims to stand to these seven. How entirely He “hath” them, by how close a right they are his, may best be understood by the comparison of other words, presently occurring in this same Book; “I beheld a Lamb as it had been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven Spirits of God sent forth into all the earth” (Revelation 5:6; cf. Zechariah 3:9). It need hardly be observed how important a witness this verse, when the right interpretation of “the seven Spirits” has been seized, bears to the faith of the Western Church on that great point upon which it is at issue with the Eastern, in respect, namely, of the procession of the Holy Ghost. He is indeed the Spirit of the Father and the Son. The Son “hath the seven Spirits,” or the Spirit; not because He has received; for though it is quite true that in the days of his flesh He did receive (Matthew 3:16; John 3:34; Hebrews 1:9); yet now it is the Son of God, a giver therefore, and not a receiver, who is speaking; who “hath” the Spirit; “hath” to the end that He may impart it. If, too, the Spirit be admitted to be God, then the Son, who “hath” the Spirit, must be God likewise; as is well argued, though not with reference to this particular verse, by Augustine (De Trin. xv. 26): “Quomodo Deus non est, qui dat Spiritum Sanctum? Immo quantus Dens est, qui dat Deum?” There is a special fitness in the assumption of this style by the Lord in his address to the Angel of the Church of Sardis. To him and to his people, sunken in spiritual deadness and torpor, the lamp of faith waning and almost extinguished in their hearts, the Lord presents Himself as one having the fulness of all spiritual gifts; able therefore to revive, able to recover, able to bring back from the very gates of spiritual death, those who would employ the little last remaining strength which they still retained, in calling, even when thus in extremis, upon Him.
“And the seven stars.”—This is the only approach to a repetition in the titles of the Lord throughout all the Epistles. He has already declared Himself “He that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand” (Revelation 2:1), and now “He that hath the seven stars.” But “the seven stars” are brought there and here into entirely different combinations. There “He that holdeth the seven stars” is set forth as the same “who walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks;” here “He that hath the seven Spirits of God” hath also “the seven stars.” But since “the stars are the Angels of the seven Churches” (Revelation 1:20), we must see in this combination a hint of the relation between Christ, as the giver of the Holy Spirit, and as the author of a ministry of living men in his Church; this ministry of theirs resting wholly on these gifts, even as the connexion between the two is often brought out in the New Testament. Of course the locus classicus on this matter is Ephesians 4:7-12; but compare further John 20:22-23; Acts 1:8 . His are the golden urns from which these “stars” must continually draw their light. They need not fear to be left destitute of his manifold gifts, for his is the Holy Spirit in all his sevenfold operations, with which evermore to furnish them to the full.
“I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead.”—A passage which at once suggests itself as parallel to this, is 1 Timothy 5:6 , where St. Paul, of a woman living in pleasure, says,
Revelation 3:2 . “Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die.”—Translate rather, “Become” (what thou art not now) “watchful (
“For I have not found thy works perfect before God.”—The word here employed is not that which we commonly render “perfect;” not
It is a very instructive fact, that every where else, in the Epistles to all the Churches save only to this and to Laodicea, there is mention of some burden to be borne, of a conflict either with foes within the Church or without, or with both. Only in these two nothing of the kind occurs. The exceptions are very significant. There is no need to assume that the Church at Sardis had openly coalesced and joined hands with the heathen world; this would in those days have been impossible; nor yet that it had renounced the appearance of opposition to the world. But the two tacitly understood one another. This Church had nothing of the spirit of the Two Witnesses, of whom we read that they “tormented them that dwelt on the earth” (Revelation 11:10), tormented them, that is, by their witness for a God of truth and holiness and love, whom the dwellers on the earth were determined not to know. There was nothing in it to provoke from the heathen, in the midst of whom it sojourned, any such words as those which the author of The Wisdom of Solomon puts into the mouth of the ungodly men (Revelation 2:12-16). The world could endure it, because it too was a world. On the not less significant absence of all heretical opposition in these Churches, there will be something to say when we deal with the Epistle to Laodicea.
Revelation 3:3 . “Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and holdfast, and repent.”—This “how” is by some interpreters referred to the manner of their former receiving, and by some to the matter which they formerly received and heard. Now if the character of the charges which the Lord is making against Sardis were that of holding, or even tolerating, any erroneous doctrine contrary to “the faith once delivered to the saints,” I should certainly be on their side who referred this “how” to the matter, to the form of sound words which they had accepted at the first, and to which Christ would recall them now; I should see in these words a parallel to such passages as Colossians 2:6; 1 Timothy 6:10; 2 Timothy 1:14 . But the charge against Sardis is not a perverse holding of untruth, but a heartless holding of the truth; and therefore I cannot but think that the Lord is graciously reminding her of the heartiness, the zeal, the love with which she received this truth at the first. There was great joy in that city, no doubt, then; but now all was changed. Compare St. Paul to the Thessalonians, 1 Thessalonians 1:5-10 , where, however, there is no such painful comparison to draw between their present and their past; also the same Apostle to the Galatians (Galatians 4:13-15), a completer parallel to the words before us, St. Paul contrasting there their present disaffection and coldness of heart toward him and the Gospel of the grace of God which he brought, with the zeal and warmth and love wherewith they first received these glad tidings at his lips, the “how” of their present holding with the “how” of their past receiving. At the same time, this their joyful loving acceptance of the truth in times past is only one-half of the “how” of their receiving it. They are bidden, no doubt, in these words to remember as well “how” that truth itself came, that they might receive it; with what demonstration of the Spirit and of power from the lips of those ambassadors of Christ, whoever they may have been, who first brought it to Sardis; how holily, how unblamably these went in and out among them. And remembering all this, let them not guiltily let that go, which came so commended to them, which was so joyfully embraced by them, but rather hold it with a firm grasp. “Prize now” —this is what Christ would say—“that which thou didst once prize so highly, which came to thee so plainly as a gift from God, accompanied with the Holy Ghost from heaven; and repent thee of all the coldness and heartlessness with which thou hast learned to regard it” (2 Peter 1:9).
“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.”—Augustine has pointedly said, “Latet ultimus dies, ut observetur omnis dies.” But should this Angel refuse thus to observe and watch, the Lord takes up against him and repeats here his own words, twice spoken, with slight variations, in the days of his ministry on earth (Matthew 24:42-43; Luke 12:39-40); words which must have profoundly impressed themselves on those who heard them, and on the early Church in general, as is evidenced from the frequent references to them in other parts of the New Testament; as by St. Paul (1 Thessalonians 5:2); by St. Peter (2 Peter 3:10); and by St. John (Revelation 16:15). It is the stealthiness of Christ’s advent, and thus his coming upon the secure sinner when least He is looked for, which is the point of the comparison. not the violent taking away of the worldling’s goods. In that case, he would be the
δοκεῖς τὰ θεῶν σὺ ξυνετὰ νικῆσαί ποτε,
καὶ τὴν δίκην που μάκρ᾽ ἀποκεῖσθαι βροτῶν;
ἡ δ᾽ ἐγγύς ἐστιν, οὐχ ὁρωμένη δ᾽ ὁρᾷ,
ὃν χρὴ κολάζειν τ᾽, οἶδεν· ἀλλ᾽ οὐκ οἶσθα σὺ,
ὁπόταν ἄφνω μολοῦσα διολέσῃ κακούς.
Revelation 3:4 . “Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments.”—“Names” cannot here be slightingly used, any more than at Acts 1:15; cf. Revelation 11:13; it must be simply equivalent to persons;—or there may be a tacit reference to Revelation 3:1 . The Angel of Sardis had a name that he lived, and was dead; but there were some there, however few, whose names were more than names; who had not merely the form of godliness (2 Timothy 3:5 ,
There were those at Sardis, a little remnant, who had thus kept their garments; or, according to the testimony of Christ, had “not defiled” them. Absolutely, and in the highest sense, no one has thus kept his garments, save only He who received more than a garment of grace at baptism; having been sanctified from his conception, and thus a “holy thing” (Luke 1:35) from the very first. But, in a secondary sense, and as compared with too many others, there are those who have not defiled these garments; the phrase is equivalent to St. James’s “keeping oneself unspotted from the world” (Revelation 1:27). These are they who, if they do contract any defilement upon these, yet suffer it not to harden or become ingrained there; but go at once to the fountain open for all uncleanness, wash their garments and make them white again in the blood of the Lamb (Revelation 7:14).
“And they shall walk with Me in white.”—Here are many promises in one. The promise of life, for only the living walk, the dead are still; of liberty, for the free walk, and not the fast bound. Much more too we may find in these words, “they shall walk in white,” than if it had been merely said, “they shall be clothed in white.” The grace and dignity of long garments only appears, at least only appears to the full, when the person wearing them is in motion; cf. Luke 20:46 : “the scribes desire to walk in long robes.” And all this has its corresponding truth in the kingdom of heaven. God’s saints and servants here in this world of grace, and no doubt also in that world of glory, are best seen and most to be admired when they are engaged in active services of love. And such they shall have. They shall walk (cf. Zechariah 3:7) with their Lord, shall be glorified together with Him (Romans 8:17; John 17:24); his servants shall serve Him (Revelation 22:3).
“For they are worthy,”—God’s Word does not refuse to ascribe a worthiness to men (Matthew 10:10-11; Luke 20:35; 2 Thessalonians 1:5); although this worthiness must ever be contemplated as relative, and not absolute; as grounding itself on God’s free acceptance of an obedience which would fain be perfect, even while it actually is most imperfect, and on this his acceptance and allowance of it alone. There are those who “are worthy” according to the rules which free grace has, although there are none according to those which strict justice might have, laid down; and God is “faithful” (1 John 1:9), in that having laid these rules down, He will observe and abide by them. Vitringa well: “Dignitas hic notat proportionem, et congruentiam, quæ erat inter statum gratiæ quo fuerant in his terris, et gloriæ quam Dominus ipsis decreverat, æstimandam, ex ipsâ lege gratiæ.” There is another very fearful “They are worthy” in this Book (Revelation 16:6), where no such observation would need to be made, where no such mitigation of the word’s force would be required; for see the antithesis between death as the wages (
Revelation 3:5 . “He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment.”—A repetition of the promise of the verse preceding. They who have kept their garments here, as a few in Sardis to whom the Lord bears testimony (Revelation 3:4) had done, shall have brighter garments given to them there, “vestes vitæ;,” as in the book of Enoch they are called. Of white as the colour of heaven, and of white garments as shining ones, there has been already occasion to speak; see p. 170. Add the words of Grotius: “
I have alluded already, see p. 147, to the frequency, as it appears to me, of the scoffing side-glances at Scripture which occur in the writings of Lucian. It would be curious to know whether he intended a mock at this and at the glorious hope of the Christian, when, relating the tales current about Peregrinus, after his fiery passage in the spirit of Empedocles to a mock immortality, he makes one of this impostor’s followers assure his hearers that shortly after the disappearance of Peregrinus in his funeral-pile he beheld him walking in a white garment, shining, and crowned with a garland of olive (
“And I will not blot out his name out of the book of life.”—It is much more than a simple negative;
“But I will confess his name before my Father, and before his Angels.”—Christ had spoken when on earth of confessing those who confessed Him, before his Father in heaven (Matthew 10:32-33), and before the Angels (Luke 12:8-9). That “in heaven” is of course omitted now, for there is no longer any contrast between the Fatherin heavenand the Sonon earth; but the two confessions, which were separated before, appear united now; and in general we may observe of this Epistle that in great part it is woven together of sayings which the Lord had already uttered once or oftener in the days during which He pitched his tent among men; He now setting his seal from heaven upon his words uttered on earth. On these costly mosaic-works of Scripture, which in our careless reading of it we so often overlook, there are some beautiful remarks in Delitzsch,Commentar über den Psalter, onPsalms 135:1-21; which is itself, as are alsoPsalms 97:1-12 striking examples of the skill of a divine Artificer herein. Nor will it be inopportune to observe further what signal internal evidence this same fact, analysed a little closer, will supply on another point; upon this, namely, that these Epistles are what they profess themselves to be, namely Epistles, directly, and in their form no less than their substance, from Christ the Lord. With no unworthy thought about their inspiration, we might very easily come to regard them as having past through the mind of St. John, and having been recast, in their form at least, in the passage. What they would have been, if they had undergone any such modifying process as this, St. John’s own Epistles tell us. But no; it is the Lord Himself who speaks throughout; who not merely suggests the thoughts, but dictates the words. That St. John is here merely his mouthpiece, that the Master is speaking and not the servant, is, I say, remarkably witnessed for in the fact of the numerous points of contact and coincidence between these seven Epistles and the words of Christ as recorded in the Gospels, in the three synoptic Gospels above all. Had such only been found in St. John’s own Gospel, this might have suggested quite a different explanation. But it is mainly the other Gospels which furnish these. Thus in this Sardian Epistle alone, where, it is true, the points of resemblance are more numerous than any where else, spiritual activity is set forth as a watching,Revelation 3:3; with which compareMatthew 24:42;Mark 13:37 . Christ likens his. unlooked-for coming to that of a thief (ibid.); compareMatthew 24:43;Luke 12:39 . He speaks here of blotting out a name from the book of life (Revelation 3:5), there of names written in the book of life (Luke 10:20); here of confessing his servants before his Father (Revelation 3:5), with which the parallels from the Gospels have just been given. The remarkable reappearance in this and in all these Epistles of the words so often on our Lord’s lips, according to the three first Gospels, but never noticed in the fourth, “He that hath an ear to hear, let him hear” (Matthew 11:15;Mark 4:9;Luke 8:8), has been dwelt on already, p. 120.
Revelation 3:6 . “He that hath an ear, let him, hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches.”—Compare Revelation 2:7 .
