07-VII. EPISTLE TO THE CHURCH OF LAODICEA.
VII. EPISTLE TO THE CHURCH OF LAODICEA.
Revelation 3:14 . “And unto the Angel of the Church of the Laodiceans write.”—Laodicea, called often Laodicea on the Lycus, to distinguish it from other cities (there were no less than six in all) bearing the same name, was a city in Southern Phrygia (Phrygia Pacatiana), midway between Philadelphia and-Colosse. Its nearness to the latter city is more than once referred to in St. Paul’s Epistle to the Colossians (Colossians 4:13). Its earliest name was Diospolis, then Rhoas (Plin. H. N. v. 29). Being rebuilt and adorned by Antiochus the Second, king of Syria, he called it Laodicea, after his wife Laodice, by whom he was afterwards poisoned. In Roman times it was a foremost city among those of the second rank in Asia Minor; “celeberrima urbs” Pliny calls it. Its commerce was considerable, being chiefly in the wools grown in the region round about, which were celebrated for their richness of colour and fineness of texture. The city suffered grievously in the Mithridatic war, but presently recovered again; once more in the widewasting earthquake in the time of Tiberius, but was repaired and restored by the efforts of its own citizens, without any help asked by them from the Roman senate (Tacitus, Annal. xiv. 27).
Some have supposed that the negligent Angel of the Laodicean Church was that Archippus, for whom St. Paul, writing to the Colossians, adds the message, “And say to Archippus, Take heed to the ministry which thou hast received in the Lord, that thou fulfil it” (Colossians 4:17). The urgency of this monition certainly seems to imply that St. Paul was not altogether satisfied with the manner in which Archippus was then fulfilling the “ministry,” whatever that might be, which he had undertaken; and affording a not inconsiderable support to this conjecture is the fact that in the Apostolical Constitutions (viii. 46), which with much of later times also contain much of the very earliest, Archippus is actually named as first bishop of Laodicea. Let him have been the son of Philemon (Philemon 1:2), a principal convert in the Colossian Church, whose son therefore might very probably have been chosen to this dignity and honour, and it would be nothing strange to find him some thirty years later holding his office still; while it would be only too consonant with the downward progress of things, that he who began slackly, should in the lapse of years have grown more and more negligent, till now he needed and received this sharpest reproof from his Lord. Whether the rebukes and threatenings contained in this Epistle did their work or not, it is only for Him who reads the hearts of men to know. But it is certain that the Church of Laodicea was in somewhat later times, so far as man’s eye could see, in a flourishing condition. In numbers it increased so much that its bishop obtained metropolitan dignity; and in 361 an important Church Council, that in which the Canon of Scripture was finally declared, was held at Laodicea, and derives its name front thence. All has perished now. He who removed the candlestick of Ephesus, has rejected Laodicea out of his mouth. The fragments of aqueducts and theatres spread over a vast extent of country tell of the former magnificence of this city; but of this once famous Church nothing survives. Recent travellers with difficulty discovered one or two Christians in the poor village of Iski-Hissar, which stands on the site which Laodicea occupied of old.
“These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true Witness.”—“The Amen” (it is only here that the word is used as a proper name) is He who can add a “Verily, verily,” an “Amen, amen,” to every word which He utters; as so frequently He does—the double “Amen” indeed only in the Gospel ofJohn 1:51 , and often. He is “the Witness, the faithful and the true,” in that He speaks what He knows, and testifies what He has seen. The thought is a favourite and ever-recurring one in the Gospel of St. John (John 3:11); but does not appear in any other. It may be interesting here to call to mind how the confessors of Lyons and Vienne, referring to these very words, put back from themselves the name of “witnesses” (
It will be seen that the truthfulness of Christ as a Witness is asserted in the
“The beginning of the creation of God.”—There are two ways in which grammatically it would be possible to understand these words. They might say that Christ was passively this “beginning of the creation of God,” as the first and most excellent creature of God’s hands; thus Jacob addresses Reuben as
Revelation 3:15 . “Iknow thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot.”—
It is thus that Gregory the Great explains these words (Reg. Past. iii. 34): “Qui enim adhuc in peccatis est, conversionis fiduciam non amittit. Qui vero post conversionem tepuit, et spem, quæ esse potuit de peccatore, subtraxit. Aut calidus ergo quisque esse, aut frigidus quæritur, ne tepidus evomatur, ut videlicet aut necdum conversus, adhuc de se spem conversionis præbeat, aut jam conversus in virtutibus inardescat.” Compare Origen (De Princip. iii. 4): “Forte utilius videatur obtineri animam a carne, quam residere in suis propriis voluntatibus. Namque quoniam nec calida dicitur esse, nec frigida, sed in medio quodam tepore perdurans, tardam et satis difficilem conversionem poterit invenire. Si vero carni adhæreat, ex his ipsis interdum malis quæ ex carnis vitiis patitur, satiata aliquando et repleta, velut gravissimis oneribus luxuriæ ac libidinis fatigata, facilius et velocius converti a materialibus sordibus ad cœ lestium desiderium et spiritualem gratiam potest.” Jeremy Taylor, too, in the second of his sermons, Of Lukewarmness and Zeal, discusses this point, why the Lord preferred “hot” or “cold” to “lukewarm,” at considerable length; and urges well that it is the “lukewarm,” not as a transitional, but as a final state, which is thus the object of the Lord’s abhorrence: “In feasts or sacrifices the ancients did use apponere frigidam or calidam; sometimes they drank hot drink, sometimes they poured cold upon their gravies or in their wines, but no services of tables or altars were ever with lukewarm. God hates it worse than stark cold; which expression is the more considerable, because in natural and superinduced progressions from extreme to extreme, we must necessarily pass through the midst; and therefore it is certain a lukewarm religion is better than none at all, as being the doing some parts of the work designed, and nearer to perfection than the utmost distance could be; and yet that God hates it more, must mean, that there is some appendant evil in this state which is not in the other, and that accidentally it is much worse: and so it is, if we rightly understand it; that is, if we consider it not as a being in, or passing through, the middle way, but as a state and a period of religion. If it be in motion, a lukewarm religion is pleasing to God; for God hates it not for its imperfection, and its natural measures of proceeding; but if it stands still and rests there, it is a state against the designs and against the perfection of God: and it hath in it these evils.”
I must not leave these words without observing that there is another way of explaining this, “I would thou wert cold or hot,” which has found favour with somne in modern times. Urging that food, when either cold or hot, is pleasant to the taste, and only when tepid unwelcome, they make both the “cold” and the “hot” to express spiritual conditions absolutely acceptable in themselves, the only tertium comparationisbeing the nausea created by the tepid, and affirm that nothing further has a right here to be pressed. But assuredly there is much more in these words than this.
Revelation 3:16 . “So then because thou art lukewarm., and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.”—The land of Canaan is said to have spued out its former inhabitants for their abominable doings; the children of Israel are warned that they commit not the same, lest in like manner it spue out them (Leviticus 18:28); but this threatening is more terrible still: it is to be spued out of the mouth of Christ, to be rejected as with nausea, with moral loathing and disgust, by Him; to exchange the greatest possible nearness to Him for the remotest distance. At the same time, in the original the language is not quite so severe as in our Version; the threat does not present itself as one about to be put into immediate execution. The long-suffering of Christ has not been all exhausted;
Revelation 3:17 . “Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.”—There is a question whether this verse coheres the most closely with what goes before, or what follows after,—that is, whether Christ threatens to reject him from his mouth, because he says, “I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing;” or whether, because he says he is all this, therefore Christ counsels him to buy of Him what will make him rich indeed (Revelation 3:18). Our Translators regard the latter connexion as the right one; and, by the punctuation which they have adopted, join this verse with that which follows after it, not with that which went before it—I doubt whether correctly. I should have preferred to place a colon at the end of Revelation 3:16 , and a full-stop at that of Revelation 3:17 , instead of the reverse, which they have done.—These riches and goods in which the Laodicean Church and Angel gloried we must understand as spiritual riches, in which they fondly imagined they abounded. Some interpreters take it in another sense, that they boasted of their worldly prosperity, their flourishing outward condition, and found in this a sign and token of God’s favour towards them. But assuredly this is a mistake; it is in the sphere of spiritual things that the Lord is moving; and this language in this application is justified by numerous passages in Scripture: as by Luke 12:21; 1 Corinthians 1:5; 2 Corinthians 8:9; above all, by two passages of holy irony, 1 Corinthians 4:8 and Hosea 12:8; both standing in very closest connexion with this; I can indeed hardly doubt that there is intended a reference to the latter of these in the words of our Lord. The Laodicean Angel, and the Church which he was dragging into the same ruin with himself, were walking in a vain show and imagination of their own righteousness, their own advances in spiritual insight and knowledge. That this may go hand in hand with the most miserable lack of all real grace, all true and solid advances in goodness, we have a notable example in the Pharisee of our Lord’s parable (Luke 18:11-12; cf. Luke 16:15; 1 Corinthians 13:1); and so it was here. Rightly Richard of St. Victor: “Dicis quod sum dives et locupletatus, sive videlicet per scientiæ cognitionem, sive per Scripturæ prædicationem, sive per secularis eloquentiæ nitorem, sive per sacramentorum administrationem, sive per pontificialis apicis dignitatem, sive per vulgi laudem inanem.”
Such was their estimate of themselves; but now follows the terrible reality, namely, Christ’s estimate of them: “And knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.” Here, as so often, our Version, to its loss, has taken no note of the article which goes before the two first adjectives, and raises them to the dignity of substantives, while the three which follow are added as qualifying adjectives. Read rather, “And knowest not that thou art the wretched and the miserable one,37and poor, and blind, and naked.”
Revelation 3:18 . “I counsel thee to buy of Me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear.”—There is a certain irony, but the irony of divine love, in these words. He who might have commanded, prefers rather to counsel; He who might have spoken as from heaven, conforms Himself, so far as the outward form of his words reaches, to the language of earth. To the merchants and factors of this wealthy mercantile city He addresses Himself in their own dialect. Laodicea was a city of extensive money transactions; Cicero, journeying to or from his province, proposes to take up money there (Epp. ad. Div. ii. 17; iii. 5); Christ here invites to dealings with Him: I-Ie has gold so fine that none will reject it. The wools of Laodicea, of a raven blackness, were famous throughout the world; but He has raiment of dazzling white for them who will put it on. There were ointments for which certainly many of the Asiatic cities were famous; but He, as He will presently announce, has eyesalve more precious than them all. Would it not be wise to transact their chief business with Him? Thus Perkins (Exposition upon Rev. i. ii. iii.,Works, vol. iii. p. 363): “Christ saith, I counsel thee to buy of Me; where He alludeth to the outward state of this city, for it was rich, and also given to much traffic, as histories record, and therefore He speaks to them in their own kind, as if He should say, Ye are a people exercised in much traffic, and delighted with nothing more than buying and selling. Well, I have wares that will serve your turn, as gold, garments, and oil; therefore come and buy of Me.” But first on those words, “buy,” and “of Me.” We must not fail to put an emphasis on that “of Me.” “In Me,” Christ would say, “are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” Christ’s Apostle had once before to remind the Colossians, neighbours of the Laodiceans, that this was so; and that there was no growth for the Church, or for any member of the Church, except through holding the Head (Colossians 2:3); that all self-chosen ways of will-worship might have a show of wisdom, but puffed up, and did not build up (Colossians 2:10-15); and out of the deep anxiety which he evidently felt for both these sister Churches alike (Colossians 2:1), he had desired that the Epistle to the Colossians should be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans (Colossians 4:16). But they had not learned their lesson. St. Paul’s “great conflict” for them had been well nigh in vain; and now the Lord, repeating his servant’s lesson, gathers up into a single point, concentrates in that single phrase, “buyof Me,” the whole lesson of the Epistle to the Colossians. The “buying” of Christ, who in so many more passages is described as making a free gift of all which He imparts to men, is drawn fromIsaiah 55:1 , with which we may compareMatthew 13:44 . The price which they should pay was this, the renunciation of all vain reliance on their own righteousness and wisdom; the price which in another Epistle St. Paul declared he had so gladly paid, that so he might himself win Christ (Php 3:7-8); the
Excoquit.”
But, secondly, as he is “naked,” he shall “buy” of Christ “white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear.”—Instead of the
“And anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.”—The eye for which this salve is needed is, of course, the spiritual eye, the eye of the conscience, by which spiritual things are discerned and appreciated; which eye may be sound or simple (
It has been already remarked (p. 211), and assuredly is very well worthy of notice, that the two Churches which are spiritually in the most sunken condition of all, that, namely, of Sardis and this of Laodicea, are also the two in which alone there is no mention made either of adversaries from without, or of hinderers to the truth from within. Of the absence of heathen adversaries there has been occasion to speak already; but more noticeable still is the fact that there neither appear here nor there Nicolaitans, or Balaamites, or Jezebelites, or those who say they are Jews and are not; seeking to seduce Christ’s servants, and making it needful for them earnestly to contend for the truth, if they would not be robbed of it altogether. In the coldness andl deadness of these Churches, which had no truth to secure or defend from gainsayers, we may see a pregnant hint of all which the Church owes to the heresies and heretics that, one after another, have assailed her. Owing them no thanks for what she has gained by them, her gains themselves have been immense, and there are remarkable acknowledgments to this effect made by more than one of the early Fathers. Contending against these she has learned not merely to define more accurately, but to grasp more firmly, and to prize more dearly, that truth of which they would fain have deprived her. What would the Church of the second century have been, if it had never learned its strength, and the treasures of wisdom and knowledge which it had in Christ Jesus, in the course of that tremendous conflict with the Gnostics which it then sustained? Would the Church itself have ever been the trueGnostic, except for these false ones? Again, what an education for it were the fast-succeeding conflicts of the two next centuries; and not in intellectual education only, but “as iron sharpeneth iron,” so the zeal of the adversaries of the truth served often to excite the zeal and love, which might else have abated, of its friends. Assuredly it was not good for the Sardian and Laodicean Churches to be without this necessity of earnestly contending for the truth. Perhaps they gloried in their. freedom from conflicts which were agitating and troubling the other Churches around them. But we may be bold to say that in a world of imperfections like ours, it argued no healthy spiritual life that there should have been none there to call the truth into question and debate. Misgrowths are at all events growths; and if there is a spiritual condition which is aboveerrors, so also there is one which is beneath them, when there is not interest enough in theology, not care enough to know any thing certain about God, or about man’s relation to God, even to generate a heresy. As we read the history of the Church, we may perhaps find some consolation in thoughts like these. Assuredly in reading many a page in that history, we need the strongest consolations which we can any where find. But to return from this digression.
Revelation 3:19 . “As many as I love I rebuke and chasten; be zealous therefore, and repent.”—He, the great Master-builder, polishes with many strokes of the chisel and the hammer the stones which shall find a place at last in the walls of the heavenly Jerusalem (cf.Proverbs 3:12;Job 5:17;Hebrews 12:6;2 Chronicles 33:11-13;Psalms 94:12). And this is a rule which endures no exception. In that “as many” (
Revelation 3:20 . “Behold, I stand at the door and knock.”—The Hellenistic
“If any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with Me.”—Christ does not knock only; He also speaks; makes his “voice” to be heard—a more precious benefit still! It is true indeed that we cannot in our interpretation draw any strict line of distinction between Christ’s knocking and Christ’s speaking. They both represent his dealings of infinite love with souls, for the winning them to receive Him; yet at the same time, considering that in this natural world a knock may be any one’s and on any errand, while the voice accompanying it would at once designate who it was that was knocking, and with what intention (Acts 12:13-14), we have a right, so far as we may venture to distinguish between the two, to see in the voice the more inward appeal, the closer dealing of Christ with the soul, speaking directly by his Spirit to the spirit of the man; in the knocking those more outward gracious dealings, of sorrow and joy, of sickness and health, and the like, which He sends, and sending uses for the bringing of his elect, in one way or another, by smooth paths or by rough, to Himself. The “voice” very often will interpret and make intelligible the purpose of the “knock.” But that “knock” and this “voice” may both remain unheard and unheeded. It is in the power of every man to close his ear to them; therefore the hypothetical form which this gracious promise takes: “if any man hear my voice, and open the door.” There is nogratia irresistibilishere. It is the man himself who must open the door. Christ indeed knocks, claims admittance as to his own; so lifts up his voice that it may be heard, in one sense must be heard, by him; but He does not break open the door, or force an entrance by violence. There is a sense in which man is lord of the house of his own heart; it is for him to open, and unless he does so, Christ cannot enter. And, as a necessary complement of this power to open, there belongs also to man the mournful prerogative and privilege of refusing to open: he may keep the door shut, even to the end. he may thus continue to the last blindly at strife with his own blessedness; a miserable conqueror, who conquers to his own everlasting loss and defeat. At the same time these words of Christ, decisive testimony as they yield against that scheme of irresistible grace which would turn men into mere machines, and take away all moral value from the victories which Christ obtains over. the sullenness, the pride, the obstinacy, the rebellion of men, must not be pushed, as some have pushed them, in the other direction, into Pelagian error and excess; as though men could open the door of their heart when they would; as though repentance was not itself a gift of the exalted Saviour (Acts 5:31). They can only open when Christ knocks; and they would have no desire at all to open unless He knocked, and unless, together with the external knocking of the Word, or of sorrow, or of pain, or whatever other shape it might assume, there went also the inward voice of the Spirit. All which one would affirm is that this is adrawing, not adragging—a knocking at the door, not a breaking open of the door. Hilary has here some words very much to the point (In Ps. cxviii. 89): “Vult ergo semper introire; sed a nobis ne introeat excluditur. Ipse quidem semper ut illuminet promptus est; sed lumen sibi domus ipsa obseratis aditibus excludit. Quæ si cœ perit patere, illico introibit, modo solis, qui clausis fenestræ valvis introire, prohibetur, patentibus vero totus immittitur. Est enim Verbum Dei Sol justitiæ, adsistens unicuique ut introeat, nec moratur lucem suam repertis aditibus infundere.”
Some, wishing to decry the Song of Solomon, to take it from its place in the Canon, and to set it down as a mere human love-poem, an idyl of an earthly love, have affirmed that there is no single allusion to it in the New Testament. This statement is altogether without warrant. In the words we have been just considering there is an undoubted allusion to Song of Solomon 5:2-6; where indeed the very language which Christ uses here, the
Revelation 3:21 . “To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with Me in my throne.”—A magnificent variation of Christ’s words spoken in the days of his flesh: “The glory which Thou gavest Me, I have given them. . . . Father, I will that they also whom Thou hast given Me, be with Me where I am” (John 17:22); as also of the words of St. Paul, “If we suffer with Him, we shall also reign with Him” (2 Timothy 2:12). Wonderful indeed is this promise, which, as the last and the crowning, is also the highest and most glorious of all. Step. by step they have advanced, till a height is reached than which no higher can be conceived. It seemed much to promise the Apostles themselves that they should sit on thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel (Matthew 19:28); but here is promised to every believer something more than was there promised to the elect Twelve. And more wonderful still, if we consider to whom this promise is here addressed. He whom Christ threatened just now to reject with loathing out of his mouth, is offered a place with Him on his throne. But indeed so it is; the highest place is within reach of the lowest; the faintest spark of grace may be fanned into the mightiest flame of divine love. It will be observed that the image here is not that of sitting upon seats on the right hand or on the left of Christ’s throne (1 Kings 2:19), but of sharing that throne itself. To understand this, we must keep in mind the fact, that the Eastern throne is much ampler and broader than ours; so that there would be room upon it for other persons, besides him who occupied as of right the central position there (Matthew 20:21).
“Even as 1 also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne.”—The Son is
Revelation 3:22 . “He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches.”—CompareRevelation 2:7 . A few words in conclusion upon the order in which the promises of the seven Epistles follow one another. It is impossible not to acknowledge such an order here,-an order parallel to that of the unfolding of the kingdom of God from its first beginnings on earth to its glorious consummation in heaven. Thus the promise of Christ to the faithful at Ephesus is, that He will give them to eat of the tree of life which is in the Paradise of God (Revelation 2:7); thus taking us back toGenesis 1:1-31; Genesis 2:1-25 But sin presently entered into Paradise, and death, the seal and witness of sin (Genesis 3:19); but for the faithful at Smyrna,—and the promise that is good for them is good for the faithful every where,—this curse of death is lightened. It shall be but the gate of immortality, for “he that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death” (Revelation 2:11). The next promise, that to the faithful at Pergamum, brings us to the Mosaic period, to the Church in the wilderness: “To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna” (Revelation 2:17); and if the interpretation of the “white stone” which has been ventured here is the right one, that promise will also fall in perfectly with the wilderness period and the institution of the high-priesthood, which at that period found place. In the fourth, that namely to Thyatira, we have reached the full and final consummation, in type and prophetic outline, of the kingdom, the period of David and Solomon,—the triumph over the nations, the Church sharing in the royalties of her king (Revelation 2:26-27). Every reader will recognize this as a characteristic feature of those reigns (2 Samuel 10:19;1 Chronicles 17:1-13).
Here there is a pause; and with this consummation reached, than which in type and prophecy there can be nothing higher, a new series begins; the heptad falling, as is so constantly the case, into two groups; either of three and four, as in the Lord’s Prayer, or of four and three, as here. And now the scenery, if I may use the word, changes; it is not any longer of earth, but of heaven. The kingdom, not of David, but of David’s Son, has come; all his foes are under his feet; his Church is not any longer contemplated as militant, but triumphant; and in the succession of the three last promises we learn that even for the Church triumphant there are steps and advances from glory to glory. Thus, in the promise addressed to the Angel of Sardis, we have the blessings of the judgment-day, the name found written in the took of life, Christ’s confession of his own before his Father, the vesture of light and immortality, in other words, the glorified body which it shall be then given to the saints to wear (Revelation 3:5). This, however, is a personal, a solitary benefit, belonging to each of them alone; not so the next. In the promise made to the faithful at Philadelphia, it is declared that as many as overcome shall have right to enter by the gates into the heavenly City, where City and Temple are one, shall be themselves avouched members of that heavenly
