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The Book of Revelation - Session 5 of 24 - A Remastered Commentary by Chuck Missler

1:13:0912,570 words · ~63 min readUrduTranscribed May 28, 2026
AI Summary

This commentary on the letter to the church at Pergamus in Revelation 2:12-17 exposes spiritual compromise, tracing how pagan Babylonian religious systems historically migrated through Pergamus to Rome and ultimately merged with the church under Constantine and Theodosius.

Understanding the letter to Pergamus is essential for recognizing how institutional compromise, syncretism, and the historical 'marriage' of the church to political systems corrupt biblical doctrine and individual Christian ambassadorship.

Section summaries

0:00-1:50

Introduction & Blessing on the Reader

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Establishes the unique value of studying the book of Revelation and introduces its old covenant source material.

1:50-7:20

The Olivet Discourse: Matthew vs. Luke

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Crucial eschatological comparison refuting partial Preterism and outlining first-century history vs. future prophecy.

7:20-12:50

Seven Letters Overview and Four Levels of Interpretation

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Lays down the hermeneutical framework (local, homiletic, prophetic, and clinical) for analyzing the letters.

12:50-20:10

Historical Overview of Pergamus

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Provides deep secular history of the Greek city, its rulers, and geography, which is useful but secondary to the biblical theology.

20:10-31:10

Asclepius, the Bronze Serpent, and Medical Emblems

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Fascinating analysis of the Typology of Numbers 21, John 3, and the pagan corruption of the serpent symbol.

31:10-53:10

Exegesis of the Letter to Pergamus

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Verse-by-verse exposition of the actual text, the role of Antipis, the seat of Satan, and the doctrine of Balaam.

53:10-1:07:50

Constantine, Babylon, and Church-State Marriage

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A detailed look at the historical timeline of Rome, pagan integration, and how the state hijacked Christian worship.

1:07:50-1:11:30

Summary, Action Items, and Homework Assignment

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Delivers practical modern-day applications regarding ambassadorship and previews the study on Thyatira.

Key points

  • Historical Dual-Desolation Hermeneutic — The Olivet Discourse is not a singular harmonized event; Luke's account (Luke 21) focuses on the historical fall of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. ('before all these signs'), while Matthew's account (Matthew 24) focuses on the future Great Tribulation ('after those signs'). Confounding these two distinct desolations leads to the errors of partial or full Preterism.
  • The Genealogy of Babylonian Syncretism — Following the fall of Babylon to Cyrus, the Babylonian priesthood and the occult mysteries migrated to Pergamus before shifting to pagan Rome. This religious system, along with its high-priestly title 'Pontifex Maximus' and its sun-god practices, was eventually absorbed and baptized with Christian nomenclature under Roman ecclesiastical authority.
  • Typology of the Serpent on the Pole — The caduceus of Pergamus—venerating Escalapius and Hermes—originates typologically from the brass serpent of Numbers 21. Brass speaks of judgment, and the serpent on the pole was an anticipatory sign of Christ being made sin on the cross to avert eternal death (John 3:14-16).
  • The Peril of Institutional Marriage (Pergamus) — The name 'Pergamus' structurally denotes a 'mixed, objectionable marriage.' In the prophetic profile of church history, this represents the Constantinian era where state acceptance of Christianity achieved what severe persecution in Smyrna could not: corrupting the church through institutional wealth, unregenerate membership, and pagan compromise.
pergamus means mixed marriage or objectionable marriage... we see pergamus, we can suggest that that implies an inappropriate marriage Chuck Missler
what persecution didn't accomplish in smyrna was accomplished in a marriage to the world. If you can't lick 'em, join 'em. Chuck Missler

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

[Music]

0:09

[Music]

0:45

well we're studying the book of

0:46

revelation

0:48

and uh the most important part of that

0:49

book we feel is chapters two and three

0:51

so we're spending very careful attention

0:53

to those

0:54

and we are going to be exploring tonight

0:56

the third of seven letters

0:58

by jesus christ to his churches

1:00

a letter to the church at pergamus

1:03

and uh it's the fifth of 24 sessions

1:07

but just by way of warm-up and review

1:09

we're dealing in it's the revelation

1:11

notice that it's singular the word in

1:13

the greek means the unveiling

1:16

of jesus christ

1:18

and uh it's the consummation of all

1:19

things

1:20

it's the only book of the bible that has

1:22

the audacity to announce a special

1:25

blessing on the reader or the listener

1:27

and no other book in the bible has

1:29

singles itself out the way this book

1:31

does

1:32

and there are 404 verses

1:34

in the book that include within them 800

1:37

more than 800

1:39

illusions from the old testament alone

1:41

and i mention that because one of the

1:42

reasons that may sound strange to our

1:44

ears is because most of us

1:47

don't know the old testament like we

1:49

should the more you understand the old

1:51

testament the more comfortable this book

1:53

becomes

1:54

and it presents the climax of god's plan

1:57

for man

1:58

as i looked at this slide in the in the

2:00

earlier

2:01

today i thought gee that's not the way i

2:02

want to say it it's not the man it's you

2:04

and me

2:05

mr and mrs man if you will it's the

2:08

climax of god's plan for you and for me

2:11

and so it's a very very key book it's

2:13

strange

2:14

that this book with all that's got going

2:16

for it

2:17

is the least studied in the least

2:19

preached on book from the pulpits of

2:21

america

2:22

but

2:24

one of the things we did last time and i

2:25

thought i just mentioned here to put in

2:27

perspective we had a little backgrounder

2:29

on the olivet discourse

2:31

which is that that

2:33

famous discourse that was

2:35

a response to four disciples coming to

2:37

jesus and asking about a second coming

2:40

and uh

2:41

his his response is recorded in matthew

2:43

24 mark 13 and luke 21

2:46

and

2:47

in each of those

2:49

accounts

2:50

there's a group of signs that emerge

2:53

very prominently within each

2:54

presentation

2:56

and these list of signs the emergence of

2:58

false christ wars

3:00

nation against nation kingdom against

3:01

kingdom and so forth

3:02

famines uh death and martyrs and and

3:06

ultimately global chaos those signs are

3:09

highlighted in matthew and luke and mark

3:12

but they also will become very prominent

3:14

to us when we get to revelation chapter

3:15

six the same pattern is there then

3:18

that's noted by most scholars

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but

3:23

the matthew accounts familiar to most of

3:25

us that have studied prophecy since

3:26

matthew took shorthand most of us tend

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to lean on matthew's very detailed

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account

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and for this for 1700 years

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scholars have assumed that all those are

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talking about the same presentation

3:40

and it's called the harmonization of the

3:42

gospels among other things

3:44

and

3:45

it's interesting if we stand back

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and

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set aside our presuppositions

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we notice that luke's account is

3:55

actually quite different than matthews

3:57

and there that generates a great deal of

3:59

confusion in fact when you get to luke

4:01

when matthew goes through his

4:02

presentation

4:04

he mentions those signs and then shall

4:06

the abomination of desolation occur and

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then and then and then

4:09

most of what he talks about comes after

4:11

that group of signs but if you look at

4:12

what luke says sorry about verse 11 he

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says in great earthquakes shall be in

4:16

divers places famines pestilences and

4:17

fearful signs and great signs shall be

4:19

from heaven but i want you to notice

4:21

what he says those next four words

4:24

but before all these

4:26

shall they lay hands on you and

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persecute you and delivering you up to

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the synagogues and prisons and so forth

4:32

most of what luke says focuses on what

4:34

occurs before those signs

4:37

what matthew talks about occurs after

4:39

those signs and therein lies a glimmer

4:42

of insight and

4:44

they have different emphases

4:47

luke says before all these signs

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matthew says all these the beginning of

4:51

sorrows then shall they etc and they're

4:53

talking in reference to this series of

4:55

signs false christs wars famines

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earthquakes

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what's interesting is

5:00

that luke's emphasis is before those

5:02

signs

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matthew's after those signs

5:06

and once that you understand that

5:08

suddenly the fog begins to lift

5:10

if we take luke's account and matthews

5:12

and put him side by side verse by verse

5:15

we'll discover that they all talk about

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wars famines earthquakes and so forth

5:21

and they also climax at the end with

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some cosmic upheaval and so forth

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and the second coming of christ etc

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but what luke talks about in most of his

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presentation occurs before those signs

5:32

and he's talking about the fall of

5:33

jerusalem in 70 a.d

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and that's well recognized by scholars

5:38

in fact

5:39

many scholars so focus on that

5:41

they take the position that all the rest

5:43

of it has already been fulfilled in 70

5:45

a.d which is patently not true the only

5:47

can the only way you can hold that view

5:49

is to allegorize all the rest of it

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and

5:52

so when matthew talks about

5:55

after those signs he then says then

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shall be the abomination of desolation a

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very specific thing that jesus focuses

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on and so forth that all comes after

6:02

that and he that ushers in a period of

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time that jesus himself labels as the

6:07

great tribulation he's quoting from

6:08

daniel 12.

6:09

and

6:10

this is desolation number two in other

6:11

words we have two desolations of

6:13

jerusalem in view luke is talking about

6:15

one earlier

6:17

matthew one after those signs two

6:19

different ones

6:20

and so the first generation

6:22

is luke says this generation shall not

6:24

pass away to all be fulfilled and it's

6:26

38 years later from that point that

6:29

jerusalem falls the 38 years being very

6:32

significant because that's exactly the

6:34

length of the generation that wandered

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in the wilderness before kiddish bernie

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and all that

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so uh

6:40

when matthew talks about

6:42

this generation will not pass he's

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talking about the last generation

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and how long is that we don't know

6:46

because unless those days are shortened

6:48

there should no flesh be saved so it's a

6:49

totally different thing altogether

6:51

in any case we're we're that's just by

6:53

way of summary the main reason i bring

6:55

this up in this study is because clearly

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the seven letters to seven churches

6:59

occur

7:01

after the fall of jerusalem because that

7:02

fell in 70 a.d and this is these letters

7:04

are being written about 95 96 a.d about

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20 years later and yet they obviously

7:09

occur prior to

7:11

these

7:12

wars famines earthquakes and so forth

7:15

and so uh that'll become even more

7:17

significant as we get into more and more

7:19

of the prophetic aspects of the seven

7:21

letters

7:22

but that's all it's interesting as you

7:24

reflect on all of this

7:26

that luke is writing to gentiles and

7:28

he's focusing the gentile christians on

7:30

what's coming

7:32

and during

7:33

when vespasian

7:35

and

7:36

his son titus were mopping up in the

7:38

north

7:39

up in tiberias and these various cities

7:42

nero had told vespasian to bring war

7:44

against the jews and he was doing that

7:47

but

7:48

about 96

7:51

a.d

7:52

nero dies

7:54

and vespasian ends up getting tangled up

7:56

in their rome politics and he ends up

7:58

emerging as the emperor of the roman

8:00

empire he leaves his son titus to attack

8:04

jerusalem in which he does sets the

8:05

siege up that causes ultimately

8:08

jerusalem to fall

8:09

but there's a hiatus in that siege

8:12

and eusebius among others points out

8:14

that the christians that heard

8:16

this presentation knew that when they

8:18

were when the armies were coming to get

8:20

out of town they did they went to a

8:21

place called pella in north petraea and

8:24

there are some scholars believe that no

8:25

in despite the fact that one million one

8:27

hundred thousand were killed in the fall

8:28

of jerusalem no christians were because

8:30

if they followed jesus directions they

8:32

were out of there before the siege

8:33

sealed it off

8:34

and all that trauma and and that jose we

8:37

have a detailed first-hand account of it

8:39

all in josephus if you're interested in

8:41

reading his stuff on called the wars of

8:43

the jews and so on in any case

8:46

that's just by way of review from last

8:48

time

8:49

let's just uh get back to the book of

8:51

revelation

8:53

to whom was the book given this is many

8:55

people don't read the first sentence

8:56

it's the revelation of jesus christ

8:58

which god gave unto whom

9:01

jesus christ in exactly no wonder is

9:04

such a treasure

9:06

to show unto his servants things which

9:07

must shortly come to pass and he sent

9:10

and he signified it signified it is a uh

9:13

rendering it into signs or semens

9:16

and uh one of the things that first got

9:17

me excited about the bible as a

9:20

my young teens was a lecturer that was

9:22

speaking uh a series he pointed out the

9:24

whole book of revelations in code but

9:26

every code is explained somewhere else

9:27

in the bible i thought wow that's

9:28

interesting what a treasure hunt indeed

9:30

it was that changed my life

9:32

but in any case it is signified or

9:34

signed and every sign is explained

9:36

somewhere most of right in the book

9:38

itself many elsewhere that's what takes

9:40

takes you from those 400 verses into the

9:42

800 of illusions of the old testament

9:44

for example

9:45

okay but here's the promise that we're

9:47

going to claim tonight you and i we're

9:49

here together for verse 3 of chapter 1

9:51

blessed is he that readeth and they that

9:52

hear the words of this prophecy and keep

9:54

those things which are written therein

9:56

for the time is at hand

9:58

in john to the seven churches which are

10:00

in asia now this whole book

10:02

was sent to seven key churches

10:05

seven churches strange why these

10:07

churches

10:08

because there are over a hundred

10:10

churches that were active in those days

10:12

why these seven because jesus picked

10:14

these seven because of their incredible

10:16

appropriateness as we'll discover as we

10:18

get into them

10:19

not only for that day but through all of

10:22

history

10:23

john to the seven churches which are in

10:25

asia that's the cut that's the province

10:27

of asia not asia's we tend to use the

10:28

term continentally it's essentially that

10:30

region we call turkey

10:32

grace unto you and beast from him who

10:34

which is which us and which is to come

10:36

and the seven spirits which are before

10:37

his throne and from jesus christ who is

10:38

the faithful witness the first begotten

10:40

of the dead the prince of the kings of

10:41

the earth unto him that loved us and

10:43

washed us from our sins in his own blood

10:46

these are a few of

10:47

uh uh seven labels that jesus introduces

10:50

of himself

10:52

and those labels will be identity pieces

10:54

throughout the rest of the book and

10:55

we'll link that up as we go

10:57

in chapter one we have an introduction

10:59

we have the salutation and the occasion

11:00

where he's on patents

11:02

we have a per a a description of jesus

11:04

christ the vision of him

11:06

the risen christ is described by john as

11:08

he sees him

11:10

but then we have verse 19 which is very

11:13

precious it's the only book i know of in

11:14

the bible it gives you its outline

11:17

usually when you take a book to study

11:18

the first thing you do you want to do is

11:20

outline it well john has

11:22

done that for you and so we'll take a

11:24

look at this

11:25

john is told to write three things write

11:26

the things which thou hast seen

11:29

that's obviously an allusion to the

11:31

physical description of christ that

11:32

precedes these verses

11:35

and the things which are present tense

11:37

first is passions these are things which

11:38

exist right now

11:40

and the things which shall be hereafter

11:42

and obviously the vision of christ are

11:44

the things he has seen by the time he

11:46

gets that verse

11:47

the things which are the seven churches

11:49

in chapters two and three

11:51

and then the things that are after the

11:53

seven churches

11:54

uh which shall be uh and we'll get into

11:56

that of course we get chapter four but

11:57

the point is

11:59

uh for you and i

12:01

the most important part of the entire

12:03

book

12:04

and it's a fantastic book but the most

12:06

important part is chapters two and three

12:08

because that affects you and me from

12:10

chapter four on i believe we'll be

12:12

watching it from the mezzanine okay

12:15

but we're going to focus our attention

12:17

on these seven churches

12:19

at the

12:20

then that chapter closes with a couple

12:21

of lessons here jesus says the mystery

12:23

of the seven stars which i saw in my

12:24

right hand the seven golden app stands

12:26

the seven stars are the angels of the

12:28

seven churches and the seven lampstands

12:30

which thou sawest are the seven churches

12:33

so here's an example where these idioms

12:35

are used earlier in the chapter but

12:36

before the chapter closes they're

12:38

explained to you

12:39

and we're going to find these little

12:40

explanations all through the book

12:43

most of the critical symbols are

12:45

explained for you in the book as we go

12:47

others are illusions from the old

12:49

testament that are easily

12:51

chased down

12:52

now these seven churches that's where

12:54

why these seven is a key question you

12:56

need to

12:57

come to grips with

12:58

each of the letters has a common phrase

13:02

that closes the letter

13:04

we find this strange phrase he that hath

13:05

an ear let him hear what the spirit says

13:07

to the churches

13:09

this phrase occurs seven times here of

13:11

course with the seven letters it also

13:12

occurs seven times elsewhere in the new

13:14

testament and i'll let you chase that

13:16

down as a treasure hunt but

13:18

this tells us there are at least four

13:21

levels of application or interpretation

13:24

of these letters

13:25

the first is local these were real

13:27

churches as we get into this

13:30

we'll spend a little bit of time on

13:31

identifying just where they were what

13:33

their problems were what their history

13:34

was

13:35

they were real local churches these were

13:37

not

13:38

fictions these are not parables they're

13:40

not uh just little idiomatic stories to

13:42

get a point across they were real live

13:43

churches at the time

13:46

but as we learned

13:47

we discover these seven letters are

13:49

report cards on each of these churches

13:50

their seven report cards

13:52

and you notice this holy spirit says he

13:54

that hath an ear let him hear what the

13:55

spirit says to the church says plural

13:58

let's not forget as we go through these

14:01

that each letter

14:03

is applicable to every church i don't

14:06

know what church you're going to but i

14:07

can tell you there is

14:09

there are elements of all seven in your

14:12

church

14:13

ten percent of this and seventy percent

14:15

of that maybe or whatever but the point

14:16

is if you understand those seven letters

14:19

you can map spiritually the condition of

14:21

any church

14:23

and uh so that's so they're all we it'll

14:26

be easy for us to sit on the sideline

14:27

and say oh those guys did this and

14:29

didn't do that you know well hey be

14:30

careful

14:31

because

14:32

we may see that same thing going on in

14:34

the in the mirror when we shave in the

14:35

morning so

14:37

that leads us to it says he that hath an

14:39

ear and i always ask our aunts how many

14:40

of you have earlobes how many brady

14:41

loves that okay that it's written to you

14:44

personally despite what church you might

14:46

belong to he that hath an ear let him

14:48

hear what the spirit says the churches

14:50

so this there's a personal application

14:53

or what could be formerly called a

14:54

homiletic application

14:56

hopefully you will take away from these

14:58

studies

15:00

and insight into your own personal

15:02

report card before the lord jesus christ

15:05

well those three if that was all that

15:07

was here that would be plenty that's

15:09

rich material that's terrific but there

15:12

is a little

15:14

icing on the cake there's a fourth level

15:17

that frankly

15:18

is astonishing

15:20

it's absolutely it's the kind of thing

15:22

that i won't try to sell you

15:24

you need to see it for yourself but i

15:26

think what you'll discover is there's a

15:28

fourth level a prophetic implication it

15:31

turns out that these seven letters

15:34

lay out a history

15:36

of the church

15:37

the book of acts covered about 30 years

15:40

book of revelation covers about 2 000

15:43

and it lays it all out in advance you'll

15:45

be able to figure out where we are

15:46

historically in that line as we go

15:49

and uh

15:51

so

15:51

it's a it's it's fun stuff

15:55

now we'll discover that each of the

15:56

letters have seven elements there's the

15:58

name of the church and the name of the

16:00

church will be a clue to what that

16:02

letter's main theme is each letter each

16:04

of the seven has a particular theme a

16:08

particular focus some good news some bad

16:10

news some exhortation so

16:12

the title that jesus uses of himself

16:15

is

16:16

selected by him

16:18

the title he picks is relevant to that

16:21

church's need

16:22

he's got seven to choose from

16:24

and he chooses that title of himself

16:27

that fits the situation

16:29

well we can turn this around as we

16:30

understand the title he's using it helps

16:33

us draw an inference as to what is the

16:35

issue that's really lurking under the

16:37

surface with this church

16:39

then there's a commendation

16:41

he mentions the church

16:42

and he mentions the title of himself and

16:44

then he starts the report card the first

16:46

element is here's the good news

16:48

these are things you've done well

16:50

well done on this and this and this and

16:52

this

16:53

but then there's also expression of

16:55

concern

16:57

you're not doing this this and this

17:01

and that leads of course to an

17:02

exhortation or a challenge

17:04

repent do this do this you follow me

17:06

it's a report card

17:08

what's interesting to get ahead of the

17:09

story a little bit when we do all seven

17:11

we'll be able to look back

17:13

and conclude that every one of the

17:16

churches was surprised

17:18

the ones that thought they were doing

17:19

well were not doing well the ones that

17:20

were doing

17:21

thought they were doing poorly were

17:22

doing better they thought

17:24

and the humbling thing about that is

17:26

whatever we perceive of our church is

17:28

probably wrong

17:30

places that we think we're not doing

17:31

well enough we might be doing in the

17:33

lord's eyes better than we're giving

17:34

ourselves credit for

17:35

and on the other hand there's places we

17:37

think we're doing pretty well that we

17:38

may be overlooking what we really want

17:39

so these are sobering issues

17:43

each letter has a promise to the

17:44

individual overcomer

17:46

each one's distinctive but consistent

17:48

with the theme of the letter of course

17:50

and then we have this closing phrase

17:51

heather hathan here let him hear what

17:52

the spirit says the churches it's almost

17:54

like a a marker at the end of the letter

17:56

except it has some strange exceptions

18:00

well

18:00

we went through the

18:02

we're in the third of the first three

18:04

and uh we went through ephesus

18:06

the name meant the desired one and uh

18:09

they were doing well on doctrine they

18:11

got rid of people who were heretics but

18:13

they

18:14

the thing concern was they had lost

18:16

their first love what the main theme of

18:17

that letter is that jesus desires

18:19

devotion not just doctrine

18:22

and that's really the theme to the to

18:23

the the letter to the ephesians

18:26

and then we had the promise of the

18:27

overcomer but when we got through all

18:29

this we noticed something strange about

18:31

the structure of that letter the promise

18:33

to the overcomer

18:34

was like a ps

18:36

it's after the close of the letter

18:38

now we're not going to make a big thing

18:39

of this now but i want you to notice

18:41

this before we get through all seven

18:42

because we're going to come back to that

18:43

whole

18:44

issue of the architecture smyrna the

18:46

same thing we went through smyrna means

18:47

myrrh suggestive of embalming or death

18:50

all the way through that letter is this

18:52

uh a cloud of persecution that hung over

18:56

smyrna

18:57

in fact we noticed something very

18:59

interesting about smyrna

19:00

that you wouldn't notice unless you've

19:02

been outlining this carefully there's a

19:03

piece missing

19:05

there's a piece missing there is no

19:07

concern

19:08

it's one of two letters of the seven of

19:10

which there is nothing negative said

19:13

virtually all the letters are something

19:14

good and something bad

19:16

two of the letters have nothing bad

19:18

about them nothing of concern in other

19:21

words an abe report card

19:23

and smyrna is one of them

19:25

two of the two of the churches

19:28

have nothing good said about them

19:30

laodicea and one other that will

19:31

surprise you

19:34

but we're getting ahead of the story so

19:35

we're in pergamus the third of the bunch

19:38

now we also said these letters have a

19:40

prophetic profile ephesus as we examined

19:43

it would seem to fit the apostolic

19:45

church

19:46

very appropriately the church of that

19:47

first century

19:49

smyrna clearly was the persecuted church

19:52

and because it's enduring such

19:53

persecution jesus said i'm going to lay

19:55

anything else on you just hang in there

19:56

it's basically a story

19:58

never give up if i can steal my wife's

20:00

title to her new book never give up

20:03

that's basically the message to smyrna

20:05

well what about pergamus let's take a

20:06

look at pergamus

20:08

pergamus is the city of the serpent

20:10

that's spooky

20:12

pergamus is the feminine form pergamum

20:14

some of your bibles may use is the

20:15

neuter form of the same name as both are

20:17

used don't let that throw you

20:19

pergamos is about 48 miles north of

20:21

smyrna

20:22

ephesus the first one we studied was the

20:25

great political center smyrna was the

20:27

great commercial center pergamus is the

20:29

great religious center

20:30

and uh just by way of summary

20:33

and

20:34

prior to alexander the great it really

20:36

wasn't much it was just a castle on top

20:38

of the hill

20:40

its foundation goes way back and i won't

20:42

take you through all of that

20:43

the uh

20:45

we'll just keep moving

20:47

name is said to be derived from son of

20:50

paris and andromeda which made himself

20:52

king by killing the king in a single

20:54

combat and what have you

20:56

but

20:57

the

20:58

early history about 301 bc antigonus

21:01

defeated

21:03

at the battle dipsis

21:05

in northwest asia minor then was united

21:07

to the thracian kingdom of lesimacus

21:09

remember when alexander the great died

21:10

four generals divided it up this region

21:13

fell to lesimacus but

21:15

it had an impregnable position so it was

21:17

useful as a treasury that makes it start

21:19

to become important uh commercially

21:22

but one of the generals uh of lessimicus

21:25

under him

21:26

betrayed himself to his rivals lucas and

21:28

so there was some chicanery but in any

21:30

case subsequent rulers to this area

21:33

established themselves as a major

21:35

dominant power in asia minor

21:37

bear in mind that's the roman

21:38

designation of what we would consider

21:40

two-thirds of turkey if you will

21:42

and it became a major center for greek

21:45

culture

21:46

but

21:48

they had the perception to ally

21:51

themselves very early with rome as rome

21:54

begins to rise over the greeks they

21:56

allied early with rome they became

21:58

extremely wealthy and prosperous as a

22:00

result of that

22:01

and the official capital of the roman

22:03

province of asia for 200 years

22:06

but they're they didn't have proximity

22:08

to the main trade routes so they

22:09

eventually yielded that leadership to

22:11

their rival ephesus but these are

22:14

important cities all three of them

22:15

ephesus smyrna and pergamos in that in

22:18

throughout that early history

22:19

it's about 48 miles north of smyrna

22:22

about 18 miles from the sea the other

22:24

two

22:24

ones we looked at were harbor situations

22:27

this one is not it's in there

22:29

there's a city presently in turkey

22:31

called bergama

22:32

which has a population about forty two

22:34

thousand but it was much

22:36

larger uh back in the new testament

22:38

period about two hundred thousand they

22:39

estimate

22:41

interestingly enough

22:42

zeus

22:43

the god zeus is said among the greeks to

22:45

have been born there

22:47

and to celebrate that there's a huge

22:50

huge altar

22:52

it's a almost 800 feet above the ground

22:55

it i mean on a cliff

22:58

protrudes there and uh it was over about

23:01

100 by 125 115 feet that's a huge flat

23:05

altar up there

23:06

it's over 50 feet high and it's set on a

23:08

collinated enclosure but all of this is

23:10

about 800 feet above the valley floor

23:12

very very prominent very very uh

23:14

well-known temple to zeus if you will

23:17

to give you a feeling of the geography

23:19

patmos is the middle of the bottom of

23:21

the screen there i put athens and

23:22

istanbul on the map just so you get a

23:24

reference here athens to the left and

23:26

istanbul near the top

23:27

but

23:28

you can see where ephesus was with

23:30

respect to patmos and then north of that

23:32

about 38 miles of smyrna and then about

23:35

48 miles north of that is pergamus just

23:37

to give you a rough feeling of the

23:38

geography

23:39

and so

23:41

one of the

23:43

venerated

23:44

idols

23:45

in pergamus was escalabius

23:48

and the caduceus was the official emblem

23:50

of the city this you've seen it many

23:52

many times with the two head-headed

23:54

snakes on a pole

23:55

and uh the escalapias is considered the

23:58

god of healing among other things

24:00

many of the early

24:02

records seem to indicate it was even

24:04

elevated higher than just that but in

24:05

any case that was his main identity

24:08

and

24:09

i think most scholars recognize that the

24:11

legend of escalapus

24:14

derives from numbers 21.

24:17

we've talked about that before in this

24:18

study and remember the brazen serpent

24:20

that moses

24:21

set up there so

24:23

it

24:23

it

24:24

it really emerged from that

24:26

that whole idea of the brazen serpent is

24:29

weird but it doesn't make any sense

24:31

until it's explained to us by jesus

24:33

christ in john chapter 3.

24:35

that brass serpent that was made by

24:38

moses in numbers 21

24:40

was still around in the days of hezekiah

24:42

so much so he had to destroy it

24:44

we'll take a look at that

24:46

back in numbers 21 the lord sent fiery

24:48

serpents among the people and they bit

24:50

the people and much people israel died

24:52

therefore the people came to moses and

24:54

said

24:55

we have sinned for we have spoken

24:56

against the lord against thee

24:58

pray unto the lord that he may take away

25:00

the serpents from us and moses prayed

25:02

for the people

25:04

the lord said unto moses make me a fiery

25:06

serpent set upon a pole and it shall

25:08

come to pass that everyone that is

25:09

bitten when he looks upon it shall live

25:12

and moses made a serpent of brass put it

25:13

upon a pole came to pass that if a

25:15

serpent had bitten any man when he

25:17

beheld the serpent of brass he lived

25:20

now that's very great that was great

25:21

saved the lives but you have to stand

25:23

back and say that's pretty weird

25:25

that's kind of a strange way these

25:27

people are dying if they will look at

25:29

this pole with the brass serpent on it

25:30

they'll be healed like that

25:33

now if you're in the old testament

25:34

that's you got to scratch your head and

25:35

wonder what's going on there

25:37

and it's interesting we don't really

25:39

understand it until you get to john when

25:41

he's being visited by nicodemus

25:43

as you may be jesus when he's in the

25:44

gospel of john get john 3 when he's when

25:47

jesus is being visited by nicodemus at

25:49

night

25:50

jesus says to nicodemus as moses lifted

25:52

up the serpent in the wilderness even so

25:54

must the son of man be lifted up that

25:56

whosoever believeth in him should not

25:57

perish but ever have eternal life

26:00

so suddenly we begin to realize why god

26:02

did that back in numbers 21 because it

26:05

was a sign an anticipatory sign of the

26:08

crucifixion of jesus christ

26:10

i don't think moses knew that

26:13

i think most prophets going through

26:15

the centuries may not have understood

26:16

why it isn't until you get to john

26:19

chapter 3 that jesus

26:21

lifts the fog by saying it's a sign

26:24

pointing to the cross that's really what

26:25

he's saying in fact

26:27

not only is that true this very

26:29

discussion with nicodemus leads to

26:32

the most well-known verse in the entire

26:34

bible

26:35

what's john 3 16. for god so loved the

26:38

world that he gave his only begotten son

26:40

whosoever believeth in him should not

26:41

perish but of everlasting life

26:43

and so that's really there appended to

26:45

the explanation of the

26:47

numbers 21.

26:48

and so john 3 16. all of you know what

26:50

i'm sure

26:51

what you may not realize in second kings

26:53

18

26:54

again to pass the third year of hosea

26:55

the son of elka the king of israel that

26:57

hezekiah the son of ahaz king of judah

27:00

began to reign

27:01

25 years old was he when he began to

27:03

reign he reigned 20 and nine years in

27:04

jerusalem his mother's name also was

27:05

abby the daughter of zechariah and he

27:08

did that which was right in the sight of

27:09

the lord according to all that david his

27:11

father did this is good news because not

27:13

all the good kings were he's following a

27:14

really bad news guy master and the rest

27:16

of it but anyway he removed the high

27:18

places

27:19

now there's the bad these are

27:21

uh idolatrous places he break the images

27:24

he cut down the groves these are these

27:26

phallic symbols they made out of trees

27:27

all the paganism that had prospered

27:30

under manasseh his predecessor

27:32

and he break in pieces

27:34

the brazen serpent that moses had made

27:36

for in those days the children of israel

27:37

did burn incense to it

27:39

in other words this brass serpent that

27:41

had occurred that was so prominent

27:42

numbers 21 had become a fetish

27:46

it probably has a it has a relationship

27:48

to them

27:49

that the shroud of turin has to some

27:51

people today

27:52

there's a danger in these things

27:54

especially if they're authentic

27:57

i don't know if the shroud of turn is

27:58

authentic are not as dangerous if it

28:00

really is

28:01

people will tend to focus on that rather

28:03

than the lord jesus christ

28:04

what what uh

28:06

hezekiah did

28:08

he crushed it he wrote it

28:10

he says he called it nahushtan which

28:11

means a thing of brass

28:13

he destroyed it to avoid people

28:15

venerating this artifact

28:18

it was it was becoming in effect an idol

28:20

we've got to be careful interesting

28:22

lessons here

28:24

well the legend of escalapus is of

28:26

course the derivative of that

28:28

often uh uh featured

28:31

a as a pole with a snake on it

28:33

and uh you know i don't know if i made

28:35

that clear see a snake is a as a symbol

28:38

of sin

28:39

a brass brass was the limit the metal

28:42

that could sustain heat so brass speaks

28:45

of judgment it's idiomatic in the in the

28:47

levitical things

28:49

the idea of a brazen serpent on a pole

28:51

is expression of sin being judged

28:54

and jesus christ on that cross was made

28:56

sin for us paul tells us so that's where

28:59

the idioms tie together but in any case

29:01

uh the legend of escalapias is of course

29:04

venerated in many many of the ancient

29:06

things always a snake on a pole

29:08

and

29:09

even today it's astonishing how many

29:12

american medical association others have

29:14

a snake on a pole as a symbol of the

29:16

medical profession

29:17

and many of the articles will say that

29:19

comes from you know the legends of

29:21

escalation but that in turn comes from

29:23

something even earlier

29:25

it comes from

29:27

numbers 21. we together so far

29:30

it gets worse

29:33

and he had been recognized as the son of

29:35

us apollo in their in their system and

29:36

so forth and

29:39

they actually felt he had the power to

29:40

avert death

29:42

and he was uh represented in by the

29:44

anatolians that's the predecessors in

29:46

turkey by as a serpent

29:48

the greeks later

29:50

depict him as holding hermes staff

29:53

that's the caduceus many people use that

29:55

term to represent either one but

29:56

technically a caduceus is one with two

29:58

snakes

29:59

the caduceus has a two-headed snake on

30:01

it

30:02

but the greeks using the caduceus

30:05

are venerating hermes

30:07

hermes is the god of commerce

30:10

not medicine

30:11

it's always amused by that when i see a

30:13

license plate you know with a doctor if

30:15

he has a caduceus on it that means he's

30:17

commercial right

30:19

so

30:20

the hermes is the god of commerce

30:23

and the caduceus though was the official

30:24

emblem of pergamus interestingly enough

30:27

and so we have

30:29

all kinds of caduces you see around here

30:32

they have actually studied 242 logos of

30:35

american organizations relating to

30:36

health or medicine

30:38

and the caduceus or the staff of

30:40

escalations are used in most of those

30:42

obviously and uh from the 70s to 1970s

30:45

through 1980s and this study was kind of

30:46

interesting because

30:47

professional associations more likely to

30:49

use the staff escalator 62 percent while

30:51

the commercial organizations about 76

30:54

percent use the caduceus

30:57

exception is for hospitals 37 percent

30:59

use the staff escalators versus 63 for

31:01

the caduceus but remember hospitals

31:02

usually commercial anyway but it's kind

31:04

of interesting so i i'm not sure that's

31:06

a i want to hit that too hard but i

31:07

thought you got a kick out of that when

31:09

you see the two edited snake you're

31:10

talking about the god of commerce in

31:13

contrast to the god of healing okay

31:15

but

31:16

they also in in pergamus had health

31:18

institutions

31:19

which dealt with uh this is presumably

31:22

started by hippocrates he uh for about

31:24

800 years they featured mostly

31:26

psychiatric kinds of things

31:27

psychological things uh sleep was

31:29

induced by priests and using drugs and

31:31

other things

31:32

and

31:33

it was it was a

31:35

obviously a very close mix

31:36

of attempts at healing and attempts and

31:39

their religious structure

31:41

well let's get into the letter to

31:43

pergamus

31:44

and to the angel of the church at

31:46

pergamus wright

31:48

now the word pergamus is

31:52

a combined combination of two words in

31:54

the greek

31:55

the per as a prefix

31:58

means mixed or objectionable we use it

32:00

like pervert or perturbation

32:02

it's something that's unanticipated or

32:04

different it's it's inappropriate is the

32:06

idea

32:07

and the the suffix gamos means marriage

32:10

you speak of monogamy bigamy polygamy

32:13

that suffix refers to marriage so

32:15

pergamos means mixed marriage or

32:18

objectionable marriage strangely enough

32:20

that's not the only read the word pergo

32:22

can also mean high so some this also can

32:24

mean in the greek a high marriage

32:27

like many of these things there's work

32:28

plays on words in each direction

32:31

but

32:32

onto the angel of the church but very

32:34

right away we see pergamus

32:37

we can suggest that that implies a

32:39

inappropriate marriage is going to be in

32:42

part of the letter

32:43

and then jesus uses of his title next

32:45

comes these things saith he which hath

32:47

the sharp sword with two edges remember

32:50

in the earth chapter one that was one of

32:51

the uh

32:53

attributions to jesus christ what is the

32:55

sharp sword with two edges

32:58

the word of god

33:00

and that's going to turn out to be the

33:01

primary remedy to the situation

33:04

that emerges in pergamus

33:08

well he starts then he starts with his

33:10

report card i know thy works just like

33:12

he did several of the other letters i

33:14

know thy works jesus knows what we're

33:16

doing better than we do

33:18

he says i know thy works and where thou

33:20

dwellest

33:22

even where satan's seat is whoo

33:26

is that literal

33:28

we do these studies you know i i know

33:30

people come up to each other you know

33:32

was his seat literally there

33:34

i believe it was i'll show you why

33:36

see we've got to remember

33:39

only god is omnipresent

33:43

the angels aren't they're local they

33:45

have locality

33:47

demons aren't they have look strangely

33:49

you think they're spirit beings they can

33:50

be anywhere no we learn from the

33:52

scripture even demons have boundaries

33:54

you river euphrates for certain reasons

33:56

and in daniel 10 we get strange glimpses

34:00

so there they have locality strangely

34:01

enough

34:02

in any case satan can't be everywhere at

34:05

once

34:06

it may seem like that at times because

34:08

he's got a lot of help

34:11

even where satan see this

34:13

and thou hold as fast my name

34:17

you know it's interesting every time god

34:19

talks about his name it's always

34:20

singular

34:22

the name itself is elohim it can be a

34:23

plural form referring to the trinity

34:25

but when god speaks of my name

34:28

throughout the bible it's singular let's

34:29

say my name's

34:31

he has several renderings of his names

34:34

we can make lists of those but

34:36

the concept of his name is singular his

34:38

authority his person

34:40

his reality thou hold as fast my name

34:43

and has not denied my faith even in

34:45

those days when antipas was my faithful

34:47

martyr who was slain among you where

34:49

satan dwelleth

34:50

boy boy boy now who is one of the other

34:53

questions who is antipas

34:54

we don't know

34:56

there are some early church fathers that

34:58

uh think there was a specific guy named

35:00

antipas in fact there's stories about

35:01

him being shut up in a brazen bull and

35:05

that was heated up red hot

35:07

and he ended his life in as he died in

35:09

this ordeal

35:11

he was praying and singing songs

35:13

until he died until he bartered another

35:16

group of authors feel that the word

35:18

antipas in the greek means against all

35:22

and that may be it's almost like

35:24

both may be true in other words he's

35:26

against he was he stood alone as the

35:27

idea

35:28

i wouldn't make too much of his name

35:30

because herod had antipas as a name too

35:32

so they're probably it was probably not

35:34

an uncommon name in those early years

35:36

but anyway antipas can mean in the greek

35:38

against all and that also apparently

35:40

describes the situation because he

35:42

obviously was he's getting committed

35:44

here as a faithful martyr during these

35:45

very days

35:47

but the main thing this issue of satan

35:49

here's where we could

35:50

depart into a whole special study on the

35:53

reality of satan and let me just cut

35:55

through it quickly because i think for

35:57

this audience most of you realize that

35:59

satan is real it's not an idiom for evil

36:01

in some broad sense he's a person he's

36:04

malevolent he's very resourceful

36:06

his character he's a murderer from the

36:08

beginning jesus says jesus describes him

36:10

as a person in john 8 and elsewhere he's

36:13

a deceiver we'll encounter him in

36:15

revelation 12 and we will study his

36:17

shenanigans there from genesis to

36:18

revelation in the overview

36:21

he's a liar he always was he's from

36:23

genesis 3 on

36:25

and of course obviously he's a sinner

36:26

but that's very confirmed for you in

36:28

first john 3 8 and elsewhere

36:30

his domain

36:32

he has a vast demonic kingdom

36:36

that's and we're going to encounter that

36:38

also as we get into revelation 12.

36:40

he also is in charge

36:42

of the world system

36:45

remember when jesus was tempted in his

36:47

famous temptations after his 40 days

36:49

fasting after his baptism

36:52

satan shows jesus somehow all the

36:55

nations of the world

36:57

and he makes the boast that they're all

36:59

given to me and i can give them to

37:00

whomever will and i'll give them to you

37:01

if you just but if you'll worship me

37:04

that would not have been a temptation if

37:07

he didn't have claim to them

37:09

if i tried to sell you the the

37:12

sears tower in chicago

37:14

you're not tempted to buy it from me

37:16

because you don't think i own it in

37:18

order for you to be tempted you have to

37:19

believe that hey i really have the deed

37:21

and i'll sell it to you for ten grand

37:23

you're not tempted because you know i'm

37:25

don't in other words in order for you to

37:26

be tempted to take my deal you have to

37:29

have the confidence that i have the deal

37:31

to present you follow me

37:33

satan offered all the nations to christ

37:35

to give them if he would just be

37:37

worshiping and and obviously jesus

37:38

declined not because he didn't own him

37:41

but he had he was there he was not

37:43

willing to take a shortcut around the

37:44

cross

37:46

but the world system belongs to say we

37:48

need to remember that as we look at the

37:49

world and we see

37:51

pain and suffering and and and evil

37:55

we need to remember who the god of this

37:57

world is

37:58

and know that satan has locality he

38:00

can't be everywhere at one time he's not

38:01

omnipresent

38:03

he has a number of strangers he's

38:04

obviously our adversary right

38:07

that's what the word satan actually

38:09

means first timothy 5 first peter 5.

38:13

he's the accuser of the brethren

38:17

you know there are prominent

38:18

people on public platforms that make

38:20

their living

38:22

tearing apart members of the body of

38:25

christ

38:26

over some imagined differences or what

38:28

have

38:30

you are people i know that are very

38:33

prominent whose marketing strategy to be

38:35

an accuser of the brethren i know where

38:37

that doctrine comes from

38:38

despite what differences we might share

38:40

with some of those speakers that being

38:42

attacked let's recognize that that what

38:44

that's what's really happening there

38:47

he's the god of this world according to

38:48

second corinthians 4 4. he's the prince

38:51

of the power of the air and when we get

38:53

through the in revelation the seals and

38:55

then the trumpets and the bowls the

38:57

climactic

38:58

element of the climax altogether is

39:01

poured out upon the air

39:03

we'll explore that when we get there but

39:04

that's obviously

39:06

it's the satan's seat and then his his

39:08

domain

39:10

he's the spirit that now works in the

39:11

children of disobedience according to

39:12

ephesians 2 2. he's the enemy that sowed

39:14

the tares in matthew 13 your famous

39:16

parable of the

39:18

of the four soils

39:20

and at least six times he's simply

39:22

called the wicked one i didn't bother

39:23

the list of those there's he has many

39:25

more titles

39:26

his man the antichrist has 33 titles in

39:29

the old testament 13 the new we'll deal

39:30

with that when we get to revelation 13.

39:33

let's talk a little bit about spiritual

39:34

geography

39:36

there is locality of satan and his

39:38

demons he is not omnipresent

39:41

they are territorial study daniel 10 and

39:43

we'll see that

39:45

when you get to revelation 9 revelation

39:46

16. they are they're concerned even in

39:49

the book of job even satan himself

39:51

subject to restrictions they can't do

39:53

anything they like

39:54

god has put them under constraints

39:57

and anything that happens to you has to

39:59

be father filtered if you're a christian

40:01

now something else about his geography

40:03

you know we all understand that the

40:05

nimrod

40:07

the first world dictator founded babel

40:09

which becomes babylon

40:11

what most people don't realize is that

40:12

when cyrus conquered the babylon the

40:16

priests and their initiates and their

40:18

treasures

40:19

set up shop in pergamus they got out of

40:22

there

40:24

and as

40:26

rome rises uh they go to

40:29

they get known as the trusted

40:30

mysteries and they set up shop in rome

40:32

so the centroid of of idolatry and false

40:36

worship goes from babylon to pergamos to

40:38

rome that's the migration

40:40

jesus

40:41

says hold hold fast my name to the

40:44

church there

40:45

that's all name is always singular

40:47

and i want to underscore this whole area

40:49

of the third commandment

40:51

most of us don't understand what god

40:53

says in the ten commandments when he

40:54

says thou shalt not take the name of the

40:56

lord thy god in vain

40:58

he is not talking about vocabulary

41:01

that commandment in my opinion has

41:02

nothing to do with the swearing or foul

41:05

language in that sense

41:07

it has to do with ambassadorship

41:10

and the instruction to this church is to

41:12

hold fast my name the instruction to you

41:15

and i is to hold fast his name let's try

41:17

to understand what that may mean

41:18

so here's the concern that jesus has for

41:20

these people he says

41:22

he gave him the good news and he says

41:23

but i have a few things against thee

41:25

because thou hast there them that hold

41:26

the doctrine of balaam we'll come to

41:28

that

41:29

who taught balak to cast a dumbling

41:30

block before the children of israel to

41:32

eat things sacrificed unto idols and to

41:34

commit fornication

41:36

so thou hast also them that hold the

41:38

doctrine of the nicolaitans which thing

41:39

i hate

41:40

and repent or else i will come unto me

41:42

quickly and will fight against them with

41:44

the sword of my mouth in other words

41:46

with the word of god well

41:49

here we have one of those cases we're

41:50

going to run into several of them

41:53

where jesus uses

41:55

a reference from the old testament

41:58

to make a point

41:59

and for us to understand the point he's

42:01

really making we need to understand what

42:03

is this all about who was balaam who was

42:06

balak what's he talking about so let's

42:08

take a look at the prophet balaam he's a

42:10

strange character

42:12

he is a strange character he's a prophet

42:14

but he's not jewish

42:17

i believe he was a gentile

42:19

he's called in joshua 13 a soothsayer is

42:22

that called a prophet he calls himself a

42:23

prophet he's a soothsayer

42:26

he's from

42:27

mesopotamia turns out in deuteronomy 23

42:29

in fact specifically he's from the river

42:31

euphrates in the area called aram so

42:34

he's in a sense what we might think of

42:36

as an iraqi he might have even been from

42:38

babylon doesn't say that specifically

42:39

but could be

42:41

so he's a strange character

42:43

now he is

42:45

by he is hired by the king of israel's

42:48

enemies the moabites balak is the king

42:51

of the moabites and he's hired balaam to

42:55

curse israel

42:59

god tells balaam not to go

43:01

shall i go god says no

43:03

he asked him again shall i go no

43:05

shall i go well go if you have to

43:08

so he goes and god's upset about him

43:10

going

43:11

somehow balaam didn't get the message

43:13

see one thing we should always be

43:14

sensitive to what god may permit and

43:17

what he may prefer are maybe two

43:19

different things

43:21

gee will god allow me to get a new van i

43:23

don't know

43:24

does he want you to have one that's more

43:26

the question

43:28

can a christian dance can a christian

43:30

drink beer

43:31

hey the question is what do what does

43:33

god prefer you to do under the whatever

43:34

the circumstances are

43:36

so balaam on his way there

43:38

his donkey keeps bumping the side of the

43:40

this bridge

43:42

on the trail

43:44

and he beats the donkey three times

43:46

until the donkey turns and chews him out

43:50

the donkey speaks to balaam that got his

43:51

attention

43:53

that got his attention it's a weird

43:54

weird story

43:56

but baylor was a weird guy

43:59

but then the angel

44:00

the reason that the the donkey wouldn't

44:02

go forward the donkey could see the

44:03

angels blocking the way balaam couldn't

44:05

when the angel is revealed and to be

44:06

they don't realize he's in deep yogurt

44:08

here

44:09

and so

44:10

but then he's but then the angel says go

44:12

but

44:13

don't say any more than i let you say

44:15

speak

44:16

so he goes to balak hires himself out

44:19

that's one of these doing it for money

44:22

balak wants him to curse israel he

44:24

refuses

44:25

he has his moment because in in numbers

44:27

23 and 24 where there's this interaction

44:29

with balaam and

44:30

balak

44:31

the king of moab wants him to curse

44:34

israel

44:35

and balaam won't do it

44:37

because god he will not

44:40

say things to be like that god didn't

44:42

tell him to say

44:43

say gee he's doing all right here

44:46

in fact he has a very strange prophecy

44:48

there in number 24 where he talks about

44:49

a star

44:50

out of jacob and some people

44:53

presume that that may have some

44:54

relationship to the so-called christmas

44:56

star or whatever in bethlehem but that's

44:57

all conjecture

44:59

it's not that crisp or clear frankly

45:02

but what's not obvious until you read

45:04

the rest of the story

45:06

in numbers 31 some chapters later

45:09

what apparently balaam did do

45:12

he taught the king he couldn't he

45:14

wouldn't curse israel because god didn't

45:16

let him do that but he tipped balak

45:19

off on how to get israel defeated

45:23

he in effect said get your good-looking

45:26

single girls

45:27

and have them camp around the outside of

45:29

the camp of israel

45:31

entice these young men into fornication

45:33

and marriage and whatever else

45:35

and that and that was prohibited in the

45:37

torah

45:38

they were not to me they were not only

45:40

keep separate they were specifically the

45:42

torah says you're not supposed to marry

45:44

a moabite

45:45

they did

45:46

that caused god's displeasure that

45:48

brought judgment on the land and so

45:50

forth but

45:51

balaam's role in all this he was the one

45:54

that taught

45:55

israel's enemies on how to get israel

45:59

corrupted

46:00

get the picture

46:02

okay

46:03

so

46:05

we have

46:06

three references to balaam in the new

46:08

testament

46:09

in revelation we here we saw the

46:11

doctrine of balaam

46:13

this whole idea of spiritual unchastity

46:15

marriage with the world is the theme

46:16

here in this whole letter

46:18

ii peter 2 uses the expression the way

46:21

of balaam

46:22

apparently referring to the fact that he

46:24

was a hireling he was making a market

46:25

for his gift if you will he sold his his

46:28

gift of prophecy for money for the way

46:30

of balaam and jude 11 also makes a

46:33

reference to that the error of balaam

46:35

sacrificing eternal riches for temporal

46:37

gain now we made his spinning hairs here

46:39

these are the three phrases that occur

46:40

in the new testament and they're

46:42

probably essentially the same thing

46:44

slight

46:45

nuances of emphasis in the different

46:47

ones we'll move on

46:50

after all that he says he that hath an

46:51

ear let him hear what the spirit saith

46:52

under the churches

46:55

then we have the promise the overcomer

46:57

you know what's strange about this here

46:58

again you notice the promise the

46:59

overcomer comes after the letter closes

47:02

it's sort of like a ps

47:04

jesus says to him that overcometh

47:07

will i give to eat of the hidden manna

47:09

and will give him a white stone

47:11

and in the stone a new name written

47:13

which no man knoweth saving he that

47:14

receiveth it

47:17

boy

47:18

this is now the hidden manna is pretty

47:20

easy stuff

47:22

um now what does the word manna mean

47:28

what is it

47:29

we find it's like a coriander seed you

47:31

know in exodus 16 where it was given to

47:33

israel for a sustenance for 40 years

47:37

um

47:39

some commentators when they read the

47:40

prophecy overcomer you're gonna boy if

47:41

you do what god wants you here he'll

47:43

give you a hidden manna and they say

47:44

same to you i

47:47

you want manna this this stuff

47:49

same thing every day six days now the

47:51

sixth day there's twice as much because

47:53

they wouldn't get it on the seventh you

47:54

know essentially the sabbath was

47:55

instituted in exodus 16 that's four

47:58

chapters before the law was given by the

47:59

way it's interesting issue but

48:01

the word manna means what is it what is

48:03

this stuff

48:05

40 years

48:07

they had mana

48:09

for breakfast

48:10

for lunch

48:12

for dinner

48:14

manna biscuits

48:17

man of muffins

48:19

mana pancakes

48:21

manna waffles

48:23

manicotti

48:26

served of course with manushevitz i

48:28

suppose

48:32

now we may make fun of it and so forth

48:34

it was collected for six days only it

48:36

wasn't available on the seventh which

48:37

tells you the sabbath was in effect

48:39

long before the law was given

48:42

it's described poetically throughout the

48:44

bible it's called the food from heaven

48:45

and the bread of the mighty in psalm 78

48:48

all through there the bread of heaven in

48:49

psalm 105

48:51

but the capstone to what jesus is really

48:54

talking about comes from john 6

48:57

because most of that chapter is the

48:58

famous i am the bread of life discourse

49:02

so if you want to understand the hidden

49:03

manna that promise what it really means

49:05

that's easy john 6 take a read it it'll

49:07

be it'd be crystal clear we're talking

49:09

about jesus christ himself and he

49:10

describes it very graphically there

49:14

now before before i get back let me just

49:15

go back here get one other thing

49:17

i'll give him a white stone and in the

49:19

stone a new name written which no man

49:21

knows saving he that receiveth this is

49:22

the one area in the entire book

49:25

that most scholars have no idea what it

49:28

might mean all kinds of conjectures

49:32

and i won't take you through them all

49:33

because they're just conjectures

49:35

the one that is still a conjecture but

49:37

the one that appeals to me apparently

49:40

the roman practice

49:42

was

49:43

to give you a white stone with your name

49:45

on it which was a which would give you

49:47

food and access to the games

49:49

that was what they had like a ticket to

49:51

the coliseum it was it was one with the

49:53

government you had that stone you would

49:55

get some bread and you would get to see

49:56

the games that was it had your name on

49:59

it that was it was like your identity

50:00

didn't have driver's licenses or you

50:02

know the same idea so uh the white stone

50:05

with the name written on and so forth

50:06

may be idiomatically taken from that

50:08

practice but that's conjecture we don't

50:10

have any good records on any of that but

50:12

anyway that man we've talked about

50:15

so okay we had smyrna went through all

50:17

of that last time

50:20

now we've gone through pergamos

50:22

the name means mixed marriage the title

50:24

is the word of god it deals with the

50:25

word of god

50:26

and both the commendation and the

50:28

concerns and the exhortation deals with

50:30

this whole idea of spiritual

50:34

uh

50:34

morality

50:36

avoiding spiritual immorality

50:38

spiritual chastity if i can use that

50:39

term

50:41

so

50:42

admonitory to all churches

50:44

well ephesus

50:46

was the idea of ephesus was you had

50:48

devotion not just doctrine that made

50:51

sense

50:52

smyrna the main message to smyrna was to

50:54

endure persecution

50:56

you'll be tried for 10

50:58

days and so forth

51:00

for pergamos it's to purify your

51:02

ambassadorship

51:04

hold fast to my name was his admonition

51:06

that'll become clear as i get go go a

51:08

little further here

51:10

the other application is to us

51:12

personally let's talk how do we apply

51:14

these personally

51:15

well the whole story of ephesus was

51:17

neglected priorities they were sound on

51:19

doctrine but they were short on devotion

51:22

god wants

51:23

devotion not just doctrine

51:26

smyrna of course the whole issue there

51:27

was satanic opposition

51:29

satan was at work

51:31

persecuting the church

51:33

and jesus message them would just hang

51:34

in there pergamos

51:37

is spiritual compromise

51:40

spiritual compromise that's exactly what

51:42

bail

51:43

balaam taught balak to take advantage of

51:45

and israel compromised itself

51:48

with with the sexual immorality in the

51:50

in the sexual sense but also the

51:52

spiritual morality by taking on the

51:53

idols of these girls in other words the

51:55

guys would uh uh get tangled up with

51:58

these girls get married and adopt the

52:01

the

52:02

gods of the moabites and that was what

52:05

caused god to bring a judgment upon

52:06

israel

52:08

the promise is the overcomer evidence

52:10

eat of the tree of life smyrna will be

52:11

not heard of the second death again it's

52:13

death death death through that one

52:15

and we have the man of stone and name

52:16

promised here who is the overcomers the

52:19

question

52:21

well

52:22

everybody it's easy to get on a

52:25

legalistic trip here if you're not

52:26

careful you might put in your notes

52:28

first john 5 verses 4 and 5 where john

52:32

the writer of the book of revelation

52:34

writes to you

52:35

what the overcomer who the overcomer is

52:39

in first john 5 he says for whatsoever

52:41

is born of god overcometh of the world

52:43

and this is the victory that covertly

52:44

cometh the world even our faith

52:46

who is he that overcometh the world but

52:48

he that believeth that jesus is the son

52:50

of god

52:51

so these overcomer promises are to those

52:54

are to people of faith

52:56

and so again faith is the issue let's

52:59

not forget that as we go forward

53:01

well we've talked about local the local

53:03

head monitoring personnel let's get to

53:04

this controversial one and the fog may

53:07

lift on the whole thing for you

53:09

you need to understand a little bit more

53:11

about the babylonian legend

53:14

tamez was the

53:15

posthumous sun

53:17

between nimrod and simaramas presumably

53:20

he's associated with the sun god

53:22

he was thought to die at the winter

53:24

solstice you know as the days get

53:25

shorter and shorter and shorter when the

53:26

days get the shortest he's thought the

53:28

sun god is thought to have died and then

53:30

he's resurrected if you will in the days

53:31

that follow as the days start getting

53:32

longer again so they they're very

53:34

sensitive the day's getting shorter the

53:36

sun god dies there's a death and

53:37

resurrection theme of all of this

53:40

they celebrated all of this the night

53:42

that he dies they burned a yule log the

53:45

word yule in chaldean means infant

53:48

they burn this log in the fireplace and

53:49

then the next morning they replace it

53:51

with a trimmed tree

53:53

that sound familiar

53:55

it's injected if you which every time

53:57

you get around christmas time be sure

53:58

you do a study in the first half half a

54:00

dozen verses of

54:01

jeremiah 10. if nothing else it'll pull

54:03

you on a guilt trip for a while it'd be

54:04

kind of fun

54:08

so um also the mistletoe the wassel bowl

54:10

all these things that we'd think of

54:12

coming from a

54:14

of a british you know british tradition

54:16

actually has its roots in pagan rome

54:18

which has its roots in babylon

54:21

now

54:22

nimrod founded the original babylonian

54:23

religion obviously

54:25

he's virtually identical to phaethon or

54:27

escalators in some accounts

54:29

and uh developing the worship of his

54:32

widow simaramas and his posthumous son

54:34

thomas

54:35

he's called semoramus and thomas in

54:36

babylonian it's asteroid and tamus of

54:40

phoenicia he's the isis of horus of

54:42

egypt he's the aphrodite heroes of eros

54:45

of greece and venus and cupid of rome

54:47

these are simply latin or greek labels

54:49

to the original chaldean you follow me

54:52

and all of this if you want there's two

54:53

great the classic study here is

54:55

alexander hislop's book the two babylons

54:58

we'll be talking more about this when we

54:59

get to revelation 17 and 18. but there's

55:01

a contemporary book that's even better

55:04

and that is dave hunt's book a woman

55:05

rides the beast every serious christian

55:07

i think should get dave hunt's book a

55:09

woman rides the beast we have some

55:10

differences of views on some things i'll

55:12

tell you about that when we get there

55:13

not that

55:14

critical but he's done a thorough job at

55:16

documenting the background of what we're

55:18

going to get into here

55:20

this priesthood from babylon started to

55:22

migrate when cyrus conquered babylon the

55:24

the the priesthood and the initiates

55:27

set up shop in pergamus

55:29

and as the centroid of power eventually

55:31

shifts to rome as as the roman romans

55:34

supersede the greeks

55:35

this same religious system

55:37

adopts latin labels and forms the

55:39

foundation of what you and i think of as

55:40

pagan rome if you study pagan rome

55:43

before the third before the third fourth

55:46

century

55:47

it's just a latin packaging of the

55:49

babylonian system

55:51

the title pontifus maximus

55:54

was a title that the high priest of the

55:56

babylonian religion

55:58

picked up when they moved from babylon

56:00

to pergamus it's first used in pergamus

56:03

and

56:05

gh pembers studies confirm all that

56:09

and so obviously as

56:11

as the system gets migrates to rome

56:14

the appointment of each caesar inc it

56:17

was many titles that he took on one of

56:19

them was the head of the church which

56:21

which was politifix maximus it was the

56:22

head of the babylonian religion

56:25

and this all gets codified in 378 uh

56:28

when the damascus of the bishop of rome

56:30

completes the absorption of the

56:31

babylonian system into the roman church

56:34

now you if you're going to do take your

56:36

bible seriously you're going to want to

56:37

do some background on the history of

56:39

rome

56:40

it gets founded in about 753 bc

56:43

in in

56:44

in

56:46

somewhere in the

56:47

4th and 3rd centuries bc they subdue it

56:49

italy

56:50

they conquer carthage in 264 to 146 bc

56:55

then greece and asia minor falls the

56:57

following century

56:59

and then we get to spain gaul britain

57:01

and the two times

57:03

and uh

57:04

very graphically portrayed among other

57:06

things if you've seen the movie

57:07

gladiator they do a great job marcus

57:09

it's actually the days of marcus

57:10

aurelius

57:11

but i checked that out by the way

57:12

komodus commodious commodus who took

57:15

over marcus was killed in the arena it's

57:17

very interesting

57:20

anyway in 63 bc they conquered judea

57:23

and when at their peak they span from

57:26

the atlantic to the euphrates and from

57:28

the north sea to the african desert

57:31

now the population is estimated maybe to

57:32

be 120 million that might be a little

57:34

low

57:35

but

57:36

along the way of course we get into

57:37

caesar worship augustus when he takes

57:39

over

57:40

this is uh after mark anthony you know

57:43

the the whole uh

57:45

octavian take it wins that battle and

57:48

takes on the name augustus

57:50

he also inaugurates emperor worship

57:53

and part of what he's trying to do here

57:54

is to tie the empire together

57:57

in in in trying to enlist a common

57:59

sentiment was is the thought

58:01

and though even though pergamus was not

58:03

the seat of primary authority

58:06

it ends up becoming one of the major

58:08

centers for emperor worship the first

58:10

temple

58:11

that was dedicated to emperor worship

58:13

was erected at pergamus at 27 bc this is

58:16

all obviously ahead of the new testament

58:17

period but it's important for this

58:18

background

58:20

so pergamus is not only pagan in the

58:22

traditional pagan sense it's also

58:25

uh

58:25

pushing

58:26

this idea of emperor worship

58:29

and uh by the time you get to the

58:31

espacion i'll give you a profile here in

58:32

a minute

58:33

and his successors it became a global

58:36

test of loyalty to the caesar

58:38

to offer incense to a statue of the

58:40

emperor

58:41

that was like a loyalty oath all you had

58:43

to do is put a pinch of material in the

58:46

in the offer and you'd get a certificate

58:48

for another year that you're loyal to

58:50

the empire the station

58:51

enforce that

58:53

so anyway when you get to about 44 bc

58:56

julius caesar

58:57

is assassinated

58:59

and that's then we have augustus and

59:01

it's in augustus's reign that christ was

59:04

born obviously

59:06

and

59:07

it's he's succeeded by tiberius christ

59:10

was crucified and tiberius is reigned

59:12

just to give you a rough feeling here

59:15

then we get to caligula

59:16

and there is an incident that's going to

59:18

be important to us as we study

59:21

it during caligula's reign he's a tough

59:23

guy

59:24

but he instructs his general in

59:26

jerusalem to put an idol of himself in

59:29

the holy of holies

59:31

and petronius refuses to do that because

59:33

he knows that will lead to a major

59:34

explosion as it did back in 137 bc and

59:37

i'll come back to that

59:41

caligula orders petronas killed for

59:45

failing to follow the instructions

59:46

caligula happens to die two weeks later

59:49

the message of collegue's death gets to

59:50

petronas before the order of his

59:52

execution so he gets off the hook

59:54

interestingly enough

59:55

but it's interesting to see god

59:57

intervene in a way of not letting the

59:58

abomination of desolation take place

1:00:00

which is what it would have done that's

1:00:02

going to happen when

1:00:03

it should happen

1:00:05

so then we have claudius then we have

1:00:06

nero very infamous of course he's the

1:00:08

one that burned rome and got tried to

1:00:10

blame the christians on it he's the one

1:00:12

that executed paul

1:00:14

and the senate of course orders his

1:00:16

death and the

1:00:17

very very painful death but he

1:00:19

he

1:00:20

takes the

1:00:21

commits suicide rather than endure that

1:00:24

then we have when nero

1:00:25

dies

1:00:27

vespasian's down in judea with his son

1:00:29

with orders to attack jerusalem but nero

1:00:31

dies

1:00:33

from 68 to 69 galba otho and vitellius

1:00:36

in succession

1:00:37

take over for a short while but it's

1:00:39

just turbulence vespasian finally takes

1:00:41

over the empire in 69 leaving his son

1:00:44

titus in um

1:00:47

to

1:00:48

attack jerusalem

1:00:50

and of course titus does destroy

1:00:51

jerusalem in 70 a.d

1:00:53

but in that hiatus the christians get

1:00:56

out because christ warned them to in

1:00:58

luke chapter 21.

1:01:00

titus though aspires to he then becomes

1:01:03

emperor 79 to 80 10 years later

1:01:06

so they're at their zenith now we get to

1:01:08

to mission and to mission the mission is

1:01:10

a bad news he's the worst of the bunch

1:01:13

and very very very very violent very

1:01:15

very systematic

1:01:18

and of course this is when john is

1:01:19

banished to patmos when domitian dies

1:01:22

john is released trajan releases him

1:01:24

and the trade just tried to uphold the

1:01:25

laws but christianity was regarded as

1:01:27

illegal so trade is not a good guy but

1:01:29

he doesn't have the zeal

1:01:30

and the the the the uh violence the

1:01:33

diminishing characterized emission

1:01:35

then hadrian then

1:01:37

is pious it's during anthony's pies they

1:01:39

have the barcock revolt and that's when

1:01:41

jerusalem was leveled plot plowed

1:01:43

underground and a roman city built on

1:01:45

top of it which is all part of your

1:01:46

background if you go to israel

1:01:48

and you get to marcus aurelius which

1:01:50

brings you to the period of the movie

1:01:51

the gladiator in terms of

1:01:53

of length here

1:01:54

but he was the most severe since nero

1:01:56

and this is probably the peak

1:01:58

of roman power

1:02:01

and commodus cometus is the son of

1:02:05

of uh aurelius and he did uh thomas dies

1:02:08

in the arena interestingly enough

1:02:10

and then there's a whole series of what

1:02:11

they call the barrick emperors appointed

1:02:14

by the army of civil war

1:02:16

and then there's a series of others that

1:02:17

tolerate some of them tolerate

1:02:19

christianity they're too busy trying to

1:02:20

scotch tape the end the empire's

1:02:21

starting to come apart

1:02:24

a lot of us alexander severus max menace

1:02:28

we get to phillips and decius valerian

1:02:32

um

1:02:33

some uh that were favorable some of them

1:02:35

are uh serious persecutors

1:02:38

until you finally get to

1:02:39

diocletian

1:02:41

and he's the worst of the bunch

1:02:44

diocletian uh

1:02:45

persecutes christians furiously

1:02:48

and uh he tried to

1:02:50

be especially tortuous to discourage

1:02:53

that whole movement

1:02:55

that's the then you get to this

1:02:56

interesting guy by the constantine who's

1:02:58

widely misunderstood

1:03:01

in 312 a.d he set out to defeat the

1:03:03

forces of accentus his rival the supreme

1:03:05

power and the empire

1:03:06

his father had prospered when he prayed

1:03:08

to the god of the christians

1:03:10

and so he and his extremity resorted to

1:03:12

the same action

1:03:14

we're

1:03:16

we're told that on the next day he saw a

1:03:19

shining cross the sky with the

1:03:20

inscription of it

1:03:21

in hawk signo vince's that is in this

1:03:23

sign thou shalt conquer

1:03:25

whether this really happened or whether

1:03:27

it was a clever press release afterwards

1:03:29

it's up to you to see decide how cynical

1:03:31

you are but in any case he does defeat

1:03:33

make sense at the million bridge

1:03:35

and that he immediately declares his

1:03:37

conversion to christianity

1:03:39

at least that's the way the record says

1:03:41

other record says he was baptized on his

1:03:43

deathbed

1:03:44

so whether he really was converted or

1:03:46

not or whether he just took advantage of

1:03:47

this as a as a public relations thing as

1:03:49

a subject that scholars argue about

1:03:52

but in 325 a.d he he issued his edict of

1:03:56

toleration

1:03:58

that established the freedom of religion

1:04:00

this was a big break for the christians

1:04:02

because up until now christianity had

1:04:04

been an illegal underground movement

1:04:06

he did not make it a state religion he

1:04:09

simply made it legal

1:04:10

he favored christians at court he

1:04:12

exempted christian ministers from taxes

1:04:15

he issued a general exhortation for

1:04:16

subjects to become christians so this is

1:04:18

all the positives

1:04:20

in 320 ex jimmy 3 30 a.d he moved the

1:04:22

capital of the world

1:04:24

to byzantium from rome he had it he had

1:04:26

rome was so

1:04:27

up to its ears in uh pagan

1:04:30

traditions he decided it'd be simpler

1:04:32

just to move the capital of the world

1:04:33

out of there and he moved to a place

1:04:35

called byzantium that then he renamed

1:04:37

constantinople it later gets renamed

1:04:40

istanbul by the by the muslims when they

1:04:42

take over ultimately

1:04:43

but constantine has quite a record where

1:04:45

you're trying to see what he actually he

1:04:46

ceased the gladiator gladiator fights he

1:04:49

stopped that

1:04:50

he reduced the killing of unwelcome

1:04:52

children

1:04:54

he abolished crucifixion as a form of

1:04:56

execution

1:04:58

he repealed the persecution edicts of

1:05:00

his predecessor diocletian

1:05:02

he assumed the headship of the church

1:05:04

he's the one that empaneled the council

1:05:05

of nicea and so forth he advanced

1:05:08

christians to high offices

1:05:10

he declared sunday as a day of worship

1:05:12

now by the way this is widely

1:05:13

misunderstood

1:05:15

there were three major groups of sun

1:05:18

worshipers operative at that time in the

1:05:20

empire

1:05:21

you had the christians that were illegal

1:05:23

they were coming out of the caves

1:05:25

by declaring sunday as a combined day of

1:05:28

worship it was his way of trying to

1:05:30

unify the emperor empire

1:05:32

because he had three different groups of

1:05:33

sun worshipers that could

1:05:35

share that day

1:05:36

the christians could worship on that day

1:05:38

and the big news was the slaves had a

1:05:40

day off that was a big deal they didn't

1:05:42

have a day off

1:05:43

constantine forbid work on sunday and

1:05:46

that made declared as a day of worship

1:05:48

and so

1:05:51

he also reduced slavery in a lot of

1:05:52

different ways

1:05:54

so the marriage was consummated between

1:05:56

the world

1:05:57

and the church

1:06:00

because what happens is after

1:06:02

constantine dies julian takes over and

1:06:04

he is known as julian the apostate

1:06:07

julian calendar same guy

1:06:09

he sought to restore paganism he was not

1:06:12

favorable the christian cause at all

1:06:14

but he is replaced after just a couple

1:06:16

of years

1:06:17

by jovian who reestablished the

1:06:19

christian religion so this attempt at

1:06:20

paganism is just two two years then

1:06:22

jovian takes over and then we get to

1:06:25

theodosius

1:06:26

and he's the one that made christianity

1:06:29

the state religion

1:06:31

that caused forced conversions and

1:06:33

suddenly all the churches were filled

1:06:34

with unregenerate people that were that

1:06:38

had an ambition to rule

1:06:39

that were used to heathenism

1:06:41

and we have now a co-mingling of

1:06:44

christianity or at least the form of it

1:06:46

and the paganism

1:06:48

that was uh operative throughout the

1:06:50

culture

1:06:51

so this is regarded by most scholars of

1:06:53

marriage between the church and the

1:06:54

world

1:06:55

a perverted marriage hedonism was

1:06:57

christianized the pagan temples became

1:06:59

churches

1:07:00

heathen festivals were converted into

1:07:02

christian ones

1:07:03

this

1:07:04

december 25th thing we do we call

1:07:06

christmas is really a derivative of

1:07:07

pagan holidays well they know about the

1:07:09

birth of christ is that it wasn't in the

1:07:11

winter and so on we could i won't go

1:07:12

down all that pagan priests slipped into

1:07:15

the office as christian priests

1:07:18

most of the changes were simply

1:07:19

nomenclature

1:07:21

giving given these christian names to

1:07:23

their previous practices

1:07:25

so what the persecution didn't

1:07:26

accomplish in smyrna

1:07:28

was accomplished in a marriage to the

1:07:30

world if you can't lick him join him

1:07:32

satan changes his strategy trying to

1:07:35

crush

1:07:36

the myrrh the smyrna

1:07:38

didn't work

1:07:40

the blood of the martyrs is the seat of

1:07:41

the church according to the early

1:07:43

fathers

1:07:44

but then making it a legal

1:07:47

estate religion

1:07:50

destroyed it

1:07:52

so we have ephesus

1:07:54

smyrna pergamus thyatiras sardis

1:07:55

philadelphia ephesus the apollo

1:07:57

apostolic church then we go through the

1:07:59

persecuted church

1:08:00

and bergamos is the married church

1:08:04

and next time of course we'll take

1:08:06

thyatira in your next session

1:08:08

what i'd like you to do is read chapters

1:08:10

two and three

1:08:11

i know we've done in other words they're

1:08:13

short just read both chapters so you

1:08:15

have all seven letters refreshed in your

1:08:16

mind

1:08:18

and i want you to analyze that letter to

1:08:20

thyatira it's the longest of the bunch

1:08:23

no i'm not very long

1:08:24

it's from it's only about 10 verses

1:08:28

but analyze the letter

1:08:29

figure out what the good news is and

1:08:31

what the bad news is with thy tyrant

1:08:33

it's a very important letter it's the

1:08:34

longest

1:08:36

it deals with a person called jezebel

1:08:39

is anyone here named jezebel

1:08:44

does anyone here have a dog named nero

1:08:47

see some of these names you wouldn't

1:08:48

even give your dog right

1:08:51

study jezebel it's important first of

1:08:53

all it's a very colorful period

1:08:56

in in in israel's history

1:08:58

she is quite an operator

1:09:01

um

1:09:02

you need to understand jezebel for

1:09:04

several reasons not the least of which

1:09:06

jesus alludes to her with respect to the

1:09:09

church of thyatira so i'll give you a

1:09:11

clue

1:09:12

most of that story will be in first

1:09:13

kings 21. you want to read about a guy

1:09:16

by the name of naboth he had a vineyard

1:09:19

and it's absolutely fascinating to see

1:09:22

how that whole situation is dealt with

1:09:24

because i think it becomes a

1:09:25

foreshadowing of something far larger

1:09:28

far more sinister than you have any idea

1:09:31

so that's your assignment for next time

1:09:33

let's stand for a closing word of prayer

1:09:39

the letter to the church of pergamos

1:09:42

spiritual compromise

1:09:46

the lessons to the church pretty obvious

1:09:49

so we need to

1:09:51

ferret out the paganism

1:09:53

that indwells all of our churches to

1:09:55

some extent

1:09:57

it's easy to be critical of certain ones

1:09:59

let's examine ourselves

1:10:01

it also needs to be very very

1:10:06

operative

1:10:07

in our personal lives

1:10:10

because all of us

1:10:12

find ourselves compromising with the

1:10:14

world

1:10:16

we are to be his ambassadors

1:10:19

how often

1:10:20

do we

1:10:22

compromise our ambassadorship

1:10:24

for the sake

1:10:25

of protecting a job or protecting a deal

1:10:29

or not offending a neighbor or whatever

1:10:31

there are a lot of these gray areas i'm

1:10:32

not saying it's simple

1:10:34

but we need to put the test of

1:10:36

ambassadorship on these decisions

1:10:39

let's buy our hearts father

1:10:41

we thank you

1:10:43

that you have

1:10:44

brought us together and that we have a

1:10:46

divine appointment with you tonight

1:10:49

we thank you father that your kingdom

1:10:51

are no accidents no coincidences that

1:10:52

we're all here right now by your divine

1:10:54

appointment

1:10:56

so father our first prayer is that your

1:10:59

purpose be accomplished in each of our

1:11:00

lives

1:11:03

because we do come before your throne

1:11:05

father acknowledging our sin our sins of

1:11:07

ingratitude

1:11:10

our sins of presumption

1:11:13

oh father how we do presume

1:11:17

we ask you father

1:11:20

to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us

1:11:22

from all unrighteousness that we might

1:11:23

be more effective stewards

1:11:26

of these treasures that you've given us

1:11:31

indeed father we would just pray that

1:11:32

you would increase in each of us

1:11:36

a new sense of responsibility

1:11:39

as your ambassadors

1:11:42

as your representatives

1:11:46

we pray father you would give us

1:11:47

discernment

1:11:50

in the opportunities that you unfold

1:11:51

before us

1:11:53

that in each of these things

1:11:57

we might

1:11:59

be more fruitful stewards and more

1:12:01

pleasing in your sight

1:12:05

as we commit ourselves father

1:12:08

without any reservations

1:12:12

into your hands in the name of yeshua

1:12:14

our lord and savior jesus christ amen

1:12:19

[Music]

1:13:06

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