The Book of Revelation - Session 4 of 24 - A Remastered Commentary by Chuck Missler
This session provides an in-depth commentary on the letter to the persecuted church of Smyrna in Revelation 2, emphasizing that faithful Christians must expect earthly tribulation but are spiritually rich. Missler also introduces a comparative analysis of the Olivet Discourse in Matthew and Luke to highlight distinct prophetic timelines for Israel and the Church.
This video is vital for understanding how biblical typology, linguistic precision, and historical context shape Dispensational eschatology, particularly regarding the distinction between earthly Christian persecution and the eschatological Great Tribulation.
Section summaries
Opening Prayer and Introduction
optionalContains standard opening prayer and warm-up remarks for the study group.
Structure of Revelation & Chapter 1 Recap
optionalRecaps the basic outline of Revelation and explains the symbols of stars and lampstands from Chapter 1.
The Four Levels of Interpreting the Seven Letters
watchCrucial for understanding how Missler applies the letters locally, admonitorily, personally, and prophetically.
Historical and Linguistic Background of Smyrna
watchExplains the etymology of myrrh, the geography and politics of Smyrna, and the rise of compulsory Caesar worship.
Smyrna Report Card: Poverty and 'Jews Who Are Not'
watchAnalyzes Christ's commendation, spiritual wealth vs. physical poverty, and introduces the critique of Replacement Theology.
10 Days of Tribulation and Five Crowns
watchDetails the ten historical periods of Roman imperial persecution and the five crowns promised to believers.
Personal Application: Why Christians Have Trials
optionalA devotional segment listing ten biblical reasons why God allows believers to experience trials.
Addendum: Comparing Matthew 24 and Luke 21
watchAn essential eschatological analysis highlighting structural differences in the Olivet Discourse to distinguish Israel's program from the Church's.
Key points
- Smyrna and the Chemistry of Myrrh — The name Smyrna is derived from the Greek and Hebrew words for myrrh, a gum harvested from trees that yields its sweet fragrance only when crushed. This serves as a precise typological picture of the church at Smyrna, which was crushed by severe Roman and local persecution yet remained spiritually beautiful and faithful in the eyes of Christ.
- Replacement Theology as Blasphemy — Missler interprets the 'synagogue of Satan' and those who 'say they are Jews and are not' as a potential biblical critique of Replacement Theology—the belief that the Christian Church has permanently superseded ethnic Israel in God's covenant promises. He argues that maintaining distinct origins and destinies for Israel and the Church is essential to biblical truth.
- The Dual Timelines of the Olivet Discourse — A close comparison of Matthew 24 and Luke 21 reveals they are not identical records of the same sermon. Matthew 24 focuses on events occurring 'after' the beginning of sorrows (the Great Tribulation and the Abomination of Desolation) directed at the Jews, while Luke 21 focuses on events 'before' those signs (the 70 AD destruction of Jerusalem) directed at a Gentile-inclusive audience.
“If these letters were in any other order, this would not be true. But in the order they're in and with the emphasis that they have, they lay out a history of the church from the apostolic period to the present day.” — Chuck Missler
“Where do we in America get the arrogance to presume that we'll be exempted from what most of the body of Christ in most of the world for most of the last 1,900 years have had to endure? It's called persecution.” — Chuck Missler
AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.
Let's bow our hearts for a word of
prayer.
Father, we praise you for who you are.
We thank you that
you've given us this opportunity
to meet in peace
without persecution or any interference.
We thank you, Father, for your word.
We pray, Father, that your spirit would
open your word to our lives
and open our hearts to your word.
That in all these things we might see
more clearly just what it is you would
have of us
in the days ahead. As we commit
ourselves
without any reservation
into your hands in the name of Yeshua,
our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Well, we're studying the book of
Revelation and we're specifically
in those two chapters that I regard as
the most important in the entire book,
chapters 2 and 3,
which include seven letters to seven
churches.
And for reasons that I think will become
very clear to us as we get into this,
this is
the most practical
and the most essential part of the
entire book to each of us. And we're
going to tonight be exploring the letter
to the church of Smyrna.
But just by a quick perspective and get
a warm up here, understand the book is
singular, Revelation.
I read a biblical commentary just today
in which the commentator said
Revelations, plural. I'm sure it was a
typo, but that's revealing. No, it's it
the word apocalypse means the unveiling.
It's singular, it's the unveiling of
Jesus Christ.
It's the consummation of all things.
It's the only book in the Bible that has
the audacity
to say, "Read me, I'm special."
No other book of the Bible singles
itself out above all the others as a a
book of special blessing. Revelation
does do that.
So, we're going to claim that blessing
tonight.
And one of the reasons it's such a
blessing,
in the 404 verses that make up the book,
there are over 800 allusions from the
Old Testament alone.
So, if it sounds strange to our ears,
it's because we're not as familiar as we
should be
to what we call the Old Testament or
what the Jews call the Tanakh.
And of course, it's exciting because it
represents
the climax of God's plan of redemption
for you and me and for the
earth and much more.
To whom is it given? The Revelation of
Jesus Christ, it opens, which God gave
unto him. Unto whom?
Unto Jesus Christ. That shocks a lot of
people to realize that. Everybody reads
that and they they don't stop to realize
what it says.
And why did he give it to him? To show
unto his servants things which must
suddenly come to pass. It's translated
shortly, it really means when it starts
it'll be very quick. In tachys it's the
same it's the Greek word from which we
get the word for tachometer.
And he sent and signified it, rendered
it into signs by by his angel unto his
servant John, who bare record of the
word of God and the testimony of Jesus
Christ and of all the things that he
saw. We're just going to see a record
that John the Apostle penned from things
he experienced. He saw them first hand,
he heard them with his ears.
And in in a very very exciting manner.
And this is the the third verse is one
of several places in the book where this
is expressed. Blessed is he that readeth
and they that hear the words of this
prophecy
and keep those things which are written
therein, for the time is at hand.
Then it continues that just like a a
memo or a letter, the whole thing is a
letter to all the seven churches.
John to the seven churches which are in
Asia. That's the Roman province of Asia.
Grace be unto you and peace from him who
which which is, which was, and which is
to come.
And from the seven spirits which are
before his throne, and from Jesus Christ
who is the faithful witness, the
firstborn of the dead, and the prince of
the kings of the earth unto him that
loved us and washed us from our sins in
his own blood.
And it goes on. It's interesting we have
a trinity alluded to here, I believe.
Unto him which is, which was, and which
is to come, I regard I view that as the
Father. The seven spirits is the
sevenfold spirits as detailed in Isaiah
11.
And from Jesus Christ, of course. And
then we have a number of appellations on
his name, who is the faithful witness,
the firstborn of the dead.
And that firstborn of the dead phrase is
going to be used as an identity in the
letter we're studying tonight. In fact,
each letter of the seven letters we're
going to explore,
Jesus selects a title of himself from
chapter 1.
And
it's always relevant to the key theme of
each letter. It's a clue in effect to
what the letter's all about.
And the prince of the kings of the earth
unto him that loved us and washed us
from our sins in his own blood.
So, we have the outline
of chapter 1
uh that we looked at in our earlier
meetings, which had introduction and the
salutation and the occasion of the book.
Then the vision of the risen Christ, a a
detailed physical description of Christ
in heaven.
But then we get to verse 19. That's why
I wanted to focus on this because this
gives us the outline of the entire book
and the outline that will organize our
study for us.
The outline of the book and then the
preparation for the last two verses of
the chapter 1 are there. Now, the
outline is write the the things which
thou hast seen. John is instructed to
write three
packages, so to speak. Write the things
which thou hast seen,
the things which are,
and the things which shall be hereafter,
meta tauta.
And we have the
if you will, of the book into three
parts.
The past, present, and future, so to
speak. What was the things thou hast
seen? That's the vision of Christ that
occurred in chapter 1. When you get to
this verse, chapter 1 is essentially
behind you.
That's what thou hast seen, John.
Then the things which are, that'll turn
out to be the seven letters to seven
churches that are in existence at the
time John is writing.
And from what happens after that
is future and is the bulk of the book.
Write the things which shall be meta
tauta is the Greek phrase translated
here hereafter.
And chapter 4 verse 1 starts out with
that same Greek phrase, meta tauta.
And so, those are the three partitions.
The reason we focus so much on chapters
2 and 3 because those two chapters are
the ones that impact you and I directly.
You'll see why we have the view we have.
From chapter 4 on, we believe we'll be
watching that from the mezzanine.
So, the part that affects us is is the
chapters 2 and 3. The book of Acts
covers about 30 years of church history.
The book of Revelation covers their
following 1900.
And you'll see why as we go into it. And
now,
so we're really focusing in this area
and we've decided we elected to actually
spend a full session on each of the
seven churches. I'll try to show you
why.
Chapter 1 closes with a final verse. It
says, "The mystery of the seven stars
which thou sawest in my right hand and
the seven golden
lampstands,
these were introduced earlier in the
chapter, but I want you to notice Jesus
himself explains what those symbols or
signs means.
It's astonishing to realize how many of
the signs in Revelation are explained by
the book itself.
Not all of them, but they're all
explained somewhere else in the Bible.
It's one of the great treasure hunts
that make up the study of Revelation is
to study it with a concordance and every
time you find some expression in there
that you don't understand, track down
that word elsewhere in the Bible and to
properly understand the book of
Revelation, it'll take you into
virtually every book of the Bible, Old
and New Testament.
But in any case, here Jesus explains the
stars and the lampstands. It says, "The
seven stars which thou sawest in my
right hand, the seven golden lampstands,
the seven stars are the angels of the
seven churches.
And the seven lampstands which thou
sawest are the seven churches."
And we're going to see those lampstands,
they're on the earth in chapters 2 and
3,
but they're going to be in heaven in
chapter 4.
Now, the seven churches.
The first question that will and this
will haunt us through the the next
five sessions as well, why were these
seven churches picked? There were more
than seven churches in the in
proconsular Asia, the
the area that we would think of as
Turkey.
There's certainly over 100 churches in
the New Testament period. Why these
seven? Why the Holy Spirit picked these
seven?
And there's another phrase that occurs
in each letter. Every letter uses a
different title of Christ, obviously
it's a different church. And the report
card of that which is basically what
they are, of that church, is different
for each one. But there's one phrase
that closes each letter.
He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit says to the churches.
That's sort of a code phrase. It's sort
of a closing phrase.
And it gives us a clue as to what these
are all all about. There are at least
four levels of understanding or
application of these letters. The first
is local. These were real churches.
We'll talk about that. They were real
places with real churches that had real
problems that these letters do address.
But strangely, the letters go far beyond
just that application.
It turns out, the Holy Spirit says, "He
that hath an ear, let him hear what the
Spirit says to the churches plural."
Every one of these letters apply to
every church on the planet Earth.
To different in in different degrees.
And there's a central theme which each
of the seven letters, and you need to
understand the central theme of each
letter, what was right, what was wrong,
and what the remedies
were required. Because there are parts
of that that affect every one of the the
churches on the planet Earth.
So, it's it's each letter is admonitory
in a collective sense, in a broad sense.
But all the Spirit also says, "He that
hath an ear." How many of you have
earlobes? Can I see a show of hands?
Okay, it's about 90%. Good, okay. Um
then if you have an ear, you are to
listen to this, and that means there is
a personal application. The Holy Spirit
intended this letter tonight to
apply to each one of us to some degree.
Now, that so far, so good, no problem.
There's a fourth letter that creates
some controversy.
They have a prophetic implication.
And this is not some kind of
fringe conjecture. Some people might
regard it that way.
But I'll just show you why so many
scholars, ourselves included,
uh feel they are prophetic by making
just one simple observation.
If these letters were in any other
order, this would not be true. But in
the order they're in and with the
emphasis that they have,
they lay out a history of the church
from the apostolic period to the present
day.
And you have to see that for you'll
either see that or you don't. It's up to
you.
But we'll show you why we have that
view.
Now, as we get into this, it's it'll be
instructive for us to be conscious of
seven elements that make up the letter.
There There's the name of the church,
and the name of the church will have an
impact on what it's really all about.
That's quite surprising when you think
about it.
And uh
Jesus in addressing that church selects
a title of himself that fits the
situation. And each title is different.
There are seven different titles of
Christ introduced in chapter 1 and seven
different titles of Christ that are used
in the seven letters.
Then there's a report card. There's some
good news, the commendation. You did
this really well. I know your works and
this this this is really great.
You feel pretty good.
Then you get to the fourth element,
which is an expression of concern.
We're going to say, "Nevertheless, I
have this problem. I have this concern
over you. You're not doing quite what
you should be over here." Whatever.
So, it's a report card.
Once he gets through that, then there's
an exhortation. Here's the remedy.
Here's what I want you to focus on, not
everything. Here's the specific things
you need to focus on in your situation.
And then there's a promise included for
the overcomer.
Each letter includes a little phrase
near the end
that says uh for the one that
overcometh, I will do this that
There's a special little reward for the
one that overcomes.
And then there's this strange closing
phrase.
He that hath an ear,
hear what the Spirit says to the seven
churches.
Now, you'll see why there are seven
elements here because what you're going
to discover when you do all seven
churches,
there's a couple of churches that have
no commendation.
There's a couple of churches that have
no concern expressed.
And what's more important to recognize
is that every church will be surprised.
Every church will learn something they
didn't know.
The ones that thought they were doing
great are not doing so great. The ones
that thought they were doing terribly
are doing much better than they thought.
And that's sobering cuz we need to
realize that our assessment of
ourselves, our own church and ourselves,
is probably at some variance
from the way the Lord sees us. And
that's part of what we want to gain by
understanding these letters is what's
What is his perspective? What's his
agenda?
What's his business plan, so to speak?
So, these report cards, okay?
We'll take the churches, all seven, not
just the first three, but the name, the
title, comment. And what we'll do is
we'll fill these in, and you'll discover
some interesting things as we go.
Now, Ephesus last time, the word Ephesus
meant the desired one.
They were very very good on doctrine,
but uh
uh
they had lost their first love.
They were God desires devotion, not just
doctrine, and that was their shortcoming
and and so forth. And we went through
all of that last time, except we noticed
something when we did this,
that the promise to the overcomer was
the last thing in the letter.
It was after the closing phrase,
"He that hath an ear," and so forth.
It's almost as if the promise to the
overcomer was a postscript.
Now,
with just this one letter that we I'm
not going to jump to any great
conclusion. I just want to call your
attention to the value of being very
precise when you study.
And we're going to discover that the
first three are characterized this way,
the last four are different.
We're going to discover there's several
ways the first three letters are
distinctive from the last four, and
we'll do that as we go.
And we also determined that the we
suggested the possibility, at least,
that Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamus,
Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and
Laodicea see you
are each descriptive of a successive
phase of church history, it seems. At
least that's the conjecture. And of
course, Ephesus would be descriptive of
the apostolic church, the early church,
the first century or so, very zealous
for doctrine. That's where we had all
the councils and putting to putting down
these various heresies that surfaced.
They're very diligent on that, but they
lost their first love. They lost their
their their the love for the king. They
were too busy on the business of the
king to have time for the king. That was
That's the quick snapshot of Ephesus.
But we're tonight going to explore the
second letter.
The letter to Smyrna.
And unto the angel in the church at
Smyrna, right?
By the way, the word Smyrna
comes from smurios, which is a Greek
word that has a Hebrew root, which is
mur, which means death. So, um it it
actually
is a word that means myrrh.
Myrrh.
And myrrh is a made from a
uh
gum of certain trees or shrubs in Arabia
or Ethiopia, and it's highly valued for
a number of reasons. It's used in
perfume.
It's also used in holy anointing oil for
priests, and it's used in the
purification of women in Esther 2 and so
forth.
But that primary use of of myrrh was for
embalming
and for uh um
suffering, a pain reliever.
Myrrh gives off
its characteristic scent by being
crushed.
So, the very term here is going to turn
out to be very descriptive of the church
at Smyrna.
Now,
you recall when when we at Christmas we
usually celebrate the wise men bringing
the three They're actually not wise men,
they're the Magi, but in any case, they
bring the three gifts to the child.
They bring what? What are the three
gifts, anyone?
Gold, frankincense, and myrrh, exactly.
Gold speaks of royalty. Frankincense is
a
a a incense for priesthood, speaking to
his deity priesthood. And myrrh, of
course, speaks of his suffering and
death.
Now, the reason that's interesting is
And of course, body of Jesus was
embalmed in myrrh by Nicodemus and
Nicodemus in John 19.
But it's interesting to look ahead in
the millennium
because we find in Isaiah 60, it's going
to it mentions that he is going to be
given gifts when in the millennium of
gold and frankincense.
But no myrrh.
Why no myrrh? Cuz his death is behind
him. It's once and for all.
And there are there are obviously
different levels of application. We'll
focus initially, of course, on the local
Smyrna was an actual place. It's about
42 mi north of Ephesus. It had a double
harbor.
Had a narrow interest in the second part
with a chain that could be blocking it.
This has since been silted in, but
that's the way it was originally.
Today, this city is a thriving city in
Turkey. It's known as Izmir,
which is a Turkish rendering in the
sense of Smyrna.
And it's the third largest city in
Turkey. It's got about 300,000
population. It's a very beautiful, very
bustling city.
In the New Testament period, it probably
had a population about 100,000, which is
a very large city in those days.
It exports tobacco, grapes, figs,
cotton, olives, and olive oil. A lot of
shipping. It's got a great harbor. In
fact, if you look at a map,
that's where Patmos is. That's where the
John is writing this.
We were at Ephesus last time,
and that uh had a harbor that was
getting uh filled with erosion because
the Romans took down all the trees, and
that caused erosion. They eventually
lost the harbor. But Smyrna is about 42
mi to the north. It has an excellent,
almost double harbor, and as such, it is
on a it becomes a major trading port
that connects uh Greece and the rest of
it to to the
to the east. And uh
if you look at a regular contemporary
map, um you can see Izmir there,
uh just north of Ephesus. And you get it
it's roughly makes it If you you can
almost see a triangle between Athens,
Izmir, and Patmos to get a rough feeling
for the geography there.
Very very key location.
In fact, it's always been. It's right at
the entrance of a very fertile valley,
and a very well-sheltered gulf, very
sheltered harbor.
So, it was very its strategic placement
caused it to rival other cities, Sardis
and others,
as the as the connection between Asia
and Europe.
And so, it's very prosperous from the
beginning. Strabo
described it as the most beautiful city
in the world.
And even today, the bustling Izmir has
been termed the Paris of the Levant.
And so um
It was devastated many years ago. It uh
it had a history about 2,500 years
before it was devastated by uh
the Lydians and so forth. But anyway,
you get to about the 4th century,
Alexander the Great orders one of his
generals, Lysimachus,
to build a strong, well-planned city,
the most beautiful city um in that
region. And it became known as the
flower of Ionia. And so it it was
singled out for excellence very early.
And it it prospered in addition to that
patronage from Alexander, it also became
one of the greatest cities of the known
world.
When you get to about 27 BC,
it comes under the control of the Romans
cuz it it was a very faithful ally to
Rome in the Syrian and Mithridatic Wars.
And so um
they they they played the chips right
and they were on the winning side.
So they enjoyed great material
prosperity for the next several
centuries.
Um during the reign of Tiberius, there
was a contest and they wanted to be the
the uh
make one of the first major um
um
uh statues for Tiberius. And but it also
has been
hit pretty hard by earthquakes
back then in the reign of Tiberius
between 178 and 180, it practically was
reduced to
to ruins
but rebuilt.
By the time you get to Marcus Aurelius,
uh
it was he restored it. In fact, parts of
his agora are still standing there. You
can when you visit, you can see them
there.
And about 370, another earthquake
demolished the city, but again, they
always rebuild. It's it's so prosperous
and it's such a critical
location that the
there's a lot of pressure to always you
know rebuild. But it obviously has been
a major pagan center.
At the foot of the mountain, there was a
huge temple for Zeus,
which is considered in in that pantheon
the father of the gods and so forth. But
also along the Golden Street as it's
called, from the port all the way up to
that mountain, there's just a a a a row
of shrines. Apollo to Apollo the sun
god, to Aphrodite, the goddess of love
and so forth. Aesculapius, the god of
medicine. We're going to talk more about
him next time because he's very
prominent in Pergamus. We'll talk about
some of the interesting things that lie
behind that whole tale.
Cybele is the primary goddess for the
for the for Smyrna.
At the agora itself, that's the
commercial political center, there were
statues of Poseidon the sea god and
Demeter the the goddess of corn. But in
any case, the primary
deity they worshipped was Cybele.
And
uh
I won't get into a lot of this except
her worship was very wild and
unrestrained.
She was considered the giver of wealth
and she's always in
depicted enthroned with a very unusual
crown, a crown of battlements and
towers.
And I mention this primarily because
there are some speculation by some
scholars
that in Daniel chapter 11, it there may
be an allusion to this because of
speaking of as the goddess of fortress.
In your King James, it says the god of
forces, but in the the rendering is it's
actually female. The goddess of
fortresses is alluded there and some
people associated with this particular
idol. But more to the point of our
interest,
uh Smyrna was also one of the early
places to sponsor Caesar worship.
It readily accepted Caesar worship. And
in in 196 BC, so this is a couple of
centuries before the period that we're
going to be watching in John's period,
the Smyrnaeans were erected a temple to
Dea Roma, the goddess of Rome.
And and and because of that, they won
the contest so to speak to build this
um
temple to Tiberius in 26 AD. You realize
that the the the
the emperor
it became a
uh
went from republic to an empire
in about 30. The worship of the emperor
was compulsory.
Now for most people, this was a token
gesture.
Each year, a Roman citizen had to burn a
pinch of incense on the altar and
acknowledge publicly that Caesar was
supreme lord.
Now this was simply an action they took
to be primarily as primarily a political
one.
Cuz every individual in the empire could
worship whatever gods they wanted to cuz
they had all kinds of tribes and
cultures that they'd conquered.
But what they wanted to do is get
everyone to acknowledge that Caesar's
number one. That was their way of what
they really that was their way of having
them express a commitment to Caesar
above all others.
And so
it was just a way of unifying the and
integrating the many elements of the
empire.
But
and and and if you did that, you you go
up there and you put a pinch of whatever
it is into the fire, you received a
formal document that you had done so
each year.
And that was a very important
certificate politically.
Now this was unfortunately a very vital
test for Christian.
Because and there were many Christians
that went ahead and did that just to
avoid trouble.
But Christians who were serious about
Jesus Christ had a problem.
They refused to go and put this pinch of
incense in the fire
and that caused them to be burned at the
stake in effect willingly.
Cuz all they had to do to avoid being
burned at the stake is put a pinch of
stuff in the fire.
But not in good conscience cuz if Jesus
Christ is lord, Caesar isn't. And so
those that refused were made an example
of either by being burned at the stake
or fed to the lions or whatever.
So anyway, let's take a look at the
letter Jesus writes to the church of
Smyrna. Under the angel of the church of
Smyrna, write, "These things saith the
first and the last, which was dead and
is alive." Now this is the title of that
Jesus chose.
Now interesting title.
First and the last, he which was dead
and is alive. These are the elements of
the identity of Christ to this church.
And it's interesting, you're going to
see that concept of death
all through this because they were
facing martyrdom every day.
We last time we when we looked through
chapter one, we noted that this
expression first and the last occurs how
many times in the Bible?
Seven, good guess.
And uh
and it's a but it's very revealing is in
two of the places, he not only says he's
the first and the last, but he was dead
and is alive.
And that's a that's a that's a blow to
the Jehovah's Witnesses cuz they love to
talk about Jehovah God and so forth and
you can get them to acknowledge in each
of these references that the first and
the last is of course what they call
Jehovah God.
But Revelation 1:17 and Revelation 2:18
has got an embarrassing phrase tucked in
there. "I'm the first and the last who
was dead and am alive." That's a little
hard to deny that that speaking is very
specifically of none other than Jesus
Christ.
But um
then he gets to the report card. "I know
thy works and tribulation and poverty,
but thou art rich. And I know the
blasphemy of them that say they are Jews
and are not, but are of the synagogue of
Satan." Ooh.
Now this is the commendation. This is
the good news, Smyrnaeans.
Jesus says, "I know thy works." We need
to you notice that almost every letter
says opens that way. The commendation
is, "I know thy works." Jesus knows what
you've accomplished. He knows what
what really motivated it, whether it was
public
approbation or whether it was really for
him. But in any case, "I know thy works
and their trib- and your tribulation
and your poverty."
Now by the way, this term tribulation,
don't confuse tribulation
with the Great Tribulation. Tribulation
here is used in the sense of
persecution.
We're going to be dealing with the great
a specific period of tribulation that
Jesus himself labels as the Great
Tribulation.
But this is speaking in effective of
just persecution. And poverty,
but then he inserts a little editorial
comment, "But thou art rich." They
thought they were poorer, but Jesus is
telling them, "Hey, you're better off
than you think you are."
"And I know the blasphemy of them which
say they are Jews and are not, but are
of the synagogue of Satan." Let's talk
just a little bit about tribulation.
There's several different words. The
word that's used here is thlipsis, which
is a pressing together,
crushing under pressure.
It's a metaphor for oppression,
affliction, tribulation, distress, or
straits.
Um anyone here not in tribulation?
Okay.
That was a trap. You'll see why in a
little bit. But I want to emphasize
right up early, we're not talking about
the Great Tribulation. That's going to
become clear as we go downstream.
We every one of us are going to have
tribulation, trouble, persecution. Why?
Because
Jesus promises it in John 16:33, 2
Timothy 3:12, and elsewhere.
He also speaks of our poverty.
We're poverty but rich according to his
to that. This is going to be in
contrast, vivid contrast, to the church
at Laodicea at the end,
which thinks they're rich but are
actually poor.
The church of Smyrna thought they were
poor but were much richer than they
thought. The church at Laodicea,
with its fancy cathedrals or whatever,
thinks they're rich
but are actually poor. And we're going
to we'll indulge in that contrast later
as we go.
There are two words for poverty in the
Greek.
Penia, which means having nothing that's
superfluous. I'm having nothing
superfluous. That's you know, in other
words, you got your minimum necessities.
And
ptocheia, which is
the one that word that's used here. It's
a state of one that has nothing at all.
It implies absolute beggary.
We have to beg for everything. You've
got zippo, nothing.
Less than nothing. You've got zero with
the rim rubbed out, okay?
Jesus says, "I know you're suffering."
That's how comforting that is.
Now what's interesting about their
poverty, it could have been ameliorated
with a pinch of incense in a fire.
Offered to Caesar, it would all go away.
No problem.
And there are some that would argue,
"Well, I'm I'm a Christian. I'm I've not
going to I'm just I'm not to avoid some
trouble.
And and uh
that was sort of the parallel the
parallel idea in the book of Hebrews.
Book of Hebrews is written to the Hebrew
Christian before the Well, the temple
was still standing.
And many of them were getting oppressed
by their Jewish friends because they
were Christians.
And some of them were considering the
idea of
going along with that
and getting saved at the last minute.
And that was what what the writer to
Hebrews points out that's not an option.
Then we get into the strange thing. Who
are these that say they are Jews and are
not?
What on earth could they
blaspheme that say they are Jews and are
not, but Jesus designates them as the
synagogue of Satan. Who is this
referring to?
Now, John, the writer, knows a lot about
the blasphemy of Jews. If you read John
chapter 8,
it's one of the most intense uh
exchanges between Christ and the
Pharisees.
They call him illegitimate.
They make a they they crashed cast an
aspersion to his birth that Mary was was
uh unmarried when he was, you know, uh
got pregnant.
And he says, "I'll tell you something
about your fathers.
You're You're the father of the devil."
And there's a there's a there's really
You when you read John 8, you want to
really understand the sparks that are
flying. But he understands the blasphemy
of Jews.
Some of the scholars view this um
allusion
to those that were legalistic, the
legalists, the Judaizers.
And this is the leaven that the Epistle
of the Galatians hits head on.
And uh you know, remember in Acts 15,
there was a demand that the Gentile
converts had to get circumcised.
Circumcision was a symbol of a of an
allegiance to the
covenant with Abraham.
Circumcision of the children was a
demonstration that the parents were
committed to the to the uh
uh
covenant of Abraham.
Now, today's world doesn't mean as much
cuz it's often done just for medical
reasons, but
classically, the circumcision was a
indication of the parents being
committed to Abraham. Well, the idea was
when a Gentile became a Christian, they
were obviously generally uncircumcised.
There was a There was a big issue, and
that's what led to the council in Acts
15.
In which it was the conclusion was that
the
uh they don't have to become Jews to
become Christians, okay?
And even Peter is rebuked by Paul in
these issues in Galatians 2 and 3 is
mentioned.
Where Paul rebukes Peter, and Peter
later admits he was wrong. He agrees in
a second letter.
About Paul although he sort of mumbles,
he says some things are hard to
understand.
But they had their issues on here.
And uh now, you need to understand if
you can understand the the history here,
the early persecution of Christians was
brought
about by the Jews, not the Romans.
That came later.
The early That's why um Luke,
as he drafts what I believe were the
trial documents for Paul's appeal to
Rome in both Luke 1 and Luke 2 in Book
of Acts, uh we find the that the one of
the emphasis that's always there is that
the the the troubles were always fanned
by the local Jewish community
that regarded the Christian sect as a
heretical sect, of course.
And so it that happened in Antioch in
Acts 13 and Iconium in Acts 14 and
Lystra Acts 14 and Thessalonica in Acts
17 and so forth. And just to mention a
few of them.
It's interesting that Polycarp,
John trained Polycarp, John's the one
that appointed uh Polycarp to be as a
bishop of Smyrna. And John is writing
the this letter
uh in about 95 AD under under the under
Domitian, right?
About 166 AD, so a good you know, a good
Polycarp by now is probably 100 years
old maybe over 100 years old.
And he is he refused to recant as he was
asked to.
And his quote when they put they're
tying him to the stake to burn him at
the stake, he said,
"86 years have I served him, Jesus
Christ.
And he never did me wrong. How can I now
blaspheme my king who's loved me so?
Bring on the flames."
So
So this old man was burned at the stake
on a Sabbath day by the Jews
as well as uh he had they encouraged the
Jews. They they were they they were, you
know, part of the cheering section here
as they burned Polycarp, the bishop of
Smyrna, at the stake.
You know, we speak of the remember the
uh
parables of the various soils and the
sowing of the tares.
There are four tares that were sown in
the early church. Legalism was one of
them. Legalism denies Christ's completed
work.
Gnosticism
is a denial of Christ's humanity.
And Caesar worship, the denial of
Christ's lordship.
These three uh tares or false doctrines
or were the
primary
adverse thrusts against the early
church.
Okay, let's get to the exhortation then.
Jesus goes on, "Fear none of those
things which thou shalt suffer.
Behold, the devil shall cast some of you
into prison and that you may be tried.
And you shall have tribulation 10 days.
Be thou faithful unto death, and I will
give thee a crown of life." Pretty
straightforward exhortation. Fear none
of those things.
It's interesting that one of the
condemnations we'll see in the lake of
fire,
but when it lists the various people
going to be thrown in the fire, the
first one listed are the fearful.
It's hard to realize that fearfulness is
the opposite of faith.
Fear none of these things which you thou
shalt suffer.
Behold, who's going to cast you into
prison?
The devil.
He's behind all of this.
That you may be tried. And you shall
have tribulation 10 days. Be thou
faithful unto death,
and I'll give thee the crown of life.
So they're fearful of death, Jesus will
give them the crown of life. Now, this
term 10 days has a couple of different
um
understandings by various authors.
The term 10 days is held by some
scholars as to be an a Hebrew idiom for
a short period of time.
We find it used that way in Genesis
24:55,
Job 19:3, Dan 1:12. It's used as a
figure of speech, if you will. And that
may be what it means, but I'm going to
show you something another view that
might be more
defendable.
By the way, the word crown here is a
stephanos, not a diadem. So the
stephanos here is the is is the kind of
thing you reward a victor, if you will.
And uh so
10 days.
It's interesting that there were 10 If
you study the persecutions by Rome, we
obviously had Nero was was one of the
bad guys. He he's the guy that had Paul
beheaded, and he's the one that
crucified Peter upside down.
Then we get to Domitian. That's the guy
that exiled John to Patmos, and that's
in other words, the contemporary guy
here. Um and uh he is followed by
Trajan. When Tra- when Domitian dies,
when John is released from Patmos to go
back to Ephesus,
where he retires in effect. But Trajan
is the guy that had Ignatius burned at
the stake.
And he's followed by Marcus Aurelius.
This brings you into the period that was
celebrated in the movie The Gladiator,
essentially, if you recall. Marcus
Aurelius is the guy that it was in his
reign that Polycarp gets burned at the
stake.
Then we have uh Septimus Severus, who is
the one that killed Irenaeus.
And then we get to Maximus, and he
killed Ursala and Hippolytus and Decius
and uh
Valerian and then Aurelian and then
finally Diocletian. Diocletian
is is the 10th of this gang. Notice
they're not necessarily contiguous.
These are the particular emperors under
which there was specific directed
persecution against the church.
And the worst of the bunch was
Diocletian, the last guy on the list.
And total of 250 years,
some scholars suspect the 10 days or 10
periods are here here
you know, profiled.
And so either way,
Roman persecution
uh occurs there were there was famine
and pestilence on Rome.
Diseases were brought back from the
Parthian wars. The They Those diseases
devastated Rome. And also, the Tiber
overflowed and put the grain storehouses
under water. All this led to famine and
persecution at various times. And what
they did, the convenient scapegoats,
was this illegal underground religious
movement called Christians. They were
convenient scapegoat.
And so it was convenient for the
politicians to somehow pin the blame for
these disasters on the Christians.
So Christianity became a crime.
5 million believers died for Christ
during this period, according to Fox's
Book of Martyrs.
Sound terrible?
The 20th century
murdered more Christians
than all the other centuries put
together.
So while this is bloody and while this
is dark,
doesn't compare to today.
To today.
Stalin himself murdered somewhere
between 10 and 20 million somewhere
between 30 and 40 million of his own
people, of which the estimates are 50%
of them were Christians.
And you could go on and on. But in
addition, of course, to the Jewish issue
that we all familiar with.
There are crowns promised. We saw the
crown of life promised in this one. I
thought it'd be a good time to point out
there's five that are specifically
promised in the scripture. Crown of life
for those who have suffered for his sake
in both here and in James um
uh James chapter 1. The crown of
righteousness is promised in 2 Timothy 4
for those who love his appearing.
Crown of glory for those who fed the
flock.
Crown incorruptible for those who press
on steadfastly. The crown of rejoicing
for those who win souls.
So, how many crowns are there going to
be given out?
Trick question.
Probably
many, many, many different kinds. If I
was going to pick a guess, I wouldn't
pick the five that are listed. I'd guess
seven, but I suspect there's more than
that, too.
These are just happen to be the ones
that are alluded to specifically in the
scripture.
Okay, we went through the exhortation.
And after the exhortation, we have this
phrase, "He that hath an ear, let him
hear what the Spirit says to the
churches." And then we have this promise
to the overcomer, "He that overcometh
shall not be hurt of the second death."
And um
the first First thing I want you to
notice is the structure. You notice that
the promise to the overcomer, just like
the previous letter, is like a P.S. It's
after the close of the letter. It's like
an appendage.
And uh it speaks of the second death.
Revelation will will talk about that in
chapter 20. We'll talk about it more
there. Also, Jude talks about being
twice dead. You see, if you know if
you're born once, you die twice.
If you're born twice, you die once.
That's the way to go. All right. Okay.
Well, I said there are different
applications. Let's talk How does it
apply that Find We've talked about how
it applies to to Smyrna. Well, how does
it apply to you and I?
Well, first of all, one way we need to
apply this, and I'll show you where
where I'm going to give you an addenda
at the end of this will may surprise
you, but don't confuse persecution with
the Great Tribulation.
And here's the key phrase. I didn't even
put it on the slide. I want you to
be paying attention here. Just because
we believe we can prove to you that the
church will not go through that period
of time called the Great Tribulation.
Where do we in America
get the arrogance
to presume that we'll be exempted
from what most of the body of Christ
in most of the world for most of the
last 1,900 years have had to endure?
It's called persecution.
Don't confuse A lot of people accuse
pre-trib people of being escapists. No,
hardly. Hardly.
No, we we we we we we're not that naive.
Most of the body, most of the world,
most 1,900 years had en- en- en- endure
persecution.
It is the opinion of many, and we join
with those, that ultimately the body of
Christ in America will have to go
underground again, like it had to in the
early years.
But let's get back to this non-Jews.
What on earth are the non-Jews? Is it
possible
Is it possible
that these who say they are Jews and are
not
are those who claim
that Israel forfeited her promises and
it now falls upon the church?
Is it possible that this allusion, this
very strange allusion that we find here
in this letter
may be reflexive on the people who hold
a view that's called replacement
theology?
That somehow, because Israel rejected
her Messiah, that all those promises
that God gave Israel now fall upon the
church. That's taught in most churches
in America, by the way.
But it's blasphemy. It makes God a liar.
Because
Paul, in his definitive statement of
Christian doctrine called the book of
Romans hammers away for three chapters,
chapters 9, 10, 11, that God is not
finished with Israel.
That That's a heresy. The origin of the
Israel and the church The origin and the
destiny for the church and Israel are
different. Different origins, different
destinies. We need to understand that.
And this replacement theology is the
root cause
damage anti-Semitism.
And it was the root cause of the
Holocaust in Europe.
The silent pulpits in Europe.
Okay, we've talked about the at
Monterey. What about to us personally?
What does this Smyrna letter have to do
with you and I?
Well, for one thing, 2 Timothy 3:12. We
mentioned it before, but let's look at
it. "Yea, and all that live godly in
Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution."
And I want to ask you to put up your
hands if you're not having persecution,
because that implies you're not living
godly in Christ.
So, people come up to me and say, "Do
you Chuck, I'm I I'm not under
persecution." I got good news for you.
Just wait.
Okay, personally. We are promised
persecution.
It raises a question, why do Christians
have trials?
This is a throwback to our review of the
book of Romans.
And uh you may recall I I picked I had
10
examples why Christians have trials. I
got most of these from Hal Lindsey's
book, Combat Faith. Hal's book on Ro- We
We put this in our Romans study.
To glorify God. We find that in Daniel 3
and elsewhere.
Another reason Christians have trials is
to disci- discipline for known sin. Not
necessarily, but sometimes. There's a
number of passages that support that.
Often we have trials to prevent us from
falling into sin. 1 Peter 4 deals with
that.
To keep us from pride. That was Paul
with his thorn in the flesh.
Many have suspected it was an eyesight
problem, but nevertheless, whatever it
was, it kept him from pride. "My grace
is sufficient for thee."
Uh God told him three times.
Sometimes we have trials to build our
faith. That's what Nan's book's all
about, The Faith in the Night Seasons.
To cause growth. That's the way we grow.
It's like sandpaper. Takes off the rough
rough edges sometimes.
To teach obedience and discipline.
To equip us to comfort others. One
reason you may be going through a dark
valley is to equip you to minister to
people in the future that are going to
be that in that kind of a valley.
To prove the reality of Christ in us. To
draw us into intimacy, as Wayne Edwen
expressed it.
Another one is kind of a surprise, to
tell for testimony to the angels.
Job 1:8 is an example of that. Ephesians
3:8 and following 1 Peter 1 deal with
that dimension. So, there are a lot of
reasons. Thus, in any case, that leads
us to James chapter 1. "My brethren,
count it all joy when you fall into
divers temptations, knowing this, that
the trying of your faith worketh
patience.
But let patience have her perfect work,
that you may be perfect, that is,
complete and entire, wanting nothing."
That's your key verse for the day,
personally.
But there's another dimension to this.
Jesus said asked He asked the Smyrnans
to demonstrate their ambassadorship
by not putting that pinch of incense in
the fire, not not acknowledging Caesar
as Lord.
See, I think the third commandment has
nothing to do with vocabulary. "Thou
shalt not take the name of the Lord thy
God in vain" is not about vocabulary.
It's about ambassadorship. If you're
going to be a
an ambassador of the king, you better
represent him accurately and fairly and
reliably.
And um
so, that's um
it's interesting
that uh
the name of God is always the name The
word name is always in the singular.
You may say God has many names. Yes, but
he has one name.
And you're representing God when you say
uh you take the name of the Lord thy
God, singular. Name singular.
Okay, that leaves prophetic. And in this
case, I just Ephesus, we went through
this before with Ephesus. We assume that
Ephesus was pretty much the apostolic
church. That makes Smyrna
the persecuted church.
And after the apostolic period, we go
through these centuries up until
Constantine, where they are up until the
the the you know, the the beginning of
the 4th century, where
we have
something even more disastrous than
persecution take place, and we'll take
that next time.
So, we've taken Ephesus, Smyrna,
Pergamum Ephesus and Smyrna. And Ephesus
was last time. We went through there,
and we of course noted that the promise
to the overcomer was
below the end of the letter. Smyrna had
uh
uh the same structure, but there's
something you may not have caught.
What were Christ's concerns in the
letter to Smyrna?
The answer is,
there wasn't any.
So, we notice by omission
that he didn't give them any negatives
on the report card. That's going to be
interesting to map as we go further in
our study.
But um
we're
I've left a little time at the end to
put an addenda.
This addenda, I think, is going to be
some essential background as we go
forward in the book of Revelation.
And I'd like to talk about one of the
pivotal prophecy passages in the New
Testament called the Olivet Discourse.
It's recorded in Matthew 24,
Mark 13, and Luke 21.
And when you look at all three of those
passages, they are so similar
that virtually
99 out of 100 Bible scholars will assume
that they're the same message recorded
in three slightly different ways by
three different hearers.
I'm going to suggest to you to put that
on the shelf for the moment, and let's
examine those, because I think in if you
are precise
in your understanding of the scripture,
if you really believe it's God-breathed,
if you really believe in what we call a
high view of inspiration, then if there
are differences, those differences may
prove to be very significant. So, let's
take a look at Matthew 24's rendering as
the base rendering, because he took
shorthand. We can assume it's a
competent record.
Let's go through it. And Jesus went out
and departed from the temple. His
disciples came to him for to show him
the buildings of the temple. And Jesus
said to them, "See not all these things.
Verily I say unto you, there shall not
left be left here one stone upon another
that shall not be thrown down." And as
he sat upon the Mount of Olives,
the disciples came unto him privately,
saying,
"Tell us, when shall these things be,
and what shall be the sign of thy coming
and the end of the age?" Now, we're not
going to be able to resolve all the
issues as we go. We're just going to hit
a few highlights. But first of all, they
came to him privately. And where? On the
Mount of Olives. You with me so far?
It may surprise you know that's not the
Luke account. We'll We'll come back to
that in a little bit.
Jesus answered said to them, "Take heed
that no man deceive you. For many shall
come in my name saying, 'I am Christ and
shall deceive many.'" Notice Christ's
injunction here.
"See that you be not deceived." How
do you not be How do you keep from being
deceived? There's that's a whole study
that we're going to undertake
separately, but it's it's it's our
challenge. Let's move on here. "And you
shall hear of wars and rumors of wars,
see that you be not troubled. For these
things must come to pass, but the end is
not yet."
"For nation shall rise against nation
kingdom against kingdom, and there shall
be famines and pestilences and
earthquakes in divers places."
"And all these are the beginning of
sorrows." Notice that verse that that
that verse
"Nation shall rise against nation
kingdom against kingdom, there shall be
famines, pestilences, earthquakes in
divers places."
You'll discover that those signs that
group of signs are distinctive.
They're in the Matthew account, they're
in the Luke account, and they also
constitute the first half, if you will,
of Revelation 6. So, we're going to talk
about those in depth when we get to
chapter 6, but just be aware of them as
sort of a marker at this point.
"Then shall they deliver you up to be
afflicted and kill you, and you shall be
hated of all nations for my name's sake.
And then shall many be offended and
shall betray one another and shall hate
one another, and many false prophets
shall arise and shall deceive many."
Notice that first word in verse 9 of
Matthew 24, "Then".
Matthew is talking about what happens
after the beginning of sorrows. What
happens after that group of signs? You
with me so far?
Okay.
"And because iniquity shall abound, the
love of many shall wax cold. And he that
shall endure to the end, the same shall
be saved. And this gospel of the kingdom
shall be preached in all the world for a
witness to all nations, and then shall
the end come."
And then he has this key verse.
"When you therefore shall see
the abomination of desolation spoken of
by Daniel the prophet standing in the
holy place, let whosoever read it let
him understand." The abomination of
desolation, this is a technical term
that Jesus could use because
two centuries earlier that had happened
and everybody knew it.
Uh Antiochus Epiphanes, he
he tried he made reading the Torah a
crime, he outlawed Judaism, he he
slaughtered a pig on the brazen altar in
Jerusalem. If you know how they feel
about pork and how they feel about that
altar, you can imagine how that went
over. He didn't stop there.
He then erected an idol to Zeus in the
Holy of Holies.
And that tore it.
That led to the Maccabean revolt where
though vastly outnumbered, they took on
the Greek empire.
And they s- uh uh
threw off the yoke of the Seleucid
empire. Took 3 years.
And when they had regained the control,
they destroyed all the implements of the
temple that had been defiled by the
Greeks.
And they made new ones, and they
rededicated the temple, and that's
honored to this very day by what they
call the Feast of Lights or Hanukkah.
And Jesus himself observed it in John
10:22.
So, we know what that is, but Jesus is
using it prophetically. So, that event
that happened two centuries earlier,
Jesus said is going to happen again. He
says, "When you therefore shall see this
happen."
"Spoken of by Daniel the prophet", Jesus
here just saved you hours of boring
library research.
Did Daniel write the Book of Daniel?
Absolutely. Was he a prophet?
Absolutely. How do I know? Jesus told me
so.
That ends the argument. I could give you
lots of other proofs, but that's that's
all you need.
And where is this abomination of
desolation? It has to stand in the holy
place. This is not just a desecration of
the temple by burning it down, but the
Romans did do that.
No, this is this was a specific
political move.
Now, how many of you read that with me
this evening on the screen? Can I see
your hands?
I did a dirty trick to you.
You see, that's not just for pastors or
theologians, that's for you. If you read
it, you have a command from Jesus Christ
to understand that.
Now, we're not going to cover it all
here, but you need to make a commitment
to yourself to really understand what
this verse cuz this is the pivotal verse
of prophecy. Jesus himself points them
to Daniel 9 as the key, and we'll we we
we're going to append
two two uh sessions
to our study.
Our study notes will have them in the
tapes that you that this will be on will
have them with you on Daniel's 70 weeks
cuz that's
essential piece of background.
Anyway, when you see that abomination of
desolation, Jesus says, "Then let them
which be in Judea flee into the
mountains. Let him which is on the house
top not come down to take anything out
of his house, neither let him which is
in the field return back to take his
clothes. But woe unto them that are with
child and that to them that give suck in
those days. And pray you that your
flight be not in winter neither on the
Sabbath day."
Interesting thing, Sabbath day. Who is
he talking to?
Jews. Matthew is writing to the Jews.
Let's remember that cuz Luke's writing
to the Gentiles.
It's going to be a little different.
You'll see.
"For then shall be great tribulation."
There's that term. He's Jesus is quoting
himself. He's quoting from Daniel 12.
With virtually the same words occurring.
"Then shall be great tribulation such as
not since the beginning of the world to
this time nor ever shall be." So, in
other words, this is a distinctive
period of time.
"And except those days should be
shortened, there should no flesh be
saved, but for the elect's sake those
days shall be shortened." Don't assume
the Don't assume that everybody that's
saved is in the elect.
That's another stumbling block for some.
"And then if any man should say unto
you, 'Lo, here is Christ or there',
believe it not. For there shall arise
false Christs and false prophets that
shall show great signs and wonders,
insomuch that if it were possible they
would have They shall deceive the very
elect. Behold, I have told you before."
"Wherefore if they say unto you,
'Behold, he's in the desert', go not
forth. 'Behold, he's in the secret
chambers', believe it not. For as the
lightning cometh out of the east and
shineth even unto the west, so shall the
coming of the Son of man be." He's
talking about the second coming, not the
rapture. Be careful.
"For wheresoever the carcass is, there
shall the eagles be gathered together."
What does that mean? I don't know.
Neither have I found any scholar that
has anything but guesses.
That they at least admit they're
guessing, they're not sure. They They
would suspect that that was a a
proverbial phrase at the time, but
there's just conjectures as to It has
several different conjectures, but I'll
leave that on the shelf for now.
"Immediately after the tribulation those
days shall the sun be darkened, and the
moon shall not give her light, the dark
stars shall fall from heaven, and the
powers of heaven shall be shaken." Has
that happened yet?
No. Absolutely not. There are people
prominent prominent Christian leaders
that claim this has already happened.
Not this, they say it's all just
allegory. That's just allegory.
And you reminds me of the old computer
phrase in the computer industry, we used
to say, "If you torture the data long
enough, it'll confess anything."
"Then shall appear the sign of the Son
of man in heaven, and then shall all the
tribes of the earth mourn for they shall
see the Son of man coming in the clouds
of heaven with power and great glory.
And he shall sell send his angels with a
great sound of a trumpet, and they shall
gather together his elect from the four
winds, from the one end of heaven to the
other. Now, learn the parable of the fig
tree."
"When his branch is yet tender and
putteth forth leaves, you know that
summer is nigh. So, likewise ye, when
you shall see these things
all these things, know that it is nigh
even at the doors. Verily I say unto
you, this generation shall not pass till
all these things be fulfilled."
And the libraries are full of books that
try to predict which generation are we
talking about, how long is it. I won't
go into that right now. We'll do that
another time. "Heaven and earth shall
pass away, but my words shall not pass
away. But of that day and hour knoweth
no man, no not the angels of heaven, not
my Father only."
We're going to go look at Luke in
detail, but we're not bothered with
Mark, but I want to take one verse from
Mark. And Mark's rendering is pretty
parallel. Mark's rendering is Peter's,
really. Mark was Peter's
his secretary.
But Mark's does include something that
Matthew doesn't. If you look at this
verse in Mark 13,
it says, "Heaven and earth shall pass
away, but my words shall not pass away.
But of that day and hour knoweth no man,
no not the angels of heaven, neither the
Son, but the Father only." This is a
remarkable verse in the scripture.
Because at least at that moment there
was something the Father knew the Son
did not.
And that's just a
a provocative insight.
Whatever he didn't know then, I'm sure
he knows now.
Okay.
Neither the Son. Okay.
And then Matthew goes on, "But the days
of Noah were, so shall the days of the
coming of the Son of man be. For as in
the days that were before the flood,
they were eating and drinking and
marrying and giving in marriage until
the day that Noah entered into the ark,
and knew not until the flood came and
took them all away. So shall the coming
of the Son of man be."
Again, we're talking about the second
coming, and again, we're talk You won't
understand this passage unless you've
done your homework in Genesis chapter 6
to understand what the days of Noah
were, which again is another study.
But anyway, Matthew goes on, "Then shall
be two in the field, one shall be taken
the other left. Two women shall be
grinding at the mill, one shall be taken
the other left." "Watch therefore for
you know not what hour your Lord doth
come. But know this,
that if the good man of the house had
known in what watch the thief would
come, he would have watched and would
not have suffered his house to be broken
up. Therefore, be ye also ready for in
such an hour as ye think not the Son of
man cometh."
"Who then is faithful and wise servant,
whom his lord hath made ruler over his
household to give him meat in his due
season? Behold, blessed is that servant
whom his lord, when he cometh, shall
find so doing. For verily I say unto
you, that he shall make him ruler over
all his goods. But
if that evil servant shall say in his
heart, 'The Lord delayeth his coming',
he shall begin to smite his fellow
servants and drink and eat with the
drunken, the lord of the of that servant
shall come in a day when he looketh not
for him and in an hour when he is not
aware of, and shall cut him asunder and
appoint him his portion with the
hypocrites. There shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth."
Well, I don't know. There's a lot we
could talk about this. All I'm going to
do make sure I'm I'm not going to
suggest the Lord is delaying at all. I
think he can come any moment, okay?
Let's take a quick look at Luke, and
most people crunch these two together to
assume they're the same presentation.
Let's challenge that assumption and see
what it reveals.
This is Luke now.
Luke 21.
"As some spake of the temple, how it was
adorned with goodly stones and gifts, he
said, 'For For these things As for these
things which you behold, the days will
come in the which there shall not be
left one stone upon another that shall
not be thrown down.'"
So, it's obviously very similar to the
Matthew thing, but it may not be exactly
the same. Let's see here.
"They ask him saying, 'Master, but when
shall these things be, and what sign
shall there be when these things shall
come to pass?'"
"And he said, 'Take heed that you be be
deceived.
For many shall come in my name, saying,
I am Christ
and the time draweth near: go ye not
therefore after them.
But when ye shall hear of wars and
commotions, be not terrified: for these
things must first come to pass, but the
end is not by and by.
Then said he unto them, Nation shall
rise against nation, and kingdom against
kingdom:
See, we got the same signs, those same
group of signs are being alluded here in
the Luke passage.
And great earthquakes shall be in divers
places, and famines, and pestilences,
and fearful sights, and great signs
shall be from heaven. Let's stop at
verse 11 for a minute.
Up till now, it's understandable why
most people jump to the conclusion that
these are just two recordings of the
same meeting, right?
Except for what you notice verse 12.
But before all these,
Whoops.
That's a strange phrase because Matthew
said, "After these things."
And what he talks about comes after
those signs. What Luke's going to deal
with here are things that happened
before those signs. You see the
difference?
That difference turns out to be
profoundly significant
because there they they're all kinds of
very serious Bible scholars who in
effect don't notice that before this.
Before all these, they shall lay their
hands on you, and persecute you, and
deliver you up to the synagogues, and in
in the prisons, being brought before
kings and rulers for my name's sake. And
it shall turn to you for a testimony.
Settle it therefore in your hearts, not
to meditate before what
what you shall answer.
For I will give you a mouth and a
wisdom, which all your adversaries shall
not be able to gainsay nor resist.
And ye shall be betrayed both by
parents, and by brethren, and kinsfolks,
and friends: and some of you shall shall
they cause to be put to death.
And ye shall be hated of all men for my
name's sake.
But there shall not a hair of your head
perish.
In a permanent sense.
That may be just a after life remark, or
it may mean something else. I'll come
back to you in a minute.
In your patience possess ye your souls.
And when ye shall see Jerusalem
compassed with armies,
then know that the desolation thereof is
nigh.
Then let them which be in Judaea flee
into the mountains; and let them which
are in the midst of it depart out, and
let not them that are in the countries
enter thereinto.
For these be the days of vengeance, that
all things which are written may be
fulfilled.
So, here Luke is telling them
before these signs, they're going to
have trouble, and when they hear
Jerusalem surrounded, get out of town
when you can.
Let me tell you something most people
don't know.
Titus Vespasian and his son Titus,
Vespasian and his son Titus were the
main Roman leaders
conquering the various cities in Israel
about this time
until Nero dies.
When Nero dies, there's turbulence in
Rome, and I won't go through all the
politics. They Galba took over, they
murdered him, and so forth.
Vespasian goes to Rome as become the
emperor of the entire empire,
leaving his son general, who then
follows through and sets up the siege
that causes Jerusalem to fall in 70 AD.
The point is, I've I've tracked this
down. I've
There are some scholars who point out
they believe that no Christians got
killed. Over a million people got killed
in that siege.
But no Christians. Why? Because Jesus
warned them, "When you see the city's
getting surrounded, get out of town."
And during this hesitation by the Romans
because of the turbulence associated
with Nero thing, they didn't close it
up.
And that gave those guys a chance to
split and get into the hills, wherever.
Follow me? And that's the the premise by
some scholars is the Christians, if they
followed Christ's advice, would not have
been in the fall of Jerusalem.
Interesting. Yeah, so
but let's go on here.
Woe unto them that are with child, and
to them that give suck in those days!
for there shall be great distress in the
land, and wrath upon this people. For
they shall fall by the edge of the
sword, and shall be led away captive
into all nations:
and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of
the Gentiles, until the times of the
Gentiles be fulfilled.
And there shall be signs in the sun, and
in the moon, this is now he's he's
looking ahead, of course, and in the
stars, and upon the earth distress of
nations, perplexity, the sea and waves
roaring; men's hearts failing them for
fear, and for looking after those things
which are coming upon the earth, for the
powers of heaven shall be shaken: and
then shall they see the Son of man
coming in a cloud with power and great
glory.
And when these things begin to come to
pass,
then look up, and lift up your heads for
your redemption draweth nigh. And he
spake to them in a parable; Behold the
fig tree, and all the trees. No, it's
not just a fig tree here, all trees.
When they now shoot forth, ye know ye
see and know of your own selves that
summer is now nigh at hand. So likewise
ye, when ye see these things come to
pass, know
ye that the kingdom of God is nigh at
hand. Verily I say unto you, this
generation shall not pass away, till all
be fulfilled. Heaven and earth shall
pass away: but my words shall not pass
away. Take heed to yourselves, lest at
any time your hearts be overcharged with
surfeiting, and drunkenness, and cares
of this life, so that they may come upon
you unawares. For as a snare shall it
come on all them that dwell on the face
of the whole earth.
Watch ye therefore, and pray always. Get
this verse. Interesting key verse. Watch
ye therefore, and pray always,
that ye may be accounted worthy to
escape all these things that shall come
to pass, and to stand before the Son of
man.
Wow.
That's interesting.
And in the in the daytime, now now you
thought this was Mount of Olives. No,
look at what Luke says. And in the
daytime he was teaching at the temple.
At night he went out, and abode in the
mount of that is called the Mount of
Olives. And all the people came early in
the morning to hear him in the temple.
Go to hear him.
Gee, I thought they were the same
briefing. Apparently they're similar,
but not exactly the same. Very similar,
but not the same.
Again, we have this strange group of
signs, but here's
um
it's this strange thing that Luke says,
"And but before all these, they shall
lay hands upon you, etc. etc."
Let's see if we can talk about
Luke says, "Before all these."
Matthew says, "Then shall they."
There's a big difference.
And the these verses bracket this group
of signs, false Christs, wars, famines,
earthquakes, right?
Then and before are very different.
Let's see if we can stand back from this
now, and draw some interesting
observations.
Luke and Matthew
are taking a slightly different
perspective. Luke's talking to Gentiles,
and Matthew the um
Jews.
Both of them
face this group of signs, wars, famines,
pestilences, earthquakes, and so forth.
You with me so far?
Okay.
Luke is focusing beforehand, Matthew
after.
There are two desolations of Jerusalem
in view.
Luke is focusing
on the the the fall of Jerusalem in 70
AD, which occurs prior to the wars
and and pestilences and earthquakes. You
with me? That's what he says.
Matthew is looking at a different
desolation cuz he includes a milestone
that Luke doesn't even mention.
After the wars, famines, pestilences,
earthquakes, Matthew says, "These are
the beginning of sorrows."
But when ye shall see, in other words,
after this,
the abomination of desolation, then let
them which be in Judaea flee, etc. You
with me? So, Matthew is focusing on a
second desolation
that is labeled by Jesus himself as the
great tribulation. Yes, it does involve
Jerusalem, that's the center of it.
And
the Jeremiah 30:7 calls it the time of
Jacob's trouble.
So, we have a big difference here.
Why am I getting into this here? Because
the seven letters, seven churches fit
after the fall of Jerusalem because that
happened in 70 AD, and John is writing
in 95 AD.
But clearly, when he's writing the wars
and rumors of wars,
what we call Revelation chapter 6 hasn't
happened yet.
You with me?
Okay, we're together.
Something very interesting.
Luke doesn't even mention
the great tribulation as such. He talks
about its climax. He obviously has a a
total view involved, but he makes he
makes no mention of the abomination of
desolation.
He makes no mention of fleeing
the fleeing to the mountains instruction
are for those
that are
threatening captivity by the nations and
so forth, right?
See the difference? Very similar, but
very different.
Matthew is writing to the Jews,
but the Jews aren't listening because
Jesus riding that donkey
proclaimed judicial blindness on in
Israel that that Paul talks about in
Romans chapter 11:25. Israel's blinded
until the fullness of the Gentiles be
come in.
So, they're going to be blinded anyway.
What Matthew By the time you get to the
abomination of desolation, they have
woken up and be watching.
The blindness is lifted. You follow me?
Cuz the Gentiles will have come in. It's
after the rapture.
The rapture occurs at between the seven
letters and those signs.
In a little I should have left a little
gap probably with the diagram there.
It's interesting that Luke,
while Matthew doesn't deal with the
the the uh the the Jews in the fall of
Jerusalem,
he's
uh
Luke does.
But Luke doesn't bother
because his readers, I think, are in the
mezzanine by the time you get to
the the last part of it. You with me?
That's conjecture. I leave it with you
to sort it out because it's going to
it's going to come up again and again.
So, that brings us to the close of our
study tonight.
For next time, I want you to Once again,
read chapters 2 and 3. They're not that
long. Read the whole chapters.
And do an outline of the letter to
Pergamus. It's going to be some full of
some surprises for you.
And its background, if you have time,
find out who Balaam was, and who Balak
was.
You'll find that in Numbers 22 through
about 25.
And we'll talk about it because Jesus
makes reference to them, and you won't
understand what Jesus is talking about
unless you have the background he
presumes you have.
So, that's our a challenge for next
time.
Let's stand for a closing word of
prayer.
Let's bow our hearts.
Oh Father, we just thank you
for your word.
We thank you that
became flesh and dwelt among us.
And we beheld his glory, the glory of
the only begotten of the Father. We
thank you, Father, for your word. We
thank you for this evening.
And Father, we would pray that through
your Holy Spirit that you would reignite
in each of us
a new passion
for our king.
Help us, Father, to repair the damage of
Ephesus.
That while we need to be sound on
doctrine, we have to be ever more sound
in our devotion.
Help us, Father, to
love you more. You've commanded us the
greatest commandment to love you above
all other things.
And Father, we also
thank you for the warnings
in the letter of Smyrna.
We do recognize that
on the horizon there may be dark clouds,
and yet those dark clouds
will provide strength
for the body.
And Father, we do pray
that you would
just re- reignite in each of us a hunger
and appetite for your word.
Help us to really
absorb and understand
these seven letters
that we might apply them as you would
have us apply them to ourselves.
We would, Father, that you just help us
to see the path before us.
What you would have us do.
How you would rearrange our priorities
that we might be much more effective
stewards
of the opportunities that lie ahead.
As we commit ourselves right now before
your throne without any reservation.
We commit ourselves into your hands.
In the name of Yeshua.
The first and the last, he was
dead and is alive now.
Who ever liveth to make intercession for
us. We just thank you.
In the name of Yeshua, our Lord and
Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.
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