The Book of Revelation - Session 6 of 24 - A Remastered Commentary by Chuck Missler
This session provides an in-depth expository commentary on the letter to the church at Thyatira (Revelation 2:18-29), framing its warning against the 'woman Jezebel' as a prophetic prediction of the rise of the Roman Catholic papacy, its medieval corruption, and its compromise with Babylonian paganism.
Understanding Thyatira exposes how ecclesiastical institutions can compromise with pagan traditions and temporal power, offering a vital case study in maintaining doctrinal purity versus institutional compromise.
Section summaries
Opening Prayer and Introduction to Revelation
optionalStandard opening prayer and introductory remarks summarizing general facts about the Book of Revelation.
Review of the Previous Seven Letters and Church History Layout
watchEstablishes the four levels of interpretation (local, admonitory, personal, prophetic) and defines terms like 'Nicolaitans' which are critical to Missler's interpretive model.
Scripture Reading and Geographic/Historical Background of Thyatira
watchExposes the links between the city of Thyatira and the Babylonian mystery religion of Semiramis.
Verse-by-Verse Commentary on Revelation 2:18-23
watchExamines Christ's titles, His commendation of works, and His severe warning regarding the woman Jezebel.
Typological Digression: Jezebel and Elijah on Mount Carmel
optionalA detailed retelling of the Old Testament narratives in 1 Kings 18 and 21. Excellent for typology but skippable if you are already highly familiar with the life of Elijah.
Verse-by-Verse Commentary on Revelation 2:24-29
watchExplains the 'depths of Satan', the promise to the overcomers, and the significance of the structural shift in the letter's layout.
Historical Overview of Papal Corruption and the Reformation
watchThe core polemical section of the lecture detailing the abuses of the medieval papacy, the Inquisition, and the rise of Martin Luther.
Prophetic Matrix Summary and Homework Assignment
watchSummarizes the overall prophetic layout of the seven letters, contrasting the first three with the final four, and gives homework for the next session on Sardis.
Key points
- The Babylonian Roots of Thyatira — Thyatira's historic name 'Semiramis' links it directly to the Babylonian mystery religion founded by Nimrod, Semiramis, and Tammuz. Missler explains that the pagan traditions, symbols, and holidays of this mystery cult eventually migrated to Rome, where they were integrated into the professing Christian church.
- Jezebel as an Ecclesiastical Type of the Medieval Church — Using the Old Testament narrative of Ahab and Jezebel (1 Kings 18-21), Missler establishes Jezebel as a type of a corrupt religious system that usurps authority, introduces pagan worship, persecutes the faithful, and orchestrates 'inquisitions' to seize property for the state/monarchy.
- The Shift in Prophetic Letter Architecture — The letter to Thyatira marks a structural shift in the seven letters. Unlike the first three letters (Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamos) where the promise to the 'overcomer' is placed as a postscript after the call to hear, the final four letters (starting with Thyatira) embed the promise within the body of the letter and include explicit references to Christ's Second Coming.
- A Polemic Against Papal History — Missler reviews centuries of papacy history, highlighting forging scandals like the Isidorian Decretals, the 'Rule of the Harlots' (904-963 AD), medieval corruption, and popes who authorized the brutal executions of dissenting groups like the Albigenses and Waldenses.
“One of the most profound experiences I had as a teenager when I heard a lecture say that the entire book of Revelation is in code, but every code is explained somewhere else in the Bible.” — Chuck Missler
“The problem here isn't Jezebel. The problem here is that the church is condoning Jezebel.” — Chuck Missler
AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.
Well, Father, we thank you for who you
are and we thank you for
this opportunity that you've placed
before us, for we know that there are no
accidents, no coincidences in your
kingdom that we're all here right now by
your divine appointment.
So, we do pray, Father, that your
purpose would be accomplished in each of
our lives
this evening.
We pray, Father, that you would reignite
in each of us
a new hunger, a new appetite, a new
awareness of your word.
And help us, Father,
to understand more clearly just what it
is you would have of us personally
in the days that remain as we commit
ourselves this evening
without any reservation into your hands
in the name of Yeshua, our Lord and
Savior, Jesus Christ.
Well, we are studying the book of
Revelation. We are in the sixth session
and we'll be exploring specifically
the last part of chapter 2, which has a
letter to the church at Thyatira.
But we have but just by way of review
and warm up, we're talking about the the
Revelation. Notice that's singular. The
word means the unveiling. The it's the
consummation of all things. It's the
only book of the Bible that promises a
special blessing to the reader for its
particular um
reading or hearing. And
there are over 400 verses, 404 verses
that include over 800 allusions from the
Old Testament. And tonight's going to be
a good example of several of those.
And that's one reason it may sound
strange to us as we read the book, it
may sound strange to our ears because we
haven't done our homework in the Old
Testament in large measure.
And so that'll
it also represents the climax of God's
plan for man.
And man, you know who that is? That's
you and me.
Mr. and Mrs. Man, if you will.
It has a a climate it's going to lay out
for you and me personally the climax
that's ahead of us.
Now, to whom was the book given? Let's
keep this in front of us. The Revelation
of Jesus Christ
which God gave unto whom?
Unto him, Jesus Christ.
That shocks many people. Many people
will just slough over that first
sentence. It's profoundly significant.
And why did he give it to him? To show
unto his servants things which must
shortly or more perhaps more precisely
suddenly come to pass.
And he sent and signified it. He
rendered it into signs
by his angel unto his servant John, who
bare record of the word of God and the
testimony of Jesus Christ of all the
things that he saw. John actually saw
these things.
And but they are signs.
One of the most profound experiences I
had as a teenager when I heard a lecture
say that the entire book of Revelation
is in code, but every code is explained
somewhere else in the Bible. And one of
the reasons it's such a blessing
if you study it carefully, takes you
virtually into every other book in the
Bible. So, that's part of what we're
about.
And here's the promise. Verse 3 is the
promise that's echoed several times
throughout the book. Blessed is he that
readeth and he they that hear the words
of this prophecy.
The landscape is littered with so-called
experts and very prominent people in the
Christian field who say this isn't
prophecy, it's all been fulfilled.
And so it's making you know
I can I obviously take exception to
that. So, and keep those things which
are written therein for the time is at
hand.
And this book is one of the unique books
in the Bible that gives you an outline
of the book. By the time you get to the
close to the end of first chapter, there
is an outline. John has said write the
is told write the things which thou hast
seen, the things which are, and the
things which shall be meta tauta after
these things.
And the things which thou hast seen by
the time you get to here is the the
personal appearance of Jesus Christ, his
visit physical description that occupies
verse 12 through 18 in this chapter. So,
by the time you get here, those are the
things we had he had just seen. Write
the things which you have seen,
and the things which are, which will
turn out to be chapters 2 and 3, the
seven letters, seven churches. These are
seven letters written to seven real live
existing churches
in the province of Asia Minor, the Roman
province of Asia Minor, which we would
call Turkey. But these seven churches
what we're what we're going to focus on.
And then the things which shall be meta
tauta after these things. And chapter 4
verse 1 opens with that word meta tauta.
After these things. And then we have
chapters 4 and following which are yet
future.
Very interesting book in total, but the
area of the book that's most profoundly
significant to you and me
is chapters 2 and 3.
And that's why we're going to we're
going to spend a full session on each of
those seven churches.
And so this is this is the core of the
whole thing. We believe that the rest of
the book we will watch from the
mezzanine.
And I'll show you about why when we get
to chapter 4.
Then the the chapter 1 closes, the
mystery of the seven stars which thou
sawest my right hand, the seven golden
lampstands. The seven stars of the
angels of seven churches, seven
lampstands which thou sawest are the
seven churches.
Just as an example, the chapter closes
where Jesus himself explains a couple of
the signs that had been that emerged
earlier in the chapter. That's going to
be the pattern throughout the book. More
often than not, the book will explain
the signs you're going to watch.
Others it relies on you doing your
homework in the in the rest of the
Bible.
Now, seven churches. The great mystery
that you need to think about yourself is
why these seven churches. There were
over 100 churches in the New Testament
period.
Why these seven?
And uh
each letter has a strange phrase that is
sort of the closing
signature on the letter.
He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit says to the churches. That
occurs seven times here, of course, cuz
seven churches, but also occurs seven
times elsewhere in the New Testament.
So, I'll leave that with you to search
that out. It's kind of fun.
There are at least four levels
of application of these letters. First
of all, they were local local churches.
So, William Ramsay researched this they
much to his surprise he discovered that
these seven churches really had
relevance in term the letter had
relevance to them in that first century.
But there's more than that.
The Holy Spirit says he that hath an
ear, let him hear what the Spirit says
to the churches plural. Every letter
applies to every church.
We're going to be talking about
different churches, the the seven
letters,
but you need to recognize that every
church here described is also existent
in every church.
You may have two
you may have a teaspoon of Ephesus, a
tablespoon of Smyrna, and a whole that
you know other words, you have
if you took each church, you could take
a percentage of each one and add up to
100%. There's going to be some
percentage of every church in every
of the seven churches in each of your
churches. So, it's a it's a way of
profiling any church.
Now, obviously because it also says he
that hath an ear,
how many of you have earlobes? Can I see
a show of hands?
That letter is for you then. He that
hath an ear, let him hear what the
Spirit says to the churches. So, this
means there is a personal application.
No surprise. As we understand each
letter, we'll be able to It doesn't take
a lot of spiritual insight to begin to
apply it to ourselves.
Um
so that's uh
um
pretty straightforward.
One of the things we're going to
discover
is that each of the letters has a
specific theme.
It isn't as if all the churches were
guilty of the same mistakes. Each one
had a slightly different mistake or or a
need need of correction.
These are these are going to be seven
report cards.
Every report card has something good.
Here's what you've done well.
Here's what you need to work on.
And each one is different. Part of the
the mastery of this series is to
understand the theme that's operative in
each of the seven letters.
But then comes the surprise. Having said
all that, it's easy to visualize seven
letters, each one did some good things,
needed some correction, and we can apply
that to our churches, we can apply it to
ourselves personally. No problem. Here's
the surprise that may shock you.
And it's also an area that not all
scholars agree. You draw your own
conclusions.
But turns out
that these seven letters lay out a
history
of the church in advance.
Now, you say Chuck, that's pretty wild.
Yes, it is.
Is that true? You decide yourself.
We're going to look at what the letters
say
and we'll take a look at history. And I
I'm going to predict you'll be
astonished at how they fit. In fact, if
they were in any other order, this would
not be true.
So, I believe that order is deliberate
and is instructive.
There are seven elements to each letter.
First of all, the name of the church
will turn out to be significant. The
title that Jesus uses of himself to open
the letter
is selected from chapter 1. There's
seven different titles, but he picks a
different one for each church.
The title that Jesus takes of himself,
the emphasis in other words, is a clue
that'll help you understand what is the
issue with that particular letter.
So, it's it's this is going to be like a
little treasure hunt here.
Then there's a commendation. Here's the
good stuff. Here's what you've done
well. Well done. Here, here, here.
Here's my concern, he'll Jesus will say,
"Here are the things that
Jesus is not so pleased about."
Then there's of course from all of that
an exhortation, "Do this and do this and
do this."
Then there's a promise to the overcomer.
The letter includes a special promise to
the person to the one that's an
overcomer. We'll talk about what an
overcomer is in a minute.
And then we have this closing phrase.
"He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit saith to the churches." You
need to recognize there are these seven
elements because in a couple of places
one or two of these elements will be
missing.
And you wouldn't notice it unless you're
sensitive to the structure of each
letter. And that's also a clue as to
what's really going on here.
So, the first letter we was Ephesus,
which means the desired one or darling.
And we
talked we understood that they were very
strict on doctrine. They good That was
the good news, but they had lost their
first love.
God wants Jesus Lord our Lord Jesus
Christ wants devotion, not just
doctrine.
But we noticed as we went through that
something very strange
that the promise to the overcomer in the
book of to to the letter
Ephesus was appended after the closing
phrase. It was like a PS on it, if you
will.
When we get to Smyrna, Smyrna means
myrrh or speaks of death, and of course
it turns out to be the persecuted
church.
And again it has that same structure
that the promise to the overcomer is
outside the body of the letter for some
strange reason.
But if we look carefully, we notice
there were no concerns.
Jesus simply encouraged them because
they were a church under great
persecution. He just says, "Hang in
there, guys." He had no particular
concerns.
Pergamos, which means
which refers to a perverted marriage,
um
uh we we talked about last time. I'll
review a little bit of that as we get
into the tonight's thing. But there
again we discover that the promise to
the overcomer is appended outside the
body of the letter. Why am I making such
a thing of that? Cuz you're going to
discover in the letter tonight
and all the ones following, it doesn't
do it that way.
What does that mean? Don't know yet.
We'll just hold it in reserve before as
we go.
The prophetic profile we said, "Here are
the seven churches, Ephesus, Smyrna,
Pergamos, Thyatira, and so on."
And Ephesus was descriptive of the
apostolic church that seemed to fit.
Smyrna, clearly the persecuted church.
That one was pretty easy. Pergamos was
where the church married the world. What
Satan could not accomplish by
persecuting the church, he accomplished
by having the church
marry the world under under
Constantine and all of that.
So,
and we noticed there were tares sown in
the early church. We talked about
legalism, the denial of God's complete
Christ's completed work, Gnosticism, the
denial of Christ's humanity, and Caesar
worship, the denial of Christ's
lordship. These are the main uh
frailties, if you will, in that early
century in those early centuries.
There's also one that was mentioned in
the letter last time, but in reviewing
my notes I realized I may not have
emphasized it, and that's the
Nicolaitans.
And what were they? The Nicolaitans,
some are believe it was a first-century
sect that abused the their liberty in
Christ. There are scholars that
conjecture that was the That's what it
was.
More than that, most scholars recognize
that it's an untranslated word. Nikeo
means to conquer or rule, and laos means
the the people, the laity. And the whole
idea of Nicolaitans was to rule over the
people.
And
that's what Christ hated. He told the in
the church of Ephesus, "The good news is
you also hate the the deeds of the
Nicolaitans, which I also hate."
And we we suspect that in either case
the Nicolaitans refers to
the whole idea of using a clerical
structure to rule over the people.
And to to seek apostolic authority for
their opinions of the early times. And
so, Jesus told us how to organize a
church. He had the leader wash the feet.
That's his concept of an org chart is in
John 13.
Now, the deeds that were hated by the
Ephesus and they get commended for that
became the doctrine
in Pergamos as part of that whole
episode. So,
we see a progression
progressive there. As you talk to
application of all churches, Ephesus
obviously was devotion, not just
doctrine. Smyrna was just hang in there,
endure endure the persecution.
Pergamos, stand fast against the world
is what they should have been rather
than not be part of the world, but to be
a witness to the world.
And personal application, Ephesus again
is a question of neglected priorities
personally. Where are our priorities? Do
Are we so busi- busy on the business of
the king that we have no time for the
king?
Jesus would have devotion, not just
doctrine.
And Smyrna, trying to apply that
personally, just be sensitive to the the
satanic opposition.
You don't have to be in a persecuted
church to be persecuted.
And uh
and Pergamos, of course, was the whole
issue of spiritual compromise with the
world again. So, and the overcomers
probably had various special promises,
promise to the overcomer, and we'll talk
about that as we go. Well, that's by way
of review. Let's just jump into
tonight's letter. And what I'm going to
do,
I'm going to we'll put the letter on the
screen before we go through. But before
we do anything else, let's get your
Bible, and let's read chapter Revelation
chapter 2.
Like all textbooks, the answers are in
the back.
That's what Revelation is all about.
And uh
So, let's pick it up about verse
chapter
2 verse 18.
"And to the angel of the church at
Thyatira
write,
'These These things saith the Son of
God, who hath his eyes like a flame of
fire and his feet like fine brass.
I know thy works and charity and service
and faith and thy patience
and thy works and the last to be more
than the first.
Notwithstanding,
I have a few things against thee,
because thou sufferest that woman
Jezebel,
which calleth herself a prophetess,
to teach
and to seduce my servants to commit
fornication and to eat things sacrificed
unto idols.
I gave her space to repent of her
fornication, she repented not. Behold, I
will cast her into a bed and them that
commit adultery with her into great
tribulation,
except they repent of their deeds.
And I will kill her children with death,
and all the churches shall know that I
am he which searcheth and reigneth the
reins and hearts. And I will give unto
every one of you according to your
works.
But unto you I say and unto the rest in
Thyatira, as many as have not this
doctrine
and which have not known the depths of
Satan, as they speak,
I will put upon you no other burden.
But that which you have already hold
fast till I come.
And he that overcometh and keepeth my
words unto the end,
to him will I give power over the
nations, and he shall rule them with a
rod of
rod of iron. As vessels of a potter
shall they be broken into sherds, even
as I received of my Father.
And I will give him the morning star.
He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit saith unto the churches.'"
So, that's the It's the longest of the
letters. Brief as it is, it's still the
longest of the bunch.
And let's uh
take a look at the geography.
We're dealing, of course, with the
the proconsular
uh province of Asia,
which is a Roman province, not Asia like
we use the term Far East. We're talking
what you and I would consider as part of
Turkey.
And I've got on the map here, you see
where I put Athens and Istanbul on there
for just reference.
The little red circle is Patmos. That's
where all this is taking place with
John.
Ephesus, Smyrna, and Pergamos we looked
at before. Thyatira is a small
town today, about
30,000 people live there. And
it occupied
it occupies the site that Thyatira
originally did back in the New Testament
times. In the New Testament times it was
at the juncture of three roads that led
to Pergamos, Sardis, and Smyrna.
And so, it was a frontier fortress to
guard those very critical roads.
So,
originally it was a Lydian town
bearing the name of Pelopia,
then Semiramis, and then Euippia.
And here's the clue. The word Thyatira
really come is a word that means
daughter.
But what's really a clue to its
spiritual significance is to recognize
that its previous name one of its
previous names was Semiramis. And who
was Semiramis? Anyone?
The consort of Nimrod,
the mother of the posthumous son of
Tammuz that becomes the core trio,
Nimrod, Semiramis, and Tammuz, in the
Babylonian mysteries.
All paganism, all idol worship has its
roots in the Babylonian legends having
to do with Nimrod, Semiramis, and
Tammuz.
So, the fact that this town is a town
that once held the name of Semiramis, I
think is a very important clue.
In any case, it was taken by the
Persians and then, of course, the Greeks
under Alexander. It only passed to the
possession of one of his key generals,
Lysimachus, and
the but in 301 BC, Lysimachus defeated
by his rival, Seleucus, another one of
when you know, when Alexander died, four
key generals divided up the empire. And
so, it became really part of Syria.
And uh
uh
Seleucus Nicator
named it Thyatira when he was informed
that a daughter had been born to him.
So, the word Thyatira suggests daughter,
but I think the more important name is
the previous name that it had earlier,
Semiramis. Let's keep that in mind as we
go forward.
See, the Babylonian legend, of course,
is that Tammuz was born to Nimrod and
Semiramis. He's associated with the sun
god. He was considered to die at the
winter solstice. That's when the you
know, the days get shorter and shorter
and shorter. And then he's considered as
resurrected as the days get longer. And
that was celebrated by
burning a Yule log in the fireplace and
then replacing it with a trimmed tree
the following morning.
If you want to find the biblical
references that, check out Jeremiah 10.
It's astonishing to discover, if you
haven't yet, how many of our so-called
Christmas traditions all lead back to
Babylon. The mistletoe, the wassail
bowl,
uh and so forth.
But let's move on. This is somewhat by
way of review.
Nimrod founded the original Babylonian
religion.
And uh
Semiramis and Tammuz of Babylon
in other languages. On Phoenicians they
were Astarte and Tammuz and
Isis and Horus of Egypt, Aphrodite and
Eros of Greece or Venus and Cupid of
Rome. All this is mapped out in the
classical study of by Alexander Hislop
called The Two Babylons or a more
contemporary version of this whole
scholarship is by Dave Hunt, A Woman
Rides the Beast. And we'll talk a lot
about that before our study in
Revelation is over.
But most people don't realize that the
priesthood that was founded in Babylon
moved. When Cyrus conquered Babylon, the
Babylonian priesthood and the initiates
fled and set up shop in Pergamos. We
talked about this last time.
So the centroid of power ultimately goes
from Pergamos to Rome
where it gets a Latin labels and forms
the foundation of pagan Rome. We're
going to talk a lot about that as we
unfold this The The background of
Pergamos and Thyatira have much in
common. So this this review is a double
review in a sense.
And when Cyrus conquered Babylon, of
course, they founded the center of
Pergamos and the king there took the
title Pontifex Maximus, which was a
religious title. He was the high priest
of the Babylonian
pagan system.
And uh
And as it goes, Rome, of course, all the
Caesars kept that title up until 378 AD.
That's when the bishop of Rome uh
absorbed that title for himself and and
endured from that point on as in the
bishops. We'll come back to that.
Constantine
um has a strange experience which causes
him to uh when he takes over the empire
to uh make
um
Christianity no longer illegal.
In 325, the Edict of Toleration.
He favored Christians at court. He
exempted Christian ministers from taxes.
He issued a general exhortation to all
his subjects to become Christians. He
did not make it a state religion. That
comes two
leaders later.
But he does He's so fed up with the
paganism of Rome.
He moves the world empire to
Constantinople.
And uh we'll talk about the implications
of that as we go here.
But Constantine is a much maligned guy.
Many people, especially Christians, are
critical of him. He did a He did a lot
of interesting things. He
He ceased the gladiator thing. He
reduced the killing of unwelcome
children. He abolished It's amazing, by
the way, how many ancient cultures, the
Persians, the Romans, others, regarded
abortion as a crime.
Because population was a force of
strength and to abort a child was to
injure the state. That was their view.
Interesting.
He about He Constantine abolished
crucifixion as a form of execution. He
repealed the the persecution edicts of
his predecessor Diocletian.
He assumed the headship of the church.
Advanced Christians to high offices. He
declared Sunday as a day of worship.
That's widely misunderstood. He had
three different groups of sun worshipers
in his empire plus the Christians that
are now legal.
And so he declared a day that would
presume in his mind, at least, that
would unite them all. It It was his
gesture to try to unite the empire.
It was also a big deal for the slaves
because he forbid work on Sunday. They
never had a day off. This created a day
off for the
for over 50% of the population, which
were slaves.
And uh so and he reduced slavery and
relocated the capital, as I say.
So the marriage is now consummated
between the church and the world.
Julian the Apostate comes along, Julian
calendar, that preceded the Gregorian
one. Um he sought to restore paganism,
but he only lasted a couple of years.
Jovian reestablished the Christian
religion, but it was Theodosius that
really established Christianity as the
state religion. That was the biggest
disaster of all because now you have
unregenerate people entering the church
and running the churches.
So ambition, um
heathenism, and so forth, all emerge in
the in this world
church situation. That starts
bad news. Big bad news.
Now getting back to Thyatira, Thyatira
is turns out to be a very important
center for the powerful trade guilds.
That trade guilds were a big deal in
those days.
You had If you were had a skill of some
kind, in order to have a job, you'd have
to be a member of that union. But that
union was only compulsory. They each
Each union was under the patronage of
one some pagan deity. And all their
meetings and procedures were all tangled
up in the worship of that deity. So it
was a real a real source of conflict for
a practitioner that was Christian
because he couldn't get a job unless he
was in a trade guild, but in the trade
guild it raised all kinds of issues.
That's the problem.
Thyatira, by the way, was also known for
its dyes.
Particularly purple, but actually it may
turn about But you always hear purple,
it may have been scarlet, but I don't
split hairs here here here.
Uh it was Apparently they had a madder
root that is very prolific in that area.
When you get to Acts 16, you encounter
Lydia, who is a sales rep living in
Philippi, but for for Thyatira.
Just a, you know, she was a she was a
sales rep. Okay.
So we have heathenism now
is is Christianized. The pagan temples
now become Christian churches. The
heathen festivals get relabeled into
Christian ones. That's how the
Saturnalia and so forth becomes
Christmas and all that stuff.
Pagan priests slip into offices
Christian priests.
The change was mostly nomenclature.
See what the persecution didn't
accomplish
with Smyrna did The The marriage to
Pergamos did.
And we're going to see the fruits of
that as we get into Thyatira. Let's take
a look at the letter now in more detail.
Unto the angel of the church in Thyatira
write. And again
starting with the name, Semiramis is the
key name here in my mind because it ties
you to the Babylonian culture. You see
why we're going to get into that here in
a minute.
Thus saith the Son of God.
This is the only mention
of the Son of God, that title, in the
book of Revelation.
Jesus picks it here.
And I'm going to suggest the possibility
is that it's in apposition
to the theme of the letter, which is
going to be the queen of heaven.
With Jezebel and all of that. Thus these
things saith the Son of God
who hath his eyes like a flame of fire
and his feet are like fine brass. Now
when you see the word like, that tells
you it's a simile.
Doesn't say his feet were brass.
If he said that, it would be a maybe
metaphor, but here it says it's like, so
you know it's not bra It's It's a
metaphor. It's a simile.
His eyes were like a flame of fire.
These are the eyes of inspection. These
are the eyes of judgment. His feet like
fine brass. Feet
deal with the walk.
And brass speaks of judgment. Brass was
the material that could sustain fire.
That's why brass is used Levitically to
suggest to judgment. That's why we had a
serpent of brass that we talked about
previous sessions and so forth.
So the title of Christ is the Son of
God. Very strange strange illuminating
label that puts us right away. He's And
he apparently is coming in the form of
judgment here. He's He's concerned.
But he opens up, as he does all his
letters, with a commendation.
I know thy works. That's a key phrase.
Jesus knows what you're doing.
He knows the fruits of what you're
doing. I know thy works. Nothing will be
a surprise to him. I know thy works. And
charity and service and faith and
patience and thy works
and the last to be more than the first.
He gives them a good compliment. He's
fully informed on them and they their
walk is good and improving.
We're going to talk about a lot of
negative things here shortly. Let's not
lose sight of the fact that he opens up
with a commendation. Okay?
And it's not only his commendation, but
it's even that aspect of it is
improving. But there is a problem.
Here's his concern.
You get that horrible word
notwithstanding.
Your boss calls you into his office and
says, "Hey, you've really done a good
job. You've done this this this. I'm
quite impressed." And you feel pretty
good.
Then he says, "Notwithstanding
Mhm.
Sounds like a pink slip coming, doesn't
it?
Notwithstanding, I have a few things
against thee.
Because thou sufferest that That means
permits. Sufferest that woman Jezebel,
which calleth herself a prophetess.
Doesn't say she was. It says she called
herself one.
To teach and seduce my servants to
commit fornication, to eat things
sacrificed unto idols.
And I gave her space to repent of her
fornication, and she repented not.
Now the word fornication, obviously,
speaks of sexual immorality.
And that may be at the local level
exactly what was going on.
But that term is also used throughout
the scripture, Old and New Testament, to
refer to idol worship.
Having intimacy with a false god is
fornication
in God's eyes. He's a very jealous God.
So we've got to recognize that word
fornication doesn't exclude sexual
immorality, but the term goes far beyond
just that. Are we together?
Seduce my servants to commit fornication
and to eat things sacrificed unto idols.
I gave her space to repent of her
fornication, and she repented not. It's
in Now the the problem here isn't
Jezebel.
The problem here is that the church is
condoning Jezebel.
See, the problem in Sodom and Gomorrah
in Genesis 19 was not homosexuality.
The problem in Genesis 19 is that the
whole town
condoned homosexuality.
All the men of the of the town were at
that door.
It was the widespread condoning of it.
There's homosexuality
elements of it all the time. No, it's
when it's widespread and condoned
civically, that's the problem in Sodom
and Gomorrah.
And we're you dealing with a similar
thing here. The problem isn't Jezebel.
It's that they all embrace it. They They
don't do anything about it.
Jesus goes on and says, "Behold, I will
cast her into a bed and them that
committed adultery with her into great
tribulation, except they repent of their
deeds. Boy, this is quite a term. First
of all, this is the first phrase of this
this first use of this phrase in the
book of Revelation, the great
tribulation. And what it's saying is if
they don't change, they're going to go
into the great tribulation.
That also implies, by the way, if they
do change, they won't.
This is a heavy implications here.
The outcast them that committed adultery
with her into great tribulation, except
they repent of their deeds.
And uh we could uh
talk a lot about this, but perhaps let's
talk a little let's let's understand we
need to to understand this letter, we
need to really understand who is this
person Jezebel, what's she all about?
Well, she was the daughter of Ethbaal,
which was the king of Sidon,
the priest of Astarte, the and he was
the murderer of his predecessor Phaëles,
whom he killed to seize the throne. So,
that's she's she comes from a rough
family.
She married King Ahab, the king of the
northern house of Israel.
Married King Ahab to seal a profitable
trade alliance between Israel and
Phoenicia. King of Sidon and was part of
Phoenicia, so it was a it was a
commercial deal.
But as she marries Ahab, becomes the
queen, she sets out to exterminate the
prophets
of Yahweh
or Yahweh or Jehovah, however you want
to pronounce it.
And so she is bad news. If you In your
background here would be to read 1 Kings
18 through 21 to get the background.
We'll just highlight some of it here.
What she brought to the table was pagan
worship.
She's a worshiper of Baal and Astarte,
which all of which originated in
Babylon.
So, she, along with her husband, ushers
in the worst period of time in the Old
Testament. And that's saying something.
That's saying something.
She worshipped Ashtoreth, which is
another variation of Astarte.
Also associated with all this are the
what called the groves. When you read
about the groves in the Bible, you may
not understand
the Jews never had their holy places on
the top of a hill.
That was always the pagan locations.
And on the top of the hill were the
groves. You say, "What are the What are
the groves?" They're trees that were
carved to look like phallic symbols.
It was part of the pagan worship, the
fertility rites and all of that.
And uh all this this is all also called
the abomination of Sido- the Sidonians
and so forth. The whole concept of the
queen of heaven, incidentally, is a
Babylonian concept. And that lurks
behind many of these things, and I won't
spend a lot of time on that here.
But let's give you a You can I can't get
into Jezebel and Ahab without and deal
with this issue without using it as an
excuse to jump in to 1 Kings 18.
I don't know how Cecil B. DeMille
missed this chapter in the Bible.
He made so many movies
with Samson and Delilah and David and
Bathsheba and of course the 10
Commandments. Cecil B. DeMille had a had
a a thing for this. He missed the what's
got to be one of the most incredible
showdowns you've ever seen anywhere.
So, we're going to just go through it
quickly to get a flavor of this cuz it
talks about what Jezebel's really all
about. Came to pass when Ahab saw Elijah
that Ahab said unto him, "Art thou he
that troubleth Israel?" This is the
king's
Elijah says, "I have not troubled
Israel, but thou and thy father's house,
in that ye have forsaken the
commandments of the Lord and has
followed Baalim." Baalim Baalim here
being a plural of Baal,
the the the false gods.
"Now therefore, send and gather unto
me," Elijah says, "all Israel unto Mount
Carmel and the prophets of Baal 450 and
the prophets of the groves," there we
go, "400, which eat at Jezebel's table."
Everybody knows about the 450, they
overlook there's another 400 others.
You're talking 850 of these false
priests.
Elijah challenges the king, "Bring them
all up to Carmel, we're going to have a
showdown."
So, Ahab sent to all the children of
Israel and gathered the prophets
together at Mount Carmel. They came
there cuz the king told them to.
Elijah came in all the people and said,
"How He's gathering The priests are
there, but he gathers Israel around.
There's a show There's a
This is showtime.
Elijah came in all the people and said,
"How long will halt ye between two
opinions?
If the Lord be God, follow him.
But if Baal, then follow him."
Nobody said a word.
Then said Elijah unto the people, "I,
even I, only remain a prophet of the
Lord, but Baal's prophets are 450 men.
Let them therefore give us two bullocks.
And let them choose one bullock for
themselves and cut it in pieces, lay it
on wood, and put no fire under it.
And I will dress the other bullock and
lay it on wood and put no fire under it.
And call ye upon the name of your gods,
and I will call upon the name of the
Lord.
And the god that answers by fire, let
him be god."
All the people said, "Aye,
well spoken.
Cool deal. Let's get this resolved."
Elijah said unto the prophets of Baal,
"Choose you one bullock for yourselves
and dress it first, for ye are many.
And call on the name of your gods, but
put no fire under." And they took the
bullock which was given them, dressed
it, called it called on the name of Baal
from morning until noon, saying, "O
Baal, hear us."
But there was no voice,
nor any that answered. And they leaped
upon the altar which was made. And it
came to pass at noon. I love this part.
This is a key.
That Elijah mocked them and said, "Cry
aloud, for he is a god.
Either he is talking
or he's relieving himself."
That's what the word really means there.
"Or he's on journey or peradventure he
sleeps, must be awakened." Here's
You sort of visualize these two guys on
two hills. Elijah is just having a field
day, mocking them.
"A little louder, we can't hear you.
Maybe he's sleeping. Maybe he's on Maybe
he's going to the john. Something's
wrong."
And they cried aloud and cut themselves
what one of their ways of expressing
themselves was to was to slash and cut
and bleed.
They cried aloud and cut themselves
after their manner with knives and
lancets till the blood gushed out upon
them.
And it came to pass when midday was past
and they prophesied until the time of
the offering of the evening sacrifice
that there was neither voice nor any to
answer nor any that regarded.
Elijah said unto all the people, "Come
near to me."
And all the people came near to him.
And he repaired
There apparently was an altar that was
broken down, was destroyed earlier. So,
he repairs it. He takes his puts the
stones back up, repairs the altar that
was broken down. He took 12 stones
according to the number of the tribes of
the sons of Jacob, unto whom the Lord
word of the Lord came saying, "Israel
shall be thy name." Remember when it
when when Jacob was given the name
Israel. That's
And with the stones he built an altar in
the name of the Lord and he made a
trench about the altar as great as would
contain two measures of seed. Now,
here's something he just introduces. You
golfers will understand what he's doing,
it's called a handicap, okay?
He puts a trench about the altar.
Put the wood in order and cut the
bullock in pieces and laid him on the
wood, that is bullock, and said, "Fill
four barrels with water and pour it on
the burnt sacrifice and on the wood."
He's dousing it with water.
And he said, "Do it a second time." And
they did it a second time. He said, "Do
it a third time." And they did it a
third time.
And the water ran about the altar and he
filled the trench also with uh water.
And the water ran about the altar and he
filled the trench also with water. And
it came to pass
at the time of the offering of the
evening sacrifice, how appropriate, that
Elijah the prophet came near and said,
"Lord, God of Abraham,
I'm from Isaac and Israel.
Let it be known this day that thou art
God in Israel,
that I am thy servant and that I have
done all these things at thy word.
Hear me, O Lord, hear me, that this
people may know that thou art the Lord
God, that thou has turned their heart
back again."
And then the fire of the Lord fell
and consumed the burnt sacrifice and the
wood and the stones and the dust and
licked up the water that was in the
trench. Can you imagine that scene? Oh,
man.
When all the people saw it, they fell on
their faces. Boy, can you imagine?
They said, "The Lord, he is God. The
Lord, he is the God."
And Elijah said unto them, "Take the
prophets of Baal, let not one of them
escape."
And they took them and Elijah brought
them down to the brook Kishon. And what
he do?
He killed them. Didn't mess around.
1 Kings 18, there's more, but we're
we're going to just we're going to move
a couple chapters. There's another
incident
that is in the scripture and I believe
there's no incident in the scripture
that isn't there by design.
And I believe that the event that we're
going to look in 1 Kings 21
is perhaps the most revealing of all.
Let's take a look what happened in 1
Kings 21.
It came to pass after all these things,
several other things that happened
between 18 and chapter 18 and 21, but
anyways, it says, "That Naboth the
Jezreelite had a vineyard
which was in Jezreel, hard by the palace
of Ahab, the king of Samaria.
So, this little guy, Naboth, got a
vineyard. It happens to be convenient
for the king.
So, Ahab spake to Naboth saying, "Give
me thy vineyard that I may have it for a
garden of herbs, because it is near unto
my house. And I will give thee for it a
better vineyard than it, or if it seem
good to thee, I will give thee the worth
of it in money."
So, give him a trade or cash, he wants
the deal.
But then said Naboth, "The Lord forbid
it me that I should give the inheritance
of my fathers unto thee."
This whole concept of land The land was,
you know, allocated by tribe and and you
didn't you could lease it in terms of
letting somebody use it for a while, but
you didn't get rid of it.
No, he says, "I I I
He wouldn't do that."
So, Ahab is in a pout.
All right?
Verse 4, "Ahab came into his house heavy
and displeased because of the word which
Naboth the Jezreelite had spoken to him.
For it said, 'I will not give thee the
inheritance of my fathers.' And he laid
him down upon his bed and he turned away
his face and would eat no bread."
Just like a spoiled brat, right?
Uh, Jezebel.
But Jezebel's wife came to him and said
unto him, "Why is thy spirit so sad that
thou eatest no bread?"
He said unto her, "Because I spake unto
Naboth the Jezreelite,
and said unto him, 'Give me thy vineyard
for money, or else if it please thee, I
will give thee another vineyard for it.'
And he answered, 'I will not give thee
my vineyard.'" Jezebel his wife said to
him, "Dost thou now govern the kingdom
of Israel? Arise and eat bread, and let
thine heart be merry. I will give thee
the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite."
Jezebel says to the king, "Don't sweat
it. Let me handle it."
How does she handle it?
She wrote letters in Ahab's name, and
sealed them with his seal, and sent the
letters unto the elders and the nobles
that were in his city dwelling with
Naboth.
She wrote in the letter saying,
"Proclaim a fast,
and set Naboth on high among the people.
And set two men, sons of Belial, before
him to bear witness against him saying,
'Thou didst blaspheme God and the king.'
And then carry him out and stone him
that he may die."
Straightforward procedure.
The men of the city, even the elders and
the nobles who were the inhabitants in
his city, did as Jezebel had sent unto
them.
And as it was written in the letters
which she had sent to them, they
proclaimed a fast, and set Naboth on
high among the people. And there came
two men, children of Belial, that sat in
other words,
devil worshipers in effect, and sat
before him. And the men of Belial
witnessed against him, even against
Naboth, in the presence of the people
saying, "Naboth did blaspheme God and
the king."
Then they carried him forth out of the
city, stoned him with stones that he
died.
And then they sent to Jezebel saying,
"Naboth is stoned and is dead." What is
not mentioned here, but is mentioned
elsewhere in the scripture, they didn't
just kill Naboth, they slaughtered all
his heirs, sons and grandsons.
So there'd be no claim on the land.
Doesn't end there. Doesn't end at verse
14.
It came to pass when Jezebel heard that
Naboth was stoned and was dead, that
Jezebel said to Ahab, "Arise and take
possession of the vineyard of Naboth the
Jezreelite, which he refused to give
thee for money. For Naboth is not alive,
but dead." And it came to pass when Ahab
heard that Naboth was dead, that Ahab
rose up to go down to the vineyard of
Naboth the Jezreelite and take
possession of it.
And the word of the Lord came to Elijah
the Tishbite saying,
"Arise and go down to meet Ahab the king
of Israel, which is in Samaria.
Behold, he is in the vineyard of Naboth,
whither he is gone down to possess it.
And thou shalt speak unto him saying,
'Thus saith the Lord, Hast thou killed
and also taken possession?
And thou shalt speak unto him saying,
"Thus saith the Lord, In the place where
dogs licked the blood of Naboth, shall
dogs lick thy blood, even thine."
Very specific, very direct.
You know, it really is ridiculous.
Here's a king who could have gotten
anything he wanted, but here's this
little vineyard of this little guy
for that to be an issue. It's just, you
know,
anyway.
And Ahab said to Elijah, "Hast thou
found me, O mine enemy?" And he
answered, "I have found thee, because
thou hast sold thyself to work evil in
the sight of the Lord. Behold, I will
bring evil upon thee, and I will take
away thy posterity, I will cut off from
Ahab him that pisseth against the wall,
and him that is shut up and left in
Israel." You say, "What on earth is that
about?" It's a rather call for way of
saying his male sons
and grandsons.
In other words, the ones that would
inherit.
Them that pisseth against the wall. I
didn't say that. That's King James said
that.
I'm going to hear about that when I get
home here.
And will make thine house like the house
of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and like
the house of Baasha the son of Ahijah,
for the provocation wherewith thou hast
provoked me to anger, and has made
Israel to sin."
And and of Jezebel also spake the Lord
saying, "The dogs shall eat Jezebel by
the wall of Jezreel.
Him that dieth of Ahab in the city, the
dogs shall eat. And him that dieth in
the field, shall the fowls of the air
eat." But there was none like unto Ahab,
which did him sell himself to work
wickedness in the sight of the Lord,
whom Jezebel his wife stirred up. And on
it goes. He did very abominably in the
follow in following idols, according to
all the things did the Amorites, whom
the Lord cast out before the children of
Israel. And it came to pass when Ahab
heard those words, he rent his clothes,
put sackcloth upon his flesh, and
fasted, and lay in sackcloth, and went
softly.
Naboth's vineyard. The king wants the
vineyard. The queen arranges the
inquisition,
arranges for false witnesses,
condemnation, execution,
and it's property is seized for the
king. Does that echo something in
history?
What's it called in history?
Anyone?
The inquisition.
Dark days.
What also is that they they about's
heirs were also slain as indicated.
Let's look ahead from 1 Kings into 2
Kings chapter 9 when Jehu Jehu is quite
a guy. I don't have time to get into him
tonight, but there is
he was a quick on the draw here.
He also drove too fast. He broke speed
limits, but I won't go into that here.
When Jehu was come to Jezreel, Jezebel
heard of it.
And she painted her face, and tired her
head, and looked out at a window.
And as Jehu entered in the gate, she
said, "Had Zimri peace, who slew his
master?" That's a taunt by the way,
because Zimri had slain his master. And
and uh
Anyway, and he lifted up his face to the
window. She's up there. And he says,
"Who's on my side? Who?" And they looked
out two eunuchs, two officers of the
harem there. Said, "Throw her down." So
they threw her down.
Some of her blood was sprinkled on the
wall and on the horses, and he trod her
under foot.
And when he's come in, he did eat and
drink.
She falls there, he runs his horses and
chariots over her, so she makes sure
she's dead. He goes in and has a has a
bite to eat.
This is Jehu, right?
He said, "Go see now this cursed woman,
and bury her, for after all, she's a
king's daughter, right?"
And they went out to bury her, but they
found no more of her than the skull, and
the feet, and the palms of her hands.
Wherefore they came again told him and
said, "This is the word of the Lord,
which he spake by his servant Elijah the
Tishbite saying, 'In the portion of
Jezreel shall dogs eat the flesh of
Jezebel.
And uh the carcass of Jezebel shall be
as a dung upon the face of the field in
the portion of Jezreel, so that they
shall not say, 'This is Jezebel.'"
Forgot to mention that Jehu is with his
sidekick. The two of them were servants
of Ahab at Naboth's vineyard. So they
witnessed the sin of Ahab.
But now Jehu is king, and his sidekick,
they also witness the judgment of Ahab
and of Jezebel. It's very very There's a
lot of retribution under all of this.
But uh so Jezebel gets her due.
Well, so Jesus is using Jezebel as an
idiom here. Uh apparently, I assume that
there was a literal Jezebel of some kind
there in the church in Thyatira, but I
think it's something far deeper that's
coming on here.
Jesus says, "I will kill her children
with death, and all the churches shall
know that I am he which searches the
reins and the hearts." So the minds and
the hearts. And I will give unto every
one of you according to your works.
It's interesting, this sort of already
starts to imply that there is a remnant
in Thyatira that may survive.
The church itself is in big trouble.
Here's the exhortation that Jesus says,
"But I said But unto you I say, and unto
the rest in Thyatira,
as many as have not this doctrine,
and which have not known the depths of
Satan, as they speak. I will put upon
you none other burden.
But that which ye have already, hold
fast till I come."
Now, the deep things of Satan, the
depths of Satan, what on earth is that
all about?
Uh there's a play on words here, because
the the uh
the deep things of Satan is bathos, and
the burden is baros. So then in the in
there's a
uh a phonetic similarity in the Greek.
But anyway, that which ye have already,
hold fast till I come.
This is the first place
in the seven letters
that there is an explicit reference to
the second coming of Christ.
She says, "Which that which you have
already, hold fast till I come." That
till is a very important word.
Then we get to he he that overcometh and
keepeth my works unto the end, to him
will I give power over the nations.
Now, he's he promises that to the
overcomer. The context implies that was
the ambition of Jezebel, that power over
the nations.
Don't go that way.
Hold fast to your faith.
And keepeth my he he that keepeth my
works unto the end, to him will I give
power over the nations. And he shall
rule them with a rod of iron, as the
vessels of potter shall they be broken
to shivers. These are all echoes of
Psalm 2 and so forth. Even as I received
of my father.
And I will give him the morning star.
This will happen before sunrise.
And uh
the there may be an echo of the star of
Jacob that Balaam, the prophet Balaam
talks about, but we'll let that one go
for here. And then we have of course
this closing phrase, "He that hath an
ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith
saith to the churches." This is the
first letter where the promise to the
overcomer is in the body of the letter.
So we have Thyatira, we have the name,
we have the all the elements that we've
just gone through.
But we notice
that unlike the first three, the promise
to the overcomer is in the body of the
letter as it will be for the coming
three ones. There's a change in
structure here for some bizarre reason.
We'll explore that when we have all the
letters in front of us.
We've looked at the local We've Let's
talk about the admonitory. How does this
apply to churches today? Are there
Jezebels in churches today?
Well,
are there pagan practices in the church
today?
Absolutely.
And we be we're going to be talking
about some specific ones, but let's
recognize there are pagan practices in
every church you'll walk into. The
question is, how much?
Find a church that worships on Sunday.
You got Constantine there, not the not
the New Testament. I'm not a Seventh Day
Adventist, don't misunderstand me.
But anyone that thinks that that Sunday
is the Sabbath hasn't done their
homework.
But that's not a big deal. Paul says,
"Don't let anyone judge you for keeping
of any holy day, Sabbath or or
Sabbaths." So, don't make that a
divisive thing. But just understand that
that's a that that uh Shabbat is the
seventh day of the week, Sunday isn't.
Sunday is the first day of the week.
And some people say, "Well, we worship
it because of the resurrection." If
that's your argument, fine. We'll leave
it lay for now.
But let's go on.
There are pagan practices.
Um when we talk about Easter, that's a
that's the golden egg of Astarte.
And the formula for the Easter calendar
was deliberately designed by the
churches so it would not fall on
Passover.
And usually it's close. This year it's
strange because of the extra month, but
the point is that that um there's
paganism everywhere, some churches more
than others.
Okay, we also have a personal thing.
Well, that probably fits pretty much all
the way through. Again, pagan practices,
how do we deal with that personally?
And we need to deal with that.
And the overcomers promises. There's all
kinds of promises, but we'll leave that
one leave that That's pretty
straightforward, also.
And who is the overcomer? Let's not get
into a legal trip here. Who is the First
John 5:4 is your verses.
The same author that wrote Revelation
wrote a letter, first letter.
"Whatsoever is born of God overcometh
the world. This is the victory that
overcometh the world, even our faith."
"Who is he that overcometh the world,
but he that believeth that the Jesus is
the son of God." That's our job.
We are a walk by faith, not of works. If
you have serious faith, works will be a
byproduct. But don't put that cart
before the horse or you get into a whole
a denial of Christ's completed work.
Okay, we've covered three of them. Let's
get to the
most astonishing one of all, the
prophetic side of this.
What are these depths of Satan, first of
all? Esoteric mysteries of the
Babylonian cults, of course.
In 378 AD, Damasus, the Bishop of Rome,
took the office of Pontifex Maximus.
That was the high priest of the
Babylonian religion. It previously had
been the prerogative of the Caesars.
But here he took it on, and that is when
the Christian church now had as its
titular head Pontifex Maximus, the very
title from the Babylonian pagan
paganism. But let's get into the papacy.
This is the core issue here. Let's
review this. And I want to apologize in
advance for any of you who are from a
Catholic background, cuz I'm I'm pretty
confident we're going to talk about some
history that you may not be aware of.
And I'll give you biblical bibliographic
references at the end where you can
verify this. I do encourage you not to
believe a word I say,
but do your own homework.
But let's take a look. You will not
understand the history of Europe
unless you understand the tensions
between the Vatican and the various
kings of Europe as the Vatican aspired
to temporal authority more than
religious authority.
The word pope, of course, simply means
papa or father. It initially applied to
all Western bishops, by the way. About
500 AD, it began to be restricted to the
Bishop of Rome.
For 500 years, the Bishops of Rome were
not popes, by the way. What about Peter?
They have a Roman Catholics promote a
tradition that Peter was the first pope.
It's fiction, there's no historical
basis for this. There's no evidence that
Peter was ever a Bishop of Rome.
In fact, he himself seems to have a
foreboding
over his successors. In 1 Peter 5:3, it
says, "Neither is being lords over the
God's heritage, but being examples to
the flock." This is emphasis, just the
opposite, if you will.
And by the way, there are people that
argue that word Babylon in his second
letter
that shows up there as a code name for
Rome. That's not true. Babylon was a
major Jewish center. In fact, that's
where the Babylonian Talmud was
compiled. That's all another myth that
we'll talk about later in the study,
later in the study of Revelation.
In the fourth century, there were five
major primary centers, Rome,
Constantinople, Antioch, Jerusalem, and
Alexandria. They each had the bishop in
that area was called a patriarch. All
five were originally equal.
In 395 AD, when the empire divides,
Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria
acknowledged the leadership of
Constantinople, not Rome.
Constantinople, that's one reason
Constantine moved it.
But that started a struggle between
Rome, pagan Rome, if you will, and
Constantinople.
And that struggle goes on for quite a
while.
And
the Bishop of Rome and his lust for
worldly power claimed universal
jurisdiction over the church. He just He
just asserted it.
Unfortunately, that was all It was his
under his watch, the empire divided into
two separate empires, east and west.
The Roman Empire itself split into two
arms, two legs, if you will.
The east, of course, was beset with all
kinds of
theological controversies. The west was
under increasingly weak emperors, and it
was breaking up before the barbarians.
They would fall apart by 476 AD.
The eastern leg outlasted the western
leg by 1,000 years.
But these jawbone attempts, these
attempts for the Bishop of Rome to
somehow declare that he's in charge of
all of them, those attempts that
continued until Leo the First. We want
to get to Leo the First here. Um the
in 445 445, he obtained from the emperor
uh the the the imperial recognition for
his claim as primate of all bishops. In
452, he did a Understand the barbarian
Rome was falling apart. The barbarians
were at the gates. And uh Attila the
Hun, he he he persuaded Attila the Hun
to spare the city of Rome.
Pretty cool. I mean, he he pulled that
off.
Uh in 455, a few years later,
uh Genseric, the Vandal, uh he did the
same thing. He talked him into having
mercy on the city.
These jawbone attempts, these these
these
diplomatic moves really earned Leo the
First his his reputation. He had it
made. So, he declared himself lord over
the whole church. He advocated exclusive
universal papacy, just following
along here that the same claims that
predecessors had, but in his case, he
sort of earned some respect here.
And he proclaimed that resistance to his
authority was a sure path to hell.
These are the kinds of assertions that
are starting to They also advocated the
death penalty for heresy. So, this is
starting to This is These guys are
starting to get pretty tough.
But we have the fall of Rome.
And
Simplicius was the Roman Pope when the
Western Empire came to an end. That's
roughly 476 AD.
And
now there was no civil authority. All
the fragmented kingdoms of barbarians
gave all kinds of opportunities to do
deals among the
And the Pope became one of the more
commanding figures in the west, not
because of his political authority, just
as as a center of influence.
Gregory the First is regarded by many
scholars as the first pope. Others would
say Leo was. There's debates in in that
in various ways, but but Gregory the
First was quite a guy. If um
there if there'd been more popes like
him, I think the world would have a
whole different estimate of the papacy.
He labored unceasingly over the
purification of the church. He deposed
neglectful or unworthy bishops. He
opposed the sale of offices, that's
called simony.
Um
But let's get to a guy by name of
Charlemagne.
Zacharias was instrumental in making
Pippin the king of the Franks. The
Franks was the Germanic people that
occupied uh Western Germany and Northern
France.
And uh so,
uh succeeding pope requested Pippin to
lead his army to Italy to conquer the
Lombards, which had pillaged Italy, and
he did, and he succeeded. And he gave
the center core of Italy to the Pope.
That became the beginning of the the
Papal States, if you will. And that
continued, by the way, all the way till
1870, when uh Italy regained
uh those lands back, all except Vatican
City itself.
So, they had that for 1,100 years,
thanks to to uh um Pippin.
Pippin has a son by name of Charlemagne,
who becomes a major player.
And he was He turns out to be one of the
greatest rulers of all time. That's why
we're getting into this a little bit
here. But he was He reigned 46 years
through many wars and incredible
conquests.
And his realm included Germany, France,
Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Belgium,
and parts of Spain and Italy.
So, that was the so-called Holy Roman
Empire, if you will. And he helped the
Pope, and the Pope helped him. They had
a real duet going here.
And he was one of the greatest
influences in bringing the papacy to a
position of world power.
Uh following the the tradition I might
mention he's the grandson. Charlemagne
was the grandson of Charles Martel, who
stopped the Moors in 732.
That was a big thing in European
history. They had Charles Martel.
The the the Moors were were taking over
Europe. And at Tours, France, he he
stopped So, Charlemagne is his grandson.
So, he comes from a very distinguished
background.
And we get to the Treaty of Verdun.
After Charlemagne dies, of course, the
Treaty of Verdun divided his empire into
what later became the foundations of
Germany, France, and Italy. That's where
it really came out of, the Treaty of
Verdun.
But this is where a ceaseless struggle
starts between the popes and the
primarily the German and French kings.
And the so-called Holy Roman Empire
lasted 1,000 years until Napoleon
brought it to an end in 1806.
It's interesting how the Holy Roman
Empire,
which was neither holy nor Roman, but
that's the label,
uh is sort of the echo of ambition
subsequent Hitler's Third Reich was the
Third
regime. You had the original Roman
Empire, the Holy Roman Empire. It was
the Third Reich. That was the idea. And
uh
so on. And what we're seeing in Europe
is heading in the similar direction.
Well, we have a strange thing occur. Um
Nicholas the First, by the way, is the
first pope to wear a crown.
And it's about this time, 857, that a
book surfaces called the Isidorian
Decretals.
And it purported to be letters and
decrees of bishops and councils of the
2nd and 3rd centuries.
And the whole idea was to to exalt the
power of the Pope stamping the papacy
with the authority of antiquity
and antedating the Pope's temporal power
by five centuries.
They were very very important except
after a couple of centuries, they were
proven to be forgeries. Most colossal
forgeries in history.
Deliberate forgeries forgeries.
See, until 1860 until 869
all these ecumenical councils were held
under the auspices of Constantinople.
They were in Greek, not Latin. We tend
to forget that.
But that was really where the real
issues were joined.
And uh Nicholas I undertook to interfere
in the affairs of the Eastern Church.
He excommunicated the patriarch of
Constantinople who in turn
excommunicated him. So, they they traded
excommunication notes.
Um
and uh the claims of the Roman Church
became increasingly unbearable. So, the
East finally it's separates itself. This
is called the Great Cleavage where the
where the Eastern Orthodox separates
from the Roman Catholics if you will.
They really that's where they really
split. The Eastern Orthodox
um
uh has many traditions that are similar
but many that are very distinctly
different than the Roman Catholics.
They don't have celebrate priests and so
forth.
Um
and of course the breach became becomes
wider through the centuries and uh
the uh brutal treatment of
Constantinople by the armies of the Pope
Innocent the II during the Crusades
um
deepens the whole
uh division between the two. So, there's
a huge tension between them.
Well, from 904 to 963 is known in
history, strangely enough,
as the rule of the harlots.
And uh it turns out that uh
uh under Sergius III in 904, there's a
gal by name of Maro Marozia.
Marozia, excuse me, and uh her mother
Theodora
and her sisters, they filled the papal
uh chair with paramours and bastard sons
and turned the papal then into a den of
robbers. And this is why they call this
era called the rule of the harlots.
Um
Sergius the I gets replaced by John the
X. He was brought from Ravenna to Rome
by uh and made Pope by Theodora for her
more convenient gratification.
He was uh smothered to death by
Marozia
who then in succession raised the papacy
uh
Leo VI
Stephen VII and John IX.
Uh
uh
Uh
who was her own her own illegitimate
son.
And uh
another of her sons was another of her
sons that appointed the following Popes
Leo VII Stephen the uh
VIII
Martin III and uh
uh Agapetus the II.
And uh
then we get to John the XII.
He was the grandson of Marozia.
Guilty of almost every crime you can
imagine. Violated virgins and widows.
Lived with his father's mistress. Made
the papal palace a brothel.
Um was killed in the act of adultery by
the woman's enraged husband.
So, this is the
legacy that's from that era.
But the descent continues. Um
we have uh Benedict the VIII and
and John the IX that bought the office
of the Pope through by open bribery.
And then Benedict IX was made Pope as a
12-year-old boy
through a money bargain with the
powerful families that ruled Rome.
He committed murders and adulteries in
broad daylight and robbed pilgrims and
on the graves of martyrs.
A hideous criminal.
The people drove him out of Rome and
some people call him the worst of all
the Popes.
But that that
he at least make the finals.
Then we have a period of time where
there were three rival Popes. Benedict
IX continued but Gregory VI and
Sylvester III um the Rome swarmed with
hired assassins. The virtue of pilgrims
was violated.
And uh so we get to Clement the II. And
uh
he was appointed Pope by Emperor Henry
the VIII of Germany, quote,
"Because no Roman clergyman could be
found who was free of the pollution of
simony, that is purch buying offices,
and fornication."
So, it's that bad. The king steps in and
appoints Clement the II to fill the
bill.
Now, we start moving into better days.
The golden age of papal power at least.
And uh there was a cry of reform was
answered by Hildebrand who led the
papacy into its golden age from 1049 to
1294.
And uh he controlled five successive um
administrations prior to his own.
And uh when he he he controlled he
appointed those four and then he he uh
became uh Gregory the the uh VII.
And he took he undertook a a major
reform.
So, things are getting better
presumably.
We get to Innocent the III, however, who
may be the worst of the bunch.
He was the most powerful of all the
Popes by most uh historians.
Um
he claimed to be vicar of Christ and
vicar of God. He said, "All things on
earth and in heaven and in hell are
subject to the vicar of Christ." This is
crazy. More blood was shed under his
direction and that of his immediate
successors than any other period of
church history
except perhaps the papacy's effort to
crush the Reformation in the 16th and
17th centuries.
He considered himself the supreme
sovereign of the church in the world.
All the monarchs of Europe obeyed his
will including the Byzantine Empire.
That's astonishing.
He ordered two Crusades. He decreed
transubstantiation. He confirmed
auricular confession. He declared papal
infallibility. He condemned the Magna
Carta. That's interesting.
Forbade the reading of the Bible in the
vernacular.
And the institute of the Inquisition.
And we can't go very far without export
understanding a little bit about the
Inquisition called in and by the Vatican
the Holy Office.
The Inquisition was instituted by Pope
Innocent the III and was perfected by
Pope Gregory the IX.
Everyone was required to inform against
heretics. Anyone suspect was liable to
torture without knowing the name of his
accuser. The proceedings were secret.
The inquisitor pronounced sentence and
the victim was turned over to civil
authorities to be imprisoned for life or
to be burned.
And his property the victim's property
was confiscated and divided between the
church and the state. Do you understand
the insidious incentives here?
There's a real incentive here to you
know to to for a guilty verdict whatever
the circumstances are.
The Inquisition of course claimed vast
multitudes of victims in Spain, Italy,
Germany, the Netherlands. It did its
most deadly work against the Albigenses.
Let's talk about them a little bit.
They were in Southern France, Northern
Spain, and Northern Italy.
They preached against the immoralities
of priesthood, the worship of saints and
images. They completely rejected the
clergy and their claims. They opposed
the claims of the church at Rome.
They made great use of the scriptures
and lived self-denying lives with great
zeal for moral purity.
That's a formula to get persecuted,
isn't it? By 1167, a majority of
population of Southern France
and and they were and and they were very
numerous in Northern Italy.
In 1208, the Pope Innocent the III,
strange label, isn't it?
Ordered a bloody war of extermination
which utterly wiped out town after town.
The inhabitants murdered without
discrimination until all the Albigenses
were utterly wiped out.
They weren't the only ones. The
Waldenses.
A similar but not identical group in the
same region emphasizing Bible reading
and rejecting clerical usurpa-
usurpation and profligacy were similarly
wiped out. Notice this is well before
the Reformation. These are backgrounds
that lead of course to the Reformation.
In the 30 years between 1540 and 1570
no fewer than 900,000 Protestants were
put to death by the Pope's war for the
extermination of the Waldenses.
For 500 years, the Inquisition was the
most diabolical thing in human history.
Well, we get to Boniface the VII or VIII
I mean.
He in his famous bull Unam Sanctam, he
said, quote, "We declare, affirm,
define, and pronounce that it is
altogether necessary for salvation that
every creature be subject to the Roman
Pontiff."
That was their style.
He was so corrupt that Dante, the famous
English author who visited Rome during
his pontificate, called the Vatican a
sewer of corruption and assigned him
among with Nicholas III and Clement V to
the lowest parts of his famous, you
know, uh Divine uh
Inferno. Yeah, thank you.
Then we get to another era that many
people don't know about, the French
control of the papacy.
See, the papacy had been victorious in
its 200-year struggle primarily with the
German Empire.
But they met their match with Philip the
Fair, the King of France
with whom the history of modern France
begins. At the death of Pope Benedict
the XI, the papal palace was removed
from Rome to Avignon on the south border
of France and for 70 years, the papacy
was the mere tool of the French court.
Many people don't realize that. For the
next 40 years, there were two sets of
Popes, one at Rome and one at Avignon,
each claiming to be the vicar of Christ,
hurling anathemas and curses at each
other.
Then we get to what's called the
Renaissance Popes
from the John the XXIII on.
And uh
he's he was called by some the most
depraved criminal who ever sat on the
papal throne, guilty of almost every
crime.
As Cardinal Bologna, he was
200 maidens, nuns, married women fell
victim to his amours.
As Pope, he violated virgins and nuns.
Lived in adultery with his brother's
wife. Was guilty of sodomy and nameless
vices. Bought the papal office in the
first place.
Uh sold cardinalates, I guess you call
it, uh to children of wealthy families
and he openly denied the future life. No
surprise.
And uh so and we get to Pope Pius the
II. Uh he said to have been the father
of many illegitimate children. He spoke
openly of the methods he used to seduce
women and encourage young men, even
offering to instruct them in the methods
of self-indulgence. That's quite an
example.
Paulus II filled his house with
concubines, we're told.
Uh Sixtus IV
sanctioned the Spanish Inquisition.
Decreed that money would deliver souls
from purgatory. That's a great way to
raise funds.
Was implicated in a plot to murder the
Lorenzo de Medici and others who opposed
his policies and used the papacy to
enrich himself and his relatives.
He made eight of his nephews cardinals
while as yet some of them were mere
boys.
In wealth and pomp, he and his relatives
surpassed the old Roman families.
And we get to uh
Innocent VIII.
Had 16 children by various married
women. Multiplied church offices, sold
them for vast sums of money, decreed the
extermination of the Waldenses,
appointed the brutal Thomas of
Torquemada as the Inquisitor General of
Spain.
And ordered all rulers to deliver up
heretics to him.
Then we have Alexander VI, the most
corrupt of the Renaissance popes.
These are tough competitions, by the
way. None of these guys are
um
He was licentious, avaricious, depraved.
He bought the papacy, made many new
cardinals for money, had a number of
illegitimate children whom
he openly acknowledged and appointed to
high church office while they were yet
children.
And murdered cardinals and others who
stood in the way.
And then we get to Pius the
the
By the way, Alexander VI also had a
mistress of the
had a mistress.
Uh a sister of a cardinal who he then
made pope, Pope Pius III.
So, they all get a piece of the action
here. Well, that leads us That's the
background for a young coal miner's son.
1483, was born born to a coal miner, guy
by name Martin Luther.
He was out to become a lawyer when he
had an experience in a very violent
lightning storm
that caused him to pursue a doctorate in
theology.
Very pivotal time for the world,
actually.
He went to Rome
and to give you just a short rendering
of this, he was so disillusioned
that he had been advised when he was he
was very ill on the going through the
Alps to Rome that a monk told him to
He he he had Luther very early in his in
his doctoral studies became very
um
burdened by his own sin. He really
couldn't deal with that. In fact, his
his
confessor said, "Stop coming to me until
you've got something to confess." I
mean, he was just you know
But he
this monk said, "The key to your life is
Habakkuk 2:4."
He went to Rome, became very
disillusioned, but on the way back he
realized that's the key to the whole
thing. And then Habakkuk 2:4 says, "The
just shall live by faith."
And that became his life verse.
In fact, Paul wrote a trilogy on that
verse, the book of Romans, book of
Galatians, book of Hebrews.
Who are the just? That's what the book
of Romans answers and quotes that verse.
How shall the just live? They shall live
by faith.
How do How do How you do that? That's
what Galatians is all about.
The just shall live how? By faith. And
that's what the book of Hebrews
elaborates on in in the in that verse is
quoted in all three. So, there's it's a
very key thing worth worthy of study.
But in any case, that leads him
ultimately on October 31st of 1517,
Luther nails his famed 95 Theses to the
door at Wittenberg College. He was his
dream, his hope, his ambition was to get
the church to reform, to to to shed
these pagan uh pa- practices.
But the response is just the opposite.
On December 10th of 1520, there's a bull
excommunicating him and unless he
retracts within 60 days or death.
And Luther burns it publicly and the
Reformation in effect is born.
Uh the Diet of Worms in 1521, Charles V,
the emperor of the so-called Holy Roman
Empire, that would be Germany, Spain,
Netherlands, and Austria, summoned
Luther to appear.
And he has his big climactic appearance.
If he if he doesn't recant, he's going
to they're going to kill him. Says,
"Here I stand, I can do not else. So
help me God."
And that was
fortunately, because of the support of
the German princes and so forth, they
didn't kill him, obviously. And the but
the century of wars began, the war on
the German Protestants,
the war on the Protestants of the
Netherlands, the wars the Huguenot wars
in France, Philip's attempt against
England. These are just a whole century
of wars here. 30 Years' War is it's
called.
All were wars trying to stamp out or
curtail the so-called Reformation. So,
we have the Reformation popes. You got
Julius II, called the warrior pope.
He's the richest of the cardinals with
vast income from numerous bishops and
church estates.
Uh he bought the papacy, obviously, and
he attained and personally led vast
armies and used and issued indulgences
for money.
Uh that was part of what uh
uh we have
dealing with here with Leo the
the uh
He was pope when Luther started the the
whole Protestant Reformation. And Luther
People argue he didn't really start it.
He was just a precipitating event. There
were a lot of things already going on in
different parts of Europe. The
the Martin Luther thing was sort of is
what caused it all to to
to move forward in a dramatic way.
That's why they
say the Reformation started with him.
Technically, there were a lot of
movements that already started in other
places. But anyway,
Leo X was made an archbishop when he was
8 years old.
And he uh
he became a cardinal at 13.
He held 27 offices before he was 13
years old.
He appointed cardinals as young as
seven. See, these were just games
they're playing, in a sense.
Um
He maintained the most luxurious and
licentious court in Europe. As a
legatory, he reaffirmed the Unam Sanctam
in which it declared that every human
being be subject to the Roman upon for
salvation.
He used indulgences and for stipulated
fees
and declared the burning of heretics a
divine appointment.
So, we we get to Adrian and we get to
Let's keep moving along here, Paul.
Uh the third had many illegitimate
children. He was a determined enemy of
the Protestants and he offered Charles V
an army to
to exterminate them.
And we have the Jesuits. That was a They
they uh
based on a principle of unconditional
obedience to the pope having its
objective of recovery of territory lost
to the Protestants and Muslims and the
conquest of the entire heathen world for
the Roman Catholic. It was very militant
group.
Their supreme aim was the destruction of
heresy, that thinking anything different
than what the pope said to think.
And uh
for this accomplishment, though, their
ground rules are pretty broad. Anything
was justifiable, deception, morality,
vice, even murder.
In France, they were responsible for the
St. Matthew's massacre. I'll come to
that in a minute. The persecution of
Huguenots, the revocation of the
tolerant edict, and they even
facilitated the French Revolution. In
Spain, Netherlands, South Germany,
Bohemia, Austria, Poland, and other
countries, they laid they led in the
massacre of untold multitudes
and thus saved the papacy from ruin. St.
Matthew's
a St. Excuse me. St. Bartholomew's
massacre.
Catherine de Medici was the mother of
the existing king at the time, an ardent
Romanist and willing tool of the pope.
She gave the order on the night of
August 24th of 1572, 70,000 Huguenots
were massacred.
There was great rejoicing in Rome. The
pope and his college of cardinals went
in solemn procession to the Church of
San Marco and uh
and ordered the Deum to be sung in
thanksgiving. They struck a medal in
commem- in commemoration of the
massacre.
Sent a cardinal to Paris to to bear the
king and the queen mother the
congratulations of the pope.
Strange times.
Well, with that background, we had a
very interesting thing occur on March
29th of 1994.
All this apparently some kind of big
misunderstanding.
A joint declaration was signed called
the Evangelicals and Catholics Together:
The Christian Mission in the Third
Millennium.
Uh most signi- This is Some people
herald it the most significant event in
500 years of church history.
Is it?
Difficult area. Some very prominent
Christian leadership have joined in
signing this.
And an equal equally impressive In fact,
maybe more impressive group of Christian
scholars are shocked
because it's really a denial
of the of the people that willingly went
to the to be burned at the stake for
their belief in biblical doctrine.
The compromise of the gospel lies at the
heart of the agreement. And the gospel
hasn't changed.
And that's the problem.
But there was in a surprising
announcement that you also should make
part of the record here, and that's May
21st of 1995. The pope himself, believe
it or not, asked forgiveness
for all the wrongs and crimes committed
and permitted by the Roman Catholic
Church throughout their history.
It would have been a little more
impressive if he asked forgiveness of
what the Vatican perpetrated during the
history. But he he generalized it.
And at least that's a
uh you know, a
stake in the ground.
You say, "Chuck, this is pretty wild
stuff. You've been very offensive here.
I'm sure some people are I encourage you
to do a little homework.
One of the most accessible products you
can get at any Christian bookstore is
Halley's Bible Handbook.
But the one I use is the 24th edition
published in 1965. It originally
published way back in 27. It's a
classic. You can get it in any Christian
bookstore. I might caution you, though,
don't get the special edition that was
handed out by Billy Graham.
Cuz you'll discover this particular
section was removed from that special
printing run.
So, get Make sure you get the whole one.
And that that'll have a history of the
of the Vatican thing.
And it'll give you the references where
you can check things out.
Another way to deal with this subject is
to check out the book by Dave Hunt, A
Woman Rides the Beast, published by
Harvest House in 1994.
It's I I regard it as a must-read for
every serious Christian.
There are some viewpoints that Dave
holds that I don't happen to be quite in
step with, but they're not material
here. They He's done an outstanding job
at researching the background and he
will he has the thing documented
thoroughly, so you can check it out.
Dave and I did a briefing pack together
here called The Kingdom of Blood where
we each spent
did a session, and that's available
here. But I recommend even better than
it that's handy here. I I recommend that
this book go to any Christian bookstore
and and get it. If you can't get it
uh you can get it on the net, whatever.
Well, let's get to this prophetic
profile. Remember we said that we had
these various churches. Um Ephesus was
the apostolic church, Smyrna the
persecuted church, Pergamum is the
married church. What do I call Thyatira?
Well, for lack of another name, I'll
just call it the medieval church. We
together? That's I think a reasonable
descriptor.
Um
And again, we we made note of the fact
that if there's a change in architecture
that has just occurred,
and we're going to study that in the
subsequent sessions, but I'll give you a
a glimpse in advance.
If I take these
churches,
and I take the various
appellations on them,
Thyatira, we notice a couple of things.
First of all, we notice that these first
three had the promises to the overcomer
postscripted.
And the second group, the promises are
in the body of the letter.
If nothing else, it least clusters these
into two groups.
It's interesting, too, that the last
four each have an explicit reference to
the
of the coming of Christ. First three did
not, the last four do. So, that's also a
distinctive.
Thyatira is distinctive in that there it
includes a threat
that if they don't repent, that they'll
be thrust in the great tribulation.
We're going to see one of the other
three churches have just the opposite
commitment made.
And uh we'll talk about that as we get
to it.
So, that's just a fore-glimpse. As we
get through all seven, we'll backtrack
and try to look at the how these all fit
together in an in a overall design.
So, let's talk about next session. I've
run a little over time already, so let's
read for next time. Read chapters 2 and
3. Read all all seven letters. I think
that's useful.
But outline the next one, which is the
letter to Sardis, Revelation chapter 3
verses 1 to 6.
And what is
the the Sardis What is their primary
need?
It won't be as obvious until unless you
study carefully.
And find out what are the dis- What What
are the distinctives of this particular
letter?
That's your assignment for next time.
Let's stand for a closing word of
prayer.
Tough stuff.
A very difficult period of history to
try to summarize briefly.
Um
And let's remind ourselves that Jesus
commended them, the church of Thyatira,
for their works, their services, and so
forth.
There's some positives there.
But he did emphasize this woman Jezebel
and all that she represented.
And uh
I think the parallels to us seem very
very obvious.
How does it affect you and me?
How does it affect you and me?
That's the challenge.
Because he that hath an ear, let him
hear what the Spirit says to the
churches.
There are lessons here. Independent
Independent of the church you happen to
attend personally.
It has to do with our personal walk with
the Lord.
And our our forbearance of
paganism in whatever form we find it.
Our forbearance of immorality,
sexual and spiritual immorality. That's
the issue all the way through.
And immorality always goes hand in hand,
sexual and idolatrous together.
It caused the church to stumble.
It caused Solomon to stumble, the wisest
man on the earth. Started off great,
but became apostate at the end
because of
sexual immorality
and
um
false worship.
Bow our heads. Father,
we come before your throne awed
that you
have loved us so much
as to give us your son, Jesus Christ.
And yet, Father, if we stand back and
look at history, we just grieve.
Just grieve
at the miserable respon- miserable
response
that
on balance, we collectively have made.
We thank you, Father, that nevertheless,
that you've given us your son. We thank
you, Father, that you've brought us to
this point in time. We pray, Father,
through your Holy Spirit for discernment
and understanding,
and yes, resolve.
We do pray, Father, that you would help
us understand what you would have of us
where you have planted us.
We pray, Father, you'd give us the
strength
and the equipping
to hold fast,
to be strong
as your ambassadors.
Keep us from being married to the world,
Father.
Help us to never forget that we're just
passing through. We're pilgrims here.
For we look for a city whose maker
is you.
Father, we would just pray that you
would help each of us to grow in grace,
the knowledge of our Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ.
Help us to shed the grave clothes of the
past.
Help us to
step forward untrammeled, unhindered
by the traditions and the missteps of
the past.
Help us, Father, to be your ambassadors.
Help us to be fruitful stewards
as we commit ourselves into your hands
without any reservation.
As we come to you in the name of Yeshua,
our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, in
whose name we do pray. Amen.
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