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From Matthew 16, we
read a wonderful text. The paragraph actually begins in verse 13,
but we will start reading in verse 16. “And answering, Simon Peter
said, You are the Christ, the Son of the living God. And Jesus
answering said to him, Blessed you are, Simon Barjona.” That is,
son of Jonah. “because flesh and blood has not revealed to you but
my Father who is in the heavens. And I say to you, that you are
Petros, and upon this
petra
I will build my church; and the gates of Hades will not prevail
against her.” (Verses 16–18.) This is a wonderful, wonderful
promise. When these words were spoken, after the feeding of the
5,000 (see Matthew 14), great multitudes had left Jesus; they
forsook Him. At this time, there was just a handful of men and a
few women who were faithful followers of Jesus. And Jesus made this
wonderful pronouncement. He said, “You are Petros [that is
like a rolling stone], but upon this
petra,
this rock, this boulder, I am going to build my church.” Who is the
Rock? Who did Peter say the Rock was in I Peter 2? Who is the
chief Cornerstone upon which the church is built? It is Jesus
Christ. “Upon this rock I will build my church and the gates of
Hades will not prevail against her.” Do you believe that? If you
believe that, then you believe that from that time until now God has
always had a church and will have a church until Jesus comes again.
When Jesus comes again, friends, He is coming for His church.
This church has been
attacked. Millions of her adherents down through the ages have been
martyred. When we say down through the ages, are you aware of the
fact that during the twentieth century it is estimated that between
100 to 200 million Christians were martyred? The church has been
under attack, but we have the Lord’s promise, whether I live or die,
whether you live or die, that “The gates of Hades are not going to
prevail against this church,” because Jesus is coming, friend. When
Jesus comes, the gates of the graves of God’s children will all be
opened.
I want to tell you,
when God says that something is going to be opened, you cannot shut
it. The devil and his entire host, if you die in Christ, cannot
stop you from coming out of the grave when Jesus comes. When God
says something is to be opened, nobody can shut it. If God says
something is to be shut, nobody can open it.
The book of
Revelation is one of my favorite books in the Bible. The book of
Revelation is not written to the whole world. Did you know that?
It is not. God has written some parts of the Bible for the whole
world. In the book of Daniel you will find a vision, a dream that
God gave to King Nebuchadnezzar. It was an outline of the future
history of the world given to a heathen king and to all the peoples
of the world. God has written some parts of the Bible for all
mankind, but there are some parts of the Bible that are special.
Turn to Revelation, the first chapter. Let us see who this is
written to. It is not written to the whole world. That is why the
people of the world cannot understand it. They have to have the
people of the church explain it to them.
Revelation 1:1 says,
“The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave to Him to show to
His servants.” Who is the Book of Revelation written to? Look at
the end of the book of Revelation, at Revelation 22:16: “I, Jesus,
have sent My angel to bear witness to you of these things to the
churches.” Both at the beginning and at the end of Revelation you
are told who this book is written to. It is written to Christ’s
servants; it is written to the churches.
As you would expect,
the very first vision in Revelation starts talking about the
churches. For instance, in chapter 1, verse 11, it says, “What you
see, write in a book, and send to the churches.” The book of
Revelation is written to the church; it is written to God’s
servants. Chapter 1, verse 19, says: “Therefore, write what you
see, and the things that are and the things that are about to be
after these things.” Notice carefully that when John writes to the
churches, he is writing about things that are, but he is also
writing about things that are going to happen in the future. You
must understand chapter 1, verse 19, to understand the message to
the church. It is written about the present, but it is also written
about the future.
If you had come to
the city of Ephesus, a seaport city, and then you got on a Roman
road at Ephesus and followed it, you would next come to a city that
was called Smyrna. If you stayed on the Roman road and went past
that city, you would next come to another city called Pergamos. If
you stayed on the Roman road and went past Pergamos, eventually you
would come to another city called Thyatira. If you passed that city
and stayed on the Roman road, eventually you would come to another
city called Sardis. If you stayed on the Roman road and you went
past that city, eventually you would come to a sixth city called
Philadelphia. If you went past that city and stayed on the Roman
road, eventually you would come to a seventh city called Laodicea.
These were actual cities, and they are given in geographical order,
starting with Ephesus. We have descriptions here of all the people
in God’s church. We should understand, as Christians, that these
messages to the churches were given not just for the present, but as
we just read in Revelation 1:19, they were also given for the
future.
As we study history
from that time, going through the different periods of the Christian
church, astonishingly we find that the experience of the majority of
the predominant number of the people in the Christian church, at the
different times in Christian history, exactly coincides with the
descriptions given in the seven churches. However, there is
something else we need to remember. Everybody in the church does
not necessarily have the experience of the church that living in the
period of time described. No. There might be people in the same
group having the experience of any one of these seven churches. So
we need to study them all.
There were times
when Ellen White took the church of Ephesus and applied it to
Seventh-day Adventists. There were times when she took the
experience of the church at Sardis and applied it to Seventh-day
Adventists. We cannot go through all of them, but we are going to
look at one. I will go through quickly all seven of them with you,
though. I will give you just a snapshot picture that you can study
out later on your own.
The first church,
Ephesus, we could describe as “the loveless church,” because they
had lost their first love. If you have lost your first love, then
you are in the Ephesus church.
The second church,
the church at Smyrna, we could describe as “the persecuted church.”
If you are enduring persecution—on your job, in your home, wherever
you are—maybe you are in the church at Smyrna.
The third church,
the church at Pergamos, we could describe as “the compromising
church.” Very scary. You see, in the church at Ephesus, they would
not tolerate people that were teaching the doctrine of the
Nicolaitans, but in the Pergamos church, they had people that were
teaching the doctrines of Nicolaitans. They also had people in
that church teaching them to commit fornication—spiritual
fornication—and to worship idols. They were a compromising church.
Compromise always
results in something, and that is the experience of the fourth
church, Thyatira. We could describe the experience of Thyatira as
“the corrupt church.” There were people in that church that Jesus
said knew the depths of Satan. They allowed Jezebel to teach in
that church—the one who called herself a prophetess—and to teach the
Christians wrong practices.
Then there is the
church at Sardis. This is another very sad testimony from Jesus.
We could describe this church as “the dead church.” In Ellen
White’s day, there were evidently many Seventh-day Adventists in the
church of Sardis. Jesus said, “You have a name that you are alive,
but actually you are dead.”
Then we come to some
wonderful news, the church that we want to study, Philadelphia!
Wonderful, wonderful word. Phileo is the Greek word for a
friend or somebody that you love with tender affection. When Jesus
said to Peter, “Do you . . . ,” He used the word agapao, that
is usually used in the New Testament for divine love. (John
21:15.) Peter replied immediately. He said, “I phileo you.
Lord I have tender affection for you.” The second time Jesus said
to Peter, “Do you have love for me,” he used again the word
agapao, and Peter immediately said, “I phileo you. I
have tender affection for you.” (Verse 16.) The third time Jesus
did not use the word agapao. The third time Jesus asked
Peter that question He said, “Do you phileo me?” The Bible
says Peter was grieved, because the third time Jesus did not use the
word agapao. Peter said, “Yes, Lord, you know I do.” (Verse
17.) Phileo is a word that means you have tender affection
for somebody. Adelphos is the Greek word for brother. So
Philadelphia is “the place of brotherly love.” I want to tell you,
if there was ever a time when we needed
Philadelphia
in the church, it is today.
Of all the seven
churches, there are only two churches for which Jesus has no
condemnation. One is the church at Smyrna, the persecuted church,
and the other is the church at Philadelphia. We could describe the
church of Philadelphia as “the faithful church.”
There are two
churches that received no word of commendation at all but only
rebuke from the Lord. Those two churches are the church at Sardis
and the church at Laodicea. You know about Laodicea if you have
studied Daniel 11, because there was a queen mentioned in Daniel 11,
not by name, but she is referred to. Her name was Laodice.
Laos
is the Greek word for people. Dicea has to do with right or
judgment, so the word Laodicea has to do with the judging of the
people. This is the church that lives during the time of judgment.
It could be described in a phrase as “the lukewarm church.” There
we have the message of the seven churches. We have described each
of them by just a phrase.
Let us go now to
Revelation 3:8. Jesus says to the Philadelphia church, “I have set
before you a door that has been opened.” Now to get the context of
verse 8, we need to know what was said in the last part of verse 7.
It talks about the Person, the Holy One, the True One, the One
having the key of David. Who is that? That is Jesus Himself. In
the beginning of each of the messages to the seven churches, it has
certain references to the descriptions of Christ. Verse 8 says,
“The One who opens and no one shuts and shuts and no one opens.”
Notice, when Jesus opens something, nobody can shut it. And when He
shuts something, nobody can open it.
What I would like to
get into as quickly as we can happens to be one of the most
controversial doctrines that the Second Advent Movement has
believed. If you read any of the books that have been published by
former Seventh-day Adventist ministers who are now calling
themselves Evangelical and who attack the Second Advent Movement,
you will find they always attack this doctrine. For instance, I am
not interested in name-calling, but I think we need to get
specific. When a former Seventh-day Adventist pastor by the name of
Walter Rea wrote a book called The White Lie [M. & R.
Publications, Turlock, CA., 1981], he included a whole section which
he calls, “Go Shut the Door.” What is he talking about? He is
talking about this doctrine right here. If you look in the books
and on the Internet, at the books published recently against the
Second Advent Movement, you will find that they always attack this
doctrine. Whole chapters are given to the doctrine of the shut
door. But friends, this chapter in Revelation teaches that when
Jesus opens something, nobody can shut it, and when He shuts
something, nobody can open it. Is there such a thing as a shut
door? Yes, there is.
I am amazed to find
that every doctrine that I study has that doctrine, at least in
embryo form. Have you ever noticed that? It is an astounding
thing. Have you read anywhere in the Book of Genesis where there
was a shut door? I know of two places. In the Book of Genesis,
there was a time when Noah and his family went inside the ark, and
the door was shut, and nobody could go in anymore. There was a time
when the angels reached out and took Lot and pulled him into his
house and shut the door. And I want to tell you, everyone that was
on the outside of that door was lost. There is such a thing as a
shut door.
What I really want
to study with you is the open door, but for people who are critics
and skeptics, I want you to see from the Bible that there is such a
thing as the shut door, and I want to tell you there was a shut door
in 1844. There was. You see when you reject a vital message from
God, you have shut the door yourself. Did the Jews shut the door of
salvation on themselves? Yes, they did. Is it serious if you are a
Christian and you do not want the Lord to come back again? Is that
serious? Friend, that is a way to commit the unpardonable sin.
Think it through. If in your heart you do not really want the Lord
to come right away, you are on your way to committing the
unpardonable sin unless you are converted. It is serious.
In Luke 13:22–30, we
read: “And he went through the cities and villages, teaching, making
as if he were going on to Jerusalem. And a certain one said to him,
Lord, are there few that shall be saved? And he said to them,
Struggle.” Let us stop right there just a moment. Have you ever
heard a preacher get up and say that it is easier to be saved than
lost? Have you ever heard that doctrine? Every time you hear that
doctrine, turn to Luke 13:24 and read it and see what Jesus said.
“Struggle to enter in through the narrow door, because many, I say
to you, will seek to enter in and will not be able, from which time
the master of the house has risen up and shut the door. And you
began to stand outside and to knock on the door, saying, Lord open
to us, and answering he will say to you, I do not know you [or]
where you are from. Then you will begin to say, we ate before you
and drank, and you have taught in our streets. And he will say to
you, I don’t know you, where you are from. Depart from me all of
you who work unrighteousness. There will be weeping and gnashing of
the teeth when you see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the
prophets in the kingdom of God and you yourself cast out outside.
And they will come from the east and the west and from the north and
the south and will sit down in the kingdom of God. But behold they
are the last, they shall be first, and the first, they shall be
last.” We could read more texts of scripture, but you see it
clearly, don’t you? There is such a thing as a shut door and there
is coming a time when the Master of the house is going to shut the
door. Remember, when the Master of the house shuts the door, nobody
can open it. But right now, this moment has not yet happened.
To the church of
Philadelphia was given the message, “I have set before you a door
that has been opened.” Remember, friends, when Jesus opens a door,
all the skeptics in the world cannot shut the door. Are you glad
for that? This is a door that has been opened. Now I want to ask
you a question. What was the door that was opened to the church at
Philadelphia? “Well,” somebody says, “that is the door of
salvation.” You mean, the door of salvation was not opened until
the Philadelphian church? Think this through a little bit.
When you go to the
Old Covenant, where was the worship of God centralized? Where was
the central place, the headquarters for divine worship in the Old
Covenant? It was in the sanctuary. Now let me ask you another
question. None of these are trick questions, but we want to think.
I will give you a hint to start with, so you won’t make a mistake.
The sanctuary had more than one door, but what I want you to tell me
is how many doors. When the people went to the sanctuary to
worship, think carefully, how many doors did they have to go
through? Three, exactly.
The courtyard
represents things that happen here on earth, and something else
happened in the courtyard of the sanctuary that must happen to us.
After the brazen altar, they had to go past the laver before they
went into the sanctuary. That was where they were to be cleansed or
purified.
You cannot go into
the sanctuary if you are not purified. Look in Hebrews 9. We won’t
read all the context, you can do that for yourself, but look at
Hebrews 9:8. It says, “The Holy Spirit making it plain by this that
not yet it was manifested the way of the holy places while the first
tabernacle yet had standing.” The other two doors were not open
yet; you could only enter by faith. There were people, such as
Enoch, that went in there by faith. Enoch lived before people even
knew about all these things, before even the Old Covenant was made.
Did Enoch have a Most Holy Place experience? Yes. He could go
clear in by faith. Could people have their sins forgiven before
Jesus died on the cross? Yes, by faith. Hebrews 9 explains that.
It is just the same as if I give you a promissory note and I promise
you that at a certain time I am going to pay you $10,000. If I have
good credit, can you take that note to the bank and get money for
it? Yes, you can. It has not been paid yet, but if my credit is
good enough, you can take that note to the bank and get money for
it. That is the way people’s sins were forgiven in the Old
Testament. They were forgiven by the promise of God. The price had
not been paid for their sins yet, but they were forgiven by the
promise of God. In the same way that they could have their sins
forgiven before Jesus died on the cross, they could go by faith into
the Holy Place and into the Most Holy Place. But there came a time
when the price actually was paid, and Jesus actually did die on the
cross for their sins. When that happened, then there was no more
meaning to offering lambs and goats and all of those things
anymore. The book of Hebrews discusses that in detail in chapters
7, 8, 9, and 10. There was no point in that anymore. Jesus invited
his people to come with Him by faith, and He was going to go into
the heavenly sanctuary. But, most sadly, the Jewish church refused
to go.
Now, if Jesus says
that it is time to stop offering your lambs and your goats because
the true sacrifice has been offered, and He wants you to follow Him
into the temple in heaven and you refuse to go, how much meaning is
left in your religion? What gives meaning to religion? What is the
foundation of all religion? The whole foundation of all religion is
love for God, isn’t it? If you do not love God enough to follow Him
when He goes somewhere and asks you to follow Him, what is the
meaning of your religion? It is meaningless.
There was a time
when it was meaningful to offer those sacrifices and do all those
things in the Old Covenant, because it was expressing faith in what
was going to happen. But after it happened, those things had no
meaning. The people that refused to go into the Holy Place of the
heavenly sanctuary, had a meaningless religion. All they had left
was the ritual, the form, the ceremony. The meaning was gone.
Jesus said to them, in Matthew 23:38, “Your house is left to you
desolate.” There is no meaning to it; it is empty.
When we look at the
history of the seven churches and we follow in our church history
book and compare the experience of the church with the vision of the
seven churches, and we look at the time period, it is very, very
interesting. We find that the church entered the period of
Philadelphia right toward the end of the life history of John
Wesley, around the time and after the time of the French
Revolution. The church had been stagnant and almost dead, just like
it described in Sardis, for over 200 years. Right after the French
Revolution, there was a tremendous resurgence in the interest of
Bible prophecy in all churches and tremendous Bible societies and
mission societies formed. Missionaries started going all over the
world. That happened in the latter part of the eighteenth century
and the early part of the nineteenth century.
You can read in any
church history book about that. It is one of the most thrilling
stories of modern missions, but it lasted less than 100 years. When
God had a faithful church, He said to them: “I am setting before you
a door, and it has been opened.” What door was this? It was the
third door. It was not the door into the court. That was opened to
the Jewish church. It was not the door into the Holy Place. That
had been open in the time of the apostles. It was a door that was
now open, and people began to look inside. We can read about what
they saw when they started to look inside this open door.
Revelation 11:19 says, “And the temple of God was opened in heaven,
and there was seen the ark of his covenant.”
When the door was
open, people noticed something that somehow they had lost sight of
for many centuries in the Christian church. They saw that when you
go farther in—not just into the court, not just to see the cross,
not just into the Holy place,—when you get clear inside to the inner
shrine of God’s temple, there is just one article of furniture. It
is so important that in it there is a law. That law, friends, is
the foundation of God’s government. It is the basis of His divine
government for the whole universe. When people began to look into
that law, they found out that they had been breaking it. Have you
been breaking it?
Here is something
more you may wish to study later. Remember there are two apartments
to the sanctuary, the one we call the Holy Place, and the other one
we call the Most Holy Place. The Holy Place is where you take sin
in. Let me explain that in just one paragraph. I come to Jesus as
a sinner, every single morning, seeking not just confession and
repentance but restoration. When I come to Jesus as my great High
Priest and I confess to Him my sinful condition, as I repent and as
I confess my sins to Jesus, by means of His blood, my sins and my
guilt are taken away from me. Where does it go? Have you ever
studied the sanctuary enough to figure out where it goes? When the
people came, in the Old Covenant, and confessed their sins over the
head of the lamb, where did the guilt go? It went to the
sacrifice. That is why the sacrifice had to die. It went from the
person to the sacrifice, and then the life of that sacrifice,
represented by the blood, was brought into the sanctuary and
sprinkled there.
After that, the Most
Holy Place is a place where you take sin out. On the Day of
Atonement, when the High Priest went into the Most Holy Place and
sprinkled the blood, he then came out with all of that sin, and he
confessed it over the head of the scapegoat, and the sanctuary was
cleansed. It was purified; it was vindicated; it was restored to
its rightful state. My dear friend, if you are a Christian, you
have a case pending in God’s court. If you are a Christian, you
have a page in the Book of Life, and in that book is written down
every particular of your life history. One of two things is going
to happen.
Maybe you would like
to read it in the words given to the Sardis church as recorded in
Revelation 3:5. “The one who overcomes like this, he will be
clothed in white garments, and I will not at all wipe out or blot
out his name from the Book of Life. And I will confess his name
before My Father, and before His angels.” If I overcome, what does
Jesus promise me? He promises me that He will not blot out my
name.
In Exodus 32:33, it
says, “Jehovah said to Moses, Whoever has sinned against me, I will
blot out from my book.” The Lord says that the person that sins
against Me, I will wipe him out; I will blot him out from My book.
That is the destiny,
friend. One of those two destinies awaits each one of us. Either
our sins are going to be blotted out—sins are blotted out during the
times of refreshing, you can read about that in Acts 3—or our names
will be blotted out like it says here, one of the two. What is
going to happen to you?
I want to put this
as kindly as I know how, because I have nothing against people who
are our theological opponents. There are a lot of people that want
to go into the Holy Place, but they do not want to ever leave
there. They do not want to go to the Most Holy Place and have that
experience. They want to bring their sins in, and they want to
confess and confess and confess.
Now friends, when we
sin, we should confess, but that is not all there is to religion.
The sanctuary did not have just one compartment; it had two
compartments. The plan of salvation does not just have one part.
It is not enough to bring the sin in; the sin has to sometime be
taken out. God has already told us that He is going to cleanse His
sanctuary. He is going to purify it. He told us that in Daniel 8
and in Hebrews 9. Jesus said and Moses said also, “In the mouth of
two or three witnesses, every word shall be established.” (See
Daniel 8:14; Hebrews 9:22, 23.)
The Lord has told us
that His sanctuary in heaven is going to be cleansed. There is only
one way it can be cleansed. Think this through. If you are a
Christian, you have a page in the Book of Life. On that page, all
of your sins are recorded, every sin that you ever committed your
whole life—every sinful thought, every sinful feeling, every sinful
word, and every sinful action. There are only two ways God’s
sanctuary can be cleansed. The page containing your name with all
of your sins could just be taken out of the book; that is one way.
Then you are lost. Or your sins can be blotted out and your name
remains. Is that what you want to happen? Does the Bible teach
that the sins of the true Christians are going to be blotted out?
Yes, it does. Read Acts 3.
I just want to ask
you one question for you to think about. Would it do any good for
God to blot out my sins if the next hour or the next day I sinned
again? It would not do any good. You can study that out on your
own.
Are you praying in
your daily devotions? Are you saying to the Lord, “Lord, I want to
have a fitness for heaven?” We have to have fitness for heaven, and
we can have it, because the Lord can give it to us if we cooperate
with the Holy Spirit.
I have learned that
we human beings need to make decisions while something is on our
mind. If the Holy Spirit is speaking to you now, you need to make a
decision now. The Bible says, “Now is the day of salvation.”
11 Corinthians 6:2. If the Holy Spirit is speaking to you right
now, don’t wait and say, “I will make a decision later.” You do not
know when the Holy Spirit is going to speak to you again, friend.
If the Holy Spirit is speaking to you now, you need to make a
decision right now. Say to the Lord, “Lord, I want my sins blotted
out, and I am willing to cooperate with the Holy Spirit so that this
can happen.”
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