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The Seven Churches.
We began some months ago a series of
articles on The Seven Messages to the Churches, of Rev. 1 to
3.
Absence from home and other reasons
have hindered their continuance. We have already examined the first four, but
it is suggested that we partially review these before proceeding.
We hold that the book of Revelation
is a book of symbols. We are told that our Lord "sent and signified [made
signs] by his angel unto his servant John" (Rev. 1:1).
We know that the book abounds in
symbols or signs, and we are satisfied that these are the rule, and the
literal-- when unavoidable--is the exception.
To be in harmony, then, with the
rest of the book, "the seven churches which are in Asia" must be
symbolic: and as the book is chiefly "history written beforehand," they
must also symbolize seven successive stages in the history of the Christian
Church; covering the period between the first and second advent of Christ. The
fulfillment, we think, proves the correctness of this position.
In the first chapterwe have a description
of "one like unto the Son of man," [R491 : page
3] as seen in a vision by John. Some one or more of the features of this
description are peculiarly appropriate to each of these successive stages of
the Church; and in each case he who sends the message is thus described.
The names of the churches are also
characteristic, as we shall see when we come to look at them.
The last part of each message, or
the promise to the "overcomers," is also peculiarly adapted to the
different periods.
To give a sort of birdseye view of
the arrangement, we would notice their chronological position. Ephesus
covers the period during the lives of the Apostles; Smyrna
during the time of the Pagan persecution, reaching to about A.D. 323, when Constantine became sole
Emperor of Rome, and declared in favor of Christianity. Pergamos embraces the
transition period in which the Papal
Church had its rise; Thyatira
the space during which the true Church was in the wilderness, and the mother of
Harlots sat as a queen, cohabiting with the kings of the earth. Sardis takes in a short
interval just before the Reformation. Philadelphia,
from the Reformation until recent times; and Laodicea, the nominal Church of to-day.
Ephesus means, first, desirable. In this period our Lord "holdeth the seven stars
in his right hand," etc. (compare chap. 1:20). The messengers of the
Churches (Paul, Peter, John, etc.) during that period were so powerfully led
and kept in the grasp of the Lord Jesus that we accept their teachings as we
accept his, believing that their words were really his. This Church is
commended for its faithful, patient labor, and its discernment of truth and
teachers (Acts 20:28-30, 1 Cor. 11:19). It
was a characteristic of that period that "they forsook all and followed
him"; they took joyfully the spoiling of their goods; they sold what they
had, and gave to those in want. Though often deprived of the bread of this
life, they not only had the living bread, but the promise of "the tree of
life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God."
Smyrna means bitter, [Myrrh and Marah (Ex. 15:23) are kindred
words.] It was the period of most bitter persecution, under the Roman Emperors
from Nero to Diocletian. "The devil [Pagan Rome] shall cast some of you into
prison that ye may be tried, and ye shall have tribulation ten days" (last
and most severe persecution, A.D. 303 to A.D. 313).
Those who have read the history of
this period can understand the depth of the words, "that ye may be
tried." Some of the most sublime pictures of Christian endurance that the
world has ever seen were enacted during the Smyrna period.
The call was for faithfulness "unto
death"; the promise was "a crown of life." Also "he that
overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death." Pergamos means an earthly
elevation. The speaker is he who has "the sharp two-edged [Greek,
two-mouthed] sword" --the Word of God. During this period, while the
nominal Church was growing popular, the true Christians were tested by the
introduction and development of Pagan and Papal ideas. The Pagan priests,
unwilling to lose their positions of honor and influence among the people,
sought to bend their theories to fit the new religion; and while nominally
professing Christianity they brought many of their ideas with them; which were
eventually engrafted upon the true stock. Thus the Church was led into error,
evil practices, and away from God. This is what is alluded to in the reference
to Balaam and Balak. Balak tempted Israel to sin, and thus brought
about what he could not accomplish by his own powers (Num.
31:16). So these priests taught the Church to indulge in spiritual fornication,
and thus brought upon her the withering blight of God's wrath.
The doctrine of the Nicolaitanes
seems to be the theory of lordship or headship in the Church. Nicholas means a lord.
The strife as to who should be greatest existed among many of the Patriarchs
(fathers) of the prominent churches. At their councils there was a bitter fight
for supremacy. The tendency was toward an earthly head, and of course many
wanted the honor. The patriarchs of Jerusalem, Antioch, Constantinople and Rome, were most prominent. The first two
dropped out, but the strife continued several hundred years between
Constantinople and Rome, and was only settled by
a division of the Church: the Eastern, or Greek Church accepting the Patriarch
of Constantinople for its head, and the Western, or Papal
Church acknowledging the Bishop or Pope
(Father) of Rome.
Many of the true in the churches
denounced this attempt to disobey the direct command of Jesus, "Call no
man Father" (Matt. 23:9), and of course received the
persecution promised (2 Tim. 1:12). This class in Pergamos
our Lord commends under the symbol of "Anti-pas my faithful martyr." In
the Greek, anti means against, and Papas, father; so in the usual formation of
words Antipas would mean an Anti-papist, one who protests against the Pope or
Father.
In this age also those who sought to
be popular received the emoluments of the Church, but the promise to the overcomers
is of pleasure and honor that shall be eternal.
Thyatira seems to mean "The
sweet perfume of a sacrifice." It was the period of the Papal persecution.
The Antichrist had seated himself in the temple of God, announcing himself
through his minions as "Our Lord God the Pope," ruling the nations
and the churches with a rod of iron; dashing in pieces like a potter's vessel
those who would not acknowledge his authority. The virgin church was enduring
the hardships of the wilderness, while the harlot, reveling in her lewdness,
sat on the throne of her royal paramours.
The message is sent by one who has "eyes
like a flame of fire" to watch over his faithful ones as they wandered
through the dark valleys, or hid in the darker caves of earth; and "feet
of hard brass" to walk by their side as they scale the rugged mountains,
or wander footsore and weary seeking a place to plant the seeds of truth. An
allusion is made to a faithful old prophet who had to flee for his life into
the wilderness from the idolatrous wife of a king. The picture is from the
history of Elijah, Jezebel and Ahab. Jezebel was the protector of the priests
of Baal. Her husband was king, and she wielded his power for her own ends. The
drouth of three and a half years was evidently a type of the "time, times
and a half"--1260 years--of the spiritual famine, "not of bread nor
of water, but of hearing the words of the Lord" (Amos
8:11). "And I gave her space [chronos, time] to repent....And she repented
not. Behold I will cast her into a bed [sleep, stupor], and them that commit
adultery with her into [the] great tribulation." A symbolic
"time" is 360 years, as the three and a half above. Her time for
repentance has been, of course, since the light of the Reformation dawned upon
her. On Oct. 31st, 1517, Luther nailed his ninety-five propositions on the
church door in Wittemberg. The news and light spread rapidly. Dating the
beginning of this "time" from the spring of 1518, allowing the
intervening months for the light to spread, 360 years bring us to the spring of
1878; when, according to the parallels, the announcement was made, "Your
house is left unto you desolate"; and the fall of Babylon was due to
begin. The "world" who supported her are also already entering the
"time of trouble." "And I will kill her children [daughters] with
death." Spiritual death is what ails the Churches of to-day. The Physician
has given them up and the spiritual gangrene is surely doing its work. [See
article Seven Last Plagues, by ED., 1st Plague, in this issue].
The characteristic of this Thyatira [R491 : page 4] period was the reign of the false church,
therefore the promise to the overcomers is, "To him will I give power over
the nations, and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a
potter shall they be broken to shivers: even as I received of my Father."
The false Church claimed
infallibility, that she alone could interpret the Scriptures; but to the
faithful is here promised not only light before the day, but the same proof of
the time of night and of the dawning--"I will give him the morning
star." W. I. M.
W.T. R-490 c : page 3 – 1883 r.