Please Lord, bless
us as we continue our study. We are reading, help us to hear, teach us to hear,
to understand all You would have us understand. By Your will!
*******
From the book -
Daniel and Revelation - by Uriah Smith
The Angel of the
Church.--
The angel of a
church must denote a messenger, or minister, of that church.
As each church
covers a period of time, the angel of each church must denote the ministry, or
all the true ministers of Christ during the period covered by that church. The
different messages, though addressed to the ministers, cannot be understood to
be applicable to them alone, but are appropriately addressed to the church
through them.
The Cause of
Complaint.--
"I have
somewhat against thee," says Christ, "because thou hast left thy
first love." "Not less worthy of warning than departure from
fundamental doctrine or from Scriptural morality, is the leaving of first love.
The charge here is
not that of falling from grace, nor that love is extinguished, but diminished.
No zeal, no suffering, can atone
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for the want of
first love." The time never should come in a Christian's experience, when,
if he were asked to mention the period of his greatest love to Christ, he would
NOT say, The present moment.
But if such a time
does come, then he should remember whence he has fallen, meditate upon it,
carefully call up the state of former acceptance with God, and hasten to repent
and retrace his steps to that desirable position. Love, like faith, is
manifested by works; and first love, when it is attained, will always bring
forth corresponding works.
The Admonition.--
"I will come
unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except
thou repent."
The coming here
mentioned must be a figurative coming, signifying a visitation of judgment,
inasmuch as it is conditional.
The removal of the
candlestick would denote the taking away from the church of light and
privileges of the gospel, and the committing of these advantages to other
hands, unless the church should better fulfill the responsibilities of the
trust committed to it.
It would be the
rejection of them by Christ as His representatives, to bear the light of His
truth and gospel before the world. This threatening would be just as applicable
to individuals as to the church as a body. How many who professed Christianity
during that period came short and were rejected, we do now know, but doubtless
many. Thus things would go on, some remaining steadfast, some backsliding and
becoming no longer light-bearers in the world, new converts meanwhile filling
up the vacancies made by death and apostasy, until the church reached a new era
in her experience, marked off as another period in her history, and covered by
another message.
The Nicolaitanes.--
How ready is Christ
to commend His people for whatever good qualities they may possess! If there is
anything of which He approves, He mentions first. In this message to the church
of Ephesus, after first mentioning their commendable traits and then their
failures, as if unwilling
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to pass by any of
their good qualities, He says that they hated the deed of the Nicolaitanes,
which He also hated.
In verse 15 the
doctrines of the same characters are condemned. It appears that they were a
class of people whose deeds and doctrines were both abominable in the sight of
Heaven. Their origin is involved in some doubt. Some say that they sprang from
Nicholas of Antioch, one of the seven deacons (Acts 6: 5); some, that they only
attribute their origin to him to gain the prestige of his name; and others,
that the sect took its name from one Nicholas of later date. The latter theory
is probably more nearly correct. Concerning their doctrines and practices,
there seems to be a general agreement that they held to a community of wives,
regarded adultery and fornication as matters of indifference, and permitted the
eating of things offered to idols. (See Clarke, Kitto, and other commentators.)
The Summons to
Attention.--
"He that hath
an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches." This is a
solemn manner of calling universal attention to that which is of general and
most momentous importance. The same language is used to each of the seven
churches.
Christ, when upon
earth, made use of the same form of speech in calling the attention of the
people to the most important of His teachings. He used it in reference to the
mission of John (Matthew 11: 15), the parable of the sower (Matthew 13: 9), and
the parable of the tares, setting forth the end of the world (Matthew 13: 43).
It is also used in relation to an important prophetic fulfillment in Revelation
13: 9.
The Promise to the
Overcomer.--
To the victor it is
promised that he shall eat of the tree of life that grows in the midst of
Paradise, or in the garden, of god. Where is this Paradise? It is in the third
heaven. Paul writes, in 2 Corinthians 12: 2, that he knew a man (referring to
himself) caught up to the third heaven. In verse 4 he says that he was caught
up into "Paradise," leaving only one conclusion to be drawn, which is
that Paradise is in the third heaven. In this Paradise, it seems, is the tree
of life. There is but one tree of life brought to view in
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the Bible. It is
mentioned six times, three times in Genesis, and three times in the Revelation;
but it is used every time with the definite article "the." It is the
tree of life in the first book of the Bible, the tree of life in the last; the
tree of life in the "Paradise" (the term used for "garden"
in the Greek translation of Genesis) in Eden at the beginning, and the tree of
life in the Paradise of which John now speaks, in heaven above.
If there is but one
tree, and that was at first upon earth, it may be asked how it has now come to
be in heaven. The answer would be that it must have been taken up to the
Paradise above. There is no possible way that the identical body which is
situated in one place can be located in another but by being transported there
bodily. That the tree of life and Paradise have been removed from earth to
heaven there is a very good reason to believe.
On commentator
remarks on this point:
"The act of God
in appointing the cherubim 'to keep the way of the tree of life' (Genesis 3:
24) in the garden of Eden, likewise appears not only in an aspect indicating
judicial severity, but also in one which conveys a promise full of consolation.
The blessed abode from which man is expelled, is neither annihilated nor even
abandoned to desolation and ruin, but withdrawn from the earth and from man,
and consigned to the care of the most perfect creatures of God, in order that
it may be ultimately restored to man when he is redeemed. (Revelation 22: 2.)
The garden, as it
existed before God 'planted' or adorned it, came under the curse, like the
remainder of the earth, but the celestial and paradisaical addition was
exempted, and entrusted to the cherubim. The true (ideal) Paradise is now
translated to the invisible world. At least a symbolical copy of it,
established in the holy of holies in the tabernacle, is already granted to the
people of Israel, after the pattern which Moses saw in the mount (Exodus 25: 9,
40); and the original itself, as the renewed habitation of redeemed man, will
hereafter descend to the earth. (Revelation 21: 10.)" [6]
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To the overcomer,
then, is promised a restoration that will include more than Adam lost. Not to
the overcomers of that state of the church merely, but to all overcomers of
every age is the promise made, for in the great rewards of heaven there are no
restrictions. Reader, strive to be an overcomer, for he who gains access to the
tree of life in the midst of the Paradise of God, shall die no more.
The Time of the
Church.--
The time covered by
this
first church may be
considered the period from the resurrection of Christ to the close of the first
century, or to the death of the last of the apostles.
*******
We can but imagine
the tree of life in all its glory given to it by God. By the grace of our LORD
and SAVIOR alone will be partake of that tree! We must not LEAVE our FIRST LOVE
of CHRIST.
First human love we
know doesn't always mean forever love. Not many people find a first human love
and remain with that first love throughout their lives. Human love is so incredibly different from
the love of Christ. Human love has placed upon it condition after condition
after condition even as we might say there are none. There is so much in the
human frail, sinful flesh that is not loving. The spiritual war of flesh and
spirit interferes with our ability to love as we should. Only through Christ
can we love even remotely as He would have us love.
Please….save us.
All through Jesus
Christ our Lord, now and forever!!!!!!!
Amen.
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