Strong
Church/Weak Church 11
Last week, we saw some rather
remarkable strengths in the Ephesian church. They were a laboring, patient,fiercely independent church. In the midst of this bounty of spiritual
maturity, however, we find one problem. And it is a serious problem, more
rightly a massive problem. They had left their first love for the Lord and for
people. Nevertheless I have somewhat against the, because thou hast left thy
first love (Revelation 2.4).
In one of the classic New Testament
passages that even many in the heathen world know of, our Saviour said that
God’s expectations and instructions for humanity hung on two supports – a love
for God and a love for people.
Matthew 22:37–40
37 Jesus said unto
him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy mind.
38 This is the
first and great commandment.
39 And the second
is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
40 On these two
commandments hang all the law and the prophets.
As I have written in more detail elsewhere,
this does not mean there are only two rules. It means every God-given
instruction is motivated by one or both of these principles. The church at
Ephesus had the right doctrine; they had studied the claims of the Nicolaitans
and renounced them. The church at Ephesus had the right character; they labored
fervently in their service for the Lord. The church at Ephesus had the right
attitude; they bore their trials with stoic endurance. But in a very real sense
they did all of this for the wrong reason. Why do I assert that? Because any
reason other than a love for God and a love for people as a motivation for our
actions is an unscriptural reason. Their reason was something other than love.
They had long ago left that behind.
Beloved, our religion is a
relationship. That relationship is with a Person. That Person is Christ. And
that Person told us to love Him and to love others. The Apostle Paul wrote an
epistle to this same church at Ephesus three decades prior to John doing so,
but we find the same message. Paul acknowledges they then had this love. Wherefore I also, after I heard of your
faith in the Lord Jesus, and love unto all the saints (Ephesians 1.15). He
urges them to strengthen the ties which bound their actions to such love. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by
faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love (Ephesians 3.17). In
fact, in that prior epistle Paul connected numerous aspects of Christianity to
love i.e. forbearing one another in love, speaking the truth in love, edifying
in love, walking in love, and explicitly connecting faith with love. In my
view, Paul stressed this not only because it was important, but because he must
have had some level of concern about it, as he clearly expresses in the very
last verse. Grace be with all them that
love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity. Amen (Ephesians 6.24).
In short, they had it, once. They were
losing it. Paul tells them to hold onto it, to grow it. But they turned around
and walked away. They left it.
How does such a thing happen? How does
a person or church or organization that once had a fervent love for Christ and
for people grow apathetic? At least some of the answer is found in our
Saviour’s words in the first gospel. And because iniquity shall abound, the
love of many shall wax cold (Matthew 24.12). We notice here it is not the
existence of iniquity that is the problem. Iniquity exists in every human and
thus in every human institution, too. But when we allow that iniquity to pick
up steam, so to speak, in the parlance of this illustration to charge down the
track unhindered, it will choke the love for God and for His people right out
of us.
As I sit here at my dining room table writing in late May, we have just this past week planted our small urban garden.
Tiny zucchini, basil, lavender, rosemary, and tomato plants dot the enclosure.
As the weather warms into summer and the weeks pass these plants will grow, and
we will enjoy their fruit. Well, that is we will enjoy their fruit if they stay
rooted, if we water them, if they receive abundant sunshine, and if we keep
control of the weeds.
I have never yet seen a garden without
weeds. Every garden has them. They spring up practically overnight, coming back
from the spot you previously plucked them or taking root a few inches over.
The problem with gardening, however, is not the presence of weeds. The problem arises when
you stop dealing with those weeds, when you allow them to multiply unchecked,
when you allow them to abound. A garden that abounds in weeds cannot abound in
fruit, no matter how good the soil, abundant the sunshine, and regular the
watering. And the exact same thing is true of a Christian and a church.
This is not a dissertation on
holiness. I have a book on that subject at the publisher even as we speak. But
even within the severely subscribed limits of a blog post I cannot help but
mention that is just here that tools such as frequent confession of sin and the
mortification of the flesh enter in. It is only by walking in the Spirit that
we will not walk in the flesh. The two cannot be done simultaneously. One
always pushes the other out.
Having established how such a
condition as leaving our first love arises let us briefly turn our attention to
what happens when it does. Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, John’s
short epistle in Revelation to the
Ephesian church warns, Remember therefore
from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I
will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his
place, except thou repent (Revelation 2.5). The candlestick in context
represents the church itself, a shining testimony to the grace of Christ
drawing men into His embrace. But a church that is walking away from love as
the motivation for all it does is walking into the twilight. The sun is
setting. The gloaming gradually deepens into night. And then the testimony of
that church is gone.
I have pastored in Chicago for fifteen
years. It is not an easy place to keep a church going, let alone shepherd one
forward for the cause of Christ. Over these fifteen years I have seen two
Baptist churches located less than a mile from me close their doors
permanently. How does that happen? How is it that their candlestick is removed?
Somehow, somewhere, in some way, iniquity began to reign unchecked. Their love
waxed cold. Their light grew dim. And then went out.
When it has gone this far it cannot be
reversed, but prior to that point I believe it can be. In point of fact, this
is John’s precise reason for writing. He seeks to call them back, to get them
to return to their first love. He calls on them to remember, to repent, and to
do the first works. He asks them to embrace the humility necessary to admit
error. He asks them to show that attitude to be genuine, by attacking the
iniquity then abounding in their church. Having begun there, they must proceed
on to do the first works. They were a working, laboring people, but they needed
to get back to laboring like they did when they first started, out of love.
1 Thessalonians
1:3
3 Remembering
without ceasing your work of faith, and labour of love, and patience of
hope in our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God and our Father;
Hebrews 6:10
10 For God is not
unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love, which ye have shewed
toward his name, in that ye have ministered to the saints, and do minister.
Do you serve God?
Good.
The next question is why?
The answer must be out of love. If it
is not, return to what you left. Repent. Attack the iniquity in your life. And
fall in love with God and with people all over again. It is the only way to
keep the candle of your church burning for the next generation.
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