Recovery Through
Spiritual Dynamics
Revelation 3:1: “…I know your
deeds; you have a reputation of being alive, but you are dead.” This is a
reference to operational death when a believer is operating like a spiritually
dead person. James talks about this in James 2:26: “Faith without works
[application] is dead.” It doesn’t mean that that person in that section is an unbeliever, he is operationally dead like the believers in
Revelation 3:2: “Be watchful,
and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die: for I have not
found thy works perfect before God.” If they were unbelievers
and spiritually dead they wouldn’t have anything that remained, because they
couldn’t have produced anything from the flesh. The first command, what
we have in our English a “Be,” is the Greek verb GINOMAI [ginomai] in a present middle imperative. It is a deponent
verb, which is why it is a middle voice, but it is a present imperative. The
present imperative means this is something which should be a
ongoing characteristic, a standard operating procedure, habit pattern of any
Christian life. We should always be watchful. It has the idea of becoming
something that you were not already, so it is indicating the fact that they are
not watchful, not alert at all to what is going on in their own spiritual life.
So they need to become something they are not already, and what they are to
become is “watchful.” This is the word GREGOREO [grhgorew]
where we get the name “Gregory.” It means to wake up or to awaken. They are to
be watchful. A dead person can’t be watchful but a temporally dead person,
someone who is in carnality, can be watchful. They need to wake up, become
alert, which they aren’t already, and they need to stay alert. So the idea
there is that they are to wake up, put their focus on the right priorities, and
to be alert and watchful about their spiritual life. They need to pay attention
to what is going on around them and not just drift lazily through their
spiritual life but to realize what Paul says in Ephesians chapter six that we
are involved in a spiritual warfare. We are engaged in a battle and there are
three enemies in that battle. The first is the enemy within, the sin nature
which is constantly pumping out temptation to get us to operate independently
of the grace, the provision and the power of God. That sin nature is allied
with an external enemy called the world system, or the cosmic system. This is
simply the total collection of all the thoughts and values of a local culture
that is based on principles that are antagonistic to or independent from the
Word of God. The word system often presents rationales and justifications and
truisms that sound good but are in contradiction to the Word of God.
The New King James Bible
says, “strengthen the things which remain, that are
ready to die,” but the majority text says something completely different. The
word STERISON [sthrion] means to stand fast, to
set fast, to fix firmly, to establish something.
Establishing something means to make a certain condition permanent, to cause
something to grow. It is related to putting something in a place where later
growth could occur. It has to do with bringing stability to that which is
unstable, to make something firm or stable. The other word which is from the
Greek word TEREO [threw] means to keep, to guard,
or to protect things that are under attack or in danger. So we can see that either word works within this context, and either word
presents a very similar sense. The latter part of this sentence varies from one
version to another. One says “strengthen the things which are about to die”;
the other says, “keep the things which are about to be thrown away.” The first
option is probably the best. We are to strengthen what remains. They are about
to die and go into non-existence. There is a regression that occurs in the
spiritual life where you can reach a certain level of maturity but then as you
reverse course and backslide you can lose the ground you have gained. You lose
even the doctrine that you have learned. You forget about principles and how to
apply them. This is the condition that the Lord is pointing out in the
The question we have to ask:
How do we stabilize that which remains? How do we go about establishing our
Christian life, or even re-establishing our Christian life? Because there is a
threat here, these things are in jeopardy if there is continuance in carnality.
One point to be made here is that even though they have reversed course, even
though they are falling apart, even though they are in carnality, and even
though instead of being spiritually mature they are spiritually immature, there
is hope. There is an opportunity to reverse course. No matter what you have
done in your life, no matter how you have failed, no matter what sins you have
committed, no matter how you have shocked yourself—and we have all done that at
times—somehow His grace covers it all. Certainly there is damage, loss of
reward, things that you have to surmount now that are
more difficult than if you hadn’t gone through that, but there is always hope,
always recovery. 1 John 1:9 is the starting point for that recovery but it
doesn’t mean that once you have confessed your sin you have recovered. Now you
have to go through the recovery process, which means learning all over again—to
walk by means of the Spirit, to abide in Christ, to take in the Word of God, to
apply the Word of God, to re-establish those spiritual disciplines that are
necessary to advance in the spiritual life.
“…for I have not found thy
works perfect before God.” This is a perfect tense of HEURISKO [e(uriskw], meaning to find or discover something. The perfect
tense means this is emphasizing completed action. Some level of evaluation has
been completed at this point, and what He is saying is that at this point as a
result of the evaluation done already the present result of this is failure.
They are getting an F-minus for their progress in the spiritual life right now.
“I have not found [as a result of a previous evaluation completed] your works
perfect.” The word there for works is ERGON [e)rgon] meaning production, whatever it is. “Perfect” is the
Greek verb PLEROO [plhrow]
here, meaning to make full, to fill, to bring to completion, and it is used
periphrastically here to complete the thought, “I have not found complete your
works before God.” So there is much left that they need to do in their
spiritual life. They have a lot of growth left and they need to pursue that, it
needs to be their priority.
Revelation
3:3, the conclusion. “Remember
therefore how you have received and heard.” Those verbs indicate how they
received Christ as savior—by faith alone in Christ
alone. Grace. You have to come back to a grace oriented position. Remember how
you received the Word that you learned originally, not just the reception of
salvation but also receiving the Word, the idea that is linked with the next
verb, hearing. Hearing is never viewed in the Scripture as the simple process
of listening to the teaching of the Word of God. It includes within its idea that
of application of doing, of not just listening but also applying what you hear.
So He is calling them back to what they did earlier when they were advancing
spiritually, to remember the principles that they implemented earlier in their
life.
“…and hold fast, and repent.
If therefore you will not watch, I will come on you as a thief, and you will
not know what hour I will come upon you.” The key is changing one’s mind. It is
not talking about emotion, remorse. There is always recovery. The recovery
procedure is laid out here in verse three and it is a refocus on how we
originally learned and accepted Christ as our savior,
how we originally learned doctrine, received doctrine, underwent those
principles, and understanding at the root the spiritual dynamic that is crucial
to that supernatural means of growth, which is walking according to the Spirit.