Sermons

Summary: Thyatira - Jezebel in the Church (PowerPoint slides to accompany this talk are available on request - email: gcurley@gcurley.info)

Reading: Revelation chapter 2 verses 18-29:

Ill:

• There was a minister out taking a walk on a beautiful street.

• He noticed a small boy attempting to ring the doorbell on the porch of a house.

• The boy was short and the doorbell was higher than usual.

• The boy could not quite reach it.

• The minister stepped up to the porch beside the boy and reached up;

• And aggressively rang the doorbell for the boy.

• ‘AND NOW WHAT YOUNG MAN?’

• ‘NOW’, the boy said, ‘WE RUN LIKE CRAZY’!

• Things are not always as they appear;

• That was certainly true for the Church at Thyatira.

(A). Background:

Thyatira is the fourth of 7 churches mentioned in these opening chapters of Revelation:

• It’s worth noting that this is the longest letter and yet it’s addressed to the church;

• That was considered the least important city of the seven.

Ill:

• Biggest Church in the world is in South Korea (1 million people),

• Seoul, the capital, contained 11 of the world's 12 largest Christian congregations

• 1 in every 3 people in South Korea are evangelical Christians!

• Question: How did it start?

• Answer: A couple of hundred years a go;

• The Queen of Korea lost her little child by death,

• A slave girl in the palace told her of heaven where the child had gone,

• And the Saviour who would take her there.

• Thus the Gospel was first introduced to Korea by a little captive maid.

• What we think as of being insignificant;

• God often values and uses for his glory!

• So to this is the longest letter and yet it’s addressed to the church;

• That was considered the least important city of the seven.

(1). Geographically.

• If you were to look Thyatira up on a historical map;

• You would notice that it is located about sixty Kilometres southeast of Pergamum

• Which you looked at last week.

• There were no real distinguishing features about the city of Thyatira.

• It was not situated on a harbour like Ephesus or Smyrna,

• It was not on at prominent hill like Pergamum.

• In fact it was in the middle of a valley.

• Although it was situated well away from the Mediterranean Sea;

• It was on the road which connected the cities of Pergamum and Sardis.

• This was the road that the Imperial Post travelled;

• And so while it may not have been a large city it was a thriving city.

Ill:

• It was the ‘Watford Gap’ of its day or the ‘Crewe’ of its day.

• Not so much famous for itself,

• It was somewhere you passed through on the way to somewhere else.

• And so it was well known as a ‘pass through’ place.

Strategically the importance of Thyatira:

• Was that it was the gateway to Pergamum;

• Which was the Capital of the Roman Province of Asia Minor.

• And so there was an armed garrison placed in the city to protect the capital.

• However Thyatira wasn’t capable of a sustained defence because it lay in the middle of an open valley.

• Ill: So the very best that Thyatira could hope for was to be a speed bump;

• That would slow an advancing army down until Pergamum could prepare a defence.

(2). Commercially:

• Because of its location along trade routes,

• Thyatira became a prosperous commercial centre.

• Thyatira was a city full of merchants and manufacturing.

• Some of those major trades are mentioned; e.g. bronze and pottery workers.

Ill:

In verse 27 we are told:

• “He will rule them with an iron sceptre;

• He will dash them to pieces like pottery”.

• One of the jobs of the potters assistant;

• Was to smash the pottery with an iron rod.

• This was not blatant vandalism;

• He was to smash any pot that was not perfect. Any pot that was flawed, sub-standard.

• It was not to be traded or passed on (no second shops in those days);

• If it was faulty it was destroyed to save the name and reputation of the potter.

• That is what it means to ‘Rule with a rod of iron’;

• It means to break up everything that is not right.

Note:

• Archaeological discoveries have revealed;

• That the city had a large number of trade guilds,

• Which were the early equivalent of trade-unions,

• And so it could be said that Thyatira was a union town, a closed shop.

• That meant that no one was allowed to practice any trade;

• Unless he or she was a member of the local guild of that trade

Copy Sermon to Clipboard with PRO Download Sermon with PRO
Talk about it...

Nobody has commented yet. Be the first!

Join the discussion
;