Bible Repentance - chapter 3part 2 of 2

The Remedy for Laodicea’s Problems

Since Christ’s call to repent is sent to the angel of the church, its human leadership, with the intent that the experience be ministered to the church at large, it is clear He calls for a corporate and denominational repentance.
It is denominational pride and complacency which is rebuked in the message of the True Witness. Therefore, the remedy proposed is denominational repentance. The medicine must fit the disease.

Therefore, we miss the point of the Laodicean message when we assume that the call to repent is merely for personal sin. it is true that we all as individuals have sins and weaknesses for which we should repent. For example, we may battle for the. victory over an evil temper, perverted appetite, love of amusement, pride of dress, or sensuality. An infinite list of personal sins could be compiled. But the point of the Lord’s appeal in Revelation 3 is that as a church and, more particularly as church leadership, we are guilty of denominational sin.

This sin is specifically (1) denominational pride (“Thou sayest, I am rich and I have been enriched”); (2) denominational complacency (“Thou sayest, I have need of nothing”); (3) denominational self-deception (“Thou knowest not that thou art wretched”); and (4) denominational assumptions of success which are not divinely validated (“Thou art miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked”).

The remedies proposed are for the healing of these denominational ills: “gold tried in the fire,” “white raiment,” and “eyesalve.” To the leadership of the church the Lord Jesus says, “As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent.” Upon the minds of church leadership there is deeply impressed as never before in world history a sense of the Lord’s love for the corporate body of His last-day church, a love that finds expression not in pampering denominational pride but in “faithful and true” rebuke and chastening, albeit with abundant evidence of loyalty.

We Must Succeed
Where the Jews Failed

There is no difficulty in understanding what the Lord Jesus means by His call to repentance. We have a divine illustration of it in His call to the leadership of the Jewish nation of His day. If we find out what He meant then, we know what He means now. With the repentance of Nineveh standing in sacred history as the model, we can easily see the pattern that the Lord Jesus expects to see develop today. “From the greatest of them to the least of them”, the repentance envisaged in the Laodicean message must spread from the “top to the bottom” throughout the worldwide church. When the experience Christ calls for is understood and embraced by the “angel” of the church, the methods of its promotion will be. uniquely effective. It will be clearly seen that the Holy Spirit, not advertising promotional technique, will have “caused it to be proclaimed and published.” As in Nineveh’s day, “the king and his nobles” will range themselves solidly in support of the experience Christ calls for. (See Jonah 3:5-9).

Where the Jews of Christ’s day failed, “the angel of the church of the Laodiceans” is to succeed. Although it is true that in past history God’s calls to repentance have usually been refused, it is not necessary to expect that the final call He sends to the last-day church must also fail. The prophetic picture is clear that something must happen in the end of time that has never happened before. The long sad history of milleniums of defeat must be changed at last, and the remnant church glorify the Lord and vindicate Him before the world and before the universe in a way that has never yet been done. Thus the church will “make herself ready” to be worthy to become the Bride of Christ. Doesn’t Christ deserve this? Hasn’t He sacrificed enough and suffered enough that at last His church shall give Him the kind of complete surrender that a bride gives to her husband? Doesn’t Calvary demand such a response from us? Should it be any longer delayed?

Success Not Only Possible, But Certain

Nothing could be more tragic in the end of history than for a disappointed Christ to have to stand before “the door” knocking in vain and ultimately turning away in the sadness of defeat. But the picture we see in Revelation 3:20 and 21 indicates complete success.

Christ purchased the church of Cod with His own blood (Acts 20:28), and thus richly deserves from her this full measure of devotion. Surely this will be the experience of Jesus’ “bride.” “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, 0 God, Thou will not despise” (Psalm 51:17). By virtue of the infinte sacrifice on Calvary, let us have confidence that the Laodicean message will fully accomplish its objective.

The fact that the Jews failed does not mean that modern Israel must also fail:

That which Cod purposed to do for the world through Israel, the chosen nation, He will finally accomplish through His church on earth today. He has “let out His vineyard to other husbandmen,” even to His covenant-keeping people, who faithfully “render Him the fruits in their season.” (Prophets and Kings, pp. 713, 714.)

How encouraging this prophecy is! Lessons can be learned. The impenitent “old Jerusalem” will become the penitent “New Jerusalem,” both corporate bodies. The transformation from the one to the other will be accomplished through the power of divine love.

Critics of the church who have given up hope and expect ultimate corporate failure mark her inward defects. The cannot see how God’s love could possibly be loyal to such a faulty, erring church. Their mistake is a failure to discern the true nature of love. They assume, perhaps innocently, that divine love is like human love. Human love is conditioned and dependant on the value or virtue of its object. We “fall in love” with someone beautiful or wonderful. We cannot comprehend falling in love with someone ugly or evil. So critics look at the enfeebled and defective condition of the church and wonder how God’s love for her can be permanent. “The church has failed,” they say; “therefore, God’s patient love must cease.” What they have not yet seen is that divine love, being free and sovereign, is not dependent on the goodness or value of its object. It creates goodness and value in its object.

It is this creative quality of divine love which assures the complete success of the message of “the faithful and true witness” to the “angel of the church of the Laodiceans.”

The Laodicean church is the “new covenant” church. Not for her own intrinsic goodness nor for her “works” will the Lord remain loyal to her, but because He remains a covenant-keeping God. “Not for thy righteousness, or for the uprightness of thine heart, dost thou go to possess their land: but … that the Lord thy God … may perform the word which the Lord sware unto thy fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob” (Deuteronomy 9:5). For the honor and glory of His name He will remain loyal to His church and in her vindication before the world Christ too will be vindicated. His sacrificial love will be proven justified.

Perhaps enough has been said in this chapter already. But we should consider one more question before we finish. Is it our business to ask whether an experience of corporate or denominational repentance is necessary, practical, or even beneficial?

We have no right to sit in judgment on our Lord’s call and deliberate over its value as though it were a human suggestion someone makes. Perish the very thought that we have any right to reject it! Is He not our Lord and Master? Did He not give His blood for us? Is it not sufficient that the Lord Jesus Christ calls for repentance? How dares anyone to say, “Well, I like the idea, but I doubt it will work,” or, “In my opinion, we’re not all that bad that we need denominational repentance.” No committee or council can contradict Christ’s call.

The universe of heaven is watching us on their equivalent of TV. They watched the crucifixion of the Prince of glory. They have seen that He has called for a humbling of heart, contrition, melting of soul, from the denomination that prides itself on being the “remnant church.”

What response will they see us make in this our generation?

Read Chapter 8 — How Can Millions of Members Repent?
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