Sermons

Summary: When a church has a good reputation, much activity and past accomplishment it does not guarantee a spiritually alive church.

George Barna in his book Turnaround Churches, profiles thirty churches that were about to die and made a turnaround. He compares dying churches to the Sears Catalogue. For about 100 years Sears was the symbol of mail order catalogue business. They introduced their mail order catalogue in 1894. For nearly one hundred years Sears was the catalogue retailer top dog.

In 1993 Sears announced that their catalogue would cease. What worked well in the past was no grantee of future success. The irony is that they buried their mail order catalogue when mail order business was $90 Billion business and the industry in a time of tremendous growth. That is striking that when direct marketing was at its height the most successful catalogue company of past dies out.

Barna makes a connection to the church. Today he says Christianity is growing as fast as ever and exciting things are happening and there is unprecedented church growth worldwide. In our nation more people are attending church than ever before. Yet some great churches of the past, prestigious churches that used to set the pace are dying, even closing their doors.

Sometimes the pride and complacency that comes with success often spells the fist step in decline. The paid staff grows and lay involvement becomes less. It is like a car that runs out of gas that does not come to an immediate stop but coasts along for a while.

In Revelation 3: 1-6 Jesus addresses the church in Sardis. It ran out of gas and was coasting. This church needs a turnaround. Jesus gives them a call to wake up. He exhorts them to be alive again. A church that is alive is an exciting church where people are expecting God to do great things.

When churches experience what God called the church to do it is dramatic. This is what Sardis needs. Sometimes a church comes alive and is looking for real ways to touch the world. An alive church is full of vision, purpose and a sense of God’s presence. When a church comes alive it is the place to be. When the church wakes up it is no longer the church for church sake, but it becomes the church with an eternal purpose.

The Church about to die

Jesus says you have a reputation of being alive but are dead.

Revelation 3:1

“To the angel of the church in Sardis write:

These are the words of him who holds the seven spirits of God and the seven stars. I know your deeds; you have a reputation of being alive, but you are dead.

Jesus calls Sardis a dead church, but vs 4 sheds light.

Revelation 3:4

You have a few people in Sardis that have not soiled their garments.

Revelation 3:2

You are about to die, strengthen what remains.

The picture is that this was a great church in the past alive and did great things. They had prestigious pastors, dignified lay people, but the real dynamism is missing.

It becomes the place to be seen. A prestigious church that in reality is a place only of religious formalism. This formalism has a death grip on the church. That seems to describe Sardis.

What needs to be done? Wake up!

Revelation 3:2

Wake up! Strengthen what remains and is about to die, for I have not found your deeds complete in the sight of my God.

When a church has a good reputation, much activity and past accomplishment it does not guarantee a spiritually alive church. The church in Smyrna was a sleeping giant.

Jesus calls the church to wake up. Worldly concerns had lulled this church to sleep to the point of death. Today there are churches across the landscape that are sleeping and about to die and Jesus says, Wake up!

Satan should fear a dying church. Why, because at any moment a core group in the church could hear Jesus words to wake up. They could get their church back on mission and make the gospel central. Then the church would no longer be focused on self. In Smyrna there was a small remnant there that had some life. That group needs to be strengthened and revitalized or the church will die.

How to revive the church.

Revelation 3:3

Remember, therefore, what you have received and heard; obey it, and repent. But if you do not wake up, I will come like a thief, and you will not know at what time I will come to you.

Jesus did not instruct Smyrna to go to a church growth conference in Philippi. He did tell them to remember what they had seen and heard. What they had heard was the basic message of the apostles. Jesus calls them back to the basics.

When Vince Lombardi tried to wake up his sleeping Green Bay Packers football team he called them back to the basics. He knew they needed to focus on the football basics of blocking and tackling. He took it to an extreme, held up a football and said; Gentlemen this is a football.

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