Summary: Hollywood makes sequals and the same thing is always said, "It just wasn't as good as the first one, the original." Jesus says the same thing about the Church at Ephesus, "where you are now isn't as good as where you started out."

Lost Your First Love

Revelation 2:1–7

INTRODUCTION — “THE SEQUEL IS NEVER AS GOOD AS THE ORIGINAL”

We live in a culture obsessed with sequels, reboots, and remakes. Hollywood keeps chasing the magic of the original—Star Wars, Jurassic Park, The Lion King, Indiana Jones, The Matrix, Full House, even The Office and The Walking Dead. And time after time, audiences leave the theater saying the same thing:

“It just wasn’t like the first one.”

The sequel isn’t necessarily terrible. It often has bigger budgets, flashier effects, more characters, more action. But something’s missing—the pure passion, the fresh spark, the heart that made the original unforgettable.

In Revelation 2, Jesus says something strikingly similar to the church in Ephesus:

“Your sequel isn’t as good as your original. You’ve drifted from your first love.”

This wasn’t a failing church. It wasn’t dying or heretical. It was active, structured, doctrinally sound, disciplined, and enduring. Yet Jesus saw the problem: the sequel lacked the passion of the original.

Let’s read the passage together.

I. THEY HAD THE RIGHT WORK (Revelation 2:2–3)

If you or I had walked into the Ephesian church, we would have been impressed. This was the kind of congregation most pastors dream of leading.

They were a serving church.

Jesus says, “I know your deeds.” They were active, involved, engaged—their calendar overflowed with ministry.

They were a sacrificing church.

“Toil” means labor to the point of exhaustion. They didn’t quit when it got tough; they poured themselves out.

They were a steadfast church.

“Perseverance” means endurance under pressure. They stood firm when culture pushed back.

They were a separated church.

They tested false teachers, guarded sound doctrine, and refused to tolerate impostors.

They were a suffering church.

They endured hardship for Christ’s name and never grew weary.

From the outside, this church looked ideal:

Strong doctrine

Strong leadership

Strong ministry

Strong endurance

Many of us would want our church to mirror it.

But Jesus sees deeper than activity—He looks at affection. And that reveals the core issue.

II. THEY WORKED FOR THE WRONG REASON (Revelation 2:4)

Jesus declares, “But I have this against you: you have left your first love.”

Not lost it—left it. Not misplaced—walked away from it.

They did all the right things… but not out of love for Christ. Their doctrine was right, service right, discipline right, structure right, schedule right. But their hearts were wrong.

They had lost the passion, intimacy, joy, and devotion they once had for Jesus.

Here’s where the pop-culture thread returns: A franchise can boast better graphics, bigger budgets, more explosions, more characters—and still fall flat. Why? Because it lost the heart that made the original powerful.

The Ephesian church had more structure, more activity, more ministry… but less love.

Jesus doesn’t ask:

Do you attend church?

Do you serve?

Do you give?

Do you volunteer?

Do you know the Bible?

He asks one piercing question: “Do you love Me?”

Everything else flows from that.

When you love Him:

Worship becomes joy, not duty

Service becomes delight, not burden

Witness becomes natural, not forced

Obedience becomes desire, not obligation

So what does Jesus do when a church—or a believer—drifts from first love? He offers a clear choice.

III. THEY HAD A CHOICE: REPENTANCE OR REMOVAL (Revelation 2:5–7)

Jesus delivers one ultimatum with two outcomes.

Repentance

“Remember… repent… and do the works you did at first.”He calls them back to the original—back to the beginning, back to first love, back to the pure script.Remember:

The joy of your salvation

The sweetness of prayer

The hunger for His Word

The excitement of worship

The days when Jesus was enough

Then He commands, “Repent.” Turn back. Return to Me. Come home.Christians need repentance as much as anyone. We must shatter self-sufficiency, pride, and religious performance to reclaim simple, passionate love for Jesus.

Removal

“If you do not repent, I will remove your lampstand.”This isn’t loss of salvation—it’s loss of usefulness.A church can retain its building, programs, committees, traditions, history—and still lose its lampstand. Jesus won’t empower a body that refuses to love Him.Many churches today are mere shells because:

They loved programs more than Christ

Comfort more than obedience

Tradition more than truth

Themselves more than the Savior

And they refused to repent

Christ still walks among the lampstands. He trims wicks. He removes those that refuse to shine.

CONCLUSION — WHAT WILL THIS CHURCH CHOOSE?

Every church writes a story. Every believer writes a story.

Jesus asks: Will your sequel be weaker than your original… or will you return to the love that made the original powerful?

The world doesn’t need a flashier version of you. It needs the version that first fell in love with Jesus.

The choice isn’t made by committees, budgets, or leadership teams. It’s made by you—by your heart, by your love for Jesus.

Jesus calls His church back to Himself—not to more activity, programs, or busyness, but to our first love.

INVITATION — A CALL BACK TO YOUR FIRST LOVE

Church, listen closely.

Some of you are here today: busy… but empty. Active… but dry. Faithful… but distant. Present… but not passionate.

You’ve been living in the sequel—functioning without fire, serving without intimacy, worshiping without wonder.

Jesus calls you back to the original:

Back to the moment He saved you

Back to the moment He forgave you

Back to when you couldn’t stop talking about Him

Back to when you couldn’t wait to worship

Back to when your heart burned for Him

Today, He’s not asking for perfection—He’s asking for affection.

Not performance—repentance.

Not more work—your heart.

So here’s the invitation:

If you’ve drifted from your first love… come back.

If your heart has grown cold… come back.

If worship has become routine… come back.

If service has become duty… come back.

If faith has become mechanical… come back.

If you’ve been living in the sequel… come back to the original.

The altar is open. Your Savior is calling. Your first love is waiting.

Return to Him. Return to joy. Return to passion. Return to Jesus.

Today can be the day your story changes. Today your heart can come home. Today your first love can be restored.

Come. Now. While He is calling.