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Read Revelation 1 (use your own Bible or use the link above to access the in-App Bible).
‘Suffering and kingdom and patient endurance’ Revelation 1:9 (NIV)
This phrase reminds me of my honeymoon! Gill and I spent the last weekend of our honeymoon in London, and I took her to an Anglican church with a strong reputation for Biblical preaching. The sermon was on Revelation 1 and the preacher spent half an hour explaining that suffering, kingdom and patient endurance were hallmarks of the Christian life. I spent the sermon quietly hoping that my new bride wasn’t taking this as a warning of things to come!
John, the author of Revelation, had been exiled to the lonely island of Patmos (v.9) by the Roman authorities because of his testimony to Jesus. When John met the risen Jesus in a vision (v.13) he was given a message that related to events in the first century, ‘to show what must soon take place’ (v.1). He was writing to encourage seven local churches to keep the faith in a time of persecution ‘for the time is near’ (v.3) and to show patient endurance for the sake of the kingdom of Christ.
The seven churches listed in verse 11 were in a small area of what today would be western Turkey. Interestingly, the order in which the cities are listed is exactly the order that the carrier of the letter would visit them in, following a circular route along the trade routes of the time. So as we embark on reading the book of Revelation let’s first try to imagine what this message would have meant to these young churches under threat of persecution.
As we do so let’s realise that these words are deeply relevant for today too, for ‘suffering, kingdom and patient endurance’ have been the lived experience of faithful disciples of Jesus in every generation since the first century. Suffering and persecution are signs of a world that is not yet fully under the rule of Christ. But God’s kingdom continues to break into this world, and local churches are called to be signs and agents of God’s kingdom in their communities.
Let us pray: Lord Jesus, ruler of the kings of the earth, help me to patiently endure whatever suffering may come today as I strive for Your kingdom to come. Amen.
The Venerable Mark Ireland, Archdeacon of Blackburn