It is unknown who
started the church in Sardis, and there is little historical record of what became
of it. Therefore, what we know is mostly from Revelation 3:1–6, Jesus’ letter
to this church. That letter, among the letters distributed to seven churches, is one of
the harsher. It opens by saying they have the appearance of spiritual life but are
actually dead (Revelation 3:1b). As a church, it was spiritually on its last breath (Revelation 3:2a)
and needed to “wake up.” The language
Jesus employs about waking up echoes the city of Sardis’ own weakness and was likely an intentional allusion. The city was twice ransacked, by Cyrus the
Great in 546 BC and by Antiochus III in 218 BC, because its watchmen grew lazy.
Jesus likewise told the church to “wake up” lest He come against them like a
thief (Revelation 3:3c). While their exact
error is unknown, it appears that the church was busy acting like a
church, but Jesus knew their heart.
At the same time, Jesus commended those in Sardis who remained faithful and pure (Revelation 3:4).
For those individuals, Jesus encouraged them to persevere, promising eternal life and Jesus’ commendation to the Father (Revelation 3:5). The church in Sardis serves as a sobering warning that Christianity can look alive outwardly while dying inwardly. Church is meant to be a place where believers spiritually grow and mature—not where faith quietly falls asleep beneath empty routine and religious appearance.
The church of
Sardis only looked like a church. They were doing “churchy things,” but that activity was merely external, not in love
or service to Him. This should be a wake-up
call! If we aren't being careful, we might find out that we've been playing
church our entire lives. Being a Christian isn't about doing certain spiritual
activities. It's about having a relationship with God through His Son, Jesus.
Just like our spouses and parents would not be happy if we just did the bare
minimum to fulfill our duties as husband, wife, or child, God is not pleased
when we treat Christianity as a series of necessary activities to fit into our
lives. That's not an expression of love!
While we don't
know how the church of Sardis ended up, history is filled with churches that ceased
being alive. One such cause has been when formality of worship overtook love of
God and others.
We can guard
against this in our own churches by checking the motivations of our hearts for
everything we do. It’s OK to have structure in church, but we need to ask whether
the order of our service is intended to facilitate joyful
worship for God. If we answer that we do what we do at church “just
because,” then we need to stop and think carefully about Jesus’ warning to the church in Sardis. Our church services should be purposeful times where we worship God, hear
Scripture preached, take communion, fellowship with other believers, and so
forth. In short, the church is where our spiritual life is cultivated and
grown. When it falls asleep, first the church, then its believers, start to die!