It was a thriving seaport city more than 3,000 years before Christ was born, and it is still a thriving city today. During the time Revelation was written, it was a center of commerce, wealth, and architectural splendor, located about 40 miles north of Ephesus. The city fathers proclaimed it “the Pride of Asia.” Today it’s the third largest city in Turkey and a major international trade center, as well as the home of the NATO southern command HQ and the prestigious Aegean University. The city is now known as Izmir, but during the first century, when the book of Revelation was written, its name was Smyrna.

The name Smyrna means “myrrh,” a fragrant spice or perfume obtained when the tender bark of the flowering myrrh tree is pierced or crushed. It is a fitting name for the first-century church of Smyrna, which gave off a fragrance of Christ throughout the region because it was a church that was often pierced, often crushed, often afflicted. The city Smyrna was a center of idolatrous emperor worship. As early as A.D. 26, the region of Tiberius Caesar, a temple was erected to the emperor, and all the citizens of Smyrna – including Christians – were expected to worship the Roman emperor. If you were a Christian in Smyrna, you were called upon once a year to appear at the temple and either say “Caesar is Lord,” or, “Jesus is Lord.” Those who refused to confess Caesar as their Lord were either imprisoned or put to the sword.

So Smyrna was a place of enormous oppression and persecution for the early church. This persecution was inflicted upon the church by the Roman government. And it was also inflicted upon the church by the Jewish community in Smyrna – a community that was fanatically hostile to the early Christian church. These then, are the circumstances of the church in Smyrna at the time the second letter of Revelation was written.

Smyrna receives the shortest of Jesus’ seven messages, yet one filled with praise and without any criticism from the Lord. Jesus’ urgent letter to this church is dominated by His need to prepare the Smyrnaeans for severe persecution that is drawing near (vv. 9-10). Jesus is very familiar with the state of affairs in Smyrna, especially the “tribulation” that was upon the church. This word means “living under the pressure of great oppression.” It’s not surprising that Jesus first associated this tribulation with “poverty,” since successful participation in social and economic life would probably have been impossible for those not willing to worship Caesar as Lord.

How few Christians today are willing to place the affairs of Christ’s kingdom ahead of their careers or financial prosperity! But the Christians of Smyrna realized that theirs was a privilege of sharing in Christ’s own suffering. Another form of tribulation came through the “slander” that the Christians were enduring from “those who say that they are Jews and are not” (v. 9).

Another feature of Smyrna was the large and prominent Jewish community in the city. Many of the first believers may have come from the Jewish community. This would have been one reason why Jewish leaders were some of the early church’s most resolute oppressors. The two other forms of persecution in Smyrna go together, since imprisonment in those days was not for the sake of incarceration but merely as a brief prelude to execution: “Behold, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison… Be faithful unto death” (v. 10).

The kinds of tribulation suffered by the church at Smyrna are still being suffered by Christians around the world today. Here in America today, Christians are frequently slandered as being hateful people because of our moral stance against homosexuality. Simply reading the Bible’s teachings on sexuality and marriage may soon be criminalized in the United States as “hate speech.”

Jesus has a message of encouragement to the persecuted church of Smyrna which is grounded in His own glorious person. His command is “Do not fear what you are about to suffer” (v. 10). The basis for this urging is found in Christ’s opening words: “To the angel of the church in Smyrna write: ‘The words of the first and the last, who died and came to life’” (v. 8). Jesus presents Himself as the Lord of the persecuted, granting hope, provision, and victory for His saints in the tribulation of this world.

Jesus has three words of encouragement for those who will endure this severe form of persecution, three statements to strengthen and embolden the hearts of the believers in Smyrna. First, He says, “The devil will put some of you in prison to test you.” God knows what we are to endure even before we are subjected to it. We discover how much we have matured in Christ and how trustworthy God is in times of trouble. Trials strip away our artificial and superficial supports and force us to lean on the only support that is truly reliable: the grace and strength of God Himself!

Second, He says that persecution will last only a limited time (“for ten days”). We can be encouraged to know that the Lord sets limits to our suffering. The test will not last longer than we can endure. If the Lord says the test will last “ten days,” then there is no force on earth that could make it last eleven days! The pressure under which the Smyrna congregation suffered would not last forever.

Third, He says, “Be faithful, even to the point of death, and I will give you the crown of life.” We can be certain that “the crown of life” had a special significance to the Christians in Smyrna. The city of Smyrna was often called “the crown of Asia.” This was a source of status and pride to the citizens of Smyrna. But Jesus says that He will give to the Christians of Smyrna and even better crown – the crown of life, the enjoyment of eternal life in glory! These words of reassurance to the church in Smyrna remind us of Paul’s statement in Romans that “the sufferings of this present moment are not to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us.” And elsewhere Paul writes, “This light affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us to produce an eternal weight of glory.” We are continually encouraged by the fact that these trials, testings, and pressures are producing something of eternal value in our lives.

Jesus places a single requirement on His persecuted church: “Be faithful,” even “unto death” (v. 10). The believers were not to look at the suffering to come, so that they tremble with fear, but to look through the suffering to the Sovereign Lord who promised to deliver them strengthened and purified after a limited duration of trial. With this perspective, remaining faithful was their single goal.

Jesus gave an incentive to faithfulness under tribulation that pertains to believers of all times: “He, who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. The one who conquers will not be hurt by the second death” (v. 11). The expression “second death” also appears later in Revelation, which identifies it with the eternal condemnation in hell that awaits unbelievers in the final judgment (21:8). The Bible speaks not only of two deaths, temporal and eternal, but also of two resurrections – of the spirit and of the body. All persons will be resurrected in the body on the last day to stand before the judgment throne of Christ (Matt. 25:31-32). But those who believe in Jesus in this present life, suffering tribulation for His name but made rich through saving faith, have received a spiritual resurrection in the new birth.

Jesus told His followers in Smyrna, “Do not fear what you are about to suffer” (v. 10). Likewise, Jesus tells unbelievers that their true fear is not what they will lose in this world through the faith in Christ but rather God’s judgment that awaits us all in death. Jesus once said: “Do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear Him who can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matt. 10:28). For both the Christian and the unbeliever, the Bible’s antidote to fear is one and the same, along with an invitation to eternal life: “Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved” (Acts 16:31). He promises all who believe: “Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life…The one who conquers will not be hurt by the second death (vv. 10-11).

Revelation 2:8-11 Study Questions:

In the church of Smyrna, the Lord finds nothing to condemn. What seems to be the main focus of this letter?

The Jewish synagogue in Smyrna has become a “satan-synagogue” – not just in vague, general, abusive sense, but in the rather sharply defined sense that, as “the satan” is literally “the accuser,” the synagogue in town has been “accusing” the Christians of all kinds of wickedness. What is the Lord’s advice to the church at Smyrna when it comes to responding to such accusations and their consequences (v. 10)?

How might we take the promise of verse 11 to heart and live as those who know that the “second death” has no power to harm the faithful?

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