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What are you willing to lose for Jesus Christ?In this final episode of our four-part series on the church in Smyrna, we bring the entire letter together. Jesus speaks to a poor, slandered, persecuted church and gives them two staggering promises: the crown of life and protection from the second death. Rome could threaten their bodies, imprison them, and even execute them, but Rome could not touch the final verdict of the risen Christ.Smyrna teaches us that the church is not measured by comfort, cultural approval, money, visibility, or worldly success. The church is measured by faithfulness to Jesus Christ when pressure rises, when compromise becomes convenient, and when obedience becomes costly. The empire looked permanent while it was dying. The church looked weak while it was conquering.This episode explores the crown of life, the second death, the endurance of the persecuted church, the faithfulness of Polycarp, and why Smyrna receives no rebuke from Christ. If Smyrna teaches us anything, it is this: survival is not the highest good. Faithfulness is.In This EpisodeWe cover:• Why Smyrna speaks first to persecuted Christians around the world today• How Polycarp’s courage was formed long before the flames were lit• What Jesus means by “the crown of life”• Why Rome’s crowns were counterfeit glory• What the “second death” means in Revelation• Why Rome could kill Christians but could not conquer them• Why Smyrna receives no rebuke from Jesus• Why cultural pressure often reveals faithfulness rather than failure• How every generation faces its own version of Rome• Why Christ is worth more than safety, comfort, prosperity, reputation, freedom, and life itselfKey Quote“The empires always look permanent while they are dying. The church often looks weak while it is conquering.”ScriptureRevelation 2:8–11“And to the angel of the church in Smyrna write: The first and the last, who was dead, and has come to life, says this: ‘I know your tribulation and your poverty (but you are rich), and the blasphemy by those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan. Do not fear what you are about to suffer.’”Wrath And GraceA huge thank you to our new channel partner, Wrath and Grace, who are now helping with video post-production for the PRODCAST. Check out their resources, content, website, and app here:www.wrathandgrace.comSupport The ChannelJoin this channel to get access to perks and help us keep producing bold, biblical, Christ-centered content:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCD_3vCL8AM6U3sJIAzq9vnA/joinConclusionNext week, we leave Smyrna and travel north to Pergamum. Smyrna was the church pressured from the outside. Pergamum will be the church tempted from the inside. And if persecution is one of Satan’s weapons against the church, compromise may be an even deadlier one.
By Kendall Lankford4.9
2727 ratings
What are you willing to lose for Jesus Christ?In this final episode of our four-part series on the church in Smyrna, we bring the entire letter together. Jesus speaks to a poor, slandered, persecuted church and gives them two staggering promises: the crown of life and protection from the second death. Rome could threaten their bodies, imprison them, and even execute them, but Rome could not touch the final verdict of the risen Christ.Smyrna teaches us that the church is not measured by comfort, cultural approval, money, visibility, or worldly success. The church is measured by faithfulness to Jesus Christ when pressure rises, when compromise becomes convenient, and when obedience becomes costly. The empire looked permanent while it was dying. The church looked weak while it was conquering.This episode explores the crown of life, the second death, the endurance of the persecuted church, the faithfulness of Polycarp, and why Smyrna receives no rebuke from Christ. If Smyrna teaches us anything, it is this: survival is not the highest good. Faithfulness is.In This EpisodeWe cover:• Why Smyrna speaks first to persecuted Christians around the world today• How Polycarp’s courage was formed long before the flames were lit• What Jesus means by “the crown of life”• Why Rome’s crowns were counterfeit glory• What the “second death” means in Revelation• Why Rome could kill Christians but could not conquer them• Why Smyrna receives no rebuke from Jesus• Why cultural pressure often reveals faithfulness rather than failure• How every generation faces its own version of Rome• Why Christ is worth more than safety, comfort, prosperity, reputation, freedom, and life itselfKey Quote“The empires always look permanent while they are dying. The church often looks weak while it is conquering.”ScriptureRevelation 2:8–11“And to the angel of the church in Smyrna write: The first and the last, who was dead, and has come to life, says this: ‘I know your tribulation and your poverty (but you are rich), and the blasphemy by those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan. Do not fear what you are about to suffer.’”Wrath And GraceA huge thank you to our new channel partner, Wrath and Grace, who are now helping with video post-production for the PRODCAST. Check out their resources, content, website, and app here:www.wrathandgrace.comSupport The ChannelJoin this channel to get access to perks and help us keep producing bold, biblical, Christ-centered content:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCD_3vCL8AM6U3sJIAzq9vnA/joinConclusionNext week, we leave Smyrna and travel north to Pergamum. Smyrna was the church pressured from the outside. Pergamum will be the church tempted from the inside. And if persecution is one of Satan’s weapons against the church, compromise may be an even deadlier one.

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