Reviving Spiritual Vitality: Overcoming Apathy in the Church

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Churches that lack interest, enthusiasm, or concern for the world around them. When you hear stats like that, it should be a wake-up call to church. We never want to be that. We always want to be a healthy, vibrant church. And we can't turn away from some of the hard, difficult conversations. But we should be able to say, Oh, there is a significant problem in the American church. And one of them is apathy. [00:08:15] (29 seconds)


And Jesus, as he's telling John to write these letters to the churches, he addresses apathy. Now, what's important? Sometimes we don't understand Revelation. Well, the book of Revelation. And it is an end times book, but it's more than that. You see, Jesus is telling John, write to the future church. And we always interpret that through the lens of, Oh, meaning like at the second coming, the end of times. [00:08:59] (30 seconds)


And when we look at Revelation 3, this is what Jesus says. He's writing to the church in Sardis. And he says to the angel of the church in Sardis, write, he who has seven spirits of God and the seven stars says this, I know your deeds, that you have a name, that you are alive, and yet you are dead. Be consistently alert and strengthen the things that remain, which were about to die. [00:09:47] (28 seconds)


What Jesus is really saying, that the church in Sardis has a good name, meaning that they are perceived as a healthy church to others. Even other churches in the area would think that this church is alive and well. When he says that you have a good name, it means like saying, oh, well, people speak highly of you. You're well known. And even other churches recognize you. Oh, you're a great church. [00:13:30] (27 seconds)


When Jesus says to be constantly alert, we could interpret that as wake up, be watchful, pay attention. That's what Jesus is telling the church. And then Jesus tells the church to strengthen the things that remain, which were about to die. In other words, Jesus is saying that the church, the church is not paying attention to what it is or is not doing to the point that it's going to destroy the church. [00:15:42] (31 seconds)


I mean, Jesus is making a point when he says it's about to die, meaning there's still hope. You're not dead. If you don't fix this, you will die. The church will die. But there's still hope. It's the same thing. I think just about all of us in here have gone camping. You sit around the campfire. And maybe, like Chris Wells, you're the last one there at the campfire at 2 o'clock in the morning for some strange reason. [00:16:49] (39 seconds)


The church in Sardis knows what it's supposed to do, but it isn't doing it. The church is full of apathy, and it's killing the church. There's a strong passage, a strong verse in the Bible that often gets overlooked about apathy. And it comes in the first verse. It's in the form of James 4. James records this. Here's what the church in Sardis needs to hear, and this is what the church today needs to hear. Apathy is a sin. [00:19:48] (46 seconds)


And he will not erase your name from the book of life. Let me give you a little bit of context on that, why that verse is mentioned there, that phrase is mentioned in the ancient world. It wasn't uncommon for kings to have a book that recorded all the citizens of their kingdom. They would write them down. Here's Bob, Bob has a family of four, blah, blah, blah, all that information's in there. [00:26:48] (29 seconds)


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