Opening Prayer: Lord, awaken me, you whose love burns beyond
the stars; light the flame of my lantern that I may always burn with love. (A
Traveler Toward the Dawn by John Eagan)
Scripture: Revelation 3:1-6
Journal: How are you like the church at Sardis? How do the words to the church at Sardis
speak to your heart today? How do the
inspire you? How do they disrupt
you? How do you need to “wake up?” What is dead in you that needs to be revived?
Reflection:
A reputation is a powerful thing. Because a reputation (good or bad) is often
not reality, but only someone’s impression of reality. And in our day and age—as well as that of the
church at Sardis apparently—impression is everything. If you can create and maintain the impression
you are hoping for, then who cares what the reality is, right? Thus, impression becomes all about reputation
management. What people think about you
becomes more important than what the truth about you really is. As long as you can keep up the charade you
are good to go.
But keeping up the charade can be
exhausting, and darn near impossible over time.
Eventually someone is going to find out the ugly truth. There is always that one person in any crowd
that is adept at spotting a phony.
Someone who is somehow magically or supernaturally able to see right
through the façade—right down to the core.
And when this happens we are horrified.
Because somehow our greatest fear—and maybe, at the same time, our
deepest longing—comes true, we are exposed.
That’s how the church at Sardis must’ve
felt. They had worked and worked at
maintaining a good reputation, even though they knew deep in their hearts that
there was no life in their souls. And then
here comes Jesus, into the midst of the pretense, calling their bluff and
tearing their finely crafted costume to smithereens. At that point they must have been in scramble
mode. I mean, what do you do? Deny it?
Ignore it? Avoid it? Rationalize?
Or do you resort to attack? What
is the best strategy for damage control?
How can we spin it so that our reputation—which we have worked so hard
on—still comes out intact?
Or maybe there is another solution. Maybe we do exactly what Jesus is suggesting. Maybe we admit the truth. Maybe we come clean and stop trying to fool
ourselves—and others. Maybe we take it
as a wake-up call to start living an authentic life with God. Maybe we repent. Maybe we change our minds, our way of
thinking (as well as our direction), and begin to see everything (and live
everything) differently. Maybe we
realize that reality is more important than reputation and we start trying to
be authentic people in Christ; more concerned with how we’re loving than with
what people are thinking. Like Jesus,
who “made himself of no reputation,
and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: and being found in fashion as a man, humbled himself,
and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.” (Philippians 2:7-8, KJV)
Prayers
Closing Prayer: Most Holy God, wake me up from my soul’s deep slumber
and bring my life under your complete control.
By your grace, awaken me daily to the reality of your presence within
and around me. And, by the power of your
Spirit, make me responsive to your will and your direction. Amen.
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