Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Revelation 3:10

Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.

10. Because I also ] It would be possible, but hardly in accordance with the usage of this book, to connect this with what goes before, “that I have loved thee, because thou hast kept , and I will keep thee from.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Because thou hast kept the word of my patience – My word commanding or enjoining patience; that is, thou hast manifested the patience which I require. They had shown this in the trials which they had experienced; he promises now, that in return he will keep them in the future trials that shall come upon the world. One of the highest rewards of patience in one trial is the grace that God gives us to bear another. The fact that we have been patient and submis sive may be regarded as proof that he will give us grace that we may be patient and submissive in the trials that are to come. God does not leave those who have shown that they will not leave him.

I also will keep thee – That is, I will so keep you that you shall not sink under the trials which will prove a severe temptation to many. This does not mean that they would be actually kept from calamity of all kinds, but that they would be kept from the temptation of apostasy in calamity. He would give them grace to bear up under trials with a Christian spirit, and in such a manner that their salvation should not be endangered.

From the hour of temptation – The season; the time; the period of temptation. You shall be no kept that what will prove to be a time of temptation to so many, shall not endanger your salvation. Though others fall, you shall not; though you may be afflicted with others, yet you shall have grace to sustain you.

Which shall come upon all the world – The phrase used here – all the world – may either denote the whole world; or the whole Roman empire; or a large district of country; or the land of Judaea. See the notes on Luk 2:1. Here, perhaps, all that is implied is, that the trial would be very extensive or general – so much so as to embrace the world, as the word was understood by those to whom the epistle was addressed. It need not be supposed that the whole world literally was included in it, or even all the Roman empire, but what was the world to them – the region which they would embrace in that term. If there were some far-spreading calamity in the country where they resided, it would probably be all that would be fairly embraced in the meaning of the word. It is not known to what trial the speaker refers. It may have been some form of persecution, or it may have been some calamity by disease, earthquake, or famine that was to occur. Tacitus (see Wetstein, in loco) mentions an earthquake that sank twelve cities in Asia Minor, in one night, by which, among others, Philadelphia was deeply affected; and it is possible that there may have been reference here to that overwhelming calamity. But nothing can be determined with certainty in regard to this.

To try them that dwell upon the earth – To test their character. It would rather seem from this that the affliction was some form of persecution as adapted to test the fidelity of those who were affected by it. The persecutions in the Roman empire would furnish abundant occasions for such a trial.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 10. The word of my patience] The doctrine which has exposed you to so much trouble and persecution, and required so much patience and magnanimity to bear up under its attendant trials.

The hour of temptation] A time of sore and peculiar trial which might have proved too much for their strength. He who is faithful to the grace of God is often hidden from trials and difficulties which fall without mitigation on those who have been unfaithful in his covenant. Many understand by the hour of temptation the persecution under Trajan, which was greater and more extensive than the preceding ones under Nero and Domitian.

To try them] That is, such persecutions will be the means of trying and proving those who profess Christianity, and showing who were sound and thorough Christians and who were not.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Because thou hast kept the word of my patience: the doctrine of the gospel is, unquestionably, the word here called the word of the Lords patience, because it was that word, that doctrine, which (as those times went) could not he adhered to and observed without much patience in those that adhered to it; both actively, waiting for the promises revealed in it, and passively, enduring all manner of trials and crosses. To keep this word, was to keep close not only to the matters of faith revealed in it, but to the duty imposed by it upon ministers and others in the preaching and propagating of the gospel, and all the duties of a holy life.

I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world; for this faithfulness God promises to keep the ministers of this church from those persecutions which raged elsewhere, and were further, in Trajans time, to come upon all Christians living under the Roman empire.

To try them that dwell upon the earth; to try those Christians that lived within that empire, how well they would adhere to Christ, and the profession of the gospel. This I take to be a more proper sense, than theirs who would interpret this hour of temptation of the day of judgment, which is never so called.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

10. patience“endurance.””The word of My endurance” is My Gospel word, whichteaches patient endurance in expectation of my coming (Re1:9). My endurance is the endurance which I require, andwhich I practice. Christ Himself now endures, patientlywaiting until the usurper be cast out, and all “His enemies bemade His footstool.” So, too, His Church, for the joy before herof sharing His coming kingdom, endures patiently. Hence, in Re3:11, follows, “Behold, I come quickly.”

I alsoThe reward is inkind: “because thou didst keep,” c. “I also (on Myside) will keep thee,” &c.

fromGreek, “(soas to deliver thee) out of,” not to exempt fromtemptation.

the hour of temptationtheappointed season of affliction and temptation (so in De4:34 the plagues are called “the temptations of Egypt”),literally, “the temptation”: the sore temptationwhich is coming on: the time of great tribulation before Christ’ssecond coming.

to try them that dwell uponthe earththose who are of earth, earthy (Re8:13). “Dwell” implies that their home is earth, notheaven. All mankind, except the elect (Rev 13:8Rev 13:14). The temptation bringsout the fidelity of those kept by Christ and hardens theunbelieving reprobates (Rev 9:20;Rev 9:21; Rev 16:11;Rev 16:21). The particularpersecutions which befell Philadelphia shortly after, were theearnest of the great last tribulation before Christ’s coming, towhich the Church’s attention in all ages is directed.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Because thou hast kept the word of my patience,…. The Gospel; so called because it gives an account of the patience of Christ, in the midst of all his outward meanness and humiliation; and because it is a means of implanting and increasing the grace of patience, which God is the efficient cause of, and Christ is the example of; that patience, which bears a resemblance to his, in enduring afflictions, reproaches, persecutions, desertions, and temptations, and in waiting for his kingdom and glory; and because both the preachers and professors of the word have need of patience, and should exercise it in like manner as Christ did. This word, the churches, in the Philadelphian state, will keep pure and incorrupt, and observe the ordinances of it according to the directions given in it; and will believe the promise of Christ’s personal coming, and patiently wait for it: wherefore, Christ promises as follows,

I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth; this hour seems to refer not to any of the vials which will be poured out on the antichristian states, but to some affliction and distress which will befall the reformed churches, and will light upon the outward court worshippers among them It seems to be the last struggle of the beast of Rome, and to denote some violent and sharp persecution, such as what Daniel mentions, that never was before nor since; but it will be but short, but one hour, the twenty fourth part of a prophetical day or year, perhaps about a fortnight; yet it will be very extensive; it will reach all the world, the whole Roman empire, and all that dwell upon the earth, that are called by the name of Christians, and will try them, whether they are so or not; Christ will now have his fan in his hand, and purge his floor of all his formal professors and hypocrites; and it will be known who are his true churches, and pure members; and these he will keep close to himself, and preserve safe amidst all the distress and confusion the world will be in. This cannot refer to the bloody persecutions under the Roman emperors, for from those the church at Philadelphia was not preserved. We read s of twelve members of it that suffered with Polycarp.

s Euseb. Eccl. Hist. l. 4. c. 15.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Patience (). “Endurance” as in Rev 13:10; Rev 14:12 as also in 2Th 3:5.

Thou didst keep ()

–I also will keep ( ). Aorist active indicative and future active corresponding to each other. For a like play on the tenses of this verb by Christ see Joh 17:6 (), Joh 17:11 (), Joh 17:12 ().

From the hour of trial ( ). This use of after in Joh 17:15, in Jas 1:27. Trial brings temptation often (Jas 1:2; Jas 1:13). Jesus endured (Heb 12:1f.) and he will help them. There is still a church in Philadelphia in spite of the Turks.

Which is to come ( ). Agreeing with (feminine), not with (masculine).

Upon the whole world ( ). The inhabited earth () as in Rev 12:19; Luke 2:1; Acts 16:6, etc.), not the physical earth, but the world of men as explained by the next clause.

To try (). First aorist active infinitive of purpose from , probably to tempt (cf. the demons in 9:1-21), not merely to afflict (2:10).

That dwell upon the earth ( ). Present active articular participle of , explaining “the whole world” just before.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

The word of my patience [ ] Not the words which Christ has spoken concerning patience, but the word of Christ which requires patience to keep it; the gospel which teaches the need o a patient waiting for Christ. On patience, see on 2Pe 1:6; Jas 5:7.

From the hour [] . The preposition implies, not a keeping from temptation, but a keeping in temptation, as the result of which they shall be delivered out of its power. Compare Joh 17:15.

Of temptation [ ] . Lit., “of the trial” See on Mt 6:13; 1Pe 1:7. Rev., trial.

World [] . See on Luk 2:1

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “Because thou hast kept the word of patience,” (hoti eteresas ton logon tes hupomones) “Because you all have kept or guarded the word of my endurance,” to which he called them; His word exhorts to patience, Luk 21:19; to get hold or patience: run, and wait in patience is godly, Jas 1:3; Jas 1:12; Heb 10:36; 2Pe 1:6.

2) “I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation,” (kago se terseo ek tes horas tou peirasmou) “I will also keep or guard you out of the hour of trial or testing,” from the evil or cruel results of the time of temptation. For deliverance from the particular hour of temptation our Lord desires that his children and his church pray, Mat 6:13; Luk 22:31-32; Mat 26:41; 2Pe 2:9; Pro 2:8; 1Co 10:13.

3) “Which shall come upon all the world,” (tes mellouses erchesthoi epi tes oikoumenes holes) “Which is about to come upon all the inhabited earth,” This appears to allude or refer to the period of trial and deception over all the world under the appearance of the antichrist, preceding our Lord’s return in the air, before the antichrist is made manifest, for who he is, in character, Dan 9:26-27; 2Th 2:3-13. Note 2Th 2:13, that the church ye” is chosen to salvation (deliverance) from that hour thru sanctification of the spirit and belief of the truth, 1Th 4:13-18.

4) “To try them that dwell upon the earth,” (peirasai tous katoikountas epi tes ges) “To try those dwelling upon the earth; to make manifest their principles, character, and relation to God; This seems to refer to the testing (terrible evil judgments) that are to fall upon and over all the earth for a 42 month period, following our Lord’s coming in the air, for the resurrection of righteous and to catch away his bride, his church, and to pour out his wrath upon those remaining on the earth; Joh 5:43. Under the revealed antichrist, who requires self worship, as Nebuchadnezzar did, Dan 3:1-18; Dan 9:26-27; Dan 7:21-28.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

(10) Because thou hast kept (better, didst keep) the word of my patience.The one who keeps Gods word is kept. Such is the benigna talio of the kingdom of God, as Archbishop Trench calls it. The promise does not mean the being kept away from, but the being kept out from the tribulation. The head should be kept above the waters; they should not be ashamed, because they had kept the word of patience. It is through patience, as well as comfort of the Scripture that we have the hope which maketh not ashamed. (Comp. Rom. 15:5, and Rev. 3:3-5.)

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

10. My patience So Rev 1:9, “the patience of Jesus Christ,” (if that be an allowed reading,) namely, a patience which is his and his followers.

Hast kept keep thee The faithful work has its fitting reward; the keeper shall be kept.

Hour of temptation The Greek word for temptation may mean the presentation of agreeable inducements to sin before one’s mind, in order to elicit sin; and so the devil tempts. Or it may mean the presentation of a test or trial, adverse or agreeable, to allow the will or character to display itself. So every fearful crisis brought upon us is a temptation. And especially that great crisis which precedes the great white throne, (Rev 20:11,) is a test, a trial, of the soul. The trial here described is mundane upon all the world and not in one nation or kingdom: is not merely a persecution in Asia Minor, but over the entire world, and upon all that dwell upon the earth. This is the same universality as in Rev 1:7. The rich promise to the faithful Philadelphian is, that in that great ordeal he shall be kept from terror and despair.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘Because you kept my word of patient endurance I also will keep you from the hour of trial which is to come upon the whole world, to try those who dwell on earth. I come quickly. Hold fast what you have that no man take your crown.’

For His ‘word of patient endurance’ see Mat 10:22; Mar 13:13; Joh 15:18; Joh 15:21; Joh 16:2. All who would live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution (2Ti 3:12), and they must endure to the end. Clearly the Philadelphian church has also faced persecution instigated by false Jews, and has come through unscathed, patiently enduring. (Alternately we may read it as ‘the word of my patient endurance’, thus referring to His sufferings on the cross. But it is clear from Rev 3:9 that there has been serious trouble, so the former is more likely).

‘I also will keep you from the hour of trial’. There is a play on the word ‘keep’. ‘You have kept my word of patient endurance’ – ‘I will keep you from the hour of trial’. God responds to the faithfulness of His people. They have already suffered enough. He will not ask them to suffer more.

‘Those who dwell on earth’ are mentioned regularly in Revelation, referring specifically to non-Christians, and the various trials that they have to go through are vividly described. They represent humanity outside the church.

So the Philadelphians are promised that in some way not described they will escape, not all the trials, but the worst of the trials to come, the ‘hour of trial’. This may have in mind that, as always in such times there will be places where the worst effects are not felt, possibly because of the presence of a humane governor. It is a reminder that God can keep His people either from or through, depending on His will, any hour of trial they have to face. But more probably it has in mind the particularly awful attacks of spiritual forces which are limited in time but which those sealed by God will not experience (Rev 9:4-11).

They will not be kept from everything that the world must face. Their preservation is limited to a particularly severe ‘hour of trial’ which God has in mind. This ‘hour’ cannot be seen as describing the whole process of tribulation described in the following chapters, which will be prolonged, but must have reference to a particularly severe part of the trials which are coming, which they will escape. As suggested it may refer to Rev 9:4-11.

It may well, however, have reference to the ‘hour’ mentioned in Rev 17:12; Rev 18:10; Rev 18:17, promising that they will not share the fate of Babylon the Great (His people are warned to come out of her (Rev 18:4)). Rev 9:15 demonstrates that an ‘hour’ means a small part of what is being described. But had Jesus meant that they would totally escape something tangibly called ‘the Great Tribulation’ He would have said so. The fact is that the unique period called ‘the Great Tribulation’ as such is an invention of Bible students. The great tribulation mentioned in Mat 24:21 was of the Jews, and could be escaped by fleeing to the mountains. It began in 70 AD at the destruction of the Temple, and continued on through the centuries (see Luk 21:24). The great tribulation in Rev 2:22 was threatened as possibly coming on certain members of the church in John’s day. That in Rev 7:14 refers to the same possibility.

We can compare this use of the word ‘hour’ with its use by Jesus where we are told ‘His hour was not yet come’. His hour was a short period at the end of His life and ministry. The world also must face its ‘hour’, but this church will be kept from it. Great play is often put on the words ‘out of ’ and ‘hour’ in ‘out of the hour of trial’, suggesting that because they will not go through the hour they must have been raptured. But the hour is for those who must face the trial, ‘those who dwell on earth’. Those who do not face it, even though on earth, are kept out of it. (Jesus went through His hour, the disciples were kept out of it. It was not their hour. But they were still both on earth).

‘I come quickly. Hold fast what you have that no man may take your crown.’ Jesus intends that His people live in expectancy of His imminent return, for He knows it will be an encouragement in whatever they have to face. Now, today, Christians are still looking for His imminent return, as have Christians in every age. To every generation He is ‘coming soon’. The two thousand years that have passed may seem long to us, but in God’s terminology they are two days (2Pe 3:8 – written specifically in the light of the second coming – compare Psa 90:4). Besides these words come from Christ in resplendence in ‘the Lord’s day’ looking back in time to where the churches are. Thus ‘quickly’ can be seen as relating to His standpoint.

For those who have been faithful a crown awaits, an idea constantly repeated in the New Testament (an incorruptible crown – 1Co 9:25; a crown won by striving in accordance with the rules – 2Ti 2:5; a crown of righteousness – Rev 4:8; a crown of life – Jas 1:12; an unfading crown of glory – 1Pe 5:4). We must ensure that we endure stedfastly so that it is not taken from us by others. Like entry in the book of life it is not something that  can  be taken from us, but we are exhorted to live in such a way that we deserve it not to be taken from us.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Rev 3:10 .

. The form of the antanaclasis [1453] corresponds with the inner relation between the performance of the church, and the reward on the Lord’s part; but even the performance of the church depends entirely upon the Lord’s grace, as the . . itself, which the church has kept, is full of divine power, nourishes and supports the faith, fidelity, patience, and hope of the church, and thus qualifies the same for victory.

. The gen. designates the according to its peculiar nature, as it depends upon its contents; [1454] the pronoun belongs not only to . , [1455] but [1456] to the whole conception . . . . [1457] The form of statement in Rev 1:9 is therefore, at all events, a different one. [1458] Consequently . . . . cannot be: “the word concerning Christ’s patience, concerning the sufferings of Christ patiently endured for us,” or “the word of constancy in Christ’s faith;” [1459] or “the word which makes its demands partly according to its contents and spirit, [1460] and partly by virtue of the duty of confession and steadfastness in following, as it belongs to me and mine;” [1461] also not: “my patience, i. e., the specifically Christian, expressly required by the Lord himself, and enjoined as a preservative against the judgments threatened against the world.” [1462] The vacillation and juncture of different ideas by all interpreters who wish to refer the only to . . reveals the unnaturalness of the combination. The of the Lord dare not, however, be explained: “the word which among other commandments contains that of patience also,” an explanation which is incorrectly ascribed to Grot., who, as many others vacillating concerning the relation of the , says at one time: “My precept concerning patience,” and then, again, that the patience of Christ signifies “that which Christ has enjoined.” The whole word of God as a word of patience rather appears to be the view of the Revelation in general, and of our epistle in particular, because with respect to troubles unavoidable to believers it gives and demands steadfast, faithful, and hopeful patience, i.e., the virtue which alone can lead us from all troubles to glory. [1463] With respect to the already present and still future troubles, every thing to the believer turns upon the fact that he “overcomes.” This he can attain only through the , to which the word of his Lord points him. Thus the writer of the Apoc. can from his point of vision regard the whole word of Christ as a with the same right as, e.g., Paul, the preacher of righteousness, alone by faith in the Crucified, represents the whole gospel as the [1464]

In the words , . . ., the church at Philadelphia is not promised that it shall be preserved from the hour of trial, i.e., that it shall not meet with sufferings full of trial, [1465] but in accordance with the presentation of the Apoc., that the troubles before the coming of the Lord will befall all believers, who of course are sealed, [1466] lest by the temptation in the troubles they may fall; [1467] and in accordance with the corresponding expression . , [1468] in distinction from . , [1469] the church at Philadelphia, since it has already maintained victorious patience, is also to be delivered by his confirming grace from the universal distress impending before the coming of the Lord. [1470]

The , . . . , i.e., the precise period wherein the temptation is to occur, [1471] refers to no persecution whatever proceeding from the Roman emperors, neither that of Nero, [1472] nor some one after Domitian, [1473] possibly under Trajan, [1474] also not, as Primas and Beda [1475] arbitrarily agree, to sufferings occasioned by antichrist; but the idea, here not more minutely defined, is to be referred, according to the further development of the Apoc., to all the afflictions which, before the personal coming of the Lord, [1476] are to burst upon believers; [1477] the punishments impending by God’s wrath only over unbelievers before the appearing of the Lord are not meant. [1478]

The idea of the and [1479] has its justification because, on the one hand, to believers the danger of a fall into such suffering is present, [1480] and hence there go with it the promise , the command , . . ., Rev 3:11 , and the pledge to the victor, Rev 3:12 , but, on the other hand, to unbelievers such suffering must actually be a temptation, [1481] and that, too, of such kind as that because of their impenitent unbelief they will ever fall by it the deeper, and their hostility to what is holy be always the more revealed by despair and blasphemy. [1482]

. The remark that hereby the Roman empire is designated [1483] is correct only so far as in John’s historical horizon the whole world appears comprehended in the Roman empire. Yet by this (erroneous) limitation, the prophetic truth remains untouched, that the hour of temptation is to come to the actual , as certainly as the Lord himself is to appear as absolutely Judge of all.

. Those dwelling on the earth are, according to the constant mode of expression in the Apoc., [1484] the mass of men, in contradistinction to believers redeemed from all nations and tongues. [1485] The refers to them in so far only as they are not kept ( ).

[1453] Beng., etc.

[1454] Cf. Winer, p. 222.

[1455] Calov., Ew., De Wette, Hengstenb., etc.

[1456] Cf. Rev 13:3 ; Col 1:13 ; Heb 1:3 .

[1457] Winer, p. 222. Obscure: Grot., Vitr., Eichh., Heinr., Ebrard.

[1458] Against Hengstenb., etc.

[1459] Calov.

[1460] As the word of the cross (1Co 1:18 ).

[1461] Vitr., who also paraphrases: “They preserved the word of the Lord’s patience; i.e., the word of the Lord, which is a word of patience, because no one can with constancy profess the doctrine of the gospel, unless, at the same time, he fortify himself to bear with patience the afflictions accompanying the profession of Christianity.” All Christians must bear the cross of Christ (Mat 16:24 ), i.e., ; but works (Rom 5:3 ), so that the . . is nothing else than the . (1Co 1:18 ).

[1462] Luk 21:19 ; Luk 8:15 ; Mat 10:22 ; Mat 24:13 . Hengstenb.

[1463] Cf. Rev 1:9 ; Mat 24:13 .

[1464] Cf. 1Co 1:17 sqq., Rev 2:1 .

[1465] Whereby either the church at Philadelphia alone, as constituting a special exception (Beng., Eichh., Ebrard), or certain afflictions (chs. 6, 8), in whose presence all believers are to remain approved (Rev 7:3 sqq.; De Wette; cf. Ewald, Zll.), are regarded.

[1466] The case is different in Rev 9:3 , where they who are sealed are not touched by a plague immediately coming from the abyss .

[1467] Cf. Rev 7:3 ; Rev 7:14 ; Mat 24:22 ; Mat 24:24 .

[1468] Joh 17:15 . Cf. Rev 7:14 : . . .

[1469] Jas 1:27 ; Pro 7:5 . Cf. 2Th 3:3 .

[1470] Cf. Vitr., Hengstenb., Ew. ii., Volkm.

[1471] Cf. Rev 14:7 ; Rev 14:15 .

[1472] Grot.

[1473] N. de Lyra.

[1474] Alcas., Pareus, etc.

[1475] Cf. Andr., Areth.

[1476] Cf. immediately afterwards Rev 3:11 : .

[1477] Cf. ch. 6.

[1478] Cf. ch. 16.

[1479] Cf. Rev 2:10 .

[1480] Cf. Mat 24:22 ; Mat 24:24 .

[1481] Cf. Deu 4:34 ; Deu 7:19 ; Deu 29:3 .

[1482] Rev 9:20 . Cf. Rev 16:11 ; Rev 16:21 ; Hengstenb.

[1483] Cf. Luk 2:1 ; Grot., Vitr., Stern, etc.

[1484] Rev 6:10 , Rev 11:10 , Rev 13:8 ; Rev 13:14 , etc. Cf. Act 4:26 .

[1485] Cf. Rev 5:9 .

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

10 Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.

Ver. 10. The word of my patience ] So called,

1. Because we must suffer for the truth of it.

2. Because, hid in the heart, it worketh patience.

I will keep thee ] From the hurt, if not from the smart of it; from the common distraction, if not from the common destruction.

Which shall come upon all the world ] So the Romans in their pride called their empire.

To try them that dwell ] sc. By that sharp and sore persecution under Trajan the emperor.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Rev 3:10 . The position of shows that it belongs not to as a whole, but to (2Th 3:5 ). The precise sense therefore is not “my word about patience” ( i.e. , my counsel of patience as the supreme virtue of these latter days, so Weiss, Bousset, etc.), but “the word, or the preaching, of that patience which refers to me” ( i.e. , the patient endurance with which, amid present trials, Christ is to be served; so Alford, Spitta, Holtzm.). See Psa 38 (39), 8: ; ; The second reason for praising the Philadelphian Christians is their loyal patience under persecution, as well as the loyal confession of Christ (Rev 3:8 ) which had possibly brought on that persecution. . . . (“I in turn”; cf. similar connection in Joh 17:6-8 ), a reproduction of the saying preserved in Luk 21:36 . The imminent period refers to the broken days which, in eschatological schemes, were to herald messiah’s return. Later on, this period is specifically defined as a time of seduction to imperial worship ( cf. Rev 13:14-17 , Rev 7:2 , with Dan 7:1 , LXX). The Philadelphian Christians will not only triumph over the contempt and intrigues of their Jewish foes but also over the wider pagan trial (which is also a temptation), inasmuch as their devotion, already manifested in face of Jewish malice, will serve to carry them through the storm of Roman persecution. The reward of loyalty is in fact fresh power to be loyal on a higher level: “the wages of going on, and ever to be”. This seems better than to take the world-wide trial as the final attempt (Rev 8:13 , Rev 11:10 , etc.) to induce repentance in men or to punish them, from which the P. Christians ( cf. Rev 7:1-8 , and Ps. Sol. 13:4 10, 15:6, 7) would be exempt; but it is impossible from the grammar and difficult from the sense, to decide whether means successful endurance (pregnant sense as in Joh 17:15 ) or absolute immunity ( cf. 2Pe 2:9 ), safe emergence from the trial or escape from it entirely (thanks to the timely advent of Christ, Rev 3:11 ). Note the fine double sense of : unsparing devotion is spared at least some forms of distress and disturbance. It is like Luther’s paradox that when a man learns to say with Christ, “The cross, the cross,” there is no cross. Rabbinic piety ( Sanh. 98 b) expected exemption from the tribulation of the latter days only for those who were absorbed in good works and in sacred studies.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

Revelation

KEEPING AND KEPT

Rev 3:10 .

There are only two of the seven churches which receive no censure or rebuke from Jesus Christ; and of these two – viz., the churches of Smyrna and Philadelphia – the former receives but little praise though much sympathy. This church at Philadelphia stands alone in the abundance and unalloyed character of the eulogium which Christ passes upon it. He doles out His praise with a liberal hand, and nothing delights Him more than when He can commend even our imperfect work. He does not wait for our performances to reach the point of absolute sinlessness before He approves them. Do you think that a father or a mother, when its child was trying to please him or her, would be at all likely to say, ‘Your gift is worth very little. I could buy a far better one in a shop’? And do you think that Jesus Christ’s love and delight in the service of His children are less generous than ours? Surely not.

So here we are not to suppose that these good souls in Philadelphia lived angelic lives of unbroken holiness because Jesus Christ has nothing but praise for them. Rather we are to learn the great thought that, in all our poor, stained service, He recognizes the central motive and main drift, and, accepting these, is glad when He can commend. ‘Thou hast kept the word of My patience,’ and, with a beautiful reciprocity, ‘I will keep those that keep My word from’ and ‘in the hour of temptation.’

I. Now notice, in the first place, the thing kept.

That is a remarkable phrase ‘the word of My patience.’ A verse or two before, our Lord had said to the same church, evidently speaking about the same thing in them, ‘Thou hast a little strength, and hast kept My word.’ This expression, ‘the word of My patience,’ seems to be best understood in the same general way as that other which precedes it, and upon which it is a commentary and an explanation. It refers, not to individual commandments to patience, but to the entire gospel message, the general whole of ‘the Word of Jesus Christ’ communicated therein to men. That is a profound and beautiful way of characterizing the sum of the revelation of God in Christ as ‘the word of His patience,’ and is one which yields ample reward to meditative thought.

The whole gospel, then, is so named, inasmuch as it all records the patience which Christ exercised.

What does the New Testament mean by ‘patience’? Not merely endurance, although, of course, that is included, but endurance of such a sort as will secure persistence in work, in spite of all the opposition and sufferings which may come in the way. The world’s patience simply means, ‘Pour on, I will endure.’ The New Testament patience has in it the idea of perseverance as well as of endurance, and means, not only that we bow to the pain or the sorrow, but that nothing in sorrow, nothing in trial, nothing in temptation, nothing in antagonism, has the smallest power to divert us from doing what we know to be right. The man who will reach his hand through the smoke of hell to lay hold of plain duty is the patient man of the New Testament. ‘Though there were as many devils in Worms as there are tiles on the housetops, I will go in.’ That speech of Luther’s, though uttered with a little too much energy, expressed the true idea of Christian patience. High above the stormy and somewhat rough determination of the servant towers, calm and gentle, and therefore stronger, the ‘patience’ of the Lord, and the whole story of His life on earth may well be regarded, from this point of view, as the record of His unfaltering and meek continuance in obedience to the Father’s will, in the face of opposition and suffering. His life, to use a secular word, was the most ‘heroic’ ever lived. Before Him was the thing to be done, and between Him and it were massed such battalions of antagonism and evil as never were mustered in opposition to any other saintly soul upon earth. And through all He went persistently, with ‘His face like a flint,’ of set purpose to do the work for which He came into the world.

But there was no fierce antagonism about Jesus Christ’s patience. His persistence, in spite of all obstacles and opposition, was the persistence of meekness, the heroism of gentleness. Patience in the lower sense of quiet endurance, as well as in the higher, of heroic scorn of all that opposition could do to hinder the realization of the Father’s will, is deeply stamped upon His life. We think of His gentleness, of His meekness, of His humility, of all the softer, and, as men insolently call them, the more feminine virtues in Christ’s character. But I do not know that we often enough think of what men, with equal insolence and shortsightedness, call the masculine virtues of which, too, He is the great Exemplar, that magnificent, unparalleled, and perfectly quiet and unostentatious invincibility of will and heroism of settled resolve with which He pressed towards the mark, though the mark was a cross.

This is the theme of the gospel story, and this Apocalypse of a gentle Christ, whose gentleness was the gentleness of inflexible strength, this story, or word ‘of My patience,’ is that which we are to lay upon our hearts. For that name is fitly applied to the gospel, inasmuch as it enjoins upon every one of us in our degree, and in regard of the far easier tasks and slighter antagonisms with which we have to do and \ which we have to meet, to make Christ’s persistence the model for our lives. So the whole morality of Christianity may almost be gathered up into this one expression, which sets forth at once the law and the supreme motive for fulfilling it. Unwelcome and hard tasks are made easy and delightsome when we hear Jesus say, ‘The record of My patience is thy pattern and thy power. Be like Me, and thou shalt be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.’

II. Notice, next, the keepers of this word.

The metaphor represents to us the action of one who, possessing some valuable thing, puts it into some safe place, takes great care of it, carries it very near to the heart, perhaps within the robe, and watches tenderly and jealously over it. So ‘thou hast kept the word of My patience.’

There are two ways by which Christians are to do that; the one is by inwardly cherishing the word and the other by outwardly obeying it. There should be both the inward counting it dear and precious, and treasuring it in mind and heart, as the Psalmist says,

‘Thy word have I hid in my heart, that I should not offend against Thee,’ and also the regulation of conduct which we more usually regard as keeping the commandment.

Let me say a word, and it shall only be a word, about each of these two things. I am afraid that the plain practical duty of reading their Bibles is getting to be a much neglected duty amongst professing Christian people. I do not know how you are to keep the words of Christ’s patience in your hearts and minds if you do not read them. I am afraid that most Christian congregations nowadays do their systematic and prayerful study of the New Testament by proxy, and expect their ministers to read the Bible for them and to tell them what is there. A mother will sometimes take a morsel of her child’s food into her mouth, and half masticate it first before she passes it to the little gums. I am afraid that newspapers, and circulating libraries, and magazines, and little religious books – very good in their way, but secondary and subordinate – have taken the place that our fathers used to have filled by honest reading of God’s Word. And that is one of the reasons, and I believe it is a very large part of the reason, why so many professing Christians do not come up to this standard; and instead of ‘running with patience the race that is set before them,’ walk in an extraordinarily leisurely fashion, by fits and starts, and sometimes with long intervals, in which they sit still on the road, and are not a mile farther at a year’s end than they were when it began. There never was, and there never will be, vigorous Christian life unless there be an honest and habitual study of God’s Word. There is no short-cut by which Christians can reach the end of the race. Foremost among the methods by which their eyes are enlightened and their hearts rejoiced are application to the eyes of their understanding of that eye-salve, and the hiding in their hearts of that sweet solace and fountain of gladness, the Word of Christ’s patience, the revelation of God’s will. The trees whose roots are laved and branches freshened by that river have leaves that never wither, and all their blossoms set.

But the word is kept by continual obedience in action as well as by inward treasuring. Obviously the inward must precede the outward. Unless we can say with the Psalmist, ‘Thy word have I hid in my heart,’ we shall not be able to say with him, ‘I have not hid Thy righteousness within my heart.’ If the Word of the Lord is to sound like a rousing trumpet-blast from our lives, it must first be heard in secret by us, and its music linger in our listening hearts.

We need this brave persistence in daily life if we are not to fail wholly. Very instructive in this aspect are many of the Scripture allusions to ‘patience’ as essential to the various virtues and blessednesses of Christian life.

For example, In your patience ye shall win your souls.’ Only he who presses right on, in spite of all that externals can do to hinder him from realizing his conviction of duty, is the lord of his own spirit. All others are slaves to something or some one. By persistence in the paths of Christian service, no matter what around or within us may rise up to hinder us, and by such persistence only, do we become masters of ourselves. Many a man has to walk, as in the old days of ordeal by fire, over a road strewn with hot ploughshares, to get to the place where God will have him to be. And if he does not flinch, though he may reach the goal with scorched feet, he will reach it with a quiet heart, and possess himself, whatever he may lose.

Again, the Lord Himself says to us, ‘These are those which bring forth fruit with patience.’ There is no growth of Christian character, no flowering of Christian conduct, no setting of incipient virtues into the mature fruit of settled habit, without this persistent adherence in the face of all antagonism, to the dictates of conscience and the commandment of Christ. It is the condition of bringing forth fruit, some thirty, some sixty, and some a hundredfold.

Again the Scripture says, demanding this same persistence, gentle abstinence, and sanctified stiffneckedness, ‘Run with perseverance the race that is set before you.’ There is no progress in the Christian course, no accomplishing the stadia through which we have to pass, except there be this dogged keeping at what we know to be duty, in spite of all the reluctance of trembling limbs, and the cowardice of our poor hearts.

III. We have here Christ keeping the keepers of His word.

‘Because thou hast kept the word of My patience I will keep thee from,’ and in, ‘the hour of temptation.’ There is a beautiful reciprocity, as I said. Christ will do for us as we have done with His word. Christ still does in heaven what He did upon earth. In the great high priest’s prayer recorded by the evangelist who was also the amanuensis of these letters from heaven, Jesus said, ‘I kept them in Thy name which Thou hast given Me, and I guarded them, and not one of them perished.’ And now, speaking from heaven, He continues His earthly guardianship, and bids us trust that, just as when with His followers here, He sheltered them as a parent bird does its young, fluttering round them, bearing them up on its wings, and drew them within the sacred circle of His sweet, warm, strong, impregnable protection, so, if we keep the word of His patience, cherishing the story of His life in our hearts, and humbly seeking to mould our lives after its sweet and strong beauty, He will keep us in the midst of, and also from, the hour of temptation. The Christ in heaven is as near each trembling heart and feeble foot, to defend and to uphold, as was the Christ upon earth.

He does not promise to keep us at a distance from temptation, so as that we shall not have to face it, but from means, as any that can look at the original will see, that He will save us out of it, we having previously been in it, so as that ‘the hour of temptation’ shall not be the hour of falling. Yes! the man whose heart is filled with the story of Christ’s patience, and who is seeking to keep that word, will walk in the midst of the fire-damp of this mine that we live in, as with a safety lamp in his hand, and there will be no explosion. If we keep our hearts in the love of God, and in that great word of Christ’s patience, the gunpowder in our nature will be wetted, and when a spark falls upon it there will be no flash. Outward circumstances will not be emptied of their power to tempt, but our susceptibility will be deadened in proportion as we keep the word of the patience of the patient Christ. The lustre of earthly brightnesses will have no glory by reason of the glory that excelleth, and when set by the side of heavenly gifts will show black against their radiance, as would electric light between the eye and the sun.

It is great to wrestle with temptation and fling it, but it is greater to be so strong that it never grasps us.

It is great to be victor over passions and lusts, and to put our heel upon them and suppress them, but it is better to be so near the Master that they have crouched before Him, and ‘the lion eats straw like the ox.’

To such blessed state we attain if, and only if, we draw near to Him and in daily communion with Him secure that the secret of His patient continuance in well-doing is repeated in us. So we shall be lifted above temptation. That great word of His patience, and the spirit which goes with the word, will be for us like the cotton wool that chemists put into the flask which they wish to seal hermetically from the approach of microscopic germs of corruption. It will let all the air through, but it will keep all the infinitesimal animated points of poison out. It will filter the most polluted atmosphere, and bring it to our lungs clean and clear. ‘If thou keep the word of My patience I will keep thee from the hour of temptation.’

Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren

temptation = trial. Greek. peirasmos. Only occurrence in Rev.

shall = is about to.

world. App-129.

try = test. Greek. peirazo. Here, and Rev 2:2, Rev 2:10.

earth. App-129. Compare Zep 1:14-18.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Rev 3:10. [49] ) Thus the Septuagint often render, when in the Hebrew is found: Isa 26:21, etc. But the word is used of the inhabitants of heaven, ch. Rev 12:12.

[49] , thee) A most gracious exception in so great a temptation.-V. g.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

world

“oikoumene” = inhabited earth. (See Scofield “Luk 2:1”).

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

the word: Rev 1:9, Rev 13:10, Rev 14:12

I also: Mat 6:13, Mat 26:41, 1Co 10:13, Eph 6:13, 2Pe 2:9

all: Mat 24:14, Mar 14:9, Luk 2:1, Rom 1:8

to try: Isa 24:17, Dan 12:10, Zec 13:9, Jam 3:12, 1Pe 4:12

Reciprocal: Psa 41:1 – time of trouble Psa 119:67 – but now Pro 14:3 – but Pro 16:17 – he Mar 13:13 – but Mar 14:38 – Watch Luk 11:4 – lead Luk 21:19 – General Luk 22:40 – Pray Joh 6:70 – and one Act 21:13 – for 2Co 6:4 – in much Phi 4:1 – so 1Th 1:3 – and patience 2Th 3:5 – and into 1Ti 1:19 – Holding 2Ti 4:7 – I have kept Heb 2:18 – them Heb 11:17 – when Heb 12:1 – with patience 1Pe 1:7 – the trial 2Pe 1:10 – never Rev 2:3 – hast patience Rev 3:8 – and hast kept Rev 16:14 – the whole

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Rev 3:10. Word of my patience denotes that they had endured according to His word. As a reward for their patience the Lord will keep them or preserve them when the hour of temptation (or trial) comes. Such a promise is so far-reaching, that it could refer to the specific siege of persecution that the pagan government was about to wage against the church, or to tribulations from the world in general.

Rev 3:11. Behold is an expression to arouse attentive interest. I come quickly would apply to the personal coming of Christ to judge the world, or to the close of their life at which time all opportunity for service will cease. In either case the important thing is to hold that fast which thou hast which means to maintain their present life of faithfulness. That no man take thy crown. Not that one man can literally get possession of a crown that belongs to another. But if a disciple suffers the enemy to mislead him it will cause him to lose his crown.

Comments by Foy E. Wallace

Verses 10-11.

4. “I will also keep thee from the hour of temptation (trial), which shall come upon all the world”–Rev 3:10-11.

This promise was made to the Philadelphians in divine reciprocation of their having “kept the word” of Christ. They were not promised exemption from trial, but preservation through the period of trial.

The world in Rev 3:10 meant the empire. The hour of trial was the persecution period: in Mat 24:29, the tribulation; in Rom 16:20, the bruising of Satan; in 1Co 7:26, the present distress; in Heb 10:25, the day approaching; in Jas 5:8, the coming of the Lord draweth nigh; in 1Pe 4:7, the end of all things at hand; in 1Jn 2:18, the last time–and in Revelation, the hour of trial, all pointing to the impending events attending the end of the Jewish system and state.

The Lord’s statement in Mat 24:1-51 was the forecast of the siege of Jerusalem; because of “the present distress,” in Corinthians Paul dispensed advice concerning certain jeopardies involved in marriage; in Heb 10:1-39 they were exhorted not to forsake (meaning to abandon, renounce) their first day of the week assembling because of these threats of persecution (as the context of Heb 10:25-39 indicates), and to exhort each other, as the day of persecution approached, not to so renounce and abandon the new covenant; in Jas 5:1-20, the declaration that the coming of Christ was nigh could not have referred to the return of Christ, for it did not occur therefore it was not nigh–it referred to the Lord’s coming in these approaching events concerning which all of the apostles were exhorting the members of all the churches in every place; and John, in his epistle mentioned “the last time” in reference to the state of the Jews and of their nation; in the apocalypse he symbolized it as “the hour of trial,” and assured the Philadelphians that the Lord would “come quickly,” in the judgments and rewards that he had repeatedly promised to render.

The foregoing running summary of the expressions in the epistles of the New Testament to these impending events constitutes cumulative proof that the visions of Revelation related to the persecution period of the early church.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Rev 3:10. Because thou didst keep the word of my patience. The reference is neither to any precepts of Christ concerning patience, nor to any accounts given us of the patience of Christ Himself, but simply to Christs word, which cannot be kept without much patient endurance on the part of His people.

I also will keep thee out of the hour of the trial, etc. The hour spoken of is described as that of the trial, the great, probably the final, trial which was now about to come, which was near at hand. Out of (comp. Joh 17:15) this trial believers are to be kept,not that they are to be kept in it, when in the course of providence it comes upon the Church as well as others, but that they are to be kept entirely out of it; it shall not touch them. This trial, then, is not to be a trial of the world, in order to see whether it will repent, or a trial of the Church, in order to confirm her in faith; nor is it to operate in two ways,bringing out the fidelity of the believing, and hardening the unbelieving. It really befalls the impenitent alone, and is the just recompense of their sin (comp. Mat 24:5, etc.; 2Th 3:3). Even if the righteous suffer in it, it will not be to them a trial; they are already elect, safe. That this is the true sense of the passage is confirmed by what follows. The trial comes upon the whole inhabited world; no part of the world shall escape it. But at the same time, it comes to try them that dwell upon the earth, not all living men without exception, but, as clearly shown by the use of this expression in the Apocalypse, only the wicked (comp. chaps, Rev 6:10, Rev 8:13, Rev 11:10, Rev 13:8; Rev 13:12; Rev 13:14, Rev 17:2; Rev 17:8). The earth is the opposite of heaven (comp. Joh 3:12), and they that dwell upon the earth do not include the saints who are already seated in heavenly places (comp. chap. Rev 5:9, Rev 13:6, Rev 19:14).

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Still our blessed Saviour proceeds with promises and encouragements to this church, Because thou hast kept the word of my patience.

Here note, That the doctrine of the gospel is called the word of Christ’s patience, partly because it teaches patience in persecuting times, and partly because it is a doctrine which cannot firmly be adhered to without patience, Thou hast kept the word of my patience.

To keep this word of Christ’s patience, implies not only the keeping his doctrine pure and uncorrupted from error, but also the observing and practising all the duties of a good life.

And note, The reward promised to this church for the performing of this duty, Because thou hast kept–I will keep thee; Christ will not be behind-hand in rewarding our obedience, no, not in this life: I will (here) keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world.

Here note, 1. That a time of affliction, much more of persecution, is a time of temptation, because an afflicted and persecuted state hath many circumstances attending it, by which all are tried and some ensnared.

Note, 2. That a time of trial and temptation will come, most certainly come, sooner or later, upon all persons that dwell upon the earth, upon sinners as well as saints, upon hypocrites as well as sincere Christians; which trials will infallibly discover the faith and constancy of the one, the corruption and apostasy of the other: Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I will also keep thee from the hour of temptation.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

Verse 10

The word of my patience, that is, my word enjoining patience.–To try them; to put their fidelity to test.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

3:10 Because thou hast {g} kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.

(g) Because you have been patient and constant, as I would have my servants be.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes