Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.
11. hold that fast which thou hast ] See on Rev 2:6; Rev 2:25.
that no man take thy crown ] i.e. rob thee of it: the image of a race or other contest for a prize does not seem in harmony with the context, nor with the style of this book.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Behold, I come quickly – That is, in the trials referred to. Compare the notes on Rev 1:1, Rev 1:11, Rev 1:16.
Hold that fast which thou hast – That is, whatever of truth and piety you now possess. See the notes on Rev 3:3.
That no man take thy crown – The crown of life appointed for all who are true believers. See the notes on 2Ti 4:8. The truth which is taught bore is, that by negligence or unfaithfulness in duty we may be deprived of the glory which we might have obtained if we had been faithful to our God and Saviour. We need to be on our constant guard, that, in a world of temptation, where the enemies of truth abound, we may not be robbed of the crown that we might have worn forever. Compare notes on 2Jo 1:8.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Rev 3:11
Behold, I come quickly.
The coming of Christ
It is not improbable that this bishop was no other than the Demetrius who is mentioned in St. Johns third Epistle as having a good report of all men and of the truth itself, and if this is the case we have before us a holy man who, probably, was not a very resolute one, and was placed in a position of much difficulty. Behold, I come quickly. If our Lords words are understood of His second coming, it is obvious to reflect that the good Bishop of Philadelphia died without witnessing their fulfilment. Nay, he has been in his grave something like eighteen centuries, and our Lord has not yet come to judgment. Man sees only a little distance, and he is impatient, because his outlook is so limited; to him it seems that an event will never arrive, if it has been delayed for some centuries, and so the judgment long apprehended, and also, perhaps, through a series of years long delayed, will not really take place at all, but may at once be classed among the phantoms of a morbid and disordered brain. With God it is altogether otherwise, long and short periods of time do not mean to Him what they mean to us. We see this truth more clearly if we reflect that to us men the passage of time seems slow or rapid, its periods seem long or short according to our varying moods and tempers. When we are suffering acute pain of body or very great anxiety of mind time hangs heavily. We seem to extend the duration of time by the suffering that we compress into its constituent moments. And on the other hand, when we are experiencing great pleasure, whether of mind or body, we become almost or entirely insensible to the flight of time, and from this we may understand how one being, who is the fountain of all goodness, because He is in Himself infinitely blessed, blessed in contemplating His own perfections, blessed in surveying the works which His hands have made, would be, as such, insensible to the impression of time. Behold, I come quickly. The Bishop of Philadelphia, Demetrius, probably felt that, as far as he was concerned, these words received their fulfilment when, his pastoral labours being completed, he laid himself down to die. In death our Lord comes to each of us, He comes in mercy or in judgment to bring the present state of existence to an end, to open out upon us another. There are two things about death which are full of meaning, and which do not admit of any sort of contradiction. The first is the certainty that it will come to each of us some day, and the second is the utter uncertainty of the day at which it will come. Behold, I come quickly. The expected coming of Christ throws a flood of light on the various aspects of existence. We are struck, perhaps, with the insignificance of life. Even when man is in possession of all his faculties of mind and body he is often obliged to pass his life in occupations which are at once exacting and mechanical–occupations which make scarcely any demand upon the mind beyond that of attention to the movement of the feet or of the fingers; occupations which might almost or altogether be discharged by machinery, and which, taken by themselves, appear unworthy of a being capable of comprehending truth, capable of growing in the comprehension of it, capable of enjoying a happiness proportionate to his vast desires. Behold, I come quickly. If Christs coming means anything, it will be no sorrow nor crying; it means the exercise of mans higher powers to that fullest extent of their capacity–the beginning of an existence in which thought and heart and will will rest in perfectly ecstatic satisfaction on their one true object, and an existence which will last for ever. (Canon Liddon.)
Hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.—
Hold fast
I. We are already in possession of a great property. That which thou hast. As Christians, we are not only striving to gain, but also striving to keep that which we have. That is the gospel, salvation, Christ, and heaven in Him.
II. The holding fast of that which we have.
1. That which we have is contemplated more in the light of a trust than of a privilege.
2. Of course, this whole injunction implies the presence of opposition, making this a matter of difficulty. A Christian holding fast against the world, its spirit, and way, is like a man pulling a boat up-stream, when the waters are deep and the current strong. Whether in the boat or on the bank, pulling by a rope, he needs to pull always–a strong, steady, constant pull–that is it! He meets a great many people coming down stream; and they do not need to pull much–a touch of the helm now and again, and a dip of the oar is all that they need. Sometimes a Christian is discouraged by observing that so many more seem to be going with the stream than seem to be going against it. He may be in a great measure mistaken in this. Christians sometimes have a feeling of loneliness. It seems as if all the world were against them. Hold fast! you are not so solitary as you imagine.
III. Thy crown. Every duty has a crown when it is well done, and every affliction patiently borne, and every day well spent, and every year well lived through, a crown which hangs trembling on its last hour. There is a sense, too, in which one man can take the crown of another in daily life. To put the matter plainly: if any of us shall be blind or heedless before the face of rich opportunity–if we shall hear, without hearing, the Master say, Behold, I have set before thee an open door, and if another, listening, catch the Masters words and enter in, that man takes our crown. He is no richer, for the faithfulness that has proved itself here would have proved itself somewhere else, and in some other service; but we are the poorer–we have lost that little crown. And to lose many of these lesser crowns will diminish the lustre, if indeed it do not also affect the security of the great final crown.
IV. Behold He comes quickly. (A. Raleigh, D. D.)
Hold that fast which thou hast
Those who are overtaken by spiritual bankruptcy and ruin are probably often very much surprised by such a result befalling them. Every one who has ever had spiritual treasures is tempted to think that his spiritual treasure must be secure. Every one who has had a religious reputation is apt to think that such a reputation is abiding.
I. The capacity of religious feeling and effort, like all other powers of the soul, dies out for want of use. There is a tendency to believe that because we could once do a thing, or understand a thing the power or capacity must remain, although for years we have been out of practice. Oh yes, of course, I can do that; I have done it often. How frequently you have heard a man say that, and then, after a desperate, pitiful struggle, he has to give it up and admit his failure. A man has been an expert in rowing, or running, or climbing. Mature years are upon him now, but he laughs at the suggestion that his lungs are not still as strong and his arms as muscular as ever. He makes a severe drain some day on his bodily strength, and finds to his surprise and vexation that the nervous force is giving out long ere the days work is done. Or we once knew a foreign language. We fancy it must still flow to our tongue as easily as ever. We are suddenly called upon to use it, and are chagrined to find that the words will not come at our bidding. Now, what is true of our physical and of our intellectual nature is quite as profoundly and terribly true of our spiritual nature. There are organs by which we live to God, and these, if they get no exercise, decay. The practice of ten years ago does not secure their existence and activity now. Their present existence depends upon their present use; but once they have declined, all that province of our nature becomes incapable of impression and feeling, just as to the unintellectual man. Shakespeare has no more significance than a daily newspaper. The inner eye loses its faculty of discerning spiritual things; and yet the tongue may go on talking of them as fluently, perhaps even more fluently than ever. Others will very likely detect the change. For ii a man attempts to describe what he has never seen, or gives merely the loose recollection of ten or twenty years ago, an intelligent listener will soon find out something amiss. But the man himself thinks it is all as it should be. He knows the expressions about revealed truth as well as before. Perhaps he is even a trifle more orthodox than he was before; but for all that the spiritual faculty may be gone, perhaps for ever. Let us apply some tests to ascertain our spiritual vitality, the keenness of our spiritual vision. Your nature is perhaps active enough on some sides. You are not suffering from intellectual or emotional lethargy. Your wants and desires have multiplied in number; but are they as baptized with the Christian baptism as they were ten years ago? You have acquired means, you have greatly increased your resources; but is there as much of the gold of the kingdom, of the treasure of heaven there? There are wide harvests of the heart waving from carefully sown seed; but are you sure their roots would not be as rottenness, and their blossomings up as the dust, if the fiery winds of God began to blow across them? In the remote recesses of the soul, in its hidden depths, what response are you making now to spiritual appeals and promptings? Is there a deep undercurrent of your life setting towards Christ?
II. We are not at all so necessary to God, so essential for his purposes, as we sometimes think we are. We can be useful to God, helpful in carrying out His purposes. It is right that the ambition of being a fellow-worker with God should stir a man. One of the grandest features in the character of the Puritans was that they learned thus to regard themselves, unreservedly. We may not use precisely the same phrases, or give exactly the same colour and form to our thinking. It is in some respects better that we should not, but it is as possible now as then to be representatives of Gods cause, fighters for God, enthusiasts, zealots in His behalf; to have our joys and sorrows completely wrapt up with His joys and sorrows. It is as possible and as blessed. But close behind this spiritual attitude lies a subtle temptation. It lurks even in that extreme doctrine of predestination in which the Puritans found so much support and consolation. When fighting Gods battles amid discouragement and failure of hope, against great odds, they comforted themselves with the thought that they were safe in Gods hands; that their salvation and ultimate triumph were guaranteed by a Divine decree. This decree was irreversible, they felt and said, and in its absolute certainty they gloried. But you see how dangerous this position may become. So long as we are certain that our heart is beating with Gods, our souls yearning for His righteousness, our hands busy about His work, we are right to comfort ourselves with the thought of the Divine decree, and to take for granted that it is in our favour. But the attitude may change, and the old idea remain. We are far too inclined to take for granted that we must be on Gods side–that His decree must be in our favour. Do we suppose that God has special favourites–that He is a respecter of persons? What is there in us, apart from His grace, which makes us specially attractive or necessary? The history of Christs Church is one long tale of gifts forfeited and privileges transferred. The crown is not lost, but with a little alteration it is made to fit anothers brow. The talent is not melted down; it becomes another mans. There is no empty space either in the arena of conflict below or in the place of victory and banqueting above.
III. Salvation and ultimate reward depend entirely on faithfulness to present light and steadfastness in present duty. Our crowns are being shaped by our present efforts and prayers and sacrifices. We are like men moulding in clay. God pours in gold and brings the crowns out in gold. The crowns will be out of proportion to our deserts, yet will bear the impress of our personality. Each of Christs disciples has something–some attainment, some experience, it does not matter how humble. Whatever be his ultimate salvation and reward, his crown depends on his holding it. You have learnt, perhaps, some rudiment of Christian faith–as, for example, that you cannot keep your own feet when the enemy assails; and you have learnt when you feel your own weakness to cry out to God. Well, that is not much, but it is something. Hold that fast. You have perhaps got further–acquired some deeper laws of the Christian life. You have found that the soul grows by giving. You have tasted the strange, Christlike sweetness of doing good; the new strength won by bold witness-bearing. Hold that fast. Or you have found out that, however it may be with others, there are certain assaults of evil which have for you a special danger; certain places and atmospheres peculiarly perilous; a certain set of truths on which your soul must feed. It is much to have found out what these are. Hold that fast. Dont think it a small thing merely to hold what you have. Dont think it always necessary to be opening your hands and grasping at more, sometimes, in your eagerness, dropping what you were holding. It is well to think and speak of progress, but let your edifying, your building up, be done carefully; see that the new stones lie evenly on the top of the old. Permanence in spiritual things is as important as progress, and a permanence that is essential is sometimes sacrificed to a progress that is not essential. Let us make sure that we are husbanding what we have won. To gather up, to retain, to make use of all the wisdom we have ever got from God; never to fall behind the best epochs of our former spiritual selves–if we do this we shall not fall. (John F. Ewing, M. A.)
Soul-tenacity
I. The things of which the soul is to be tenacious. The soul of man is not to be tenacious of riches, of fame, or of the things of this life; these it cannot long retain in its grasp.
1. It must hold fast the truths of the Bible.
2. It must hold fast the reality of the Christian character.
3. It must hold fast the determination of the Christian life. The tenacity of the soul must be brave; it must be meek; it must be wise; it must be prayerful; and it must be hopeful of the end.
II. The reason why the soul should be tenacious of these things.
1. Because they are valuable.
2. Because they are threatened by vigilant enemies.
3. Because the advent of Christ is near. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Fair warning
I. The possession implied. That which thou hast.
1. If unsaved, still we have–
(1) The offer of salvation.
(2) The means of grace.
(3) The Bible.
(4) The commanding voice of conscience.
(5) The convictions of the Holy Ghost.
(6) The precious, ennobling possibilities of a blood-bought probation.
2. If saved, we have all these, and–
(1) Saving faith.
(2) The witness of the Spirit.
(3) Gods approving smile and fellowship.
(4) Saintly communion and fellowship.
(5) Place among the people of God.
(6) Hope of glory.
II. The duty urged. Hold fast.
1. Do it publicly.
2. Persistently.
3. Fearlessly.
4. Humbly.
5. In faith, and humble reliance upon Jesus Christ.
6. Do it in self-defence. That no man take thy crown.
III. The motive presented. Behold, I come quickly.
1. The majesty and power of the person coming. I. Describe him:
(1) His pre-incarnate glory.
(2) His humiliation and sacrifice.
(3) His mediatorial glory and coming to judgment.
2. The solemnity of the event. I come.
3. The impressive manner of His approach. Quickly.
4. The attention the subject demands. Behold. This great crisis will be sprung upon no man unaware or unwarned. He exhorts, entreats, warns, so that all may be ready to meet Him with joy. (T. Kelly.)
Perseverance
Those who are sincere Christians ought to be very careful that they hold fast and preserve that which they have. You must by no means abandon the faith and truth which ye once espoused, you must continue in grace and persist in the ways of virtue, through all opposition. A Christian ought to strive and endeavour for final holiness. He must persevere not only in the profession of all Divine truths, but in the performance of all the duties which are enjoined by the Christian religion.
I. On what accounts we are obliged to be careful that we persevere in truth and godliness.
1. As to the benefit and advantage of persevering, it were enough to say that this is that which will give us an assurance of the sincerity of our hearts, and of the reality of our holiness. Many mens beginnings are tolerably good, but they grow worse afterwards, and their end is worst of all. Therefore it is the conclusion that must be the trial of men. Next, I will show the advantage of this admirable gift from that portion of Scripture to which my text belongs: Thou hast kept My Word, and hast not denied My Name. Now, observe what are the advantages. Behold, I will make them of the Synagogue of Satan, to come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee, i.e., I will make heretics, apostates, and false brethren ashamed: they shall at last be forced to condemn their own hypocrisy and apostasy, and to reverence that sincerity and uprightness which appear in the lives of those holy men whom no temptations could withdraw from their duty, but who in all seasons held fast their integrity. It follows, verse 10. Because thou hast kept the Word of My patience, I also will keep, etc. Here is another benefit of perseverance, namely, God keeps those who keep His Word, who continue in it, and forsake not the profession and practice of it. Such persons shall be kept in an hour of temptation, i.e., in a remarkable time of distress. And He adds, That no man take thy crown: where, according to the different sense of this clause, there is a double reason suggested, that we should not apostatise from the ways of God. If by crown be meant religion itself, then we have reason to hold it fast, because it is a thing of so excellent a nature. It is our crown, our dignity, our glory. Or, we may understand this of the crown of perseverance, and then the sense may be this, Hold that fast which thou hast, continue so steadfast in your religion and in your duty that no man may be able to take your crown from you, i.e., to rob you of your constancy and perseverance, for these are the crown of a Christian. And they are called so because they are the consummating of all, according to that known maxim, the end crowns the work, i.e., accomplisheth the whole enterprise. Again, perseverance is deservedly called a crown, because it is this which entitles you to a crown of glory. It is in vain that we set out well at first, and run swiftly, if we reach not the end of the race, and come up to the very goal. This may convince you of the benefit and advantage of this duty. So that I need not insist much on the evil of apostasy. Apostasy is near akin to the unpardonable sin (Mat 5:13). This doctrine condemns the apostasy of these times we live in.
II. The most effectual helps to perseverance, and the most sovereign antidotes against apostasy.
1. The first effectual help is serious deliberation and choice. For it is certain that this is one cause of apostasy that men do not sit down and consider before they enter into religion. They take up the principles and practice of religion too hastily; and so it is no wonder that as they rashly took them up, they as suddenly lay them down. The old aphorism is true here, Nothing that is violent lasts long. Force a stone upwards with never so great strength, yet you shall soon see it fall down again. And to this purpose furnish yourselves with a sufficient stock of knowledge; for this will help to preserve you from falling away (Pro 2:11-12). They are the ignorant and novices that usually leave the paths of uprightness. Let religion be founded in serious consideration and choice, and then you will not bid farewell to it in evil times, when you come to be tried; then you will not shrink and fall back, and, like ill-built ships, sink in the launching.
2. That you may do so, carefully look to your heart, for thence is the rise of all your backsliding. What you can do in religion, though it be never so weak and mean, do it heartily.
3. That you may hold fast that which you have, and not revolt from God and His ways, see that you be very humble Unless you lay your foundation low, your fabric will not stand long.
4. To humility you must not forget to join fearfulness, according to that of the apostle, Be not high-minded, but fear. I do not speak of such a fear as is accompanied with cowardice; but such a religious awe upon our minds, whereby we are sensible of our own inability to stand, and therefore we are wary and cautious.
5. Are you desirous to persevere, and continue to the end in the ways of truth and holiness? Then see that your affections be not immoderately carried out towards this world.
6. That you may not be of this number, fix and establish yourselves by faith. Thou standest by faith, saith the apostle (Rom 11:12). This grace is an establishing, confirming, strengthening grace; and as long as we maintain this, we shall never fall away. But on the contrary, know this–that unbelief is one grand cause of apostasy–which was the occasion of that caution given in Heb 3:12. Such as your faith is, such is your fortitude; therefore endeavour to attain great measures of this, that you may with undaunted valour withstand the temptations of the evil spirit, and keep your station when he is most desirous to put you to flight. Cleave to the Rock of Ages, and you shall stand immovable; rely on Him, and you shall be upheld; depend on His promises, and you shall never fall.
7. That you may never turn apostates, entertain a love of God and goodness in your breasts. Love as well as faith is an establishing grace. Therefore St. Jude had reason to speak thus to the Christians of his days (verse 28), Keep yourselves in the love of God. If they would be steadfast in their religion, they must embrace it out of love.
8. In order to perseverance be careful to nourish a patient and resigning temper of mind.
9. Grow in grace, strive for the utmost attainments in Christianity; for this likewise is an approved remedy against apostasy. See then that you cast off all slothfulness, and remember that constant endeavours and the continual exercise of Christian graces are the conditions of perseverance. Be diligent, then, to improve your graces, and to make accessions to what you have.
10. That you may continue and persevere in all holiness, take care that those means, those institutions, those ordinances, which were appointed for this purpose, be not neglected by you. Lastly, Be ever watchful and circumspect, if you would hold fast what you have. (J Edwards.)
Hold fast thy crown
We must all feel that to have, and then to lose, is worse than never to have had. For a man is to be responsible–not according to what he is to be found having at the last, but according to what he once possessed and the capability that possession gave him of possessing much more. But then you must remember what is the Bible sense of that word to have. To have is to hold anything that so you can and do use and enjoy it. First, then, there are stores of memory. It is no trifling possession to have passages of Scripture, of sacred poetry, of holy authors, laid up in the mind. Increase the power of a sacred memory by always adding something more to the stock. And never forget that it is one of the offices and prerogatives of the Holy Ghost to assist and to empower the memory in Divine things. Secondly, the acquisition of a new truth, or a clearer perception of any truth, is a very real and very delightful possession. But, if you would hold a truth fast you must turn that truth to some practical account, for God is very jealous that His truth be not an idle thing; you must make that truth a centre, round which you are always gathering another and another truth. Then you must live that truth inwardly; and then you must live that truth outwardly. You must live it, not only for yourself; but you must live it for others. You must glorify God in it. And that truth will abide; and that truth will grow. Thirdly, you have enjoyed the things of God, the means of grace. You must be coming down from your mount to the plain–to the simple duty of daily life, to do that duty better because you have been upon the mount. Fourthly, a soft, tender heart–feelings much drawn out in strong love to God or man–is a thing greatly to be prized. But to maintain that blessed state of a mental affection, it is necessary that you live very close to God. The wax will only be soft if it is kept in the sunshine. Fifthly, an open door of usefulness is an exceeding boon when God gives it to a man. Have you it? Sixthly, to some of you it has been given to know, and not to doubt, that you can call Christ yours. And can all this pass away? Yes, it can. If that light go out, how great will that darkness be! It all depends upon the firmness and the continuance with which you hold it. Therefore, spend life in making your calling and election sure. Do not grieve, by small resistances, that Holy Ghost which is in you. The only way to hold fast, is to be held fast. Under our weak hand, Gods own omnipotence must lie; and we must be apprehended, that we may apprehend. (James Vaughan, M. A.)
Thy crown
I. The crown spoken of here is not the symbol of royalty, but the floral wreath which in ancient social life played many parts: was laid on the temples of the victors in the games, was wreathed around the locks of the conquering general, was placed upon the anointed heads of brides and of feasters, was the emblem of victory, of festivity, of joy. And it is this crown, not the symbol of dominion, but the symbol of a race accomplished and a conquest won, an outward and visible sign of a festal day, with all its abundance and ease and abandonment to delight, which the apocalyptic vision holds out before the Christian man. The crown is spoken about under three designations–as a crown of life, of righteousness, of glory. The crown is the reward of righteousness, and consists of life so full that our present experience contrasted with it may almost be called an experience of death; of glory so flashing and wonderful that, if our natures were not strengthened, it would be an exceeding weight of glory that would crush them down, and upon all the life and all the glory is stamped the solemn signature of eternity, and they are for ever. Christian men, it much concerns the vigour of your Christianity that you should take time and pains to cultivate the habit of looking forward through all the mists of this petty present, and of thinking of that future as a certainty more certain than the contingencies of earth, and as a present possession, more real by far than any of the fleeting shadows which we proudly and falsely call our own. Thy crown will fit no temples but thine. It is part of thy perfected self, and certain to be thine, if thou hold fast the beginning of thy confidence firm unto the end.
II. The grim possibility of losing the crown. That no man take it. Of course we are not to misunderstand the contingency shadowed here as if it meant that some other person could filch away and put on his own head the crown which once was destined for us, which is a sheer impossibility and absurdity. No man would think to win heaven by stealing anothers right of entrance there. No man could, if he were to try. The results of character cannot be transferred. Nor are we to suppose reference to the machinations of tempters, either human or diabolic, who deliberately try to rob Christians of their religion here, and thereby of their reward hereafter. But it is only too possible that men and things round about us may upset this certainty that we have been considering, and that though the crown be thine, it may never come to be thy actual possession in the future, nor ever be worn upon thine own happy head in the festival of the skies. That is the solemn side of the Christian life, that it is to be conceived of as lived amidst a multitude of men and things that are always trying to make us unfit to receive that crown of righteousness. If we would walk through life with this thought in our minds, how it would strip off the masks of all these temptations that buzz about us!
III. The way to secure the crows which is ours. Hold fast that thou hast. The slack hand will very soon be an empty hand. Anybody walking through the midst of a crowd of thieves with a bag of gold in charge would not hold it dangling from a finger-tip, but he would put all five round it, and wrap the strings about his wrist. The first shape which we may give to this exhortation is–hold fast by what God has given in His gospel; hold fast His Son, His truth, His grace. Use honestly and diligently your intellect to fathom and to keep firm hold of the great truths and principles of the gospel. Use your best efforts to keep your wandering hearts and mobile wills fixed and true to the revealed love of the great Lover of souls, which has been given to you in Christ, and to obey Him. But there is another aspect of the same commandment which applies not so much to that which is given us in the objective revelation and manifestation of God in Christ, as to our own subjective degrees of progress in the appropriation of Christ, and in likeness to Him. And possibly that is what my text more especially means, for just a little before the Lord has said to that Church, Thou hast a little strength, and hast kept My word, and hast not denied My name. Thou hast a little strength hold fast that which thou hast. See to it that thy present attainment in the Christian life, though it may be but rudimentary, is at least kept. Cast not away your confidence, hold fast the beginning of your confidence firm, with a tightened hand unto the end. For if we keep what we have, it will grow. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Graces need keeping
Where we are most tempted, know that there is some special grace to be kept or lost. A thief will not hanker after an empty chest; but if he knows where jewels or treasure is, he haunt there. (Jeremy Taylor.)
Perseverance
No grace, not even the most sparkling and shining, can bring us to heaven without perseverance in following Christ; not faith, if it be faint and frail; nor love, if it decline and wax cold; nor humility, if it continue not to the end; not obedience, not repentance, not patience, no, nor any other grace, except they have their perfect work. It is not enough to begin well, unless we end well. (T. Brooks.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 11. Behold, I come quickly] These things will shortly take place; and I am coming with consolations and rewards to my faithful followers, and with judgments to my adversaries.
Take thy crown.] God has provided mansions for you; let none through your fall occupy those seats of blessedness.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Behold, I come quickly; , which certainly is the same with ; and it might be as well concluded, that the day of judgment should come by that time Rome pagan should cease, as that all things written in this book had their accomplishment in that time, because Christ told John they should come to pass tacei, Rev 1:1; 22:6. No other coming of Christ, but his coming to the last judgment, can be here meant.
Hold that fast which thou hast; , hold with a strong hand the doctrine of faith, which thou yet hast, pure, and thy pure worship, and discipline, and a pure conscience.
That no man take thy crown; that thou mayest not lose that reward which shall be the portion of those that persevere to the end, and of those only.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
11. Beholdomitted by thethree oldest manuscripts and most ancient versions.
I come quicklythegreat incentive to persevering faithfulness, and the consolationunder present trials.
that . . . which thouhast“The word of my patience,” or “endurance”(Re 3:10), which He had justcommended them for keeping, and which involved with it the attainingof the kingdom; this they would lose if they yielded to thetemptation of exchanging consistency and suffering for compromise andease.
that no man take thycrownwhich otherwise thou wouldst receive: that no temptercause thee to lose it: not that the tempter would thus secure it forhimself (Col 2:18).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Behold, I come quickly,…. To bring on this hour of temptation on the reformed churches, which will be at the beginning of this period; to help and deliver, save and preserve the truly godly among them; to destroy antichrist, and introduce the latter day glory:
hold that fast which thou hast; either her grace in the exercise of it, as her faith, patience, c. or rather the doctrines of the Gospel, and the ordinances of it, which she had received, as delivered by Christ and his apostles: and which she had held in the truth and purity of them, and is now exhorted to hold them fast, since this hour of temptation would be a trying time to her faith, patience, integrity, and constancy:
that no man take thy crown not eternal happiness, called a crown of life, glory, and righteousness, and which was prepared for her, and promised to her, and would be certainly given her; nor was there any danger of another’s taking it from her; not but that exhortations of this kind to the saints are necessary, with respect to that, to excite to diligence, care, and watchfulness; and are no ways contrary to their final perseverance, and certain salvation, but are means thereof: but either her honour for her faith and faithfulness, for her integrity, sincerity, and purity, is here meant; or the glorious things which were spoken of this church state, and to be accomplished in it, Ps 87:3; see Isa 60:1.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
I come quickly ( ). As in Rev 2:16; Rev 22:7; Rev 22:12; Rev 22:20. “The keynote of the book” (Beckwith). But allow the author’s own meaning of “quickly.”
Hold fast that which thou hast ( ). Sort of motto for each church (2:25).
That no one take ( ). Purpose clause with and second aorist active subjunctive of . Here to take away “thy crown” (2:10) which will be thine if really won and not forfeited by failure (2Ti 4:8). In that case it will go to another (Matt 25:28; Rom 11:17).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Behold. Omit.
That no one take thy crown [ ] . Take it away. The idea is not that of one believer stepping into the place which was designed for another, but of an enemy taking away from another the reward which he himself has forfeited. The expression is explained by Col 2:18. It is related by Mahomet that, after having attempted, in vain, to convert one Abdallah to the faith, and having been told by him to go about his business and to preach only to those who should come to him – he went, downcast, to a friend ‘s house. His friend, perceiving that he was sad, asked him the reason; and on being told of Abdallah’s insult, said, “Treat him gently; for I swear that when God sent thee to us, we had already strung pearls to crown him, and he seeth that thou hast snatched the kingdom out of his grasp.” For crown, see on chapter Rev 2:10. Thy crown is not the crown which thou hast, but the crown which thou shalt have if thou shalt prove faithful.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Behold, I come quickly,” (erchomai tachu) “I am coming (of my own choice) quickly,” at an unexpectant moment, to require an accounting, Act 1:6-7; Rev 22:7; Rev 22:12; Rev 22:20; The “quickly” term is used to emphasize the need of ones having his “ledger of life” in balance for a moment of immediate auditing or accounting to God, Mat 24:44.
2) “Hold that fast which thou hast,” (kratei ho echeis) “Hold or guard (cautiously) what you (now) have or hold;” hold faithfully, with trustworthiness, or fidelity your calling to service, your position of stewardship, of accountable trust from the Lord, Mar 13:31-37; 1Co 4:2; prize highly your calling of God, and the talent-strength you have use well, 1Co 9:24-27; Heb 12:1-3; Rev 2:25.
3) “That no man take thy crown,” (hina medeis labe ton stephanon soul “in order that no one takes your crown,” or glory, that none snatch it away, divert your service to keep you from receiving it, that you be not as one “saved as if by fire;” The crown refers to rewards offered to children of God for true, faithful service, 2Jn 1:8; 1Co 3:8; 1Co 3:14-15; 1Ti 4:8; Jas 1:12; Rev 2:10; Rev 22:12.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
(11) Behold, I come.Omit Behold. Better, I am coming quickly; hold fast; continue your race as those who are striving for a garland (1Co. 9:24).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
11. Quickly In Rev 1:7 he is already visible in the cloudy firmament.
Take thy crown Not indeed gaining it for himself, though depriving thee of it.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Rev 3:11 . . The message resounding throughout the entire Revelation, [1486] which proclaims judgment against enemies and the impenitent, [1487] serves faithful believers [1488] as a consolation and encouragement, [1489] and here is made especially prominent by the more explicit admonition to receive the crown [1490] from the hand of the coming Lord: , . . . What the church has , must be that because of which it is to receive the crown, if it hold the same fast. [1491] Thus, e.g., the church at Ephesus “has” this, that it hates the works of the Nicolaitans. [1492] What the church at Phila. has, is to be discerned from Rev 3:8-10 ; viz., this, that in trouble they had patiently kept the word of the Lord, and had not denied his name. Holding fast is by perseverance unto the end; [1493] but the victor’s crown of eternal life the hope laid up [1494] would be taken away, [1495] if the church would not hold fast to what it had, but in the impending temptation would waver and apostatize. Hence the Lord who pledges his gracious preservation (Rev 3:10 ) admonishes to faithful holding fast. Inconsistent with the context is the definition of the by N. de Lyra as “grace given thee;” and by Ew., [1496] “the ornament of thy virtues.” Better, C. a Lap.: [1497] “faith and patience.”
From the general mode of expression , the idea must not be pressed that another could retain for himself the crown snatched from the church. [1498] This possibly would have been expressed by [1499] But the idea itself is impossible. [1500]
[1486] Rev 22:7 ; Rev 22:12 ; Rev 22:20 . Cf. Rev 1:1 ; Rev 1:3 .
[1487] Cf., e.g., Rev 2:5 ; Rev 2:16 .
[1488] Cf. Rev 2:25 .
[1489] De Wette.
[1490] Cf. Rev 2:10 .
[1491] Cf. Rev 2:1 ; Rev 2:25 .
[1492] Rev 2:6 .
[1493] Cf. Mat 24:13 .
[1494] 2Ti 1:12 ; 2Ti 4:8 .
[1495] . Cf. Rev 6:4 ; De Wette.
[1496] Cf. Vitr., Wolf, etc.
[1497] Cf. Grot., etc.
[1498] Grot., Zll.
[1499] De Wette.
[1500] Cf. already Calov.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
11 Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.
Ver. 11. That no man take thy crown ] Not that crown of eternal life (for that is unlosable), but that honour that God hath put upon thee, Rev 3:9 . A Christian may, by falling into reproachful courses, “lose what he hath wrought,” 2Jn 1:8 . 2Jn 1:1 . In respect of the praise of men. 2. In respect of inward comfort. 3. In respect of the degrees of glory in heaven; he may miss being a pillar in the temple of God, as Rev 3:1 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
11 .] I come quickly (these words, which in different senses and with varying references form the burden of this whole book, are here manifestly to be taken as an encouragement and comfort to the Philadelphian church, arising from the nearness of the Lord’s coming to reward her; cf. below): hold fast that which thou hast ( , in the language of these Epistles, imports any advantage, or progress in grace, already possessed; cf. ch. Rev 2:6 , , This is regarded as a treasure, to be firmly grasped, as against those who are ever ready to snatch it away. In this case the was a rich treasure indeed: cf. Rev 3:8 ; Rev 3:10 ), that no one take (snatch away: but here the figure stops: it is not for himself that the robber would snatch it, but merely to deprive the possessor. So , ch. Rev 6:4 . The idea of the robber taking it for himself must, as De W. remarks, have been expressed by ) thy crown (ref.).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Rev 3:11 . “You have not long to wait and suffer now”; a fresh motive for tenacity of purpose. Compare with what follows the tradition of R. Simon (in Tract. Shabb. bab. 88 a ) that on the occasion of Exo 24:7 , the Israelites were each crowned with two crowns by 600,000 angels one when they said we will do , the other when they said we will be obedient ; but on the occasion of Exo 33:6 these crowns were snatched off by 1,200,000 devils. In the last day, at the messianic age, God restores these crowns (according to Isa 35:10 ). The sense is not altered if (like Luk 12:20 ) is taken as a vivid form of the passive “lest thou be deprived of thy crown” ( cf. Col 2:18 with 2Ti 4:8 ), forfeiting it through misconduct.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Revelation
‘THY CROWN’
Rev 3:11 .
The Philadelphian Church, to which these stirring words are addressed, is the only church of the seven in which there was nothing that Christ rebuked. It had no faults, or at least no recorded faults, either of morals or of doctrine. It had had no great storm of persecution beating upon it, although one was threatened. But yet, although thus free from blame and occasion for censure, it was not beyond the need of stimulating exhortation, not beyond the need of wholesome warning, not beyond the reach of danger and possible loss. ‘That no man take thy crown’ – as long as Christian men are here, so long have they to watch against the tendency of received truth to escape their hold because of its very familiarity; of things that are taken for granted to become impotent and to slip, and so for the crown to fall from the head, which is all unconscious of its discrowned shame.
We have here, then, three things: ‘thy crown’; the possibility of losing it; the way to secure it.
I. Now, as to the first.
It contributes to the understanding of the meaning of the metaphor to remember that the crown spoken of here is not the symbol of royalty, not the golden or other circlet which kings and emperors wore, but the floral wreath or garland which in ancient social life played many parts: was laid on the temples of the victors in the games, was wreathed around the locks of the conquering general, was placed upon the anointed heads of brides and of f casters, was the emblem of victory, of festivity, of joy. And it is this crown, not the symbol of dominion, but the symbol of a race accomplished and a conquest won, an outward and visible sign of a festal day, with all its abundance and ease and abandonment to delight, which the apocalyptic vision holds out before the Christian man.
The crown is a common figure all through the New Testament, and it may help us to grasp the fullness of the meaning of the metaphor if we just recall in a sentence or two the various instances of its occurrence. It is spoken about under three designations, as a crown of ‘life,’ of righteousness,’ of ‘glory’; the first and last designating it in reference to that of which it may be supposed to consist, namely, life and glory; the centre one designating it rather in reference to that of which it is the reward. The righteousness of earth is crowned by the more abundant life and the more radiant glory of the future. The roses that were wreathed round the flushed temples of the revelers withered and faded, and their petals drooped in the hot atmosphere of the banqueting hall, laden with fumes of wine. The parsley wreath, that was twined round the locks of the young athlete who had been victorious in the games, was withered to-morrow and cast into the dust heap. ‘But,’ says one of the New Testament writers, ‘the crown of glory fadeth not away.’ And the other wreaths, intrinsically worthless, were only symbols of victory and honour, but this itself is full of preciousness and of substance and of power.
So the crown is the reward of righteousness, and consists of life so full that our present experience contrasted with it may almost be called an experience of death; of glory so flashing and wonderful that, if our natures were not strengthened, it would be an ‘exceeding weight of glory’ that would crush them down, and upon all the life and all the glory is stamped the solemn signature of eternity, and they are for ever. Now, says my text to each Christian, all this, the consequence and reward of gore toil, faithfully done, and of effort that strains every muscle in the race – the festal participation in life and glory for evermore – is ‘thy crown’; not because thou hast it now, but because, as sure as God is God and righteousness is righteousness, nothing can prevent the man who, holding by Jesus Christ, has become possessor of the righteousness, which is of God by faith, from receiving that great reward. It is his already in the Divine destination; his by the immutable laws of proprietorship in God’s kingdom; his upon the simple condition of his continuing to be what he is. Like Peter’s saying about the inheritance ‘reserved in heaven for you,’ this representation treats the perfect future blessedness of us who are toiling and struggling here as already in existence and waiting for us, beyond the dust of the wrestling-ground, and the fury of the battlefield. Of course that is not meant to be taken in prosaic literality. The place ‘may indeed be’ prepared ‘in which that blessedness is to be realized, but the blessedness itself can have no existence apart from those who possess it. The purpose of the representations is to put in the strongest possible way the absolute certainty of the heads that now are pressed by the helmet being then encircled with the crown, and of the strangers scattered abroad reaching and resting for ever in the Promised Land to which they journey. The reward is as sure as if each man’s crown, with his name engraved upon it, lay safely guarded in the treasure-house of God.
The light of that great certainty should ever draw our weary eyes, weary of false glitter and vulgar gauds. The assurance of that joy unspeakable makes the best joy here. Future blessedness, apprehended by the long arm of faith, brings present blessedness. The gladness and the power of the Christian life largely depend on the habitual beholding, with yearning and hope, of ‘the King in His beauty and of the land that is very far off,’ and yet so near, and of our own proper portion of the inheritance of the saints in light.’ Christian men, it much concerns the vigour of your Christianity that you should take time and pains to cultivate the habit of looking forward through all the mists and darkness of this petty and unsubstantial present, and of thinking of that future as a certainty more certain than the contingencies of earth and as a present possession, more real by far than any of the fleeting shadows which we proudly and falsely call our own. They pass from hand to hand. They are mine to-day, another’s tomorrow. I have no real possession of them while they were called mine. We truly possess but two possessions – God and ourselves. We possess both by the same way of giving ourselves to God in love and obedience; and of such surrender and possession the crown is the perfecting and the reward. ‘Thy crown’ will fit no temples but thine. It is part of thy perfected self, and certain to be thine, if thou hold fast the beginning of thy confidence firm unto the end.
II. Note next the grim possibility of losing the crown.
‘That no man take’ it. Of course we are not to misunderstand the contingency shadowed here, as if it meant that some other person could filch away and put on his own head the crown which once was destined for us, which is a sheer impossibility and absurdity. No man would think to win heaven by stealing another’s right of entrance there. No man could, if he were to try. The results of character cannot be transferred. Nor are we to suppose reference to the machinations of tempters, either human or diabolic, who deliberately and consciously try to rob Christians of their religion here and thereby of their reward hereafter. But it is only too possible that men and things round about us may upset this certainty that we have been considering, and that though the crown be ‘thine.’ it may never come to be thy actual possession in the future, nor ever be worn upon thine own happy head in the festival of the skies.
That is the solemn side of the Christian life, that it is to be conceived of as lived amidst a multitude of men and things that are always trying to make us unfit to receive that crown of righteousness. They cannot work directly upon it. It has no existence except as the efflorescence of our own character crowned by God’s approbation. It is an ideal thing; but they can work upon us, and if they stain our heads with foul dust, then they make them unfit for our crown. So here are we, Christian men and women! in a world all full of things that tend and may be regarded as desiring to rob us of our crowns. This is not the way in which we usually think of the temptations that assail us. For instance, there comes some sly and whispering one to us and suggests pleasant hours, bought at a very small sacrifice of principle; delights for sense or for ambition, or for one or other of the passions of our nature, and all looks very innocent, and the harm seems to be comparatively small. Ah! let us look a little bit deeper. That temptation that seems to threaten so little and to promise so much is really trying to rob us of the crown. If we would walk through life with this thought in our minds, how it would strip off the masks of all these temptations that buzz about us! If once we saw their purpose and understood the true aim of the flattering lies which they tell us, should we not see over the lies, and would not they lose their power to deceive us? Be sure – and oh! let us hold fast by the illuminating conviction when the temptations come – be sure that, with all their glozing words and false harlot kisses, their meaning is this, to rob us of the bright and precious thing that is most truly ours; and so let us put away the temptations, and say to them, ‘Ah I you come as a friend, but I know your meaning; and forewarned is forearmed.’
III. Lastly, note the way to secure the crown which is ours.
‘Hold fast that thou hast.’ For if you do not hold it fast, it will slip. The metaphor is a plain one – if a man has got something very precious, he grips it with a very tight hand. The slack hand will very soon be an empty hand. Anybody walking through the midst of a crowd of thieves with a bag of gold in charge would not hold it dangling from a finger-tip, but he would put all five round it, and wrap the strings about his wrist.
The first shape which we may give to this exhortation is – hold fast by what God has given in His gospel; hold fast His Son, His truth. His grace. Use honestly and diligently your intellect to fathom and to keep firm hold of the great truths and principles of the gospel. Use your best efforts to keep your wandering hearts and mobile wills fixed and true to the revealed love of the great Lover of souls, which has been given to you in Christ, and to obey Him. You have got a Christ that is worth keeping, see to it that you keep Him, and do not let Him slip away out of your fingers. When the storms come a wise captain lashes all the light articles, and then they are safe. You and I have to struggle through many a storm, and all the loose stuff on deck will be washed off or blown away long before we get into calm water. Lash it by meditation, by faithful obedience, and by constant communion, and hold fast the Christian gospel, and, in the Christ whom the gospel reveals, the spiritual life that you possess.
But there is another aspect of the same commandment which applies not so much to that which is given us in the objective revelation and manifestation of God in Christ, as to our own subjective degrees of progress in the appropriation of Christ, and in likeness to Him. And possibly that is what my text more especially means, for just a little before, the Lord has said to that Church, ‘Thou hast a little strength, and hast kept My word, and hast not denied My name.’ ‘Thou hast a little strength . . . hold fast that which thou hast.’ See to it that thy present attainment in the Christian life, though it may be but rudimentary and incomplete, is at least kept. Cast not away your confidence, hold fast the beginning of your confidence firm, with a tightened hand, unto the end. For if we keep what we have, it will grow. Progress is certain, if there be persistence. If we do not let it go, it will increase and multiply in our possession. In all branches of study and intellectual pursuit, and in all branches of daily life, to hold fast what we have, and truly to possess what we possess, is the certain means to make our wealth greater. And so it is in the Christian life. Be true to the present knowledge, and use it, as it is meant to be used, and it will daily increase. ‘Hold fast that thou hast.’ Thou hast the ‘strength’; thou hast not yet the crown. Keep what God has committed to you, and God will keep what He has reserved for you.
And so the sure way to get the crown is to keep the faith; and then the life and the glory, which are but the outcome and the fruit of the faithful, persistent life here, are as sure as the cycles of the heavens, or as the throne and the will of God. Men and things and devils may try to take your crown from you, but nobody can deprive you of it but yourself. Hold fast the present possession, and make it really your own, and the future crown which God has promised to all who love and thereby possess Him will, in due time, be twined around your head. He who has and holds fast Christ here cannot fail of the crown yonder.
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
Behold. Omit.
hold . . . fast. Same Greek. word as Rev 2:1, Rev 2:13, Rev 2:14, Rev 2:15, Rev 2:25, not as Rev 3:3.
that = in order that. Greek. hina.
no rnan = no one. Greek. medeis. These words do not relate to such as through grace are perfect “in Him”. See Rom 8:38, Rom 8:39.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
11.] I come quickly (these words, which in different senses and with varying references form the burden of this whole book, are here manifestly to be taken as an encouragement and comfort to the Philadelphian church, arising from the nearness of the Lords coming to reward her; cf. below): hold fast that which thou hast ( , in the language of these Epistles, imports any advantage, or progress in grace, already possessed; cf. ch. Rev 2:6, , This is regarded as a treasure, to be firmly grasped, as against those who are ever ready to snatch it away. In this case the was a rich treasure indeed: cf. Rev 3:8; Rev 3:10), that no one take (snatch away: but here the figure stops: it is not for himself that the robber would snatch it, but merely to deprive the possessor. So , ch. Rev 6:4. The idea of the robber taking it for himself must, as De W. remarks, have been expressed by ) thy crown (ref.).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
I come: Rev 1:3, Rev 22:7, Rev 22:12, Rev 22:20, Zep 1:14, Phi 4:5, Jam 5:9
hold: Rev 3:3, Rev 2:13, Rev 2:25
thy: Rev 2:10, Rev 4:4, Rev 4:10, 1Co 9:25, 2Ti 2:5, 2Ti 4:8, Jam 1:12, 1Pe 5:3, 1Pe 5:4
Reciprocal: Son 3:4 – I held Lam 5:16 – The crown Eze 18:24 – All his Luk 19:26 – and from Joh 21:22 – If 1Co 9:24 – so run Phi 4:1 – so Col 2:18 – no 1Th 3:8 – if 1Th 5:21 – hold 2Th 3:5 – and into 2Ti 1:13 – Hold Tit 1:9 – Holding Heb 3:6 – if Heb 10:23 – hold 2Pe 1:10 – never 1Jo 2:24 – abide 2Jo 1:8 – Look
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Rev 3:11. I come quickly. Comp. chap. Rev 2:25 and Rev 3:3, in both of which the general, rather than any special, coming of the Lord had been spoken of. He was to come in the first, to come as a thief in the second; now He comes quickly.
That no one take thy crown, that is, take it away (comp. chap. Rev 6:4), deprive the church of it. The crown is the crown of future glory, the kingly crown (comp. on chap, Rev 2:10).
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, notwithstanding this church’s constancy, yet Christ exhorts her to steadfastness, Hold fast; the steadiest and most steadfast Christians have need to be often cautioned and counselled against backsliding.
Observe also, The encouragements which Christ gives his church to hold fast his innocency, fidelity, and patience: the first is drawn from the shortness of her sufferings, by reason of Christ’s sudden coming, Behold, I come quickly, that is, to deliver my faithful people, and to destroy their enemies; the second is drawn from the hazard which they run of losing the crown, for want of an unfainting perseverance, Hold fast, that no man take thy crown.
Where note, That only the persevering Christian shall be crowned, and that each persevering Christian shall have his own crown: there are probably differences of reward in heaven, as well as degrees of misery in hell; for quality the glory will be the same, they shall shine as the sun; for degree it will likely be differing, as much as one star differs from another in glory: Let no man take thy crown.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Rev 3:11-12. Behold, I come quickly To put an end to those trials which for the present are so painful; hold that fast which thou hast With resolute fidelity; that no man take thy crown That no person or thing may prevent thy receiving that crown of everlasting glory which will be the gracious reward of thy continued fidelity. Him that overcometh All opposing power by faith and patience; will I make a pillar in the temple of my God I will fix him immoveable in Gods heavenly temple, where he shall be as a pillar of distinguished ornament and beauty; and he shall go no more out But shall be holy and happy for ever: and I will write upon him the name of my God So that the nature and image of God shall appear visibly upon him. And the name of the city of my God Giving him a title to dwell in the New Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God And shall soon be represented to thee, O John, in a most glorious vision. And I will write upon him my new name I will give him a share in that joy which I entered into after overcoming all my enemies. Few texts, says Doddridge, in the whole New Testament, are more illustrated by antiquity than this. Great numbers of inscriptions are yet remaining, brought from the Grecian cities of Europe and Asia, and some from islands in the neighbourhood of Patmos, in which the victories of eminent persons are commemorated. And, as some of these were placed near the temples of their deities, others were in those temples, to signify their being put under the particular protection of those deities; whose names therefore were inscribed upon them, and the names of the conquerors and of the cities to which they belonged; as also the names of the generals by whose conduct the victory was gained.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Verse 11
Hold that fast, &c.; be firm and decided in your Christian course.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
4. Exhortation 3:11b, 13
Since Jesus Christ’s return is imminent the believers should remain faithful to Him so their detractors would not rob them of the reward that would be theirs for steadfast perseverance (cf. 2Jn 1:8). The familiar closing charge (Rev 3:13) reminds us again that the message of each of these seven letters is applicable to all churches.
Students of church history have seen the era during which the modern foreign missionary movement flourished, especially the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as similar to the Philadelphia church. During those years there were several revivals of return to God’s Word. These took place under the leadership of the Puritans, the Wesleys, the Plymouth Brethren, and others. Like the church at Philadelphia, these groups of believers were not flashy, but they were faithful.