Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.
5. repent ] Neither this word, nor the cognate subst. repentance, is used in St John’s Gospel or Epistles.
do the first works ] He does not say, “Love with the first love,” though the works were only valuable as proceeding from love: for to love, though depending on the state of the will, is not a directly voluntary act. But He says “do the first works,” for that is in thy power. Do again what love made thee do, that thou mayest learn to love again. The paradox is as true of spiritual graces as of natural virtues (Arist. Eth. Nic. II. Rev 4:1-2 ) that the good habitual character is only gained by good acts, while really good acts are only possible as the product of the good character.
I will come ] Literally, I am coming the verb having, from its own nature, the sense of future time: cf. Rev 1:4 and note.
remove thy candlestick out of his place ] i.e. make thee cease to be a Church. It seems scarcely relevant to point to the destruction of the city by the Turks, and its present desolation, as a fulfilment of this threat. We may presume that the Church of Ephesus did repent, as it was famous and prosperous, and fertile in Saints, for centuries. It is likely enough that the Turkish conquest was God’s judgement on the sins of the Eastern Empire and its Churches: but we cannot conclude that the Church of Ephesus was in the 14th century more corrupt than e.g. that of Smyrna, because it was more entirely exterminated.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen – The eminence which you once occupied. Call to remembrance the state in which you once were. The duty here enjoined is, when religion has declined in our hearts, or in the church, to call to distinct recollection the former state – the ardor, the zeal, the warmth of love which once characterized us. The reason for this is, that such a recalling of the former state will be likely to produce a happy influence on the heart. Nothing is better adapted to affect a backsliding Christian, or a backsliding church, than to call to distinct recollection the former condition – the happier days of piety. The joy then experienced, the good done, the honor reflected on the cause of religion, the peace of mind of that period, will contrast strongly with the present, and nothing will be better suited to recall an erring church, or an erring individual, from their wanderings than such a reminiscence of the past. The advantages of thus remembering their former condition would be many; for some of the most valuable impressions which are made on the mind, and some of the most important lessons learned, are from the recollections of a former state. Among those advantages, in this case, would be such as the following:
- It would show how much they might have enjoyed if they had continued as they began, how much more real happiness they would have had than they actually have enjoyed.
- How much good they might have done, if they had only persevered in the zeal with which they commenced the Christian life. How much more good might most Christians do than they actually accomplish, if they would barely, even without increasing it, continue with the degree of zeal with which they begin their course.
- How much greater attainments they might have made in the divine life, and in the knowledge of religion, than they have made; that is, how much more elevated and enlarged might have been their views of religion, and their knowledge of the Word of God. And,
(d)Such a recollection of their past state as, contrasted with what they now are, would exert a powerful influence in producing true repentance; for there is nothing better adapted to do this than a just view of what we might have been, as compared with what we now are.
If a man has become cold toward his wife, nothing is better suited to reclaim him than to recall to his recollection the time when he led her to the altar, the solemn vow then made, and the rapture of his heart when he pressed her to his bosom and called her his own.
And repent – The word used here means to change ones mind and purposes, and, along with that, to change ones conduct or demeanor. The duty of repentance here urged would extend to all the points in which they had erred.
And do the first works – The works which were done when the church was first established. That is, manifest the zeal and love which were formerly evinced in opposing error, and in doing good. This is the true counsel to be given to those who have backslidden, and have left their first love, now. Often such persons, sensible that they have erred, and that they have not the enjoyment in religion which they once had, profess to be willing and desirous to return, but they know not how to do it – how to revive their ardor, how to rekindle in their bosom the flame of extinguished love. They suppose it must be by silent meditation, or by some supernatural influence, and they wait for some visitation from above to call them back, and to restore to them their former joy. The counsel of the Saviour to all such, however, is to do their first works. It is to engage at once in doing what they did in the first and best days of their piety, the days of their espousals Jer 2:2 to God. Let them read the Bible as they did then; let them pray as they did then; let them go forth in the duties of active benevolence as they did then; let them engage in teaching a Sunday school as they did then; let them relieve the distressed, instruct the ignorant, raise up the fallen, as they did then; let them open their heart, their purse, and their hand, to bless a dying world. As it was in this way that they manifested their love then, so this would be better suited than all other things to rekindle the flame of love when it is almost extinguished. The weapon that is used keeps bright; that which has become rusty will become bright again if it is used.
Or else I will come unto thee quickly – On the word rendered quickly ( tachei), see the notes on Rev 1:1. The meaning is, that he would come as a Judge, at no distant period, to inflict punishment in the manner specified – by removing the candle-stick out of its place. He does not say in what way it would be done; whether by some sudden judgment, by a direct act of power, or by a gradual process that would certainly lead to that result.
And will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent – On the meaning of the word candlestick see the notes on Rev 1:12. The meaning is, that the church gave light in Ephesus; and that what he would do in regard to that place would be like removing a lamp, and leaving a place in darkness. The expression is equivalent to saying that the church there would cease to exist. The proper idea of the passage is, that the church would be wholly extinct; and it is observable that this is a judgment more distinctly disclosed in reference to this church than to any other of the seven churches. There is not the least evidence that the church at Ephesus did repent, and the threatening has been most signally fulfilled. Long since the church has become utterly extinct, and for ages there was not a single professing Christian there. Every memorial of there having been a church there has departed, and there are nowhere, not even in Nineveh, Babylon, or Tyre, more affecting demonstrations of the fulfillment of ancient prophecy than in the present state of the ruins of Ephesus. A remark of Mr. Gibbon (Decline and Fall, iv. 260) will show with what exactness the prediction in regard to this church has been accomplished.
He is speaking of the conquests of the Turks. In the loss of Ephesus the Christians deplored the fall of the first angel, the extinction of the first candlestick of the Revelations; the desolation is complete; and the temple of Diana, or the Church of Mary will equally elude the search of the curious traveler. Thus, the city, with the splendid temple of Diana, and the church that existed there in the time of John, has disappeared, and nothing remains but unsightly ruins. These ruins lie about ten days journey from Smyrna, and consist of shattered walls, and remains of columns and temples. The soil on which a large part of the city is supposed to have stood, naturally rich, is covered with a rank, burnt-up vegetation, and is everywhere deserted and solitary, though bordered by picturesque mountains. A few grainfields are scattered along the site of the ancient city. Toward the sea extends the ancient port, a pestilential marsh.
Along the slope of the mountain, and over the plain, are scattered fragments of masonry and detached ruins, but no thing can now be fixed on as the great temple of Diana. There are ruins of a theater; there is a circus, or stadium, nearly entire; there are fragments of temples and palaces scattered around; but there is nothing that marks the site of a church in the time of John; there is nothing to indicate even that such a church then existed there. About a mile and a half from the principal ruins of Ephesus there is indeed now a small village called Asalook, a Turkish word, which is associated with the same idea as Ephesus, meaning, The City of the Moon. A church, dedicated to John, is supposed to have stood near, if not on the site of the present mosque. Dr. Chandler (p. 150, 4to) gives us a striking description of Ephesus as he found it in 1764: Its population consisted of a few Greek peasants, living in extreme wretchedness, dependence, and insensibility, the representatives of an illustrious people, and inhabiting the wreck of their greatness. Some reside in the substructure of the glorious edifices which they raised; some beneath the vaults of the stadium, and the crowded scenes of these diversions; and some in the abrupt precipice, in the sepulchres which received their ashes. Its streets are obscured and overgrown. A herd of goats was driven to it for shelter from the sun at noon, and a noisy flight of crows from the quarries seemed to insult its silence. We heard the partridge call in the area of the theater and of the stadium … Its fate is that of the entire country; a garden has become a desert. Busy centers of civilization, spots where the refinements and delights of the age were collected, are now a prey to silence, destruction, and death.
Consecrated first of all to the purposes of idolatry, Ephesus next had Christian temples almost rivaling the pagan in splendor, wherein the image of the great Diana lay prostrate before the cross; after the lapse of some centuries Jesus gives way to Muhammed, and the crescent glittered on the dome of the recently Christian church. A few more scores of years, and Ephesus has neither temple, cross, crescent, nor city, but is desolation, a dry land, and a wilderness. See the article Ephesus in Kittos Cyclopedia, and the authorities there referred to. What is affirmed here of Ephesus has often been illustrated in the history of the world, that when a church has declined in piety and love, and has been called by faithful ministers to repent, and has not done it, it has been abandoned more and more, until the last appearance of truth and piety has departed, and it has been given up to error and to ruin.
And the same principle is as applicable to individuals, for they have as much reason to dread the frowns of the Saviour as churches have. If they who have left their first love will not repent at the call of the Saviour, they have every reason to apprehend some fearful judgment, some awful visitation of his Providence that shall overwhelm them in sorrow, as a proof of his displeasure. Even though they should finally be saved, their days may be without comfort, and perhaps their last moments without a ray of conscious hope. The accompanying engraving, representing the present situation of Ephesus, will bring before the eye a striking illustration of the fulfillment of this prophecy, that the candlestick of Ephesus would be removed from its place. See also the engravings prefixed to the notes on the Epistle to the Ephesians.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 5. Remember] Consider the state of grace in which you once stood; the happiness, love, and joy which you felt when ye received remission of sins; the zeal ye had for God’s glory and the salvation of mankind; your willing, obedient spirit, your cheerful self-denial, your fervour in private prayer, your detachment from the world, and your heavenly-mindedness. Remember-consider, all these.
Whence thou art fallen] Fallen from all those blessed dispositions and gracious feelings already mentioned. Or, remember what a loss you have sustained; for so is frequently used by the best Greek writers.
Repent] Be deeply humbled before God for having so carelessly guarded the Divine treasure.
Do the first works] Resume your former zeal and diligence; watch, fast, pray, reprove sin, carefully attend all the ordinances of God, walk as in his sight, and rest not till you have recovered all your lost ground, and got back the evidence of your acceptance with your Maker.
I will come unto thee quickly] In the way of judgment.
And will remove thy candlestick] Take away my ordinances, remove your ministers, and send you a famine of the word. As there is here an allusion to the candlestick in the tabernacle and temple, which could not be removed without suspending the whole Levitical service, so the threatening here intimates that, if they did not repent, c., he would unchurch them they should no longer have a pastor, no longer have the word and sacraments, and no longer have the presence of the Lord Jesus.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen; that is, in what degree thy love was formerly, and compare it with what it is now.
And repent; repentance in man, signifieth both the change of the heart and of the actions.
And do the first works; recover thy former warmth of love, and zeal for good works.
Or else I will come unto thee quickly; if thou do not, I that know thee, and walk in the midst of thee, will show myself an enemy to thee.
And will remove thy candlestick out of his place; and unchurch thee, and say unto thee, Lo-ammi, You are not my people. Which threatening is long since made good; for where is now the famous church of Ephesus?
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
5. whencefrom what a height.
do the first workstheworks which flowed from thy first love. Not merely”feel thy first feelings,” but do works flowing from thesame principle as formerly, “faith which worketh by love.”
I will comeGreek,“I am coming” in special judgment on thee.
quicklyomitted in twooldest manuscripts, Vulgate and Coptic versions:supported by one oldest manuscript.
remove thy candlestick out ofhis placeI will take away the Church from Ephesus and removeit elsewhere. “It is removal of the candlestick, not extinctionof the candle, which is threatened here; judgment for some, but thatvery judgment the occasion of mercy for others. So it has been. Theseat of the Church has been changed, but the Church itself survives.What the East has lost, the West has gained. One who lately visitedEphesus found only three Christians there, and these so ignorant asscarcely to have heard the names of St. Paul or St. John”[TRENCH].
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen,…. Believers cannot totally and finally fall away from the grace which they have received; but they may fall into sin, and from a degree of grace, and the exercise of it, as these first and pure churches did, from some degree of their love to God, and Christ, and one another; and therefore are called upon to remember, mind, and observe from what degree of it they were fallen; in order to bring them under a conviction and acknowledgment of their evil, and a sense of their present state, and to quicken their desires after a restoration to their former one:
and repent; of their coldness and lukewarmness, of the remissness of their love, and of those evils which brought it upon them:
and do the first works; of faith and love, with the like zeal and fervour, which will show the repentance to be sincere and genuine; so the Arabic version reads, “and exercise the former works, to wit, charity” or “love”. The Jews have a saying b,
“if a man repents, do not say to him, “remember”
, “thy first works”;”
which they seem to understand of evil works; but former good works are to be remembered and done, to show the truth of repentance for evil ones.
Or else I will come unto thee quickly; not in a spiritual way, to pay a love visit, nor in a judicial way, to take vengeance or inflict punishment, but in a providential way, to rebuke and chastise:
and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent; or thee out of the candlestick, the pastor from the church, either by persecution or by death; or else the church, and church state itself, signified by a candlestick; [See comments on Re 1:12]; and may design a shaking and an unsettling of it, which is sometimes done by violent persecutions, and by false teachers and their doctrines, and by the divisions and contentions of saints among themselves; and by the former particularly was there a change made in the state of this apostolic church, when it passed into the Smyrnean one, which was a period of great persecution and distress; for this cannot be understood of the total removing of the church state itself quickly, no, not of Ephesus itself; for though there is not now indeed, nor has there been for many hundred years, a church of Christ in that place, yet there was one till the times of Constantine, when there was none in any of the other seven cities, and a long time after; [See comments on Ac 20:17]; which shows, that this was not a commination or threatening of divine vengence to that church literally, but to the state of the church, which that represented; nor does it intend the utter abolition of that church, for the apostolic church still continued, though it ceased to be in the circumstances it was before.
b Misn. Bava Metzia, c. 4. sect. 10.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Remember (). Present active imperative of , “continue mindful” (from ).
Thou art fallen (). Perfect active indicative of , state of completion. Down in the valley, look up to the cliff where pure love is and whence thou hast fallen down.
And repent ( ). First aorist active imperative of , urgent appeal for instant change of attitude and conduct before it is too late.
And do ( ). First aorist active imperative of , “Do at once.”
The first works ( ). Including the first love (Acts 19:20; Acts 20:37; Eph 1:3) which has now grown cold (Mt 24:12).
Or else ( ). Elliptical condition, the verb not expressed (), a common idiom, seen again in verse 16, the condition expressed in full by in this verse and verse 22.
I come (). Futuristic present middle (Joh 14:2f.).
To thee (). Dative, as in 2:16 also.
Will move (). Future active of . In Ignatius’ Epistle to Ephesus it appears that the church heeded this warning.
Except thou repent ( ). Condition of third class with instead of above, with the first aorist active subjunctive of .
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Thou art fallen [] Lit., hast fallen out.
Repent [] . See on Mt 3:2; Mt 21:29.
l will come [] . Rev., correctly, I come.
Quickly. Omit.
Will remove thy candlestick. “Its candlestick has been for centuries removed out of his place; the squalid Mohammedan village which is nearest to its site does not count one Christian in its insignificant population; its temple is a mass of shapeless ruins; its harbor is a reedy pool; the bittern booms amid its pestilent and stagnant marshes; and malaria and oblivion reign supreme over the place where the wealth of ancient civilization gathered around the scenes of its grossest superstitions and its most degraded sins” (Farrar, “Life and Work of Paul,” 2, 43, 44). John employs the verb kinew remove (Rev., move) only in Revelation, and only once besides the present instance, in chapter Rev 6:14, where, as here, it signifies moving in judgment.
The Nicolaitans. From nikan to conquer, and laov the people. There are two principal explanations of the term. The first and better one historical. A sect springing, according to credible tradition, from Nicholas a proselyte of Antioch, one of the seven deacons of Jerusalem (Act 6:5), who apostatized from the truth, and became the founder of an Antinomian Gnostic sect. They appear to have been characterized by sensuality, seducing Christians to participate in the idolatrous feasts of pagans, and to unchastity. Hence they are denoted by the names of Balaam and Jezebel, two leading agents of moral contamination under the Old Testament dispensation. Balaam enticed the Israelites, through the daughters of Moab and Midian, to idolatry and fornication (Num 31:16). Jezebel murdered the Lord ‘s prophets, and set up idolatry in Israel. The Nicolaitans taught that, in order to master sensuality, one must know the whole range of it by experience; and that he should therefore abandon himself without reserve to the lusts of the body, since they concerned only the body and did not touch the spirit. These heretics were hated and expelled by the Church of Ephesus (Rev 2:6), but were tolerated by the Church of Pergamum (Rev 2:15). The other view regards the name as symbolic, and Nicholas as the Greek rendering of Balaam, whose name signifies destroyer or corrupter of the people. This view is adopted by Trench (” Seven Churches “), who says : “The Nicolaitans are the Balaamites; no sect bearing the one name or the other; but those who, in the new dispensation, repeated the sin of Balaam in the old, and sought to overcome or destroy the people of God by the same temptations whereby Balaam had sought to overcome them before.” The names, however, are by no means parallel : Conqueror of the people not being the same as corrupter of the people. Besides, in verse 14, the Balaamites are evidently distinguished from the Nicolaitans.
Alford remarks : “There is no sort of reason for interpreting the name otherwise than historically. It occurs in a passage indicating simple matters of historical fact, just as the name Antipas does in verse 13.”
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen,” (mnemoneue oun pothen peptokas) “Remember therefore whence (from where and what) thou hast fallen,” fallen away. Recognition of wrong is the first step to restoration from that wrong – The Bible is so definitively accurate in its analysis of evil and righteous solution to the problem; to wit the restoration of David and the Prodigal Son and the Publican, Psa 51:1-4; Luk 15:18; Luk 18:13.
2) “And repent, and do the first works,” (kai, metanoeson kai ta prota erga poieson) “and repent (turn, about face) and do the first works,” of witnessing and making disciples, in obedience to the Lord’s command, 1Jn 1:9; Act 1:8. Peter turned back from his lying and cursing to preach the Pentecost message and write two books of the New Testament, Luk 22:32; Luk 21:22; Act 2:14-47.
3) “Or else I will come unto thee quickly,” (ei de me erchomai soi) “And if not (if you do not) I am coming to you of my own accord; quickly promptly without delay, for chastisement or in chastisement unless you repent, turn from your conduct in fallen love, Eph 5:14; Eze 18:30-32; Heb 12:5-13.
4) “And will remove thy candlestick out of his place,” (kai kineso ten luchnian sou ek tou topou autes) “And I will move your candlestick (lampstand, support) out of its place; will take from you, as a local congregation, the empowering of administration of my work, as I did from Israel who rejected me, Mat 21:41-43.
5) “Except thou repent,” (ean me metanoeses) “Unless you repent; Repentance is the way to God’s fellowship for 1) the sinner, Mar 1:15; Luk 13:35; Act 17:31; Acts 2) for the backslidden, the wayward child of God, Psa 51:1-4; 1Jn 1:9; and for erring churches, Rev 2:16; Rev 22:21; Rev 3:3.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
(5) Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, . . . and do the first works.It is argued that we have here evidence that the later, or Domitian, date of the Apocalypse is the true one, since it describes a fall in spiritual life which might have occurred in thirty years, but would hardly have taken place in the few yearsten at the utmostwhich elapsed between the visit of St. Paul (Act. 20:29-30) and the reign of Nero. But greater changes than a decay of this kind have passed over communities in equally short periods. We have seen nations pass from imperialism to republicanism, from the fever-heat of radicalism to the lethargy of conservatism, in shorter space. Has not the past decade shown marvellously rapid movements in the Church of our own land! The change, moreover, in the Ephesian Church was not so great as the advocates of the later apocalyptic date would describe. There is at present little outward sign of decay; they have resisted evil and false teachers; they have shown toil and endurance; but the great Searcher of hearts detects the almost imperceptible symptoms of an incipient decay. He alone can tell the moment when love of truth is passing into a noisy, Pharisaic zealotism; when men are settling down into a lower state of spiritual life than that which they once aimed at and once knew. Such a backsliding is gentle, unmarked, unnoticed in its course. Further, it must not be forgotten that the Apostle did express his presentiments of coming danger, and specially warned the elders (Act. 20:28) to take heed unto themselves; and in his Epistle (Eph. 6:24) he gives in his closing words the covert caution that their love to Christ should be j an incorruptible, unchanging love: Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in incorruption (sincerity, English version). The advice now given is, Repent, and do the first works. The advice is three-fold: remember, repent, reform. Remember the love of the past peaceful hours. How sweet their memory still! There are ever goads, says Archbishop Trench, in the memory of a better and a nobler past, goading him who has taken up with meaner things and lower, and urging him to make what he has lost once more his own. (Comp. Luk. 15:17, and Heb. 10:32.) So Ulysses urges his crew to further exertions.
Call to mind from whence ye sprung:
Ye were not formed to live as brutes,
But virtue to pursue and knowledge high.
Inf. xxvi.
Remember, but also repent, and repent in true practical fashion; for Love will recognise no repentance but that which is confirmed in the doing of the first works. It must be a repentance whereby we forsake sin. Christ does not say, Feel thy first feelings, but, Do the first works. An ounce of reality, says a modern novelist, is worth a pound of romance.
Or else I will come . . .Better, Or else I am coming unto (or, for thee, in a way which concerns) thee, and (omit quickly, which is wanting in the oldest MSS.) will remove thy candlestick out of its place, unless thou shalt have repentedi.e., unless the change shall have come before the day of visitation. The now they are hid from thine eyes, is not yet spoken for Ephesus.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
5. Remember A calling to remembrance the days when his heart was rich with his first divine love, is often the first inspiring impulse for the backslider to return.
First works For that early love was not a mere emotion ending where it begun, within the feeling, but put itself forth in works.
I will come Greek present tense, I come, or, am coming; but remove is in the future, showing that the present of come implies vividness of conception. The come does not designate the second advent, for which parousia is the unequivocal word, as noted in 2Pe 3:4. This coming is the interposition of Christ to remove the Church of Ephesus. This removal some interpreters apply to the transfer of the primary episcopate elsewhere. Others, to the transfer of the Christian Church from east to west, from Asia to Europe. We can easily imagine how the necessity of uttering this threat to his own Ephesus should touch the heart of St. John.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Rev 2:5. Will remove thy candlestick out of his place, As this threatening is addressed to the church of Ephesus, though much better than some other churches, it is reasonable to believe, that, like other denunciations, it was also intended to awaken the rest. It intimates how terrible a thing it would be to have the gospel taken away from them: and indeed it has been executed upon them all in a very awful manner; for, ruined and overthrown by heresies and divisions within, and by the arms of the Saracens from without, Mahometanism prevails throughout those countries, which were once the glory of Christendom; their churches turned into mosques, and their worship into superstition.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
5 Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.
Ver. 5. From whence thou art fallen ] viz. From thy former feelings and present fitness for God’s kingdom,Luk 9:62Luk 9:62 .
And repent ] See the practice of this second repentance in the relapsed spouse returning to her old husband, Son 5:6 . See Trapp on “ 2Co 7:11 “ See an excellent letter of the Lady Jane to that apostate Harding, sometime her chaplain, Acts and Mon. fol. 1292, and what sweet counsel Bradford afterwards gave the same Harding, lb. fol. 1564, besides the example of Mr Bartlet Green, martyr, fol. 1680.
And do the first works ] Begin the world again (as the Nazarite was to do that had broken his vow, Num 6:1-27 ), and, to set thee up afresh, make a gathering of prayers, and see that thy works be better at last than at first.
And remove thy candlestick ] Sins are the snuffs that dim our candlestick and threaten the removal of it. And surely if we repent not, a removal thereof may be as certainly foreseen and foretold as if visions and letters were sent us from heaven, as to these seven Churches. There is a prophecy in Thelesphorus, reported, that Antichrist shall never overcome Venice, nor Paris, nor London; but we have a more sure word of prophecy here. This nation is sick of a spiritual pleurisy; we begin to surfeit on the bread of life. When God sees his mercies lying under table, it is just with him to call to the enemy to take away.
Except thou repent ] Minatur Deus ut non puniat. God therefore menaceth, that men may be warned. As a bee stings not till provoked; so neither doth God punish till there be no remedy,2Ch 36:162Ch 36:16 . Currat ergo poenitentia, ne proecurrat sententia, saith one; mittamus preces et lacrymas cordis legatos, saith another. Haste, haste, haste, to meet the Lord with entreaties of peace; lest we be laid waste as Sodom and desolate as the people of Gomorrah, Isa 1:9 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Rev 2:5 . , from what a height. Contrast Cic. ad Attic . iv. 17: “non recordor unde ceciderim, sed unde resurrexerim”. To realise that a decline has taken place, or to admit a lapse, is the first step and stimulus to amendment (see the fine passage in Bunyan’s preface to Grace Abounding , and the “Hymn of the Soul,” 44, 45, in Acts of Thomas ). Once this is brought home to the mind ( , a prolonged effort), repentance quick and sharp ( , aor.) will follow, issuing in a return to the first level of excellence ( ), i.e. , to the initial charity ( 2Jn 1:6 ; 2Jn 1:8 ; love shown in deeds). The way to regain this warmth of affection is neither by working up spasmodic emotion nor by theorising about it (Arist. Eth. Nic. ii. 4), but by doing its duties. (“The two paracletes of man are repentance and good works,” Sanhed. 32). It is taken for granted that man possesses the power of turning and returning; the relation of Christ’s redeeming death to the forgiveness of sins throughout the Christian life, although implied, is never explicitly argued (as in Hebrews) by this writer. The present ( .) emphasises the nearness of the approach, while the future ( .) denotes a result to follow from it. either a dat. incommodi or (more probably) a local dat. (rare in classical literature, cf. Aesch. Pr. ver. 360) with “the sense of motion to a place,” (Simcox, Lang. N. T. 81), if not an incorrect reproduction of Heb. (as Mat 21:5 , Blass). Cf. Journ. Theol. St. iii. 516. . . ., (“efficiam ut ecclesia esse desinas,” Areth.); not degradation but destruction is the threat, brotherly love being the articulus stantis aut cadentis ecclesiae . So, in a remarkable parallel from Paul (Phi 2:14-16 ), quarrelsomeness forfeits the privileges of Christ’s care and service, since the function of being , depends upon concord and charity in the church ( ). A slackened sense of the obligation to mutual love formed the cardinal sin at Ephesus; to repent of this was the condition of continued existence as a church; utility or extinction is the alternative held out to her. The nature of the visitation is left unexplained; the threat is vague, but probably eschatological. The Apocalypse, however, knows nothing of the Jewish idea that Israel’s repentance would bring the advent of messiah ( cf. Schrer’s Hist. II. ii. 163, 164), as though the transgressions of the people hindered his appearance.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
from. Omit.
art fallen = hast fallen.
repent. Compare Lev 26:40-42. Deu 30:1-3. Dan 9:3, Dan 9:4. Mat 4:17. Act 2:38; &c. Contrast Eph 1:3. App-111.
else = if (App-118) not (App-105).
will. Omit.
quickly. The texts omit.
remove = move, as Rev 6:14.
except. If (App-118) not (App-105).
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Rev 2:5. [29] ) This is spoken absolutely without a verb, Rev 2:16; , with a verb, presently after in this verse, and Rev 2:22, ch. Rev 3:3; Rev 3:20.- ) The coming of the Lord was about to take place at one time; and the denunciation of His coming was made first at Ephesus, etc., lastly at Laodicea. [In these denunciations the idea of nearness of approach increases: Rev 2:16; Rev 2:25, ch. Rev 3:3; Rev 3:11; Rev 3:20.-Not. Crit.] The verb is used so constantly in the present, that it remains so even when followed by a future: , Rev 2:16. See also Joh 14:3. The angel ought to effect much, on account of his close tie of connection with his own church.
[29] , remember) A remembrance of this kind profits very much: ch. Rev 3:3.-V. g.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Remember: Rev 3:3, Rev 3:19, Eze 16:61-63, Eze 20:43, Eze 36:31, 2Pe 1:12, 2Pe 1:13
thou art: Isa 14:12, Hos 14:1, Gal 5:4, Jud 1:24
and repent: Rev 2:16, Rev 2:21, Rev 2:22, Rev 3:3, Rev 3:19, Rev 9:20, Rev 9:21, Rev 16:9, Act 17:30, Act 17:31
and do: Rev 2:19, Rev 3:2, Rev 3:3, Isa 1:26, Jer 2:2, Jer 2:3, Hos 9:10, Mal 3:4, Mal 4:6, Luk 1:17
else: Rev 2:16, Rev 3:3, Mat 21:41-43, Mat 24:48-51, Mar 12:9, Luk 12:45, Luk 12:46, Luk 20:16
Reciprocal: Exo 25:31 – a candlestick Exo 40:24 – General Lev 24:4 – the pure Psa 85:8 – but Pro 6:23 – lamp Eze 18:30 – Repent Mat 3:2 – Repent Mat 13:12 – from Mat 24:12 – the love Mat 25:7 – General Mat 25:29 – shall be taken Luk 22:61 – And Peter Act 26:20 – repent Rom 11:22 – otherwise 1Co 11:31 – General 2Co 13:5 – Examine Phi 3:16 – whereto 1Ti 5:12 – their Heb 10:32 – call Rev 3:16 – I will spue thee out
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
REMEMBER!
Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent or else I will remove thy candlestick.
Rev 2:5
These are the words before us. It is an honour to be privileged to appropriate words addressed to one of the most honoured Churches of antiquity. We would reverently take to heart the Voice from the upper sanctuary, which resounds now in the community of the Lord. Note
I.The kindly admonition.
II.The earnest call to repentance.
III.The fearful threatening.
Illustration
At Ephesus, one of the seven golden candlesticks, set up in the midst of the heathen world, was once the most distinguished Church in Eastern Christendom. St. Paul had founded it, and loved it before all others, as his touching farewell to its presbyters at Miletus proves, as well as the glorious letter he wrote to it. St. John fostered it to the end of his days. It was privileged to harbour the loving disciple of Jesus long after the Lord came, at the destruction of Jerusalem, and to preserve in its bosom his honoured bones. Even in the circular letter of the Revelation, it still gets that praise from the mouth of the Lord, I know thy works, thy labour, and thy patience. And yet there follows upon it the admonition, Think from what thou hast fallen. Thy star is on the wane. It grows pale.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Rev 2:5. The exhortation to the church now follows in three parts:(1) Remember therefore from whence thou hast fallen; her first condition being regarded as a height; (2) and repent, by contrasting thy present with thy former state; (3) and do the first works; for it is the duty of the church to abide in Christ: Even as the Father hath loved Me, says Jesus Himself, I also have loved you; abide ye in My love (Joh 15:9). Works are here to be understood in that widest sense of the word peculiar to St. John. The Lord does not bid His Church act as if acting were everything and feeling nothing. Feeling is rather the thing mainly thought of. There was no want of action: what was needed was the love which alone makes action valuable (cp. 1 Corinthians 13).
or else I come unto thee; not the final judgment, or the Second Coming of the Lord; for, in that case, we should hardly have had the words unto thee attached to the warning, but a special coming in judgment, an earnest and symbol of the great Coming at the last.
And will move thy candlestick out of its place, except thou repent. The removal of the churchs candlestick denotes removal from her high standing and privileges in the sanctuary of God. There is nothing here of what has been described as simply the removal of the candlestick, not the extinction of the candle; judgment for some, but that very judgment the occasion of mercy for others. The word move is in the Apocalypse a word of judgment (cp. chap. Rev 6:14), and there is no thought of anything else in the warning given. Surely also, it may be remarked in passing, the warning distinctly shows us that the angel of the church cannot possibly be its bishop. Thy candlestick! where is the Church spoken of as if she belonged to any of her office-bearers? She is always the Church of Christ. Contrast with thy candlestick My sheep, My lambs (Joh 21:15-17).
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
We had Christ’s commendation and reprehension of the church of Ephesus before, we have this admonition and exhortation now. The words before us are partly monitory, and partly minatory; monitory in the former part of the verse, Remember from whence thou art fallen and repent.
Note here, That Christ did not surprisingly come upon this church at unawares; they were admonished before chastised, warned before laid waste; Christ doth premonish before he punishes. In the minatory part we have a great guilt and sin supposed, a great judgment for that guilt denounced, the unchurching of them that had committed it; and the means prescribed for the averting of that judgment, to wit, repentence.
Learn hence, 1. That a people professing religion and godliness may fall.
2. That fallen professors should and ought to remember from whence they are fallen.
3. That fallen professors should be repenting professors, and do their first works.
4. That without repentance and reformation, God will certainly remove a people’s candlestick, take away the gospel from them, as the severest judgment which he can inflict upon them.
Remember, repent, and do the first works, else I will remove thy candlestick out of its place: that is, such a tempest of persecution shall arise, as will shake your tottering candlestick out of its place. The universal church only has a promise of stability; any particular church may be unchurched finally.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Rev 2:5. Remember therefore, &c. It is not possible for any church, or individual Christian, whether public teacher or private member, that has lost the first love, to recover it, but by taking the three steps here spoken of. 1st, Remember; 2d, Repent; 3d, Do the first works. Remember from whence thou art fallen From what degree of faith, love, holiness, though perhaps insensibly; and repent Have a deep and lively conviction of thy fall, be humbled and truly sorry for it before God, earnestly desiring to be pardoned and renewed, and bringing forth fruits worthy of repentance in all respects; do the first works Outwardly and inwardly, otherwise thou canst never regain the first love; or else thou must expect that I will come unto thee quickly In some awful dispensations of providence. By this word is the warning sharpened to those five churches which are called to repent, this admonition belonging equally to them; (for if Ephesus was threatened, how much more shall Sardis and Laodicea be afraid!) and according as they obey the call or not, there is a promise or a threatening, Rev 2:5; Rev 2:16; Rev 2:22; Rev 3:3; Rev 3:20. But even in the threatening the promise is implied in the case of true repentance. And will remove thy candlestick out of its place This threatening, considered as addressed to the angel or pastor of the church, meant, Unless thou repent, I will remove the flock now under thy care to another place, and put it under the care of another pastor, where it shall be better taken care of. Considered as addressed to the church, it implies that it should no longer continue to be a church, if the members of it did not endeavour to recover their lost ground, and to shine at least with their former lustre; but that the hedge of discipline should be broken down, and the light of the gospel removed from them. From the flourishing state of the church, however, at Ephesus, for a time after this, there is reason to believe that both the pastor and his flock did repent, although, not long after, they declined again, and fell lower than ever; and this church, with the other churches addressed in these letters, was ruined and overthrown by heresies and divisions from within, and by the arms of the Saracens from without. So that Mohammedanism prevails and prospers in all those countries which were once the glory of Christendom, their churches being turned into mosques, and their worship into superstitions; even Ephesus, which was once so magnificent and glorious a city, being become, as is observed on Rev 2:1, a mean, sordid village, with scarcely a single family of Christians dwelling in it.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
5. Here comes in Gods terrible rebuke for apostasy, loving call to repentance, and importunate appeal to come back and do their first works over; i.e., get religion again. So here we see a Church whom God pronounces perfectly orthodox, and against whom there is not an insinuation immorality or disloyalty; yet God condemns them, pronounces them backsliders, and appeals to them to come and get their first religion again.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
Verse 5
And will remove thy candlestick; that is, take away from them the religious privileges which they would not rightly improve.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
4. Exhortation 2:5-6
The corrective for a cold heart that the Lord prescribed was a three-step process. They needed to remember how they used to feel about Him, to repent (change their attitude), and return to the love that formerly motivated them. The "deeds" they used to do probably refer to the activities that fanned the flame of their love (e.g., the Lord’s Supper perhaps) as well as their service for Him (Rev 2:2). To rekindle first love there needs to be a return to first works because there is an intimate relationship between love and good works (1Jn 5:2).
"Memory can be a powerful force in effecting a return to a more satisfying relationship (cf. the prodigal son in Luk 15:17-18)." [Note: Mounce, p. 88.]
Eventually the Ephesian church passed out of existence, but that did not occur until the eleventh century. [Note: Swete, p. 28.] The recipients of this letter seem to have responded positively to this exhortation. The site of the city has been virtually without inhabitants since the fourteenth century. The present city of Ephesus is farther west.
"The church that loses its love will soon lose its light, no matter how doctrinally sound it may be." [Note: Wiersbe, 2:572.]
We know little of the Nicolaitans who were evidently followers of someone named Nicolas, perhaps the proselyte from Antioch who was one of the Seven (cf. Act 6:5). Irenaeus, who lived in the late second century, wrote that they were without restraint in their indulgence of the flesh and practiced fornication and the eating of foods sacrificed to idols. [Note: Irenaeus, Against Heresies, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, 1:352.] The word "Nicolaitans" is a transliteration of two Greek words that mean "to conqueror" and "people." Consequently Nicolaitanism has come down through history as typifying any system that seeks to dominate rather than serve people.
"The teaching of the Nicolaitans was an exaggeration of the doctrine of Christian liberty which attempted an ethical compromise with heathenism." [Note: Merrill C. Tenney, Interpreting Revelation, p. 61.]
"Though they had left their first love, they had not left their former hatred for evil." [Note: Thomas, Revelation 1-7, p. 147.]