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From Patmos to Nicaea to Now

 

Meditation on Revelation 1:4–8 [the Second Reading appoint for this upcoming Sunday, the Second Sunday of Easter, Year C, RCL]

Grace to you and peace from Him who is and who was and who is to come… [Revelation 1:4].

In about five weeks, I’ll be walking among ruins—dusty remnants of cities once vibrant with life and faith. Along with about 40 fellow pilgrims, I’ll be traveling through western Turkey to mark the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea—the first ecumenical council of the Church and the birthplace of the Creed that many of us still say on Sundays.

As part of that journey, we’ll visit the sites of the seven churches named in Revelation: Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and Laodicea.

There’s a kind of chronological irony here. Revelation was written near the end of the first century—one of the last New Testament texts to take shape—but still more than two hundred years before Nicaea. Many early believers expected the world to end long before any councils could be convened or creeds composed.

It didn’t. And yet the Revelation text has endured.

It spoke to those first-century Christians. It spoke again to the bishops gathered at Nicaea. And it still speaks—if we’re willing to hear.

A Letter, not a Cipher

“John to the seven churches that are in Asia….” The format is familiar: sender, recipient, greeting. But the weight of the words is anything but ordinary. Many of us think that these seven churches likely stand symbolically for the whole church, just as the “seven spirits before his throne” signify the fullness of God’s Spirit.

The Revelation of John is a letter, not a riddle. And its first word to us is grace.

A Trinitarian Blessing

The greeting that follows is profoundly trinitarian:

  • From God, “who is, and who was, and who is to come”
  • From the Spirit, depicted in sevenfold fullness
  • From Jesus Christ, described with three titles:
  • The faithful witness
  • The firstborn from the dead
  • The ruler of the kings of the earth

This Spirit—whole and holy—is not a relic of the upper room. Nor is It a flame that flickered out in Patmos. It is the presence that sustained confessors in the amphitheater before their executions. It is the presence that also spoke to bishops at Nicaea. This Spirit still animates faith wherever It’s found.

The Revelation text resonated deeply with early believers. In a world that demanded allegiance to Caesar, it spoke of another Lord—one who had suffered, conquered death, and reigns eternally.

Priests and Kingdom People

Before John moves on, he names what Christ has done:

He loves us, freed us by his blood, and made us a kingdom, priests serving God [Revelation 1:6].

The verbs matter. Loves—that’s present tense. Not just “loved” in the past.
Freed—It’s already accomplished.
Made us—We are, not just will be, God’s priestly people.

For churches marginalized or persecuted two thousand years ago, these weren’t just theological claims. They were identity statements. You are not forgotten. You are not powerless. You are not what Rome says you are.

The One Who Comes

Look, he is coming with the clouds… [1:7a].

John echoes Daniel’s vision of one like a Son of Man, returning in glory. But Revelation never lets us off easy. “Every eye will see him—even those who pierced him” [1:7b]. The return of Christ is not merely triumphant—it is personal, even painful.

I think that’s part of what Revelation is asking:
When he comes, will we recognize him? Will we mourn? Will we worship?

A Word for Now

The churches John addressed are long gone, their stones scattered. But the Word remains. As I prepare to walk among the sites where those churches once stood, I don’t imagine I’ll find secrets. I hope to listen. To remember that Revelation begins as a letter—and that the One who writes still speaks.

What might it mean to receive this old letter as if it had just arrived?

Grace and peace to you from him who is, and who was, and who is to come…

2 Comments

  1. joe summerville joe summerville April 23, 2025

    Thanks, Tom. Enjoyed this one and all of your past theological meditations.
    Especially enlightening was this one and am so excited that you are able to make a visit next month to the very places spoken of here.

    • trob trob April 24, 2025

      Thanks, Joe. I’m indeed excited about going to Turkey. The “pilgrimage” will be almost two weeks and it will be neat to walk where Paul and other First Century Christians gathered and worshipped. See you in a few days. We’re looking forward to Pawley’s.

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