“Repent of your sin, or I will come to you suddenly and fight against them with the sword of my mouth.” – Revelation 2:16.
In the Book of Revelation, Jesus speaks seven short but piercing messages to seven real churches. One of them is the church in Pergamum. It was a city known for power, learning, and pagan worship, and was a center of emperor worship. And yet—right there, in that spiritually suffocating environment—a faithful church existed.
Jesus tells them, “I know that you live in the city where Satan has his throne” (Revelation 2:13). He sees their pressure. He knows the cultural hostility. He acknowledges that they held fast to His name and did not deny the faith—even when Antipas, a faithful witness, was martyred. That alone should comfort us. Jesus sees where we live. He understands the environment we navigate—our workplaces, schools, media landscape, and communities. He is not naïve about the pressures.
But then comes the hard word: “But I have a few complaints against you.” Some in the church were holding to the teaching of Balaam. The issue wasn’t that persecution had crushed them. The issue was that compromise had crept in.
So Jesus says one clear word: repent. Repentance is not merely feeling bad. It is a decisive turning. It means recognizing where we have allowed the culture of our times to shape us more than the Spirit of God. Pergamum teaches us something crucial: you can be courageous in public and compromised in private. You can hold the name of Jesus firmly while quietly loosening your grip on obedience. The church did not deny Christ outright; they simply tolerated what He clearly opposed. And tolerance, in this context, was not compassion—it was spiritual drift.
We, too, live in Pergamum-like moments. Our culture has its own altars—success, pleasure, political identity, self-expression without restraint. The temptation is rarely to renounce Jesus outright. The temptation is to subtly reshape Him into someone more acceptable. To keep the label “Christian” while adopting the ethics of the surrounding world.
Repentance today might mean asking uncomfortable questions. Where have I blurred biblical convictions to avoid tension? Where have I justified attitudes or behaviors because “everyone does it”? Where have I grown silent about truth out of fear of rejection?
The call to repent is not an angry outburst; it is a loving summons. It is Jesus saying, “Come back to wholehearted devotion. Don’t settle for survival when you were called to holiness.”
Pergamum reminds us that faithfulness is not just standing firm under attack. It is staying pure in the quiet compromises no one else sees.
Discussion Questions:
- Where might we be standing firm publicly in our faith, yet quietly tolerating compromise in our private lives? What would genuine repentance look like in that specific area?
- How can we discern the difference between showing Christlike love to our culture and slowly conforming to it?