In AD 17, a massive earthquake struck modern-day Turkey. Known as the Lydia earthquake, it devastated more than a dozen cities. Some were completely destroyed. Thousands of people died, and the ruins stood as haunting reminders of what some considered to be the worst earthquake in history. Even more traumatic, tremors continued for years afterward. One city especially marked by this was Philadelphia. Imagine surviving the terror of the “big one.” Now think about having aftershocks stir that memory again and again.
I’ve never experienced an earthquake. I’ll take a hurricane over that any day, and I’ve been through several. Growing up in Galveston, even though I was eighty years removed from it, the great 1900 storm still shaped part of who I thought I was. In the same way, I can imagine how the Lydia earthquake continued to shape the identity of Philadelphia for generations.
By the time Philadelphia is mentioned in the book of Revelation, the city had been rebuilt. The church there, apparently, was small and poor. But Jesus praised them for their faithfulness. He encouraged them to hold fast to their faith, promising, “I will make you a pillar in the temple of my God. You will never go out of it.”
That image would have been powerful. After the earthquake, many Philadelphians moved to the countryside, never certain when the next tremor might strike. And yet, here was God’s promise: You are not fragile. You are a pillar in my temple. You are a part of the strength that will not be shaken.  I take two encouragements from that today. First, the faith we carry is not our own achievement. It is God’s work within us. Even when we feel weak, God is strengthening us. Second, we sometimes think success means bigger or better. But Jesus praised a small church that remained faithful. Their story still inspires us centuries later. Maybe we all don't need more people, but deeper faith. Firmly planted in God's unshakable faith, let's make that our identity.
Stay blessed...john |
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