Revelation 7:9-17 · The Great Multitude in White Robes
The Lamb
Revelation 7:9-17
Sermon
by Argile Smith
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Have you ever heard of a man named Polycarp? Don’t feel badly if you haven’t. Polycarp’s not exactly a household name, at least in most houses.

Yes, it’s an odd name, to our ears anyway. The name conjures up for most people today a product that’s manufactured from something made of plastic that tastes like freshwater fish. In the history of the church, the name lived through one century after another, and the person who bore it gave good reason for people to keep on mentioning the name.

Because of the story behind the name, Polycarp has significance for us as we worship. It’s a name rich in meaning when we think about the Christians who died as martyrs. They died because they devoted themselves exclusively to Jesus Christ. John had them in mind when he wrote about the Lamb. He wrote about people in white robes gathering around Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God, and worshiping him.

For that reason, the name Polycarp signifies the value of All Saint’s Day. It’s the name of a martyr who died for his faith a long time ago. Polycarp happened to be a remarkable man who laid down his life as a testimony of his devotion to Christ. Hopefully the name will live a little longer in our memories because we spent some time retelling Polycarp’s story. We hope that retelling his story will give us fresh inspiration to worship the Lord whose love for us compelled many believers down through the centuries to face death because of their love for him.

Polycarp died in about AD 150 in the city of Smyrna. Yes, that’s a long, long time ago in a land far, far away. But the significance of that time and place lies in the obvious fact that he died just a little over a century or so after Christianity got off to a good start, thanks to Pentecost.

Church historians say that Polycarp was probably one of John’s disciples. You may recall that John had a brother named James, and they were sons of Zebedee. Jesus called them sons of thunder, probably because they were boisterous men who acted like bulls in a china shop when they got out of control, which may have been quite often. Not long after Pentecost, James was murdered. Until his murder, he served as the leader of the church in Jerusalem. But then Herod had him killed (Acts 12:2).

James didn’t live very long after the birth of the church, but his brother, John, lived much longer. Some scholars speculate that he may have been around ninety years old or so when he died. He had a long life all right, but no one would say that he had an easy life. Quite the contrary, he had a tough life. He had the privilege of spending many of his years doing hard labor on the island of Patmos, apparently because he worshiped Jesus Christ instead of Caesar. Fortunately for us, that’s when the Lord showed him what the future would hold for Christians, and he wrote it down for us in the book of Revelation. The story in that grand Bible centers on the Lamb. The story of the Lamb intersects the story of Polycarp. And their stories intersect our stories as we worship the Lamb ourselves.

Most scholars say that John was the last of the twelve original apostles to die. His life came to an end at about the same time that the first century AD came to a close. Somewhere along the way, perhaps in his last years, he met Polycarp and discipled him in the Christian faith. Apparently he mentored Polycarp well. Many years later his disciple would stand strong in the face of persecution that threatened the lives of Christians everywhere at that time. John had taught his disciple well how to be courageous in the face of death because of his faith in Christ.

As Roman persecution of Christians became more intense in the world in which Polycarp lived, he had an impression that he would face it one day. He even told a friend about having a strange dream about it. In the dream, he saw himself being burned alive for his faith in Christ.

Before long, his dream came true. In due time, the opponents of his faith came for him because he held firm to his conviction that Christians worship Jesus, God’s Son, and not Caesar. They intended to bring him and his testimony of Jesus to an end.

When Polycarp heard that his oppressors had come in search of him, he responded simply by praying for God’s will to be done. His prayer served as a striking prelude to the memorable testimony he bore as he faced his death unafraid and with complete confidence in Christ.

When they captured him, they never expected to see such an old man. He was quite elderly in their eyes. Perhaps he reminded some of them of their own fathers or grandfathers. Perhaps the notion of executing such an old man made some of them begin to reconsider what they were about to do to him.

They never expected the treatment they received from him once they captured him. They probably didn’t know what to do when he made arrangements for them to be given something to eat and drink while he spent some time in prayer. For two hours his executioners sat at his table and ate his food and listened as he talked with God. What they heard in his conversation with the Lord moved them deeply.

According to the record of the event, some of them gave up on persecuting believers and became Christians themselves.

Polycarp’s act of kindness turned out to be as extreme as his age. What do you think he must have said in his prayer to render that kind of response from his captors? And think about the confidence and compassion that blended together in his prayer and provision for them. No wonder that some of his captors couldn’t go through with his execution.

The time came for him to be taken to the stadium. By the time they arrived with him, the stadium was filled with people who came to watch him die. As his captors led him into the stadium, all of them heard someone say, “Be strong, Polycarp. Be a man!” Although they all heard a voice, they never saw the person who spoke. For that reason, many Christians believed that an angel had appeared to encourage Polycarp as he faced his death.

As he stood before the judge appointed to sentence him to death, Polycarp refused to recant his faith in Christ. The judge tried to frighten him with threats of a cruel death if he chose to hold on to his commitment to Jesus, but he couldn’t strike fear in Polycarp. Then he tried to cajole the old, faithful servant of Christ by promising to release him if he would disown Jesus. Polycarp replied by saying that for 86 years Jesus had been faithful to him. In turn, he would remain faithful to the Lord who had saved him.

With that testimony, Polycarp sealed his fate. The judge sentenced him to death, and his executioners decided to burn him alive. They piled up the wood for the fire and tied him to a stake in the middle of the woodpile. As he prepared to die, he prayed. He thanked God for the privilege of dying for him and for the honor of joining other martyrs who had laid down their lives for him as well. He went on to ask for God to be glorified in the person of his Son, Jesus Christ.

When he finished his prayer, his executioners set the wood on fire. According to the account of the story recorded in The Apostolic Fathers, the blazing furnace couldn’t consume his body. Instead of the nauseating odor of burning flesh, the air was filled with the scent of precious perfume that permeated the stadium. Eventually life left him when a baffled and angry executioner stabbed him with a knife.[1]

Everything Polycarp had said about following Jesus throughout his life had been demonstrated in the way that he faced his death. All of the people he taught as bishop of Smyrna would have the lessons he passed along to them reinforced with the image of him praying for the people who would execute him. They would never forget the way he ended his long life as a loyal, faithful follower of his precious Lord.

Now you know why Polycarp deserves our attention today. His story reminds us of others who laid down their lives for Christ across the centuries. Even today, stories leak out of closed countries about Christians who suffer and die because they won’t recant their allegiance to Jesus. Like Polycarp, they lay down their lives willingly like lambs to be slaughtered.

According to the image that John has given us in Revelation 7, such remarkable people will gather in heaven to worship the Lamb, Jesus Christ, God’s precious Son, our Savior and Lord. Imagine the scene: lambs slaughtered worshiping the Lamb slain for them. Words cannot express the mood, the character, and the quality of that worship experience.

Throughout the Bible, the gentle lamb has been used to describe some of the most moving features of our relationship with God. Starting with the first Passover meal, the lamb has been associated with sacrifice. In Exodus 12, the gripping account of God’s people getting ready to step toward the Promised Land and their freedom from slavery included a lamb. The lamb’s blood sprinkled over the door post of a home spared God’s people from the horrible fate that awaited the Egyptian families that night. From that night on, the lamb symbolized God’s hand on his people to protect them.

When the Lord met His people on Mount Sinai not long after he liberated them, he made a covenant with them. He instructed them regarding some fairly specific acts of worship. Engaging in the acts of worship that God mandated helped them as they grew in their walk with him. One particularly important act of worship involved sacrificing a lamb. Once each year, on the Day of Atonement, the priest offered a lamb on the altar to express the desire of God’s people to be forgiven of their sins. The lamb came to symbolize the sacrifice necessary for God’s people to be forgiven and the grace and mercy God showed them by forgiving them.

Little wonder, therefore, that the Old Testament prophets used the image of the lamb when they talked about God’s Anointed One who would come and bring deliverance with him. For Israel, therefore, the lamb came to embody what they looked for in God’s Messiah. In their portrayals, the prophets pointed out that the Messiah would be treated like a lamb led to the slaughter for us all (Isaiah 53:7).

Centuries later, John the Baptist came along preaching that the Messiah would be coming soon. He warned people to prepare for the arrival of God’s Anointed One by repenting of their sins. One day, while he was talking with some of his disciples, he saw Jesus approaching him. Drawing the attention of his disciples to Jesus, John declared him to be the Lamb of God who would take away the sins of the world (John 1:29). Of course, the imagery expressed in the title John conferred on Jesus gave a striking prelude to his life, death, and resurrection.

Just as John said, Jesus was the Lamb of God, and he demonstrated it by the way he lived, died, and rose from the grave. After God’s ascension, his disciples proclaimed the good news about his sacrifice for sins. They also began to portray God as a victorious ruler who would come for his people, gathering them from the four corners of the earth to join him in heaven. There God will be the eternal centerpiece of worship. The picture painted with John’s words gives us a glimpse into the scene involving the Lamb being worshiped by gentle lambs like Polycarp.

In his Revelation portrayal, John leaves us with another compelling image of Jesus. Not only is he the Lamb to be worshiped, but he is also the Shepherd to be followed. Until the day comes for us to join Polycarp and others who have given themselves to Christ, we can count on Jesus to be our Good Shepherd. According to John 10:11, that’s the way Jesus described himself in his relationship with us. That’s the way we can think about him until he comes for us.

As our Shepherd, Jesus walks with us while we face our own trials and tribulations because of him. Our distinctive walk with God sets us apart from people around us. Our values don’t always allow us to blend in with the crowd, and we have to face the trouble that comes from being different. But Jesus, our Shepherd, walks with us along the way. We are not alone.

When Polycarp walked toward his martyrdom, a voice called out to him to be courageous, but no one could identify the voice. Let’s suppose that it was the voice of Jesus, the Good Shepherd, encouraging one of his choice servants not to be afraid. That notion would make sense, given the fact that a shepherd never leaves his sheep. When one of his lambs gets into trouble, the shepherd’s never far away. He comes to the rescue. For Polycarp, he came to the rescue, giving his servant what he couldn’t give himself in his time of tremendous need.

Many other Christians have heard the voice of the Good Shepherd. No, they didn’t stand before tribunals or courageously stake their claim in Christ and die because of their unwillingness to disown him. But they have stood in the face of great pain just the same. They have endured the torture of suffering associated with their bodies wasting away because of terminal diseases. They have agonized over the fate of the people they love at the hands of others who treated them with injustice. They have grieved their losses and for a long time heard nothing but silence when they asked God why they had to lose so much.

None of these people, sweet saints of God, ever gave any impression that they stopped trusting him. Instead, they kept on whispering the verses they memorized as children, kept on humming the tunes of the hymns that sustained them, and kept on believing that although they may be like lambs to the slaughter, they looked forward to beholding the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ, their Messiah. Somehow, they believed that he would come to their rescue.

How can they be so resilient in the face of such torment? Jesus, the Good Shepherd, walks with them. And he walks with us. Either he takes our pain away, or he takes us away from our pain. After all, he knows what it’s like to be a lamb. Amen.


1. J.B. Lightfoot, The Apostolic Father (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1983), pp. 109-117.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Walking with God: and other Cycle A sermons for Proper 23 through Thanksgiving, by Argile Smith