TITLE: “Does Jesus Find You to Be Therapeutic, Refreshing, or Disgusting?”
GREEK WORD WITH ENGLISH TRANSLITERATION: emew (emeo)
PRONUNCIATION: em-EH-oh
STRONG’S CONCORDANCE #: 1692
MEANING: vomit; spew out; spit
ENGLISH WORDS DERIVED FROM: emit
HOW TRANSLATED IN KJV, NASB AND/OR ESV: spew; emit; vomit
# OF TIMES USED IN THE GREEK NEW TESTAMENT: 1
KEY VERSE IN THE BIBLE WHERE GREEK WORD USED:
Revelation 3:16 – “So, because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth.” ESV
THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK:
When we lived in northeast Mississippi we knew folks who would regularly visit Hot Spring, Arkansas. The city is set among several natural hot springs for which the city is named. The perceived healing properties of the hot spring water were discovered centuries ago, and the waters were legendary among several Native American tribes.
In Russia, it is a tradition for people to visit the sauna. People especially love to do this in the middle of the winter. This tradition is hundreds of years old, dating back to the time when people didn’t have running water in their villages or homes. People would join all their friends at the local sauna once a week not only to get clean but to spend an evening of fellowship.
Today everyone has running water in their homes in Russia; nevertheless, people still go to the sauna, for it remains a very important part of Russian culture.
The city of Laodicea was built in a region that was full of seismic activity and had experienced many earthquakes. As often happens in a seismic area, vents came up from the depths of the earth, allowing boiling hot water to reach the surface. In the nearby city of Hierapolis, these hot springs were famous. People came from great distances to bathe in those waters, believing they had medicinal powers. An experience in those waters was viewed to be therapeutic and effective in improving one’s health.
Another city named Colosse was not too far away. As Hierapolis was known for its hot springs, Colosse was known for its cold waters. Just as people journeyed to Hierapolis to bathe in the hot springs for health purposes, people would travel great distances to vacation in Colosse, where they could invigorate themselves by taking frequent dips into the famous, refreshing, cool-to-freezing waters of that city.
Laodicea may have been the biggest and richest city in the area, but it had neither hot nor cold water. Therefore, the people of Laodicea had to leave their luxurious homes and travel to Colosse if they wanted to enjoy fresh, cool water. On the other hand, those who desired to soak in the hot springs had to travel six miles to Hierapolis.
Once in an attempt to bring the hot water from Hierapolis to Laodicea, a huge construction project was commenced. The goal of those who initiated the project was to build pipes that would channel the hot water six miles from Hierapolis to the city of Laodicea. The pipes effectively delivered the water a real feat of construction at that time. Sadly, however, the water lost its heat along the way. By the time the water reached Laodicea, it was not only lukewarm, but it had developed a sickening, nauseating taste. The taste was so revolting that no one wanted to drink it!
So when Jesus told the Laodiceans in Revelation 3:16-17 – “So, because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth”, this was a message that carried a strong punch. He was telling them, Because you have become so dead, dull, sickening and nauseating because no spiritually refreshing waters flow from you and you have no healing properties left I will spit thee out of My mouth!
The word spit (or spue in the KJV) is the Greek word emeo, and it means to vomit, to spit out, to regurgitate. This picture of Jesus threatening to spit the Laodiceans out of His mouth doesn’t mean He was rejecting them or disinheriting them. It just reveals how utterly distasteful a spiritually lukewarm condition is to Jesus. The fact that these believers were lukewarm means they weren’t good for anything; they were neither cool and refreshing, nor were they hot and healing. They were just stuck in the middle, like something that has lost both its flavor and its heat along the way.
These words in Revelation 3:16 could be interpreted:
Because you’ve lost your temperature and become lukewarm because no refreshing waters flow out of you and you have no healing properties left I find your taste in My mouth to be disgusting! I can’t bear it anymore, and I have no choice but to spit you out!
CHALLENGE FOR THE WEEK:
That’s how God feels about a lukewarm spiritual walk. You see, with God there is no middle ground. But if you have allowed your walk with God to become lukewarm, you can reverse that abominable condition! God has tossed the ball in your court, and now it’s up to you. He is calling you to repent of your lukewarm attitude. Go after the things of God with all your heart, soul, and strength! So ask yourself, “Does Jesus Find You to Be Therapeutic, Refreshing, or Disgusting?”
PRAYER FOR THE WEEK:
Lord, I never want to be lukewarm so that You find me to be an unpleasant taste in Your mouth. Instead, I ask You to help me be a fountain from which healing waters flow to the sick and a source of refreshment to anyone who needs strength and encouragement. Help me to never allow a lukewarm attitude to take hold in my life! If there is any area of my life where I’ve already slipped into a lukewarm state, please reveal it to me so I can repent and get back to where I ought to be! I pray this in Jesus’ name! Amen.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER:
1. What are some signs of a lukewarm spiritual condition in your own life?
2. Can you recall a time when you were hot for the Lord? What were you doing at that time that caused you to be so on fire for Jesus? What about a time when you were refreshing like a cold spring?
3. If you have slipped away from that wonderful time in your walk with the Lord, can you recall what changed the condition of your heart? What can you do to get back there again? Write down your answers so you can see them and pray about them.
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