Revelation 3 quiz

25 Ultimate Revelation 3 Quiz Questions and Answers

Revelation 3 closes the cycle of seven letters that opens the Apocalypse and turns the visionary record toward the throne. The Revelation 3 quiz below tests the verdicts, charges, and promises spoken to its three congregations.

Pair it with the Revelation 1 quiz to begin the visionary record from the throne, and the Revelation 2 quiz to cover the four churches that come before.

Revelation 3 Quiz Questions and Answers

Question 1: To which church did Christ identify Himself as the one who hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven stars?
  • A. Philadelphia
  • B. Laodicea
  • C. Sardis
  • D. Thyatira
  • E. Pergamos
View Answer

Answer 1: C. Christ opened the message to Sardis with this self-description, drawing from John’s vision in chapter one of the seven Spirits and the seven stars.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:1, “And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write; These things saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars.”

Question 2: What did Christ counsel the Laodiceans to buy from Him that they might be rich?
  • A. Pearls of great price
  • B. Gold tried in the fire
  • C. Treasure hidden in a field
  • D. Silver refined seven times
  • E. Riches of His grace
View Answer

Answer 2: B. Christ urged the lukewarm church to purchase from Him gold tried in the fire, exposing the falsehood of the riches they boasted in.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:18, “I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich.”

Question 3: What did Christ tell the angel of the church in Sardis that He had not found?
  • A. A heart wholly devoted to God
  • B. Faith equal to the prophets
  • C. Their love for the brethren
  • D. Their works perfect before God
  • E. The fear of His name
View Answer

Answer 3: D. Christ judged the works of Sardis as unfinished and unfulfilled, lacking the perfection that should attend a true labour before God.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:2, “for I have not found thy works perfect before God.”

Question 4: The synagogue of whom did Christ promise to bring before the Philadelphian church to worship at their feet?
  • A. Satan
  • B. The Nicolaitans
  • C. Balaam
  • D. The Pharisees
  • E. Jezebel
View Answer

Answer 4: A. Those who professed to be Jews but were not are named the synagogue of Satan, and Christ promised to humble them at the feet of His faithful church.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:9, “Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say they are Jews, and are not, but do lie.”

Question 5: What did Christ promise to do for him that overcometh in Sardis concerning the book of life?
  • A. Inscribe his name in golden letters
  • B. Not blot out his name from it
  • C. Read his name aloud at the throne
  • D. Seal his name with the Spirit
  • E. Number him among the firstborn
View Answer

Answer 5: B. The promise is preservation, not inscription. Christ pledged that the overcomer’s name, already written, should never be erased.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:5, “I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels.”

Question 6: How did Christ describe Himself in the opening words to the church of the Laodiceans?
  • A. The Alpha and Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end
  • B. The Holy One, the true One, who hath the key of David
  • C. The Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God
  • D. The Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, who hath prevailed
  • E. The Son of God, who hath eyes like unto a flame of fire
View Answer

Answer 6: C. Each opening title carried weight against a particular failing. Christ stood before the lukewarm as the Amen and faithful witness, the steady measure against their drifting.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:14, “These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God.”

Question 7: What did Christ promise to write upon him that overcometh in Philadelphia?
  • A. The names of the twelve tribes of Israel
  • B. The seal of the living God upon his forehead
  • C. The number of his redemption upon his hand
  • D. The mark of His covenant upon his right side
  • E. The name of His God, the city’s name, and His new name
View Answer

Answer 7: E. Three names are written upon the overcomer: the name of His God, the name of the city of His God which is new Jerusalem, and Christ’s own new name.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:12, “I will write upon him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which is new Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God: and I will write upon him my new name.”

Question 8: How did Christ describe the works of the Philadelphian church when He set before them an open door?
  • A. They had laboured greatly and would not lose their first love
  • B. They had little strength, kept His word, and denied not His name
  • C. They had patience, hated evil, and tried false apostles
  • D. They had endured persecution and remained faithful unto death
  • E. They had borne much for His name and had not fainted
View Answer

Answer 8: B. Note the threefold commendation. The distractors echo praise spoken to the earlier churches in chapter two, against which Philadelphia’s particular commendation must be carefully distinguished.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:8, “for thou hast a little strength, and hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.”

Question 9: What did Christ command the church of Sardis to do for the things which remained that were ready to die?
  • A. To remember and call them back to repentance
  • B. To watch and pray for them without ceasing
  • C. To gather them as a hen gathereth her chickens
  • D. To strengthen them and prepare them for life
  • E. To keep them as the apple of the eye
View Answer

Answer 9: D. The dying remnant required strengthening, not merely watching. Christ also told them to be watchful, but the specific charge concerning the things which remained was to strengthen them.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:2, “Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die.”

Question 10: Christ said that because the Laodiceans were lukewarm, He would do what?
  • A. Hide His face from them
  • B. Cast their candlestick from its place
  • C. Spue them out of His mouth
  • D. Write Ichabod upon their walls
  • E. Give their portion unto another
View Answer

Answer 10: C. The metaphor is bodily and visceral. Distractor B is the threat to Ephesus in the previous chapter, not to Laodicea.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:16, “So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.”

Question 11: What did Christ promise to do for him that overcometh in Laodicea?
  • A. Grant him to sit with Christ in His throne
  • B. Give him a white stone with a new name written upon it
  • C. Make him ruler over many things in His kingdom
  • D. Set him as a seal upon His own right arm
  • E. Crown him with eternal glory and immortality forever
View Answer

Answer 11: A. The promise to Laodicea is the highest of the seven. Distractor B is the promise to Pergamos in the previous chapter.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:21, “To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne.”

Question 12: What did Christ say He would do if the Sardian church did not watch?
  • A. Remove their lampstand from its appointed place
  • B. Come upon them as a thief at an unknown hour
  • C. Smite them with sore vexation in the night
  • D. Withdraw His Spirit from their midst forever
  • E. Suffer them to fall by their own hand and counsel
View Answer

Answer 12: B. The thief metaphor exposes the danger of spiritual sleep. Distractor A is the warning given to Ephesus, not to Sardis.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:3, “If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee.”

Question 13: Concerning the Philadelphian church, what did Christ promise about the open door He set before them?
  • A. That none might pass through it but the worthy ones
  • B. That angels should attend it day and night
  • C. That it should lead unto the throne of God
  • D. That no man could ever shut it against them
  • E. That kings of the earth should enter therein
View Answer

Answer 13: D. The promise concerns sovereign protection, not access by merit. Christ alone holds the key, and what He opens is sealed open.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:8, “behold, I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it.”

Question 14: What did Christ promise the false synagogue would come to know concerning the Philadelphian church?
  • A. That they had walked in truth from the very beginning
  • B. That their labour and works were full and complete
  • C. That the kingdom was theirs forever and ever
  • D. That they were chosen above all the seven churches
  • E. That Christ had loved them with His own love
View Answer

Answer 14: E. The humbling at the feet of the church served a deeper purpose. The opposers should be brought not only to defeat but to recognition of Christ’s particular love for that congregation.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:9, “behold, I will make them to come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.”

Question 15: How did Christ describe Himself in His opening words to the Philadelphian church concerning what He shuts and opens?
  • A. He hath the keys of hell and of death in His hand
  • B. He hath the rod of iron in His right hand to rule
  • C. He openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man openeth
  • D. He hath authority over all flesh, and every spirit on earth and in heaven 
  • E. He hath the seven seals to loose at the appointed time set before him
View Answer

Answer 15: C. The double clause established Christ’s absolute authority over the door He set before Philadelphia. Distractor A names a different prerogative described in chapter one.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:7, “he that hath the key of David, he that openeth, and no man shutteth; and shutteth, and no man openeth.”

Question 16: What did the Laodicean church say of itself that Christ rebuked?
  • A. I am a king and priest unto my God
  • B. I have laboured for His name, in plenty and in want and have not fainted
  • C. I am pure and undefiled in His sight
  • D. I am rich, increased with goods, having need of nothing
  • E. I am a child of Abraham and am free indeed
View Answer

Answer 16: D. The triple boast of wealth, increase, and self-sufficiency exposed the heart of the Laodicean error. They rated themselves by what they possessed rather than by what Christ possessed in them.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:17, “Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing.”

Question 17: How did Christ describe the true condition of the Laodiceans, who thought they had need of nothing?
  • A. Lost, lifeless, sleeping, faithless, and lukewarm
  • B. Wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked
  • C. Forsaken, burdened, weary, faint, and barren
  • D. Empty, broken, scattered, ruined, and desolate
  • E. Sick, weak, troubled, fearful, and bowed down
View Answer

Answer 17: B. Christ answered their boast with five exact opposites. Each adjective matches in number and weight what the church claimed of itself.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:17, “and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.”

Question 18: What did Christ tell the Philadelphian church to hold fast that no man take their crown?
  • A. That which they had received from the beginning
  • B. The doctrine of the prophets and the apostles
  • C. The covenant of life and of peace
  • D. The bread that came down from heaven above
  • E. The pledge of their everlasting inheritance forever
View Answer

Answer 18: A. The instruction was simple. They were to keep what they already possessed, not to seek something new, and the warning came tied to His promise of swift coming.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:11, “Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.”

Question 19: Concerning the few in Sardis who had not defiled their garments, what did Christ promise?
  • A. They should be sealed with the seal of the living God
  • B. They should never taste of death nor see corruption
  • C. They should walk with Him in white, for they are worthy
  • D. They should reign with Him a thousand years upon thrones
  • E. They should sit upon thrones judging the tribes of Israel
View Answer

Answer 19: C. The undefiled few were granted the dignity of walking with Christ in white. Their worthiness lay in what they had not done, namely, to soil their garments.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:4, “Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they are worthy.”

Question 20: What did Christ counsel the Laodiceans to anoint their eyes with, that they might see?
  • A. The oil of joy and gladness
  • B. Pure frankincense and the myrrh
  • C. The dew of Mount Hermon and Zion
  • D. Pure olive oil pressed for the lamps
  • E. The eyesalve that Christ Himself giveth
View Answer

Answer 20: E. The blind church needed remedy at the source of its blindness. Christ named eyesalve as the cure for sight that did not see itself.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:18, “and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.”

Question 21: Whom did Christ say that He rebukes and chastens?
  • A. The proud and haughty ones
  • B. As many as He loves
  • C. The rebellious and disobedient ones
  • D. Those that turn from Him
  • E. The children of His covenant
View Answer

Answer 21: B. The reproof to Laodicea is reframed as evidence of love. The chastening is not punishment for an enemy but the discipline of the beloved.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:19, “As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent.”

Question 22: What did Christ promise the Philadelphian church concerning the hour of temptation that should come upon all the world?
  • A. To preserve them through it as the Hebrews in the fire
  • B. To shorten its days for the elect’s sake forever
  • C. To keep them from it that they enter not therein
  • D. To compass them about with angels day and night
  • E. To hide them in the secret of His pavilion
View Answer

Answer 22: C. The promise is removal, not preservation through the trial. The reward is tied to their having kept the word of His patience.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:10, “Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world.”

Question 23: What did Christ promise to make him that overcometh in Philadelphia?
  • A. A king and a priest unto His God 
  • B. A beloved son of the Most High
  • C. A judge over the angels
  • D. A pillar in the temple of His God
  • E. A vessel of honour for His Master’s use
View Answer

Answer 23: D. The image is of fixity and permanence. The pillar bears the temple’s weight and goes no more out, the opposite of the unstable, removable lampstand.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:12, “Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God, and he shall go no more out.”

Question 24: What did Christ promise to him that overcometh in Sardis concerning his raiment?
  • A. He shall be clothed in white raiment of righteousness
  • B. He shall wear a robe dipped in His blood
  • C. He shall be girded with a golden girdle
  • D. He shall be clothed with the fine linen of saints
  • E. He shall be arrayed in the garments of salvation
View Answer

Answer 24: A. The Sardian few who had not defiled their garments are joined by every overcomer in the same white raiment, the standing dress of those whom Christ owns.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:5, “He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment.”

Question 25: What did Christ promise to do for any man who hears His voice and opens the door?
  • A. He will write his name in heaven above
  • B. He will deliver him in the time of trouble
  • C. He will lift up His countenance upon him
  • D. He will make His abode with him forever
  • E. He will come in and sup with him
View Answer

Answer 25: E. The promise is mutual table fellowship. Christ enters where He is welcomed, and the act of opening becomes the start of communion.
KJV Reference: Revelation 3:20, “Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.”

Christ does not write to churches that pretend to be alive, that hold a little strength, or that count themselves rich. He writes to ours. The same voice that walked among the candlesticks searches our prayers, our works, and the secret rooms of our hearts. He stands at the door and knocks. The question is not whether He speaks, but whether we hear, and whether we open.

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