Thoughts on Revelation
MESSAGE

It seems that many who are interested in the Bible would like to know what the Book of Revelation is about but few want to take the time to get into it. No doubt there are numerous reasons for that. To begin with, the book is not written in plain speech like the book of Acts, Genesis or the Gospels and that means more work for an already busy student. Secondly, there is so much disagreement about what the book means that many people feel, “If all the experts differ how can we, the less experienced, hope to understand it?” So they leave it alone and concentrate on the books they can “draw lessons from.” However, the book is not as difficult as the “experts” have made it. It is richer and deeper than all of their insights combined. No, it is not as obscure as they often give the impression it is. But insisting on thinking that it cannot be understand will certainly undermine your ability to understand it. With God’s gracious help and if you are prepared to spend a little time grasping it, be assured that you can gain a working knowledge of its general thrust and a sense of its riches.

Some helpful suggestions
Read a lot in the Old Testament because so much of Revelation’s speech and thought is rooted there.

Tell yourself again and again that Revelation is written mainly in images and pictures that are not supposed to be taken literally. Remind yourself, “That’s what he sees, now what does it mean?” Be content to get a grasp of the main drift and larger issues first before spending too long wrestling with the details. It does not matter that you do not know all the answers at first. When you are done you will admit there is a vast amount that you have missed but you will feel helped by how much you have learned.

Believe that God would not have written it if it could not be understood and then prayerfully work away at the contents.

Credit yourself with as much common sense as the people who paint these wild pictures of what they say is going to happen in the very near future. (What they have been saying for many years is going to happen in the very near future.) We have heard from the “experts” that very soon hailstones will fall. We hear that all the water on the earth – oceans included – will turn into blood and warriors from the East will ride on horses into Palestine. All that, they warned us, was going to happen and the Coca-Cola will run out. You cannot butcher Revelation worse than that so get on with your study and see what you can do.

Has the Book Of Revelation been fulfilled?
This is a legitimate question but it leaves a false impression. It makes it appear as though the Book of Revelation is more or less a series of predictions. It gives the impression that it is essentially a book that foretells startling events that will unfold in the near future. It would be a mistake to deny that there are events predicted in the book but that is true of the Gospels, Acts and the epistles. The Book of Revelation is a prophetic call to loyalty to God who alone is worthy of service and praise. And it is an assurance that victory belongs to the People of God no matter who the enemy might be. But there are predictive elements in the book that are wrapped up in the truths just mentioned. But have the predictive elements been fulfilled? We believe the answer is yes.

Bear in mind that John wrote the book almost two thousand years ago. When he wrote it he said it was “the revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show his servants what must soon take place” (1:1) – notice this statement: what must soon take place. Then in 1:3 he urged his readers to take to heart what is written, “because the time is near” – again notice: because the time is near. What do you think those two phrases mean? He wrote this two thousand years ago at the opening of the book. Unless we had a special interests, no doubt we would take the words at face value.

And he did not change his mind as the book closed. In 22:6 the angel says, “The Lord, the God of the spirits of the prophets, sent his angel to show his servants the things that must soon take place” – things that must soon take place. And just to be sure we get the message, he says this in 22:10: “Don’t seal up the words of the prophecy of this book, because the time is near” – because the time is near.

Most people understand what these words mean until they come to the Book of Revelation. Certain teachers keep telling us that the end of the world is near or that Armageddon will take place soon. Most of these teachers know what it means when they write their books or make their tapes. They know what it means everywhere in the Bible except in Revelation. When it comes to Revelation the phrases become a mystery.

If John walked into your presence today, showed you a scroll and said, “This is about what must soon take place” what would you think? If he repeated, “Take this to heart, because the time is near” what would you think? If he read the whole thing and then said, “These things are true and must soon take place” would you think they might be hundreds or thousands of years away? And then he hands you the scroll and as he turned to leave you he says, “Don’t seal that revelation up because the time is near” would you even imagine that it related to centuries from now?

The truth is the Book of Revelation deals with things related to the Roman Empire, the fourth beast of Daniel 7, when it came into conflict with the New Testament church back in the first centuries. Revelation presents Rome as the tool and instrument of Satan in conflict with Christians who are the body of Christ, the army of the white-horsed rider whose name is: The Word of God (Revelation 19:11-16). It comes to focus in a particular emperor (Domitian) who stands for all that the Roman Empire stood for.

If we cannot understand plain phrases that are like an envelope enclosing the whole of the book (scholars call phrases that function in that way an inclusio) how do we imagine we will understand symbols and images that are left without explicit explanation? Whatever the signs and images mean we are to understand this: Over two thousand years ago John said the coming events were to happen soon.

One might say that with God time does not matter and that with Him one day is like a thousand years so “at hand” or “soon to happen” may mean anything. It is true, of course, that God is not bothered by time but His creatures are. If God had been talking to Himself such a remark would have been relevant. But God was talking to puny little people. He takes our humanity into account as Ezekiel 12:21-28 and Daniel 8:26 demonstrates.

In Daniel 8:26, God says the vision there “concerns the distant future.” There is no distant future for God but He was not talking to Himself. When He spoke to limited humans He spoke of “the distant future” so obviously God knows what words like that mean. The ungodly mocked God’s message in Ezekiel chapter 12. At first they said, “These threats are empty. They won’t be fulfilled.” Then they said, “Well, maybe they’ll be fulfilled but the vision he sees is for many years from now, and he prophesies about the distant future.” And how did God answer them? He answered them in the words we find in Revelation. “Say to them the days are near … it shall be fulfilled without delay …” They said, “Don’t worry it’s a long way off” and God said, “Worry, the time is near.”

Finally on this point: Compare Daniel 8:26 with Revelation 22:10 and let common sense rule. Here is what the two texts say:

Seal up the vision, for it concerns the distant future.

Don’t seal up the prophecy, because the time is near.

You can see they are told to do opposite things, but notice why they were told to do opposite things. Daniel is told to seal up the vision because it deals with the distant future. John is told to leave it open because the time is near. God knows what a short time is. Why do people argue against this? For one reason or another folks have drawn conclusions about what the images in Revelation mean and they settle for that. They reject truths like the above because it makes a mess of their whole futuristic scheme. And when you go public, write a book and construct a whole eschatological system based on an interpretation of these images, it is hard to back away. It is never easy to admit being wrong, especially if a lot is riding on it.

The safest approach to Revelation is to let John tell us what its time frame is rather than us telling John.

The central message of the Book of Revelation
The central message is that God alone is to be worshiped and served and that that truth is to be maintained when the Roman beast rises against the People of God. The central message of the book is that the Roman Empire is the expression of the world spirit (the Dragon, Satan) that opposes God’s kingdom purpose as it shows itself in Jesus Christ and His followers and they are not to make peace with the Beast. The central message is that when the smoke clears it is the followers of the Lord Christ that are triumphant and His Lordship is made concrete and local here on the earth. The Roman Empire claims dominion but it is a satanic claim. They “prove” it by brutality and cruelty. The church insists that Jesus has dominion and they prove it (as followers of Christ) by outliving, out-suffering and out-lasting Rome.

Two major elements in the book
There are some predictive elements and these have been fulfilled. They are summarized and focused in the emperor Domitian, who stands for all that is the brutal and bestial Empire. On his tomb, so to speak, Jesus stands and proclaims the kingdom of God. And so aspects of Daniel 2 and 7 are demonstrated as “done.”

There are timeless truths. For example, God alone is Lord and worthy of praise and service. Note how large sections of praise for God occur in chapters 4-12 and 14-19. Sandwiched in between is chapter 13 and the worship of the Beast. Twice John is told to worship no one but God Himself. Other major timeless truths are developed in the book.

But if the predictions of Revelation have been fulfilled would that mean Revelation is of no real interest or relevance to us today? Indeed not. Nahum prophesied the fall of Nineveh in 612 BC but to call it useless or irrelevant would be silly. Old Testament prophecies of the birth and suffering of Christ in His earthly ministry have been fulfilled but we know they are not useless. There is profoundly more about life with God than having a calendar of future events in our pocket.


    
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