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voice of Jesus Christ is heard in the pages of this unique book called
Revelation. It is the only book in the Bible with the promise of a blessing
to those who read, hear, and pay attention to it. It is a direct revelation
from Jesus to us. In it we see glimpses of Jesus that cannot be found
in any other place. The gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John look
back in time and reveal Jesus living on this earth as a man, but the
book of Revelation reveals Jesus as God who lives in heaven. Jesus came
as the Son of Man who would die and the Son of God who was sinless, but
in Revelation we see Jesus as Conqueror, Judge, King of kings, Lord of
lords, and our eternal God. In this study we will see Him in His majesty
and when He comes again. Revelation is about Jesus Christ - the Alpha
and Omega.
Unique Book. This book is unique. It is
the only book in the New Testament in which we find seven lampstands,
seven spirits, seven seals, seven eyes, seven horns, seven angels, seven
trumpets, seven thunders, seven lamps, seven mountains, seven heads,
seven kings, seven bowls, twelve stars, four horns, four angels, 666,
100 pounds of hail, four winds, and 144,000 witnesses. There is also
evil: two beasts, a dragon, locusts coming out of smoke, scorpions with
power, an angel of the abyss, the Serpent of Old, the Devil, Satan, unclean
spirits, and a false prophet. But best of all there is the holy: new
heaven and new earth, holy angels, the Root of David, the Lamb, God,
the Son of God, and the Alpha and Omega. There is no other book like
it in the Bible.
Who Wrote It? So who wrote this unusual
book? The first verse of Revelation tells us that it was written by invisible
and visible authors. The prophecy in this book was given by God the Father
to Jesus Christ. Then it was Jesus’ decision to give it to us through
His angel who gave it to the Apostle John, who wrote the words we will
be reading.
The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave Him to
show to His bond-servants, the things which must shortly take place;
and He sent and communicated it by His angel to His bond-servant John,
who bore witness to the word of God and to the testimony of Jesus Christ,
even to all that he saw. (NASB) Rev. 1:1-2
In the coming weeks we will hear angels talking with
John and telling him about the things to come. Angels have spoken in
the pages of scripture before. This happened in Daniel 10-12 when God
sent an angel to give Daniel a prophecy about the future. It was an answer
to Daniel’s prayer. In Acts 7:53 and Gal. 3:19, we are told that
angels helped to give Moses the Law, but we do not know how. They are
going to do it again in this book. This is no ordinary book, because
it was written for a special purpose and a divine reason. The authors
are divine, holy, and one is an apostle. Why? Because it was written
for you!
When Written. This revelation was given
to the Apostle John about A.D. 95-96. The apostle wrote this book near
the end of his life. The early church fathers say that he wrote it while
he was exiled on the Isle of Patmos (Rev. 1:9) near the end of the reign
of Domitian. Domitian was a Roman Caesar who ruled during the time of
A.D. 81-96.
How Do We Understand It? Before we start
our study, it is important to know how we should understand the book.
There are four major view points of the book.
There are some who call themselves Preterists. They say
that Revelation needs to be understood symbolically. It is all symbols.
They say that Revelation is about the conflicts which occurred during
early church history, and then add that Revelation 20 is the church’s
victory over the world.
Others believe that Revelation represents all of church
history. Some say it is symbolic of good and evil and add that it was
written to encourage the early Christians during their struggles with
suffering and death.
But these views are hard to accept. Why? How about a very
practical question, “If we say that Revelation is completely symbolic,
then how do we decide what the symbols mean?” and “Who decides
the meaning of the symbols?” The answer is rather easy. The meaning
of the symbols is left to the creative mind of the one explaining the
passage. If we cannot understand the symbols literally, then the meaning
of the symbols is subjective. Our amillennial friends take this approach
when they say the church is the nation of Israel when they come to future
things, which includes the book of Revelation. This is dangerous, because
you can make symbols mean anything! It is left to the imagination of
the teacher.
Yes, Revelation has symbols, but they must be understood
as literally as possible; otherwise the meaning is left completely to
our imagination. It is also an error to understand the symbols literally.
Some men and women have tried that too! We will find that our study in
Daniel will be helpful in understanding this book. While the book of
Daniel was symbolic, it was also easily understood, because the symbols
were explained. We will find that scripture will help us understand the
symbols in Revelation too!
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