Linear Chronological Sequence?
Are Revelation’s visions presented in chronological sequence as they unfold? If we assume this is the case, things quickly become untenable as key events are repeated over several visions. For example, the “sixth seal” culminates in the final day of wrath accompanied by celestial and terrestrial upheaval, yet the same events also occur in the “seventh trumpet.”
Likewise,
the outpouring of the “seventh
bowl of wrath” results in the proclamation, “It
is done,” referring to the “wrath of God” that is completed by the “seven
last plagues.” At that time, Babylon falls, and “every island and
mountain is removed,” another picture of terrestrial upheaval that will
occur at the end of the age.
The repetition
of terms and imagery across multiple visions raises the question: Is the book describing
multiple “final” judgments, multiple “days of the Lord,” or is the same set of
events pictured from different perspectives?
PROGRESSIVE REVELATION
This does
not mean the book is an allegory about “timeless truths.” Its visions
move forward to inevitable conclusions - final judgment, ultimate victory, and the
New Creation. Likewise, the visions unveil events progressively. Later ones
have literary links to previous visions, but also provide more details.
For
example, in the book’s prologue, God is the one “who is and who was and who
is coming.” This clause is repeated three more times; however, in the last
instance, the third stanza is dropped (“He who is coming”). That is, God
has arrived, and therefore, no longer is “coming” - (Revelation 1:4, 4:8,
11:17, 16:5).
Information is revealed in stages. For example, the prophecy from Ezekiel about “Gog and Magog” is used in three separate visions.
In the
first instance, the language from Ezekiel is brief and allusive.
In the second, the description becomes more recognizable. The invading force is
identified as “all the kings of the earth and their armies.” And, in the
third case, the language becomes explicit. “Gog and Magog” are named,
but they represent the “nations of the earth” in their final attempt under
the direction of Satan to annihilate the “saints” - (Revelation 16:12-16, 19:17-21, 20:8-9).
A repeated
theme is the ascent of a malevolent figure from a dark place that persecutes
the “saints.” In each instance, it is described in similar terms. For
example, the sounding of the fifth
Trumpet causes a horde of
locust-like beings to “ascend (anabainō) from the Abyss.” The Abyss
is ruled by the destructive creature named “Abaddon” and “Apollyon”
- (Revelation 9:1-2).
In the
vision of the “Two Witnesses,” the “Beast” ascends (anabainon)
out of the Abyss to make war with the Two Witnesses. The language is
from the seventh chapter of Daniel where the prophet sees four “beasts”
ascending from the sea. The same language is also used to describe the
single “Beast” that John sees “ascending” from the sea to “wage
war” against the “saints” - (Revelation
13:1-10, Daniel 7:1-8).
The “Beast”
is described again as it is “ascending out of the Abyss” in chapter 17. Finally,
at the end of the thousand years, Satan is “loosed” from the Abyss
to deceive the nations and lead them to “ascend over the breadth of the
earth” against the “saints.” The common theme is the ascent
of a malevolent being (demons, beast, false prophet, Satan) from a dark and forbidding
place (Abyss, sea, earth) in order to wage war against the
“saints.”
DOWNFALL OF SATAN
The
downfall and “binding” of Satan are presented twice, each time with the
same terms and imagery. In chapter
12, Satan is the “great
dragon, the old serpent, the Devil and Satan,” the one “who deceives the
whole habitable earth,” and who is poised to devour the “son,” but instead,
he is thwarted when the “son” is caught up to the throne.
As a
result of the death of Jesus, “Michael and his angels” defeat “the
dragon” who is “cast” (Greek ballō) out of heaven to the
earth. From that point, salvation, God’s kingdom, and Christ’s rule are
declared “because the accuser of our brethren is cast down!” Therefore,
saints “overcome him by the blood of the Lamb, the word of their testimony,
and because they loved not their lives unto death.” ALL THIS IS BASED ON CHRIST’S
DEATH - (Revelation 12:1-11).
Satan is
described as the one “who deceives the whole habitable earth” before
he is cast to the earth. After his downfall, he turns his fury against the
woman who gave birth to the “son” by persecuting the “remnant of her
seed, they who have the testimony of Jesus Christ” - (Revelation 12:12-17).
In chapter
20, the “angel” lays hold of the “dragon, the old serpent, the Devil
and Satan to cast (ballō) him into the Abyss” for the “thousand
years.” The Devil is unable “to deceive the nations” until that
period is completed, after which he is “loosed for a little time” - (Revelation 20:1-6).
At the end
of the “thousand years,” Satan is “loosed from the Abyss” to go
out and “deceive the nations from the four corners” of the globe and gather
them to “ascend over the breadth of the earth to encompass the camp of the saints.”
All this is to no avail for “fire descends out of heaven and devours them”
as they assemble for the final assault against the church - (Revelation 20:7-9).
VERBAL PARALLELS
The verbal
parallels between the “casting down” of the “Dragon” following
the victory of the “son,” and the Devil’s imprisonment in the “Abyss”
and later release, are too close to be coincidental. On some level, the same realities
are in view - (Revelation 12:9, 20:1-3).
In the
vision of the Throne, John sees that “out of the throne proceeds flashes of
lightning, voices, and thunders.” This statement is repeated three more
times, and each time, additional elements are added, including earthquakes and
hail - (Revelation 4:5, 8:5, 11:19, 16:18-21).
There are
too many verbal and conceptual parallels between the different visions of Revelation
to be coincidental. John expects us to detect these clues for insight into each
vision and how they all fit together. To read these visions as if they are laid
out in a neat chronological order is to miss the larger picture and their true
significance.
Comments
Post a Comment
We encourage free discussions on the commenting system provided by the Google Blogger platform, with the stipulation that conversations remain civil. Comments voicing dissenting views are encouraged.