Monday, September 25, 2017

Vision of the Ages: The Seven Trumpets (Part 2)

The Church and the World
Revelation 8.2-14.20

 

The seven trumpets announce the beginning of a series of judgments on the wicked world for its rebellion against God, rejection of Christ, and persecution of the Saints. It helps to look at the trumpets in reverse order, beginning with the seventh trumpet, which announces the exaltation of Christ and then unveils the cosmic enemies who oppose Christ. When we look back at the first six trumpets, we discover the reason for God’s wrath: the world has joined Satan in his rebellion and opposition to Christ. God responds to this evil in the world with a series of judgments. The trumpets announce these judgments as they fall upon the earth.
Satan has been cast down to the earth and cannot directly assault God or Christ in heaven. So, Satan’s strategy is to pursue the people of God in the world. The enemies of God and Christ are also opponents of the people of God. A great, cosmic conflict that began in heaven has spilled over into the earthly regions. Satan has failed and has been defeated by Christ, but that only makes him a more dangerous enemy for the saints who are still in the world. The people of God can defeat Satan, but not because of their own power or wisdom. The saints are being made aware, not only of their Enemy’s existence, but also of his schemes, or how he intends to carry out his war.
The Dragon calls up two allies to help him in his war against the saints. These allies are beasts, which identifies them as enemies with hostile and violent intentions. The first beast probably represents Satan’s use of corrupt government to recruit the people of the world and to violently persecute the saints.
The second beast probably represents the use of false religion to delude the inhabitants of the world and cause them to oppose the saints. Satan’s cosmic war has come to earth and he is now working through people to oppose the people of God.
We do not ultimately fight flesh and blood, but Satan does use people to do his will in the world. Satan has successfully enlisted the world’s help in his war on the saints. The book of Revelation is showing us two of the main strategies Satan has used for recruiting the people of this world to serve his agenda. Working either through brute force or through delusion, these two beasts have been very effective in the world. We have already seen the cosmic actors in this great struggle. Now we get to see some revelations of the human actors in the struggle.
Satan is a spiritual being and the only way he can attack the saints in the world is to seek a physical way of manifesting his will and agenda. Satan has his people in the world just like God has people who belong to Him. There are two groups of people in the world: one group follows the Lamb and the other groups serves the Dragon. These two groups of people are very different from each other and can never be in fellowship, just as the Lamb and the Dragon are also opposed one to the other. We will see in these visions that the main purpose of the people who follow the Lamb is to give a witness to the world. The main activity of those who serve the Dragon is to oppose and persecute those who follow the Lamb. Collectively, and for brevity or clarity, we can call the people following the Lamb “the Church” and those serving the Dragon “the World”. These perspectives show us how very different the Church is from the World and the perpetual, spiritual conflict that these two societies of people represent. This difference is not traced back to the people themselves but is due to their spiritual origins.
Obviously, the book of Revelation was given to the people of God and not to the people of the world. The message of this book is to prepare the saints for hardship in the world, even for suffering and persecution. God’s people should not be surprised or even alarmed when they feel the opposition of the unbelieving world. Our situation is being revealed so that we will understand and know what to expect. Anyone who becomes a Christian and expects everything after that to be smooth sailing has been deceived and will probably fall away during the times of trial. Additionally, the people of God need to be able to identify the sources of the opposition. We need to know where the attacks are going to come from so we will not be caught by surprise or confused. The most important reason for these visions, as far as the Saints are concerned, is so that we will endure whatever hardships we face in the world, remain completely faithful to Christ, and refuse to compromise our witness.
Before we continue, we must go back and consider one more revelation about the nature of the World that comes from the trumpet judgments. A very important summary statement in this section comes at the end of the sixth trumpet judgment:

“The rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands nor give up worshiping demons and idols of gold and silver and bronze and stone and wood, which cannot see or hear or walk, nor did they repent of their murders or their sorceries or their sexual immorality or their thefts” (Rev. 9.20-21).

Here we see not only that the World deserves God judgment, but that the nature of the World cannot be changed or redeemed. Even God’s plagues do not bring about the repentance of the wicked. “The sun melts wax, but hardens clay.” The World Order is destined for destruction and anyone who does not want to go with it must leave it as Lot had to get out of Sodom, Israel had to exit Egypt, and the captives of Judah had to be brought home from exile in Babylon.

A Personal Perspective of the Church and the World (10.1-11)


The first perspective of the Church and the World is personal and concerns John himself and his ministry. John sees a powerful angel come down from heaven with a little book in his hand. The book reminds us of the sealed scroll in the earlier chapters of Revelation, but this little book is open in the angel’s hand and is not sealed. Some commentators have made the case that the sealed scroll that the and this little scroll is one and the same, but this is probably not the best way to understand this passage. John hears something that he is not allowed to write down and reveal, but he is then told to give his attention to the contents of this little book and is given a rather surprising command:

“Go, take the scroll that is open in the hand of the angel who is standing on the sea and on the land. So, I went to the angel and told him to give me the little scroll. And he said to me, “Take and eat it; it will make your stomach bitter, but in your mouth, it will be sweet as honey.” And I took the little scroll from the hand of the angel and ate it. It was sweet as honey in my mouth, but when I had eaten it my stomach was made bitter (Rev. 10.8-10).

The prophet Ezekiel was given the command to eat a scroll at the beginning of his prophetic ministry (Ezek. 2.8). John is also a prophet who was sent to the people of God and has much in common with Ezekiel and his situation. John is exiled to Patmos as Ezekiel was an exile in Babylon. The people of God in the world are much like the exiles of Judah in Babylon. God promised Israel through the prophet Ezekiel that Babylon would be judged and the people would be restored to the Promised Land. In the same way, John prophesies about the judgment of the world order and the entrance of the people of God into the promised land of the New Creation. God’s people are still exiles in the World, which is our Babylon. As exiles in the world, there are certain realities we must face about our present situation.
The scroll that Ezekiel was commanded to eat and the little book that John had to eat represents the Word of God that each prophet was supposed to ingest and then deliver to the people of God. But John’s experience after eating this little book was both sweetness and bitterness. (There is no doubt that the prophet Ezekiel also experienced the bitterness in his ministry since Israel mostly ignored his message.) This sweetness and bitterness is not just John’s personal experience but is in some way the experience of every child of God in the world.
            When we first begin to ingest the Word of God, the Gospel of Christ, there is an immediate sweetness. We learn that our sins have been forgiven and that we are children of God with access to His Throne of Grace. We find that we are part of the Family of God. We have a new purpose and meaning in life as we walk with Jesus each day and learn to pray to our Heavenly Father for all our earthly needs. We also have the hope of heaven and eternal life with the Lord when this life is done. The Christian life is wonderful and new converts are often filled with joy at the sweetness of this new experience.
But this is not all there is to the Christian life. Very soon we come to experience something else that is not so pleasant. There is also a bitterness that comes from being a Christian in a world that is opposed to God and to Christ. We find that there are people who hate us and shun our presence. Some of these people may have once been our friends or even members of our family. We want to share our joy with others and tell them about our experience with Christ, but we find that most people are not willing to listen to us and they may even mock and make fun. The reaction of the World is sometimes even more severe and Christians often face violent persecution and deprivation.
It is sweet to know that our sins have been forgiven, but it is bitterness for us to see many people around us continuing in their sin, refusing the offer of God’s forgiveness in Christ, and heading toward destruction. We begin to see why Jesus wept over the city of Jerusalem. Jesus Himself experienced this bitterness when He saw people refusing to listen to God and heading toward destruction and judgment. The Saints experience the bitterness of seeing the entire World around them heading toward judgment and rejecting the only thing that could save them.
It is tempting at this point for us to try to mitigate this bitterness or to avoid it somehow. We have a responsibility to share the Word of God with people in the World, but since we know they will probably reject it and then reject us, it is tempting for us to simply shut down and stop witnessing altogether. Or, we only focus on speaking those aspects of the Word of God that will not offend the people of the World and so avoid some of the bitterness and rejection.
Many people who experience the sweetness of the Word of God at first, later fall away when they begin to experience some of the bitterness of the World’s rejection and disapproval. But if we are going to follow the Lamb, we must accept both the sweet and the bitter. We cannot avoid the World’s rejection by hiding our witness or by softening the message about sin and judgment to win the World’s favor. We must continue speaking the Word even when the World refuses to listen.
If we are not willing to accept the bitterness then we are not worthy of being Christ’s disciples. Remember that Jesus had to swallow the bitterness of the Cross when He came into the World and He told us to take up our cross and follow Him. Following Jesus in this wicked World will be both sweet and bitter. That was John’s personal experience and this will also be the personal experience of every Christian until our bitter tears are wiped away forever by the Lord.


A Corporate Perspective of the Church and the World (11.1-14)


The next perspective moves us from personal experience to a corporate experience. The vision that John saw is about two mysterious witnesses: “And I will grant authority to my two witnesses, and they will prophesy for 1,260 days, clothed in sackcloth. These are the two olive trees and the two lampstands that stand before the Lord of the earth” (11.3-4). It is a mistake to try to identify these two witnesses as if they are specific persons. These two witnesses probably represent the witness of the entire Church in the World, from the beginning of the Church at Pentecost to the end of the Age. The Church will be in the World as a witness, constantly warning the World about God’s judgment and calling for repentance. God will always maintain a witness in the World. There are two witnesses to establish a legitimate testimony. According to the Law of Moses, testimony must be established by two witnesses. Some expositors have posited that these two witnesses might represent the Law and the Gospel, which together constitute a complete witness to the World.
The imagery for these two witnesses comes from the Old Testament prophet Zechariah:

And the angel who talked with me came again and woke me, like a man who is awakened out of his sleep. And he said to me, “What do you see?” I said, “I see, and behold, a lampstand all of gold, with a bowl on the top of it, and seven lamps on it, with seven lips on each of the lamps that are on the top of it. And there are two olive trees by it, one on the right of the bowl and the other on its left” (Zech. 4.1-3).

The dual images of a lampstand with an olive tree is a picture of sources of light with a constant supply of oil so that it never will go out. The witness of the Church in the World is like a lamp that cannot be extinguished because it has a constant supply from Heaven. This is a God-ordained and supported witness in the world that cannot fail. When the Church is faithfully witnessing, it is given Divine power and resources and is unstoppable! The witness of the Church cannot be stopped by the World until God deems that it is done.
            But the World is always trying to silence the witness of the Church. And there have been times and places where it looks like the World is successful and the witness of the Church has been snuffed out, just like it looked like the life of Jesus had been ended at the Cross:

And when they have finished their testimony, the beast that rises from the bottomless pit will make war on them and conquer them and kill them, and their dead bodies will lie in the street of the great city that symbolically is called Sodom and Egypt, where their Lord was crucified” (Rev. 11.7-8).

Sodom, Egypt, and later Babylon, are all Biblical symbols for the wicked World order, the rebellious City of Man, that is opposed to God and to His people. And the City of Man has always been especially opposed to God’s message of sin and the need for repentance. The witnesses of God torment the City of Man with a message they do not want to hear. So, the World simply kills the messengers.
            But there is a promise in this vision that the World will never be able to completely eradicate the Church and Her witness:

Then I was given a measuring rod like a staff, and I was told, “Rise and measure the temple of God and the altar and those who worship there, but do not measure the court outside the temple; leave that out, for it is given over to the nations, and they will trample the holy city for forty-two months” (Rev. 11.1-2).

There is a subtle reference here to another of Ezekiel’s visions. At the end of his book, Ezekiel is taken on a journey by an angel who measures the size of a new temple (Ezek. 40-48). The holy city of Jerusalem and the Temple had been destroyed by Babylon. But this vision was a way of giving hope to the people of Judah in their captivity that they would not be destroyed but had the hope of restoration. In the same way, as the Church is exiled in the Babylon of this present, evil World, there is the promise from God that it will never be destroyed. God will always have His remnant of faithful witnesses.
            Just when it looks like the Church’s witness is snuffed out, God brings it back to life! There is something like this that happened during the Protestant Reformation. Before the end of the world, it may be that the witness of the Church will appear to be all but silenced. “When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?” This vision is communicating to the Church the hostility of the World and the need for faithfulness. The Church must remain a faithful witness in a hostile World that does not want to hear the Word of God. Be faithful even unto death!


A Heavenly Perspective of the Church and the World (14.1-5)


The next perspective is a heavenly contrast between the people of God and the World. We see a group of people who are completely different from those of the World. These images of the Redeemed contrast with the followers of the Dragon and his two beasts. The World worships the beast and serves the Dragon (13.4, 8). The Redeemed sing a new song (14.3) and they follow the Lamb wherever He goes (14.4). (Learning a singing a new son is a picture of conversion from the World to the Kingdom of God. We used to sing the World’s song, but now we sing a new song we learn from the Lamb!) The World bears the mark of the beast upon them (13.16). The Redeemed have their Father’s name on their foreheads (14.1). The Redeemed are pure and undefiled, in contrast to the World (14.4-5).
            The Redeemed are not going to be a secret society in the world, but are meant to be a visible counter-culture and witness to the World Order. Jesus said the Church would be the light of the World, like a city set on a hill it would be visible and visibly different. The witness of the Church in the world would not be only in preaching the message of the Gospel but by simply being visibly different from the World Order. If the Church ever becomes like the world around it then it has lost its usefulness, just as salt that is not salty must be thrown away. This vision in Revelation is a lasting challenge to the Church in every Age to maintain its distinction from the World. Not only is it possible for the Church to remain pure in a defiled world, this purity and separation are vital to the Church’s identity as the people of God. If there is no difference and no distinction between the people of God and the people of the World, then the whole purpose of redemption becomes thwarted and any claim the Church makes to belonging to God is void. The Church is a visible sign of the coming of the Kingdom of God to the earth. God’s people are to be a holy society that brings a little breath of heaven to earth and points the world toward the future fullness of Christ’s reign. If God’s will does not reign supreme in the Church, then it is exactly like the World Order, which is also in rebellion against the will of God. Obviously, the World Order is going to pressure the Church to compromise its position and God’s people must constantly refuse to give in to the pressure to conform to the ways of the World.
            This is a heavenly view of the Redeemed, not as they appear to the earth. The people of God have a kind of double identity and they occupy two different realms at the same time. The people of God have been redeemed from out of the earth, yet they are standing on the heavenly Mt. Zion. The redeemed are seated with Christ in heavenly places (Eph. 2.6). This vision is not of the future of the saints in Heaven. This is what the Saints are now from a heavenly point of view.
            Redemption is effective even in the middle of Satan’s war on the earth. This is due to the victory of Christ and His exaltation into Heaven. Satan’s war will fail to interrupt God’s purpose of redemption. In fact, redemption would be worked out in the context of evil and conflict. So, Satan is still serving the higher purpose of God even as he goes about his evil business in the world. All the glory for extracting the Redeemed from Satan’s kingdom must go to God.
            Here we are seeing that there are two communities of people in the earth. There is now a choice presented concerning which community to belong to and if we will worship the beast or follow the Lamb. The vision shows that there is an alternative to being part of Satan’s kingdom. The only way to escape the evil of the World is to follow the Lamb. There is salvation in no one else.
            The salvation that God offers is from out of a community that is destined for judgment and a World Order that is destined for destruction. The Redeemed will endure but the Dragon and his kingdom will eventually be destroyed completely. The Redeemed can look forward to an eternal home in the New Creation, but the people of this world will eventually be left eternally homeless and bereaved.


A Future Perspective of the Church and the World (14.14-20)


The next perspective of the Church and the World projects out into the future, all the way to the end. There are two harvests in this vision: one harvest is for the righteous and the other harvest is of the wicked.
These two different societies in the world have very different destinies: one is destined for wrath and the other for salvation. One community will be gathered in, while the other will be cast out. One group of people is useful to God, while the other is wasted. A harvest is an image in Scripture for both salvation and for judgment, and both kinds of harvest are pictured here in Revelation.
            Jesus taught in His parables about the Kingdom of God that there will be two harvests at the end of the Age. One such parable that is helpful here to explain this vision in Revelation is Jesus’ parable of the Wheat and the Tares. In the parable, there was a man who planted a field with wheat. While it was night, an enemy came in and sowed tares, a type of weed, in among the wheat to ruin the field. When the two plants began to grow, the wheat and the tares were all mixed together in the same field. The servants of the owner of the field wanted to immediately take the tares out, but the owner would not allow this because the wheat would also be uprooted. The two plants would be allowed to grow in the same field together until the time of harvest when they would be separated. The wheat would be gathered into the owner’s barn, but the tares would be burned. Here is Jesus’ interpretation of the parable:

The field is the world, and the good seed is the sons of the kingdom. The weeds are the sons of the evil one, and the enemy who sowed them is the devil. The harvest is the end of the age, and the reapers are angels. Just as the weeds are gathered and burned with fire, so will it be at the end of the age. The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will gather out of his kingdom all causes of sin and all law-breakers, and throw them into the fiery furnace. In that place there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. He who has ears, let him hear” (Matt. 13.38-43).

The world is like a field where something has been planted and is growing in view of a harvest. The whole point of this world is to grow the people of God. The children of the Devil are imposters. The righteous are sons of God that He planted in the world. The wicked are the sons of the Evil One that he planted in his attempt to ruin God’s plans. The point of this parable is that good and evil must exist together in the world until the time of the end. Jesus probably told this parable because the Jews thought that when the Kingdom of God came, all evil would be completely uprooted from the world. But this would not happen immediately. God’s people would have to continue growing in the world in the presence of evil. Until the time for the harvest is here, it is not wise to do any uprooting because this will disturb God’s purpose for His children while they are still in the world. In some way, the presence of evil is necessary for the growth and maturity of God’s people.
From the standpoint of the end, the identity of the righteous and the wicked appear to be certain and fixed. But on this side of eternity, in the confines of time, the harvest is still in a process of developing and we do not always know which harvest a person belongs to. So, we judge nothing until the time comes for the harvest. In the meantime, there is a harvest going on as the fields of the earth are white unto harvest for the Gospel. This is the harvest the Church is currently to be focused on gathering. Executing the final harvests is not our concern.
            The harvest of the vine of the earth and its destruction is certainly an image of judgment in this vision (14.17-20). This vine of the earth is a useless vine that does not produce the kind of fruit that God is looking for. In contrast to this vine of the earth is Jesus, who is the true vine. We must be connected to Jesus rather than to the World if we want to be pleasing to God. The vine of the earth is destined for the winepress of God’s wrath.


A Motivating Perspective of the Church and the World (14.6-13)


The final perspective of the Church and the World is a brief series of summary statements that are designed to motivate us to respond to what we have seen in these visions. There is a warning here to the wicked World Order and a message of encouragement to the people of God. The wicked must repent if they are to escape being judged. The Saints must endure the opposition from the World until death when they can then enter eternal rest. Death removes the Saints from danger permanently. But those who remain connected to the World are in danger of God’s wrath. There are three summary statements delivered by angels, an editorial comment by John, and then a final word given by an unidentified voice from Heaven. All these statements are meant to afflict the comfortable who are still a part of the World Order and to comfort the afflicted saints who suffer under the World’s opposition.
            During this period, when the trumpet judgments are coming upon the World Order, the message of the Gospel is also being proclaimed throughout the earth. While the Gospel is ultimately good news to those who believe it, there is an aspect of the Gospel that is a warning. The World Order is like a house that has been condemned and is in the process of falling apart. The Gospel warns people to get out of that house before it collapses and is destroyed. The Trumpets are a time of partial judgments on the world. The sounds of the World’s collapse can already be seen and heard, but the end has not yet come and God’s mercy can also be experienced. But the time of mercy will not last forever.
The Gospel is a word of liberation from the World’s bondage and corruption. There is a way out if people will take it. Evil will eventually fall but no one must be destroyed by it.
The World Order, as ruled by the Dragon, is the enemy of mankind and detrimental to his eternal well-being. Satan brings only death and destruction, not life. God desires that all men be saved, but the World ruins men’s lives and damns their souls. The World Order is not friendly to man, it is a kind of spiritual bully that seeks to press its will on every person and bring them into subjection.
            Eventually, the World Order, referred to here as Babylon for the first time in Revelation, will be judged and all those connected to Satan’s kingdom will experience the wrath of God, which will last for eternity. Here we have a clear statement about the eternal fate of the wicked. Those who are connected to the World Order may be comfortable and enjoying themselves now, but they will eventually be tormented and will never find rest again. The exact opposite is true of the Saints, who often are tormented by the World but will eventually enter eternal rest. The Saint’s suffering at the hands of the World will not be forgotten by Heaven and their sacrifices will not have been wasted. Worldly people are experiencing the best times they will ever have. The Saints who are in the world are experiencing the worst times they will ever have. The eternal state of each group will be eternally reserved, just as the rich man woke up and found himself in hell while Lazarus was carried to Abraham’s bosom. The last will be first and the first will end up being last!
            The contrast between these two societies could not be made more explicit. One society is blessed while the other is under a curse. One group of people must repent while the other must endure. One kingdom is in the state of passing away while the other Kingdom is coming into its fullness. One Order is temporal and the other is eternal.

            These summary statements not only wrap up this cycle, they also anticipate the final cycle of visions which reveal more about the coming demise and judgment of Babylon, the wicked City of Man, otherwise known as the World. Likewise, there will also be more revealed in the final section concerning the eternal rest and the reward that is in store for the people of God in the New Creation. One must be impressed by the absolute certainty of these visions. These are not vague guesses about what might happen. The future has already been determined by Heaven and is certain to come to pass. This means we can build our lives on these Divine absolutes and base our hope for the future on what has been revealed in these visions!

Monday, September 18, 2017

Vision of the Ages: The Message of Revelation

The Opponents of the Lamb
The Seven Trumpets Part 1
Revelation 8.2-14.20

The seven seals are immediately followed by another cycle or series of visions. These visions cover the same span of time between Christ’s ascension and Christ’s second coming. Each cycle reveals a slightly different perspective. The perspective of the seven seals is the current reign of Christ from heaven over all events on earth. Christ is the ruler of human history and is executing the eternal purpose of God on earth from His position in Heaven. The purpose of this vision is to bolster the faith of God’s people in the world who are often at the mercy of forces beyond their control. Many things are beyond our power but nothing is above the authority of God’s Christ.
But some of the things that transpire on the earth seem to contradict the authority of Christ. How can we believe that Jesus is reigning when the world still appears to be chaotic and evil? There are many people who cannot reconcile the Bible’s message about a loving God who sent His Son to save the world with the ongoing reality of evil in the world. Atheists usually bring up the perennial problem of evil as a way of explaining away the existence of God and any rational meaning for world history. What many people fail to understand is that the God of the Bible is opposed to evil and has promised to completely remove it from the world. The book of Revelation has much to say about this very issue and gives us a specific explanation for the evil in the world. The world has always rejected God. And now that God has exalted Christ, the world has continued its rebellion against God’s chosen King.
God has made Jesus the ruler of the world and exalted Him into Heaven, but the world order has no intention of submitting to Christ’s authority. The world’s rebellion against God and Christ is the reason for all the chaos and evil in the world. What is God going to do about this situation? How will God respond to the world’s rebellion and rejection of His Christ? The seven trumpets will answer these questions.
In the ancient world, trumpets were used to announce or signal that something important was about to happen. Trumpets were often used in battle to signal the beginning of an attack. The seven trumpets in Revelation are also signals that something is happening or about to happen. The trumpet call serves as a warning that is designed to capture the attention and cause a sense of readiness and alertness in those that hear the signal.
It might be best to study this section by reading it backward. If we begin with the seventh trumpet, we see the central theme emerge. Christ has been exalted into Heaven. God approves of His Son, but not every person in the universe is pleased. The enemies of Christ are revealed for us to see. And we also get to see how these enemies will go about their opposition to God and to His Christ. Obviously, the enemies of God and Christ are also the enemies of God’s people.
There is a great, cosmic conflict going on that began in Heaven. Here we get to see behind the scenes into the true nature of this great conflict. There are vast, spiritual forces at work. The fact that we cannot see the spiritual actors in the conflict does not mean they are not real. There is more to reality than what meets the eye and the book of Revelation is showing us those things that cannot be seen.
We are again reminded that what happens in heaven determines what then happens on the earth. This cosmic conflict spills over into the earthly regions and begins to involve human beings. Some people join in the opposition to God and His Christ. Every person on the earth is drawn into this cosmic conflict, even if they remain unaware of its true nature. No one can be neutral. Even God is not neutral and the seven trumpets depict God’s preliminary response to His enemies. In this cycle of visions, we will see the source of the opposition to God and His Christ, and then God’s preliminary response to this opposition.

The Source of the Opposition


We see the source of the opposition to God and Christ. Like the other cycles of visions in Revelation the point is theology rather than chronology. As the trumpets progress, there is more revealed. The seventh trumpet is the key to this entire cycle and helps explain what has happened in the previous six trumpets. The first six trumpets reveal God’s judgment on the world. The seventh trumpet shows us why these judgments have been necessary. The world has allied itself with the greatest source of evil and opposition to God. A cosmic rebellion that began in heaven has been brought down to the earth. The opposition to God and His Christ has a spiritual origin in heaven that has then been given a physical manifestation on earth. Men who oppose God and Christ on the earth are serving an evil agenda with a spiritual source that remains hidden to those under its power and influence. The world has been drawn into a great, cosmic battle. This cosmic conflict is the true meaning of world history and will determine the eternal destiny of every human soul.

The Spiritual Source: The Dragon


We begin with the spiritual source of the opposition to God and Christ. The seventh trumpet begins with the declaration of Christ’s reign: “Then the seventh angel blew his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven, saying, ‘The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall reign forever and ever’” (Rev. 11.15). This is not saying that Christ will reign in the future as if this has not happened yet. It is a declaration of Christ’s current reign from heaven and takes us back to the vision in chapter five. It is after this declaration of Christ’s reign that the enemies appear. The ultimate source of all opposition to God and to Christ comes from the Dragon, or Serpent, who is Satan:

“And a great sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars. She was pregnant and was crying out in birth pains and the agony of giving birth. And another sign appeared in heaven: behold, a great red dragon, with seven heads and ten horns, and on his heads seven diadems. His tail swept down a third of the stars of heaven and cast them to the earth. And the dragon stood before the woman who was about to give birth so that when she bore her child he might devour it” (Rev. 12.1-4).

The imagery here in Revelation takes us all the way back to the beginning of human history, to the Garden of Eden. It was there, after our parents had sinned, that God spoke these words in the presence of the man, his wife, and the serpent: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel” (Gen. 3.15). A man would be born who would deal a mortal blow to Satan. The old Serpent heard those words spoken by God in Eden and planned to destroy the Seed of the Woman. But the child was born one night there in Bethlehem, and despite all the efforts of Satan to destroy Him, God’s Christ has been exalted into Heaven.
Satan’s rebellion has failed and he is already a defeated enemy. That is the point that the book of Revelation is making. As soon as the Christ entered heaven, Satan was thrown down and defeated. The people of God can overcome the Dragon, not because they are so strong or wise, but because of the victory of God and His Christ. However, the final victory has not come yet, and the Dragon is still the enemy of God’s people. The final efforts of the Dragon will be directed against the people of God on earth. Satan can no longer directly attack Christ because He has been exalted into Heaven. So, the Dragon’s war will continue with a new strategy. The saints must remember that our ultimate struggle is not with other men. Our real enemy is the Dragon, even though he does work through people to oppose the saints on earth.

 

The Earthly Source: The Two Beasts


Now we can see the earthly source of the opposition to God and Christ. The Dragon will call upon two earthly allies to aid him in his final war against the saints on earth. The Dragon calls forth two beasts. These entities are called beasts because they are inimical to men and destructive to human life on earth. Satan’s objective is to destroy the people of God, but he also destroys the lives of the people he is working through. Evil is always self-destructive. We have seen the image of beasts before in Scripture in the visions of Daniel. Those beasts represented specific kingdoms of men that would oppress the people of Israel. A beast is an enemy with evil and destructive intent. These beasts are not something separate from men but represent a manifestation of evil working through men.

 

The Beast from the Sea: Corrupt Government

 

The first beast Satan calls up comes from out of the sea:

And I saw a beast rising out of the sea, with ten horns and seven heads, with ten diadems on its horns and blasphemous names on its heads. And the beast that I saw was like a leopard; its feet were like a bear's, and its mouth was like a lion's mouth. And to it, the dragon gave his power and his throne and great authority” (Rev. 13.1-2).

In Scriptural imagery, the sea is a picture of the chaos and restlessness of the world. The wicked are like the troubled sea in their rebellion against God. Satan is not going to use unwilling people in his war against the saints. Satan can use the world because it is already corrupted.
This first beast is marked by its brutal strength and power. It will wage war by violence and awe-inspiring intimidation. The people of the world are impressed by a show of strength and power and they follow this beast. The beast wages war against the saints with violent and bloody persecution. One of the ways Satan has attacked the saints is through the power of the State, beginning with Rome. While God ordained human government to control the spread of evil, Satan has also found human government useful and willing to join him in his opposition to the people of God on earth.

 

The Beast from the Earth: False Religion

 

The second beast comes from the earth, as opposed to heaven, and it is different from the first beast in how it opposes God and His people:

“Then I saw another beast rising out of the earth. It had two horns like a lamb and it spoke like a dragon. It exercises all the authority of the first beast in its presence and makes the earth and its inhabitants worship the first beast, whose mortal wound was healed. It performs great signs, even making fire come down from heaven to earth in front of people, and by the signs that it is allowed to work in the presence of the beast it deceives those who dwell on earth, telling them to make an image for the beast that was wounded by the sword and yet lived” (Rev. 13.11-14).

This second beast uses deception and delusion to trick the inhabitants of the earth. Deception has always been Satan primary strategy and is usually more effective than brute strength.
So, Satan can work to intimidate people into joining his side or he can resort to trickery.
This second beast has a religious nature and seeks to cause men to worship the first beast. Another primary tactic of Satan in his war against the saints is to use false religion. Some of the greatest opponents of the people of God have been religious people. Religious people are useful to Satan because they are zealous in their work and believe that they are justified because they are doing God’s will. Remember that it was the religious people who killed Jesus. Many Christians need to learn that their greatest adversary is probably not secularism but is religion. It is not the atheist we must fear, it is the person who thinks he is doing God’s will when he is really serving the god of this world. Even secular people recognize that religious people have often been the source of great evil in the world. The book of Revelation reveals that religion has been and will continue to be a tool used by Satan to deceive the inhabitants of the earth and to persecute the saints of God.

 

An Effective Strategy


Either through political power or religious deception, Satan is looking to recruit an army of willing and devoted servants to do his will on earth. Of course, the people captured by Satan never know who is really behind the scenes pulling their strings. The Saints, on the other hand, are not impressed by the power of the first beast nor are they tricked by the deception of the second beast. But these two beasts will be very successful in recruiting the people of the world. One of the ways God judges the wicked world is by giving them over to the power of Satan. If the world will not serve God and do His will, it must serve the Dragon and do his bidding. Those who serve Satan and belong to his kingdom have his “mark” upon them and their lives reveal where their true allegiance lies.
The Dragon, the Beast from the Sea, and the Beast from Earth together form an unholy trinity in opposition to the Holy Trinity. (Another enemy who works with the Beast and is called Babylon is mentioned in this cycle and unveiled in the next.) Satan is a counterfeiter who seeks to turn men from God to idols. Satan does not care what men worship or even if they are religious just so they do not worship God. Satan knows that all men must worship. Worship is not optional, but our worship may be misdirected away from God to other objects of devotion.
Many modern people have rejected organized, traditional religion. It is even in vogue for Christians to say that they are not religious. Spirituality is the buzz-word now, while religion has almost become a bad word. But all this misses the point. Every person is religious and every person worships, even if they do not worship the living God, and even if they do not belong to an organized or institutionalized form of religion. Mankind’s primary sin, always encouraged by Satan, is idolatry. As Paul wrote about the ancient pagan world in Romans 1, men have known about the true God but have tried to forget about Him and have chosen to worship created things rather than the Creator Himself. By turning from the truth of God, mankind has become vulnerable to Satan and his many delusions.
The Dragon and his evil allies are revealed to us so that we will know true nature of this conflict and how our enemy works. The people of God do not have to fear being duped by Satan because we are aware of his devices. If we cling to the truth and avoid being contaminated by the world we are ultimately safe from Satan’s domination. The people who are not safe from Satan are those who fail to love the truth or who attach themselves in their affections to this present, evil world. The Apostle Paul wrote about people who are open to Satanic delusion:

“The coming of the lawless one is by the activity of Satan with all power and false signs and wonders, and with all wicked deception for those who are perishing, because they refused to love the truth and so be saved. Therefore, God sends them a strong delusion, so that they may believe what is false, in order that all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness” (2 Th. 2.9-12).

There are only two spiritual kingdoms and we must serve one or the other. God has His Kingdom, which is ruled by Christ. Satan has his kingdom of darkness. It is called a kingdom of darkness because those who are dominated by it are blind to their true condition and fate. Those who refuse to worship God will end up serving the Dragon and his hellish agenda, making themselves enemies of God and targets for God’s righteous wrath and judgment.

God’s Response to His Enemies


Now we can consider God’s response. The wrath of God is the theme of the first six trumpet blasts. These trumpets represent only a preliminary judgment of the world, and each trumpet only brings a partial judgment. But God is not content to allow the world’s rebellion to go unchecked. Starting with the seventh trumpet we now understand the reason for the first six trumpets. These trumpets all announce some disastrous calamity for the inhabitants of the earth. These judgments come because of the world’s rebellion against God’s Christ and because of the way the world persecutes the people of God. In fact, the whole cycle begins with the prayers of the saints going up to heaven, no doubt echoing the cries of the martyrs under the altar in the last cycle. The saints call out for justice against the world that mistreats them, and God answers from heaven with these judgments. We should remember that we are never to take vengeance for ourselves. When we are persecuted we are to pray for the ones mistreated us. And then we leave room for the wrath of God.
We must allow God to take care of our enemies. In this way, these trumpet judgments follow the Biblical tradition of imprecation. There are examples in Scripture of righteous people praying to God for the destruction of their enemies. Modern people frown upon these statements because they don’t understand what is going on. Instead of taking vengeance themselves, the saints pray to God that He will act and that He will “break the arm of the wicked and evildoer; call his wickedness to account till you find none” (Psa. 10.15). God hears the prayers of His people when they call out to Him for justice and deliverance. When the people of Israel were in bondage in Egypt, the Scriptures say that God heard their groans as they labored under their taskmasters. In the same way, God hears the cries of his people against the wicked world order. The judgments that follow parallel what God did when he judged Egypt and sent the plagues on that pagan nation before delivering His people.

 

A Disruption of the Natural Order


How does God judge the world? The first six trumpets reveal a series of judgments on the wicked world, beginning with calamities in the natural world. God disrupts the natural order and shakes up the world. To most people, the natural world represents something that is solid, secure, and dependable. In fact, one of the sins of the pagan nations is that they tend to worship the creation rather than the Creator. So, fittingly, God begins to shake up the natural world and disturb those things that men think are so stable. The first four trumpets all depict God’s disruption of the natural world, which are judgments on the human inhabitants of the earth:

“The first angel blew his trumpet, and there followed hail and fire, mixed with blood, and these were thrown upon the earth. And a third of the earth was burned up, and a third of the trees were burned up, and all green grass was burned up.

The second angel blew his trumpet, and something like a great mountain, burning with fire, was thrown into the sea, and a third of the sea became blood. A third of the living creatures in the sea died, and a third of the ships were destroyed.

The third angel blew his trumpet, and a great star fell from heaven, blazing like a torch, and it fell on a third of the rivers and on the springs of water. The name of the star is Wormwood. A third of the waters became wormwood, and many people died from the water because it had been made bitter.

The fourth angel blew his trumpet, and a third of the sun was struck, and a third of the moon, and a third of the stars, so that a third of their light might be darkened, and a third of the day might be kept from shining, and likewise a third of the night” (Rev. 8.6-12).

When we see natural disasters, which men sometimes call “acts of God”, we should remember that God is angry with the wicked world for how it has treated Him, His Son, and His people. The natural world is groaning under the burden of man’s sinfulness (Rom 8.19-22). The sun went black when Jesus died as if the natural world itself was appalled at man’s wickedness and sought to hide the shame of what men had done to the Creator. And we remember how the earth opened and swallowed Korah and the other men of Israel who rebelled against Moses, the one whom God had chosen to lead.
There are people who have no place in their theology for God to bring this kind of judgment on the world. To them, God is too loving to judge and they struggle to understand why bad things happen to innocent people. Of course, there are no innocent people in the world. All have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory and so God is perfectly just in punishing the wicked. If we are spared from calamities then we ought to be thankful for the mercy of God that He has not given us what we really deserve. Where do modern people get the idea that they deserve a good and happy life? God owes us nothing. If we did get what we deserve then we would all have to die in our sin.
When the earth itself begins to shake and convulse, when there are earthquakes, famines, floods, storms, and fires, we should remember that God is the righteous judge of all the earth who is angry with the wicked world for its rebellion. “Then the earth reeled and rocked; the foundations also of the mountains trembled and quaked because he was angry” (Psa. 18.7). The little floods, fires, and earthquakes are just reminders of the time when God will shake the entire earth so that those things which cannot be shaken will be all that remains.

A Disruption of the Moral Order


The trumpet judgments will steadily grow more severe, and we hear a flying eagle cry out “woe, woe, woe to those who dwell on the earth, at the blasts of the other trumpets that the three angels are about to blow” (Rev. 8.13)! When the fifth trumpet sounds, all Hell breaks loose on the earth:

And the fifth angel blew his trumpet, and I saw a star fallen from heaven to earth, and he was given the key to the shaft of the bottomless pit. He opened the shaft of the bottomless pit, and from the shaft rose smoke like the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were darkened with the smoke from the shaft. Then from the smoke came locusts on the earth, and they were given power like the power of scorpions of the earth” (Rev. 9.1-3).

God sent locusts to devastate Egypt before the Exodus, and the prophet Joel also references a great locust plague in Israel. But these locusts in Revelation are not natural insects. This judgment depicts a supernatural plague of demonic evil being released on the earth. This increase in demonic activity results in an increase in wickedness and the corresponding misery that moral corruption inevitably brings to people. One of the ways God judges the wicked is by giving them over to their wickedness and then allowing them to suffer the consequences (See Rom. 1.18-32).
In our times, we have seen a rise in wickedness as all sense of moral restraint has been abandoned. This situation must be viewed as a judgment from God, who has removed all restraints and allowed evil to increase. People often think that removing all restraint results in freedom and happiness because people can be and do whatever they want. But when the moral order is disrupted people become enslaved to their passions and they end up hurting themselves and each other. There is no doubt that people who have given themselves over to various forms of iniquity are also vulnerable to demonic influences.
People who will not serve God will be given over to Satan who takes them captive to do his will. Satan is not interested in the welfare of his servants. Satan seeks only to destroy and those who become his servants will only find misery and death. We are living in a time when more and more people are living wretched, miserable lives, wishing that they could die and escape their torment. There is a sense in which the wicked who are under the judgment of God already suffer a taste of the torments of Hell, just as the Redeemed get to have a foretaste of glory.

 

A Disruption of the Social Order


In the Exodus of Israel from Egypt, God sent a death angel as the final plague. In the sixth trumpet, God sends four angels of death who descend on the world of men to kill and destroy. When the Assyrians were besieging Jerusalem, a single angel killed 185,000 enemy soldiers (See Isa. 37.36). What are four killing angels capable of doing? These passages are in Scripture to remind us of the weakness of men. If men cannot withstand angels, then there is no possibility of successfully opposing God!

Then the sixth angel blew his trumpet, and I heard a voice from the four horns of the golden altar before God, saying to the sixth angel who had the trumpet, "Release the four angels who are bound at the great river Euphrates." So, the four angels, who had been prepared for the hour, the day, the month, and the year, were released to kill a third of mankind. The number of mounted troops was twice ten thousand times ten thousand; I heard their number (Rev. 9.13-16).

We need to understand that this is apocalyptic imagery for the destruction and death of war. This trumpet judgment parallels the riding of the four horsemen in the previous cycle who brought war and death to the world of men. One of the principles that the book of Revelation is illustrating for us is that there are spiritual forces at work in the world behind the scenes. What we might see is a political dispute that escalates into a war. But behind the scenes, there are spiritual forces moving these events. War and the destruction and death that follows is one of the ways that God judges the wickedness of the world. God is making the world suffer the consequences of its wickedness and rebellion.
We have examples of this all through the Old Testament Scriptures in God’s dealings with Israel. When the people turned away from God, broke the Covenant, and began to worship idols, God would raise up an enemy who would bring warfare to the people: “Behold, a people is coming from the north country, a great nation is stirring from the farthest parts of the earth. They lay hold on bow and javelin; they are cruel and have no mercy; the sound of them is like the roaring sea; they ride on horses, set in array as a man for battle, against you, O daughter of Zion” (Jer. 6.22-23)! There is little doubt that the two world wars of the last century were the results of God’s judgment for the modern world’s rejection of the truth.
God does not have to force men to fight each other. Strife is part of the sinful nature and when there is already an atmosphere of moral disorder, it does not take much for the social order to also be disrupted and men begin to fight and to kill each other. When there is an increase in iniquity in the world, there is also a corresponding increase in violence and social disorder. When people turn against God they inevitably end up turning against each other as well. Modern people want to throw off the restraints of God’s law, but at the same time, they want a just and peaceful society. You can’t have it both ways! When men rebel against God the moral order is disrupted which then causes the social order to be disrupted. It is like a row of dominoes that begins to topple over, throwing the world into chaos. This situation is evidence of God’s wrath:

“Since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done. They were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness. They are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless” (Rom. 1.28-31).


Those verses sound like they were just written! That is because the wrath of God is still being revealed from heaven against all the ungodliness and unrighteousness of men. But God’s response to wickedness while this world endures is small in comparison to the wrath that will be revealed at the end. For the sake of His own people, who are still in the world, God’s wrath is limited. Now it is still possible for men to be reconciled to God. But the time is getting short. “Kiss the Son, lest he become angry, and you perish in the way, for his wrath is quickly kindled.” Or, as C.S. Lewis put it in one of his books: “Now, today, this moment, is our chance to choose the right side. God is holding back to give us that chance. It will not last forever. We must take it or leave it.”