Revelation of John 1
Book Introduction - Revelation
Read first chapter of Revelation WRITER: The Apostle John ( 1:1) DATE: A.D. 96 THEME: The theme of the Revelation is Jesus Christ ( 1:1), presented in a threefold way:- As to time: "which is, and which was, and which is to come" (1:4);
- As to relationships--the churches (1:9-3:22), to the tribulation (4:1-19:21), to the kingdom (20:1-22:21);
- In His offices--High Priest (8:3-6), Bridegroom (19:7-9), King-Judge (20:1-15).
- Things past, "the things thou hast seen," i.e. the Patmos vision, 1:1-20.
- Things present, "the things which are," i.e. things then existing--obviously the churches. The temple had been destroyed, the Jews dispersed: the testimony of God had been committed to the Churches (1 Timothy 3:15). Accordingly we have seven messages to seven representative churches, 2:1-3:22. It is noteworthy that the church is not mentioned in chapters 5-18.
- Things future, "things which shall be hereafter," lit. "after these," i.e. after the church period ends, 4:1-22:21. The third major division, as Erdman (W.J.) has pointed out, falls into a series of six sevens, with parenthetical passages, making, with the church division, seven sevens.
- The seals, 4:1-8:1.
- The seven trumpets, 8:2-11:19.
- The seven personages, 12:1-14,20.
- The seven vials (bowls), 15:1-16:21.
- The seven dooms, 17:1-20:15.
- The seven new things, 21:1-22:21.
- The Jewish remnant and the tribulation saints, 7:1-17.
- The angel, the little book, the two witnesses, 10:1-11:14.
- The Lamb, the Remnant, and the everlasting Gospel, 14:1-13.
- The gathering of the kings at Armageddon, 16:13-16.
- The four alleluias in heaven, 19:1-6. These passages do not advance the prophetic narrative. Looking backward and forward they sum up results accomplished, and speak of results yet to come as if they had already come. In Re14:1, for example, the Lamb and Remnant are seen prophetically on Mount Sion, though they are not actually there till Re20:4-6.
- (1) Local, to the churches actually addressed;
- (2) admonitory, to all churches in all time as tests by which they may discern their true spiritual state in the sight of God;
- (3) personal, in the exhortations to him "that hath an ear," and in the promise "to him that overcometh";
- (4) prophetic, as disclosing seven phases of the spiritual history of the church from, say, A.D. 96 to the end. It is incredible that in a prophecy covering the church period, there should be no such foreview. These messages must contain that foreview if it is in the book at all, for the church does not appear after Revelation 3:22. Again, these messages by their very terms go beyond the local assemblies mentioned. Most conclusively of all, these messages do present an exact foreview of the spiritual history of the church, and in this precise order. Ephesus gives the general state at the date of the writing; Smyrna, the period of the great persecutions; Pergamos, the church settled down in the world, "where Satan's throne is," after the conversion of Constantine, say A.D. 316. Thyatira is the Papacy, developed out of the Pergamos state: Balaamism (worldliness) and Nicolaitanism (priestly assumption) having conquered. As Jezebel brought idolatry into Israel, so Romanism weds Christian doctrine to pagan ceremonies. Sardis is the Protestant Reformation, whose works were not "fulfilled." Philadelphia is whatever bears clear testimony to the Word and the Name in the time of self-satisfied profession represented by Laodicea.
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