Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Revelation - Letter to a Friend (7)

 

 

“John’s work is a prophetic apocalypse in that it communicates a disclosure of a transcendent perspective on this world. It is prophetic in the way it discloses a concrete historical situation…enabling them [the readers] to discern the divine purpose…”

 

“The effect of John’s visions, one might say, is to expand his readers’ world, both spatially (into heaven) and temporally (into the eschatological future), or, to put it another way, to open their world to divine transcendence. It is not that the here-and-now are left behind in an escape into heaven or the eschatological future, but that the here-and-now look quite different when they are opened to transcendence.” (The Theology of the Book of Revelation, Richard Bauckham, Cambridge University Press, pages 7 – 8, italics mine).

 

Paul writes, “We look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal…for we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Cor. 4:18; 5:7).

 

Faith is the conviction, the evidence, “of things not seen” (Heb. 11:1).

 

Noah was warned by God of “things not seen” (Heb. 11:7).

 

The Scriptures, in Christ, teach us to see the invisible.

 

Contrast this way of viewing life with popular “Christian” teaching on the world, the church, and prophecy, with the way the popular church teaches Revelation. Popular Christian teaching focuses on what we can see. It would have us give our hearts to politics, to worldviews, to nationalism, to military power, to economic prosperity. Popular “Christian” teaching would have us view the world in terms of conservatives, liberals, moderates, progressives. This teaching would have us view the world in terms of national borders in place of the Kingdom of God in Christ. It would have us view the church in terms of “bigger is better,” “comfort is better,” “prosperity is better.” 


Popular Chrisitan teaching in America would have us reject the people of nations who have come within our borders, rather than share the Gospel with them, rather than serve them, we will reject them and send them to uncertainty, poverty, homelessness, sickness, and death.

 

Even though Revelation clearly teaches that the Lamb and His followers conquer by dying, popular Christian teaching would have us conquer by missiles, bombs, bullets, civic violence, legal intimidation.

 

O my friends, Revelation promises us a new way, in Christ, of seeing the world as it really is, and frankly seeing the apostate church for what it really is, a Whore riding on the Beast (Revelation 17). It also confronts us with Revelation Chapter 18, who are we really? Can we bear to look in the mirror?

 

Can we hear the cry, “Come out of her, my people, so that you will not participate in her sins and receive of her plagues!” (Rev. 18:4; see also 2 Cor. 6:14 – 7:1).  

 

 

 

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