The Book of Revelation - Session 2 of 24 - A Remastered Commentary by Chuck Missler
Chuck Missler provides a structured introduction to the Book of Revelation, focusing on chapter 1 as an integrated message system of extraterrestrial design. He challenges viewers to perform serious personal study, framing the text through its heptadic patterns, historical typologies, and its past, present, and future tenses.
Understanding the structural integrity, linguistic structures, and prophetic tenses of Revelation is crucial for navigating eschatological models and recognizing the unity between Old Testament types and New Testament fulfillment.
Section summaries
Session Overview and Foundations of Biblical Design
watchEstablishes the core premise that the 66 books of the Bible form an integrated message system designed outside of time.
The Four Classical Views of Revelation
watchProvides a useful overview of the Preterist, Historicist, Allegorical (Idealist), and Futurist interpretations of the apocalyptic text.
Introduction, Signified Meaning, and the Heptadic Structure
watchAnalyzes the Greek root behind 'signified' and lists the pervasive occurrences of the number seven throughout the book.
Old Testament Typology, Icons, and Patterns
watchExplores how books like Joshua, Ruth, and the Tabernacle function as types and models for the Book of Revelation.
Salutation, Tenses, and the Trinity
watchBreaks down the past, present, and future tenses of the salutation, connecting them to the three aspects of Christian salvation.
John's Identity, Patmos, and the Day of the Lord
optionalExplores John's historical background, the geography of Patmos, and a brief theological discussion on the Sabbath vs. Sunday.
Vision of the Risen Christ and Typology of the Brass Serpent
watchAnalyzes the symbolic visual markers of Christ in Chapter 1, explaining the prophetic coding of the brazen serpent in Numbers 21.
The Outline of Revelation and the Four Levels of the Letters
watchDeconstructs the crucial structural verse (1:19) and sets up the four layers of interpretation for the letters to the seven churches.
Key points
- The Bible as an Integrated Message System — The 66 books of the Bible, penned by over 40 authors, form a single, highly structured message system containing mathematical designs, place names, and microcodes that anticipate future events, proving the Author exists outside of our space-time domain.
- The Heptadic (Sevenfold) Structural Design — Revelation is structurally saturated with the number seven, featuring seven churches, seals, trumpets, bowls, beatitudes, and doxologies. This repetitive heptadic pattern typically presents six elements, a parenthetical break or change of subject, and then the final seventh element.
- The Three Tenses of Salvation and Prophecy — Both the book's structural outline (verse 1:19) and the theology of salvation operate in three distinct tenses: past (justification/penalty), present (sanctification/power), and future (glorification/presence).
- The Brazen Serpent as a Prophetic Macrocode — The historical account of the bronze serpent on a pole in Numbers 21 functions as an advanced typological macrocode. It remains completely obscure in purpose until Jesus reveals its true meaning as an emblem of the crucifixion in John 3.
- The Seven Letters as a Prophetic Chronology — The seven letters to the churches in Asia Minor in chapters 2 and 3 operate on four levels: local historical reality, admonitory counsel to all churches, homiletic application to individual believers, and a prophetic outline of 2,000 years of church history.
“The New Testament is in the Old Testament concealed. And the Old Testament is in the New Testament revealed.” — Chuck Missler
“The crucifixion of Christ was not a tragedy, it was an achievement.” — Chuck Missler
AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.
We are in the study of Revelation.
The book of Revelation.
And we're are in the second session. We
had a little introduction in the
previous section, sort of reviewed a lot
of broad principles.
We have quite a few new people, so
you'll be gratified to know there will
be quite a bit of review as we get
started. And we're going to focus still
on chapter 1.
So, you really by joining us in this
session, you'll be able to catch up
pretty quickly. And
so, it's the apocalypse.
It's the catastrophic end crisis of our
present age. So, it takes attracts a lot
of attention.
And of course, it's going to involve the
spectacular appearance of the King of
Kings taking over his global empire. He
paid for it on the cross. He takes
possession of it in this a astonishing
book.
We're also going to see the internment
of Satan into the Abusso and all the
we'll get into all those spooky aspects
as we get into that. And of course,
we'll deal with the millennial return on
the earth
and the reign of Jesus Christ. That's
very controversial.
I think it's unfortunate of course that
probably nine out of 10 of the
denominational churches
don't believe in a literal millennium.
That's their view. They have their
reasons, but we have a different view.
We'll try to explain some of those
things and we'll share with you why we
hold the view we do.
And I might mention right here, it's not
our desire to create controversy or to
sell a particular viewpoint. What were
our real goal here is to get you to do
serious study
of the Bible in general and this book in
particular
as a serious student. We will share our
views and why we hold those views, but
all underscoring it all all along the
way, we encourage you to do your own
homework.
And of course, we will see the final
insurrection and the abolition of sin.
And a new heaven and a new earth.
Interesting.
A new heaven as well as a new earth.
The redemption is involves far more than
just
you and me personally. Far more than
just the believers. There's far more
going on here.
But just to reiterate the fundamental
foundation of this ministry hinges on
two discoveries. The first discovery is
that this book that we these 66 books
that we glibly call the Bible
are actually 66 separate books that were
penned by over 40 different guys
over thousands of years.
The discovery is that we now discover
it's an integrated message system and I
don't mean just thematically. Every
detail, every number, every place name,
even the mathematical structures
underneath the text
exhibit very skillful design. That's the
first discovery.
The second one derives from that. That
design had to emerge from outside
space-time
because it anticipates things before
they happen in structure as well as
content.
And that implies that the author of
these segments
emerged from outside our constraints of
time itself.
Once you discover those two things for
yourself, it will change your whole
perspective
of the Bible and
it will lead you to an awe that's
essential to really understand it.
Now, the central themes of course, the
Old Testament is an is an account of the
nation. The New Testament is the account
of a man. A very specific man.
The creator himself became man.
And of course, his appearance is the
central event of all history.
And you know, Mel Gibson did a fabulous
job with his movie The Passion
in in its graphics and its in in in
aspects of it, but it fails to really
communicate who he was.
The crucifixion of Christ was not a
tragedy, it was an achievement.
Dozens and dozens of prophecies
fulfilled on that one day
that were written centuries before.
He died to purchase you and me.
And the good news is he's alive right
now as we speak.
And our most exalted privilege is to
know him. That's what the Bible's all
about. That's what these sessions are
all about. So, this is by way of just a
warm-up. But let's do something with our
presuppositions. We all bring to this
evening various presuppositions. Let's
first of all recognize God means what he
says and says what he means.
And that sounds so simple, but it's so
fundamental.
The Bible is an integrated whole. Every
detail is there by design and
nothing is trivial.
All things are there for our learning.
We're going to show you a lot of things
that seem trivial at first, but
hopefully show you why they're not
trivial at all.
And God of course is his own
interpreter, not Chuck Missler
or some radio preacher or whatever. God
himself. And our challenge is to find
out what he really means. Now,
in the early days of my ministry, I used
to make everybody put this at the top of
their notepad. I think I'll do this
again and this is a a warning in Acts
17:11.
Paul leaves the Thessalonians, goes down
to Berea and he speaks of the people
down in Berea. He said, "These were more
noble than those in Thessalonica." And
both groups accepted him broadly,
but the Bereans he said were more noble
than those in Thessalonica in that
they received the word, the word of God,
with all readiness or openness of mind.
But they searched the scriptures daily
to prove whether those things were so.
That's where Luke is telling you don't
believe anything Chuck Missler tells
you. Check it out for yourself.
And and my intent is to get you to
study, not to accept my particular
views. I share my views in the sense
they may be helpful, but also that you
will know where at least I'm coming
from. You may not agree, that's fine. Do
your own homework.
Now,
there are different views of this book.
There's the preterist view. They say
that the meaning of this book was good
only for the time it was written, the
era of John and so forth. That's their
view.
There's also another view that's closely
related, historical view, that this has
all been historically completed.
And those are views you'll find books
written with that perspective.
A larger number of books probably are
are regard the entire book as
allegorical.
The fight between good and evil and all
these things are just allegories. Some
people would call that the idealist
view.
And there are allegories in the
scripture of course, but this goes far
beyond just that.
The fourth view and the one we obviously
are embracing is what some people would
call futurist. We believe this Bible is
what it says it is and it said the book
of Revelation claims to be prophecy and
we believe it is. In fact, I think we
can demonstrate it as we go. But these
are four classic views you should be
aware that there are different views.
The book of Revelation itself claims to
be a prophetic book
in many many places, more than just a
few I've listed here.
Why prophecy? We're all interested in
prophecy.
Well, the Old Testament has over almost
2,000 references to Christ's rule on the
earth, not just his first coming.
There are so many references to his
first coming, that's why many of the
Jews when he made his appearance didn't
recognize him because they're so fixated
on the
Jesus the son of David.
They speak of
the
Messiah ben Joseph, the suffering
servant as a different guy.
No, they never realized it was both the
same guy. There are 17
of the 39 books of the Old Testament
that give prominence to the event. And
uh
The New Testament of course is has 216
out of 216 chapters
there are 318 references to the second
coming of Christ. Not the first coming,
the second coming.
And it's mentioned in 23 of the 27
books.
And the the three that don't mention it
are
a little single chapter books written to
an individual, doesn't fit the context.
So, it's a very dominant dominant issue
and so,
See, you and I tend to presume that
tomorrow be like yesterday.
Next week like last week. Next month
like last week. We tend to linearly
extrapolate life. It's natural.
And we we tend to have a linear
presumption in mathematical terms. Well,
the Bible says quite otherwise.
For every prophecy
relating to his first coming, there are
eight prophecies of a second coming.
It has far more visibility than even the
first coming.
Well, we're going to go through chapter
1. We started a little bit last time.
The first three verses I think we
touched on. That's the introduction to
the book.
And from 4 to 11, we have a salutation
and the occasion. What caused John to
write this book?
But then 12 to 18 is a vision of Jesus
Christ, the risen Lord.
And that may surprise you to study it
carefully.
Then we have something that's unique to
this book. I don't know of any other
book in the Bible that has an outline.
Usually that's the teacher assigns you
to do an outline of the book you're
studying.
John gives you an outline to the book in
verse 19. We'll take a look at that.
And then we have a prep. The last verse
is a preparation for your next few
sessions chapters 2 and 3.
But the introduction we'll start with
the revelation. Notice it's singular,
not plural.
The revelation of Jesus Christ which God
gave unto whom?
Unto Jesus Christ. Think about that a
minute. Many people read that first
sentence, don't realize what it's
saying.
The revel the unveiling of Jesus Christ
that God gave to whom? To Jesus Christ.
The Father gave the Son. Why? To show
unto his servants things which must
shortly come to pass.
That word shortly or quickly, we'll run
into that a lot in the book. It comes
from a Greek word, the same Greek root
from which we get the word tachometer.
And what a a better translation really
would be suddenly.
It doesn't mean shortly in the sense
it's going to be the day after tomorrow.
But it when when one thing happened,
they're all going to come right quickly
together. It's they're grouped in a
sense. That's really the intent of I
believe I believe of the passage.
To show unto his servants things which
must suddenly come to pass and he sent
signified it signified it by his angel
unto his servant John.
It was given to Jesus Christ and he sent
and signified it. What do I mean by
signified? Rendered it into signs.
Uh idioms, uh emblems, what have you.
And he signified it by his angel or
messenger unto his servant John who bare
record of the word of God and the
testimony of Jesus Christ and of all the
things he what?
He saw. We're going to be constantly
confronted with visual images. Many of
those images will be idiomatic. We'll
get to that when we get there, but this
is this is the this isn't a a abstruse
philosophical paper. It's a drama that's
going to unfold before his eyes.
Now, the basic units, you know, if we
talk of written language, what's the
basic unit of written language? An
alphabet. If you were to take Greek or
Russian or English, you have the first
thing you got to master is the alphabet.
It's the basic units of written
language. If you're going to study
sound, uh Josh and the guys that do the
editing of
of the tapes deal with very elaborate
software that breaks the sound in into
its individual phonemes. It's the
smallest element.
If you have an image, most of us are
familiar with the vocabulary of images
today because of digital cameras. What's
the smallest element of an image? A
pixel.
These are elements. Well, what's the
basic unit of meaning? Not sound or
language, but meaning. It's called a
sememe in in information sciences. It's
the smallest image. It comes from the
Greek word semaino or sema, which is
translated a mark, but that same Greek
word as used in this book uh over 4,000
times is the basic unit from which we
draw in science, the basic unit of
meaning.
And that means semaino, to give a sign
or signify, to indicate, or to make
known. It's the basic element of that.
Now, the book also has a promise in it
that is unique in the Bible.
Nowhere in the Bible is there the
the audacity
to say, "Read me, I'm special." No book
in the Bible
reaches that far. Many places say, "Read
the Bible." But only one book has, if I
use the term audacity or chutzpah, if
you will, uh to say, "Read me, I'm
special." This book says, "Blessed is he
that readeth and they that hear the
words of this prophecy."
You can't find that appellation on any
other kind of any other passage in the
scripture, I don't believe.
And keep those things which which hear
these the words of this prophecy and
keep those things which are written
therein for the time is at hand.
Now, one thing you'll notice all through
the everybody that's anybody that's
looked at the book of at all, even
superficially, realizes there's sevens
everywhere. We're going to be confronted
with seven churches in the next few
sessions.
We're going to have seven seals of a
book, a roll a scroll open, the major
part of the book. Seven trumpets will be
blown, seven bowls. In in fact, this
heptadic structure, the seven seal
scroll, um
has We'll always notice, by the way,
that of the scroll of these this
heptadic structure, there'll be six
things a break and then a seventh.
There are six seals sealed one at a time
and then there's a change of subject. It
says it's almost as if as a reader needs
to catch your breath. And we have a
chapter seven thrown in there on another
subject and then we have the seventh
seal which leads them to seven trumpets.
And again, we have six trumpets
and then we then we have a little
parenthetical series of chapters that
change the subject before we pick up
that seventh trumpet again and we go
through and we have bowls being bowls of
wrath being poured out. And even there,
there's a little one-verse parenthesis
between the sixth and the seventh. But
this this heptadic structure, heptadic
or sevenfold structure, is all through
the book.
There are seven lampstands, seven
spirits, seven stars, seven lamps, seven
title pages, seven promises to the
overcomers, seven horns, seven eyes. It
goes on. Seven angels. We'll talk a lot
about those in a little bit. Seven
thunders, 7,000, seven
heads, seven crowns, seven plagues,
seven mountains, seven kings.
There are seven beatitudes. Blessed is
he that readeth and they that hear. We
saw one already, a
beatitude, a blessing. Blessed is
Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord
in chapter 14. Blessed is he that
watcheth keepeth his garments in chapter
16.
How many
beatitudes? Seven again. If If you ask
you how many and you answer seven,
you'll be right, you know,
more often than not.
Blessed and holy is he that hath part in
the first resurrection. Blessed is he
that keepeth the words of the prophecy
of this book. That same promise that we
saw in verse three is repeated in
chapter 22 verse seven.
Blessed are they that wash their robes.
There are seven of these.
There are more subtle sevens that most
people would miss unless you're really
watching for them. There are seven
features in chapter one. There are seven
letter divisions. Not only the seven
letters, each letter there are seven
elements that make up the letters. We'll
look at that. There are seven personages
in chapters 12 and 13. A woman, a man
child, a red dragon, a seven-headed
beast, a false prophet, Michael the
Archangel, and then the lamb. There are
seven players in this drama that is
summarized for you in chapters 12 and
13.
There are seven years of judgment. There
are seven I ams of Jesus Christ.
And there are seven doxologies in
heaven.
Seven new things at the end.
I don't think you could list all the
sevens.
I've listed I've close to a hundred of
them and I think and I have the feeling
that if you look, you never end finding
more and more subtle ones, but sevens
always emerging. There's another thing
that you should be familiar with as a as
a serious Bible student. That's what we
call types.
The more contemporary vocabulary would
call it a model.
But the classical literary word is is a
type. Uh
the Abraham's offering of Isaac in
Genesis 22 is the classic uh type. The
Akedah, the Jews call it.
Nebuchadnezzar's image, the fiery
furnace, is a is a type of the
tribulation and so forth in the minds of
many.
The whole book of Ruth and the
redemption of the land, uh
the Ruth is full of as aspects of that.
The whole book of Revelation is modeled
for you in the book of Joshua. If you
study the book of Joshua, how it's
structured, where another Yehoshua
dispossessed the land of its usurpers on
the behalf of the people of God and so
forth. It's astonishing to make a list
of the parallels in structure of Joshua
and book of Revelation. And the
tabernacle. Those of you who studied
Exodus carefully, they're studying the
tabernacle. It's materials, its
dimensions,
uh and the architecture all speaks of
Jesus Christ personally. It's a fabulous
study to get into. And uh
the brazen serpent is another one.
Remember the brazen serpent? We'll We'll
examine that one later this evening to
show it make another point. But these
are all types, as we call it. Uh
idioms. You know, there's an idiom
Abraham was called the friend of God,
you may recall. And because of that, God
reveals to him as a symbol of that
friendship what's going to happen.
Remember in Genesis 18 and so forth. So,
Abraham was called a friend of God,
okay?
Who in the New Testament was called a
friend of God?
The disciples, right.
And so, it's interesting. So, we see
linkage both in the Old New Testament,
the concept of friendship with the
concept of letting you know what's
coming. See?
Well, let's take that one step further.
Um which prophet in the Old Testament
was called the beloved prophet?
Daniel, sure, exactly. And uh who And of
the disciples, who was called the
beloved disciple?
What do they have in common? Apocalyptic
writings.
Isn't that interesting that I mean not a
big deal, but you see the patterning I'm
suggesting here. Okay.
The other Now, one of the questions
we'll all have is how do you keep from
getting deceived? How do you keep from
getting down the wrong path? One way is
to rely on the whole counsel of God.
Always put Christ in the center of it
and we'll we'll show you how that works
as we go.
Uh Peter even warned us that we have
something be even better than being an
eyewitness. That's the more sure word of
prophecy.
Jesus challenged us in John 5, "Search
the scriptures and they are they which
testify of me."
He said, "Search the scriptures in which
you think you have eternal life. They're
they which testify of me." So, Jesus
Christ is what the Bible is all about
from cover to cover. And so, if you have
a problem you can't figure it out, put
Christ in the middle of it and see what
happens.
In Psalm 40, he says, "The volume of the
book is written of me." And indeed it
was.
And testament and Revelation itself is
going to identify the testimony of Jesus
is the spirit of prophecy, all prophecy.
And we pray for this every time we say
the Lord's Prayer.
It's astonishing that how many
denominational churches use the Lord's
Prayer in their services.
And when you say, "Thy kingdom come,"
what on earth do they mean? They're not
sure, frankly.
Because what we're praying for is
exactly what Revelation's all about.
And we'll move on.
We'll find certain phrases occur again
and again as sort of markers through the
book.
This phrase thunders, voices,
lightnings, and an earthquake. It occurs
not once, four times. It causes certain
partitions that we'll take a look at
when the time comes.
And there's doxologies.
And they start off small and they It's
like a symphony. It builds up in
crescendo. First, it's glory and
dominion in verse in chapter one. Then
it's glory, honor, and power in chapter
four. Blessing, honor, glory, and power,
four different things in five. Finally,
it gets to how how much? Seven, of
course. Blessing, glory, wisdom,
thanksgiving, honor, power, and might.
Okay? And if you're going to
Let me Let me put you at ease. We're not
going to examine each one of those and
how they differ. Okay? We'll let you do
that on your own. What's the difference
between blessing, glory, wisdom, you
know, they're very similar and yet
they're different. I'll let you do your
own word studies. Let's move on.
Worship. There's all kinds of songs in
here. Holy, holy, holy in chapter four.
Worthy art thou. That's repeated so many
ways in so so many places.
And it goes on. There How many different
uh
worship songs are there?
Seven. Good for you. Okay, good guess.
Yeah. All right. Oh, one thing I always
love about four four hallelujahs. There
are four hallelujahs in the New
Testament.
There are 24 hallelujahs in the Old
Testament.
And as often as the case, when you put
them together, it's always a multiple of
seven.
There are many multiples of seven that
only occur if you put the Old New
Testament together. It's almost like
they're stitched together because of
that property. The heptadic structure
again. But we'll move on. There are four
things out of place in the Book of
Revelation. And it's we're going to get
put them in the right place.
Israel is not in the land. It gets gets
the land in in the Revelation. The
church is on the earth. It belongs in
heaven.
The lamb is not on his own throne. He's
on his father's throne.
He's going to take the throne that
Gabriel promised Mary in Luke 1. David's
throne. He's going to take that.
And Satan is loose and he'll be bound.
So, these are all corrections or
resolutions that take place.
There are three women in prominent in
the book. The wife of
Jehovah or however you want to pronounce
it.
She is summarized in chapter 12. That's
not the church.
I'll show you why when we get there.
It's Israel.
The
church isn't it's the virgin bride, the
bride of Christ. She's portrayed quite
differently.
If the woman chapter 12 is
is
the church, she's in big trouble.
Cuz she's a virgin bride that's
pregnant.
The idiom doesn't quite work, okay? And
for a lot of other reasons, too. No, the
virgin bride is the bride of Christ
that's in the book. And there's the
third that's the harlot, mystery
Babylon, the woman who rides the beast.
Don't confuse the woman with the beast.
She rides the beast. They're different.
We'll get deal with that when we get
there.
So, that's a quick look at what we
talked about last time with a little bit
of a review. Let's get to the salutation
and the occasion of the book.
Revelation of Jesus Christ which God
gave unto him to show unto his servants
the things which must shortly come to
pass. And he sent and signified it by
his angel unto his servant John. This is
the John that the Apostle John. He will
show up five times in this specifically
referring to himself in this book.
Who bear record of the word of God, the
testimony of Jesus Christ, of all things
he saw. And uh
Okay. And we took that. Okay. John
is it's it's like sort of a memo from me
to you. John, which
to the seven churches which are in Asia.
The word Asia, by the way, is not the
continent of Asia. You and I use the
term to speak of the Far East.
Here it's being used as a province of
the Roman
Empire.
The province the the province of Asia,
now we might call it Asia Minor, is
essentially the western 2/3 of Turkey.
So, that was that was a province in the
Roman Empire called Asia. And he John is
writing to seven churches which are in
Asia.
Says grace unto you and peace. That's a
very common word. To a Greek, you say
grace, charis, very common comfortable
greeting. And to a Jew, you might say
shalom or peace.
So, they can be viewed as just
comfortable salutations.
But not in the scripture
because they're each one is a profound
theological statement.
And I won't get into From here we could
launch into a whole sermonette on what
do we mean by grace?
That's getting what we don't deserve,
right? And there's a whole aspect to
that.
But also peace.
Getting peace with God is what it's all
about.
We win and he wins in this
resolution. And and we could go through
both of those terms. The easy way to do
that is just pick up a commentary in the
Book of Romans and it'll go into all of
that for you. But grace unto you and
peace.
From whom?
From him which is and which was and
which is to come.
Who would that be?
God. Okay, we'll leave it at that for
the moment. From the spirit seven
spirits which are before his throne.
We have the from from him from him which
is and which was to come. And from the
seven spirits and from Jesus Christ who
is the faithful witness, the first
begotten of the dead, and the prince of
the kings of the earth.
And I'll go on that in a minute.
You have you suspect right away that
what you've got here it sounds like the
Trinity, a father, son, and the Holy
Ghost, right?
You got him which is, which was, and
which is to come, which one can argue is
God God in general or God the Father
specifically.
I'll get back to the seven spirits in a
minute. And from Jesus Christ.
Now, when you see Jesus Christ who he is
the faithful witness, first begotten of
the dead, the prince Here's three
identifiers of Jesus Christ. He is the
faithful witness.
He's the first begotten of the dead. And
he's the prince of the kings of the
earth.
These are not only true and and justify
a great deal of discussion on each one
that I'll spare you tonight, but you I
think they're self-evident. But I want
you to notice that these labels are
identified with Christ and will be used
of him throughout the book.
So, later on the book when it says the
faithful witness or if it says the first
begotten of the dead or if it says the
prince of the kings of the earth, who is
he talking about? Here's the linkage. If
you're a computer programmer, this is
like the data division. Usually a
program up front you set up the
identities, what you mean by various
things that you're going to use later.
It's exactly what's happening here.
It's interesting that each of these
phrases have three tenses, a past,
present, and future.
God which was, which is, and which is to
come.
And each one of those are allusions from
elsewhere in the New Testament.
God which was is mentioned in Colossians
1 and John 8 and elsewhere there other
places.
Then we have Jesus Christ. I said he's
the faithful witness, that's past,
that's been done.
He's the first begotten of the dead,
that's now.
And he's becoming in this book the
prince of the kings There's a future.
So, each one of these has a past, a
present, and a future. Do you get the
feeling?
And obviously we take each one and
elaborate, but your notes will have the
verses, you can chase those down
yourself, okay?
Unto him that what? Loved us, washed us
from our
sins in his blood, and made us kings and
priests. There again, it's past. He
loved us. It's interesting that in the
Bible when God says God loved us, past
tense. So, what do you mean past tense?
He loves us now. Absolutely.
But when it says he loved us, past
tense, what is it referring to?
Anyone?
Oh, I got you. What? What is What?
Right on. Gold star. Absolutely, the
crucifixion.
That's a term you'll notice it
carefully. Every time you find that God
loved us, past tense, it's allusion to
the cross, okay?
Unto him that loved us, that's past.
That washed us from our sins in his
blood, that's today, every day.
We're washed through the water by the
word, according to Ephesians.
And in the future, what's the book all
going to show us here? He made us kings
and priests. He's made us, but we become
the kings and priests. So, there's a
past, present, and future. And then
we're going to find when we get to verse
19, the outline of the entire book is in
the same tenses.
Past tense, the things which you have
seen.
In other words, when you get there it'll
be it will have been the visions of
Christ. The things which are, that is
the seven churches and we'll come to
that at the end of the day.
And the things which shall be meta
tauta, after these things. So, again we
have past, present, and future.
It may shock you to realize
that there are these same three tenses,
past, present, and future, in your
salvation.
That may disturb some people.
Well, I have been saved. What do you
mean by that? I have been removed from
the penalty of sin. It's a positional
statement. I'm no longer subject to the
penalty of sin. I have been saved, past
tense. You with me so far? Okay. That
technically would really be called
justification, but I won't go down the
theological path here.
There's a present tense. I'm being saved
every day. What do you mean by that? I'm
saved from the power of sin. Past tense,
penalty of sin. Present tense, power of
sin. That's operational moment by moment
by the power of the Holy Spirit, not by
my flesh.
If men are in my flesh, I've blown it.
I sin.
But if I'm walking moment by moment in
the spirit, then I am being saved from
the power of sin. That process, that
continuing process is called
sanctification.
Okay? There's a third, and that's I
shall be saved
from the presence of sin.
Sometimes called the redemption of our
body.
So, there's three tenses of being saved
also. And you can get in a lot of
trouble by being too absolute when you
see the word saved. You could be saved
from a burning building, it's got
nothing to do with the subject we may be
talking about. You follow me there? So,
there's three tenses, I'll leave you
leave you with that.
The other thing I like to highlight is
how important
the subject is we're dealing with. You
know, there's two major events in God's
achievement list, and one is the
creation of the universe, and the other
is the redemption that we're dealing
with here. Which one's more important?
Well, how do you tell?
Well, one way you can measure something
is how much space in the Bible is is
devoted to it.
Well, space, you got in the in the
creation, you've got two chapters in
Genesis, not bad. You got a few Psalms
and a few chapters in Job, several
chapters in Isaiah, and that's about it.
You've done it, pretty much.
How many chapters are
devoted to the redemption? The whole
Book of Genesis.
Book of Exodus, Book of Leviticus, the
whole Torah in fact. Joshua, Ruth, the
prophets, the gospels, they're all
having to do with the with the
redemption.
The all the epistles, that's what
they're hammering. And of course the
Book of
Revelation is the climax, which is the
reason I bring these up.
Well, another way to measure something,
how important is it? What did it cost?
The price of the creation?
Which breathed from his nostrils.
He called it into existence.
As astonishing as it is, as
as majestic as it is,
it's something God could do
our vernacular would be with the snap of
his fingers.
What about the redemption? What did it
cost him?
Cost him his son.
Heard a recent message by Joe Fosh that
really moved me.
He had a son that was badly in need of
emergency treatment in the hospital.
And full of blood, and I won't go
through the details, but he gets to the
emergency and they didn't they weren't
ready to deal with him right away and as
his father, he had a fit.
He explained to them that if they didn't
deal with him right now, they're going
to need emergency care.
And he he recounted the pain of a father
seeing his son.
We had you know, Gary had a situation
like that here among our so forth.
What Joe Foss did, he presented the
creation of the crucifixion
from the father's point of view. I never
heard that. Never thought about that
before.
You know, as a father
you'd gladly trade places with your son.
As they spit on him.
As they rammed him through six illegal
trials.
And you go through the whole crucifixion
from the father's point of view.
That he forebear intervening.
Why? For you and me.
For you and me. But can you imagine the
agony of the father
seeing his son
put through
that. Anyway.
Let's move on.
John to the seven churches which are in
Asia, grace be unto you and peace from
him which is, which was, which is to
come, the seven spirits.
We took the first and third. We didn't
take this other one.
I personally believe that the seven
spirits are an idiom
of the Holy Spirit. An Old Testament
phrase of the Holy Spirit. There are
other people have different views. They
suspect the seven spirits are the seven
angels.
The seven spirits which are
There are prominently seven angels
mentioned.
There are seven churches each have an
angel. We're not talking about them I
don't believe. But the seven trumpets
and the seven bowls will be administered
by seven angels. And there's some people
that see those seven angels as the key
players. And they may be right. But
uh
I personally notice in Isaiah chapter 11
is that we have the sevenfold Holy
Spirit mentioned there.
The spirit of Yahweh Yahweh the so
respond him, the spirit of wisdom,
spirit of understanding, spirit of
counsel, spirit of might, spirit of
knowledge, and the spirit of fear of the
Lord. There's seven elements.
And
there are a number of us, not not not
universal, but number of us that that
see that as the sevenfold expression of
the Holy Spirit.
There are others that argue that these
the last six are in three pairs and that
this really represents something else.
And so they may be right.
Uh we'll we'll leave that with you. But
there I I'm intrigued that there are in
fact seven elements there. It's a
sevenfold. And that also makes that
thing a a a allusion to the Trinity.
But moving on, unto him that loved us,
washed us from his from our sins in his
own blood, and hath made us kings and
priests unto God his father. To him be
glory and dominion forever and ever.
This is
John finishing his salutation that opens
his letter.
But he uses this It makes makes an
interesting remark here that he hath
made us kings and priests.
We're going to make a big thing of that
when we get to chapter five four and
five.
Because there are only three people that
are kings and priests.
You may recall all through Israel the
kings were of the tribe of Judah, the
priests from the tribe of Levi. And they
were to stay separate. A couple of
occasions they were crossing that line
and it was a no-no.
Kings and priests in Israel were
separate
mandates.
There are only three people in the Bible
that are both. Melchizedek is singled
out in Genesis 14 and and elaborated in
the
in the in a couple of places in the
Psalms. And then the book of Hebrews
makes a big thing of that Melchizedek
was a king and a priest, very unique.
The only other In fact, the other one is
Jesus Christ.
He's a king and a priest.
There's a third.
And that's identified right here.
You and I
if we're believers in Christ
hath made us kings and priests.
And that's going to be an important
identity piece forthcoming. So I call to
your attention now.
Then John continued, "Behold, he cometh
with clouds. And every eye shall see him
and they also which pierced him."
Sounds like an echo from Zechariah 12:10
so forth.
"And all the kindreds of the earth shall
wail because of him. Even so, amen."
Do I hear an amen?
Amen. Okay, good.
And
"I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and
the end ending," saith the Lord, "which
is and which was and which is to come,
the Almighty." Boy, I love that.
Love that.
Book of Revelation
will
will deal in superlatives in every
direction.
And the ultimate superlative is his
majesty.
I am Alpha and Omega. I think most of
you realize Alpha is the first letter of
the Greek alphabet, Omega the last
letter.
In the Hebrew you'd say the aleph and
the tau. In the English you'd say the A
and the Z. But the same you get the
idea. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the
beginning and the ending.
Which is, which was, which is to come,
the Almighty.
Now John starts the That was all by his
opening
breath.
Verse nine. "I John
who also am your brother and companion
in tribulation and in the kingdom and in
patience of Jesus Christ
was in the isle that is called Patmos
for the word of God and for the
testimony of Jesus Christ." This is the
occasion he calls attention. It's John.
He's going to refer to himself five
times
um
in if in this book alone.
Uh there was fashionable some scholars
have tried to attack the the the
authorship of John, but it that that is
easily shredded. It's very clear
uh competent scholars agree there's no
doubt that that he wrote it and so
forth.
So we have to waste time on that issue.
Um
John of course was born of Bethsaida to
Zebedee and Salome. He had a He was the
probably the younger of two brothers. Um
and they were fairly well off. Salome
ends up being a major financier of
Christ's ministry later on.
Uh they were Galilean
He's John was a Galilean fisherman like
his father. In fact, he was in partners
with his brother and with Peter and
Andrew in the fishing business. They
even had um
servants. So it was not a trivial
enterprise.
And so uh uh He was an early disciple of
John the Baptist to begin with.
And of course something else about John
most people don't realize, he apparently
was very well connected. Not only to
come from a
a a a non-trivial family financially,
but he also knew the high priest and
also knew Nicodemus somehow.
So he's he's apparently comfortable with
these people. So he's well connected for
whatever reasons.
He also turns out to be one of the inner
circle of Jesus Christ. There were 12
disciples, but three of them were really
insiders in a very special way. Three of
them, Peter, James, and John. Peter and
the two brothers, James and John.
Were at the Mount Transfiguration. We've
talked a little bit about that to to
today again.
They were also the three that were
allowed in when Jesus raised Jairus's
daughter
in Matthew nine.
The three of them
and Andrew along with them were the were
the ones that Jesus gave a confidential
briefing on the second coming to, called
the Olivet discourse.
And also the three of them were closer
to Jesus in Gethsemane. They were all
disciples were there, but three went
closer with Jesus as he went a little
further. And so you you really get the
if you watch your gospels, you see a
number places where James Peter, James,
and John are
uh are the closest
three to the Lord. And of course John,
this is interesting. Jesus assigns the
care of his mother not to his brothers.
He had several of them.
But to the Apostle John.
And that becomes important to us. He
wrote And John I believe wrote a letter
to her that you have in your Bibles.
It's called Second John.
Read it and come to your own
conclusions.
And John ultimately after this event of
Patmos
he was on Patmos because of Domitian,
but then when Domitian dies, he's
released and he goes to Ephesus and and
sets things in order and then retires.
Now if you look at a map
between
In other words, west of Turkey but east
of of Greece is the Aegean Sea. And
there's a little island there. It's
really part of Turkey today called
Patmos.
And if we zero in on that a little
better
about 24 miles offshore
um the
uh
for all it's 24 miles I should say from
from the coast of Turkey. It's about 40
miles from Miletus which is the port
side of the peninsula from Ephesus is
this island this island called
Patmos. If you're if you're from
California you spend any time on
Catalina, it's very very similar both in
shape in agriculture and in distance
from the from you know, one's 24, one's
26, but that's not equivalent. It it's
it's all Catalina's also sort of
crescent shaped and very similar if you
spent time there. But anyway, that's
Patmos and
a penal colony at the time.
And so he was exiled by Domitian which
means he wrote the book apparently about
96 AD. This is an important thing. Many
so-called scholars will try to tell you
it was written a lot earlier than that
cuz they have their axe to grind. Turns
out you can pretty well demonstrate it
was written um uh
at the end of the first century. Very
late in John's life, very late in that
century. John leads lives
uh
to be pretty old. Uh Domitian is the
brother of Titus who's the one that
destroyed Jerusalem. Um
Hippolytus has uh spreads this rumor
that he's first plunged in boiling oil
and then sent to the isle of exile.
That's just one of these traditions or
legends that's pretty well disputed by
most serious scholars.
Victor Ernest says that he was forced to
work in the mines located on Patmos. I
could not find any evidence of mines on
Patmos. I did It's another one of these
traditions that show up.
But Irenaeus, Clement, and Eusebius
all point out that after Domitian dies
um
that Trajan takes over that John returns
to Ephesus
sets the churches in order and he
retires there.
He really retires there.
Okay. Now we get into verse 10 and 11.
John starts the narrative. "I was in the
spirit on the Lord's day and heard
behind me a great voice as of a trumpet.
Saying, "I am Alpha and Omega, the first
and the last, and what thou seest, write
in the book and send it to the seven
churches which are in Asia.
And to Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamus,
Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and
Laodicea."
Well, let's take this apart. First of
all, on what day of the week
did was was John in the spirit to
receive this thing?
If you say Sunday, you flunk.
Good for you. We don't know that it was
Saturday, but it's a better answer.
We don't know the day of the week.
Everybody assumes, many scholars even
jump to the conclusion that when he
says, "I'm in the spirit on the Lord's
day,"
that that's what he's talking about.
Let's talk a little bit about that.
Um
is Sunday the Lord's day?
Most of us
if you've been in the medieval church
or the remnant after that church, after
a thousand years of indoctrination,
assume that Sunday's the Lord's day.
The the Sabbath, the Shabbat, was
ordained in Eden, in Genesis chapter
two.
Shabbat was observed before the law was
given.
In Exodus 16, when the manna falls, they
gather it on every day except Shabbat.
That's interesting cuz that's Exodus 16.
The law was given, the 10 Commandments
and all that, in Exodus chapter 20, four
chapters later. The point I'm getting at
is uh the the Shabbat, the the
observation of the Sabbath was ordained
before the 10 Commandments. The 10
Commandments say, "Remember the Sabbath
day." It's simply incorporating that
practice into the 10.
We know from Daniel 7:25 that the spirit
of the Antichrist, if not the Antichrist
personally, will seek to change the
times and the laws. How interesting.
Now,
if you look at a modern calendar, and I
have a picture here one of this year
from Europe,
and uh it's interesting on this calendar
that it starts on Monday, first day of
the week.
And they do that to make Sunday the
seventh day of the week. Really? That's
kind of interesting. You mean that
Monday's the first day of the week and
Sunday is the seventh day of the week. I
didn't know that.
Neither did the writer
of the Bible.
Because upon the first day of the week,
very early in the morning, they came
into the sepulcher. What day was that?
Easter Saturday? No, we call it Easter
Sunday, right?
And that's not just in Matthew 28:1,
it's Mark 16, Luke 24, John 20. It is
one of those few things that's recorded
in all four Gospels.
No, we need to understand
that
from the beginning, the um
uh
the the Lord's appointed day, by his own
definition, all through the Torah,
is uh
Shabbat, the seventh day. That's when
the Lord himself rested, and he honors
that day, and he calls that day an
appointment with him.
Well, we don't have to keep the Sabbath.
You're right, you don't have to keep the
Sabbath, I guess.
But it's his appointment. You're going
to miss it?
It's up to you. But anyway, so uh that
that's why many people get concerned
about that. Now, it's interesting, it
the Bible says many places, "Do not move
the ancient landmarks."
I never associated that with the seventh
day until a rabbi pointed that out to
me.
That's kind of interesting. That's a
very fundamental landmark
that we tend to move.
I'll point out something else if you
say, "Well, that changed that you know
that that that changed when Christ rose
from the dead."
Well, that's interesting because the
Lord gets back and sets up himself in
the millennial temple, according to
Ezekiel,
the millennial temple will only be open
on Saturday,
not on Sunday.
On Saturday, and you check that out in
Ezekiel 46:1.
On Sabbath and also on the new moon on
the month, the new moon.
So,
now, G Chuck, what are you saying? We
shouldn't worship on Sunday? No, you can
worship any day you like.
For a Christian, every day is holy.
And we on we worship those that worship
on Sunday worship to celebrate the
Lord's resurrection. Not knocking it.
Not knocking it.
But um
what we're supposed to do is show his
death until he comes. There's a
resurrection that validates the death,
but anyway, we could go down that path
if you like.
Paul does seem to take us off the hook.
He says, "Let no man therefore judge you
in meat or in drink or in respect of any
holy day or of the new moon or of the
Sabbath days, which are a shadow of
things to come,
but the body is of Christ."
So, don't let it become a big division.
But that what Nan and I try to do is
uh
observe in our own simple way
Shabbat, from Friday night through
sundown Friday through sundown Saturday.
We we have three rules.
Whatever we do, we do deliberately.
And we do together.
Rule two.
And the third rule is there are no other
rules.
My kind of deal.
And uh so, worship when you like, don't
let it be a point of division, but it's
interesting, the more you Anyone that
thinks it's a simple issue hasn't
studied it.
It's it's worthy of your own individual
study, come to your own conclusions.
But
John says, "I was in the spirit,"
obviously on the day of the Lord on
Patmos, but he also says it in three
other occasions, before the throne in
chapter four,
when he's carried away in the wilderness
in chapter 17, and then on a big
mountain in chapter 21. We'll deal with
that when we get there.
Now, the the verse 11 says as he says,
"I am Alph- Jesus said, "I am Alpha and
Omega, the first and the last."
Want to come back to that phrase in a
little bit.
"What thou seest, write in the book and
send it to the seven churches which are
in Asia.
To Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamus, Thyatira,
Sardis, Philadelphia, and Laodicea."
It's interesting that the entire book of
Revelation is like a cover letter that
is then sent I mean, it's sent with a
cover letter to seven churches.
So, it wasn't one church, it was these
seven all got a copy.
The seven churches which are in Asia,
again, that's the province of Asia, and
uh
they're not the only seven churches in
the province of Asia. Some scholars say
they were, that's not true. Yeah, we're
uh
Laodicea was right
virtually adjacent to Colossae and
Hierapolis, all of which are mentioned
in the Bible. That valley has three.
Why weren't the others mentioned? Why
these seven? We're going to come to
that.
Seven churches.
We'll come to that later. Let's go to
the verses 12 through 18. This is a core
part of chapter one. We touched on it
lightly last time. Let's go a little
more carefully. The vision of the risen
Christ.
John says, "I turned to see the voice
that spake with me." The one that said,
"I am Alpha and Omega." It was a voice
behind him, apparently. He turned to see
the voice that spake with me. And being
turned, I saw seven golden lampstands.
And in the midst of the seven
lampstands, one like unto the Son of
Man,
clothed with a garment down to the foot
and girt about
the paps with a golden girdle. Or
putting it another way, across the chest
with a golden uh breastplate kind of
thing.
Okay.
Seven lampstands.
Um
who is the Son of Man?
Jesus Christ.
That term is used of him again and again
in the scripture.
And uh encourage you to take a
concordance, chase it down yourself. We
could spend an hour just talking about
not only that phrase, what it means, but
also the way it's used in the scripture.
Uh the book of Luke's primary focus on
this on that very issue.
But here we actually see a
a a description of the risen Christ.
We see the risen Christ in the Gospels
when he rises from the dead. He has
breakfast there on the Sea of Galilee.
We don't get a description of him.
But here we do. We see him. He's clothed
with a garment down to the foot
and girt about the
the vest or the
with with a a golden
apparatus of some kind.
And we get more. His hair His head and
his hairs
were white like wool.
As white as snow. Here we have not only
the visual, but also the implication of
purity.
And his eyes
were as a flame of fire. Watch out for
that word as and like.
It's such and such is like this or such
and such is as. That means they're using
a simile.
You know what a simile is?
A metaphor is like a simile without the
as and like. They're a little more
difficult, but they're still figures of
speech.
But when you have the as or like, you
don't even have to guess, you know it's
a figure of speech. His eyes weren't a
flame.
His His eyes were as a flame of fire.
You know, and and um indeed, so you
And his feet like unto fine brass. It
doesn't say they were brass, they were
like brass.
But the image here is as if they burned
in the furnace.
So, they're molten bright, if you will.
And his voice
as the sound of many waters.
I think this is interesting contrast
here when you study Elijah. Remember how
he heard the voice of God? It wasn't in
the hurricane, it wasn't the wind, it
wasn't the It was in that still, small
voice.
And I think some of us often hear Christ
speak or God speak to us
in that still, small voice.
We're not talking about that here.
It's a roar of a mighty ocean.
His voice like the sound of many waters.
But let's take this term brass.
What I'm going to show you here is the
kind of thing I want you to do with your
own concordance. One of your most
powerful commentaries in the book of
Revelation is not somebody's commentary,
although I don't discourage you from
getting those, but is to get a Strong's
concordance or even or there are even
some better ones. Get a Get a
concordance, and when you find a word
like brass,
you can find out every place it appears
in the Bible,
and you can see how it's used to see
what it means.
You'll also discover for many of these
things the law first mention.
Where it's first mentioned is often
very, very important, but let's just
take this word brass. That should remind
you of this strange episode in Numbers
21. You may recall that the Lord sent
fiery According Starting in sorry, verse
six. The Lord sent fiery serpents
among the people, and they bit the
people, and much people of Israel died.
There's a preamble here why God is doing
this, but I'm going to set that aside
for now. These serpents are killing
people.
Therefore, the people came to Moses and
said, "We have sinned, for we have
spoken against the Lord and against
thee. Pray unto the Lord that he may
take away the serpents from us."
So, they're getting a a judgment. They
understand why they're getting it,
apparently.
And so, but can you pray can you can you
stop this thing?
And so, Moses prayed for the people.
Okay?
Now, God has lots of different ways he
could deal with it. He could make the
serpents go away. He could just stop
There's all kinds of ways you could
imagine. He does something weird. Really
weird.
Lord said unto Moses, "Make thee a fiery
brazen, turns out what, serpent and set
it upon a pole.
And it shall come to pass that everyone
that is bitten, when he looketh upon it,
shall live."
Moses made a serpent of brass and put it
on a pole, and it came to pass that if a
serpent had bitten any man, when he
beheld the serpent of brass, he lived.
Now, come on. That's pretty weird.
You're grateful that he did it,
but you've got to be asking yourself,
"What on earth is that all about?"
A A serpent is a symbol of sin.
A brass serpent on a pole up on a hill?
If I look at that, I'm cured?
That's got to be weird.
But here's the point that further.
You can read the rest of the Old
Testament and not get an answer on this
thing. What's this all about? In fact,
when you get to the days of Hezekiah,
that brass serpent is still hanging
around and people are worshipping it.
So, Hezekiah takes it and destroys it.
It's a thing of brass.
See, you say you have the same danger
with the Shroud of Turin.
The Shroud of Turin is dangerous if it's
real. I don't know if it's real or not.
Some people think it is. If it is, it's
dangerous. Why? Cuz people will start to
look to it
rather than God or Jesus or whatever.
But here we are. The whole test- We go
all the way to the end of the Old
Testament. This makes no sense
until
that night with Nicodemus.
When Jesus says something that Jesus
Jesus is talking to Nicodemus, who's a
ruler. He was the teacher of the people,
by the way. He was the top top teacher
at that time.
Jesus says to him, "As Moses lifted up
the serpent in the wilderness, even so
must the Son of Man be lifted up.
That whosoever believeth in him should
not perish, but have eternal life."
Suddenly, the fog lifts. Oh!
That's why God put a serpent on a pole,
because it's a type, an emblem in
advance
of the cross.
Did they know that in the days of Moses?
I don't think so.
They may have had some suspicions. He
may have had some insights not recorded.
But it makes no sense until Jesus
explains it to you. You with me?
Not only that, this
phrase that Jesus said here sets up
the most important verse the what most
well-known verse of the Bible. The next
verse.
For God so loved the world
that he gave
his only begotten son.
That whosoever believeth in him should
not perish, but have everlasting life.
How often we quote that?
That's verse 16. The The previous were
14 and 15.
For God so loved There again, past
tense.
How did he love us?
That he gave his son.
His only begotten son. That whosoever
believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting
life.
Verse 16. John 3:16. We all know it.
That's the kind But it's interesting
until that episode, there's no way you
can make sense of this brazen serpent. I
mention that not just because of the
point it's making. There's another
lesson here.
That's what we would call a macro code.
It's a code in the numbers
that anticipates something that hasn't
happened yet.
You see?
The design of that
emblem in Numbers 21 required the
designer to be outside the
dimensionality of time.
Who could see the end from the
beginning. Do you follow me?
The Bible is full of those. Some so
obvious, you miss them. That's one of
them.
Okay, let's move on.
It This had its start, by the way, in
Genesis 3. Remember what God said when
God is declaring war on Satan. He says,
"I'll put enmity between thee and the
woman." That is the Satan and the woman.
"And between thy seed and her seed. And
it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt
bruise his heel." The word bruise there
is a mistranslation. That word is shoof,
which can mean bruise or crush.
Well, let's move back to Revelation 16.
And he had in his right hand seven
stars, and out of his mouth went a sharp
two-edged sword, and his countenance was
as the sun shineth in his strength.
He had his right hand seven stars. No
problem with that one. We'll get to that
in a minute anyway. And out of his mouth
went a sharp two-edged sword. You know,
there are paintings in art museums
of Jesus Christ with a flaming sword
coming out of his mouth. The picture's
actually quite grotesque, cuz they took
that literally.
Well, Chuck, don't you take the Bible
literally? Yes, I do, but that's a
figure of speech.
Let me prove it to you.
What is a two-edged sword in the
scripture?
Hebrews 4:12. The word of God is quick,
that is alive, is alive and powerful,
and sharper than a two-edged sword,
piercing even the dividing of soul and
spirit, and of the joints and marrow,
and is a discerner of the thoughts and
intents of the heart. Therein lies the
frustration of the whole field of
psychology, cuz they can't discern
between soul and spirit. No way. Can't
possibly be done.
They can do what they want with the
soul,
but they can't discern the spirit, cuz
it says so. And there's a lot of other
reasons they can't. Anyway, the point is
that the the only only the word of God
makes that discernment.
And uh
two-edged sword again. Let's go to
Ephesians 6. Take the helmet of
salvation. Remember the seven elements
of armor?
All right. Take the helmet of salvation
and what? The sword of the spirit.
What's the sword of the spirit?
The word of God. Right.
And Revelation 3:16. He had his right
hand seven stars. Out of his mouth went
a sharp two-edged sword. And his
countenance, his face,
was was as
as again, the simile coming, was as the
sun shineth in his strength.
Well, wait a minute. When did that
happen in the past?
John would remember when that happened
in the past.
Okay? His countenance was as the sun. In
Matthew 16,
they were He says very
Let's let's start with last verse of
Matthew 16. He says, "Verily I say unto
you, there shall be some standing here
that shall not taste of death till they
see the Son of Man coming in his
kingdom." That ends chapter 16. Many
people wonder, "When did that happen?"
That's because you forget those chapter
divisions are man's convenience, not
part of
Verse 17 Chapter 17 says, "And after six
days, Jesus taketh Peter, James, and
John, his brother, and bringeth them up
into a high mountain apart, and was
transfigured before them, and his face
did shine as what?"
The sun. Exactly. And his raiment was
white as light. The transfiguration of
Christ is, I believe, what he's talking
about.
So, his countenance was as the sun
shineth in his strength.
What does John do in Revelation verse
seven Chapter 1:17?
"And when I saw him, I fell at his feet
as dead, and he laid his right hand upon
me, saying to me, 'Fear not.
I am the first and the last.' That's a
strange phrase.
We encountered it back in verse 11. I
didn't want to stumble over it then.
We'll pick it up now.
The first and the last. This is worth
jotting some notes down. Okay?
For lots of reasons, but one of the
things you will have your door Someone
will knock on your door.
I don't know if they'll be riding
bicycles, but they'll knock on your
door. And they will want to talk to you
about Jehovah God.
And if they do, you take them initially
to Isaiah 41:4.
Where Isaiah tells us who Speaking of
God, who hath wrought and done it,
calling the generations from the
beginning, "I am the Lord, the first and
the last. I am he."
You say, "Who is that?" Well, that's
actually they'll That's Jehovah God.
They're light lit up, cuz you
Take them to Isaiah 44:6.
"Thus saith the Lord God, the Lord the
King of Israel, his redeemer, the Lord
of hosts, I am the first and I am the
last. Beside me, there is no God."
Who's that? Well, that's Jehovah God.
They're with you now. They're You're
locked arm in arm. One more.
Isaiah 48:12. "Hearken unto me, O Jacob
and Israel, my called,
I am he. I am the first and I also am
the last."
Say, "Who's that?"
Well, now they're getting kind of What
that Come on. That's all the Jehovah
God. Good.
Then you go to their favorite book. They
love the Book of Revelation, right?
And you come down to verse 17. I fell at
his feet as dead, and he laid his right
hand upon me, saying unto me, "Fear not.
I am the first and the last." Say,
"Who's that?"
Well, that's Jehovah God. Had to be.
Same guy, right? Okay.
And you go to verse Well, 11 I talked
about. We mentioned that before. I'm
Alpha and Omega, the first and the last,
so forth.
And then you get to verse eight. I
usually save this one for last.
"Unto the angel of the church of Smyrna
write, 'These things saith the first and
the last,
which was dead,
and is alive.'"
Whoops.
Who's that?
And you can't escape that that's Jesus
Christ.
He obviously died and rose from the
dead, but he's also
the same guy, the first and the last. He
is Jehovah God in their in their
vernacular.
And we go to verse chapter 22. Uh "I'm
Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the
end, the first and the last." There he
is again.
The one that bothers them, of course, is
chapter 2:8, "Which was dead and alive."
They all stumble on that one, unless
they have a twist that they can throw at
you. So, we've got this mentioned four
three times in Isaiah, four times in
Revelation. How many times do you see
first and last? Anyone want to guess?
Seven. Okay.
All right.
And it's interesting that two of them,
verse 18 and verse
chapter two verse eight, he was dead and
I'm alive. That's his boast. That's his
identity.
The risen Lord. Okay.
So we looked at the vision chapter one.
It's got seven features. The hair on his
head is a virtually a quote from Daniel
chapter seven verse nine.
Hair as white as wool and all that
business. Okay. His eyes as a flaming
fire. Okay. That's all through the New
Testament at least four three times in
the New Testament once in the Old
Testament.
His feet, which is a symbol of his walk,
right?
Brass judgment, we talked about that.
The brazen serpent, we
you can put your notes on that.
His voice as many waters is a phrase
used twice by Ezekiel once by Daniel
chapter 10.
His on his right hand are seven stars
and seven lampstands in the It's
interesting we're going to talk more
about these stars and lampstands, but
notice something strange. They're in his
hand.
And yet he's in the midst of them.
I don't think you can draw that.
But you're going to understand it.
You see we are in his hand, in his
protection. And yet he he's among us.
Where two or three are gathered, he's
among us, right?
His mouth two-edged sword, we covered
that.
But it what his mouth does it judges the
unbeliever in John 12.
It smites the earth in Isaiah 11 and the
Antichrist is consumed by his word by
words of his mouth in 2 Thessalonians 2.
So his mouth is an nontrivial instrument
of war.
His countenance as the sun, that gives
you seven of those. Okay.
Okay, now we get to the verse that's
going to be very important to you. You
want to really understand this verse if
you're going to understand the book of
Revelation.
And that's
chapter one verse 19.
He John is instructed to write the
things which thou hast seen.
No problem. What had he seen by verse
19? He had seen the risen Lord. He saw
the vision of Christ. That's what he had
seen. Write what you had seen. He just
did. Chapter one.
The things which are
and the things which shall be hereafter.
See we got past, present, future tense
structure here again.
Okay, write the things which thou hast
seen, that's the vision of Christ which
occupies the bulk of chapter one.
Write the things which are, the things
which are existing right now. That'll
turn out to be chapters two and three.
There are seven churches that can
receive seven letters. And I'm going to
suggest to you right up front
that the most important part of this
entire book is chapters two and three.
Chapters four on have a lot of
fascinating insights and material. Don't
misunderstand me.
But you're going to watch that from the
mezzanine, I believe. I'll show you why
I believe that.
But the part that affects you and me
today, tomorrow, and next week,
whatever, is chapter two and three. You
need to understand You may not be able
to figure out who the
trumpets are, what the bowls are,
what these strange creatures in chapter
nine are about. You don't care.
Cuz you'll watch that from the
mezzanine.
From a rooting section.
No, the part that affects us is chapters
two and three.
Cuz after and then we have that which
follows after the churches.
And uh
so we're going to focus primarily on
chapters two and three in the next
several sessions.
And that then leads to the last verse of
chapter one, the preparation for
chapters two and three.
Mystery
Jesus continues, "The mystery of the
seven stars which thou sawest in my
right hand and the seven golden
lampstands." Colon, it's not even a
complete sentence. It's sort of a title
in a introductory title.
"The seven stars are the angels of the
seven churches
and the seven lampstands which thou
sawest are the seven churches."
You with me so far?
Okay.
Question.
Where are the lampstands in chapter one
right now?
In this in the imagery of the of the of
the of chapter one. Where are they?
On the earth. You got it.
You're going to find them in heaven in
chapter four.
Many people overlook that. It's not a
big proof. I'll show you some other
things that make it more conclusive. But
just understand the consistency here.
The seven lampstands represent Why
lampstands? Cuz they are light bearers.
What's the church's mission? To bear the
light. The Israel was supposed to bear
the light. That's why the menorah is
today the symbol of Israel.
Not the star of David on their flag,
that's an emblem, fine. The official
symbol of the state of Israel is the
menorah, the seven-branch candlestick.
Why? Well, for lots of reasons, not the
least of which it represents their
mission to be a light to the world. They
were intended to be the proclaimers of
the of the of the creator and the
redeemer.
Here we have seven lampstands.
Seven churches. Are there more than
seven churches? Of course, there are
dozens of churches. One of the
assignments I want you to think about
between now and the next session, why
these seven?
If you're a student, I'd have you make a
list of the churches in the New
Testament that are not.
You can you can come to 20 or 30 of them
that aren't mentioned. Where's the
church in Jerusalem? The church at Rome?
The church at Antioch was the primary
base camp for the proclamation of the
gospel of the Gentiles.
Not mentioned here? You can you can
mention you'll think of a lot of Lister,
Derby, there's a bunch of them.
Why these seven? We'll talk about that.
Okay.
Seven churches, the things which are.
Why these seven?
Each
letter
has a peculiar phrase in it. There's one
phrase, only one phrase, that occurs in
each of the seven letters. It's a
closing phrase to the letter.
"He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit says to the churches."
By the time you go through chapters two
and three, you'll be tired of hearing
that, so to speak. Okay? Cuz it's there
on every letter.
There I'm going to suggest to you
for your own confirmation, you figure
out for yourself, but there are four
levels
of interpretation or application
of these seven letters.
The first is they are local. They really
were churches operating at that time. In
fact, Sir William Ramsay
conducted an intensive archaeological
investigation.
Skeptically at first, totally convinced
when he was finished, that these
churches not only were actually existed,
they had local problems that the letters
were relevant to.
And we'll talk about some of that as we
go through the four letters or seven
letters.
But they had they were literal churches
in John's day that needed the Lord's
counsel.
Okay.
That one's a no-brainer. We got it so
far? Okay.
There I'm going to suggest they're
admonitory
to all churches. Notice what it says,
"He that hath an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit says to the churches."
See, all seven letters were sent to all
seven churches.
Yes, one was addressed to Ephesus, but
they were all supposed to read and learn
from it.
Another was dressed to You see, you
follow me?
Churches is in the plural, which means
"He that Let him hear what the Spirit
says to the churches." Plural. They're
all supposed to watch all of them. You
got it? So there must be lessons there
appropriate to the churches in general.
And we can suspect
that since there are seven churches, in
some sense they embrace all churches.
Once you learn those seven letters
in depth,
you can profile every church
in terms of percentages.
Every church has some elements of all
seven letters, even the uncomplimentary
ones.
But different churches have you They're
Oh, this one, they're 70% X and only 10%
Y. You You know, you follow what I'm
saying?
The The seven become a sevenfold
space in which you can map any church.
Some good, some bad. They're all there.
So it's important to understand. They're
report cards.
Okay.
But this phrase also says, "He that hath
an ear." How many of you in this room
have an earlobe? Can I see a show of
hands?
Then this letter These letters, all of
them, are written to you.
I know Philadelphia's written to me, but
no, what about the others? Okay.
Okay.
So they're homiletic, that is, they're
personally they're
they're intended for personal
application. This is not something I'm
contriving, that's embraced in the very
language of the letters. We tend to
overlook it because they're addressed to
a particular church. No, it's addressed
to the church you're going to, whichever
it is, in some degree. And it's also
addressed to you personally.
Personally. So you see why this becomes
the most important part of the entire
book. Okay.
But now there's a fourth part
that I hope you will take it skeptically
at first, but I'm going to suggest
before it's over you may be absolutely
stunned with the next one.
And that is
these seven letters
will outline a profile
of 2,000 years of church history.
You say, "Chuck, that's speculation."
Yes, it is.
It's conjecture in part.
But you'll be able to make your own
conclusions before we're through.
But I'll put this right up front. If the
letters were in any other order, that
wouldn't be true.
In the order that they're in, once you
understand them, they lay out the
history
of the church on the planet Earth.
Now I know some people say, "Well, the
church, you know,
the old story about the the
the elder that comes to the pastor and
says,
'They're chewing gum in the sanctuary.'"
Pastor says, "No, no, the sanctuary is
chewing gum."
In other words, we are.
So and yes, the church,
you know, we're we're the temple of God
and all that. Yes, but here the term
church is being used for these
geographical churches, churches as we
tend to use the term, not as buildings,
but as
uh assemblies that are in various
locations. Okay.
Okay. Now here's their prophetic
profile. We've got
Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamus, Thy Sardis,
Philadelphia, and Laodicea. And I'm
going to suggest before it's over that
each one of these churches have a not
only a history, a future.
And that future is reflected in the
letters in a way that's astonishing. The
more you know about this, the more
astonishing it'll become. So, that's my
challenge to you because between now and
next session, I want you to read Your
general assignment is to read the entire
book of Revelation between each meeting.
It's not that long. Don't Don't groan.
But I certainly want you to read
chapters 2 and 3, all
both chapters before next session for
some reasons.
But I want you to really understand
the first seven verses of chapter 2.
But we'll get
You're going to discover that each of
the seven letters has seven How many How
many design elements would be in each
letter? Make a guess. Seven. Good guess.
Good guess.
The name of the church will turn out to
be meaningful to the letter.
What a coincidence.
The title Christ uses of himself is
relevant to the letter.
Not when you first read it. When you
understand the letter and you go back,
you realize Jesus chose of the many
titles of himself, he picks the one that
particularly relates to the problems in
that church. You follow me?
There is It's a report card. There's a
commendation.
You did these things well.
Well done here, here, here, and here.
Great. Good. Well done.
Then he has the concerns. Whoops.
You got to work on this area or that
area. It's a report card.
Then there's an exhortation. It's
obviously consistent with that. Here's
what I want you to do. Here's your
remedial assignment, right?
And then there's a promise to the
overcomer. Each letter has this little
uh you know, promise to the overcomer.
The overcomer will get this or that.
Some something special. Each one's
different. Each one There's seven
different ones.
And then he has this close this peculiar
closing. He that hath an ear,
let him hear what the Spirit says to the
churches.
These seven elements
are the seven basic elements of all
seven letters. Here's the thing that
makes it a little complicated. You'll
discover that in the first three
letters, the close
the promise to the overcomer is not in
the letter, it's in a postscript.
It comes after the letter's finished.
That's kind of weird. And it's
consistent in the first three letters.
Why?
In the last four letters, the promise to
the overcomer is in the body of the
letter.
What's that got to do with anything?
Um you'll also discover two of the
letters
have nothing good said about them.
Whoops.
Two of the letters have nothing bad said
about them.
That's wild.
But here's the more important part.
Every one of the recipients of all seven
was surprised.
The guys that thought they were doing
well weren't.
The guys that thought they weren't doing
well were.
And the lesson is
that we don't really have the ability to
second-guess our own report card.
Let's find out what how Christ's report
card reads of our church or more
specifically us personally. That's why
we're going to get into this with some
substance.
So, we have these churches' report
cards, seven of them. And uh we'll talk
about each of the names and we'll talk
about each of the
um titles that Christ uses. Each one's
different. And we'll go through each one
of these and we'll also obviously deal
with the structure when we get there.
Now, just just back up and wrap it up.
The New Testament is in the Old
Testament concealed.
And the Old Testament is in the New
Testament revealed.
The Old Testament closes with
unfulfilled prophecies, unappeased
longings,
and so forth. That Old Testament is
incomplete in itself.
And what it lacks is right there in in
the New Testament.
And we believe it's prophetic. Over
8,000 According to one categorization by
J. Barton Payne is in something we
biblical prophecy, he catalogs over
8,000 predictive verses in the Bible on
almost 2,000 predictions on over 700
different matters.
And we live in a day where there are
major themes unfolding. Israel,
Jerusalem, the temple, Babylon,
Russia or Magog,
the rise of China, European superstate,
ecumenicalism,
the move towards a global government,
the rise of the occult. These are all
trends
that are clearly converging to a climax
and each one of them is mappable in
terms of Bible prophecy.
And that's why I always like to throw
this up as a challenge. One last
challenge. You heard me before, but I'll
put it up again.
And if you accept the challenge I put on
the screen, you flunked the course.
I want you to skeptically attack or
challenge this preposterous
assertion.
That you and I are being plunged
into a period of time about which
the Bible says more than it does about
any other period of time in history
including the time that Jesus walked the
shores of Galilee or climbed the
mountains of Judea.
That's absurd. More than the gospel
period? Yes.
I believe you and I are going to be are
being plunged into a period of time
the Bible says more than it does even
about the gospel period. Now, to
challenge that
audacious statement, you got to do two
things.
You got to find out what the Bible says.
Not what Chuck Missler says or your
favorite prophecy club or whatever. What
the Bible says. Find out what it says.
Part one. Part two.
Used to be hard, not today. Find out
what's going on.
You won't on the 10:00 news, even on Fox
News. You got to do better than that.
You can
Find out what's really happening.
On the internet, talk radio,
proprietary news. There's all kinds of
ways, all kinds of resources available.
Find out what the Bible says. Find out
what's going on. The more you know about
the Bible and the more you know about
what's really going on in the world, the
more you'll can observe
the convergence of these things into the
ultimate climax.
But the ultimate issue is that you and I
are in fact in possession of a message
of extraterrestrial origin. We'll see
that manifestly in the book of
Revelation.
It portrays us
as both the participants and the objects
of an unseen and invisible cosmic
warfare.
Whether you know it or not, you are in
it, in the middle of it. You're on enemy
turf tonight.
And our yours and mine, your eternal
destiny and mine depends on our
relationship with the ultimate victor in
that conflict.
But I peeked ahead.
We win.
And where do you Where do you stand with
respect to him? That's what this is
really all about. Now, for the next
session, here are your assignments. Read
the entire book. It's not that book. I
want you to by rereading it, rereading
it, grasp the an overview of It's really
a symphony. It's very
uh interwoven.
Examine chapters 2 and 3 cuz that's
going to be the primary uh
area of inquiry of the next few
sessions.
Outline the first seven verses of
chapter 2 if you can. I've given you the
outline. I've given you seven elements.
Structure them.
Just just write out the verses, but part
part you know, partition them in terms
of those seven elements.
And you I know that I'm asking you to
summarize the Ephesians, which is the
first of the seven letters, the book of
the letter to the church of Ephesus.
Summarize their report card.
And we'll go into Acts 20 and some other
background as we look at that next time.
Acts 20 You want to read Acts 20:16-38.
That was the middle to the end of the
chapter.
And you may also want to take a look at
Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians. It's
one of the most rewarding
of all the Epistles. Sometimes when I'm
in an airport and I got a few minutes
before the plane goes and I'm not sure
what else to do, I'll just pop my Bible
and read the book of Ephesians.
There's a couple of reasons. That's just
That's right up there cuz I know no
matter what
my mind's been on, whatever hassles I've
had, that pulls me out of it and it is
so high-flying.
It is so awesome.
And there are so many subtle surprises
in that book.
That letter. So, I encourage you. Those
six chapters is no big deal.
Let's stand for a closing word of
prayer.
Father, we just praise you for who you
are. We thank you
that in your kingdom there are no
accidents, no coincidences, that we're
all here right now by your divine
appointment. We do pray, Father,
that your purpose would be accomplished
in each of our lives. We do pray,
Father, that as we enjoy this incredible
tour de force that we call the book of
Revelation.
We thank you
for its edification. We thank you for
its excitement. We thank you for its
majesty. But above all, we thank you for
Jesus Christ. And we
We pray, Father, as we enter the seven
letters that you would use them to speak
to each of us
personally, individually. Help us to
understand
those seven report cards.
And thus, Father, help us to repair
our own
that we each might be more fruitful
stewards
and above all, more pleasing in your
sight. As we commit ourselves
into your hands.
In the name of him which was and is and
shall be forevermore.
Yeshua,
our Lord and Savior,
our King of king and Lord of lords,
in whose name we do pray. Amen.
Mhm.
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