Revelation 4: On Taking Scripture Literally or Figuratively

Today’s reading is Revelation 4.

Sadly, a great deal of confusion exists around the notion of when to take Scripture literally or figuratively. This comes into play with Revelation a great deal. We especially face this as we talk about the meaning of this book with folks who look for Premillennialism in it. (For a refresher on that doctrine, click here.)

Our Premillennial friends assure us we are to take every passage of Scripture as literally as possible. Then they claim they are the only ones who do so. The late Tim Lahaye, co-author of the best-selling “Left Behind” series, makes the following claim in Revelation Unveiled, his commentary on Revelation: “Follow the golden rule of interpretation: When the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, seek no other sense; therefore, take every word at its primary, ordinary, usual, literal meaning unless the facts of the immediate text, studied in the light of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental truths, clearly indicate otherwise.”*

Then, in his discussion of Revelation 4:1-2, he writes: “It was no coincidence that the first thing to happen after John has described the seven churches (which we have seen represent not only a message to each individual church but also to the seven periods of church history) is his being taken up into heaven. Inasmuch as John was the last remaining apostle and a member of the universal Church, his elevation to heaven is a picture of the Rapture of the Church just before the Tribulation begins.”**

Wait a minute! Did you catch what just happened there? Mr. LaHaye asserts he will take every passage literally unless it defies common sense to do so. However, in the second quote he makes two shocking non-literal assertions. First, he claims the letters we read over the last two weeks shouldn’t be taken literally as mere letters to seven churches, but also figuratively as representing seven ages of the church. Second, he claims the opening statements of this week’s chapter isn’t just John being called up to heaven, but represents the Rapturing of the Church prior to the Tribulation. But I ask you, how does the plain sense of the passages defy common sense? Wouldn’t common sense tell us letters to seven churches are just that? No one asserts the other epistles in the New Testament are anything more than just letters to those churches. Nobody reads Paul’s letter to the Romans as representing an age of church history. Why would they start asserting that here? And why would John being called into heaven be anything more than John being called into heaven? After all, Paul told us in 2 Corinthians 12:2-4 about a man (he’s actually talking about himself) who was, in visions and revelations, caught up to the third heaven and also into paradise. Are we to read a rapture of the church into that passage as well? Why would John’s experience here represent anything more than Paul’s experience did?

I share this with you to warn you. Folks who claim they are following some universal, one-size-fits-all, Scripture interpretation rule rarely are. They make assertions and claims. They then ridicule everyone who disagrees with them as not following the rule. Then they, almost without fail, turn around and interpret passages to mean whatever they want them to mean in order to teach their pet doctrine. We must take care not to fall into that same trap.

As we read through Revelation, don’t be duped by simplistic rules of interpretation. Interpretation is hard work in even the simplest of Scriptures, it will be hard work here. Whatever we determine about the meaning of a passage, it must 1) be compatible with the genre of the book, 2) make sense within the historical context and purpose of the book, 3) be consistent within the immediate literary context, and 4) correspond with remote Scriptural teaching. This expanded law of non-contradiction (Scripture won’t contradict itself) will be our most common guide on helping us interpret Revelation.

The rule for determining whether a passage should be read literally or figuratively is simply stated, but not simply followed. Take Scripture literally when it intends to be taken literally. Take it figuratively when it intends to be taken figuratively. Poetry, even when saying things that could make good common sense, is often figurative by its very nature. We know that, and we read it accordingly. The same is true with parables. Jesus wasn’t really telling us about a farmer in the Parable of the Sower. We know that not because the story defied common sense but because of the nature of parables. The same is true with apocalyptic literature like Revelation. We expect to find a great deal of figurative pictures and representations in this book. We expect numbers to be non-literal. We expect grand, exaggerated pictures of just about every aspect of the book. That being said, we’ve already learned we aren’t looking for a metaphorical one-for-one representation of every aspect of every picture. The door standing open in heaven doesn’t represent anything other than John seeing a door in the heavens and then being called up through it in order to see the rest of the heavenly vision. The purpose of this elevation is not to represent the church being taken out of the world at any time. It simply represents John being taken where he needs to go in order to see from the heavenly perspective.

John is about to reveal a heavenly perspective on the tribulation of those early Christians and what God was going to do about it. He had to be given a heavenly vantage point. That is precisely what happens in Revelation 4:1-2. When John tells us he is revealing heavenly things, we can trust him because he was taken into heavenly places.

Tomorrow’s reading is Revelation 4.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does Revelation 4 prompt or improve your praise of God?

*Tim LaHaye, Revelation Unveiled, Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids, 1999, p 17.

**ibid., p. 99.

Revelation 1: Partner in Tribulation and the Kingdom

Today’s reading is Revelation 1.

I guess it’s time to break out the big terms. Revelation is the breeding ground for some famous doctrines with big, confusing names. The most popular in our modern day is Premillennialism which claims Jesus came into the world to set up His kingdom 2000 years ago. However, the Jews killed Him and that fulfillment got put on pause. Some day in our future, He will finally fulfill that and establish a kingdom here on earth for 1000 years, a millennium. It will be a golden millennium (except right at the end when somehow there are an incredible number of enemies who attack out of nowhere and God defeats them). In this teaching, Jesus is expected to come to earth before the millennium or Pre-millennium. Thus, Premillennialism. There are several variations of this doctrine. I won’t get into those here.

Another doctrine more popular in America prior to the Civil War and then practically decimated by the two World Wars is called Postmillennialism. This doctrine says a thousand year reign is coming. That is, a millennial kingdom and golden age will come on the earth. As the gospel spreads around the globe and finally converts more and more people, Christ will establish this millennial kingdom on the earth. Some take the thousand years literally, some figuratively. But the notion is the millennium, the golden age, is yet to come. These however, say Jesus will not return until after the millennium or post the millennium. Thus, Postmillennialism.

A third major doctrine is Amillennialism. This word adds the prefix “A” to the millennium in the same way some add it to the word Theism to come up with Atheism. Theism means belief in God, Atheism means no belief in God. Millennialism means an expectation of a thousand year reign by Christians on earth. Amillennialism means no expectation of that. All cards on the table, I subscribe to this view. This view says Jesus has already established His kingdom on the earth. It asserts the millennium mentioned in Revelation 20 does not refer to a golden age on earth or to a time when Jesus establishes a special kingdom on earth for a thousand years. Allow me to be very clear. This is Amillennialism, not Akingdomism. Jesus is King. He is King already. His Kingdom is already established. We must seek it and enter it. When we become disciples of Jesus Christ in penitent baptism, we are transferred into that kingdom of light (Colossians 1:14). I am not looking for or expecting a thousand-year reign in the future.

Of course, when we get to Revelation 20, we’ll talk about the mention of a thousand years there. You may be asking why I bring all this up now. I do so because of Revelation 1:9. John says:

I, John, your brother and partner in the tribulation and the kingdom and the patient endurance that are in Jesus, was on the island called Patmos on account of the word of God and the testimony of Jesus (ESV).

Many read right through this statement and do not see its significance. Did you catch John claimed to be a partner with his audience in three things? He was partner in 1) the tribulation, 2) the kingdom, and 3) the patient endurance. In other words, John and his readers were already in the middle of tribulation and in the middle of the kingdom. They were not waiting for or trying to find out when the tribulation would start or the kingdom would get established. In other words, any reading of Revelation claiming we need to search through the codes and secret symbols to discover when some mystical period of tribulation is going to begin in our future or when the kingdom is going to be established on earth in our future is simply mistaken.

As you read the rest of Revelation, don’t read trying to figure out when the tribulation will come or when the kingdom will be established. Read to learn about the kingdom’s victory over the tribulation they were facing when John wrote. And read to gain confidence God will provide us, His kingdom today, victory over any persecution and tribulation we face.

Praise the Lord!

Tomorrow’s reading is Revelation 1.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does Revelation 1 prompt or improve your hope in God?

Revelation 1: The Time is Near

Today’s reading is Revelation 1.

In 1973, the year I was born, Hal Lindsay wrote, “To the skeptic who says that Christ is not coming soon, I would ask him to put the book of Revelation in one hand and the daily newspaper in the other, and then sincerely ask God to show him where we are on His prophetic time-clock.”* He wrote multiple books in that decade trying to encourage Christians to believe God’s prophetic clock was winding down and Jesus would return any day then. Fifty-one years have passed. And men like Lindsay continue to tell us the modern newspaper is our best source for interpreting Revelation. Some get more specific in their date-setting than others, but they all have one thing in common. They are all wrong.

On Monday, I shared the apocalypse experienced by Elisha’s servant surrounded by a great Syrian army full of horses and chariots in 2 Kings 6. Question: did Elisha’s servant need the curtain pulled back on what God was going to do 2000 years after him? Of course not. He needed to see God’s perspective and plan for what was happening to him right in that moment. He needed to see God was in control right then. He needed to see God was going to win in his situation. When we read about the chariots of fire surrounding Elisha, we don’t search our modern newspaper headlines to understand the apocalypse. Nor do we do so to make application from that man’s experience to our modern needs. God opened that servant’s eyes to His heavenly army protecting him and Elisha. We do not have to see the chariots of fire around us in Jesus Christ to make application. When enemies surround us, we can trust “those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” Or, we might say it this way, “He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world” (1 John 4:4, ESV).

With this in mind, we should not be surprised to catch some repeated statements. Notice how John begins the book.

The revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show to his servants the things that must soon take place.

Revelation 1:1 (ESV)

When are the things in this book to take place? 2000 years later? No. “Soon take place.” Not soon to us; this book wasn’t written to us. Soon to the original audience 1900 years ago.

Then John states a blessing:

Blessed is the one who reads aloud the words of this prophecy, and blessed are those who hear, and who keep what is written in it, for the time is near.

Revelation 1:3 (ESV).

Did you catch that last statement? The time is near. Near to whom? Not to us. It was near when John wrote the book.

Here’s the point. If we interpret this book with a modern newspaper in our other hand, we are doing it wrong. John was not revealing what would happen two millennia later. He was revealing God’s plans to deal with the enemy and persecution the Christians of his day were facing. We need to start there. As we asked what Elisha’s servant needed to see in his apocalypse, we should ask what John’s first readers needed to see in theirs. Then we will know how to determine what we need to see in Revelation.

Praise the Lord!

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does Revelation 1 prompt or improve your trust in God?

*There’s a New World Coming: A Prophetic Odyssey, Vision House Publishers, Santa Ana, California, 1973, p306.

John 18: Not of This World

Today’s reading is John 18.

My kingdom is not of this world.

John 18:36a (ESV)

I’m an amillennialist. That means I believe Jesus will not set up a thousand-year geo-political kingdom on earth. I believe the kingdom is a spiritual kingdom, with a throne in heaven, and its already here (see Colossians 1:13; Revelation 1:5-6, 9). It also means I pretty well only come to John 18:36 to point out Jesus didn’t intend to set up a geo-political kingdom on earth–not then, not now, not ever.

Of course, that’s true, as far as that goes. John 18:36 does demonstrate that. (At least, it sure seems like it does to me. It’s one of the reasons I am an amillennialist.) However, Jesus was making a deeper point than merely the cosmographical location of His throne room. He wasn’t primarily telling us where the kingdom is located, but how the kingdom is run. He wasn’t interested so much in where one lives in the kingdom, but how one lives in the kingdom.

Consider what Jesus goes on to say:

My kingdom is not of this world. If my kingdom were of this world, my servants would have been fighting, that I might not be delivered over to the Jews. But my kingdom is not from the world.

John 18:36 (ESV)

But His servants did try to fight to make sure He wasn’t delivered over to the Jews. We considered Peter’s faltering, flawed, and forestalled attempt to attack the soldiers arresting Jesus. And now we know Peter’s problem. He was thinking the way the world thinks. Despite Jesus’s rebuke in Matthew 16:21-23, Peter had not learned the nature of Jesus’s kingdom. He was treating Jesus like a world-begotten king and acting as if he was going to be a citizen in a world-produced kingdom. Because Jesus’s kingdom is not of this world, His kingdom citizens think and behave differently (at least, they are supposed to). Worldly kings fight to survive. The heavenly King died to give life.

Jesus explains Peter’s behavior in the garden makes sense from the world’s perspective. Everyone weaned on the world’s perspective would rally around Peter as the hero of the scene. Hey, not all heroes win, but Peter behaved the way he was supposed to. Except, not in Jesus’s kingdom. It’s not so much that His kingdom isn’t located in the world, its that His citizens don’t think like the citizens of the world. They don’t behave like the citizens of the world. In fact, the citizens of the world will often think the citizen’s of Jesus’s kingdom are nearly crazy. Who would love their enemies and pray for those who persecute them? Who would forgive seventy times seven times in a day? Who would rather be defrauded than take a brother to court? Who would stay in an unsatisfying marriage? Who would keep a vow even when it hurts? Who would turn the other cheek? On the list of questions can go. Ultimately, who would go to the cross rather than call twelve legions of angels to save Him?

Here’s the thing. The moment we mollify a passage by saying, “Jesus can’t mean such and such, nobody would do that,” we demonstrate we don’t understand our King or His kingdom. Granted, Jesus often used figures of speech. He really didn’t mean for Christians to cut off their hands or pluck out their eyes, but we have better reasons for thinking that than simply “nobody would do that.”

The struggle of course is we live in the world. Our neighbors are of the world. Our bosses and co-workers are of the world. Our teachers are of the world. Our entertainers are of the world. The voice of the world and spirit of the age pervades. The moment we try to think differently, they fight back. The even bigger struggle is since we all swim in the stream of the world’s perspectives, even many Christians have drunk the waters of the world and even they fight back against Christ’s counter-cultural perspectives. Being not of the world while we still live in this world is going to be hard. Just figuring out how to live not of this world will be hard. But actually doing it, that will take Holy Spirit kind of strength. Don’t you think? Sure am glad Jesus sent a Helper.

Today, let’s embark upon or continue our journey of unrelenting pursuit of Jesus’s kingdom and righteousness first. And let’s not be surprised when that means we stand out from the world like a sore thumb.

Tomorrow’s reading is John 18.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier sparked by this post.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does John 18 prompt or improve your hope in God?

Lake of Fire

Today’s reading is Revelation 20.

Babylon has fallen. The beasts have gone to destruction. The armies of the enemy have become a feast for the birds. God’s saints reign victorious. But then Satan gets to raise another army. What’s up with that? I could be completely wrong, however, I think the Holy Spirit’s point is Revelation recounts a particular war with the enemy. Satan had used a particular beast and false prophet to attack Christ’s kingdom–some suggest Rome and Emperor worship, others say Jerusalem and Temple worship. Whichever the specific enemy John had in mind, that enemy would be defeated. However, that doesn’t mean Satan was completely defeated. He would attack again. As with the temptation of Jesus, he departs and awaits another opportune time. John isn’t trying to give a prophecy of a particular moment in history; he is simply saying Satan will lose that war, but he’ll be back. However, no matter when he rises again, no matter what kind of army he gathers, no matter which earthly city and kingdom he works through to attack Christ’s kingdom, he is going to lose. Ultimately, like the cat’s paws he uses to attack, he will be thrown with all his minions, armies, messengers, beasts, into the lake of fire. He won’t be reigning there as the “King of Hell.” No, he will be tormented there just like everyone else who ends up there. Yes, siding with Satan provides pleasure and power for a moment, but its end is in fire. Hang on to Jesus. He always wins.

Tomorrow’s reading is Revelation 21.

Continue reading “Lake of Fire”

A Thousand Years

Today’s reading is Revelation 20.

Honestly, it blows my mind how an entire complex doctrine can be built around a single verse likeĀ Revelation 20:4. In fact, not only one, but several. Of course, they can’t all be right. The passage only means what it means and can’t mean competing and mutually exclusive ideas. But what does it mean in context? It means the exact same thing the rest of the book means: Jesus Always Wins!!!! The purpose of this verse is not to say that some time in real-time history the disciple martyrs of Jesus will reign on earth for a thousand years. It’s a contrast with the reign of the kings of this earth who oppressed them. I asked you to rememberĀ Revelation 17:12 and the one-hour reign of the enemy kings and the authority they received from the beast. Here is where it becomes important as a contrast. Our Hero’s servants receive authority and reign, not for an hour, but for a thousand years. Neither of these refer to literal periods of time in earth history. They merely point out what the entire book points out. The enemy looks like he is going to win, but hang on, his time is short. The Hero will win and His victory will be complete. You want to be on the Hero’s side. No matter what, hang on! Jesus always wins! You can give up on Him, side with the enemy and get your heyday for an hour. Or you can hang on and have real victory. The choice is yours.

Tomorrow’s reading is Revelation 21.

Continue reading “A Thousand Years”

Deceived

Today’s reading is Matthew 24.

I admit that the devotional for Matthew 24 is always the hardest for me to write. I know I’m in the minority regarding what I believe this chapter is about. I’m an amillennialist, so I don’t believe it is about a coming rapture. But though I am not what is called a hyper preterist or a realized eschatologist (if you don’t know what those terms mean, don’t worry too much about it), I do believe the whole chapter is about the destruction of Jerusalem and not at all about the end of the world or our future. However, there are parallels for us. Namely, false christs and false prophets will arise. In fact, no matter what view you take on this chapter as a whole, surely you can see the danger. Our enemy will use false gods, false teachers, false doctrines, false gospels, false anything to turn us away from the truth. Here is where the danger deepens: he doesn’t always use obvious falsehoods. He will even use very compelling falsehoods that seem to be accompanied by great signs and come so close as to take great discernment to distinguish from the truth. But God has revealed His truth. Do not be deceived by the devil’s deceptions masquerading as truth. Get in the Word. Stay in the Word. Don’t be swayed from the Word. Only truth will set you free.

Tomorrow’s reading is Matthew 25.

Continue reading “Deceived”