Come Follow Me: Revelation 5-6, 19-22

Gustav Doré's Destruction of Leviathan

Gustav Doré’s Destruction of Leviathan

Well, the end is upon us. It’s the end of the world/New Testament/year as we know it, and I feel fine.

Today’s chapters… today’s chapters, well. Let’s be blunt. If you pick up a commentary from a believing scholar who has spent his/her entire life studying Revelation, they are likely to admit that no one has any real clue. Just about every passage is disputed in some way by somebody. I am skeptical of the lesson manual’s ability to navigate us through this material, and I’m not about to hold myself out as any expert. Revelation to me is like Isaiah in the Old Testament; I’ve just never really had any particular interest. So, apologies to anyone who came to today’s post looking for the keys to unlock the universe. These chapters contain a lot of things that sound familiar, and a lot of things that sound crazy. Be prepared for lots of potentially crazy comments and wild doctrinal inferences. This is fertile ground, historically speaking, for rampant speculation.

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True to form, I’ll provide a few observations.

These chapters build heavily on the Old Testament, and the better one knows the Old, the easier this is to understand. Or if not understand, at least catch the references. Take, for example, Gog and Magog. These are two names for the same group/country/city, which comes out of Ezekiel 38-39. Technically, Gog is the leader of Magog (Eze 38:2). Gog/Magog was to “come out of the remotest parts of the north” to Israel, according to Eze 38:14-15. Now, given that east of Israel was a desert, and west was an ocean, attacking armies could come either from the south via Egypt, or the north. And whenever Egypt wanted to attack Babylon/Assyria or vice-versa, they had to tramp right through Israel to get there. So saying “out of the north” isn’t secret Bible code for “Europe” or “Russia” or anything like that. It just means “not from the south.”

Another way Revelation reflects the Old Testament is an uncomfortable one; as many are aware, once they read it, Revelation describes war, bloodshed, endless fire, brimstone, and sulphur, destruction, pestilence, death. And much of this is described as being poured out by God himself on humanity. In the Old Testament, God is a “man of war” (Exo 15:3) a “passionate, avenging God; The LORD is vengeful and fierce in wrath. The LORD takes vengeance on His enemies, He rages against His foes.” (Nah 1:2). This is the stereotype of “the Old Testament god.” But the Old Testament also describes him as “a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for the thousandth generation, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, yet by no means clearing the guilty…” (Exo 34:6-7). If he does indeed, “visit the sins of the parents” upon their children to the third or fourth generation, note that his grace is 250x times that, “showing grace to the thousandth generation.” Eze 18:23 and Eze 33:11 make clear that God takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked. So, we can’t make simplistic generalizations about the “Old Testament God” vs. the “New Testament God,” unless we cheat and cherry-pick passages. The latter is not all warm and fuzzy, nor is the former all Mad Max death-and-destruction all the time.

In any case, while Revelation largely depicts God in his “man of war” guise, it also reflects the Old Testament in the other direction as well. Revelation 21:3 (cf. Rev 7:17) reads “And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “See, the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them; he will wipe every tear from their eyes. Death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no more, for the first things have passed away.” This is a quotation/allusion to Isaiah 25:8-9,

On this mountain the LORD of hosts will make for all peoples a feast of rich food, a feast of well-aged wines, of rich food filled with marrow, of well-aged wines strained clear.
7 And he will destroy on this mountain the shroud that is cast over all peoples, the sheet that is spread over all nations;
8 he will swallow up death forever. Then the Lord GOD will wipe away the tears from all faces, and the disgrace of his people he will take away from all the earth, for the LORD has spoken.
9 It will be said on that day, Lo, this is our God; we have waited for him, so that he might save us. This is the LORD for whom we have waited; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.

That’s a fantastic eschatological passage. (Let’s ignore that in the next verses, they praise God for destroying their threatening neighbors the Moabites.) Ultimately, the enemies we want God to fight, to destroy and win, are enemies we cannot fight ourselves, namely, death, hell, and sin. God quite literally fights these in Revelation. (Remember, it’s apocalpyse, so Death and Hades/Hell can be personified as a dragon, and thrown into a lake of fire in Rev 20:14.) Indeed, this again echoes and expands on the Old Testament, with the cosmic battle at creation, God vs. the waters, the sea, leviathan/Rahab.

The bizarre polymorphic beasts that arise in ch 13 to threaten and delude the earth belong to the most archaic biblical traditions of creation and would have been easily recognized as such by early audiences. The idea that the God of Israel, like other Canaanite gods, defeated and bound Leviathan/Rahab, a sea-monster, as well as other monsters at the beginning of time, is invoked in such disparate biblical sources as Ps 74 and Job 41, and Isaiah calls for its reenactment to perfect the earth again (Isa 27:1; Isa 51:9–10).

Jewish Annotated New Testament

It’s no surprise that the early Book of Mormon prophets know this Israelite tradition, e.g. “O the greatness of the mercy of our God, the Holy One of Israel! For he delivereth his saints from that awful monster the devil, and death, and hell, and that lake of fire and brimstone, which is endless torment.” 2Ne 9:19 (See here.)

It is God the divine warrior who fights that battle, and in an ironic twist, wins by losing, by allowing himself to be killed.

Further reading:

Anyway.

One other tidbit you might find interesting. You could structure the whole lesson around the idea of continuing revelation and line upon line using Rev 22:8-9 and my very old post/paper here


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AmazonUpdated 12-17-2023

6 Comments

  1. What do you think of Pagels’ book where she postulates that the author of Revelation was focussing primarily on the immediate threat of the Roman Empire, which had just destroyed Jerusalem, and not on the end of the world, though I suppose you could argue that he was doing both since the prevalent view at that time was that the world was about to end, which I suppose is something that we have in common with those folks? (How’s that for a longwinded, run-on question?)

    • I haven’t read Pagels, but I’m lean strongly towards the idea that John is describing his current and immediate future in apocalyptic terms.

      • That’s essentially the approach she takes—and one that I find persuasive—though I don’t think she makes some of the Old Testament connections that you do, which are insightful.

      • This has an Old Testament parallel, of course. Just as there was a mythological battle between God and the waters/chaos/leviathan, that myth was also historicized and applied rhetorically to current events, as if those events themselves *were* the cosmic battle. I can’t remember which of the many books talks about this best. Might be Jon Levenson, Creation and the Persistence of Evil, which is fantastic.

        http://amzn.to/1YaPW7W

        • Thanks for the book recommendation. I have read Leveson’s “Sinai to Zion” and “Inheriting Abraham,” but I am not familiar with “Creation and the Persistence of Evil.” Sounds like I should be.

  2. There is a new book from the folks at The Bible For Normal People: “Revelation for Normal People” by Robyn Whitaker. They also recently produced a podcast episode as kind of a teaser: “This is a deeply historically located text addressing particular concerns for a minority Christian group in the Roman Empire who are trying to navigate their relationship with that empire, and what it means to be a Christian living in that kind of world.”
    https://thebiblefornormalpeople.com/episode-259-robyn-whitaker-the-book-of-revelation/

    Q. Why can the mark of the beast NOT be the barcode on your groceries, or COVID vaccine nanobot microchips (that don’t exist), etc.?

    A. Because the riddle must be solvable by the people John wrote it to in the first place. If your solution requires them to wait a thousand years or two for the technology to be developed, or the individual personalities to exist, that solution is invalid.