Lectionary Commentaries for June 17, 2012
Preaching Series on Revelation

from WorkingPreacher.org


Narrative Lectionary

Commentary on Revelation

Craig R. Koester

Notes for a seven-session  preaching series on the book of Revelation.

Week 1
Rev 1:9–2:7

John, the Risen Christ, and the Churches

Revelation begins by locating John, the seer, in the realm of time and space. Although many people assume that Revelation is all about the end of the world, the first vision is one of Christ, who is present among the churches. Then in chapters 2-3 Revelation takes a look at what is going on in the churches through Christ’s eyes. The idea is that Revelation wants us first to take a look at who Christ is and then take a look at who we are in relation to Christ.  The messages to the churches offer considerable promise for preaching, since they deal with issues of perennial concern for Christians. The selected text simply includes the first of the churches, which is steadfastly holding on to the truth and yet has lost sight of the love which is central to the gospel message. The message works by identifying the problem and calling people to change with the promise of a new future.

Week 2
Rev 4:1-11

God the Creator

Revelation’s vision of the heavenly throne room now introduces people to God, who is the Creator. The scene pictures a rightly ordered universe in which God is at the center. Around the throne are four living creatures, who represent the created order. The creatures’ faces are those of a wild and a domestic animal, a bird, and a human being. The one with the human face does not take the central place of God, but with all creation joins in praise of God. The elders are the heavenly representatives of the community of faith. As they cast down their crowns before the throne, they recognize that God and not the elders is Lord of all. God is praised for being the Creator of all things. Although Revelation is usually seen as a book of destruction, God’s fundamental identity is that of Creator. This scene anticipates the outcome of the book, where God’s purposes culminate in new creation. The words “holy, holy, holy” and the images of casting down crowns by heaven’s glassy sea have inspired many of the hymns we use in worship. Revelation functions rightly when it invites us into worship too — which we do as we add our voices to the song.

Week 3
Rev 5:1-13

Christ the Lamb

Revelation’s throne room scene continues with a vision of God holding a scroll in his hand. The scroll presumably expresses the will of God, and the question of who is worthy to make God’s will known. John hears that the Lion is worthy, but when he turns he sees a slaughtered and yet living Lamb. The idea is that the promise of the lion-like ruler from Judah is fulfilled in the promise of the slaughtered Lamb. The death of Christ is the way that the power of God is unleashed. It is the power of self-sacrifice that builds God’s kingdom by redeeming people of every tribe and nation. The Lamb is the primary way in which Christ is identified in Revelation. Again songs break out in waves. To sing “worthy is Christ the Lamb who was slain” or other songs about the Lamb is to join with the heavenly chorus in worship.

Week 4
Rev 6:1-8 and 7:9-17

The scenes of praise and celebration in the previous chapters give way to threatening visions. The four horsemen present threats of conquest, violence, economic insecurity, and death. The horsemen portray threats that are real. They were real for people in the first century and remain real for people now. The idea is that the visions strip away the pretensions of security. They point to the deep uncertainties that affect us all. In the chapter itself the threats intensify until in 6:17 (not in the reading) ask who is able to stand? We might expect the final threatening vision to occur at that point, but it does not. Instead, the threats are halted so that a promise can be given in Revelation 7. John sees who can stand: those who have been redeemed by the Lamb. Being redeemed by the blood of the Lamb does not make the threats go away, but it gives people the promise of life that allows them to stand in the face of the threats, confident that God’s purposes are ultimately for life.

Week 5
Rev 13:1-18

The Two Beasts

Revelation’s vision of the beast from the land and beast from the sea is one of the most discussed parts of the book. In the popular imagination the beast from the sea is the Antichrist (although the term “antichrist” appears only in 1 & 2 John and not in Revelation). The most helpful way to think about the word pictures in this passage is by comparing them to the word pictures used in political cartoons. In American media you find an elephant and donkey representing political parties, a bull and a bear representing the stock market trends. In Revelation we find the beast from the sea and his associate representing political authority that has become as destructive as a beast. The monster is set up as the ultimate authority, a power to be worshiped above all else. Revelation portrayed the Roman political system in this way in order to ask people about their highest loyalties. In 13:4 you find people thinking the destructive system has become invincible, but that is not what Revelation sees. The beast is the opposite of the Lamb, who gives people their true identity. The beast conquers by tyranny (13:7) but the Lamb conquers by the sacrifice that frees (5:5-6). The mark of the beast (13:16-18) is the opposite of the seal of God and the Lamb (7:1-3). The imagery challenges people to ask to whom they truly belong: to the forces that destroy or the Lamb who liberates?

Week 6
Rev 17:1-6 and 19:11-16

The Harlot and Great Battle

Revelation uses another word picture in 17:1-6. The author pictures the society in which he lives as a harlot riding on the beast that we met last week. The harlot is obsessed with luxury and conspicuous consumption. She is violent and yet alluring. The imagery describes the seductive power of materialism and society’s fascination with violence. The picture is designed to startle people into seeing how the currents in society draw people into a web of relationships that are degrading.  In 19:11-16 Revelation pictures Christ as a rider on the white horse, who overcomes the beast with the power of his word, which is pictured as the sword from his mouth. This scene is actually the battle of Armageddon (see 16:16). And in this battle there is no ordinary weaponry. Only the power of the word, the power of Christ’s truth, which brings victory over the destructive forces of falsehood.

Week 7
Rev 21:1-6 and 22:1-5

New Jerusalem

God was introduced as the Creator in Rev 4 and God’s final great act consists of new creation. The defeat of the forces of evil does not bring about the annihilation of the earth. Rather, it leads to God saying “I make all things new” (21:5). God’s future includes the resurrection of the dead but does not stop there. When death is vanquished creation itself is made new. God’s future is pictured as a city with a garden at its center. The human world and natural world are reconciled here. The tree of life stands within the city with its gates of pearl. These pearly gates are not guarded by Saint Peter as in the popular imagination. Rather the gates stand open all the time in order to invite people into the presence of God. Here the rivers that give life flow, the tree of life has leaves to heal the nations, and the radiant presence of God illumines the city. This is the future that beckons people everywhere. Those who are gripped by such a vision in turn ask how such scenes of life might shape a way of life now. To live in anticipation of New Jerusalem is to embrace its way of life and to bear witness to the purposes of God, whose work as the author of creation and new creation is ultimately life.