Armageddon

The End Of All Things (Revelation 19:11- 20:15)

Revelation is “A revelation of Jesus Christ.” (Rev 1:1) “If anyone asks, ‘Why read the Apocalypse?’ the answer must be, ‘To know Christ better.’”[1] Too much of a focus on anything less will rob us of the goodness of the message of Revelation. I say this because today’s passages have been interpreted…a lot of different ways. We must be consistent with our interpretations when reading Revelation. We tend to play “duck, duck, goose” with Revelation: “Figurative, figurative, LITERAL.” I am no exception. I have found myself revising numerous sermons in this series because I would think, “Anthony, that’s not how you used that image last week.” So, here is A WAY to understand Revelation that I have been using so far:

  • Numbers are figurative. Weigh them, don't count them. That includes the 1,000 years that show up today.

  • Sun, moon stars are heavenly beings

  • Mountains are nations; the sea is people of all nations

  • Fire/blood/winepress[2] have been icons that when you click on them lead to  the grim reality of God’s judgment. Sometimes more than one image is used at the same time (like today’s passage) 

  • The Beast, the False Prophet and Babylon have been corporate rather than individual, though individuals have embodied them throughout history. They are systems, empires, worldviews.

  • The catastrophic physical calamities have been about spiritual, economic, and political realities.

  • Recapitulation has been a thing; we saw the end of the world multiple times; we are about to hear about Armageddon again two more times (from two different perspectives) in Rev. 19 and 20.

We are going to pick up Revelation 19, beginning in verse 11. Verses 1-10 will show up next week when we get to Chapter 21. Once again, I am going to let the next few pages be the original text (mostly from The Voice translation) with its myriad of footnotes. We are going to skip to page 6 for a version/translation/commentary by yours truly that seeks to combine all the…stuff. All the things. 

I looked up and saw that heaven had opened.[3] Suddenly, a white horse appeared. Its rider is called Faithful and True,[4] and with righteousness He exercises judgment and wages war.  His eyes burn like a flaming fire, and on His head are many crowns.[5] His name was written before the creation of the world, and no one knew it except He Himself.[6]He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood,[7] and the name He was known by is The Word of God. And the armies of heaven, outfitted in fine linen, white and pure, were following behind Him on white steeds. [8]From His mouth darts a sharp sword with which to strike down the nations. 

He will rule over them with a scepter made of iron.[9] He will trample the winepress of the fury of the wrath of God, the All Powerful.[10] And there on His robe and on His thigh was written His name:[11] King of kings and Lord of lords.[12] Then I looked up and saw a messenger standing in the sun; and with a loud voice, he called to all the birds that fly[13] through midheaven. The Heavenly Messenger said, “Come. Gather for the great feast[14] God is preparing for you  where you will feast on the flesh of[15] kings, the flesh of captains, the flesh of the rich and powerful, the flesh of horses and their riders[16]—all flesh—both free and slave, both small and great.”[17]I looked down, and I saw the beast I had seen earlier and the kings of the earth with their armies gathered together to wage war against the One riding the white horse and His heavenly army.[18] 

The beast was soon captured along with the false prophet, the earth-beast I had seen earlier who performed signs to deceive those who had agreed to receive the mark of the beast and those who worshiped its detestable image. Both of them were thrown alive into the lake of fire that burns with sulfur.  And all who remained met death at the blade of the sword that proceeded from the mouth of the One riding on the white horse. All the birds feasted fully on their flesh.[19] 

Then I saw a messenger coming from heaven. In his hand was a key to the abyss and a great chain that had been forged in heaven. He seized the dragon, that ancient serpent who is the devil and Satan, and bound him for 1,000 years with the great chain.[20]The messenger cast him into the abyss and locked it and sealed him in it so that he could not go about deceiving the nations until the 1,000 years had come to completion.[21] Afterward he must be released for a short time.[22] 

Then I saw some thrones, and those seated in judgment were given the right to judge. Standing there were the souls of those who were beheaded because of their testimony of Jesus and the word of God. They had refused to worship the beast or its detestable image and had not received the mark upon their foreheads or upon their hands. They had come back to life and reigned with the Anointed One, our Liberating King, for 1,000 years.  Now as for the rest of the dead, they were not given life until the 1,000 years were completed. This is the first resurrection. Blessed and holy are the ones who take part in the first resurrection.[23] Over these, the second death has no power;[24] they will serve as priests of God and His Anointed, and they will reign with Him for 1,000 years. 

When the 1,000 years are completed, Satan will be released from his prison.[25]And he will crawl out of the abyss in order to deceive the nations located at the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog[26] as Ezekiel described them, in order to rally them together for one final battle. They are in number as the grains of sand on the shore. 

They marched in unholy array over the expanse of the earth and surrounded the camp of the saints and the beloved city.[27] As they laid siege to the city, fire rained down from heaven and incinerated them. And the devil who had deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and sulfur, where the beast and the false prophet[28] had already been thrown; and the unholy trio will be tortured day and night throughout the ages.[29] 

The scene changed.[30] I saw a great white throne, and One was seated upon it. The earth and heaven receded from His presence; there was no place for them. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing in front of the throne. Some books were opened. Then another book was opened; it was called the book of life. And the dead were judged according to what had been recorded in the first books; these were the records of everything they had done.[31] And the sea surrendered its dead.[32] Death and Hades gave up their dead as well. And all were judged according to their works. 

Then Death and Hades were cast into the lake of fire.[33] This is the second death, the lake of fire.[34]  And everyone whose name could not be found among the names written in the book of life was thrown into the lake of fire. And they will have no rest, day or night.[35] 

* * * * *

So here is my version, in which I stand on the backs of 2,000 years of commentators. I mean, it’s not all of them, but it’s a good representation of common themes. My goal is not the details (though I hope to get them right), but the message that transcends and illuminates the details. In other words, don’t miss the forest for a few distracting trees J 

[Note: we are apparently seeing the final confrontation twice. The first one focuses on Jesus as the Returning King and feels like the start of the movie where you give away what’s about to happen, then something like “Three Weeks Earlier” appears on the screen. That’s kind of how Chapters 19-20 feel. So I am going to try to tell them as a synchronized story, which means I’m combining what I understand to be the narrative of the two stories. THIS IS NOT MEANT TO TAKE THE PLACE OF THE ORIGINAL J It’s only to make the reading less confusing.]

* * * * * 

Then another messenger came from heaven with a key to the abyss, the home of chaos and evil, and a great chain that had been forged in heaven made of Jesus resurrection power. He seized the dragon, that ancient serpent who is the devil and Satan, and thoroughly bound him with the chain to suppress his power in the world. 

The messenger cast him into his abysmal home of chaos and evil and locked it, sealing him in it so that he could not stop the spread of the gospel to all the nations for 1,000 years[36] – that is, until God’s timetable had been completed, and Satan must be released from the abyss (but not unbound) for a short time. 

Then I saw that God had placed people on thrones of judgment. In front of them were the souls of those who were killed because of their testimony of Jesus and the word of God, as well as those who had paid any price by refusing to worship the beast or its detestable image, and who had not been marked as “beastly” by the allegiance in their hearts and the actions of their hands. 

Their souls were alive (#firstresurrection), and they were reigning with the Lamb, the King of Kings, while Satan was bound and the gospel flourished in the world. Blessed and holy are the ones who take part in the first resurrection as they await the reuniting of soul and body after the final judgment, when all things are made new.  

Over these, the second death – not the first, physical death, but the spiritual death that follows final judgment[37] – will have no power; they serve as priests of God and His Anointed, and they reign with Him as the gospel spreads through and flourishes in the world. 

When the time of Satan’s bondage and the gospel’s spread is completed, Satan will be released from the abyss (though not from the chains of Jesus’ resurrection power) and will deceive all the nations in order to rally them together yet again for one final battle. His followers are numerous, as numerous as the sand on the shore of the sea of humanity from which the beasts had arisen. These citizens of the city of Satan – anywhere Rome and Babylon are central - marched  over all the earth and surrounded the city of God – the church.[38]  

I looked up and saw that heaven had opened – another vision was beginning. Suddenly, a white horse appeared that looked like the horse with the false Christ-pretender from the Seven Seals. But this rider was different. This rider was Jesus, the Faithful and True.  

He comes to exercise righteous judgment and to bring an end to all unrighteousness. His eyes burned with righteous anger, and he wore…all the crowns, from everywhere, from all the kings, from all time. Only He knew His secret name, which was written before the creation of the world. 

Dressed in a robe dipped in the life-blood of his sacrifice,[39] He finally revealed His name: The Word of God. The armies of heaven, outfitted in purity as if in fine, clean linen, were following behind Him on horses just like His. From the mouth of The Word of God darted…well, the Word of God, a sharp sword of Truth with which to strike down the false foundations of nations. 

He had an iron scepter befitting all-powerful king. Like all royalty,  inscriptions that define Him were written on His robe and on His thigh, but they surpassed the inscriptions on the statues of emperors or rulers: “King of kings and Lord of lords” belongs only to Him.  

Like Isaiah prophesied concerning the ‘winepress’ of the wrath of God[40]  the  ‘grapes’ of evil will be harvested from the earth, then drained of life and destroyed.[41] [Babylon’s] sins are piled up to heaven, and God has remembered her crimes. Give back to her as she has given; pay her back double for what she has done. Pour her a double portion from her own cup....” (Revelation 18:5-6; 20)  

With a loud voice, an angelic messenger standing as if in the center of the sun called to all the carrion birds that fly through midheaven. “Come. There is about to be a war, so all you eaters of the dead be prepared to feast at the winepress: on kings, captains, the rich and powerful, horses and their riders, free and slave, small or great - all those who helped the Beast (made up of the Romes and Babylons in the world) commit evil against God, His world, and His people.” 

As they laid siege to the global church, God’s judgment rained down on them from heaven like fire and destroyed them.[42]  The earthly empires stood no chance, and the Beast was soon captured along with the False Prophet (remember, this is the spirit of anti-christ, of religious deception, of idolatry masquerading as holiness, who was able to perform signs and wonders, just like Pharaoh’s magicians, to deceive those who had agreed to be marked by their allegiance to the beast and those who compromised true faith to worship its detestable image.)  

The Beast (Global Systems hostile to God’s people) and the False Prophet (Religious Idolatry and Deception) were thrown into the lake of judgment[43] that burns with fire and sulfur, so that they would be completely consumed.  And as the One riding on the white horse spoke the sword of God’s Truth, the people who remained saw the lie that sins brings life turn into the truth that the wages of sin is death  

Just as Satan was defeated by the blood of the Lamb and the word of his followers' testimony (12:7-911), this battle was won by the blood of the Lamb and the Truth of The Word. The carrion birds, the scavengers who feed on death, feasted until they could hold no more. 

And the devil who had deceived them was exiled to a lake of fire[44] and sulfur (God’s judgment)[45] where the Beast of Empires and the Second Beast, the False Prophet of Idolatry had already been thrown; and this anti-trinity will pay the price of their evil throughout the ages. 

[now we move to the Final Judgment]

The scene changed. I saw a great pure and holy throne, and One was seated upon it. Even the earth and heaven receded from His presence; there was no place for even things as grand as them in His presence. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing in front of the throne. Some books were opened. 

Then another book was opened; it was called the Book of Life. It contains the names of all saved by grace (Ex 32:32Is 4:3Dan 12:12)— God's mercy through the Lamb who was slain for their sins is far greater in comparison than the frailty of their works. 

And the dead were judged according to what had been recorded in the first books; these were the records of everything they had done without the blood of Jesus on the doorpost of their lives.[46] Everything that held the dead – the Sea[47] and Death, which between the two of them accounted for all the bodies; Hades, which held their souls -  gave up their dead, and all were judged according to their works. 

Then Death, Hades, and everyone whose name could not be found among the names written in the book of life were given to what looked like a Lake of Fire: God’s eternal judgment. This is the second death, where both soul and body meet their eternal death. 

* * * *

I like puzzles. To use a puzzle analogy, the point is to see the Big Picture once all the pieces are together, but if some key pieces look out of place, it’s distracting at best, maybe confusing, and we might even fight over where they go! -So let’s see if we can find how some of these pieces fit into the Big Picture in a way that makes the whole come to life.

First, “The Millennium itself is one of the most controversial questions of eschatology (the doctrine of the last things)…there are problems with [all] views… responsible Christian scholars vary in its interpretation according to their convictions and presuppositions.”[48] I think it’s fair to say the timing of the tribulation and the question of whether or not Christians will have to endure it rank pretty high too. Here are 4 key ways Christians have thought about this.

Michael Heisser describes himself as an “eschatological system agnostic.” I like that term. Revelation is the kind of book that defies airtight theories. I’m thinking of a book title to highlight the problem: The Last Word on Eschatological Details (5th Revision).[49]

Second, I find it helpful to remember the “now and not yet” aspects seen in Revelation already. 

  • In some sense the Millennium began at Jesus’ resurrection (Satan is restrained now, the Gospel is flourishing in the world now, the saints in heaven are ruling and reigning now) with a fullness yet to be experienced (we have not yet seen Satan destroyed, or the Kingdom inaugurate fully and perfectly in the world). 

  • It sure seems like tribulation has always been with us (the now), which is not to say it won’t get worse (the not yet). What’s the take away from both of them? 

  • The now: “In this world you will have trouble, but take heart. I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33) Revelation is not about being taken out of this world but about faithful, obedient discipleship characterized by love in this world.[50] It is meant to enliven Christians in the midst of persecution and chaos, to help them patiently endure persecution and struggles both within and without. 

  • The not yet: Revelation 21-22 (next week).

 

Third, the return of Jesus, the Second Coming, uses the term parousia. This was the word used to describe Roman generals returning from battle. They literally would ‘descend from the clouds’ as they crossed the tops of mountains before being received with great pomp and circumstance as a returning, conquering King. John has been digging Rome and Emperors for the whole book; here is just another reminder that all earthly kings are pretenders to the throne. Jesus is King, and he’s coming back in glory. 

 

Fourth, at this last battle in Revelation 19, there is no literal, physical war for those present at the Second Coming to join. The heavenly armies just sit on their horses. All the actions belong to the Lamb Who Was Slain, who rids the world of evil through his own blood and a sword of Truth (19:15).[51] 

The symbol of the beast can open our eyes to systemic and structural evil in our world. Sometimes injustice or suffering may make it appropriate for us to use the rage passages [of Psalms] in prayer. But we must always return and worship to the central motif of the Lamb. The example and teaching of the Lamb must cover the lives of believers. Then the rage we bring to God and leave at the throne of grace will find its proper place.[52]

We can be distracted by the looming threat of a guns and mortar war and forget that our battle has been ongoing: we don't wrestle with flesh and blood, but with spiritual forces, and our solution has always been the spiritual armor of God. (Ephesians 6)

 

Fifth, Revelation is the only book of the Bible that promises a blessing for reading it: “Blessed is the one who obeys the words of this prophecy.” In other words, in light of the not yet, how should we live now?

You ought to live holy and godly lives as you look forward to the day of God and eagerly hasten toward its coming…But in keeping with his promise we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, the home of righteousness.
So then, dear friends, since you are looking forward to this, make every effort to be found spotless, blameless and at peace with him.” (2Peter 3:8–15)

We can be the voices naming that which is Beastly in the world, and calling out the false prophets who want to convince us that evil is good, that darkness is light, and that the wages of sin are anything other than death.

We can be the ambassadors of the Lamb Who Was Slain, representing the One who is Faithful and True by being faithful to the truth, and by walking in the way of the Lamb rather than the way of the Dragon.  

We can, in this Church Age, live in the ‘now’ of Christ’s Kingdom (wherever we are on this unfolding historical map). We can taste and see that the Lord is good, and that His mercies are new every morning, and that the goodness of which we only catch a glimpse now are just a teaser trailer for what awaits us in the New Heaven and New Earth. 

We can have confidence and peace now in the midst of any circumstance knowing it hasn’t surprised God. Covid? Not a surprise. Elections? Not a surprise. War? Not a surprise. Opposition to our faith? Not a surprise Your current circumstance? Not a surprise. Be at peace. 

The King is coming, and He is going to make all things new.

____________________________________________________________________________________

[1] Reading Revelation Responsibly

[2]  Like the fire and hail from the First Trumpet angel, or the fire from the mouths of the two witnesses.

[3] Emperors or various kings would have special ceremonies for their parousia (coming into a city). The king would have a specific crown that was only used for victory marches; citizens would be dressed in white robes and yelling deification names to give him honor. The parousia of Jesus brings about the final conquest of the devil and his forces (1 Cor. 15:23–24), the final judgment of the world (1 Cor. 4:5), completes the redemption of the redeemed (1 Jn. 3:21 Thes. 4:16–17Heb. 9:28), brings history to its fulfillment (Rom. 8:192 Pet. 3:13Rev. 21:1) and establishes the public vindication and glorification of Jesus (Mk. 14:62Rev. 1:7). (https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/themelios/article/the-parousia-getting-our-terms-right/)

“His robe is dipped in blood (19:13) even before he engages his enemies. The blood, therefore, is his own. Christ’s victory over his enemies… transpires through his death.” (Michael Gorman, Reading Revelation Responsibly)

[4] The rider on the white horse in the first seal (6:1-2) was introduced with exactly the same words (6:1; 19:11). If the rider in chapter 6 represented either false prophecy or the spirit of antichrist, it is appropriate that the rider here represents both true prophecy ("the testimony of Jesus") and Jesus Christ himself. (IVP New Testament Commentary)

[5] His crowns indicate that he is king of all (vv. 12,16).

[6] “This is a reference to what the rabbins call the shem hammephorash… the name the Jews never attempt to pronounce… they all declare that no man can pronounce it… and that God alone knows its true interpretation and pronunciation. (Adam Clarke)

[7] His bloody robe (see Gn 49:11Is 63:1–6) unites Christ's sacrifice on the Cross with His righteous war (v. 11) and judging of sin (see 14:14–20). (Orthodox Study Bible) “The blood mentioned in connection with Christ in the Apocalypse is always his own life-blood (1:55:697:1412:11.” (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[8] There are three OT allusions to the warrior-Messiah in this verse: he strikes down the nations (Isa 11:3ff.); he rules them with an iron rod (Ps 2:9); he tramples out the winepress of God's wrath (Isa 63:1-6)…Here his sword is the power of His Word (1:16 and 2:16)… the instrument of both his judgment and his salvation (Mt 12:37Jn 12:48). (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[9] The promise in v. 15 echoes the earlier description of the male child born of the woman and caught up to heaven (12:5). (IVP New Testament Commentary)

[10] In Semitic thought, name expressed being. In this case, Faithful and True (see 3:13), Word of God (v. 13; see Jn 1:114), KING OF KINGS (v. 16; see 17:14) AND LORD OF LORDS(see Dt 10:171Ti 6:15). (Orthodox Study Bible)

[11] Ancient nations adorned the images of their deities, princes, etc. with inscriptions, expressing either the character of the persons, their names, or some other circumstance which might contribute to their honor, on the garment, or the thighs. (Adam Clarke)

[12] The Parthian ruler was called the “great king” and the “king of kings…” (Ezr 7:12Eze 26:7Da 2:37). Scripture applied similar titles to God (Dt 10:17Ps 136:3Da 2:47Zec 14:91Ti 6:15). (NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible)

[13] This is according to a Jewish tradition, Synopsis Sohar, p. 114, n. 25: "In the time when God shall execute vengeance for the people of Israel, he shall feed all the beasts of the earth for twelve months with their flesh and all the fowls for seven years." (Adam Clarke)

[14] See Ezek. 39:4

[15] Very similar list to Revelation 6:15

[16] The only fate considered worse than death itself was death followed by lack of burial. In Eze 39:17 – 20: God invited beasts and birds to devour the flesh of the end-time army. (NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible)

[17] Recalls the graphic prophetic curse against Gog (Ezek 39:417–20; cf. Rev 20:8).

[18] This is the gathering which was initiated by the three unclean spirits like frogs “which go out to the kings of the earth” (Rev. 16:14+) (Precept Austin)

[19] No battle is fought. John may be indicating that the battle has already been fought and won by the death of the Lamb (5:59) just as Satan was defeated by the blood of the Lamb and the word of his followers' testimony (12:7-911). (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[20] “Satan’s power to influence the nations is suppressed….The present spread of the gospel to the nations, as initiated in Acts, is the result of a restriction on Satan’s power to deceive.” (ESV Reformation Study Bible)

[21] “Thousand” is often used in the Scriptures to denote a long period of time, a great quantity, completion, perfection, thoroughness (Job 9:32Pt 3:8).” (Orthodox Study Bible)

[22] Satan was bound at the completion of Christ's saving work (Mt 12:2829Lk 10:1718Jn 12:3132Col 2:15). He is not totally inactive (Acts 5:31Co 5:5Eph 6:11), but he cannot keep the gospel from the nations.” (Orthodox Study Bible)

[23] “The first resurrection (v. 6) is the heavenly life of souls who have died in Christ before His Second Coming… These righteous spirits (Heb 12:23) await only the reuniting of soul and body after the final judgment (21:1).” (Orthodox Study Bible) 

[24] “The first death is bodily death…The second death is ultimate and spiritual in character. Likewise, the first and second resurrections may be preliminary and ultimate, respectively. The first is spiritual, the second is of the body. (ESV Reformation Study Bible)

[25] Some of the early church fathers, Augustine included, thought that when Satan was cast into the abyss, it was into the hearts of those who were evil. When his is released, it is seen by those in whom Satan dwells terrorizing the people of God. 

[26] “Jewish writers typically used the invasion of Gog to predict the gathering of all nations against Israel. (NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible)

[27] “There are only two cities or kingdoms in the Apocalypse: the city of Satan, where the beast and harlot are central, and the city of God, where God and the Lamb are central. This city…Wherever God dwells among his people, there the city of God is (21:2-3).” (Expositor’s Bible Commentary) “The city is Christ’s church.” (Augustine)

[28] “That the beast and false prophet are [thrown into the lake of fire] does not argue for their individuality, since later "death" and "Hades," nonpersonal entities, are personified and cast into the same lake of fire (v.14).” (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[29] Postmillennialism: the return of Christ will not take place until the church has set up the kingdom of God on earth. Premillenialism: Christ’s return will be followed by the binding of Satan and a thousand-year reign of saints before the final judgment. Dispensationalism: divides history into seven dispensations, with the final one culminating in a kingdom centered in a renewed Jerusalem with a rebuilt temple. Amillennialism: the thousand-year reign is happening now during the Church Age in some fashion. All affirm God’s victory, and the future reign of the saints with Christ. (Asbury Bible Commentary)

[30] The vision shares features with Ps. 7:6–847:89Dan. 7:910 and other Old Testament judgment scenes (cf. Matt. 25:31–46). (ESV Reformation Study Bible)

[31] The books of judgment (Dan 7:10) contain a record of deeds, which will judge people (Ps 61:13Jer 17:6). The Book of Life contains the names of all saved by grace (Ex 32:32Is 4:3Dan 12:12)—not that they have no works, but that God's mercy is far greater in comparison.” (Orthodox Study Bible)

[32] “Many Gentiles believed that those who died at sea were barred from Hades because they were not buried. Some apocalyptic writings expected Hades to return what was entrusted to it when the dead are raised for judgment.” (NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible) However, Augustine notes that the “sea”, in Revelation, has always meant the nations. He thinks that when the Sea gives up its dead, it’s the spiritually dead from the nations who had not yet physically died. Later, John will say “there is no more sea.” I always thought that meant “no more chaos,” but might it mean “no more distinct nations of earth?” Hmmm…..

[33]   A river of fire flows from God’s throne in Da 7:10, an image that is heavily developed in later Jewish tradition. Most relevant… is the Jewish image of fiery Gehenna (Gehinnom), where many Jewish teachers believed that the wicked would be either tortured or consumed.” (NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible)

[34] “Death, the “last enemy that will be destroyed” (1Co 15:26), and Hades, the intermediate state between death and resurrection, will end.” (Orthodox Study Bible) 

[35] How Revelation 14 describes it.

[36] “A thousand-year Messianic age can be found in rabbinic literature… but [John’s]  main point was highlighting the temporary binding of Satan until the final judgment.” (NIV First Century Study Bible) There is no record in Ancient Christian Commentary On Scripture that the Early Church thought this to be a literal 1,000 years. Almost to a man, the early church fathers thought this 1,000 years were either a) the time between the Resurrection and the Second Coming, or b) the span of Jesus’ incarnate life during which the gospel spreads and Satan’s power and deceit is limited.

[37] “The first death consisted in the separation of the soul from the body for a season; the second death in the separation of body and soul from God for ever. The first death is that from which there may be a resurrection; the second death is that from which there can be no recovery. By the first the body is destroyed during time; by the second, body and soul are destroyed through eternity.” (Adam Clarke)

[38] “The worldwide city of Christ is to suffer at the worldwide city of the Devil.” (Augustine)

[39] Quick note: According to the excerpts in Ancient Christian Commentary On Scripture, all of the Early Church Father’s thought this blood was Jesus’ own. Some modern commentators think it’s the blood of those God judges in the ‘winepress’ of his wrath – which, as I read it, has not happened yet in the narrative. 

[40] Interesting: the judgment is here a winepress, in a couple verses, it will be a fire. We saw this in Revelation 14: “ Then another angel came out of the temple in heaven, and he too had a sharp sickle.  Another angel, who was in charge of the fire, came from the altar and called in a loud voice to the angel who had the sharp sickle, “Use your sharp sickle and gather the clusters of grapes off the vine of the earth, because its grapes are now ripe.” So the angel swung his sickle over the earth and gathered the grapes from the vineyard of the earth and tossed them into the great winepress of the wrath of God.” Both capture the point that judgment is coming; both are images, ‘icons’ on which to click.

[41] “Come, go down; for the winepress is full, the vats overflow—for their wickedness is great. Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision! For the day of the LORD is near in the valley of decision.” (Joel 3:13b-14)

[42] Interesting perspective from Caesarius of Arles, which will show the kind of interpretation the church fathers offered: “Either they will believe in Christ through the fire of the Holy Spirit, and they will be spiritually consumed by the church, that is, incorporated into the church, or they will be consumed by the fire of their own sins and they will perish.” (Ancient Christian Commentary On Scripture: Revelation)

[43] (Is. 66:1516Joel 2:3). 

[44] Fire is frequently associated with all-consuming judgment (Is. 66:1516Joel 2:3).

[45] So far in Revelation, all fire has represented judgment and not actual fire. I’m trying to stay faithful to that framework.

[46] My image to link it back to Exodus, which has happened a lot in Revelation. 

[47] Augustine thought this meant that, since the sea represented nations, the Sea gave up the living who were spiritually dead, and Hades gave up the physically dead. 

[48] Expositor’s Bible Commentary

[49] Got the term and the book idea from Michael Heisser, on the Naked Bible Podcast

[50] Michael Gorman, Reading Revelation Responsibly

[51] Michael Gorman, Reading Revelation Responsibly

[52] Seven Deadly spirits: The message of Revelations letters for today's Church, T. Scott Daniels

7 Bowls (Revelation 15:5 – 16:21)

After I had taken all this in, I looked again; and the inner part of the tabernacle of witness[1] opened in heaven.  Out of the temple came seven messengers, clothed in pure linen, bright and shining, their chests clad in a golden sash, carrying seven plagues.  Then one of the four living creatures[2] stepped over to give to the seven messengers seven golden bowls[3] brimming with the wrath of God who lives throughout the ages.

 The temple was full of the smoke billowing from the magnificent glory of God and from His power,[4] and no one could enter the temple until the seven plagues of the seven messengers accomplished their God-ordained end.Then I heard a great voice coming from the temple ordering the seven heavenly messengers. A voice said,” Go and pour out the seven bowls of the wrath[5] of God upon the earth.”[6]

I am going to take the approach that John's vision explains God’s coming judgment on the Roman Empire (that will be clear in the next few chapters) by taking into the account of the fall of Babylon in light of the defeat of Pharaoh at the Red Sea, and use all of these as framework for a universalized prediction of the judgments that will fall on all Babylons (World Systems) until the final global Babylon is gone.[7]

  • Chapter 15-16 pick up details from chapters 4, 8, 12 and 14. This is recapitulation.

  • The 7 bowls of judgment (16:1-21) overlap the 7 trumpets and seals. Lots of similar imagery and events.

  • They all have a similar goal: to bring the earth's inhabitants, like Pharaoh, to repentance.[8]

  • The judgment escalates from impacting 1/4, to 1/3, to all the world.[9][10] My theory: it reminds us that God is patient, but at some point “our iniquities are full.” (Genesis 15:16)

  • The bowls are linked to the Judgment of the global Babylonian system in Chapter 18; (16:19; 14:8 and 10; 15:7, 16:1).

  • This is modeled after the plagues in Egypt, the last 7 of which did not touch God’s people like the other plagues did.

 Let’s pause on that point for a moment. Literal interpretations are very popular for this section (“Oh, it must be a supernova, or nuclear war, or some kind of plague, etc.”), but a) that’s not how Revelation has been working, and b) if they were literal, there’s no way God’s people wouldn’t be harmed. Real things will happen, but just like we do with numbers, we need to weigh the message. Early church commentaries overwhelmingly read these events as symbolic of spiritual and cultural realities.  Briefly summarized, “All of these plagues are spiritual, and they occur in the soul.” (Caesarius of Arles, 500s) 

  • The waters are nations (Primasius, 500s).

  • The sores are guilt of sin and grief of apostates (Primasius, Caesarius, Andrew of Caesarea, 500s) or a version of the Mark (Bede, 700s).

  • Blood is a spiritual revenge, a vision of filth (Primasius, Bede), though it could indicate the bloodshed that followed war (Andrew, Oecumenius, 900s).

  • Scorching sun is drought (Oecumenius), the steadfastness of the saints (Primasius), or the splendor of the wise (Bede).

  • Darkness is a darkness of reason (Oecumenius), suppressing the truth through wickedness (Primasius), lacking the ‘sun of righteousness’ (Andrew),  the false joy of earthly happiness (Bede), the brightness of doctrine obscured by unbelievers (Victorinus, 200s)

  • The Euphrates drying up means nations will possess nothing which is living (Primasius).

  • The Great City is Jerusalem, Babylon, or everybody; when the cities of the nations fall, it is “the strength and confidence of the nations” (Primasius) or “the cessation of the pagan manner of life” at the coming of the Kingdom of God” (Andrew).

  • Islands are churches and the mountains are leaders (Oecumenius, Andrew, Bede).[11]

  • 100 lb. hailstones are the completeness of God’s judgment (Primasius, Andrew)

So, I feel like I am on safe ground when I say that the heart of the message is in its weight, not in connect-the-dots details. The world – the corrupt systems, the evil worldview, the idols, the violent power structures, the people enabling them – are going to be dismantled and judged, with nations reaping what they have sown. 

So the first messenger poured out his bowl onto the earth. When he did, a foul-smelling, painful sore broke out on each person who bore the mark of the beast and who worshiped its image.  

The First Bowl. The sores seem to represent some form of suffering  similar to the spiritual and psychological torment of the fifth trumpet.[12] This will not be experienced by those who are resting in God. 

The second messenger poured out his bowl into the sea. When he did, the waters became like the blood that spills from a dead body, and every living creature in the sea died. The third messenger poured out his bowl into the rivers and springs of fresh water.[13] When he did, they, too, became blood. 

  And I heard the messenger over the waters speak. You are just, O holy One who is and who was, for You have judged these things rightly. Because people shed the blood of the saints and prophets, You have given them blood to quench their thirst. They are deserving of these punishments.”[14]  And I heard a voice from the altar agree. “Yes, Lord God, the All Powerful, true and right are Your judgments! 

The Second and Third Bowl.[15]

  • 17:1 and 17:15 make clear the ‘many waters’ are nations from which the Beast emerges (Rev. 13).[16] In 20:8, ungodly nations are compared to the sand of the sea shore on which the dragon stands (13:1)  

  • The sea being turned into blood = a spiritual vision of filth (Primasius, Bede) or the bloodshed that followed war and violence (Andrew, Oecumenius). “Because people shed the blood of the saints and prophets, You have given them blood to quench their thirst.”[17] What goes around comes around.

  • Jewish tradition claimed that,[18] in response to Pharaoh drowning Israel’s babies in the Nile, God later turned the Nile to blood, struck Egypt’s firstborn, and drowned Pharaoh’s army. [19]

 Since Babylon/Rome was the source of prosperous maritime commerce, some associate this with a global economic collapse (18:17-19). They worshipped and trusted the economy, and now it’s gone, and all the ripple effects of desperate actions follow. Those who made it so God’s people could not buy and sell will now themselves not be able to buy and sell.  God punishes the world by decimating an economy built on the shedding of blood (exploitation, corruption, slavery, etc), especially because of persecution of the saints.[20]

This language of blood is not about less than the violent and greedy reaping sowing the wind and reaping the whirlwind, but I think it’s about more than that. Nothing helps them avoid the reality of reaping the sin and chaos they sowed within and around themselves – physically, existentially, emotionally, spiritually.

The fourth messenger poured out his bowl on the sun. When he did, the sun was permitted to blister people with its fire.[21] The incredible heat of the sunburned their skin; but instead of rethinking their actions and glorifying God, they cursed God’s name because He had the power to carry out these plagues.

The pouring out of God's wrath in the Old Testament is often figuratively expressed as fire.  

  • Jeremiah 7:20 -  “My anger and my wrath will be poured out on this place… and it will burn and not be quenched.”

  • Ezekiel 22:21-22  - “I shall gather you and blow on you with the fire of my wrath, and you will be melted in the midst of it...”

  • Deuteronomy 32:22 – “For a fire will be kindled by my wrath, one that burns down to the realm of the dead below. It will devour the earth and its harvests and set afire the foundations of the mountains.”

 Oecumenius viewed it literally (he thought it was drought), but the idea that it was the steadfastness of the saints (Primasius) or the splendor of the wise (Bede) shows up more often in historical church literature. Babylon will be scorched with the same kind of fire unleashed by the two prophets in chapter 11. It’s the glaring, blinding nature of truth, which is illuminating and life-giving for those who love it, and anguish for those who don’t.[22]  

 The fifth messenger poured out his bowl on the throne of the beast.[23] When he did, its kingdom was blanketed in darkness. People chewed on their tongues out of the depth of their agony.[24]  Still they refused to change their wicked ways, so they cursed the God of heaven because of their painful afflictions and ulcerous sores. 

Early Jewish interpreters thought that the darkness of the Egyptian plague symbolized spiritual separation from God, an exile from Eternal Providence. Some believed the Egyptians’ contemplation of their own wretchedness was worse than the actual darkness. Isaiah 8:20-22 associates darkness with occult practices:

“[Mediums and spiritists] have no light of dawn. Distressed and hungry, they will roam through the land; when they are famished, they will become enraged and, looking upward, will curse their king and their God.  Then they will look toward the earth and see only distress and darkness and fearful gloom, and they will be thrust into utter darkness.”

The ancient commentary summarizes well: Darkness is a darkness of reason (Oecumenius), suppressing the truth through wickedness (Primasius), lacking the ‘sun of righteousness’ (Andrew) or the false joy of earthly happiness (Bede).

I think we are intended to think of this as light being the light of God’s truth and glory, and the darkness being separation from God and every good and perfect gift that He has given the world. Those in anguish are recognizing the horror of their spiritual darkness, their separation from God, and that eternal fate awaits them characterized by this very thing.[25] [26] 

The sixth messenger poured out his bowl on the great river Euphrates. When he did, the river dried up and became a road so that the kings from the east and their armies could make their way.[27]

  •  ‘Many waters,’ are the multitudes, nations and tongues (17:15). 

  • The judgment on Babylon included the drying up of the Euphrates River (Cyrus diverted the Euphrates and crossed it- from the East)

  • Kings from the East = the kings of the whole world (17:18; 20:8).  

  • The traditional northern enemies, God and Magog, are later explained to be all nations in the four corners of the Earth.

I suspect the drying up of the Euphrates reveals that the multitude of Babylon's religious adherents throughout the world - which is where Babylon gets its wealth, power, and prestige - will become disloyal and turn against them. We will see this in the next few chapters.

  What I saw next troubled me deeply: three foul spirits like frogs appeared, belched from the mouth of the dragon, the mouth of the beast, and the mouth of the earth-beast (false prophet).  These frogs are demonic spirits.[28] As they go into the world, they perform miracles[29] persuading the kings of the world to gather for the last battle on the great day of God[30], the All Powerful.[31] 

I heard a voice saying: ” See, I am coming like a thief! Blessed is the person who watches and waits, dressed and ready to go, so as not to wander about naked, exposed to disgrace.”[32]  And the kings gathered at the place called Har-Magedon in Hebrew.[33]

This battle gathers the global persecutors of God’s people. This is the confrontation between Christ and all of the evil nations at the end of the age.[34] The nations that think they will eliminate God’s people will actually meet their own judgment (19:11-21). Things to note:

  • There is no mention of a mountain of Megiddo in the Old Testament or in Jewish literature. It was a very small hill. 

  • Thanks to a military history at Megiddo (Judges 5:19, 2nd Kings 23:29), Megiddo became associated in Judaism with the place where evil nations attack Israel.

  • If 20:8 is a recapitulation to the same event as 16:14, then 20:9 puts Armageddon at Jerusalem/Mount Zion, both of which (in John's terms) refer to the worldwide Church. 

To think of Armageddon as a specific geographical locale would go against our principles in understanding Revelation so far.  Like Babylon and the Euphrates, Armageddon must be weighed: it has global and spiritual application. Adam Clarke, writing in the 1800s, noted:

“But what is the battle of Armageddon? How ridiculous have been the conjectures of men relative to this point! Within the last twenty years this battle has been fought at various places, according to our purblind seers and self-inspired prophets! At one time it was Austerlitz, at another Moscow, at another Leipsic, and now Waterloo! And thus they have gone on, and will go on, confounding and being confounded.”

I favor the reading that Har-Mageddon is Har-Moad, God’s cosmic mountain dwelling place (Jerusalem and Zion, the home of the Church). The battle symbolizes the final cosmic clash between God and Satan over the people of God.[35]  The evil hordes associated with the East (all the nations) - are going to march on God’s domain and God’s people. [36] 

Finally, the seventh messenger poured out his bowl into the air. When he did, a great voice came out of the temple, from the throne. And a loud Voice said, “It is accomplished!”  At the sound of the voice, there were flashes of lightning, sounds of voices, rumblings of thunder, and tremors of an earthquake. In all of human history, there had never been an earthquake of this magnitude. The great city was torn into three parts, and the cities of all the nations fell. God remembered the great city, Babylon[37], and made her drink the cup of His fury and wrath.[38]

 Every island sank into the ocean, and no mountains were left to be discovered. And great hailstones, each weighing nearly 100 pounds[39], fell from the sky onto the people until they cursed God because the plague of hail was so severe.

In the 7th Bowl, God punishes the ungodly world system with final judgment. The language of lightning, thunder, and hailstone is in imagery of judgment that we've already seen several times in Revelation to show that something is brought to an end.

The Great City that splits into three parts[40] has been variously identified as Jerusalem, Rome, or ungodly world systems, which would include the former two.  Along with Babylon, John also sees the cities of the nations fall,[41] likely "the kings of the whole world" assembled for battle at Armageddon (vv. 14, 16). John's vision revealed that all the cities are doomed to share Babylon's fate.[42]

I favor the view[43] that these are images of governments (islands) falling apart, and the nations (mountains) collapsing, leaving the masses of humanity (the water) with no source of human stability and leadership. [44] Then indeed, as Othello said when his madness descended, “Chaos has come.”

The summary: The seals, bowls and trumpets and Egypt, Babylon and Rome tell us how the story is going to go as history unfolds:

  1.  Arrogant nations (beasts) will arise from humanity (sea) 

  2. They will be motivated by the Satan (dragon) and fed by the people who love them (streams and springs)

  3. They will align themselves against God and His people by abusing with power (Rome) or alluring with pleasure (Babylon).  

  4. As they reap what they sow (drinking the ‘bowls’ of the blood they shed), they will collapse, and all their allies will desert them (mountains and islands fleeing).

  5. Throughout history, God, who is slow to anger, has spared people the full weight of their punishment. Egypt, Rome, Babylon – they are all previews of the anguish, guilt, misery, and punishment (sores, darkness, scotching light of truth) that cannot be escaped. 

  6.  In the end, when the cup of the history of the whole world’s iniquity is full, God will tell the martyrs that the time of waiting is over[45], and He will pour out His wrath at the evil that destroyed His good world – but this time it will be undiluted.

* * * * *

So, right now, we are watching things unfold on the world stage that likely have us thinking about apocalyptic world events.  

  •  If John were writing today to the church in the Ukraine, I suspect Putin would be the latest example in world history of what it looks like when a beast follows the dragon.[46]  

  • There’s even a false prophet: Kremlin’s propaganda machine that has convinced so many Christians in Russia (and America) that Putin is a good man, perhaps even a friend of the church, when the reality is the opposite. (Read “How Putin’s Politics Threaten the Church’s Witness,” at Christianity Today,[47] ; “No, Putin Is Not A Defender Of Christian Values,”[48]; “The Point: Christian Persecution In Russia.”[49])

  • Putin’ allies (islands and mountains) are currently abandoning him[50]

  • His Euphrates is drying up[51]

  • His own people are in anguish over his decision[52] [53] [54]

Now, I don’t know how this war will end and what will happen to Russia when it does (also, this is a geopolitical war, not a war of aggression specifically targeting God’s people).  I just know what happens throughout history: oppressive, violent and decadent nations eventually drink the bowl of their own evil. If it doesn’t happen now, it will, given enough time.[55] 

But John’s talking about something bigger. The Babylon/Rome/Egypt that deserves God’s judgment is the whole system. It’s not less than one geographical entity or a particularly evil moment in time, but it’s certainly more than that. It’s everything and everyone aligned against Christ and his people.

John’s trying to communicate the totality of the problem: earthly nations are not the true home of God’s people. They will all eventually wreak some kind of havoc in God’s good world and seek to ruin God’s people through coercive power (Rome) or decadent pleasure (Babylon). The best way for John’s audience to understand this was to run them through all the nations they already knew to be beastly – Egypt, Babylon, Rome - and then universalize it for all believers: “This is how history is going to unfold.”

The fall of Babylon/Rome/Egypt acts as a preview to the next Babylon/Rome Egypt and eventually the fall of the whole thing when the cup of the global iniquity is full.  That sets the stage for the ultimate reversal (Revelation 17 and 18), followed by the creation of the New Heaven and the New Earth.[56] That’s where we are heading next week.

Meanwhile, we hold fast to the testimony of Jesus and keep his commands (Revelation 14:12). We pray. We hope. We endure, longing for the day when all beasts will come to an end, and all dragons will be destroyed, and every knee will bow, and every tongue confess, the Jesus is Lord, to the glory of God (Philippians 2:10-11).

_____________________________________________________________________________

[1] “The temple of the tabernacle of the testimony is the heavenly prototype of the earthly ‘tabernacle of testimony; (Nm 17:7), containing the witness of God's covenant, the tablets of the Law brought down from Mt. Sinai by Moses.” (Orthodox Study Bible) 

[2] See Revelation 4:6

[3] “Recalls the bowls that hold the prayers of God’s people who cry out for vindication (see note on 5:8; cf. 6:9–108:3–5).” (NIV Biblical Theology Study Bible)

[4] “Smoke or thick cloud frequently accompanies God’s presence, especially when He is angry. The associations include Mount Sinai (Ex. 19:9161820:18) and the visions of Isaiah and Ezekiel (Is. 6:4Ezek. 1:4; cf. Num. 12:5Ps. 18:81174:1).” (ESV Reformation Study Bible)

[5] The phrase ‘pour out God's Wrath’ in the Old Testament is used to indicate judgment against either covenant breakers or those who have persecuted God's people (Ezekiel 14:19, Jeremiah 10:25, Psalm 69:24, Zephaniah 3:8).[5]

[6] Beale claims, “These plagues are the last in that they complete the thought revealed in the preceding ‘woe’ visions and portray the wrath of God in a more intense manner than the previous visions. The bowls go back in time and explain in greater detail the ‘woes’ throughout the age and culminating in the final judgment… The trumpet visions may be compared to incomplete snapshots and the bowls to fuller photographs.”

[7] This is the approach G.K. Beale takes, and a lot of my commentary comes from his commentary in Revelation: An Introduction

[8] IVP New Testament Commentary

[9] “For example, the second and third cups reveal that the second and third trumpet plagues have increased in extent (8:8–1116:3–4); just as the earthquake following the seventh trumpet seems to be that of the seventh cup, only more fully described (11:1916:17–20). The parallels between the fourth trumpet and fourth cup are evident (8:1216:8), as also between the fifth and sixth trumpets and fifth and sixth cups (9:1–2116:10–16).”  New Bible Commentary

[10] Sam Storms notes that John writes Revelation with visions that are temporally parallel. What he means is this: “What can occur in a limited or partial manner at any point in history between the two advents of Christ, can also occur, at any point in history between the two advents of Christ, in a universal or more thorough-going manner.” https://www.samstorms.org/all-articles/post/the-seven-bowls---part-i

[11] All references from Ancient Christian Commentary On Scripture: Revelation, from IVP Press.

[12] The sores are guilt of sin and grief of apostates (Primasius, Caesarius, Andrew of Caesarea) or a version of the Mark (Bede).

[13] According to Beale, “The “sea” as figurative for ungodly humanity is not inconsistent with the other uses of thalassa in the Apocalypse… Clearly the “many waters” of 17:1 are a picture of unbelievers throughout the earth [echoed in 17:15]. Furthermore, Satan’s standing “on the sand of the sea” in 12:18 may refer to his sovereignty over the wicked nations, since in 20:8 ungodly nations are compared to “the sand of the sea.” The sea from which the beast of 13:1 emerges represents the mass of nations. This symbolic understanding of 16:3 is supported by the explicit figurative interpretation of the bloody “rivers and springs of waters” in v 4 as God’s judgment on the impious. The understanding of “blood” in v 3 as representing the suffering of the ungodly is warranted by the immediate context (e.g., vv 2, 8–11) and by the use of “blood” (haima) elsewhere in Revelation to refer, without exception, to the suffering of the wicked or of Christ and the saints (the former in 11:6; 14:20; 19:13; cf. 6:12; 8:7–8; the latter in 1:5; 5:9; 6:10; 12:11; 17:6; 18:24; 19:2).”

[14] NIV Cultural Backgrounds Commentary

[15] The sea turning to blood is based on Exodus 7:17 -21.

[16] The waters are nations (Primasius).

[17] Adam Clarke notes: “It is said that when Tomyris, queen of the Scythians, had vanquished Cyrus, she cut off his head and threw it into a vessel of blood, saying, "Satisfy thyself with blood, for which thou hast thirsted, and for which thy desire has been insatiable." 

[18] “Wisdom of Solomon once again, reflecting on how the plagues were appropriate to the Egyptians' sins: "In return for their foolish and wicked thoughts, which led them astray to worship irrational serpents and worthless animals, you sent upon them a multitude of irrational creatures to punish them, so that they might learn that one is punished by the very things by which one sins" (Wisdom 11:15) How To Read The Bible Book By Book

[19] NIV Cultural Background Study Bible

[20] Isaiah had warned the world centuries before: “I will feed your oppressors with their own flesh, and they will become drunk with their own blood, and all flesh will know that I, the Lord, am your savior.” (Isaiah 49:26)

[21] In 7:16, God promised to protect the redeemed from the sun’s “scorching heat.”

[22] “A form of spiritual judgment against persecutors, which lays the basis for their future final punishment.” Michael Heisser

[23] “"Throne" designated the stronghold of Satan at Pergamum. "The throne of the beast" symbolizes the seat of the world-wide dominion of the great satanic system of idolatry (20:1). This system is plunged into spiritual darkness or disruption, bringing chaos on all who sought life and meaning in it. This bowl plague… strikes at the very seat of satanic authority over the world; and the darkness is moral and spiritual rather than physical (cf. 21:2522:5Jn 8:1212:35-36461Jn 1:5-72:8-10). (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[24]  The darkness of Moses’ plagues could be “felt” (Ex 10:21).

[25] Heisser

[26] “Beale says,“God causes all who follow the beast to have times of anguish and horror when they realize that they are in spiritual darkness, that they are separated from God and that eternal darkness awaits them... The temporal judgment here is a precursor of the final judgment, when unbelievers will be “cast into the outer darkness,” where “there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth (Matt. 8:12; 22:13; 25:30).” G.K. Beale, Revelation: An Introduction “

[27] The reference to the Euphrates is a striking parallel to the sixth bowl plague (9:14). The sixth trumpet releases demonic hordes to inflict death on the earth dwellers; the sixth bowl effects the assembling of the rulers (kings) from the East to meet the Lord God Almighty in battle. Perhaps they are, in some sense, the same thing? (Expositors Bible Commentary) “John transforms the Roman fear of Parthian invaders into a universal confrontation. To him, kings and nations and armies are demon possessed, not just individuals. Twice he states that the evil spirits "gathered them" for battle (vv. 14, 16), giving first the time and then the place of the great final conflict.” (How To Read The Bible Verse By Verse

[28] Since these demons come from the mouth, deceptive words are implied (contrast the sword from Christ's mouth  = truth. (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[29] “Recalls the counterfeit signs by Pharaoh’s magicians (Exod 8:7), as well as Jesus’ warning concerning the “great signs and wonders” by false messiahs and prophets (Matt 24:24).” (NIV Biblical Theology Study Bible)

[30] The last battle on the Great Day of God is used in Joel 2:11 and Zephaniah 1:14 to indicate that the battle is one in which God will decisively judge the unrighteous.

[31] Imagery alluding to the battle between God and Pharaoh in Ex. 15:2. (ESV Reformation Study Bible)

[32] Hyperlink to the letters to the churches in Sardis (3:2–3) and Laodicea (3:17–18). The warning about Jesus' coming "like a thief" implies a need for alertness to the deception of idolatry and disloyalty to Jesus. 

[33] “Magedon can be derived from the secondary sense of the Hebrew verb gadad, which means "to gather in troops or bands." A simple way in Hebrew to make a noun from a verb is to prefix a ma to the verbal form. Thus we have maged, "a place of gathering in troops," and the suffix o, meaning "his," yielding "his place of gathering in troops." This is almost equivalent to the expressions in vv.1416—"to gather them [the kings] for the battle on the great day of God Almighty"—and would allude to the prophetic expectation of the gathering of the nations for judgment (Joel 3:212). In any case, the name… describes the final confrontation where God will meet the forces of evil in their final defeat. It does, however, refer to a real point in history and to real persons who will encounter God's just sentence.” (Expositor’s Bible Commentary)

[34] Lots of Old Testament prophecy on this (Zachariah 12 -14; Zephaniah 3:8-20; Ezekiel 38: 2 -9, 39:1- 8. 

[35] Asbury Bible Commentary

[36] Michael Heisser

[37] The Old Testament prophets said Babylon would be leveled by the Persians and never rise as a world power again (Isaiah 13:17 -22; Jeremiah 15:13, 51: 62 -64). Even if someone builds a city now on the site of ancient Babylon, that’s a far cry from it being a global center of world power, commerce, domination, and loyalty. 

[38] 15:5-16:21Ch. 17 identifies Babylon as the Roman Empire and 18:3 accuses Babylon/Rome of making nations drink the maddening wine of her adulteries. Now, in retribution, Rome must drink the cup of God’s wrath. (Asbury Bible Commentary)

[39] 100 lb. hailstones are the completeness of God’s judgment (Primasius, Andrew)

[40] The background to the phrase “Babylon the Great” is Daniel 4:30

[41] When the cities of the nations fall, it is “the strength and confidence of the nations” (Primasius) or “the cessation of the pagan manner of life” at the coming of the Kingdom of God (Andrew).

[42] How To Read The Bible Verse By Verse

[43] Oecumenius, Andrew, and Bede thought the islands were churches and the mountains church leaders. I think their idea was right, but too limited.

[44] Not a bad chart here for symbolism in Revelation. Not perfect (in my opinion), but overall helpful. http://www.revelation-today.com/a1bible%20symbols.htm

[45] Revelation 6:10

[46] Another example: “In 1793 the French king was beheaded by the National Assembly; and great and unparalleled miseries fell upon the French nation, which nearly extinguished all their nobility, and brought about a war that lasted twenty-three years, and nearly ruined that country and all the nations of Europe.” (Adam Clarke)

[47] https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2022/february-web-only/russia-ukraine-orthodox-pope-putin-politics-church-witness.html

[48] https://reason.com/2022/02/25/religious-freedom-russia-putin-isnt-defender-of-christian-values/

[49] https://www.breakpoint.org/the-point-christian-persecution-in-russia/

[50] (“Putin’s allies abandon him over Ukraine invasion,” Axios https://www.axios.com/putin-allies-abandon-russia-ukraine-invasion-2833f0b9-425d-4169-b159-2d2bdd159368.html

[51] “List of sanctions against Russia after Ukraine’s invasion.” https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/2/25/list-of-sanctions-on-russia-after-invasion

[52]  “Prominent Russians join protests against Ukraine war amid 1,800 arrests.” https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/25/prominent-russians-join-protests-against-ukraine-war-amid-1800-arrests-putin

[53] “Russia's richest 22 billionaires have lost $39 billion in one day after the invasion of Ukraine.” https://www.businessinsider.com/russian-billionaires-lose-39-billion-dollars-one-day-ukraine-invasion-2022-2

[54] His own troops are surrendering because they “didn’t know that they were brought to Ukraine to kill Ukrainians.”https://ktla.com/news/nationworld/russian-platoon-surrendered-to-ukrainian-forces-ambassador-says/

[55] Wikipedia has a really excellent entry on “State Collapse.” The cyclical rise and fall of nations has not only robust philosophical support, but continuous historical examples.

[56] Michael Heisser