Redemption of the Nations
The “nations” and the “kings of the earth” are found in “New Jerusalem” because of the work of the sacrificial Lamb and his saints.
The Book of Revelation presents images that are
jarring and paradoxical, visions that do not conform to our expectations about
how God works. His plans to subjugate His enemies and “judge” the nations differ
radically from popular ideas. Just as his contemporaries did not understand him,
so, too often, we fail to comprehend the “slain Lamb” who reigns from God’s
throne - [Photo by Maksim Shutov on Unsplash].
For example, in the vision of the “rider on a white horse,” the
figure’s robe was “sprinkled with blood” BEFORE he engaged
in “combat” with the “beast” and its allies. Whose blood was it, and how
did it get there?
His only weapon was the great “sword” that
“proceeded out of his mouth.” Rather than a bloodstained blade
hanging from his belt, on his thigh it is written - “King of kings and
Lord of lords.” He is the “Word of God” sent to “judge and
make war in righteousness,”
and NOT in rage. The men of his “army” were “clothed with fine linen, white, pure,” with
no weapon in sight. And his “sword” was used “to shepherd the nations,” not to crush them or lop off
heads.
At first glance, this “war” appeared
to result in the end of the “nations” and the “kings of the earth.”
However, both groups reappear in the vision of New Jerusalem, where
the “nations” walk in the Lamb’s light, and the “kings of the earth brought their glory into” the city. Rather
than the aftermath of great slaughter, the life-giving river flowed from the throne,
bordered on either side by the tree of life, and “its leaves were for the healing
of the nations” - (Revelation
21:24-26, 22:1-4).
In the book’s prologue, Jesus is called the “Ruler of the Kings of the earth,” the one
who redeemed us and made us a “kingdom of priests.” The statement uses past tense verbs to
describe things already achieved through his Death and Resurrection. Thus, already,
the “saints” reign with him, and they do so as “priests.” They mediate
his light to a darkened world. And they “overcome” and reign in the same
manner that he did, by self-sacrificial service, perseverance, and yes, by martyrdom
- (Revelation 1:4-6, 3:21, 12:11).
If Jesus is the “ruler of the kings of the
earth,” what kind of king would he be if he allowed Satan to conquer the “nations”
for all time? After all, is he not the Messiah who overcame to “shepherd the
nations”? What kind of shepherd allows a predatory beast to slaughter his
sheep? - (Revelation 12:5, 19:15).
In the book, the term “nation”
is fluid in its application. It is used both negatively and positively. For
example, the “beast” was granted authority over men from every “nation,
people, tongue, and tribe.” But far more often, it is the “Lamb” who
is designated as the one who purchased “men from every nation, people, tribe
and tongue.” He is the king over his redeemed people, and they belong to
him - (Revelation 5:6-10, 7:9-17, 13:7-10).
At times, the “nations” are victimized by the “Dragon”
and his vassals. “Babylon” is condemned because “she made all nations
drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.” She, “by her sorceries, deceived
all the nations.” Ultimately, it is Satan who “deceives all
the nations.” How can Jesus “overcome” to “shepherd the
nations” if he allows the Devil to keep his ill-gotten gains? - (Revelation
14:8, 18:3, 18:23, 20:3-8).
Photo by Timo Wielink on Unsplash |
In the end, both the “nations” and their “kings” are found in the city of “New Jerusalem,” where they give honor and glory to the “Lamb” and the One who “sits on the Throne.” This happy result was predicted in the book:
- (Revelation 15:4) - “Who shall in any way not be put in fear, O Lord, and glorify your name, alone, full of lovingkindness; because all the nations will come and do homage before you, because your righteous deeds were made manifest?”
This
last prediction finds its fulfillment in the “New Jerusalem”:
- “The nations of them which are saved will walk in the light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and honor into it…And they will bring the glory and honor of the nations into it” - (Revelation 21:24-22:4).
This
is not to say that the “Lamb” has no human enemies. There are men and
women whose “names are not written in the Lamb’s book of life.” Unrepentant
sinners find themselves cast into the “Lake of Fire.” And the “Lamb”
has four “cosmic” enemies that oppose him at every turn - the “Dragon,”
the “Beast,” the “False
Prophet,” and “the Great Whore, Babylon.” Human beings that ally
with the “Dragon” and give their allegiance to his “beast” have
their names excluded from the “book of the life.”
The term applied
most often to human opponents of the “Lamb”
is the “inhabitants of the earth.” This group will face the final
“hour of trial, which is going to come…to try the inhabitants of the
earth.” The martyrs that John saw “underneath the altar” pleaded
with God to avenge their blood on the “inhabitants of the earth,”
the same group that rejoiced over the deaths of the “two witnesses” - (Revelation
3:10, 6:9-11, 8:7-13).
The “inhabitants
of the earth” is composed of unrepentant men and women that submit
themselves to the “beast” and embrace its “mark.” They are identified
explicitly as the ones “whose names were not written in the book of life
from the foundation of the world.” They do not represent all humanity, but only
those men and women who consciously oppose the “Lamb” and refuse to
repent - (Revelation 3:10, 6:10, 8:13, 11:10).
The “inhabitants
of the earth” are never presented in a positive light, and no member of the
group is found in “New Jerusalem,” although the “kings of the earth”
and the “nations” do inhabit the city.
“New Jerusalem” will descend to
the earth, not to become the home of a tiny “remnant” that make it to the city
by the “skin of their teeth.” Instead, it will be inhabited by a multitude of
men and women from “every nation and tribe and people and tongue” - All standing in worship before the “throne and before
the Lamb” – A multitude of redeemed men and women so vast, “no man can
number them” - (Revelation 7:9-17).
Finally, the “Lamb”
does not redeem the “nations” through military conquest or governmental
force, but through the perseverance, priestly service, and the testimony of his
“saints,” the very ones who overcome the Devil by “the blood of the
Lamb, the word of their testimony, and because they loved not their lives even
unto death.”
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