Seven Seals - Overview
- (Revelation 6:1-2) - “When the Lamb opened one of the seven seals, I heard one of the four living creatures saying, as with a voice of thunder: Go! And I saw a white horse, and he that was sitting thereon holding a bow, and there was given to him a crown, and he went forth conquering, and that he might conquer.”
- “Authority was given to them over a fourth of the earth to kill with sword and with famine and with death, and by the wild beasts of the earth.”
Photo by Mohamed Nohassi on Unsplash |
The “fifth seal” revealed martyred souls underneath the “altar” where they were to remain until the full number of their fellow martyrs had been gathered. No time-lapse is indicated by the text between the first four and the fifth seals. Their sequence is literary, not chronological.
The “sixth seal” caused a great earthquake and celestial upheaval as the “Day of the Lord” arrived, the time of the “wrath of the Lamb and He Who sits on the Throne.” Thus, the “sixth seal” signified the arrival of the final judgment and the reconfiguration of the created order, presumably, in preparation for the New Creation - (Joel 2:28-32, Revelation 6:12-17).
Before the “seventh seal” was opened, the series of seal openings was interrupted for the “sealing of the servants of God,” which occurred before the “four winds of the earth” could be released on the earth. The “sealing” enabled His servants to endure whatever the “four winds” represented, and thus, “to stand” before the “Lamb and the Throne.”
In context, the “four winds of the earth” refer to the first “four seals” and their “riders.” The placement of the sealing of the servants between the sixth and seventh seals should caution us against assuming that the “seven seals” are presented in neat chronological order - (Revelation 7:1-17).
The “interruption” between the sixth and seventh seals is a literary pattern used several times in Revelation. Likewise, the “seven trumpets” were “interrupted” between the sixth and seventh trumpets by several visions. Like the first “four seals,” the first four trumpets were distinguished from the final three, which were labeled the “three woes.” And like the “seven seals,” the “seven trumpets” culminated in the “Day of the Lord” and a judgment scene at the end of the age - (Revelation 11:15-19).
The opening of the “seventh seal” produced “silence” in heaven while the prayers of the saints ascended as “incense” upon the altar before the “throne.” The “seventh seal” also transitioned the narrative to the next literary section, the series of “seven trumpets” - (Revelation 8:1-6).
The “seven seals” concluded with “claps of thunder, voices, flashes of lightning, and an earthquake,” the same phenomenon seen and heard previously before the “throne” - (Revelation 4:1-6, 8:1-5).
Thus, whatever the opening of the “seven seals” represents, the sevenfold series covers the entire period between the enthronement of the “Lamb” and the “Day of the Lord.”
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