Final judgment scenes occur several times in Revelation. The sevenfold series of โseals,โ โtrumpets,โ and โbowls of wrathโ all culminate in the final judgment, and each time it is punctuated by terrestrial and celestial upheaval. And these three โjudgmentsโ are in addition to the one that occurs as the โGreat White Throne of Judgementโ when the wicked are cast into the โlake of fire.โ
This becomes problematic if the bookโs chapters are in chronological order. It would lead to the conclusion that multiple โfinalโ judgments occur before the โdescent of New Jerusalem.โ However, if the chapters are not in chronological sequence, then the several judgment scenes point to the same final event.
THREE SEVENFOLD SERIES
The opening of the โsixth sealโ produces โa great earthquakeโฆ the sun became black as sackcloth of hair and the full moon as bloodโ; basically, terrestrial, and celestial upheaval. The image represents nothing less than the โDay of the Lord,โ the time of the โwrath of God and the Lamb. The day will be marked by โa great earthquakeโฆ and every mountain and island were moved out of their place.โ
The โsixth sealโ includes verbal links to the โGreat White Throne of Judgmentโ when John โsaw a great white throne andย he who sat upon it;ย from his face, the earth and sky fled away, andย no place was foundย for themโ – (Revelation 20:11-18).
Thus, the series of โseven sealsโ culminates in the โDay of the Lord,โ the time of judgment and universal upheaval. Similarly, the series concludes with loud โvoices, claps of thunder, flashes of lightning, and an earthquakeโ – (Revelation 8:1-6).
Likewise, the series of โseven trumpetsโ concludes with loud voices in heaven declaring the consummation of the kingdom of God, the vindication of the righteous, and the judgment and condemnation of the wicked.
Like the โseven seals,โ the โseven trumpetsโ conclude with โflashes of lightning, voices, claps of thunder, an earthquake,โ plus โgreat hail.โ What is described is not another interim stage that must precede the end, but the arrival of the end itself – (Revelation 11:15-19).
The series of the โseven bowls of wrathโ also concludes with a scene of judgment that is accompanied by the same visual and audible phenomena as the first two sevenfold series – (Revelation 16:17-21).
The โbowls of wrathโ are called the โlast plaguesโ that complete the โwrath of God.โ After the seventh angel empties the final โbowl,โ a loud voice proclaims: โIt is finished.โ
Babylon and all the cities of the earth fall, and this is followed by โflashes of lightning, voices, claps of thunder, and a great earthquake,โ plus โgreat hail.โ At this time, โevery island fled, and no mountains were found,โ effects that parallel the โsixth seal.โ And the โgreat hailโ parallels the โseventh trumpetโ with its addition of โgreat hail.โ
THE GREAT WHITE THRONE
At the end of the โthousand years,โ Satan is released to โgather the nations to the battleโฆGog and Magog.โ This Satanic army โsurrounded the camp of the saints and the beloved city.โ But no actual battle takes place. As soon as the saints are encircled, โfire descends from heaven and devoursโ the forces arrayed against the church. Afterward, Satan himself is โcast into the lake of fire and brimstoneโ – (Revelation 20:8-10).
The demise of Satan is followed by the โGreat White Throne of Judgment.โ Before it, the โearth fled and heaven and place for them was not found.โ The โbooksโ are opened and the โdead are judged out of the things written in the books.โ Anyone whose name is not written in the โBook of Lifeโ is cast into the โlake of fireโ – (Revelation 20:11-15).
There are too many verbal links between the several judgment scenes in Revelation to be nothing more than coincidence. All three sevenfold series climax in the final judgment, and the โseven sealsโ and โseven trumpetsโ both culminate in the destruction of the wicked and the final vindication of the righteous.
Both the โseven sealsโ and the โseven bowls of wrathโ produce upheaval on the earth and in the heavens, most likely, in preparation for the arrival of the New Creation.
Thus, in Revelation, there is one final judgment, not several. The series of โseals,โ โtrumpets,โ and โbowls of wrathโ are not consecutive but concurrent. In each case, the same judgment scene is in view, and the description includes items found at the conclusion of each series, but also additional information is provided progressively such as the addition of โhail.โ
From its start, Revelation moves inexorably forward to the end of the age, the judgment at the โGreat White Throne,โ and the arrival of โNew Jerusalem.โ
