The Book of Revelation itself provides several interpretations of its images. For example, it states that the โSeven Golden Lampstandsโ represent seven congregations. Likewise, the โSeven Starsโ held by the โone like a Son of Manโ symbolize angels or โSeven Messengers.โ Pictures of the smoke of โincenseโ rising to heaven represent the โprayers of the saints.โ And so on.
Near the start of the Book, John was commanded to record the things that he โsaw,โ and what they โwere.โ This provides a pattern for interpreting the Bookโs visionary images, and its first vision demonstrates how Revelation communicates symbolically.
(Revelation 1:19-20) – โWrite, therefore, what things you saw and WHAT THEY ARE; and what things are going to come to pass after these things. The mystery of the seven stars that you saw on my right hand, and the seven lampstands of gold; the seven stars are the angels of the seven churches, and the seven lampstands are seven churches.โ
At the commencement of his first vision, John โsawโ Jesus pictured as the glorious โSon of Manโ figure who was standing among โseven golden lampstandsโ and holding seven โstars.โ He was dressed in the robes and accouterments of a High Priest.
In the visionโs explanation, the Greek clause rendered as โwhat they AREโ refers to what the images represent. In this case, Seven Assemblies and Seven Messengers. Moreover, from the very start, John was told the contents and purpose of the Bookโs visions:
(Revelation 1:1) – โThe revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave to him, to show his servants the things that must come to pass soon, and he signified through his angel to his servant John.โ
The Greek verb translated as โsignifiedโ is sรฉmainล (Strongโs – #G4591), a verb related to the noun for โsignโ (semeion). It means โto signify,โ โto show by sign.โ Thus, the Book specifies its medium of communication – visionary symbolism. The visual aspect is emphasized throughout Revelation by repeated references to what John โsawโ (fifty-six times).
John was commanded to record what he saw, and what those images โareโ (โWrite what they areโ). In this clause, the English verb rendered โareโ represents the Greek verb eisin. Here, it is in the present tense and plural number – โthey are.โ It refers to the explanations provided by the narrative for many of the Bookโs visions. Thus, he was told to record what many individual images โsignified.โ
FIRST VISION & INTERPRETATION
The first vision and its explanation do exactly that. John โseesโ the risen Christ walking among Seven Golden โLampstandsโ while holding โSeven Stars.โ The โstarsโ represent seven โmessengersโ (โthey areโ – esin), and the โLampstandsโ symbolize seven โassembliesโ (โthey areโ – esin). The same Greek verb form or โareโ (esin) is used in each clause.
The Gook interprets at least nine more images with this same verbal formula. In each case, the images are not literal and represent something else. For example:
- The โseven lamps of fireโ before the throne โareโ (esin) the โseven spirits of Godโ – (4:5).
- The โseven eyesโ of the Lamb โareโ (esin) the โseven spirits of Godโ – (5:6).
- The bowls of incense โareโ (esin) the โprayers of the saintsโ (5:8).
- The great multitudes โareโ (esin) those who โare coming out of the great tribulationโ – (7:13).
- The two witnesses โareโ (esin) the โtwo olive trees and the two lampstandsโ – (11:4).
- Three unclean spirits like frogs โareโ (esin) the โdemonsโ sent to gather the kings of the earth – (16:13-14).
- The โseven headsโ of the Beast โareโ (esin) โseven mountainsโ on which Babylon sits – (17:9).
- The โten hornsโ of the Beast โareโ (esin) โten kingsโ – (17:12).
- The โwatersโ on which Babylon sits โareโ (esin) โpeoples, multitudes, nations and tonguesโ – (17:15).
The same formula is employed elsewhere to interpret symbols but by using the singular form of the same Greek verb, or eimi (or similar verbs in the present tense). Note the following examples:
- The great city that โspiritually is calledโ (kaleitai) โSodom and Egyptโ – (11:8).
- The โgreat red dragon who is calledโ (kaloumenos) the Devil and Satan – (12:9).
- Martyrdom IS (estin) the โendurance and faithโ of the saints – (13:10).
- The endurance of the saints IS (estin) they who โkeep the faith of Jesusโ – (14:12).
- And gathered them to โthe place calledโ (kaloumenon) in the Hebrew tongue; โArmageddonโ – (16:16).
- The โgreat whoreโ IS (estin) the โgreat cityโ with dominion over the kings of the earth – (17:18).
- The โfine linenโ IS (estin) the โrighteousness of the saintsโ – (19:8).
- The โlake of fireโ IS (estin) the โsecond deathโ – (20:14, 21:8).
- The โdragon and ancient serpentโ IS (estin) the โDevil and Satanโ – (20:2).
ANGELS
Angels provide John and his readers with pivotal interpretations. For example, John saw an โinnumerable multitudeโ arrayed in white robes before the Throne. One of the twenty-four elders explained that the multitude represented โthe men who are coming out of the Great Tribulation, and they washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lambโ – (Revelation 7:9-17).
Later, John was โcarried away in spirit into the wildernessโ where he saw a โwoman sitting on a scarlet beast full of names of blasphemy; having seven heads and ten horns.โ The figure had a name and โmysteryโ written on her forehead, โBabylon the great; the mother of the harlots and of the abominations of the earthโ – (Revelation 17:1-6).
The term โmysteryโ demonstrated that the woman did not represent the ancient city of Babylon in Mesopotamia. Her true significance had to be unveiled. The angel did just that, stating, โShe is the Great City that has sovereignty over the Kings of the Earth,โ a city linked to โSeven Mountains.โ As described in Chapter 17, she symbolizes Rome – (Revelation 17:15-18).
The images are often bizarre. Some even portray physical impossibilities. A woman arrayed โwith the sunโ and the moon โbeneath her feet,โ for example, cannot be literal. A lamb does not have โseven hornsโ or โseven eyes.โ Animals do not have โten hornsโ or โseven heads.โ This is symbolic rather than literal language.
GENUINE REALITIES
This does not mean the visions are allegorical. The Book is concerned with real events that โmust come to pass.โ But John did not time travel into the future. His descriptions are not how a first-century man might attempt to describe strange technologies and scenes from a remote future.
For that matter, much of the language is drawn from the Septuagint Greek version of the Old Testament. John received his visions when he โcame to be in the spiritโ where he saw images and heard explanations from angelic beings. The symbols pointed to concrete realities but were not themselves real.
The failure to understand how Revelation communicates symbolically produces incorrect and often bizarre interpretations. To comprehend the Bookโs message, the reader must pay attention to the interpretations provided by the text, its literary context, and how the Book of Revelation applies language from the Old Testament. Moreover, it very often does so in unexpected and paradoxical ways.
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