New Jerusalem will be populated to fulfill the promise to bless all nations through the Patriarch, Abraham– Revelation 21:24-22:5.
The Book
of Revelation concludes with an image of the immense Holy City, “New Jerusalem,” populated by the “innumerable
multitude” of men and women redeemed from every nation. It represents the
fulfillment of the covenant promises to Abraham of descendants, “land”
and “blessings to all the nations.” All this has been accomplished by
the shed “blood of the Lamb.” The City of God
will be populated!
This
image contrasts sharply with the “great city, Babylon.” She is full of
abominations and every “unclean thing.” She is fated to drink the full and
brimming “cup of the wine of the fierceness of God’s wrath.” The “Kings
of the Earth” will stand apart from her weeping when they see the “smoke of
her burning” - (Revelation 16:19, 18:10).
[Photo by David Barajas on Unsplash] |
In the Book of Genesis, God promised Abraham that “in you, will all the clans of the Earth be blessed.” Kings would come from him, and he would become the “father of a multitude of nations.” The vast extent of this promise was illustrated when God challenged the Patriarch to number the stars, for “so shall your seed be” - “North and south, east and west, for all the land that you see, will I give to you, and your seed, for an everlasting possession.”
The covenant
foresaw something larger than the territory of Palestine. For example, “by
faith” Abraham “became a sojourner in the land of promise… For he looked
for the city whose builder and maker is God” – (Hebrews 11:9-10).
In Chapter
21 of Revelation, the city is coterminous with the “New Heavens
and new Earth.” It is the “Paradise of God” where the “Tree of Life”
quickens the “nations.”
However,
the “Tree of Life” is none other than the Cross of Calvary.
As the Risen Christ promised to overcomers, “To him will I give to eat of the Tree of Life, which is in the Paradise
of God.” All Adam lost due
to disobedience will be restored, enhanced, and infinitely enlarged. The “Curse”
will be no more – (Revelation 2:7).
The description of “New Jerusalem” includes verbal allusions to the Old Testament stories of Adam, Abraham, and Israel. What God intended in the first creation will not be abandoned – It will be fulfilled in the New Creation.
Likewise,
the covenant promises of land, kings, and “blessings to the nations” will
be consummated in the Holy City, including the promise to gather the tribes of
Israel and the nations.
NATIONS AND KINGS
The “nations”
and “Kings of the Earth” are portrayed positively and negatively
in Revelation, depending on how they respond to the “Lamb.”
Those men who submit to him are found in “New Jerusalem.” This includes
the “innumerable” multitude of men “purchased by the Lamb” from
every “nation and people” - (Revelation 7:9-17, 21:24-27).
In his present
“reign,” Jesus is “shepherding the nations” with his “rod,”
but he does not use it to pulverize them into dust. Instead, he “shepherds”
them so that his glorious city will be fully populated - (Revelation 5:9, 7:9,
12:5, 15:4, 19:15).
Likewise,
he is the “Ruler of the Kings of the Earth.” This group was included
among those who fled from his “wrath” when the “sixth seal was opened.”
Likewise, the “Kings of the Earth” were gathered to the “war”
against the “Rider on a White Horse” - (Revelation 1:4-6, 6:15, 17:2,
17:18).
Nevertheless,
the “Kings of the Earth” will bring “their glory into the city,
and the glory and the honor of the nations,” and only individuals whose
names are “written in the Lamb’s book of life” will gain entrance. This
means that some, at least, of these kings will find their names written in the
“Lamb’s Book of Life.” The present reign of Jesus is not about
manipulating political rulers and destroying nations but redeeming them.
The
group excluded from the city is the “Inhabitants of the Earth,” the men who
gave their allegiance to the “Beast from the Sea.” Their names are not
found in the “Book of Life.” This group is distinct from the “Kings”
and the “nations” - (Genesis
12:3, 17:6, 22:8).
The
angel then showed John the “River of Water of Life.” This echoes the
final vision of the prophet Ezekiel when he saw a river flowing from “under
the threshold of the house” to provide healing and life, only now, it is
for the “healing of the nations” - (Ezekiel 47:1-12, Revelation 22:1-5).
In the
clause, the Greek noun translated as “tree” or xulon was
commonly applied to “wood” used in construction; that is, dead wood as
opposed to living trees. The same Greek clause is found in
the Septuagint rendering of Genesis 2:9 for the original “Tree
of Life.”
Elsewhere in the New Testament, xulon is applied to the Cross on which Jesus was hanged. John wants us to make this connection – Christ crucified is the source of everlasting life for the nations - (Acts 5:30, 10:39, 13:29, Galatians 3:13, 1 Peter 2:24).
Unlike
the first “Paradise,” “the curse will be no longer.” The term “curse”
echoes the Genesis story when the Earth was “cursed” on
account of Adam’s sin. This is the same “Curse” reversed by the “slain
Lamb” - (Genesis 3:17-19).
“There
will be night no more need of the sun or the moon… for the Lord God will give
them light.” This alludes to the promise of restoration to Israel in the Book
of Isaiah, the regathering of the nation to the land. Darkness would
cover the Earth, but Yahweh would display His glory over Israel so that the “nations
will come to your light, and kings to the brightness of your rising” -
(Isaiah 11:12, 60:1-3, 60:19-22).
Thus, Revelation “squares”
the “biblical circle.” The “Lamb” removes the “Curse” and redeems
God’s “good” creation. All His promises are fulfilled in Jesus, the “slain
Lamb” who “shepherds the nations.” In him, the call for Adam to “take
dominion over the Earth” and the covenant promise of land to Abraham and “his
seed” are gloriously fulfilled.
The Divine
plan was never to abandon the original creation but to redeem it and place
humanity at its center under the sovereign rule of Jesus, where righteous men
and women will dwell securely and reign with the “Lamb” forever in the “Holy
City of New Jerusalem.”
[PDF Copy]
SEE ALSO:
- Babylon Strides the Earth - (“Babylon” symbolizes the recurring rise of the world empire and its self-appointed kings and tyrants, and it strides across the Earth even today)
- His Salvation Offer - (The Good News announced by Jesus of Nazareth and preached by his Church offers salvation to men and women of every nation and people)
- The Goal of the Church - (Jesus has tasked his disciples with proclaiming the Good News of GOD’s Kingdom in and to every nation on the Earth – Romans 3:22-30)
No comments:
Post a Comment
We encourage free discussions on the commenting system provided by the Google Blogger platform, with the stipulation that conversations remain civil. Comments voicing dissenting views are encouraged.