Summary: Revelation 1:9-20, part 1

The Seven, part 4

John's Portrait of the Lord of the Church

Revelation 1:9-20, part 1

June 9, 2013

Review: The Revelation consists of three literary genre's - apocalyptic, prophecy, and epistle all at the same time. We have seen that the church is under attack so John wanted to assure the church that the victory is secure so he began the Revelation by “Setting the Tone of Victory.” He does this by infusing us with a perspective on reality that is cosmic, transcendent, and with a promised victory from the throne. In 1:9-20 John gives us a “Portrait of the Lord of the Church.” This is the only place in the bible that describes the physical features of Jesus Christ.

The Occasion of the Portrait

As we have said the apostle John wrote this letter to seven churches to address the specific issues in each church. After his salutation, he identifies with the churches to show them what he has in common with them.

• What John has in common with the churches

First, he is a brother with them. When the church is under attack and life is hard it does not matter your title or position in the body of Christ, no one is immune to attack. He is one of them and he hurts and grieves with them. He is also a partner with them in three ways - in the tribulation, the kingdom, and patient endurance. He knows what it is to suffer for the kingdom and having to persevere in suffering. All the other apostles have been martyred so he knows what it means to be prepared to die for the gospel as a faithful witness. The New Testament is blunt about suffering. Jesus said, 'in the world you will have tribulation.' Paul said to 'be patient in tribulation.' And the church 'received the gospel in much affliction.' Second, John is a partner in the kingdom. The kingdom is already here so we experience the powers of the age to come. Yet it is not fully here so we look forward to its consummation. Third, he is a partner in patience endurance or perseverance. There is no salvation without perseverance. In the letters to the individual churches we will see over and over again that it is only those who conquer, which in the context means persevering in faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ, who inherit eternal life. We only persevere because God faithfully supplies us with grace for strength of heart. Tribulation and the kingdom and perseverance are all connected. The apostles encouraged the church “to continue in the faith, and saying that through many tribulations we must enter the kingdom of God.” We have seen what John has in common with the churches; now lets see what he models for the churches.

• What John models for the Churches

John models what it means to be a faithful witness. He was exiled on Patmos for his faithful witness – on account of the word of God and the testimony of Jesus. In other words, he is on Patmos because he was faithful to the gospel in his life and his ministry. Patmos was a penal colony where Rome sent political prisoners. It is now a tourist destination but then it was just volcanic rock, a bleak and desolate place. It was meant to destroy the human spirit. He was faithful even when it cost him dearly. 'For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison.' Now let's look at what John experienced.

• What John Experienced

It was in an unlikely place and at an unlikely time that John received his vision of the resurrected Christ. Let me give you a very brief understanding of prophecy in the bible. In the Old Testament you have prophets who spoke the very words of God to the people of God. It was inspired so it was accepted and written as Scripture. In the New Testament the apostles replace the prophets as those who spoke the very words of God to the people of God. The apostles words were accepted as scripture. But there is also prophecy in the New Testament where men and women spoke human words to describe something God brought to their mind for the encouragement and edification of the church. We see this kind of prophecy in 1 Corinthians chapters 12-14 and we are told, “do not quench the Spirit. Do not despise prophecies but test everything; hold fast what is good.” We are not to despise this form of prophecy but are to test whether it is true or not.

John describes himself as 'in the Spirit , a prophetic trance in which the Risen Christ speaks to him on the Lord's day, referring to the first day of the week, when the church gathered to celebrate the resurrection of Christ. John hears a loud voice like a trumpet the voice of the resurrected Christ, who commands him to write what he saw and to send to seven churches. We have the Revelation today because John obeyed God. We have no idea the implications of obeying God. John sends it to the seven churches. The churches are listed in the order that the letter would have been circulated. These churches were probably significant churches in the area and were postal cities. Why did God want him to send it to these seven? Because the church is under attack; we are under attack and he wants to lift our eyes off of our circumstances to glimpse the risen and victorious of Christ. Christ loves the church , he died for the church , he now lives for the church, he builds the church, and is coming back for the church, his bride.

The Purpose of the Portrait

Let me say a few introductory statements about this portrait then look at it in more detail next week. First as I already said, this is the only place in the bible we have a description of Jesus Christ. The gospel writers completely ignore the physical appearance of Jesus but John gives us a glorious portrait of the resurrected Lord and King and Judge to arrest our attention and win our affections. Second, it is symbolic. If you take it literally you create a monster. Notice how many times he uses the word like, to show this is what it is like not what it actually is. Third, he gives us this portrait to encourage us to be faithful witnesses. He wants to capture our minds and our hearts so that we will suffer for what we love. Last, this is a portrait of the resurrected Christ. That is significant because it tells John, the seven churches, and it tells us that God has accepted his sacrifice for our sins, that our salvation is secure, our perseverance is secure, the kingdom is coming still, and the victory is secure. Yes, you will have tribulation; yes, you must persevere but my grace and peace is sufficient for your every need.

• Capture our attention

This portrait is meant to capture our attention. His voice is deafening and his portrait is so terrifying that John falls as though dead. This is not staged, not is it hyperbole. No human can stand as an equal to the Lord of glory. You can't and you won't.

• Capture our affections

If Jesus Christ genuinely captures our attention then our affections will rise commensurate with our attention. Perseverance requires that we are convinced that Jesus Christ is worthy of our complete devotion and that our affections are consistent with that level of devotion. If not you will never persevere when in the midst of life, let alone when under attack.