đ [EN] 15. lecture notes
Heavenly Throne and the Slaughtered Lamb (Revelation 4â7): Worship, Scroll, Seals, and the People of God
The churches in Asia face pressure, persecution, andâjust as dangerouslyâthe temptation to compromise with the values of the age. The opening vision of Christ âin the midst of the lampstandsâ (Rev 1) assures that he walks among the churches, seeing and addressing their real life; the throne-room vision of Revelation 4â5 then re-centers the churchâs imagination for faithful endurance.
Two Dominant Images: Throne and Lamb
Chapters 4â5 join two governing symbols: the throne of God and the Lamb. âThroneâ is one of Revelationâs most frequent words, and the particular term for âLambâ is overwhelmingly concentrated in this book. The essential theology: the Creator God reigns and is worthy of total devotion, and Jesusâthe faithful, slaughtered Lambâreigns with God and is equally worthy of the same devotion. Worship is therefore indivisibly directed to the One seated on the throne and to the Lamb.
Old Testament and Ancient Backdrop to the Throne Room
- OT echoes: Isaiah 6 (the enthroned Holy One), Daniel 7 (the âSon of Manâ and the Ancient of Days), Ezekiel 1 (glory-throne), Sinaiâs fire, smoke, and lightning. The sea, living creatures, angels, and the language of unending praise anchor the vision in Israelâs Scriptures.
- Numbers and symbols: âFourâ often signals creationâs breadth (four living creatures), and âtwenty-fourâ likely represents the people of God (twenty-four elders) clothed in white (purity) and crowned with gold (victory). Day and night, without ceasing, heaven worships.
The Scroll and Its Seven Seals
In 5:1 a scroll lies in the right hand of the One on the throne. As its seals are opened, Godâs plan of judgment and salvation unfolds. The âsevenâ signals completeness; the seal signifies legitimacy and ownershipâthis plan truly comes from God.
The Lion Who Appears as a Lamb
John hears âthe Lion of Judahâ has conquered (Gen 49/Dan 7 resonances) but when he looks he sees a Lamb, standing as slaughtered. The contrast teaches how Jesus wins: not by predatory force but by self-giving sacrifice. The Lamb bears seven horns (fullness of power) and seven eyesâidentified as the Spirit in sevenfold fullnessâsent out into all the earth. The people redeemed by his blood are made a kingdom and priests from every tribe, language, people, and nation.
Opening the Seals (Rev 6): The Four Horsemen and Beyond
As the Lamb breaks the seals, four horsemen ride forthâwar, economic injustice/famine, pestilence, deathâdrawing on Zechariah 6. Though God is not depicted as the direct agent of the devastation, nothing occurs apart from his permission (e.g., a crown is âgivenâ to the first rider).
âHow Long, Sovereign Lord?ââThe Cry of the Martyrs (6:9â11)
Under the altar the slain cry for justiceânot petty revenge but covenant vindication. They receive white robes (victory/purity) and are told to rest âa little longerâ until the full number of martyrs is completeâsuffering has a limit; God will set it right.
Cosmic Signs and the Question of Standing (6:12â17)
Earthquake, darkened sun, blood-red moon, falling starsâapocalyptic signals familiar from the prophets and the Gospels. The self-secure find no refuge. The climactic question, âWho can stand?â drives the narrative into the interlude of chapter 7.
Interlude (Rev 7): Sealed Servants and an Innumerable Multitude
- Protective pause: Four angels hold back the winds; another seals the servants of Godâbelonging and protection echoing Ezekiel 9.
- âI heard the number⌠144,000â (7:4â8): A symbolic census (12Ă12Ă1000) of the people of God; the tribal list intentionally differs from any single OT list, nudging us to read symbolically rather than as a strict ethnic roster.
- âAfter this I looked⌠a great multitudeâ (7:9â17): An innumerable, international assembly in white with palms, crying âSalvationâ to God and the Lamb. They have come through the great tribulation, washing robes in the Lambâs blood; the Lamb becomes their Shepherd, leading to living waters while God wipes every tear.
- Heard vs. seen: As with Lion/Lamb, John hears the numbered 144,000 and then sees a countless multitudeâtwo perspectives on the one redeemed people in covenant fullness and eschatological vastness.
How the Judgment Cycles Work: Spirals, Not a Straight Line
Seals, trumpets, and bowls re-approach the same realities from fresh angles (recapitulation). Narrative âinconsistenciesâ warn against rigid chronology (e.g., stars fall in ch. 6 yet reappear in later scenes; all grass burns in 8:7 but is present in 9:4). The aim is not a timetable but transformation: to wake, warn, comfort, and call to faithful witness under the Lambâs sovereignty.
Living the Vision: Worship that Forms Resistance
Heavenâs worship shapes earthly allegiance. Only God and the Lamb are Lordânever Caesar or empire. The church conquers âby the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony,â embracing endurance over assimilation, truth over convenience, and hope over fear.
Summary
- Center: The throne and the slaughtered-yet-standing Lamb govern Revelationâs theology and ethics; worship directs life.
- Scroll and seals: Godâs authorized plan unfolds through the Lamb; âsevenâ signals completeness.
- Victory by sacrifice: The Lion is the Lamb; the churchâs âconqueringâ mirrors the Lambâs faithful, suffering witness.
- Martyrs and justice: The cry âHow long?â meets promise, rest, and sure vindication.
- People of God: The âheardâ 144,000 and the âseenâ innumerable multitude present the one sealed, global people of God.
- Reading strategy: Expect spirals and recapitulation; resist literal sequencing; receive the visions as formation for worship, endurance, and hope.