Introduction
Last week, we overviewed Rev. 6-16, a series of visions describing the
end of the age, which the Bible calls the Great Tribulation. This is a
period of unparalleled evil and suffering caused by that evila period
cut short by the return of Jesus. In the middle of this section, John
receives two visions that amplify one of the great evils of the Great
Tribulationthe persecution of God's people (6:9-11; 11:7-10). They
introduce the three persons responsible for this persecutionthe
dragon in chapter 12, and the beast and his false
prophet in chapter 13. This morning we will cover chapter 12, which
portrays war with the dragon. Let's see if we can understand what's
going on in this chapter and how it fits into the rest of Revelation . . .
Interpretation of the passage
This chapter contains 5 key symbols, most of which are easy to identify.
The dragon is clearly Satan, because he is identified in
12:9.
The woman is probably believing Israel.
The woman's child is definitely Jesus, because he is identified
in 12:5.
The period of 1260 days or time, times and half a
time refers to the Great Tribulation. This is made especially
clear in Daniel, and we will look at it more carefully next week when
we study the beast.
The woman's other children evidently refers to the many
non-Jewish followers of Jesus during the Great Tribulation, which we
met last week (cf. 7:9-10).
The chapter consists of three sections that proceed in chronological
order.
The first section (12:1-6) describes Satan's attempt to kill
Jesus.
Read 12:1-2. The crown with 12 stars is probably a reference
to the 12 tribes of Israel. See also other Old Testament passages
which speak of Israel (or Zion or Jerusalem) as a woman (Isaiah 54:1-6;
Ezekiel 16:8-14). The child she bears is Jesus through
the believing Israelite, Mary.
Read 12:3-4. The stars Satan sweeps away may refer
to the many angels he led in his primeval rebellion against God, but
more probably refer to human rulers he deposes (see Daniel 8:10,
24). 12:4b clearly refers to Satan's attempt to kill Jesus through
Herod (see Matthew 2).
Read 12:5. Satan's attempt to kill Jesus fails. Instead, he
completes his mission and ascends to a position of authority with
God the Father (remind of the vision of Revelation 4-5).
Read 12:6. The vision now skips to the period of the Great
Tribulationthe focus of this section of Revelation. This verse
describes God's preservation of believing Israel during the Great
Tribulationon which John elaborates in 12:13-17. But before
this, we get another picture of the Great Tribulation from a different
perspective . . .
The second section (12:7-12) describes Satan's expulsion from
heaven during the Great Tribulation.
Read 12:7-9, 12. This war between Michael and Satan (and their
angels) describes the inauguration of the Great Tribulationthe
time when Satan and his demons are especially active on earth (See
9:1-11; 16:13-14). The reference to Michael is an allusion to Daniel 12:1
(read), which calls this period a time of unique distress. Like Hitler
at the end of WWII, Satan knows that his demise is imminent, so he
takes out his fury on the people of earthespecially those who
follow Jesus.
Read 12:10-11. In spite of how perilous this time is, this
shout announces that the coming of God's kingdom is imminent, and
pays tribute to God's people who overcome Satan during this time.
(This is a key passage for us today, and we will study it carefully
in a few minutes.)
The third section (12:13-17) describes Satan's persecution of
Jesus' followers during the Great Tribulation.
Read 12:13-16. During this period, Satan tries to exterminate
believing Israel. See Jesus' warning to these same people in Matthew 24:15-22.
But just as God supernaturally preserved Israel from Pharaoh on
eagle's wings during the Exodus (12:4 as an allusion to Ex. 19:4),
so he will supernaturally preserve (much of) believing Israel from
Satan during this period.
Read 12:17. Having failed to exterminate believing Israel,
Satan goes off to make war with the rest of her offspring, who
keep the commandments of God and hold to the testimony of Jesus.
This probably refers to the non-Jewish followers of Jesus (converts
of the 144,000 in 7:9-10?), many of whom die as martyrs under the
rule of the Antichrist. The vision in chapter 13 describes this in
more detail.
Application
Although these verses focus primarily on the battle between Satan and
God's people during the Great Tribulation, it contains a passage that
is practically important to every Christian today. If you have come to
Christ, you have a mortal spiritual enemy who (even though he cannot get
you back into his kingdom) will do all he can to neutralize your spiritual
effectiveness so you can't influence others for Jesus. Most of his tactics
are extremely subtle (GEURILLA WARFARE vs. HOLLYWOOD DRAMATICS)but
12:9-11 exposes his three favorites and explains how to defeat them.
Re-read 12:9-11. Notice first the three specific terms used to
describe Satan, because they expose three of his most common ways of attacking
God's people. He is the dragon who devours, the serpent
who deceives, and the accuser of the brethren. Now notice
how the brethren (followers of Jesus) overcome these three
forms of attack. They are in reverse order. They overcome the accuser
by the blood of the Lamb, they overcome the serpent by the
word of their testimony, and they overcome the dragon by not
loving their lives even to death. Let's take a closer look at each
of these . . .
ACCUSER: Re-read 12:10b. He attacks, like a merciless prosecuting
attorney, by accusing you whenever he can get your attention (day
and night). Do you recognize the accuser's voice? He will not identify
himself. In fact, he loves to masquerade as your own conscience, or even
the voice of Godaccusing you of your many sins to convince you that
you are not welcome to draw near to God and enjoy his love. Satan knows
that our service and our witness for Christ will be effective only when
it flows out of a secure, vital love relationship with Godand accusation
is the best way to trash it.
If you are a new/young Christian, he loves to first tempt you into
some sin (especially one that you have vowed never to repeat now that
you are a Christian) and then whisper, And you call yourself a
Christian! After what you just did, do you really believe God will still
accept you? or God will reject you if you keep on doing
that!
If you are an older Christian and know about God's unconditional acceptance,
he loves to rivet your attention on your moral and spiritual shortcomings.
He will try to convince you that because of these things, although God
may still accept you, he doesn't really want to be close to you and
cleanse you and restore hope to your heart, or empower you to serve
him with joy.
How do you overcome the accuser? Not by trying to deny your
sins (via MINIMIZING or BLAME-SHIFTING) or by trying to do something
to make up for them (via SELF-RECRIMINATION; RESOLUTIONS TO NEVER DO
IT AGAIN; COMPENSATORY SERVICE TO GOD). This plays right into his hands
because it reinforces the lie that God's acceptance of us and his delight
in relating to us is based on what we do for him.
You overcome his accusations by the blood of the Lamb.
This phrase refers (as we have seen) to Jesus' death on the cross, which
pays for the guilt of all of your sins and makes you welcome in God's
presence in spite of your continued sinfulness. How do you apply the
blood of the Lamb? Initially, by admitting your guilt to
God and asking him to forgive you through Jesus' death on the cross
(review 7:14 >> GOSPEL).
What about after you have received Christ? Should you keep asking
God to forgive you each time you sin? Noread Hebrews 10:19,
22. Because Jesus has already paid for all of your sins through his
death, you can simply draw near to God with humble honesty (sincere
heart) and be confident of that he forgives you, delights to
relate to you, and is ready to cleanse your conscience and restore
you to intimacy and service.
SERPENT: Satan is the Serpent of old . . . who
deceives the whole world. If he can't defeat you through accusation,
he will try to defeat you by telling you the same lies he has been telling
since the Garden of Edenthat following the God of the Bible is a
drag, and that the path to security and significance and fulfillment is
independently gratifying your physical, intellectual, aesthetic and psychological
desires. He deceives the whole world through false religions, educational
systems (both Christian and non-Christian), and through the media (especially
advertisementsEXAMPLES).
How do you overcome the Serpent? By the word of your testimony.
The word here refers to God's Word, which is the truth.
The way to defeat deception is to expose it with the truth. But notice
that John does say simply, by the word. He says by
the word of their testimony. This refers to Christians who share
the truth of God's Word that has changed their own lives. When you learn
a truth from the Bible and put it into practice, then you experience
its truth and you can share that truth to others in a way that Satan
cannot defeat. Satan doesn't like Bible-distribution campaigns or apologetics
conferences, but he doesn't fear them like he fears Christians who share
the word of their testimony with others.
This is obviously true in reaching others for Christ. How many of
you came to Christ primarily by reading a Bible alone? By hearing
a philosophical or historical proof of Christianity? By relating to
people who shared with you how Jesus changed their lives? This is
our most powerful weaponlet's use it!
But it is equally true in helping one another grow in Christ. This
is why we need to be involved with other Christians. They can share
what God has taught them from his Word in personal ways that will
dispel your deceptions and help you grow. And God will teach you his
Word in personal ways so you can do the same for others. Are you involved
enough with other Christians that both of these are happening on a
regular basis? (HOME GROUPS)
DRAGON: If Satan cannot defeat you as the Accuser or the Serpent,
he will attack you as the Dragon who devours. Then comes the nameless
dread in the middle of the night. Then come the threats: I will
take your children. I will break up your marriage. I
will ruin your life through this circumstance or that person. I
will take your life, and there is nothing you can do about it. Like
a dragon, he towers over you and bellows his fiery threats so that you
will forget God's infinite power and utter faithfulness, and be intimidated
by him into backing off on your commitment to Jesus.
Most of the time, there is no bite to his bark. If you just keep doing
what Jesus has called you to do, you find it was all a bluff. But I
would not be faithful to you if I told you that the fears never come
true. It wouldn't be a real battle if you never got hurt. So Christian
workers sometimes get maimed, lose their jobs, get rejected and even
betrayed by their families, etc.and (in many places today and
all through the ages) they get killed for their faith in Jesus.
How do we overcome this Dragon? They did not love their
life even to death. The key to overcoming the Dragon is to utterly
entrust yourself to the sovereign and faithful God (1 Peter 5:6-7).
Satan can do nothing to you except what God permits. And the worst he
can do is kill youin which case you get to go to heaven, get an
extra reward which you don't deserve (2:10), and be able to watch the
marvelous fruits of what your death! When you believe this, and determine
to follow God no matter what, Satan cannot defeat you through fear.
TSON: You only have the power to kill me if God grants it to
you, but I have the power to die. And if you kill me, you will sprinkle
my tapes with bloodand people will listen to them because they
know I gave my life for what I teach.
NEXT: The Beast
& the False Prophet
Footnote
Copyright 2002 Gary DeLashmutt