REVELATION: NARRATIVE
The
book of Revelation is, in fact, difficult to understand. It is not easy
comprehend even the linearity of its narrative. See, for example, that after
all the destruction that happens during the Great Tribulation, "the new
heavens and the new earth" (21:1) are expected to come, that is, the end.
But no, what comes is a thousand-year reign of Christ, on earth, while Satan is
in prison. Only after this period, after he is released and deceives the
nations, again, and a final battle occurs and Satan is launched into the
"lake of fire" comes the final judgment and restoration of creation
with "the new heavens and new earth". This indicates that Revelation
cannot be interpreted literally, for, as apocalyptic literature, its narrative
is not sequential. It is the understanding of Revelation 20:1-6 that opens the
comprehension of all prophecy.
For
this reason, each interpretation presents a different sequence of events.
However, here, will be given the sequence that appears in the book, not
considering the interpretations. The first part of the narrative begins
with John, exiled on the island of Patmos because of Christ's witness. On the
Lord's Day, that is, on Sunday, he, in Spirit, sees Jesus in his heavenly form
who orders him to write in a book what he sees and to send it to the seven
churches of Asia (1-3). Thus, the vision of the glorified Christ and the seven
letters constitute the subject of the first three chapters.
Then
comes a second part of the book where John sees an open door in the sky
and a voice invites him in. Suddenly he finds himself in the room of God's
throne, which looked like a jasper and sardius stone. God holds in his right
hand a book sealed with seven seals. Jesus, receiving this book from the
hands of the Creator, is adored by "thousands of thousands and millions
and millions" of angels around the throne. In this book are the divine
decrees about the end of the present world order, marked by sin and evil. This
is the content of chapters four and five.
The
third part of the narrative is composed of the execution of the divine
orders, that is, the opening of the seven seals, the sounding of the seven
trumpets and the pouring out of the seven bowls, which occur from chapter six
to sixteen. The fourth part, chapters 17 to 19, talks about details of
the struggle for destruction of the human system and Jesus' encounter with the
Church, that is, "the wedding of the Lamb". The fifth part
constitutes chapter 20. In it, It speaks of Jesus' thousand-year reign, Satan's
arrest during that period, his release at the end of that period, his work of
deceit to the nations, a final struggle, Satan's casting into the "lake of
fire" and the final judgment.
The
sixth and last part is composed of chapters 21 and 22. There is talk of
a new world, "new heavens and a new earth", for the first heaven and
the first earth had passed. A world in which God himself will live with men,
where there will be no more tears, no more death, no more pain, no more
suffering, for the old order has passed away. And "He who was seated on
the throne said, I am making everything new (Apocalipse 21:5). And so the book
of Revelation closes the cycle of this idea that permeates all Scripture, that
is, the idea that the present world lives on the influence and effects of evil,
but that it will be eliminated and all Creation will be restored.
Antônio
Maia - M. Div.
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