"The Woman and the Beast"
General idea: John is astonished; he cannot believe the audacity of this great prostitute and her unashamed willfulness to sin and leading others to do so. But, the angel reassures John that this prostitute, the beast, and their entire minion are condemned and judged and will go to eternal damnation. Thus, they are the ones who will be ultimately astonished when they see their ways punished by His Way. The angel further explains the meaning of these images for him and his churches so he can take and convey the hope of Christ to those whose hope wavers. Those who have oppressed the Church and conducted evil and reproach to those who are righteous are condemned and judged and will be sentenced soon. Yet, these evil governments will seek to rise up and fight against God for one last time, but they will not succeed. Mere man cannot fight against the Lord of all, the King of kings! God's plan cannot be thwarted or manipulated; it will be fulfilled. We can trust in Him!
Vs. 6-18, Contexts: John is clearly writing to the seven churches and consequently to people being persecuted by
The main issue at stake is compromise and how we seek to rationalize our sins as OK, ignoring our Lord, and doing as we please. This is the way of the world that leads to judgment and condemnation. In Christ, there is no condemnation but there is still the choice to do as we please in our Christian lives, which I called "liberty." He still loves us, but are we going astray in our churches and personal lives? Are we seeking out the harlot and not Him? Remember, this letter is to Christians who are misleading their churches!
Word and Phrase Meanings:
· Drunk with the blood of the saints/martyrs/witnesses…testimony to Jesus. Saints here refers to "witnesses" as in a court of law, of Christ whose testimony showed who He is. This is a comparison of what is evil to what is good, a parody of evil and why we need to have hope and trust in Christ (Is. 23:17; Jer. 51:7; Acts 22:20; Rev. 2:13; 14:8; 16:6; 17:6; 18:3).
· Greatly astonished/wondered. John was "marveled" as in awestruck by the audacity of the situation; this is not admiration as in approval, rather astonishment with disgust (2 Cor.
· Once was, now is not, and will come up/that was, and is not, and yet is. Perhaps John sees that Satan is active for a time and then is stopped. This also means the beast's power was gone or limited for a time, and then he rises up for a final battle. Some see this as Satan's actual appearance on earth. Also, this is the symbol that evil is persistent, the universal struggle between good and evil, between God and Satan, even when we do not see it or admit to it. This phrase also alludes that persecutions are coming' persecutions tend to have a pattern, as told in Daniel. This, in context, means the attempt to counterfeit God, as the Lamb of God (Gen 3:1, Job 1:7; Dan. 7; 1 John 12:31, 16:7-11; Acts 1:16-18; 2 Thess. 2:7;1 Pet. 5:8; Rev. 1:4-8,18; 2:8; 4:8; 9:1-11; 13:2-3; 12:9-10; 20:7).
· Book of life. (See Revelation Study 13:5-8)
· Go to his destruction. Evil will have its day of judgment, and its ultimate fate has been set by God. This may also be referring that although evil is a genuine reality and it is unrelenting, there will be a time to come when God places a stop to it. He also limits it, for the believer, with His grace by not allowing anything to come to us that we can't bear or learn from (John
· Will be astonished. Evil will be judged; in the meantime, they will think they are in the clear and are doing OK. This is a great comfort for struggling Christians under persecution (Rev 20:1-3, 7-10).
· Seven heads are seven hills. Refers to
· Seven hills. In context the words "mountains" or "nations" mean political kingdoms or territories. This was also a common title, literary pictogram, and symbol for
· Seven kings. From the first emperor Augustus, to Domitian, there were seven; thus, it is a possible connection to the then current state in
· Five have fallen. May refer to the cycle of persecutions or that in the succession of the seven Roman Emperors at the time of the writing, two are left to come.
· Destruction. Referring to "perdition," as that evil is self destructive and will fall upon itself.
· Ten horns.
· Not yet received a kingdom…Lamb will overcome them. Meaning nothing can challenge God. Any human conspiracy against God, no matter how vast and well planned, is nothing to God. God will prove His Way and make evil and apostasy pay (Psalm 2:2; 83:5; Is.
· One hour. Means a short period of time and/or a period of temptation (Mark
· Will give. Referring that at this time, it is beyond temptation and deception; they are willing and thus responsible for their choice (Rev. 13:4;
· King of kings. A title for the Parthian kings. It is an insult to the reference as a title for God and the real "King of kings." Christ is Lord, and the supreme sovereignty. This is also alluding to those who rule over
· Then the angel said to me. This angel commences to explain to John these symbols. The "waters" are the confused people while the devil's deceptions and hatred turn upon themselves and mutually destroy each other (Rev. 3:15-16 8:10,11 17:1).
· The beast/the devil hates…will hate the prostitute. Evil has no real companionship or loyalty, and will turn on even itself, meaning it will self-destruct. Evil will turn upon itself and others that are evil; there is no loyalty or good character in wickedness. They only gather for their own selfish reasons that fit them at the time. This is also a possible allusion to the fall of
· Eat her flesh and burn her with fire. Meaning self-destruction, as one's depravity equates one's loss. Also, that one evil judges other evil as they punish each other. This is a possible reference to how Nero burned
· Give the beast their power to rule. Evil dominates this world but has limited power and authority.
· God has put it into their hearts. This is a picture of God's grace and assurance that He is with us in dire times, and that he is still in control, even when we do not see Him (Is. 54:16-17).
· The great city is a colloquialism for
· Rules over the kings is also a colloquialism for
Thoughts and Applications:
These people think they do not need Christ and that they will escape the judgment of God! Such people and thinking is only contemptible and self destructive, because nothing can challenge God. Any human conspiracy against God, no matter how vast and well planned will utterly fail, as no evil effort on our part will bear out successfully against His Way. Nor will our obnoxious behaviors or apostasy in a church will pay out success. So why do it? Meanwhile a call is being issued by God, at the same time manipulations on our part, our sinful nature and schemes battle His Church from His own flock. While the immorality of the world are being constructed and promoted by the evil ones, each one beckoning the allegiance and loyalty of the people of earth to choose-either follow the harlot of evil, or the Bride, the Loving Lord of Hosts (Rev. 21:9). This beast, whether it is a specific personality or a theme, seems to appear and cause havoc and chaos, then manipulates the situation so it seems not to be directly responsible. From a chaos in a mismanaged church to the malevolent evils from the ways of the world keep us fighting against God. So, people are tricked, thinking sin is OK, and that Satan and evil are not to be blamed, or the cause. Thus, evil seemingly is not always present, but is effects are and will continue to be so, until God places His final stop on it. In the meantime we, the faithful, should not bow to evil or apostasy or even apathy for that matter. Our eyes are to be on Christ and Him alone.
The main prostitution we should worry about as Christians is Church Leadership falling to pride, apostasy, and the ways of the world versus faithfulness to Christ! Never think evil is just in the world and not in our local church. Gossiping in God's site is as evil as evil can be, just look up "gossip" in a concordance and see what He says about it! So is leading a church our way and not His! How we lead a church says what our real devotion and character is about, is it placating to pride, false agendas and trends or worshiping and glorifying Christ as Lord? How will your church be led?
The main meaning for us is to heed Christ's love, grace, and call, and that any evil power-past, present, or future-is not to be feared by us Christians! The phrase, God has put it in their hearts, refers that He is still in control. Even when the world seems to be in chaos and discord, He is there with us, ever faithful and still in charge. Our duty and call is to fix our eyes on Christ, not on the troubles. This is the key to dealing with suffering and when life does not seem to make sense (2 Cor.
The Four Prevailing Views
The Preterist view: They see this passage as the ways and means as well as God's judgments of oppressive
The Futurist view: Most in this camp see this passage as
The Idealist view: They see this passage as Nero himself and his inflicting tribulations upon the early church, or the theme of his evils upon humanity over the centuries. Hills are seen as the peaks of evils, from totalitarian and anti-God governments, from
The Historicist view: They see this passage as Rome, in antiquity, as a theme of a persecuting power who is evil and bows to false gods and wicked ways such as Rome's fall because of its vices as in "the road to perdition," or to papal Rome in the Middle Ages taking over from Rome prior to the Reformation. Some see this as
The Essential Inductive Questions (for more Inductive questions see Inductive Bible Study):
1. What does this passage say?
2. What does this passage mean?
3. What is God telling me?
4. How am I encouraged and strengthened?
5. Is there sin in my life for which confession and repentance is needed?
6. How can I be changed, so I can learn and grow?
7. What is in the way of these precepts affecting me? What is in the way of my listening to God?
8. How does this apply to me? What will I do about it?
9. What can I model and teach?
10. What does God want me to share with someone?
Additional Questions:
1. Are you eager for Christ's return? Why would someone not be? What have you been astonished by concerning this?
2. Have you seen people sin who are unashamed by it? How did you feel? What do you suppose can be done to show such people that life has a purpose and that it is in Christ?
3. How would you describe the willfulness and audacity of this beast or evil powers to combat against God?
4. How can your faith be strengthen when you go through a trial, knowing that those who have oppressed your faithfulness and conduct will be condemned and judged, and will be sentenced soon?
5. How and why cannot mere man fight against the Lord? Why do we try to do so? Can you give examples? What about in the church?
6. Governments will seek to rise up and fight against God for one last time, but they will not succeed. How and why do they think they can succeed? How does this relate to power, and people's agendas in the church seeking to command and control what is God's?
7. How and why should your church be judged for failure to repent and apostasy? What would Christ consider apostasy that you or your church leadership might rationalize as being OK?
8. Who has command of you and your church? Is it pride, trends, and agendas, or is it God and His preeminence? What are you going to do about it? What does Christ want you and your church to do?
9. How and why does evil fail? Why does evil have no company or loyalty, and turns on even itself? How does it comfort you that God's plan cannot be thwarted or manipulated, that it will be fulfilled and thus we can trust in Him?
10. How has understanding the background and word meanings helped you better understand? What causes people not to want to know the truth, choosing just to rely on their own thinking and presumptions? How do our presumptions get in the way of our growth in Christ?
11. When you go through trials and troubles, what reassures you? What can you do to be better at reassuring others when they have such issues and troubles? What can you do to be better at encouragement and kindness?
12. Church leadership falling to pride, apostasy, and the ways of the world versus faithfulness to Christ-this is the main prostitution we should worry about as Christians. So, what can we do about this?
© 2007 R. J. Krejcir Ph.D. Into Thy Word Ministries ww.intothyword.org