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Revelation
12 begins with an enactment in heaven and ends with action upon the earth.
The whole chapter along with chapters 13–14 furnishes background
information that will help to understand the pouring out of the seven
bowls (or vials) in Revelation 16. As noted in our earlier studies, the
seven bowls comprise the content of the seventh trumpet. Even though the
seventh angel has already sounded his trumpet (11:15), in the progressive
revelation of the book the earthly outworking of that trumpet is still
pending.
Satan’s Enmity against the Messiah (12:1-6)
Israel and her Messiah take center stage in Revelation
12. Though her identify is often debated, the woman who was part of the
great sign given to John in 12:1 must be a symbolic representation of
corporate, national Israel. As a basis for understanding the "woman
clothed with the sun and the moon under her feet and upon her head a crown
of twelve stars" (12:1), Genesis 37:9-11 tells of Joseph’s dream in
which the sun and moon represent Joseph’s father Jacob and his mother
Rachel and the eleven stars represent Joseph’s brothers. Also, the Old
Testament often represents Israel as a travailing woman about to give
birth (Isa. 26:17-18; 66:7 ff.; Jer. 4:31; 13:21; Mic. 4:10; 5:3; cf. Rev.
12:2). Since Revelation 11:19 introduces this chapter with the
representation of Israel’s ark of the covenant in the heavenly temple,
evidence for identifying the woman with Israel is strong.
John’s vision disclosed a second sign in heaven, this
time "a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns and upon
his heads [were] seven diadems" (Rev. 12:3). Establishing the
identity of the dragon is not difficult, because explicit statements in
Revelation 12:9 and 20:2 identify him as Satan. Revelation 12:9 specifies
that he is "the serpent of old, who is called the devil and
Satan." With slightly different wording, Revelation 20:2 does the
same.
The dragon focused his attention on the woman (12:4b),
meaning that the devil focused his attention on Israel. The implied reason
for his interest in her was the child she was about to bear (12:4c). The
devil wanted to "devour" the child as soon as he was born. Verse
5a fixes the identity of the child by noting that He was destined to
"destroy all nations with a rod of iron." No one other than the
Messiah of Israel could be spoken of in such terms. The devil knows that
Israel’s Messiah will eventually conquer him along with his forces of
evil.
For ages Satan has sought to stop the promise of a
coming Messiah from being fulfilled. His evil intentions toward the
woman’s unborn child evidenced themselves throughout the Old Testament.
Incidents that showed such an intent include events such as Cain’s
hostile murder of Abel (Gen. 4:8), the corrupting of the line of Seth
(Gen. 6:1-12), attempted rapes of Sarah (Gen. 12:10-20; 20:1-18) and
Rebekah (Gen. 26:1-18), Rebekah’s plan to cheat Esau out of his
birthright and the consequent enmity of Esau against Jacob (Genesis 27),
the murder of the male children in Egypt (Exod. 1:15-22), attempted
murders of David (e.g., 1 Sam. 18:10-11), Queen Athaliah’s attempt to
destroy the royal seed (2 Chron. 22:10), Haman’s attempt to slaughter
the Jews (Esther 3–9), and consistent attempts of the Israelites to
murder their own children for sacrificial purposes (cf. Lev. 18:21: 2
Kings 16:3; 2 Chron. 28:3; Ps. 106:37-38; Ezek. 16:20).
Satan’s attempt to thwart the mission of Israel’s
Messiah continued into the New Testament with Herod’s slaughter of the
infants of Bethlehem (Matt. 2:16), the temptation of Jesus, the attempt by
Mary the mother of Jesus to dissuade Him from His destined course,
Peter’s rebuke of Jesus for predicting His coming death, and, of course,
the crucifixion of Christ at Calvary.
All the devil’s attempts to withstand the promise
ended in failure with the ascension of Jesus Christ to the Father’s
right hand, i.e., when the woman’s child in John’s vision was
"caught away to God and His throne" (Rev. 12:5b). At that point
the Messiah was beyond Satan’s reach. The devil was frustrated. All that
he had to oppose now was the woman herself. At that point he began
expending all his energies to destroy the woman, forcing her to flee into
the wilderness where she could enjoy God’s protection for 1,260 days
(12:6). Since the ascension of Jesus Christ to the Father’s throne, the
woman or national Israel has been the object of special satanic enmity.
She will remain so into the future, until the period known as the
seventieth week of Daniel. During the last half of that seven-year period,
she will enjoy God’s special protection from the devil’s persecutions
against her. That will be the 1,260 days spoken of in verse 6 of
Revelation 12.
Expulsion of the Dragon from Heaven (12:7-12)
Revelation 12:7 shifts to other action that will
transpire at the beginning of the aforementioned 1,260 days. It describes
a war in heaven between Michael and his angels on one side and the devil
and his angels on the other. Verses 7-9 describe the war and its outcome,
and verses 10-12 record a heavenly hymn of victory, celebrating the
outcome.
The war will be an end-time event that occurs midway
through Daniel’s seventieth week. Michael who leads the battle against
the dragon is the special patron of the people of Israel (Dan. 10:13, 21;
12:1). This is not his first conflict with the devil. Jude 9 recounts his
dispute with Satan over the body of Moses. The text does not tell
specifically what will provoke the end-time conflict, but apparently the
dragon will attempt to unseat the woman’s Son and reestablish himself in
the presence of God. Michael as the archangel (Jude 9) will lead other
unfallen angels in putting down the dragon’s revolt. His forces will
prevail over the devil and his angels. That will be the end of the
devil’s access to heaven (Rev. 12:8).
"The great dragon, the serpent of old, who is
called the devil and Satan, who deceives the whole earth" will be
cast down (12:9). For emphasis’ sake, verse 9 speaks of his being cast
down and then repeats "was cast down" twice more, the first time
repeating the casting down of Satan himself and the second time speaking
of the casting down of his angels. From that point on, his domain of
existence will be the earth and the earth alone.
That defeat helps explain his stepped-up efforts to
destroy the woman. That last three and a half years will see an
intensification of his wrath against Israel.
The purging of heaven through the dragon’s removal
occasions a heavenly hymn that comes in 12:10-12. The hymn’s three
stanzas celebrate the arrival of God’s kingdom (v. 10), the earthly
victory of the saints who identify with Christ in His witness and death
(v. 11), and the celebration over the expulsion of the dragon and a
warning to earth because of the devil’s ejection from heaven (v. 12).
The first stanza of the hymn sounds as though the
arrival of God’s kingdom were already a past event, but it celebrates an
arrival which will come three and a half years after Satan’s expulsion.
The power that produced the male child and took Him to heaven (12:5) also
provided for the dragon’s defeat (12:8-9). That power will also
institute "the kingdom of our God" on earth (cf. Rev. 20:1-10)
and in the new heaven and the new earth (21:1-22:5). That kingdom will be
under "the authority of His Christ" as an earlier hymn has
celebrated (Rev. 11:15).
The hymn’s second stanza (12:11) celebrates the
victory of the brethren that will be based on two happenings. The primary
and objective cause of victory will be the blood of the Lamb. The brethren
were able to overcome the dragon because the death of Christ has furnished
a basis for them to defeat him. The secondary and subjective cause is
their own labor and self-sacrifice. Their personal accomplishments in
spreading the Word of God and their willingness to do it at the sacrifice
of their own lives furnishes a secondary ground for their victory.
"They did not love their life unto death" (12:11c) recalls Jesus
words spoken over sixty years before the writing of Revelation: "The
one who loves his life loses it, and the one who hates his life in this
world will keep it to life eternal" (John 12:25).
The hymn’s third stanza (12:12) celebrates the
expulsion of the dragon from heaven, but warns the earth of intensified
persecution that his wrath will bring to the faithful there.
Next month, we will complete our remarks on Revelation
12 and begin a discussion of Revelation 13. Obviously, this section of
Scripture describes a future period of concentrated opposition not only
for the people of Israel, but for all whose faith in Jesus Christ is
strong enough to keep them walking in the truth in spite of obstacles
Satan places in their paths. May God give us a renewed determination to
live for our Savior in days when our lives, which are relatively free of
persecution, may suddenly turn into lives beset with heavy burdens we must
bear because we are Christians. May He remind us that no burden is heavy
enough to make us relax our faithfulness to Jesus Christ, our Lord and
Savior.
Note: For more details
about the seventh trumpet and Satanic opposition to Israel and her
Messiah, see my discussion in Revelation 8–22 (Moody Press,
1995), pages 115-137. To order this volume, you may contact Grace Books
International at (800) GRACE15 or <www.gbibooks.com>.
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