Return to "Topical Sermons"
Return to "Lectionary Sermons"


Sermons for 7th Sunday of Easter
Year C
"Revelation Revealed"

Revelation 22:12-21

The book of Revelation is probably one of the most misunderstood and misused books in the Bible. Ironically it is also one of the most read. I run into a lot of people who say that they have read it and most of them have read it more than once. Yet few claim to understand it. Those who do claim to understand it, often differ on what it means. One claims it says one thing and they have a long list of verses to back up their interpretation while another, with an equally long list, claims it means the exact opposite. And then there are those who want to decode it so that they calculate the exact date and time of Jesus' return.

The context of the book of Revelation is the persecutions of the early 2nd century. Some believe it was written during the reign of Emperor Domition. The church was under fire because Christians refused to call Caesar "Lord." Many were being martyred as examples to everyone else. New and grotesque ways were invented to punish these Jesus people. Christians were fed to wild beasts. They were set ablaze and used as torches.

The vast middle section of Revelation that contains all these frightening images is disturbing but these images seem to fall loosely into two categories: images of judgment and images of vindication. The first, images of judgment, are truly frightening. And Revelation pulls no punches. It depicts the world in all its sinful ugliness. In Revelation the world is a sinful harlot that is drunk with the blood of the martyrs. The world is an awful beast that tries to devour anything good that is born into the world.

This is where the images of vindication come in. God will protect His own. They will be sealed. They may suffer physically, they may be mauled by wild beasts and their bodies burned, but they will be vindicated.

This brings us to the final chapter of Revelation. Consider where we started. A prison island on Patmos with the Christians being persecuted: a literal Hell on earth. And look where we have ended up: a literal Heaven on earth!

1