Stamped, hand-addressed envelopes sat bundled on the kitchen counter frequently in my childhood. My dad was passionate about getting the Bible into the hands of those who had no access to it, so he volunteered with a ministry that sent small portions of Scripture to people in Eastern Europe during the Cold War. I remember being perplexed by the amount of time and money he spent sending mail to complete strangers. Secretly I wondered if anyone really cared that much about getting a few pages of the Bible in their native language. In my youthful naivety, I couldn’t comprehend governments forbidding citizens from owning the Word of God and persecuting those who followed Jesus.
Recently I recalled my dad’s letter writing ministry when I met someone who grew up behind the Iron Curtain. Hearing the stories of her childhood and the brutalities inflicted upon her family due to their faith gave me a new understanding for my dad’s passion. She told me people receiving those letters would have treasured them and savored reading God’s Word like a starving person being given a meal.
In the West, we have little understanding of true persecution, so when we read about martyrs calling for justice and divine judgement being poured out on the earth, we feel uncomfortable and confused. Maybe that’s how you’ve felt reading about the first cycle of divine judgement poured out on the earth in Revelation 6-8:1.
This portion of John’s vision describes the Lamb, Christ, opening the seven seals on the scroll handed to Him in the throne room. As He opens each seal, God’s judgement of the earth begins. The first four seals follow a predictable pattern: The Lamb opens them one at a time, one of the four living creatures in front of the throne says “Come,” and four riders appear one after another. First, a rider with a bow on a white horse comes forward, receives a crown, and rides out as a conqueror who will exert influence over a large portion of the earth. Next, a red horse comes forth and its rider receives a large sword and permission to “take peace from the earth” by bringing war (Revelation 6:4, CSB). A black horse comes forward next and its rider receives a set of scales and authority to bring partial famine upon the earth. Next, a pale green horse’s rider receives authority “to kill by the sword, by famine, by plague, and by the wild animals of the earth.” (Revelation 6:8b, CSB)
With the opening of the fifth seal, the scene shifts and John sees “under the altar the souls of those who had been slaughtered because of the word of God and the testimony they had given.” (Revelation 6:9b, CSB) These martyrs call out to the Lord, appealing to Him as a just and holy judge and asking, “How long until you judge those who live on the earth and avenge our blood?” (Revelation 6:10b, CSB)
As westerners, we struggle to picture the faces of those who have endured persecution or lost their lives because of their faith in Jesus. While we may have heard about Christians during the Roman empire who were forced to fight wild animals in the Coliseum or burned alive at Nero’s garden parties, we can’t comprehend the extent of suffering and persecution that have happened to God’s people over the centuries. Many of us have no idea that our brothers and sisters in Christ continue to endure intense persecution around the world today.
On top of our lack of awareness about current persecution, we live in a culture that has become increasingly suspicious and distrusting of those with power. People no longer default to honoring and revering authority. So, we equate God with sinful leaders who have disappointed us, broken our trust, and abused their power. We’ve lost sight of the sovereignty of our just and holy God who is “fair in all His actions and judgements…[and] cannot over-punish or under-punish.” (Wilkin, p. 213)
Ironically, even as we question how a loving God could also judge sin and pour out His wrath, we’re a culture bent on personal justice and getting revenge. Just think of how many songs, movies, and shows include themes or plots revolving around justice and retribution. This is a curious contradiction in a society that no longer acknowledges sin and encourages us to decide what’s right and wrong based on our feelings, opinions, and preferences. God’s wise and healthy boundaries have been deemed obsolete and unrealistic. But could it be that the innate desire we all have for justice reflects that we are made in the image of a just and holy God? And if the notion of God’s final judgement upsets us so much, shouldn’t it compel us to share the gospel with more urgency instead of questioning the methods of our infinitely wise Creator?
With the opening of the sixth seal, the de-creation of the earth begins with a violent earthquake, the sun turning black, the moon turning blood red, the stars falling from heaven, the sky rolling up like a scroll, and mountains and islands jostling out of position. Every earth-dweller experiences these events; kings, nobles, generals, rich, powerful, slaves and free all beg for God’s creation to kill them, telling mountains and rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb, because the great day of their wrath has come! And who is able to stand?” (Revelation 6:16b-17, CSB) Those who have chosen to reject God will not survive the day of His wrath.
Next, John describes the opening of the seventh seal: “Then I saw another angel rising up from the east, who had the seal of the living God. He cried out in a loud voice to the four angels who were allowed to harm the earth and the sea, ‘Don’t harm the earth or the sea or the trees until we seal the servants of our God on their foreheads.’” (Revelation 7:2-3, CSB) The rest of the passage narrates a scene much like the throne room in Revelation 5:8-14 where a multitude from every tribe, language, people, and nation joins with all of the heavenly beings to worship God seated on the throne and the Lamb. The passage ends describing how those washed in the blood of the Lamb will be sheltered by the one seated on the throne: “They will no longer hunger; they will no longer thirst; the sun will no longer strike them, nor will any scorching heat. For the Lamb who is at the center of the throne will shepherd them; he will guide them to springs of the waters of life, and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.” (Revelation 7:16-17, CSB)
Those washed by the blood of the Lamb are also sealed with His Holy Spirit, so they have no need to fear God’s wrath or judgement. Be encouraged knowing that in the end the Lord will protect His own and make all things right. While descriptions of prophecies in Revelation may be confusing, unsettling, or downright terrifying, believers can take heart knowing nothing “will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:39:b, CSB)
Interested in learning more and/or supporting fellow believers enduring persecution around the world? Check out The Voice of the Martyrs by clicking here or Global Catalytic Ministries by clicking here.
Jen Wilkin, Revelation: Eternal King, Everlasting Kingdom, Lifeway Press, 2024.
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