Believer's Immediate Response to
Christ's Imminent Return
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2007,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Revelation chapter 22, getting close
to saying goodbye to this wonderful
book. In fact, the only book left in
the Bible after this is the book of
Concordance and then there’s Maps.
We are at the end, as you will see
in the next couple of weeks. There’s
nothing more that needs to be said
after this book is complete.
As we come to chapter 22, and verses
6 to 12, we come to the epilogue,
the wrap up on the apocalypse. All
of the glorious and gracious
purposes of God ordained from before
the foundation of the world have now
been attained. The rebellion of
angels and mankind is all over. The
rebels are all in the everlasting
punishment in the Lake of Fire. The
King of kings is now sitting on the
eternal throne as the sovereign with
His Father over the New Heaven and
the New Earth. Absolute and
unchanging holiness characterizes
all within the universal and eternal
Kingdom of God, the redeemed, the
chosen, the glorified saints bought
by the slain Lamb are now in their
resurrection bodies, dwelling in the
glory of the New Heaven and the New
Earth, and particularly living in
the New Jerusalem, the heavenly
city. Holy life and praise fills the
universe, the universe having been
recreated is the abode of God and
His glory fills it with blazing
light, starting from inside, the
diamond holy city and splattering
its beauty throughout the whole new
heaven and new earth. Light, beauty,
holiness, joy, the presence of God
and the Lamb, worship and praise,
service, likeness to Christ are all
the realities of this eternal state.
And that’s what we have seen as
we’ve come through chapter 21 and
chapter 22 down through verse 5.
Now, backing up a little before that
as we’ve gone through the book of
Revelation, we have seen the church
on earth in the first few chapters.
And then it appears in heaven in
chapters 4 and 5. And we saw
starting in chapter 6 the breakout
of a period of time known as the
Tribulation, a period with
tremendous judgment, that judgment
that unfolds under the seals and the
trumpets and the bowls that
represent God’s wrath poured out.
Culminating, of course, in the final
wrath in the Day of the Lord. We
have seen the arrival during that
Tribulation time of Satan’s
deceptive counterfeit Christ, namely
the Antichrist coming up out of the
pit, as it were, demon-possessed,
capturing the worship of the world
and assisted by the False Prophet
who carries the world to worship
him. And, of course, behind it all
is Satan himself, running the course
of unparallel blasphemy. And he and
his false prophet and Antichrist and
all the rest of the ungodly then
sink forever into a deserved hell.
We’ve seen the return of Jesus
Christ as King of kings and Lord of
lords to destroy the wicked and the
ungodly in a massive massacre at
Armageddon as the Day of the Lord
reaches its climax. Then we saw the
final glorious earthly Kingdom of
Jesus Christ, called the Millennial
Kingdom on the restored earth which
included the arrest and imprisonment
of Satan and his final brief loosing
to lead the last war against God,
and then his sentence with his
angels into the Lake of Fire.
After that we saw the shaking down
of the heaven and earth in the work
of uncreation. The Great White
Throne judgment of all the ungodly
dead and their resurrection and
assignment to the Lake of Fire, sin,
death and Hades, the cursed demons,
men all swept out of the presence of
God forever. Then came the creation
of the new heaven and the new earth,
the paradise of God, eternal glory,
immortality, peace and joy which we
looked at in 21 and the first part
of 22. Nothing’s left, that’s it.
We’re in the eternal state and it
perpetuates itself forever and ever.
All that can be said is epilogue.
All that can be said is a
postscript, a P.S. And, in fact, it
is very similar to the
prologue...very similar. If you go
back with me, for a minute, let’s
read the prologue. It’s important
because the prologue and the
epilogue bracket the heart of this
book. It starts out, “The Revelation
of Jesus Christ which God gave Him
to show to His bondservants the
things which must shortly take
place. And He sent it and
communicated it by His angel to His
bondservant John, who bore witness
to the Word of God and to the
testimony of Jesus Christ, even to
all that he saw. Blessed is he who
reads and those who hear the words
of the prophecy and heed the things
which are written in it, for the
time is near.”
Now let’s read the epilogue, chapter
22 verse 6. And notice the
parallels. “And He said to me,
‘These words are faithful and true.’
And the Lord, the God of the spirits
of the prophets sent His angel to
show to His bondservants the things
which must shortly take place. And
behold, I am coming quickly, blessed
is he who heeds the words of the
prophecy of this book. And I, John,
am the one who heard and saw these
things. And when I heard and saw, I
fell down and worshiped at the feet
of the angel who showed me these
things, and he said to me, ‘Do not
do that. I am a fellow servant of
yours and of your brethren the
prophets and of those who heed the
words of this book. Worship God.’
And he said to me, ‘Do not seal up
the words of the prophecy of this
book for the time is near. Let the
one who does wrong still do wrong,
and let the one who is filthy still
be filthy, and let the one who is
righteous still practice
righteousness, and let the one who
is holy still keep himself holy.
Behold, I am coming quickly and My
reward is with me to render to every
man according to what he has done.’”
Now that is the first part of the
epilogue. It runs all the way down
to verse 21, obviously, to close out
this book. But the first part of it,
from verses 6 to 12 is directed to
Christians. The last part is
directed to non-Christians. And so
we’ll break them up into those two
parts.
The first part, verses 6 to 12 which
I just read, are directed to
Christians. The latter part,
directed to non-Christians, and
we’ll take that in the future. The
character of these verses which I
just read to you is rapid-fire,
breathless, you almost feel like
John is panting as he races his
quill across the parchment to get
this down rapidly. They are single
statements, brief and independent,
one after another. And they move
from theme to theme to theme to
theme. Yet each deals with a needed
response, a response that every
Christian should have to the coming
of Jesus Christ which is the theme
of this book. Remember now, it is,
as we read in the prologue, the
revelation of Jesus Christ. It talks
about His Second Coming, that is the
theme of it. And here we find what
our response is to be to that Second
Coming. And that’s why we’ve
entitled it, “The Believer’s
Immediate Responses to Christ’s
Imminent Return.” These verses, in
fact, give the feeling of a furious
rush, a kind of a wild flurry in an
effort to call for immediate
response to such vital truth.
Nothing makes that more evident than
the fact that he repeats three
times, “Behold, I come
quickly...Behold, I come
quickly...Behold, I come quickly.”
And then down in verse 20, “Even so,
come, Lord Jesus.” And so there is a
rapidity and a repetition and at the
same time there is a series of
statements made on different themes.
The text is pregnant with urgency
and specificity, pressuring every
believer to think quickly and
immediately about the truths that
they have read and to react with
haste in the light of what is
coming. Jesus is coming. And the key
word in this text is He is coming
quickly. You will notice it there in
verse 7. “Behold, I am coming
quickly.” You will notice it in
verse 12, “Behold, I am coming
quickly.” And down in verse 20,
“Yes, I am coming quickly.” The term
is tachu from which we get the term
tachometer which measures speed. I’m
coming speedily, I’m coming hastily,
or I’m coming quickly, or I’m coming
shortly, or I’m coming soon.” Six
times in the book of Revelation that
is stated, six times, twice it is a
warning. In chapter 2 verses 5 and
16 He is coming quickly with
judgment on His mind. Four times it
is a promise...a promise of
blessing. The three that I read you
here in chapter 22 and one in
chapter 3 verse 11. In all four of
those, He is coming to bless. In the
first two, chapter 2 verses 5 and 16
He is coming to judge.
Also we read in chapter 3 verse 3
that His coming is like a thief.
That is repeated in chapter 16 verse
15, it means He will come
unexpectedly. He’s coming soon and
He’s coming when not expected. That
is, of course, the ploy that a thief
has to count on is that he is not
expected, that he can get in and get
out and do what he wants to do
immediately and hastily without
anybody able to make preparation, or
put up a defense.
Now what this is telling us is that
the coming of the Lord is soon, it’s
coming shortly, it’s coming hastily,
you need to be ready. You say, “Well
wait a minute. When this was written
around 96 A.D., they might have
thought that but we’re here a long
time, almost two thousand years
after that and He’s not here yet.”
Yeah, well that’s from the human
viewpoint, isn’t it? From the
vantage point of God, we remind
ourselves that a day with the Lord
is as...what?...a thousand years and
a thousand years is as a day. And
from God’s perspective, it’s only
been two days. In the light of
eternity, it is very, very brief.
People in the New Testament believed
that Jesus could come at any time.
They believed that He could come in
their life time. That is very clear
if you read the New Testament. It
was obvious to any reader of the New
Testament that believers felt Jesus
could come at any time. They didn’t
have such a highly refined and
defined eschatological scheme as to
conclude that He couldn’t come in
their time because this had to
happen and this had to happen and
this had to happen, and there was
this very, very carefully laid out
scenario of sequences and until
those took their proper place in
line, He couldn’t come. They lived
as if He could come at any moment.
There are a number of New Testament
texts, I think, that support this
view of what we call imminence, that
is to say He could come at any time.
Imminence could be defined as a
certainty with an uncertainty. It
was certain that He was coming, but
it was uncertain when. They were
living as if He might come at any
time, but didn’t know when He would
come.
Let me show you some New Testament
texts that help us to understand
that they lived as if Jesus could
come at any moment, for indeed He
could. Let me take you back to 1
Corinthians. And it’s important to
capture this because otherwise the
text doesn’t have its force, the
text of Revelation. Back in 1
Corinthians 1:7, and this describes
the Corinthian church here and it
says of them in verse 7 that they
were not lacking in any gift. What
that meant was that every gift that
God through His Holy Spirit could
bestow upon a church, every
ministerial gift, every spiritual
gift, every gifted leader and
teacher that He could give to His
church they had received. They
didn’t lack any spiritual gift from
God. You’re not lacking in any gift.
And then he adds, “Awaiting eagerly
the revelation of our Lord Jesus
Christ.” There is a typical
description of the attitude of a
member of the early church, waiting
eagerly for the coming of Jesus
Christ. They didn’t push the return
of Christ for His beloved way off in
some eschatological future. They
believed that it was imminent, that
it could come at any time, it could
certainly come in their lifetime.
In 1 Corinthians chapter 4 and verse
5, Paul says, “Don’t go on passing
judgment.” in other words, you’re
not the person who can judge
someone, “Don’t go on passing
judgment before the time but wait
until the Lord comes who will both
bring to light the things hidden in
the darkness and disclose the
motives of men’s hearts.” Literally,
live in expectation of the coming of
Christ. And they did. They did.
Then I want you to go to the
sixteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians
for a very interesting note there.
And it all is built around one word.
In 1 Corinthians 16 and verse 22 you
have the word “Maranatha...Maranatha,”
we’ve heard that word, haven’t we?
Maranatha, and interestingly enough
that is not translated. Maranatha is
an Aramaic word, it’s an Aramaic
word...that’s interesting because as
far as we can tell, nobody in
Corinth would have spoken Aramaic
except some Jews who may have been
living there. But basically nobody
in the Greek culture would have
spoken Aramaic. Aramaic was the
language of the people who lived in
Palestine. And so why would the
Apostle Paul in writing an epistle
to a Greek church in a Greek culture
include an Aramaic word untranslated?
It’s interesting.
What it means, by the way, is “The
Lord comes,” or “Lord, come.” It was
a word that expressed the hope of
the return of Christ. That’s very
interesting. Why an Aramaic, really
an Aramaic phrase squeezed into one
word, why would an Aramaic phrase
appear in a Greek letter to a Greek
church? The only answer is, it must
have been a word they were familiar
with, right? It isn’t even
translated. It must have been a
watch word, a byword, a proverbial
anticipation of the coming of the
Lord Jesus Christ that was so
well-known to everybody that
Christians just said, “Maranatha...Maranatha....Maranatha.”
It summed up the truth of the vital
hope of believers that Jesus could
come at any time. It expressed their
imminent hope. They were saying to
one another, “Maranatha, Maranatha,
our Lord come, our Lord come, our
Lord come.” They were living
constantly in the light of the
return of Christ. It was their hope.
On a number of occasions the Apostle
Paul expressed the idea that he
might live until Jesus returned.
Let’s look at some of the things he
said. Philippians chapter 3, for
example, and verse 20, he says, “For
our citizenship is in heaven from
which also we eagerly wait for a
Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.” He
was waiting for Christ. He was
waiting for the return of Jesus
Christ and he believed it could
happen in his lifetime, or he
wouldn’t have said that. “From which
we eagerly wait for a Savior.”
Look at 1 Thessalonians chapter 1,
here is Paul’s commendation of the
Thessalonian church. And he says
about the Thessalonian church, verse
9 of 1 Thessalonians 1, “You turned
to God from idols to serve a living
and true God and to wait for His Son
from heaven.” Listen, the early
church was just filled with
anticipation that Jesus could come
at any moment. Chapter 4 of 1
Thessalonians and verse 15, “For
this we say to you by the word of
the Lord, that we who are alive and
remain until the coming of the
Lord.” What’s he saying? He is
saying, “You know what? Some of us
may be alive at the return of
Christ.” That’s what he’s saying.
Look at 2 Thessalonians for a
moment, chapter 3, and I’m just
trying to plant in your mind the
idea that the early church believed
in imminency, they believed that
Jesus could come at any moment and
they lived in that expectation. In 2
Thessalonians chapter 3 and verse
10, listen to this, “For even when
we were with you we used to give you
this order, if anyone will not work,
neither let him eat.” Now we’ve got
some problems in the church at
Thessalonica, some people weren’t
working. “For we hear that some
among you are leading an
undisciplined life doing no work at
all but acting like busybodies. Now
such persons we command and exhort
in the Lord Jesus Christ to work in
quiet fashion and eat their own
bread.”
What does this have to do with the
Rapture? The whole Thessalonian
church was preoccupied with the
return of Christ, weren’t they? And
Paul had written them his first
epistle and told them Jesus is
coming, you’re waiting for His
coming. They were already waiting
for His coming, we saw that in
chapter 1 verse 10 of the first
letter. He said to them in that
first letter, verse 4:15 which I
read to you earlier, “We who are
alive and remain when He comes,”
they were living in the anticipation
of the return of Christ. And what
had happened was, some of them were
so convinced that Jesus would come
in their lifetime that they
stopped...what?...working. Is that
uncommon? We have that today. Every
time some guy comes along and writes
another book on when Jesus is going
to come, people do that. Remember
back in 1988 when the guy wrote the
book, Eighty-Eight Reasons why Jesus
will Come in 1988? I mean, it’s one
thing to write a book and be wrong.
It’s another thing to write a book
and be wrong 88 times. And people
sold their property, you know, and
got their pajamas on and got up on
the roof and with indolence and
laziness did what they did. I
remember years before that when a
guy told me that Jesus was going to
come on January 1 of a certain year,
I think it was like ‘81, can’t
remember exactly. And he had
liquidated all of his assets and he
had gone and bought Bibles and
passed them out to everybody and
sent out hundreds of thousands
little glow-in-the-dark praying
hands and he was kind of a bizarre
character. And he had it all pinned
down, Jesus was going to come.
Well it was a similar kind of
mentality last year in 1994 when a
man named Harold Camping wrote a
book saying Jesus was going to come
in September, remember? Of 1994 and
people did foolish things getting
ready for that? Well it was no
different than what happened in
Thessalonica. People in anticipation
of the imminent return of Jesus
Christ quit their jobs. The point
is, they lived in the light of the
reality that Jesus could come at any
time.
Now look at Titus chapter 2 and I
want you to capture this in your
mind because it’s very important.
Now we are living, according to
verse 12, Titus 2:12, we are living
righteously and godly in the present
age, okay? This is where we live in
the present age. But we are, verse
13, “Looking for the blessed hope
and the appearing of the glory of
our great God and Savior, Christ
Jesus.” We are looking for Christ.
That’s what Paul says to Titus. We
as believers living in the first
century are looking for the
returning Christ.
Turn to the epistle of James,
chapter 5, verse 7, “Be patient
therefore, brethren, until the
coming of the Lord.” Verse 8, “Be
patient, strengthen your hearts for
the coming of the Lord is near...at
hand.” That means next, soon. Then
in verse 9 he says, “The judge is
standing right at the door.” From a
human viewpoint, it seems like 2,000
years is a long time. From God’s
viewpoint, it’s two days.
Look at 1 John chapter 2 and verse
28, “And now, little children, abide
in Him so that when He appears we
may have confidence and not shrink
away from Him in shame at His
coming.” Again, living as if He’s
going to come in our lifetime was
just the way they lived. Chapter 3
verse 2, “We know that when He shall
appear we shall be like Him.”
You see, that’s been the church’s
hope. That’s been the church’s hope,
that Jesus would come. The church
then, we say, believed in imminency,
any natural reading of the New
Testament yields the fact that the
church believed Jesus could come at
any time. That is really unarguable,
as far as I’m concerned. They didn’t
know when, but they believed it
could be at any time, even in their
lifetime. And the church has held on
to that because it is such a great
motivation to live every moment
knowing Jesus might come in the next
one.
And so, imminency is really what is
on the mind of anyone who reads
carefully the New Testament. With
that in mind, let’s go back to our
text. Now when you read, “Behold, I
come quickly...Behold, I come
quickly...Behold, I come quickly,”
three times in chapter 22, you get
the idea that God is reinforcing
this reality. Quickly, not so much
as having to do with the speed with
which He comes, I mean what does
that matter? We don’t care whether
He comes at the speed of light or
ten times the speed of light. It’s
not the speed with which He comes,
that doesn’t matter because all
we’re going to know is when He gets
here. If it took Him a year to
traverse the heavens to get here,
we’d only know Him when He arrived.
If it took Him a nanosecond to
traverse the heavens before He got
here, we’d only know Him when He
arrives. The issue isn’t how fast
does He come. The issue is that we
live in the light of the reality
that He’s coming soon, that the
judge is at the door, that the
coming of the Lord is near. And we
have to live in the light of the
nearness of that.
Now that is the sum up of this book,
He’s coming, He’s coming soon. With
that in mind, look at verse 6. “And
he said to me, ‘These words are
faithful and true and the Lord, the
God of the spirits of the prophets,
sent His angel to show to His
bondservants the things which must
shortly take place.’” There again
the emphasis...it’s coming, it’s
coming soon.
Now in verse 6 he says, “And he said
to me,” and we have to identify the
speaker, the very same angel
introduced in chapter 22...pardon
me, yes 22, the angel who was
speaking to John. You go back to
chapter 21 verse 9, you meet that
angel, one of the seven angels who
had the seven bowls full of the
seven last plagues came and spoke
with me. Now here is the angel, you
remember, took him on the tour of
the heavenly city. Showed him in
chapter 2 verse 1 the water of life
clear as crystal, who took him down
through all of those marvelous
realities inside the place where He
will dwell and all saints will dwell
forever. It’s that very same angel
who showed him the holy city, that
same angel who was one of the seven
angels who poured out the wrath of
God in the seven-bowl judgments
called the last plagues, that same
angel now speaks to him. He’s not
showing him anything, he talks to
him.
This is what he said. “These words
are faithful and true.” What is that
all about? That is a heavenly
confirmation, a heavenly attestation
to what John has heard and seen
throughout the entire apocalypse.
That’s very important. The angel is
saying, “John, what you have seen is
reality. These words are faithful
and true.”
Go back to chapter 21 verse 5. “And
he said, ‘Write, for these words are
faithful and true.’” If you go back
to chapter 19 verse 11, Jesus Christ
is called Faithful and True. In
other words, the angel is affirming
the validity of everything John has
seen. He’s saying to him, “John, you
haven’t just been wandering around
in some mystical fog, you haven’t
just been having your own bizarre
dreams. You haven’t been imagining
things that aren’t really real. This
isn’t a case of an extravagant
imagination. Everything that you
have heard and seen in this
revelation is faithful and true.”
The scenes, the visions, the
revelations, the conversations with
heavenly creatures have been so
startling and so graphic and so
unearthly and so supernatural and so
frightening and so wondrous and so
amazing and so majestic and so
transcendent that some might
consider them a fantasy and some
might consider them a series of
dreams with some personal spiritual
interpretation or allegories that
need a secret spiritual meaning to
be discovered. But the angel says,
“What you’ve seen is exactly how it
is.”
Now that is a good word again to
those who want to allegorize the
book of Revelation, or those who
want to shove it way back and make
it all happen in 70 A.D. It is
exactly as John has received it.
They are utterly accurate
descriptions of accurate events and
personages to come. This emphasis,
by the way, on the truthfulness of
this is repeated in this final
chapter. Verse 16, “I have sent My
angel to testify to you these
things.” That’s right, the angel has
testified to these things and told
you they are faithful and true.
Verse 18 says, “If anybody adds to
the words of the prophecy of this
book, I’ll add to him the plagues
that are written in it.” Verse 19,
“If anyone takes away from the words
of the book of this prophecy, God
will take away his part in the Tree
of Life in the holy city.” Don’t
tamper with this revelation. It is
exactly as you received it. These
words are faithful and true. And
then he goes on to say in verse 6,
“And the Lord, the God of the
spirits of the prophets sent His
angel to show His bondservants the
things which must shortly take
place.” What he’s saying is it comes
from God. Oh yes, God used His angel
to reveal it, but the source is God,
the same God...this is very
important...who is the God of the
spirits of the prophets. That is the
same God who moved on the hearts of
Old Testament prophets, the same God
who spoke His Word through New
Testament prophets is the God who
has now revealed this. In other
words, this too is equally inspired.
The sovereign almighty God who
revealed His Word in the past
through the prophets who then wrote
the Old Testament with all of its
predictions, that’s what I think He
has primarily in mind, His Old
Testament prophets, the same God who
moved on the spirits or the minds of
the Old Testament prophets and they
wrote down the prophecies of the Old
Testament...and remember...which
were all fulfilled, literally and
actually and are still being
fulfilled. The same God who had
those prophets write with precision
and exactness, exactly how it would
be has inspired these visions and
given a message to His angel to show
to His bondservants the things which
must shortly take place.
Bondservants, by the way, are
Christians...Christians are the
bondservants. And so that’s why I
said verses 6 to 12 is directed at
Christians, it’s for us.
Now there’s a marvelous point to
make here. The Old Testament is full
of prophecies, full of future
prophecies and literally those
prophecies have come to pass. All
the prophecies about the first
coming of Messiah have come to pass.
And scholars tell us there are over
330 specific prophecies concerning
Jesus Christ that were fulfilled in
His first coming. And that then
becomes the standard. The exactness
and the precision with which the Old
Testament prophets predicted the
first coming is the standard by
which God has revealed His truth in
this book to predict the Second
Coming. These things are as faithful
and true as the prophets of the Old
Testament spoke about the first
coming of Christ because in both
cases it is God, the Lord, the
Almighty God who has inspired the
revelation.
Now the end of verse 6 he says,
“These are the things which must
shortly take place.” And there he’s
referring to the whole book. That
phrase, “things which must shortly
take place,” sweeps back over the
whole revelation. And so, God
reminds John through this angel what
you have is from Me.
Now God hasn’t given us the exact
timetable, but we are called to live
in expectation. And the eternal God
who revealed His Word to the spirits
of the minds of the prophets has
also revealed these truths to John
through the angels for us. The
things they say in here are real,
the visions he sees are real, and
they will happen just the way
Revelation says they will happen.
And I’ve told you all the way along,
this is not a forgery, this is not a
fantasy, these are not dreams that
need interpretation, this is not an
allegory, these are not fairy tales.
The one who is faithful and true has
spoken truly. Back in chapter 1
verse 1, the Revelation of Jesus
Christ, God gave him to show to His
bondservants the things which must
shortly take place. That’s it. And
He communicated it by His angel to
His bondservant John.
There was an angel coordinator who
was in charge of all of this
Revelation to John. And it is true,
it is as it is written. And I
emphasize that because there’s a
certain weariness in people
undermining the simple
straightforward realities of this
great apocalypse. And so we’ve come
full circle, from the prologue which
said essentially the same thing, to
the epilogue. And we know now that
brackets the main body of the book.
Now if God says this is faithful and
true, He means it will come to pass.
Is that not true? It will come to
pass. I mean, after all, His
prophetic record is perfect. He said
Israel would go into captivity and
they did. He said Babylon would fall
and they did. He said Tyre and Sidon
would be destroyed, and they were.
He said the Messiah would be born in
Bethlehem, and He was. He said that
Messiah would be born to a virgin
and He was. He said Messiah would be
killed and He was. He said judgment
would come in the future on land,
sea, water, and, men, believe me it
will. He said war will come killing
half the world, and it will. He said
nations will gather to battle at
Armageddon and they will. He says
there will come an Antichrist who
will rule the world and he will. He
says hell will belch forth its
demons to run over the earth and
maim the world, and they will. He
says believers will be martyred and
they will. He says the King is
coming, and He is. He says He will
set up His earthly Kingdom, and He
will. What it says in here is
exactly what it means. It is
faithful and true and there’s no
reason to equivocate, there’s no
reason to undermine the integrity of
God as He writes. In fact, it
reminds me of Isaiah 46 where it
says in verse 9, “Remember the
former things long past, for I am
God and there is no other. I am God
and there’s no one like Me declaring
the end from the beginning and from
ancient times things that have not
been done saying, ‘My purpose will
be established and I will accomplish
all My good pleasure.’” That is to
say God will do exactly what He says
He will do.
And this is how it will be done.
And so, it’s coming, folks, the book
of Revelation is coming. It’s
coming. And we’re reminded three
times in this last chapter that from
God’s vantage point it is coming
soon...soon. And sometimes it seems
so soon, so near.
In the light of that, in the light
of the reality of verse 6 that it’s
true and that it’s coming shortly,
and it’s coming soon and quickly and
suddenly, what is to be the
believer’s response? That’s the
question. What is to be the
believer’s response?
Four responses...four responses.
Response number one, immediate
obedience...immediate obedience. Or
if you like a better word, immediate
compliance. Verse 7 starts with
“And.” By the way, “and” here seems
to mark a change in the speaker. You
see and at the beginning of verse 7,
and at the beginning of verse 8, and
at the beginning of verse 9, and at
the beginning of verse 10. And that
may be a key to seeing a change in
the speaker. Here we have an
immediate change because it’s
obvious who’s speaking here, and
it’s not the angel. The angel spoke
in 6 but in 7 “And behold, I am
coming quickly.” It’s not an angel
who’s coming, who is it? It’s Christ
who’s coming and so He’s the
speaker. “Behold, I am coming
quickly.” I am coming...present
tense, the theme is urgency...I am
coming quickly. And then He gives us
what is the sixth of seven
Beatitudes. The Beatitude always
begins with the word “Blessed.” This
is the six of seven in the book of
Revelation. “Blessed is he who heeds
the words of the prophecy of this
book.” That’s immediate obedience.
Jesus is at the door. The judge is
at the door. He could come at any
time. We’re looking for His
appearing. We love His appearing, as
Paul told Timothy. And in the light
of His soon coming, in the light of
the fact that He can come at any
moment, we’re not waiting for some
unfolding prophetic scheme, the
church wasn’t like that. They didn’t
have some chart or some timetable
and they were sort of putting
themselves along the path and
saying, “Well, it certainly is not
possible for Him to come now because
we’ve got to go through all of
this.” No, they lived in the light
that He could come at any moment.
And the immediate response, first of
all, was to heed the words of the
prophecy of this book.
Now that, just to make a brief note,
indicates to us that the words of
this book are prophecy...the words
of the prophecy of this book. By the
way, that is repeated again in this
chapter about the fact that this
book is God’s revelation of
prophecy. You find it in verse 18,
“In the prophecy of this book,” you
find it in verse 19, “The book of
this prophecy.”
Now certainly prophecy doesn’t
always mean prediction, but in this
case it certainly does. This is a
book of prophecy. This is a book of
future predictions and promises. In
light of it, He says, we are to heed
the words.
Now what does it mean to heed? Well
it’s from tereo, it basically means
to keep, to hold fast, or to guard.
That’s its meaning, to hold on to,
to hold captive, to make one’s own,
to possess. That same term is used
in chapter 14 verse 12 where it
talks about the perseverance of the
saints who keep the commandments of
God, who hold on to them.
Now it does call, I think, to a
certain guarding and I don’t want to
beg this issue again, but I just
want to bring it up. When He says
“heed,” it can be translated “to
guard.” And in that sense it’s a
protective role. I feel that way. I
feel like I not only have to obey
what the book of Revelation says,
but I have to protect it from the
people who want to destroy it. It
calls for guarding this great book
from its detractors who would deny
it, guarding it from its critics who
would ignore it, guarding it from
its false interpreters who would
obscure it...just as in 1 Timothy
chapter 6 and verse 20. Timothy is
told, “O Timothy, guard what has
been entrusted to you.” There is
definitely a guardianship here. In 2
Timothy 1:13 and 14, “Retain the
standard of sound words, guard
through the Holy Spirit who dwells
in us the treasure entrusted to
you.” This is the treasure, this
book of Revelation. And it must be
guarded against the detractors and
the critics and the false
interpreters who want to destroy its
meaning, tamper with its
interpretation, obscure its simple
and direct significance.
But it’s beyond that. It’s not just
talking about a guardian
responsibility, it’s talking about
obeying. To keep means to obey, to
heed is a good translation. You
remember, don’t you, that Jesus said
in John 14:15, “If you love Me,
you’ll keep My commandments.” And
that is repeated throughout that
section. Verse 21, “He who has My
commandments and keeps them, he it
is who loves Me,” verse 21. Same
thing in verse 23, same thing in
chapter 15 verse 10, and you find it
in 1 John 2 and 1 John 5, if you
love the Lord, you keep His
commandments. If you love His
appearing, you keep His
commandments. That’s the whole
point. If we believe Jesus is coming
imminently, He could come at any
moment, and, of course, if the
Rapture of the church starts it all
off, and the Rapture of the church
is the first thing and then comes
the time of the Tribulation when all
the events are laid out, there’s no
event given in front of the Rapture
of the church...so it could happen
at any moment. And so we live every
moment as if Jesus could come in the
next moment. We have to live then
obeying the mandates given in the
book of Revelation.
Now that leads me to ask this
question, and you would ask it, I’m
sure, if you were studying, what are
the commands we’re supposed to obey?
You might say to yourself, “I don’t
remember a whole lot of commands in
this book,” and you’re right. In
fact, if I had you start in chapter
4 and track your way through the
book of Revelation all the way to
this point, you know how many
commands you’d find? None. No really
direct commands to a believer. There
are some commands to John to do
certain things.
You say, “Well where are the
commands we’re supposed to obey
here?” Well back in chapters 2 and 3
there are some direct commands given
to the church. Remember now, in
chapters 2 and 3 have letters to
churches, symbolic of all the
churches of all time and the same
commands and warnings that are given
to the churches in chapters 2 and 3
apply to us. But beyond chapters 2
and 3, the book doesn’t give
specific commands to believers until
you get here and you’re told to heed
the Words. Well then when you’re
told to heed the book of Revelation,
what does this mean? Well what do
you mean then heed the words of the
prophecy of this book?
I’ll tell you what it means. He
means this, you know that Jesus
Christ is coming, you know He could
come at any moment, so long for His
coming...long for your eternal
fellowship, desire heaven, desire
holiness, desire Christ vindicated
and glorified. That’s the spirit of
this book. Desire the end of the
curse. Desire a new heaven and a new
earth. Live for the eternal state.
You should, after reading this book,
love Christ more than you ever loved
Him for the sake of His coming
glory. You should live in the light
of the fact that some day you’re
going to face Him. You should by
comprehending this book disconnect
yourself from the perishing world
and live in the light of the eternal
world. You should long for the day
when you’re made like Christ, long
for the time when He appears and you
see Him face to face. Long for the
hour of your eternal reward, long
for your resurrection body, as Paul
did in 2 Corinthians chapter 5, that
he might be clothed upon with his
house which is from heaven.
You are to grasp also the fearful
judgment on the ungodly and call
them to Christ before it’s too late.
That is keeping or heeding the words
of this prophecy, living in the
light of the Second Coming, living
in the light of the return of
Christ, living in the light of
coming judgment on the ungodly. See,
God does not ask us to read and
understand and believe the prophecy
of this book so we can cater to our
own curiosity. And I have really
tried to avoid that all the way
through this study, not getting
caught up in all kinds of
curiosities that you read so much
about when you read people who
comment on the book of Revelation.
God didn’t write this book so we
could feed our curiosity about the
future or so we could see
helicopters and very evident
indications all around the world
today of what every little thing
might mean. Nor was this book given
to us so that we might understand
and parade our refined and
impressive eschatological charts. It
wasn’t written so we could have our
wonderful system in place. And I’ll
tell you, folks, I have been in the
ministry long enough to have
collected every imaginable scheme
from the book of Revelation. And you
know something? I rarely have a
month go by when I don’t get another
one. And some guy has got the final
and last word, rarely are they ever
published by anybody other than the
author...and you always want to
watch out for self-published
material.
There’s an endless ream of stuff
coming out as people try to come up
with the latest scheme. God didn’t
write this so we could define and
refine impressive eschatological
charts. He didn’t give us the book
of Revelation so that we could
analyze our culture, so that we
could pinpoint social and political
analyses of current events. He wrote
it so that we might catch the spirit
of the coming of Jesus Christ and
live in the light of it. It’s much
more important that this book affect
your life in terms of holiness and
zeal for the lost than that you
figure out how to fix a chart that
will wow your friends. That’s not
the issue. Seeing the glory of
heaven is the issue. Seeing the
majesty of Jesus Christ is the
issue. Seeing the terror of hell,
feeling the heat of judgment on
sinners, understanding the
seriousness of the rejection of
Christ, and at the same time feeling
the joy of coming bliss so that we
can both long for heaven and witness
to the lost, so that we can live a
holy life and give a testimony for
Christ, so that we can serve God
with all our hearts because we are
going to receive an eternal reward.
That’s how you keep this book.
That’s what He’s calling for.
Revelation is not entertainment. It
is not high-class fascination. It is
motivation to live a godly life. It
is truth to shape you. And Peter
said that in 2 Peter chapter 3 in
verse 11, he said, “Since all these
things are to be destroyed in this
way, what sort of people ought you
to be?” That’s the question. Not
what sort of chart should you draw.
What kind of person are you going to
be? The timing of these events is
very elusive. That’s why there are
so many viewpoints. And as I told
you before, even the men who wrote
the Old Testament, the prophets,
Peter says, “Searched what time they
wrote about.” They couldn’t even
comprehend the chronology of it. And
they searched what persons were they
writing about? There was mystery
even in what they wrote and only
those who were alive when it was
fulfilled saw it clearly and so it
will be with this prophecy.
The issue is, what kind of people
are you going to be? Are you going
to be living in holy conduct and
godliness, 2 Peter 3:11 says?
Because you’re looking for and
hastening the coming of the day of
God. You’re so eager and you’re
anticipating it, and you know it’s
coming, and so you live holy lives.
Verse 14 he says, “Beloved, but
since you look for these things, be
diligent to be found by Him in
peace, spotless and blameless.”
That’s it. Are you living in peace?
Or are you using your eschatology to
divide? Are you blameless? Are you
without spot?
No, the issue here is immediate
submission to the great reality of
this tremendous book...immediate
obedience. Why? Because He could
come at any moment. The imminent
return demands immediate obedience.
There’s no time to postpone, you
better get busy obeying now, you
better get in the spirit of the book
of Revelation now because Jesus
could come at any moment and you
want to receive a full reward and
you want to honor Him at His coming.
Second, and we’ll just cover two of
the four, second, this is very
important because this wraps the
whole book up and I don’t want to be
unfaithful to this part of it.
Immediate worship...immediate
worship, verse 8, “And I, John,”
there’s the “and” again that
signifies a change in speaker, “And
I, John, am the one who heard and
saw these things. And when I heard
and saw, I fell down to...what?...to
worship at the feet of the angel who
showed me these things and he said
to me, ‘Do not do that, I’m a fellow
servant of your’s and of the
brethren and the prophets and of
those who heed the words of this
book. Worship God.’”
John had the right idea, didn’t he?
I mean, he really did. The right
response was to worship, wasn’t it?
Now the whole thing was so
absolutely overwhelming. I mean, the
whole description of everything he
has seen in all these visions that
he received when he was on the
island of Patmos in exile, the whole
thing is so overwhelming that when
the angel gets through with this
affirmation and affirms that it’s
going to happen soon and he needs to
heed the words, the whole thing is
so overwhelming that he collapses in
worship. He’s breathless. He’s
absolutely overwhelmed. And so
should we be. It is a testimony to
our indifference, isn’t it, when
we’re not.
Look what he says, “And I, John,” I,
John, “Am the one who heard and saw
these things.” You say, “Why did he
say that?” Well the angel gave
testimony to the fact that it was
true and now John adds his. It’s
true, folks, I’m the one who heard
and saw. It’s his own testimony to
the reality, to the veracity of what
was revealed to him, seeing and
hearing, saw and heard, he uses
those terms twice. Vision and voice,
and that’s what Revelation is, it’s
a vision and the voice from heaven,
form an angel, even from the throne,
even from Christ. Vision and voice,
seeing and hearing, he’s so amazed.
“And I, it’s John,” it’s as if he
says, “I...can you believe
it...John, me, saw and heard.” And
he is captive to wonder and
adoration. His compulsion to worship
is unrestrained. He is so driven to
worship that he just worships the
nearest person. And he says, “I fell
down to worship.” Please notice, it
doesn’t say he fell down to worship
the angel, it says he fell down to
worship at the feet of the angel. I
don’t think he was worshiping the
angel.
Back in chapter 19 verse 10, he did
it there, too. He said, “I fell down
at his feet,” only this time he
said, “I fell down at his feet to
worship...what?...him, and he said,
Get up...the angel did...don’t do
that. I’m a fellow servant of yours
and your brethren and all the
testimony of Jesus, worship God,
don’t worship me.” So he had learned
by now. But, you know, he fell down
again. I don’t think he wanted to
worship the angel, he had already
been instructed on that, I just
think he just collapsed, like
Ezekiel, you remember, who when he
saw the vision in Ezekiel,
collapsed. Like Isaiah in Isaiah 6
when he saw the vision of the glory
of God, collapsed. Like the three
disciples at the transfiguration in
Matthew 17, they saw the glory of
God revealed, they collapsed. I
think he just crumbled in worship. I
mean, lost in wonder, love and
praise...so wonderful was the
revelation of the knowledge of what
was going to happen, so profound and
so prolific that he just collapsed.
He just collapsed. It says,
“When...he was the one who heard and
saw these things,” all of it.
Now you know what? He may have
thought the angel was Christ. He
meant no idolatry. He just lost
himself. For a moment he was so
overwhelmed he couldn’t discern
between the messenger and the one
who sent him. You know what? He knew
that you’re not supposed to worship
angels, he had just been instructed
about that in chapter 19 verse 10
and my guess is he probably read
Paul’s epistle to the Colossians
anyway. Somewhere along the path
long before this, he had read
Colossians 2:18 which says, “Don’t
worship angels.” He knew that was
wrong. But he just collapsed in
worship. And the angel who realizes
that God alone is to be worshiped
and feels so self-conscience at
John’s posture, verse 9, said to me,
“Don’t do that, stop. I’m a fellow
servant of yours and of your
brethren, the prophets and of those
who heed the words of this book. I’m
just another creature...I love
this...I’m a fellow servant of yours
and of your brethren, the prophets.”
Isn’t that wonderful that the angels
felt like they were brothers with
the prophets? Remember in the Old
Testament where in the book of
Hebrews where God says when God gave
the law in the Old Testament, He
gave the law through the angels?
Boy, the angels have been involved
in so many things, they even
identify themselves as brethren of
the prophets, fellow servants of
yours and your brethren, the
prophets. We serve alongside of you.
And Hebrews 1:14 says, “They are
sent to minister for the saints.” He
said to me, “Don’t worship me, I’m
just a creature, get up.” I think
John would have said, “I really
wasn’t worshiping you, I just lost
it there.” And the angel then says,
“Worship God...Worship God.”
If anything should be elicited out
of an understanding of the book of
Revelation, it ought to be worship,
right? I mean, when we see what
God’s going to do, where the world
is going, what’s it going to be like
in the end and how it’s all going to
wrap up and Jesus will be glorified,
and we see the millennial kingdom,
at the end of the kingdom the
uncreation of everything as we know
it and the recreation, new creation,
a new heaven and a new earth, and
the glorious new Jerusalem, the holy
city coming down from God and
settling in to the eternal state and
the glory of God shining out from
within that gold and diamond prism
and all of its bejeweled foundations
and all of that blazing through
eternal glory and we’re there in
holy perfection like Christ forever,
the only way to respond to that is
to worship. And the angel just
wanted to make sure that John knew
you don’t worship anybody but God.
Just as a footnote. The Roman
Catholic Church advocates the
worship of Mary, the worship of
angels, the worship of saints, they
call it veneration but it is
indistinguishable from worship, is a
violation of what the Bible teaches.
Worship God. All that John felt
should be directed to God alone.
And, you know, hasn’t that been a
theme all the way through this book?
You go back to chapter 4, what are
they doing in heaven? Worshiping
God. You go back to chapter 5, what
are they doing? Worshiping God. Go
back to chapter 7, what are they
doing? Worshiping God. Chapter 15,
worshiping God. Chapter 19,
worshiping God. So, the soon and
sudden return of Jesus Christ
demands immediate response. First,
obedience not just to the commands
of the book in chapters 2 and 3, but
to the whole spirit of the thing, to
heed it all and immediate worship.
When we live in the light of the
return of Jesus Christ, we will be
obedient and we will be worshipful.
The third immediate response to
Christ’s imminent return is
immediate proclamation....immediate
proclamation. Verse 10, “And he said
to me, ‘Do not seal up the words of
the prophecy of this book, for the
time is near,” again emphasizing the
imminency of it, this is not a
message to be hidden, it is a
message to be spread. It is to be
proclaimed to Christians for
promised blessing. It is to be
proclaimed, listen carefully, to
produce obedience and to produce
worship. That is its intention. The
angel, most likely, is the one
speaking here when it says, “And he
said to me,” and he says, “Do not
seal up the words of the prophecy of
this book. Don’t hide these things.”
Back in chapter 10 and verse 11,
John writes, “And they said to me,
you must prophesy again concerning
many peoples and nations and tongues
and kings.” This has to be spoken.
If you go back to the book of
Daniel, for example, Daniel 8:26 and
Daniel chapter 12 verses 4 through
10, there was a word from the Lord
to seal up these things. Not to
proclaim them. That prohibition is
removed. Immediate proclamation is
called for because now it is
abundantly clear what is to come.
And because it is imminent in every
generation from John until today,
this book is to be proclaimed. And I
just give you a note here. It says
in verse 10, “Do not seal up the
words...the words,” plural, meaning
the specific words of this book are
not to be sealed up.
That reminds me again that we’re not
looking into this book for some kind
of secretive meanings hidden behind
what is obvious. If the truth is not
in the words, then this command is
nonsense. But the truth is in the
words and we are not to seal up
these words, we are to make them
known. Way back in chapter 1 verse
11, John was told to write in a book
what you see and send it to the
churches. Spread it, spread this
word, Jesus is coming and with Him
comes blessing for His own and with
Him comes horrifying judgment on the
ungodly. To fail to preach
revelation, to fail to proclaim
revelation is not only foolish,
because back in chapter 1 verse 3 it
says, “Blessed is he who reads and
those who hear the words of the
prophecy and heed the things written
in it for the time is near.” Not
only will you forfeit that blessing,
it is not just foolish but it is
sinful.
If ever there was a day to proclaim
its truths, it is now. And tomorrow
will be a more important day and the
day after that a more important day,
and next month, more important, and
next year, more important as the
coming of Christ becomes even
nearer. Any Christian who fails to
learn the truths of this book and to
understand the words of this book
which are not at all
incomprehensible, as we have
learned, is forfeiting blessing and
any preacher who fails to preach
this book of the glorious realities
to come in the return of Jesus
Christ is sinfully unfaithful to his
mandate. And yet it is common, I
suppose it is even normal in the
church today to have this book
completely ignored. As wonderful as
the gospel record is, which tells us
the story of the first coming of
Christ, as marvelous as the epistles
are which gives us the theology that
comes out of His work, this is the
book that exalts Him most. Not to
preach the book of Revelation is to
fall short of exalting the Lord
Jesus Christ with that exaltation
due to Him. It is not just a failure
to teach the whole council of God
and to give His people the love of
His appearing, it is outright
disobedience. The time is near. It
is imminent. It is soon. This must
be preached, don’t seal it up.
A great church, a faithful church, a
biblical church is always a Second
Coming church. In 1 Thessalonians
chapter 1 it was said of that
Thessalonian assembly which was the
noblest of all the New Testament
churches to which letters were
penned, it says of them that they
had turned to God from idols,
chapter 1 verse 9, to serve a living
and true God in verse 10, and to
wait for His Son from heaven. They
were a Second Coming church, they
were waiting for the Son.
And then verse 11 fires a jolting
rocket into this idea of
proclamation. “Let the one who does
wrong still do wrong, and let the
one who is filthy still be filthy
and let the one who is righteous
still practice righteousness and let
the one who is holy still keep
himself holy.”
What is that strange statement? What
is the point of it? What is the
meaning of it? The meaning of it is
when you proclaim the truth, people
will respond to that truth and fix
their eternal destiny. For the one
who hears the truth continues to do
wrong, he is fixed in that. For the
one who hears the truth and
continues in his filth, he is fixed
in that. That is his eternal
destiny. For the one in hearing acts
righteously, he is fixed in
righteousness. For the one who
responds with a holy response, he is
fixed in his holiness. That’s the
intent of the statement. In fact,
the word “still” some commentators
think could mean “more.” Let the one
who does wrong do more wrong, let
the one who is filthy be more
filthy, let the one who is righteous
be more righteous, let the one who
is holy be more holy. And what it is
saying is, if you are wrong in this
life, you are more wrong in eternity
where there is no good influence. If
you are filthy in this life, you are
more filthy in eternity. If you are
righteous in this life, you will be
more righteous in the next. If
you’re holy here, you’ll be more
holy there.
You perpetuate your response into an
eternal destiny. When the sinner
refuses the message, the warning,
there is no cure for his wrong,
there is no remedy for his
filthiness. He will continue in it
and even be more evil and more
filthy. Once the Lord returns, or
once he dies, his character is fixed
forever in hell where wrong and
filth are perfected. If the warnings
of this book are not sufficient to
move men to repent, then let them
remain in their unrepentant sin.
God’s Spirit will not always
struggle with sinners. The day comes
when judgment falls and crushes
those who will not repent.
It’s a sobering thought. Reject
God’s warnings and you fix your
eternal destiny. Respond to his
warnings, and you set your eternal
destiny in glory. Whatever you are
in life, you will be more of in
eternity. That’s the point. And God
may just turn His back. In the Old
Testament, the prophet said,
“Ephraim is joined to idols, let him
alone.” Jesus said about the leaders
of Israel, “They are blind leaders
of the blind, let them alone, they
are fixed in their blindness.”
On the other hand, when these truths
are preached to the righteous and
the holy, it confirms and
strengthens their sanctification as
well as being the reality which they
enjoy in eternity. We could borrow
from our study of 2 Corinthians and
say to those who respond negatively
to the gospel, the preaching of the
gospel is a saver of death unto
death. For those who respond
positively, it is a saver of life
unto life. Preaching the warning
message of the book of Revelation
can make the wicked more wicked,
more blasphemous and ultimately fix
their wickedness in a form of wicked
perfection that will characterize
life in hell. These same truths when
responded to and believed make men
righteous and more righteous and
ultimately perfectly righteous.
Preach it, he says. Take the lid
off. Proclaim it. Don’t seal it. The
time is near, preach it and the
people who won’t hear it, fix their
destiny and so do the people who
will. The first destiny is hell, the
second is heaven. The sad truth is
that when Revelation is preached, it
has this great effect. It really
draws the line. One who refuses
continually the truth of this book
and the reality of Christ as the
sacrificial Lamb as He’s portrayed
in this book and as the coming King,
the one who refuses to bow his knee
to Christ and accept His sacrifice
on behalf of sin sets his rejection
in an eternal mold and only becomes
more deeply and eradicably what he
already is. So preaching the great
truths of Revelation becomes either
an instrument of salvation or an
instrument of damnation. It is to
those who are perishing, Paul said,
foolishness, but to those who are
believing, it is the power of God
unto salvation. So the angel said,
proclaim the truth so men and women
can hear it while there is still
time. It certainly reminds me and
perhaps you as well of Matthew 25
and verse 10, Jesus telling the
story about the ten virgins with
their lamps. It says in verse 10,
“And while they were going away to
make the purchase,” they wanted to
go buy oil because the bridegroom
had come, “the bridegroom came,
those who were ready went in with
him to the wedding feast and the
door was shut.” The point here is
you can fool away your opportunity
until you don’t have an opportunity
any more. Preach and warn people
that what they do with the preaching
of the book of Revelation and its
glorious truths will fix their
eternal destiny.
In Luke 13:25 Jesus said, “Strive to
enter by the narrow door, for many,
I tell you, will seek to enter and
will not be able.” Then listen to
this. “Once the head of the house
gets up and shuts the door, and you
begin to stand outside and knock on
the door saying, ‘Lord, open to us,’
and then He will answer and say to
you, ‘I don’t know where you’re
from.’”
The only thing that gives any sense
to this is the reality of an
imminent return. Every preacher in
every generation since the Apostle
John was to preach this because
Christ could come at any time. And
men needed to be ready. Immediate
obedience, immediate worship and
immediate proclamation are called
for, and then one final
responsibility or duty, immediate
service, verse 12. “Behold, I am
coming quickly and My reward is with
Me to render to every man according
to what he has done.” Behold, I am
coming quickly. Again, imminence is
the issue. It’s not describing the
speed with which He leaves heaven
and arrives, it’s the suddenness,
it’s the imminence, it’s the soon-ness
of it. And He says, “ I’m coming.”
In fact, back in Mark 13 Jesus said,
“Take heed, keep on the alert for
you don’t know when the appointed
time is.” I’m coming...I’m coming
and My reward is with Me to render
to every man. What is that? Our
complete, eternal reward.
Here He’s talking to believers about
our eternal reward. And we will be
given that reward according to what
we have done. Remember when we
studied the judgment seat of Christ,
we saw that we must all appear
before the judgment seat of Christ,
2 Corinthians chapter 5 verse 9, to
receive for the things done in the
body whether they are good or
phaulos. And then we went to 1
Corinthians chapter 3 verses 9
through 15 and we saw that our
activities in life could be gold,
silver, precious stones, or wood,
hay and stubble. And wood, hay and
stubble is not evil, it’s not
wicked, it’s not sin, it just
doesn’t have any eternal value. It
will just get burned up when the
testing fire comes, Paul says in 1
Corinthians 3. There will come a
time when all of our works will be
tested, and the fire will be put to
them, and gold and silver and
precious stones will survive the
fire because they have eternal
value. That’s our service rendered
to God. The rest is the trivialities
of our lives that weren’t evil, but
had no eternal value. Only that
which had eternal value survives.
And it’s on the basis of that test
that we are rewarded. We will
receive praise from God, 1
Corinthians 4:5 says. We will
receive a reward for the gold,
silver and precious stones. And I
told you, and I don’t want to go
back over it all, but I believe that
reward that we will receive in glory
will be a capacity to worship God
and a capacity to serve Him. The
more faithful we are here, the
greater will be our reward there.
And we will be given greater
capacity for praise and greater
capacity for service.
And so, there will come a time for
reward and because we know that,
because we look forward to the
judgment seat of Christ when He will
reward us, we serve Him diligently
because we want to receive a full
reward. The Apostle John said, “Look
to yourselves that you receive a
full reward.” Look at your life and
make sure your service is to the
maximum, 2 John 8. Our eternal
reward is based on our service that
has eternal value. And again I say,
I believe that eternal reward, it’s
not going to be a crown on your head
while you’re walking around in the
New Jerusalem with a bigger crown
than somebody else, I believe it
will be capacities for service,
capacities for worship and maybe
capacity for joy. Jesus talked about
a parable where people were put over
greater and greater areas of
responsibility based upon their
faithfulness. Remember that? And I
really believe that that’s the
essence of heavenly reward, as well
as knowing in your heart of hearts
that your life was well pleasing to
Him.
So, Jesus could come at any time.
And all of this that’s described in
this tremendous book could begin to
unfold. In the light of that
imminent reality we are called to
immediate obedience, immediate
worship, immediate proclamation and
immediate service. As we come to the
Lord’s table tonight, those four
things should be our focus. Not so
much looking back, we’ve done that
in the beautiful music that we’ve
heard and sung. As we contemplate
the cross of Jesus Christ and what
He’s done for us, let’s look
forward. What He has done for us is
to give us a salvation that is
eternal. What He has done for us is
to put us in a position to be taken
to heaven when He returns. What the
cross was intended to do was to give
us the hope of eternal life, which
hope becomes reality at the return
of Jesus Christ. And we are to live
in the light of that. And as we come
to the Lord’s table tonight, let’s
dedicate ourselves afresh to
obedience, worship, proclamation and
service in view of the soon return
of our Lord.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Our websites: www.biblebb.com and
www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986