Overview:
Like His plagues against the ancient Egyptians, God once again pours out plagues on the people of earth in Revelation 16. And as pharaoh did, with hardened hearts, they refuse to repent.
Pastor Chuck Swindoll explains how things go from bad to worse as people move further away from the true source of life. Nevertheless, God’s plan for the future will run its course and will lead to His grand finale—just as He ordained.
Choose God and His ways because He will never mislead you or let you down!
Message Summary:
Message Key Facts:
- The Columbia Illustration: Swindoll opens with a personal memory of washing his truck on a warm February morning in 2003, only to hear the sonic boom of the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrating. He uses this to illustrate how the "Day of the Lord" will come suddenly when people cry "peace and safety" [4–7].
- Defining the Bowls: Swindoll explains that the "bowls" in Revelation 16 are not large mixing bowls, but shallow saucers (phialas). The imagery suggests a sudden, splashing outpouring of judgment rather than a slow trickle.
- The Justice of Bloody Waters: When the third bowl turns rivers to blood, an angel declares God righteous for doing so. Swindoll notes the angel’s logic: because the wicked shed the blood of saints and prophets, God is giving them blood to drink, which is their "just desert" [18–19].
- Gnawing Tongues: During the fifth bowl (darkness), the pain is so intense that people "gnawed their tongues." Swindoll explains the Greek verb masaomai means "to knead," indicating a continuous chewing action caused by agony without relief.
- A Darkness that is Felt: Comparing the fifth bowl to the ninth plague of Egypt (Exodus 10), Swindoll describes the darkness as "thick" and palpable. He recounts a personal experience in Carlsbad Caverns where the darkness was so absolute he could feel the heat of his hand but not see it [24–26].
- The Trap of the Euphrates: Swindoll interprets the drying up of the Euphrates River (the sixth bowl) not as a kindness to the Kings of the East, but as a divine trap. Just as the Red Sea parted to lead the Egyptian army to destruction, the dried riverbed lures these armies toward their doom at Armageddon.
- The 100-Pound Hailstones: The seventh bowl brings hailstones weighing a talent (approximately 100 pounds). Swindoll notes that while the largest recorded hailstone is only two pounds, these future stones would hold roughly 12 gallons of water each, contributing to a plague described as "extremely severe" [32–33].
- The Richter Scale Limit: Swindoll notes that while the Richter scale has no theoretical upper limit, the earthquake in the seventh bowl is unlike anything in human history. It changes the topography of the earth, fleeing islands and leveling mountains, likely restoring the earth to a pre-flood environment [33–34].
Message References:
- Revelation 16: The primary text detailing the seven bowl judgments poured out on the earth.
- 2 Peter 3:10: "The day of the Lord will come like a thief," referenced to describe the suddenness of God's intervention.
- Exodus 10:21: Referenced regarding the "thick darkness" in Egypt that could be felt.
- Genesis 1:21: Referenced to contrast God creating every living thing in the water with the judgment where "every living thing in the sea died".
- Joshua 1:4: Referenced regarding the Euphrates River serving as the eastern boundary of the land given to Israel.