Overview:
Revelation 1:1–3, 9–19, 22:6–10, 16–21
Like a captivating drama, Revelation unfolds with otherworldly characters, high stakes, and powerful players. However, this intriguing story is not fiction but a glimpse into the future. Listen in as Pastor Chuck Swindoll makes accessible the rich message of Revelation in this helpful introductory overview. Discover three practical tips to help you interpret the book’s meaning. But more importantly, receive unquenchable hope in anticipation of the reality to come when this world crowns its true King.
Message Summary:
In this introductory message to the book of Revelation, Chuck Swindoll compares opening the Bible’s final book to entering the world of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. He notes that, like Middle Earth, the reader encounters cosmic battles, ferocious beasts, and an evil Overlord, but ultimately witnesses the darkness turn to light as the true King is revealed in splendor. Swindoll clarifies that unlike fantasy novels, Revelation is divinely inspired reality, providing the answer to the Gospels’ hope and the solution to the problems found from Genesis to Jude: good ultimately triumphs over evil [6–7].
To help the congregation navigate this complex book without falling into “wild and ridiculous extremes,” Swindoll establishes three practical rules for study. First, expect the unusual, acknowledging that John used symbols to mask the message from Roman persecutors like Domitian. Second, restrain your imagination, interpreting symbols based on Scripture rather than forcing modern headlines or names like “Hitler” or “Stalin” into the text. Third, apply a three-step method to every passage: ask “What does it say?”, “What does it mean?”, and “What does it mean to me?” [7–10, 14–16].
Swindoll concludes by providing a “reliable map” for the book based on the divine outline found in Revelation 1:19. He traces the journey from the “things which are” (the church age) to the “things which will take place” (the Tribulation, the return of the King of Kings, the Millennium, and the Eternal State). He assures listeners that God’s plan is a sovereign arrangement of events designed to replace fear with hope and superstition with truth [26, 33–35].
Message Key Facts:
- Singular, Not Plural: Swindoll corrects the common error of calling the book “Revelations.” The title is “The Revelation of Jesus Christ” (Apocalypsis), meaning an “unveiling” or “disclosing” of the Lord Jesus, not a hiding of Him.
- The “Like” Principle: Swindoll warns against hyper-literalism regarding imagery. When John writes that Jesus’s eyes were “like a flame of fire” or His voice was “like the sound of many waters,” he is using analogy. It does not mean literal fire was shooting from His eyes, but that they had the quality of penetrating brightness.
- Historical Context (Patmos): John wrote the book while exiled on the island of Patmos in the Aegean Sea during the reign of the vicious emperor Domitian (approx. A.D. 94–96). Swindoll debunks the tourist myths about specific caves on the island, emphasizing instead the reality of John’s solitude and suffering [21–24].
- The “Blessing Bookends”: The book is unique in promising a specific blessing to those who read, hear, and heed its words. This promise appears at the beginning (Revelation 1:3) and the end (Revelation 22:7), acting as bookends for the reader.
- The Divine Outline: Swindoll identifies Revelation 1:19 as the inspired outline for the entire book:
- “The things which you have seen” (Chapter 1: The vision of the glorified Christ).
- “The things which are” (Chapters 2–3: The letters to the seven churches/the present age).
- “The things which will take place after these things” (Chapters 4–22: The future judgments, Millennium, and Heaven).
- Interpreting the Beast: While discussing Revelation 13, Swindoll jokes about the many failed attempts to identify the Antichrist (the Beast) using the number 666, ranging from Nero to Ronald Reagan. He asserts that he will not engage in dogmatic speculation where Scripture is not explicit [13–15].
- Spurgeon’s Confidence: Swindoll shares an anecdote about Charles Haddon Spurgeon, who, when asked by a skeptic if he knew what a difficult passage meant, replied, “It means just what it says.” This underscores the principle that often the plainest reading is the best interpretation.
Message References:
- Revelation 1:1–3: The introduction, the promise of blessing, and the statement that “the time is near”.
- Revelation 1:19: The command to write “the things which you have seen, and the things which are, and the things which will take place after these things”.
- Revelation 22:16–21: The final testimony of Jesus, the invitation to take the water of life, and the warning not to add to or subtract from the prophecy.
- 1 Thessalonians 4:13: Paul’s statement, “I would not want any of you to be uninformed,” cited to show that God desires His people to know the future.
- Revelation 13: The description of the Dragon, the Beast rising from the sea, and the number 666 [13–14].