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Revelation
III Transcribed from the sermon preached April 29, 2007 The
Reverend Max Lynn, Pastor Today I want to
look at the main
antagonists in Revelation, the four primary evil forces: the Dragon,
the Beast
of the Sea, the Beast of the Earth, and the Great Prostitute. From a
look at
who the antagonists are we get an idea for what resistance means.
If you were
here last week you will remember the rough organization of Revelation
follows
four series of seven: seven churches, seven seals, seven trumpets, and
seven
bowls of plague.
By chapter 7,
the sixth seal has been broken. We anticipate the opening of the
seventh seal
and the final intervention of God and the Lamb. But first we get the
Church.
In verses 1 -
8 the servants of the living God receive a seal on their foreheads.
This is in
direct contrast to the mark of the beast in our second reading this
morning in
chapter 13.
The great
multitude in white robes crying out to the Lamb, we are told, are the
ones who
have come out of the great tribulation. The clear message is that the
people of
God will be helped through but not kept from the tribulation. The mark
of the
living God doesn't keep us from the pain of life. It helps us endure
and
persevere. Chapter 13 comes as part of the action of the seventh
trumpet, the end
of the third series of seven. At the blowing of the seventh trumpet we
are
introduced to a pregnant woman, about to give birth. A dragon (the
devil or
Satan) waits in anticipation of devouring the child. The child is born
and the
mother escapes into the desert. It seems fairly clear that the mother
is Mary,
the mother of Jesus and the mother of the Church, who gives birth to
Jesus and
flees with Joseph to Egypt. Angry at the mother's escape, the dragon
makes war
on the rest of her offspring, the faithful. But Michael and his angels
fight
against the dragon (the devil) and his angels (the dragon) and his
angels lose
and are cast down to earth to lead the whole world astray. What we see
here,
from a cosmic view, is that those in the hierarchy above us are not
necessarily
there because they are good, and they may be out of place. Watch out
which
angelic figures we follow.
Next we meet
the beast of the sea who has ten horns and seven heads. The beast takes
over
every tribe, people, language and nation. This beast seems to have
political
power. Then, from this morning's reading beginning at 13:11, we meet
the beast
of the earth. The beast from the earth exercises authority on behalf of
the
beast from the sea. This is a clue of John's location. Our problem is
that we
don't know with which emperor John starts counting. Some scholars argue
that
Trajan was the seventh emperor, since Trajan was designated emperor
shortly
before Nerva's death. Nerva would have been the sixth emperor in the
series.
This puts the writing of Revelation around 97-98 CE, shortly after the
murder
of Domitian. Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza notes that the Greek word for
"they have fallen" speaks of the preceding emperors as having
suffered violent deaths. (Fiorenza, Elizabeth, Revelation: a
vision of the
just world, 1991, p. 98) These emperors are Caesar, Caligula,
Nero and
Domitian.
Fiorenza
continues, "The enigmatic information that the beast was one of the
seven,
others argue, may allude to the legend that Nero would return or be
resurrected. With the help of the Parthians he would avenge himself and
destroy
Rome. It is
interesting to note that the
destruction of Rome comes from within. Evil, while it destroys the
innocent,
also destroys itself. While we hear of the Pax Romana,
of how the power
of Rome stabilized the world, for Christians, and for the competitors
for Roman
power themselves, there was anything but peace. Family members who were
rivals
to the throne were highly likely to be murdered. The history of Roman
imperial
families is filled with great victories and orgies, gold, purple silk
and wine,
but also reads like a nightmare of intrigue, back-biting, murder, rape,
incest,
fear and arrogance on a cosmic scale.
The
powerful empire is extremely attractive to kings, merchants, and
seafarers, who
seek economic and political gain. The empire lures people in with her
beauty
and luxurious living. What we see basically is people selling out for
material
and political power, paying the whore to drink of her luxuries,
worshiping the
goddess and the emperors to be brought into their economic and
political game.
Many reap the benefit.
But
as always, while the provincial elite, the merchants and ship owners,
reaped
the pleasure of orgy with the great prostitute, her fee was paid by the
taxes
on the masses of poor.
John's
apocalypse envisions a God who sides with the poor and those willing to
hold
onto their faith with integrity. Christians in Asia Minor are under
social,
economic and violent pressure to compromise their integrity of faith in
Christ
to worship the very state and emperors who oppress them. "You have been
sealed by the living God," he says. "Stay faithful and in the end,
you will win."
While
it is clear that John was writing about events in the world his
audience
understood, and therefore he was not predicting events in our time.
This does
not mean we cannot glean a message from God for our time.
Certainly
one of the great challenges in life, both personally and politically is
the
maintenance of integrity in the face of potential social and economic
gain or
loss. We want to belong and we want to prosper. We like to be connected
to
popular and powerful people. We want to maintain our popularity and
power. We
usually experience the mob mentality in school, where popular mean kids
pick on
the unpopular kid, and far from helping the unpopular one, kids become
like a
pack of wolves.
In
school we are pressured by a desire for popularity to have sex, to
drink and do
drugs, to have all the popular clothes and technology. Certainly part
of our
job as the church is to tell and show kids that there is another kind
of
self-esteem that comes not from the mob, not from power over another,
but from
the living God.
In
early adult life we are drawn into the economic life of society. How
easy it is
to get overly focused on the luxury and power of those who dominate the
market,
and to follow their lead in our life's journey.
And
sooner or later, most of us are faced with the temptation to lie, or
cheat, to
manipulate or conspire to keep or gain power or wealth. We have to
decide we
will compromise our faith and integrity or will stand strong. When we
hold
strong, when we do what is right despite the consequences, we get a
taste of
power John is talking about, a power that goes beyond the violence and
manipulations
in this world.
On
the national level, on the level of empire, I have to admit Revelation
makes me
a bit nervous, for we are an empire. We are Rome. We are Babylon. With
this
recognition, it is of ultimate importance that we do not place our God
in bed
with the State or commerce. The separation of Church and State is not
to
protect the State, but the Church and people whose God speaks
differently from
the state. The idea that we are somehow protecting the Christian
nation, the
Christian way of life by preemptive war and torture is nothing short of
blasphemy, as if we were claiming Jesus had chosen to sleep with the
whore of
Babylon. Recently a church in southern California was threatened by the
IRS
when the pastor spoke out against the war in Iraq. The preacher, they
claimed,
had crossed the line from the religious into the political. We could
also make
the opposite claim, that those who don't speak out against war are
political,
compromising the integrity of their faith and letting the beast be
idolized in
the temple.
Christian
charity can never be limited by citizenship in this or any nation.
While the
state may give us numbers and claim that those without numbers are not
eligible
to participate in the economic life of the nation, as Christians we are
called
to be a sanctuary here on earth, a borderless empire of love and
non-violence,
where people of every nation, tribe, people and language sing out
together,
"Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne and to the
Lamb." For as Christians we are all resident aliens, strangers in a
foreign land, living in the world, but citizens of God's kingdom.
Yes,
it is the kings of earth who flock to our nation, intoxicated by the
power of
Washington and Wall Street, a Disneyland vision of manufactured
happiness, the
Hollywood vision of beauty, and Las Vegas lust for immediate,
continuous,
ostentatious pleasure. As our lust for power and pleasure continue, the
poor of
nations worldwide, the earth and sea, and all that is in it suffer. We
should
always be cautious of claiming natural disaster is God's judgment,
especially
upon particular individuals or communities. On the other hand, in a
moral
universe there will be consequences to our actions. If, when given the
scientific knowledge that our gluttonous consumption is going beyond
the
carrying capacity of earth's ecosystems, we shut our eyes to the truth
and only
seek to justify increased consumption, and the wars and destruction of
earth's
ecosystems to maintain it, then environmental plagues, self destructing
murderous youth and rampant anxiety and unhappiness begin to look a lot
like
divine justice.
Yet,
as in John's day, the suffering that results from evil power continues
to fall
most heavily on the poor, powerless and faithful. John's letter is a
response
to those who would claim the current world order reflects divine
blessing, as
if that blessing justifies whatever it takes to maintain it. The poor
and
suffering are loved by God, and if they remain faithful, in the end and
in the
present, divine reward is theirs.
The
question arises, what are we to do? Who are we to be? We have several
options. 1)
Compromise. Go with the flow. Pledge allegiance to the State and to
God. A
little Jesus and a little torture; a little Jesus and a little Vegas; a
little
Jesus and a little prejudice; a little Jesus and a little addiction. We
will
drive a gas-guzzler, but put a bumper sticker on it that says, "Jesus
saves." We'll experience God's grace but refrain from telling our story
with our intellectual friends. 2) We can
work from within to change the system. This is where most of us think
we are.
With a middle class mentality we have hope we can change the way things
are. We
can recognize the gray in life and the need for compromise. We see many
great
things in our nation's culture and commerce and yet we still recognize
it falls
far short of the glory of God. We see the importance of moral
integrity, but
don't see the end of the world in a little fun from time to time. We
don't want
war, but believe that sometimes evil must be resisted with force and so
we hop
and work for wise decisions in our defense. We find this perspective
both in
the Hebrew and Christian scriptures, but this is not John's
perspective. John
is speaking for the powerless and alienated. They see no good in Rome. 3) We can
give up hope and become apathetic and nihilistic, not caring much one
way or
the other about ourselves, our bodies, minds, souls, the nation or the
world,
because we can't have an impact or find any real meaning. I have often
been
struck by the similarity of visible result from the nihilist and the
hedonist;
the depressed and the narcissistic often share the same forms of
destructive
self-indulgence. If nothing matters, use it without concern. 4) We can
seek violent revolution. 5) We can
resist the culture, including the culture of violence, and remain true
to the
Lamb. Here is the big
difference between
John's vision for the Church and those who would bomb abortion clinics
or drive
airplanes into buildings. The difference between radical John and
radical
Muslims is not the level of anger at the idolatry, immorality and
injustice, or
the lack of hope in reform, or the sense that one has been chosen to
fight for
God against culture. The difference is not even in the idea that it can
be
honorable to give up one's life for God. The difference is that John
worships
the Lamb, the Christ who sacrificed his life in a radical non-violent
love. The
difference is not even in the invocation of a certain name for God; we
can say
we worship Christ while at the same time join our Christ to the whore
of
Babylon. The difference is that John recognizes that the mother of
violence
gives birth to violence. As Christians, John calls us, if need be, not
to
become suicide bombers but suicide lovers.
The
Kingdom of God of which John speaks is within us, even as it is yet to
come. It
is already and not yet. Speaking the truth and doing the right thing,
living
love is its own reward. It demonstrates power in the here and now.
Gandhi's
moral authority and power were triumphant even before the British gave
India
independence, regardless of violence between Muslims and Hindus. Martin Luther
King Jr., in Remaining
Awake through the Great Revolution preached, "On some
positions, cowardice
asks the question, is it expedient? And then expedience comes along and
asks
the question - is it politic? Vanity asks the question - is it popular?
Conscience asks the question - is it right? There comes a time when one
must
take the position that it is neither safe nor politic nor popular, but
he must
do it because conscience tells him it is right. I believe today that
there is
need for all people of good will to come with a massive act of
conscience and
say in the words of the old Negro spiritual, 'We ain't goin to study
war no
more.' We are going to
win our freedom
because the sacred heritage of our nation and the eternal will of the
almighty
God are embodied in our echoing demands. And so, however dark it is,
however
deep the angry feelings are, and however violent explosions are, I can
still
sing "We Shall Overcome." If we remain
faithful, we will
come out of the great tribulation in springs of living water. God will
wipe
away every tear from our eyes. Never again will we hunger or thirst.
Amen!
Praise and glory and wisdom and thanks and honor and power and strength
be to
our God forever and ever. Amen! |
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