Revelation 6.9-17
I wish my Bible had footnotes that matter. For example, I wish my 
Bible had a footnote that compared the events of the sixth seal to 
Jesus’ “apocalyptic discourse” in Luke 21 (and also Mark 13, Matthew 
24). I wish my Bible had footnotes that referred back to Malachi’s 
“Great and Terrible Day of the Lord,” when God’s judgment would descend 
upon Israel and purify his people. Incidentally, those footnotes should 
probably be connected with Jesus’ predictions of the Temple’s 
destruction. And a really good Bible would have footnotes that reminded 
me that the Temple was destroyed in AD 70 by the Romans, roughly 25 
years before John wrote the Revelation.
I don’t want to be greedy, but it would be cool to find a Bible with 
footnotes suggesting (at least) that the earth-shattering events of the 
Jewish War in 67-70AD would fit the colorful descriptions of cataclysm 
in chapter 6 verses 12-14. If that seems far-fetched, please try and 
remember that the Jewish Temple was more than a religious piece of 
architecture. It represented their people, their heritage, and its 
restoration was a down-deposit on God’s New Creation promise. When the 
Temple was destroyed, the Jewish people must have felt like the White 
House, the Vatican, the moon, and the Internet all came crashing down 
around them.
Earth-shaking, indeed.
The sun turned black, figuratively, because there was no light of salvation any longer.
The moon became blood, figuratively, because judgment had been painted in the air.
The stars came falling down, representative of the sense of dissolution, that even the cosmos seemed to be coming unglued.
Flavius Josephus, a 1st century Jewish historian, wrote about this 
crazy Roman war on the Jewish rebels, saying that “horsemen leveled the 
road…and raised a bank over ten feet tall for defense.” Josephus 
continues, saying “the Romans slew all that appeared…searching the caves
 and hiding places underground.” Jesus predicted that that would happen,
 in Luke 23, in case you’re curious. I was, and—sorry to beat a dead 
horse—wish the footnotes in my Bible had mentioned that. Anyway, 
Josephus goes on to tell us that “famine widened its progress, devouring
 whole people and families…the city streets were clogged with the dead 
bodies of the aged. The children also and the young men wandered about 
the market places like shadows.” I wish my Bible had footnotes that 
hinted at the possibility that the four horsemen were reminders of what 
the Romans did (conquered, slaughtered, starved, killed) and that the 
events in chapter six had some historical reference that gave us a 
framework for understanding how God’s judgment works.
But my Bible doesn’t have those footnotes. Which, admittedly, is a 
shame. And it’s not that the editors of my Bibles are trying to keep my 
ignorant, it’s that there’s a surplus of meaning to these verses. 
Yes—they do correspond closely to historical events. But—also—those 
historical events are a type of judgment. They show us the manner of 
judgment. Evil men do evil things causing both the righteous and the 
unrighteous to suffer.
But that’s not the whole story. Revelation tells us that those who 
remained faithful to Christ have been preserved under the alter in 
heaven (see verses 9-11) Revelation tells us that tragedy can be 
transformed in the lives of the faithful.
And here’s the good news: my Bible doesn’t need footnotes to remind me of that.
Monday, June 11, 2012
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