Revelation Lesson 25: Everyone Loves A Good Mystery :: By Sean Gooding

Revelation Chapter 10: 8-11

“Then the voice which I heard from heaven spoke to me again and said, ‘Go, take the little book which is open in the hand of the angel who stands on the sea and on the earth.’ So I went to the angel and said to him, ‘Give me the little book.’ And he said to me, ‘Take and eat it; and it will make your stomach bitter, but it will be as sweet as honey in your mouth.’ Then I took the little book out of the angel’s hand and ate it, and it was as sweet as honey in my mouth. But when I had eaten it, my stomach became bitter. And he said to me, ‘You must prophesy again about many peoples, nations, tongues, and kings.’”

Some of you have written me to say that you are enjoying this series through the Revelation, and I am thankful for that. My desire is that the Lord’s people will understand and apply the truth of the scripture into their lives through the power and leading of the Holy Spirit.

God wrote the Bible for our benefit; it is meant to be read, understood and lived. Once we get these three pillars right, then we can approach the Bible with a desire to know, rather than be clouded by fear. No one, preachers included, knows everything. We see things, seemingly new things, on each pass through a passage or the Bible as an entity. Simply put, God reveals things that were there all along but we were not able to grasp them or appreciate them previously.

The Old Testament and the New Testament complement each other. Jesus and the New Testament writers quoted from all of the Old Testament books, if my memory from my seminary days is correct. In so doing, God has validated the Old Testament as relevant and profitable to the New Testament church. One should not do away with either testament. Read, read, and when you are done, read some more. You should never be able to get to the end of the Bible and then put it away like a notch on your bucket list.

Let me give you a bit of intrigue to hopefully light a desire to read more:

In Revelation 10 verse 8, we are told that when the seventh sounds his trumpet that the ‘mystery’ of God would be finished. There are many mysteries in the scriptures. Our salvation was a mystery to the Old Testament prophets. Some understood that the death of the Messiah was essential, but most of them could not have known the method of His death. The Romans had not even risen to power by the end of the Old Testament some 400 years before Jesus was born. The Old Testament prophets would not have known what crucifixion was; they probably could not have even imagined it. It was a mystery to them.

Some of them knew that the Messiah would come, but not that he would come twice – first to die for our sins and then to reign as King in Israel. This was another mystery.

A mystery is a doctrine or a teaching that God has planned before He made His creation, but that He reveals at a time in history for men to understand.

In Amos 3:7, we are told that the Lord does nothing before He reveals it to His servants. If you recall Genesis 18:16-32, the Lord revealed to Abram what He was about to do in Sodom and its surrounding cities. He and Abram had a conversation about this judgment that was about to happen. God revealed to Jeremiah the judgment He was about to bring to the Southern Kingdom of Israel via the nation of Babylon. In Matthew, He reveals the birth of Jesus; and He has two faithful servants, Anna and Simeon in Luke 2, to whom He had revealed the arrival of the Messiah.

The mere fact that we have sites like Rapture Ready and a host of godly people teaching through the prophecies in the New Testament church is a warning to us that God is about to do something. He is about to reveal a mystery; and so, before He does that, He tells His servants.

As we read and study in the Revelation we are helping to be prepared for a mystery that is going to be revealed. The mystery is the destruction of the earth –the very opposite of what the secular mind wants to do; they want to preserve the earth, but God is going to destroy it. This is in preparation for the reign of Jesus as King of the earth from Jerusalem. There will be small pockets of opposition that Jesus will have to deal with; but, for the most part, the enemies of Israel will be severely diminished.

You see, the earth is the dominion of the Devil. This is his kingdom; he demonstrated ownership by offering it to Jesus in return for worship (Matthew 4:8-11). God is going to destroy the kingdom of Satan and rebuild it under Jesus. Imagine what limited-minded men have done with technology over the past 100 years. Now consider what our freed minds in our new bodies will be able to conceive in the 1,000 years that Jesus reigns on earth. But that is another mystery for another time.

Eating the Little Book, Revelation 10:8-10

This little book has to do with the judgment and the promises of God. Some commentators think that it is the deed to the earth; I am not sure that I can agree with that. The opening of the seven seals beginning in Revelation 5-6 was a demonstration of ownership and dominance. I am not sure that we need to re-establish that. Thus, I am inclined with those that see this as a picture of God’s judgment that is about to come on the earth.

As we have journeyed from Revelation 1, we have seen a lot of destruction of the earth. But what is about to happen is the destruction of the earth system – the system that allowed evil to prosper and prepared a way for the antichrist. Yes, in the same way that the prophets of God prepared a way for the coming of Jesus, so too, the false prophets of the antichrist had prepared and are currently preparing a way for him to come to power.

John is told to eat the little book, and he does. At first it is sweet like honey in his mouth; he ate and swallowed it, and then it became bitter in his stomach. The scripture is a tale of two kinds of people:

One group of people has come to the humbling realization that they need a Savior; they have cried out to the Lord for help, to be remembered like the thief on the cross, and God has promised them eternal security through His Son, Jesus. The other people have rejected the God of the Bible and His Son; they have despised the grace and mercy of the living God; they have refused the loving kindness of the God of Heaven; and their end is an eternity in Hell, tormented for ever and ever. One message is sweet to the taste, the other souring to the belly.

I have a dear friend who is reading through the Bible for the first time, and what has astonished Him is the wrath of God. He comments to me often that God’s judgments seem to be very, very harsh on the people around the Jewish people, but even on the Jews His judgments are harsh. Yes! This is why it is imperative to read the Bible; we can get a more complete picture of God: God is gracious and merciful to those that love Him and those He loves, but He is just as fervently opposed to those that despise His loving kindness.

When you and I who love the Lord read of His wonderful promises to us, we taste them like honey in our mouths. These promises sustain us in tough times, they strengthen us in times of weakness, and they carry us when we are weary. But, the promises of God’s wrath are just as sure a promise as the blessings that we, His children, are promised: When we consider the people we know who, though they have seen and heard the gospel, refuse the grace of God. When we see the masses come past us at a mall or hear of a catastrophe like a hurricane or a plane crash and think that those people will not have any chance to change their minds. You can only hope that, like the thief on the cross, they repented and now live in Heaven.

But here, as John eats the book, he can think of the people from the end of chapter 9 who refused to repent; they hated the grace of God and seemingly do even more evil. They are about to experience the judgment of God, and the thought of it sickens John to his stomach. The reality of it curdles his inner parts. We should not rejoice when men fall into the hands of God and suffer His wrath; we should be even more humbled. But for the grace of God, it could be us.

Prophesy, preach, tell; Revelation 10:11

What are you going to do about the people that are currently rejecting God?

While the framework for the Revelation may be forming around us, the Rapture has not happened and there are still many who need to repent. There are still many who need to hear the Gospel. What will you do? The answer is to tell somebody. There is still time to preach and prophesy about salvation. There is still time to tell your loved ones and tell your family, friends and co-workers.

Begin by praying for the Holy Spirit to prepare you; ask that He prepare the people that you are with at home, at work and beyond; and the doors will open. Conversations will come up, people will ask questions, a death, a wedding, a birth, whatever; there will be a door. Pray before entering an open door. God may simply want you to plant a seed. Often, we try to plant the seed, do the watering, and get a harvest right away. Often, when you are the ‘harvester,’ others have planted the seed. There is no score card about souls. ONLY JESUS SAVES. We are simply facilitators. We plant seeds, God sends rains, and we see the harvest.

Be consistent and faithful at sharing about Jesus. Season every conversation with Jesus. Thank Him constantly for just about everything, and offer to pray when people are hurting; then actually do it. I often have an open Bible on my desk, or I have Gospel tracts, or I may put up a Nativity scene on my desk with a few candy canes; and people will notice it and ask about it.

Folks, we need to treat the Gospel as a necessity, not an option. Memorize scriptures like Romans 3:10, 3:23, 5:8, 6:23, 10: 9-10; John 3:16-17, John 14:6; and I can go on and on, but you get the idea. Be prepared to tell, to prophesy and to preach the Gospel. The word ‘prophesy’ simply means to ‘tell forth.’ Don’t be afraid of the words. We need to be telling the Gospel.

Remember the sweetness of the promises of God to those who love Him, but with just as much clarity recall the promises of God’s wrath on those that hate Him. One is honey to the mouth and the other is bitterness to the stomach; both are needed to drive us to preach the Gospel, to not just stand by and let people go to Hell and do nothing.

The greatest mystery ever revealed to man is that God would send Himself, in the form of His Son, all man and all God, to pay for our sins. That same Son is coming again to judge the whole world and the lost. Let us make His job easier by telling others about His great offer of salvation.

Ezekiel 33:7-9 “So you, son of man: I have made you a watchman for the house of Israel; therefore you shall hear a word from My mouth and warn them for Me. When I say to the wicked, ‘O wicked man, you shall surely die!’ and you do not speak to warn the wicked from his way, that wicked man shall die in his iniquity; but his blood I will require at your hand. Nevertheless if you warn the wicked to turn from his way, and he does not turn from his way, he shall die in his iniquity; but you have delivered your soul.”

Missionarybaptistchurch76@yahoo.ca

 

 

Revelation Lesson 24: God’s Word Can Be Trusted :: By Sean Gooding

Revelation Chapter 10: 1-7

I saw still another mighty angel coming down from heaven, clothed with a cloud. And a rainbow was on his head, his face was like the sun, and his feet like pillars of fire. He had a little book open in his hand. And he set his right foot on the sea and his left foot on the land, and cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roars. When he cried out, seven thunders uttered their voices. Now when the seven thunders uttered their voices, I was about to write; but I heard a voice from heaven saying to me, ‘Seal up the things which the seven thunders uttered, and do not write them.’

“The angel whom I saw standing on the sea and on the land raised up his hand to heaven and swore by Him who lives forever and ever, who created heaven and the things that are in it, the earth and the things that are in it, and the sea and the things that are in it, that there should be delay no longer, but in the days of the sounding of the seventh angel, when he is about to sound, the mystery of God would be finished, as He declared to His servants the prophets.

Revelation 10 is a bit of an interlude between trumpets six and seven. In Revelation 7 there was an interlude between judgments as well. This just seems to be the pattern. We will look at this more in just a bit. But at the end of Revelation 9, we find a belligerent and stubborn people left on earth after the sixth trumpet sounded and one-third of the earth’s remaining population was killed. We are told in Revelation 10:9: 20-21,

But the rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands, that they should not worship demons, and idols of gold, silver, brass, stone, and wood, which can neither see nor hear nor walk. And they did not repent of their murders or their sorceries or their sexual immorality or their thefts.

The roots of the sin nature are deep. They penetrate the soul, the mind and the will. We do not want to come to face to face with our rebellion towards God. We see it all around us, but it is important that God’s people take a look in the mirror first.

We live in a time of gay pride parades, open relationships with adultery as the thing that holds them together. We live in a time where it is clear that the rich have one law and the poor another. We live in a time when children rule the home and the government has become their babysitter. We live in a time when being a Godly man is being maligned and called out as hating women. We are living in a time when open defiance of God is promoted and rewarded. And we live in a time where the Lord’s churches are riddled with false doctrine and lost people.

One of the hardest things to come to grips with is our own sinful depravity. Often, while leading someone to Jesus, we talk about their sin and that the Holy Spirit will help them to realize that they are sinners in need of a Savior and they will cry out to Jesus.

As we mature in Jesus with the constant reading of the Bible and prayer, we go from being sinners to being sinful. We must come face to face with the depth of just how sinful we are. We realize that every waking moment needs to be guarded, every thought has to be reframed, and every word needs to be considered before it leaves our mouths. We understand that one failure can bring a lifetime of sorrow, and we come to understand that we are each, individually, the chief of sinners.

At the same time that the Holy Spirit is doing this, we begin to grow in love for the Lord as we realize the meaning of Romans 5:8 – God loved us while we were still sinners (sinful to the core). We grow in appreciation for His matchless grace and His never-ending mercy. Our spirit becomes more tender to the leading of the Holy Spirit, and we find that things we did not realize were sinful are sinful in light of loving God and our neighbor first. We begin to weigh each action in light of the holiness of God; and as we grow older, we come face to face with the understanding that there is a judgment to which all who call Jesus Lord must be subjected to.

But the people at the end of Revelation 9 are not this way. They understand that it is God who is causing their pain and suffering. There is no question in their minds that God is All-powerful and that He is in complete charge of the creation. Yet, in rebellious defiance, they refuse to repent. The obvious indication is that they could have, had they humbled themselves under the mighty hand of God. But the sin of pride and rebellion had so riddled their thinking, framing their lives just like the Bible is supposed to frame our lives, that they refuse to humble themselves and seek God. They had bought into the lie that is very prevalent today that no one has the right to question how I live.

Well, be sure of this: God has the right to judge, and He will exercise His right to judge. He will call every word, deed, thought and inaction into question; and since they have rejected His grace, His love, His Son’s sacrifice and His offer of peace, they will enter and remain in an eternal Hell.

Over the past few years, we have become nations that no longer issue consequences for sin and breaking the law unless it is very, very heinous. Children no longer fail in school, no one really wins a trophy, they no longer allow parents to spank, and we certainly can’t yell at kids as it may hurt their fragile minds. Thus, we have raised a generation that does not understand consequences and that there are some things that you just don’t do.

Sadly, they think God is the same way as their parents and their societal leaders. They think that God will look the other way, and they associate His grace with tolerance. Nothing could be farther from the truth than this. God hates sin, and unsaved sinners are His enemies. There will be a day of reckoning.

Another Mighty Angel, Revelation 10:1

Some commentators think that this is Jesus; but most don’t, and I am inclined to stay with the later. The word translated ‘another’ means another of the same kind; thus, this was a created angel like all other angels, but from another hierarchy. This mighty angel had a rainbow on his head; notice that in all of these judgments there are no global floods. There may be isolated floods like when the asteroids hit the water and coastal regions are flooded, but there are no global floods in the Tribulation. God has the rainbow as a perpetual reminder of the covenant He made with man thousands of years ago and recorded in Genesis 9:16.

He has a ‘little book’ and stands firmly on the earth and sea, showing God’s dominion over land and sea. In the pagan world, we see that many have gods of the sea, gods of the land, gods of the sky, and on and on. Our God, the God of the Bible, is God of all. From the heights of Heaven to the depths of the deepest sea are His; even Hell is His. Then this angel speaks, and his voice is like the sound of a lion, and then John hears loud thunders. King David records for us in Psalm 29 these words,

Give unto the Lord the glory due to His name; Worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness. The voice of the Lord is over the waters; The God of glory thunders; The Lord is over many waters. The voice of the Lord is powerful; The voice of the Lord is full of majesty. The voice of the Lord breaks the cedars, Yes, the Lord splinters the cedars of Lebanon(Revelation 10:1-5).

I am currently reading in the book of 2 Samuel for personal readings; and then, as I am teaching through Revelation, I have come to a profound appreciation for God’s power, strength and majesty. Were our Lord to walk into the Serengeti, the animals would run to Him and fall at His feet, fully aware of who He is. Were He to be surrounded by a pride of lions, they would come to Him like little kittens wanting to be petted, simply in awe of their Creator. But we humans are defiant, and we run from the Lord rather than to Him. We have lost sight of His majesty and wonder.

God Loves Mysteries, Revelation 10:4

John was about to write the stuff that he heard from the loud thunderings. But he is told not to do so. God is not obligated to tell us everything, furthermore, anything at all. Over the centuries there have been mysteries in the scripture that have been revealed. The mystery of grace is the most prominent one for us, as it pertains to our time of the last 2,000 years – the mystery that God would send Himself as a sacrifice for our sins.

But there are other mysteries. We find in Daniel 12: 1-4,

And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book. And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever. But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, even to the time of the end: many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased.

Here Daniel is told that the things that he was writing about some 500+ years before Jesus’ birth would take place in the time when ‘knowledge will increase and men run to and fro.’ No time in history aligns to this verse better than our time. In just the last 100 years, look at where we have come from and to. In 1892, a locomotive from the Wellington and Manuatu Railway set the average land speed record of 68 kph or 42 miles per hour. At times, this train did over 60 miles per hour. Let that sink in; this was almost 1,900 years after Jesus walked the earth and we had gotten to 42 miles an hour.

Here we are just over 100 years later, and we have scooters that can do over 40 miles an hour. In 1892, we had just reached 42 miles an hour, but now we know how to put rockets past the atmosphere. We have grown in engineering; we are discovering things every day that blow our minds. I was listening to a doctor last night talking about using DNA to personalize medicine and medications. They are, in the very near future, going to be able to design a specific medical approach to your diseases based on DNA.

We live in a time when knowledge is increasing exponentially. We are the generation that Daniel’s prophecy was for. Let that sink in; we revere these Godly men, and rightly so; but you and I understand more of God’s plan than Daniel did.

In this case, John was told not to write down what he heard. This was for God to know and no one else. We must trust the nature, character and faithfulness of God. We, in our finite minds, are not able to handle all that God knows; and so He, as a loving Father and kind God, restricts what we are allowed to know. Don’t you wish there were something that you had never learned, and are there not some things that you wished your children never had to learn? Well then, respect the wisdom of God and be contented that He is doing what is best for us.

Everything as God has declared, Revelation 10:7

God cannot lie. No greater confidence should we as His children have than that God cannot lie. His promises are secure, His guarantees are forever and He is not a double-minded God. Whatever He says He will do, He will set about to do it. In verse 5, the mighty angel who is standing on the earth and the sea, raises his hand to swear by God that whatever judgments that God has promised are about to come through. No more delays, no more patience, and no more grace it would seem.

This brief break between the sixth and seventh trumpets seems to most observers as a calm where God extends His grace one more time, hoping, waiting and looking for men to repent. God truly does not want anyone to go to Hell. He does not want any to miss out on what Jesus has done for them. Just one last reprieve, one last moment to take stock of where you are, to realize that God is God and you are not. One last opportunity to take advantage of the loving kindness of God.

But, God’s patience does come to an end. I have a dear friend who has just finished Jeremiah for the first time, and he commented that God has simply unleashed His wrath on the southern kingdom. The destruction was horrible and the loss of life was a lot. God had patiently waited for Judah to repent, to turn back to Him for 490 years. But they would not; they had little rays of hope: a good king here and there; but, for the most part, the Southern Kingdom of Judah rejected God as their God and turned on Him. They never thought that their measure of grace would run out.

God sent prophet after prophet, and very few listened. Most of the people rebelled and rejected God to His face, defiant and arrogant little clumps of clay turning their backs to their God. One day, the nation of Babylon showed up, and the time for repentance had come to an end. Such is the case here as the angel raises his hand to swear by God that all He has promised to do will happen.

We love to sing of God’s promises of blessings, provisions and grace. But His promises of judgment, accountability and wrath are just as true and just as secured by His character. God cannot lie. Repent; there is still a little time. The emphasis should be on a ‘little’ time. Fall at the feet of Jesus and seek his forgiveness. His offer is secure and His kindness unsurpassed, but just as sure are His judgments and wrath. I leave you with Psalm 2:12,

Kiss the Son, lest He be angry and you perish in your rebellion, when His wrath ignites in an instant. Blessed are all who take refuge in Him.

Missionarybaptistchurch76@yahoo.ca