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							Understanding Revelation 
							(Lesson 1) 
							
							When I was a young boy growing up 
							I used to send my friends letters in code. We 
							dreamed up elaborate encryptions for disguising our 
							messages back and forth so that nobody but us could 
							understand our communications. There were plenty of 
							spy kits kids could get with the same thing in 
							differing variations. I can still remember my secret 
							decoder ring, ordered from a coupon off a box of 
							breakfast cereal, it was used to translate coded 
							messages into something understandable. Nobody else 
							but us was allowed to know the real meanings of 
							those top secret communications. I remember fondly 
							the times when entire legions of imaginary troops 
							would be dispersed in life and death struggles based 
							on those communications with civilization as we know 
							it hanging by a thread. Those were fun times to be 
							sure. But what we need to take away from this is 
							that first, my friends on the other end had the key 
							to understanding my messages to them and vice versa. 
							We knew how to de-code the encrypted language. And 
							second, the coding of the message was for the 
							purpose of concealing our messages from certain 
							people. Those who did not know how to understand the 
							messages would be utterly baffled as to the meaning 
							and we could carry out our escapades of adventure 
							and conquest right under their noses without them 
							knowing anything about what was going on.  
							 
							If we are going to have any hope whatsoever of 
							unraveling the mystery of the Revelation, we are 
							going to have to understand that it was written to 
							an audience that would know what the message was and 
							understand it the same as they did. God would no 
							more write a letter to His children they could not 
							understand than we would to our secret spy buddies 
							in the spy games of our youth. The conditions 
							surrounding the first readers of the Revelation were 
							far more serious than any of those around which we 
							as up and coming 007 spies had to contend with in 
							the days of our youth growing up.  
							 
							The first readers of John's Revelation were engaged 
							in a life and death struggle against the forces of 
							evil who were committed to their annihilation. 
							Backing up and looking at this great book from a 
							distance reveals that it is obviously a book of 
							encouragement, perseverance and hope to an oppressed 
							people. the general theme of the book is the bad 
							guys lose and the good guys win. The book paints 
							very vivid and horrific pictures of the fate that 
							awaits the bad guys while likewise portrays the joy 
							and happiness that rewards the good guys. Time and 
							again, we are taken on a rollercoaster ride through 
							the book with numerous scenes of God's wrath on His 
							enemies and then His blessings and vengeful 
							protection of his faithful children who are assured 
							time and again that they will be victorious in the 
							end and their enemies will suffer His eternal wrath.
							 
							 
							The type of language used to write the Revelation is 
							called "Apocalyptic". This word comes from the Greek 
							word apokalupto (ap-ok-al-oop'-to), and simply means 
							a "revealing" or to "reveal". This is where we get 
							the word "Revelation". The book of Revelation is 
							certainly not the only time God used this kind of 
							language. The books of Daniel, Zechariah and others 
							are instances where God used this kind of language 
							in order to "reveal" what He wished to communicate. 
							The words used in this kind of language have a 
							symbolic meaning in the minds of the readers of the 
							letter. For instance the word "Horn" is used in both 
							Revelation and Daniel. To the Jews, the horn was an 
							emblem of power (1 Kings 22:11). Samuel wrote, "and 
							he shall give strength unto his king, and exalt the 
							horn of his anointed" (1 Samuel 2:10). David wrote, 
							"But my horn shalt thou exalt like the horn of an 
							unicorn" (Psalms 92:10). The Jewish Christians who 
							had converted from Judaism would be familiar with 
							this and when they heard the word "horn" they would 
							associate it with "strength and power" in their 
							minds. So we see that the many words used as symbols 
							in the Revelation have significant meanings to the 
							people who would first read the letter. The symbolic 
							meaning of the word "horn" would not be easily known 
							to anybody who was not familiar with the Old 
							Testament scriptures so those reading the letter 
							would not be able to understand what it meant to the 
							first readers of the letter. To you and I, a horn 
							simply means the horn on some kind of animal like a 
							rhinoceros or a water buffalo. So if we are to 
							understand the Revelation, we must learn what the 
							symbolic language contained therein meant to a 
							particular group of the people who read the letter 
							in the first century.  
							 
							Why was Revelation 
							written the way it was? 
							 
							Language is symbolized in order to conceal it's 
							meaning to all but to whom it is intended. The 
							Christians at the time Revelation was written were 
							undergoing severe persecution from their enemies. 
							Just about everybody that was not a Christian was 
							their enemy. Their enemies were viciously brutal and 
							their lives hung in the balance on a daily basis. It 
							was a crime against the laws of the government under 
							which they lived to even be a Christian and the 
							penalty for transgressing this law was often death.
							 
							 
							In the book of Revelation, the Christians are told 
							they will be victorious in the end and their enemies 
							will be crushed in defeat. They are also told by God 
							not to give in to their enemies and worship who they 
							want them to worship, but to worship God and only 
							God. The persecuting powers under which the 
							Christians were living wanted them to give up the 
							one true and living God and worship their false god. 
							Along comes a letter from one of the most beloved 
							leaders of the Christians telling them just the 
							opposite and in addition to this, it spells out in 
							detail the downfall, destruction and ultimate fate 
							of their enemies. One must ask, what would have been 
							the consequences faced by the Christians if this 
							letter fell into the hands of the authorities and 
							they could understand it? The persecution of the 
							Christians would have become worse and all copies of 
							the letter would have been denied to them. The 
							authorities who were oppressing the Christians don't 
							want them to have any hope. They wanted them to give 
							in and worship who they wanted them to worship. 
							John's message of hope, perseverance and victory 
							would have been rounded up and destroyed before it 
							was copied and distributed all across the known 
							world. One could only imagine how horrible it would 
							have been for a Christian to be found in possession 
							of such a letter.  
							 
							The Revelation had to be copied and distributed 
							freely across the known world in order for it to be 
							effective. In order for this to happen, it's meaning 
							could not be easily understood by the oppressing 
							authorities of the time. So with that in mind, the 
							message of Revelation was "symbolized" or 
							"signified" as we see it in the very first verse of 
							the book so that its true message was revealed in 
							such a way that it could only be understood by those 
							to whom it was intended. How did God do this? By 
							using language that meant things only a Christian 
							with knowledge of and access to the rest of 
							scripture could possibly know. 
							 
							Someone who was not a Christian, who had never 
							studied the scriptures, whether old or new, would 
							never understand the message of Revelation. To them 
							it would be a meaningless mass of nonsensical 
							writing that only confirmed in their minds that the 
							Christians were a bunch of loony fanatics who 
							followed after a mystical and hard to understand God 
							that posed no real threat to them and their way of 
							life. The Christians were given a message of hope, 
							perseverance and ultimate victory over their enemies 
							that only they could understand and that would not 
							bring any added persecution to them because of it.
							 
							 
							How effective was 
							it? 
							 
							The message of Revelation exists today. It was 
							copied and distributed throughout the known world as 
							directed by God. While many Christians were 
							slaughtered for their faithfulness, Christianity as 
							a whole survived and flourished and is still alive 
							and vibrant today and will, as we are taught in 
							scripture, continue to the end of time. History 
							teaches us that persecution of Christians was no by 
							no means limited to the first century. For thousands 
							of years, Christians have been slain for their 
							faithfulness by those who would force their way of 
							life on others. Even today in some of the Muslim 
							countries a proclamation of faith in the one true 
							and living God is the equivalent of a death 
							sentence.  
							 
							Many denominations today have their own 
							understanding of Revelation and it becomes painfully 
							obvious rather quickly that they do not all agree. 
							The real meaning of the Revelation was purposefully 
							symbolic and hard to understand when it was written 
							and it's obviously hard today in view of all the 
							many interpretations of it from numerous writers of 
							all times, especially in modern times where we see 
							the emergence of the millennial beliefs and 
							teachings.  
							 
							What we need to take away from this study is that 
							the Revelation was a message of hope, perseverance 
							and triumph, written to a specific group of people 
							at a specific time in history. The Revelation, being 
							intended for them, was successfully understood by 
							them. It was written in such a way that Jewish 
							Christians of the first century familiar with the 
							Old and New Testament scriptures would be able to 
							understand its meaning.  
							 
							In Summary 
							 
							So with that said, we are going to look at the 
							Revelation through the eyes of the first readers. We 
							are going to examine their lives and the conditions 
							under which they lived. We are going to discover and 
							learn what all the figurative language meant to them 
							through a thorough study of the rest of scripture 
							both Old Testament and New. We are, to the best of 
							our ability, going to learn how to look at John's 
							Apocalypse through their eyes and understand it how 
							they did. If we are to understand it correctly 
							today, we must realize that what it meant to them at 
							the time it was written is what it must mean to us 
							today. 
							
							  
							  
							  
							  
							
							Sermon Outline: 
							Understanding Revelation (Lesson 1) 
							
							
							Prepared by 
							David Hersey of the church of Christ at Granby, MO 
							
							  
							  
							
							
							I. 
							Introduction: The Key to Understanding Symbolic 
							Language 
							
								- 
								
								Personal 
								story of coded letters as a child introduces the 
								idea of hidden messages only understood by 
								insiders.  
								- 
								
								Just as those 
								secret messages required a decoder, so too the 
								book of Revelation requires context and 
								familiarity to unlock its true meaning.  
							 
							  
							
							
							II. God’s 
							Message Was Written to Be Understood 
							
								- 
								
								Revelation 
								was written to real Christians facing real 
								persecution, not to be an unsolvable mystery.  
								- 
								
								God doesn’t 
								give messages His people can’t understand—this 
								message was designed to strengthen their faith.  
								- 
								
								It encouraged 
								the saints under Roman oppression that God knew 
								their plight and promised final victory.  
							 
							  
							
							
							III. The 
							Genre of Revelation: Apocalyptic Language 
							
								- 
								
								“Apocalyptic” 
								comes from the Greek
								apokalupto, 
								meaning to “reveal.”  
								- 
								
								Symbols in 
								Revelation (e.g., horns, beasts, harlots) had 
								deep meaning to first-century Jewish Christians 
								who knew Old Testament imagery.  
								- 
								
								To us, a 
								“horn” might just be an animal feature, but to 
								them, it meant power (cf. 1 Samuel 2:10, Psalm 
								92:10).  
							 
							  
							
							
							IV. Why 
							the Symbolism? Protection Through Concealment 
							
								- 
								
								Christians 
								were under brutal persecution. Revelation had to 
								be hidden in plain sight.  
								- 
								
								If the 
								authorities understood the book's message of 
								victory over Rome and condemnation of false 
								worship, they would have destroyed it.  
								- 
								
								So God 
								veiled truth in symbols that believers would 
								understand but enemies would dismiss as 
								nonsense.  
							 
							  
							
							
							V. What 
							the Revelation Promised 
							
								- 
								
								Despite 
								hardship, Revelation is a message of
								hope,
								
								perseverance, and
								
								victory.  
								- 
								
								The 
								faithful would overcome; their enemies would 
								fall under God's wrath.  
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								This 
								message sustained the church through its darkest 
								trials—and still encourages the faithful today.  
							 
							  
							
							
							VI. The 
							Book Survived Because of Its Design 
							
								- 
								
								Revelation 
								was successfully copied and distributed 
								throughout the first-century world.  
								- 
								
								It outlived 
								empires, outlasted emperors, and still stands as 
								a testament to God’s promise.  
								- 
								
								False 
								interpretations today don’t change the fact that 
								Revelation 
								meant something specific to its original 
								audience, and that’s where true 
								understanding begins.  
							 
							  
							
							
							VII. The 
							Right Way to Read Revelation 
							
								- 
								
								Read it as 
								they would have read it.  
								- 
								
								Consider 
								their history, scriptures, language, and 
								persecution.  
								- 
								
								If we 
								understand what Revelation meant to them, we’ll 
								understand what it must mean for us today.  
							 
							
							 
							
							 
							
							
							Call to 
							Action:
							Let us approach 
							the book of Revelation with reverence, humility, and 
							a willingness to learn from the faith of our 
							first-century brethren. We must not twist its words 
							to fit modern doctrines or sensational predictions. 
							Instead, let us study deeply to grasp God’s original 
							message of hope, endurance, and triumph over evil. 
							As we uncover the truth they saw, may we be just as 
							faithful under trial, and just as confident that 
							victory belongs to those who remain steadfast in 
							Christ. 
							  
							  
							
							
							Scripture 
							References with Key Points:
							
								- 
								
								
								Revelation 1:1 – The message was 
								"signified" (symbolized) and given to show God’s 
								servants “things which must shortly come to 
								pass.” 
								Key Point: 
								The message was intentionally veiled but 
								understandable to believers.  
								- 
								
								
								1 
								Samuel 2:10; Psalm 92:10 – The term 
								“horn” symbolized strength and power. 
								Key Point: 
								Jewish Christians understood these symbolic 
								meanings from prior scriptures.  
								- 
								
								
								Mark 
								16:20; Romans 15:19 – The Holy Spirit 
								confirmed the new covenant with signs. 
								Key Point: 
								Revelation was part of this Spirit-led 
								confirmation of God’s truth.  
								- 
								
								
								Revelation 13:15–17 – Refers to forced 
								worship and economic persecution under Rome. 
								Key Point: 
								The book encouraged Christians not to bow to the 
								beast (Rome).  
								- 
								
								
								Revelation 2:10 – “Be faithful unto 
								death, and I will give you the crown of life.” 
								Key Point: 
								Central theme of perseverance and reward.  
								- 
								
								
								Revelation 17:14 – “The Lamb will 
								overcome them… for He is Lord of lords and King 
								of kings.” 
								Key Point: 
								Christ’s ultimate victory is assured.  
								- 
								
								
								Daniel 
								7:8, 24 – Helps interpret Revelation 
								17:9–11 concerning kings and empires. 
								Key Point: 
								Old Testament prophecies lay groundwork for 
								Revelation’s imagery.  
								- 
								
								
								1 
								Corinthians 10:11 – “These things… were 
								written for our admonition.” 
								Key Point: 
								God’s messages to past believers are still 
								relevant for us today.  
							 
							
							  
							
							Let us commit ourselves to understanding God's Word 
							as it was intended, not through modern assumptions, 
							but through the lens of faith and Scripture. 
							
							
							Lesson 2 
							Symbolic Objects in Revelation 
							  
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