The Final Hour
Revelation moves inexorably from the death of Jesus to the final day when God judges the wicked and vindicates the righteous.
At the conclusion of his ‘Olivet Discourse,’ Jesus taught his parable
of the Sheep and the Goats. On the day when the “Son of Man arrives
in glory,” his angels will gather all the nations before him for
judgment, and he will divide them into two groups. One will receive “everlasting
destruction,” and the other, “everlasting life.”
The book
of Revelation does not reference this parable, but the book’s visions
reflect the same process of sifting humanity that began at Calvary, and a
process that will continue until the end of the age when humanity is divided into
two groups for final judgment - Those who follow the “Lamb,” and those
who give allegiance to the “Beast” and its overlord, the “Dragon.”
There will be no third alternative.
In his
death, Jesus became the “faithful witness,” and the “firstborn of the
dead” upon his resurrection. Consequently, he now reigns supreme on the
messianic throne; he is the “ruler of the kings of the earth,” and his
realm extends to the “uttermost parts of the earth” as in the second Psalm.
THE GREAT DENOUEMENT
Even now, the
risen “Son of Man” is “shepherding the nations,” and like any
good shepherd, he is separating the “sheep” from the “goats” in
preparation for the “final hour” – (Psalm 2:1-9, Matthew 25:31-46, Revelation
1:4-6).
The final
settlement of all accounts will not occur until the final “day” and
“hour” when all humanity stands before the “Great White Throne of Judgment.” At that
time, everyone whose name is “written in the book of life” will receive
everlasting life, while all others will be cast “into the Lake of fire.”
And on that final day, your fate is determined by how you respond to the “Lamb” and the “beast” in the here-and-now – (Revelation 21:24).
In Sardis,
the Risen Jesus summons the church
to repent and remain ever
vigilant, otherwise, he will “come as a
thief,” and there is no way for
the church to know “in what hour I will come upon you.”
To the saints in Philadelphia, he promises to keep them from the “hour
of trial” that will come inevitably on the “whole habitable earth.”
In Revelation, the “final hour” represents the time of final
judgment. The promise to this church is not its escape from trials and persecution, but
that its faithful members will not partake of the “second death” on that
day – (Revelation 3:1-3, 3:10).
The
opening of the sixth seal reveals
the final “day of wrath.” The “stars
of heaven fell to the earth, and the heavens were withdrawn as a scroll rolling
itself up, and every mountain and island were shaken out of their place.” It is the “great
day of the wrath” of the “Lamb” - (Revelation 6:12-17).
When the “sixth trumpet sounds,” four
angels are released that have been “prepared for the hour and day and month and year.”
When the “seventh trumpet” sounds, the final victory of the kingdom of
God is declared and the time of judgment arrives - (Revelation
9:14-15, 11:11-19).
Likewise, when the sixth
bowl of wrath is emptied, the “kings of the earth” are gathered to the final
battle on the “great day of God Almighty.” There, the forces of the “Beast”
will be destroyed – (Revelation 9:14-15, 16:12-16).
HOUR OF JUDGMENT
In chapter 14, an angel proclaims:
“The hour of his judgment has
come.” This means the fall of “Babylon” and the destruction of those
who render homage to the “Beast.”
And that “hour” will culminate
in two “harvests” (“For the harvest of the earth is ripe”): The “reaping”
of the righteous, and the “ingathering” of the “vine of the earth,”
and the latter was cast into the “winepress of the wrath of God.”
Likewise, in chapter 18, the
destruction of “Babylon” arrives “in
one hour,” and she is “laid waste” in the very same “hour”
- (Revelation 14:1-20, 18:10, 18:17-19).
The series
of seals, trumpets, and “bowls of wrath” all culminate in judgment in the
“final hour.” When the “sixth seal” is opened, the day of “wrath”
arrives for the unrepentant. The “seventh trumpet” announces the day of judgment for the wicked and the vindication
of the righteous. And the seventh “bowl of wrath” completes the “wrath of God”
- (Revelation 6:12-17, 11:15-19, 16:17-21).
Revelation is about far more than history’s final few years. Its visions provide a broad sweep that begins with the death of Jesus and ends with his final victory in the New Creation.
The exaltation of the “slain
Lamb” to the “throne” sets events into motion that must culminate inevitably
in the judgment of the wicked, the vindication of the righteous, and the
descent of “New Jerusalem” to the earth.
All this is the outworking of
God’s redemptive plan that the “Lamb” began to implement following his death
and enthronement. He is the “alpha and the omega, the first and the last,
the beginning and the end,” the “firstborn of the dead,” and the “beginning
of the (new) creation.”
And all this began with the
first coming of Jesus of Nazareth who appeared first in Galilee proclaiming the
kingdom of God. His future return in the “final hour” will consummate all
things set into motion thousands of years ago, which is why the book concludes
with the exclamation - “Yea! I come speedily.
Amen! come, Lord Jesus!”
For the “overcoming” saint, that “hour” will mean vindication and
life everlasting in “New Jerusalem.” But for the unrepentant man, that day
will end in the “second death” in the “Lake of Fire.” When the
clock strikes twelve, for him, it will be too late. And that is why today
is always the day and hour of salvation, the time of decision.