Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Revelation 1-5 Part 1 • Dr. Nick Frederick • Dec 4 - Dec 10
Episode Date: November 29, 2023How can I study Revelation in a way that makes sense to me? A warning, a contextual outline, and the promise of Jesus' salvation are all included in Dr. Frederick's framework for studying Re...velation.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056YouTube: https://youtu.be/P_7HyqtobZ0Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Dr. Nicholas Frederick 01:36 Teaser by Dr. Frederick to Revelation03:37 Biography of Dr. Frederick06:26 William Miller and dangers of the Book of Revelation10:52 Revelation in The Book of Mormon13:46 Author and audience16:28 Genre18:58 Prophecy20:10 Apocalyptic literature23:55 Dangers in finding just one application27:24 The Old Testament as a lens for Revelation28:59 Revelation 1:130:55 John’s witness and testimony of Jesus31:49 Pattern of sevens35:09 Jesus’s power to save37:18 Thesis statement of Revelation40:28 Rome has sent John to Patmos44:28 John is going to write and send to seven churches46:13 Son of Man50:32 Outline and interpretation of Revelation52:55 Ephesus56:50 Smyrna59:22 Pergamum1:03:37 His name in your forehead1:05:50 Thyratia1:09: 50 End of Part 1–Dr. Nicholas FrederickThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name's Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my divine co-host John by the way. Hi, John.
The blasphemy.
Well, I opened up to the book of Revelation, John, and it said the revelation of St. John the Divine.
People who know me are laughing out loud right now, but yeah, thank you. In the book of Revelation, I know you've read it before.
What are you thinking about over the next couple of weeks?
Are you excited?
Are you nervous?
Well, I'm really excited because we have access to such amazing scholars.
I love to use this word because it makes me sound smart.
This book is written in a different genre.
See?
Did I sound smart right there? It's written in apocalyptic. It's like a different genre. See? Did I say it's hard right there?
It's written in apocalyptic.
It's like a different language almost,
and that requires us to look at it differently.
I am ready to just learn on this one,
because I know what I think it means,
but I do not think it means what I think it means.
I think I'm going to do the same thing,
probably adjust what I thought was happening to what probably is happening.
I read this from Eldera Konki this week. He was talking about the book of Revelation.
He says, if you have already fallen in love with John's presentation of the plan of salvation,
as set out in the Sepocalypse, you are one of the favored few in the church.
If this choice experience is yet ahead of you, which it might be for a lot of
our listeners, the day and hour is here to launch one of the most intriguing and rewarding studies
in gospel scholarship in which any of us will ever engage. Now, that's Elder McConkey leading us
into this great book. John, we're joined by a Bible scholar this week and also a good friend of mine.
His name is Dr. Nick Frederick.
Nick, what are we looking forward to?
I know this is one of your specialties,
the Book of Revelation.
Over the next couple of weeks,
we're gonna really get into what is one
of the more fascinating books, at least for me,
in the Bible.
This is one of those books that's very different
than the Gospels, it's very different than letters of Paul.
You can pick up and read the sermon on the Mount
and get some great insight from it. You can pick up a letter of Paul and
get a snapshot of what's going on in the first century. The Book of Revelations doing something
else entirely. They call this a unique experience, but the Book of Revelation is a fair one.
What we're going to try to do today is talk about some ways of reading this book responsibly,
how to approach it in a way that hopefully will be uplifting and edifying,
while also helping us ground ourselves and what the book is doing, and
importantly what the book isn't doing. Book of Revelation gets a lot of press, a lot of its fame,
because of how it's been interpreted over time.
Someone once said that the only thing scarier than the beasts of the book of Revelation are the interpreters
of the book of Revelation because the book has been interpreted in so many different ways
over time.
We shouldn't expect to spend the next amount of time giving you the definitive interpretation
of the book of Revelation.
That would be a mistake.
What we'll try to do is go through here and suggest some possible ways of reading it,
talk about who John was, what this text
may have meant in the first century, and how we can draw from it in the 21st century today.
That's exciting. I am really looking forward to this. John, one of my favorite quotes is from
Richard Elevins. He said, it is good to be faithful. It is better to be faithful and competent.
As I approach the book of Revelation, I want to be faithful, but I also, over the next couple
of weeks, want to learn. I want to worship God with my mind. I'm really dig into this so I can
understand what it's meant to say and what it's like Dr. Frederick said, what it's not meant to say.
John, Dr. Frederick is new to our podcast. He's not new to me. He's a good friend, but our audience
might not know who he is. Can you introduce it? Absolutely. Dr. Nick Frederick is an associate professor at Brigham Young
University. He was born in Provo and raised in Delta, Utah, Go Rabbits. I love Delta.
They've invited me down there a few times and I love those folks down there and they have
their own airline. No, just give.
If only that were true. And then
after returning from a mission in Brussels, Belgium, which is French speaking, is it? It was. Yep. He attended Brigham University, where he received his bachelor's in classics
and masters in comparative studies. Then he attended Claremont Graduate University,
where he completed a PhD in the
history of Christianity with an emphasis on Mormon studies.
After which he returned to BYU to teach full-time in religious education, his research focuses
primarily on the intertextual relationship between the text of the Bible and letterday
saints scripture specifically the Book of Mormon.
He enjoys teaching courses on the Book of Mormon and the New Testament,
particularly the writings of Paul and the Book of
Revelation. He has been married to Julie Parker Frederick for 18 years as the father of four children, Miranda Samuel Cassandra and Madeline.
Welcome Nick. Thank you so much for bringing yourself and your expertise today.
Hey, happy to be here. Happy to be here. Big fan of you guys.
No.
In fact, I'll share a brief anecdote. Again, small town delta Utah, pretty cut off from
everywhere else in Utah. I kind of do our own thing down there. Didn't really hear
much about the broader, latter-day, Saint cultural things like EFY and things like that.
So there I am, my first semester up at Rick's College, everyone in my apartment complex,
my ward gets super excited
because there's gonna be a special guest
that's going to appear in Rexburg.
And they're all going around saying,
you've gotta come watch this guy,
you've gotta come watch this guy.
And I'm like, well, what's his name?
They're like, John, by the way.
This is my first introduction to you, John.
Blue my mind, I thought it was fantastic.
But ever since then, I still remember your Owen
by the way, joke, even 25 years later,
Owen by the way.
And you're also amazing on guitar.
That's sick.
It was a Delta ticket agent who said,
are you gonna name your son Owen when he looked at my ticket?
And I went Owen by the way.
Oh, I had literally never thought about before. So I actually
laughed. You heard all of them. I thought I had until I heard that one. I was like,
give me that too. That's funny. Let's get started here. Nick, how should we approach this book?
I'm guessing we need some background. Before we hit Revelation chapter one, verse one,
what do you want to talk to us about before we get started? Can I start with a story? Please do. Turn to the 19th century.
There's a young man named William Miller who's coming of age. He fights in the war of 1812
and comes out of that war a little bit disillusioned. He's turned to the Bible, starts reading the
Bible. He's a Baptist by tradition and he becomes particularly engaged by the book of Daniel and the book of Revelation.
He begins to study it looking for some of the patterns looking for it for clues.
And in the year 1818, he decides he can predict the date of the second coming.
It's going to happen in 25 years, he says, in the year 1843.
As we roll closer to about 1840, he begins to attract thousands of followers to come be present for the second coming of Jesus Christ.
And this is again quite a popular event. Gather in 1843. Jesus doesn't show up. So he says, well, maybe I did my computations wrong. I maybe I need to use a different calendar. 1844, Jesus doesn't show up. And by the end of 1844, this has become known
amongst Miller's followers as the great disappointment. Well, Miller's followers fracture into several
different groups. A woman named Ellen White leads one of the groups of Miller's followers and
founds the seventh-day Adventist church. A little bit later on, the Jehovah's Witnesses.
Wow. We'll spring off from this group. And if we
jump ahead to about the 1950s, there's a third group known as the Branch Dividians who come from the
Miller tradition. And as their name indicates, they believe that the branch, the Messiah, the
Arab David, the son of David is going to be revealed through their faith tradition. And a young man named Vernon Howell,
who's a disaffected seventh-day Adventist,
joins up with these branched avidians,
he begins to read the book of Revelation.
He begins to think that he is the lamb
who's going to break the seals on the seven seals
and usher in the last days.
He changes his name to David Kuresh.
And again, to
representing as kind of the air of this messianic line. And of
course, as I'm sure the two of you remember, as I remember
well, 1993, Waco, Texas, tragically 80 people, about a third of
them children are a killed in an unfortunate standoff with the
FBI. The book of Revelation is a dangerous book.
There's literally a body count attached to this book,
and not just here in America,
but I mean, all the ways from the second century AD,
with the group known as the Monteneges,
who believed that they knew the date to the second coming,
all the way up to the modern age,
the stakes have run high with the Book of Revelation.
There's something about this book that draws people's attention to it
and has changed the course of religious history in America.
Here's part three.
We go back again to the 19th century, 1805,
a young man named Joseph Smith is born in Vermont.
Over the next few years, his family moves along the Atlantic coast
up in to New York. 1820 has a vision of the Father and the Son. 1823 sees an angel. 1827 he's
given some gold plates and 1830 publishes the Book of Mormon. Now consider what's the first story
in the Book of Mormon. Profit named Lehi finds himself transported into the throne room of God.
Now, almost an exact representation of Revelation chapter 4 where John finds himself transported into the throne room of God. Now, almost an exact representation of Revelation chapter 4,
where John finds himself transported into the throne room of God.
First Nephi chapter 8, Lehigh has a vision of the tree of life,
which again, harkens back to Revelation chapter 2 and Revelation 21,
Revelation 22, where you have this image of the tree of life in a very prominent position
in the new kingdom of God.
Then at first Nephi 11 through 14, Lehigh's son Nephi has a vision that we're told,
has connections with the book of Revelation. And this is what to me is remarkable. Nephi is even told
the name of the person who's going to write the book of Revelation. It's one of the disciples of the Lamb, right? It's a man named John. That doesn't happen for any other book in the New Testament. No
other author in the New Testament is mentioned in the book of Mormon, not Matthew, not Paul, not Luke,
but John is mentioned specifically, not once, but twice. Because then you go to the Jaredite
record where the brother Jared has a vision, likened to the revelation of John,
and then, either chapter 4, again, we're told to watch out for the revelation of the Apostle John.
The second most often cited New Testament text in the Book of Mormon is the Book of Revelation.
Okay, so clearly the Book of Mormon is telling us read the Book of Revelation, study the Book of
Revelation. Well, Joseph Smith,
after he publishes the Book of Mormon 1832, devotes time to studying the Book of Revelation. He even
produces a question and answer document. With questions he has for the Lord about certain signs and
symbols in the Book of Revelation, it's unfinished. He only gets through Revelation 11. He doesn't
include it in the 1830s read book of commandments. He doesn't include it in the 1830s,
Rebook of Commandments. He doesn't include it in the 1835 doctrine of covenants.
But in 1876, Brigham Young canonizes it as you can't make this stuff up, DNC 77.
If there's any number, if you're going to connect with the Book of Revelation, it's going to be 7.
What better way than 77, right? You won't forget that one. And if you look at the revelations in the doctrine of covenants, again, they cite and they quote all
the time from the New Testament, the book of Revelation is again the second most often cited New
Testament text in the doctrine of covenants. So that's two books of scripture where the Lord and
His prophets seem to be saying, study this book, this book has something to say.
Joseph will continue all the way up through 1844
to give sermons on the Book of Revelation,
to give clues onto some of the symbols in the Book of Revelation,
DNC 130, for example,
contain some of those hints,
what is the Sea of Glass mentioned in Revelation chapter 4, right?
I think you
could argue that in a way in 1842, when Joseph introduces the endowment ceremony, what is the
endowment but a chance for not just the prophets, but all of us to find ourselves transported into
the presence of God, conversing with his angels. In a way, it's democratizing the book of Revelation so that all of us can have
that experience. The history of the Latter-day Saint tradition is one that is very much informed
by the interpretation of the book of Revelation. This book has an incredible impact for both good
and bad in the history of religion America, history of religion in Europe, the last 2,000 years
of Christianity, the book of Revelation has been a key player in that drama.
One thing I'm hearing, John, I don't know about you, is we need to probably be careful
in our classes, in the way we discuss this with our children.
There's a way to read this responsibly.
This isn't one to go crazy with and to start reading things that really aren't there.
Things can go up the rails quickly, if there was any way of attaching the PG-13 rating
or putting some caution tape around the book of Revelation, that's what I would do.
What a great introduction.
That is so fascinating.
The impact this book has had on all those movements.
That's amazing.
Yeah, that's pretty incredible.
We got the right guy, Hank.
Nick, I would like to know a little bit of what's happening to the people this is written
to. As we've heard from many of our guests, these books don't just fall out of the sky and say,
read me.
They have context.
There's an author, there's an audience, and there's a lot of things happening to those people that are going to help us understand what's said and why it's said.
Yeah, those are great questions. We should start with authorship book of Revelation in the early church up until about the third century was generally accepted that this was written by the Apostle John.
That changes in the third century, you start to get some arguments that John the Apostle can't be the same as John the Revelator.
The main reason is because of the text itself,
like the Greek of the Gospel of John,
it's simple Greek, but it's pretty good Greek.
The Greek of the Book of Revelation
is the worst Greek in the entire New Testament.
There's just no other way to say it.
There's mistakes all over the place.
It's like if you were reading a paper and they used words like
Aint, every few words, that's the kind of vibe you get from the book of Revelation.
To the point where today most people don't associate the Apostle John
with John the Revelator. Now again, Latter-day Saints, we have the advantage of the Book of Mormon
where in two places we're told that the Apostle John is the author of the book of Revelation.
We can pretty safely say that the Apostle John is the one who has this experience.
He has it we're told on an island called Patmos, which we can talk about when he gets chapter one.
As far as the dating of this goes, when was this book written?
Right? Is it contemporary with the letters of Paul?
Is it later?
Because Hank, this goes to your question
of what are the people experiencing at the time?
There's two dates that get thrown around
with the book of Revelation.
Is written in the 60s or it's written in the 90s?
And there's good arguments for both,
but they both revolve around the questions
of what the Christians are going through.
Are the Christians being persecuted?
Because this type of literature, what we call apocalyptic literature, tends to become popular when things are bad. Like, when
people's undergoing persecution, what they want is a type of literature that gives them vindication,
where they can watch their enemies get literally trampled under the hooves of horses.
Chapters 13 through 17 very clearly bring the Roman Empire into the forefront.
And it seems like its events in the Roman Empire that are happening in the 80s and 90s.
My best guess for a date of this would be sometime during the 90s, where the Christians are experiencing
certain things and the book of revelations responding to certain pressures that they're under.
There's our authorship, there's our dating.
The big one, to go back to a word that John used at the beginning of the podcast here is genre.
We have to understand the book of revelation and its genre.
Different genres of books, as you know, have different rules.
When we were done here, the three of us were to meet at Barnes & Noble, and we were all pick out a book, Hank picks out a book on the history of World War II, and John picks up a book
on John Grisham, he likes fiction, and I pick up a fantasy book by Brandon Sanderson. All of our books
have different genres. We have history, we have fiction, we have fantasy, and there are certain rules that apply to those. Hank would expect that his history of World War II would have footnotes
that it would be an accurate portrayal of events during World War II, and that the author of that
would be unbiased for the most part in their opinion, that he could read that, and he could find out
accurately what would happen to real men and real women during World War II.
John, your book, your John Grisham Thriller, you would expect that it would not be about
real people, but these would be real circumstances in the sense that there are people that you
could meet on the street in any town in America.
They're going to drive cars.
They're going to buy food at the supermarket.
They're going to live lives like until you're plausible plausible
Exactly. That's a good word for it. You're not all of a sudden going to find yourself on Mars shooting laser guns or something like that
All of a sudden you would say that's not the type of book. This is
Mine on the other hand fantasy has its own rules. You would expect something to happen on a world far far away
You would expect a magic system of some sort to be in place. You would expect that these are people who have names
that you haven't seen before who are doing things that you haven't seen done before. And I would
not expect that this is a factual retelling of an actual thing that happened like Hank would be
expecting for his book. If we try to apply the rules of my genre to Hank's,
or vice versa, the book all of a sudden makes no sense.
And that's the same way the book of Revelation is.
The book of Revelation's complicated
that it is actually three separate genres.
The first is it's an epistle.
There's very clearly parts of this book that are a letter.
It's gonna have some of the same rules you would expect a letter of Paul to have.
It's located in the first century with real churches, with real people, to whom are getting
written a letter, and all the things that that genre expects.
Number two, the book of Revelation is a prophecy.
Prophecy has its own genre and its own requirements. A
prophet stands up and says, the thus say at the Lord. It usually revolves around
immoral issues. You've descended into sin, the Lord expects you to repent or
you'll be destroyed. Think of Benadai or something like that here, Jeremiah.
Prophecy is also predictive. Prophets can stand up and say, think Isaiah. Isaiah chapter 7 verse 14.
Behold, a young woman will conceive and bring forth a son, and you will call his name and manual.
Buttern Honey shall he eat, but before he knows to choose the good from the evil, the land of the abhorus,
shall be rid of both your kings. Within eight or so years, King A has,
a young woman will give birth, and a young boy will grow up. Then these kings that you're worried about are going to be gone.
Okay, that's a prediction.
These two smoking fire brands.
Exactly.
And we can look and we can say, okay, who's the fulfillment of that prophecy?
How long until that comes to pass?
Is this Hezekiah?
Is this a son of Isaiah?
How does this play out with gospel Matthew and Gabriel appears to Joseph and says, you're going to see the fulfillment of this prophecy. A prophecy is predictive.
The third genre here is a complicated one. It's what's known as apocalyptic literature.
Apocalyptic literature, the word itself literally means to unveil. And the sense is that what
you're going to do is you're going to unveil apocalyptic literature, unveils
things from God's perspective.
Often apocalyptic literature will have a tour of the heavens.
Someone from Earth gets transported to heaven and gets a guided tour.
An angel will show them around because you're seeing things from God's perspective.
A prophet is on Earth.
Apocalyptic literature takes place in heaven. So the rules
are going to be different. And what you're often going to see as apocalyptic literature is
concerned with the end of the world. A prophet speaks to you somewhat about what applies to you
in your time. Apocalyptic literature is concerned about the end. What does the end look like? Because
again, this is God and God's perspective and God's plan.
So what is God's end goal here? But this is different than prophecy. Apocalyptic literature isn't trying to predict what's going to happen in a few years.
Apocalyptic literature wants to show you the big picture from God's perspective with the idea that you will have confidence and trust once you see
he's in complete control.
So you can maybe start to see this is where the problem comes in.
If I take the rules of prophecy, that it's predictive and it's going to tell me what's
going to happen in a few years, which the book of Revelation is, chapters 2 and 3, chapter
22 are prophecy.
But the vision itself is apocalyptic.
Chapters 4 through 21 are doing something different, and I can't take the rules of
prophecy and apply them to the genre of apocalypse, or else I have the same
problem as if I try to take the rules of fantasy and apply them to Hank's
history of World War II. It just doesn't work. And that's why I say this book
has to be read responsibly.
You're dealing with three genres, each which have their own rules. And where we run into
problems is when we try to apply the rules of one genre to a different genre that exists
in the book of Revelation.
So well said, I feel like I'm creating some boundaries as I enter each chapter. What lens
I'm putting on the text as I go in. I'm seeing a lot of yellow tape,
caution tapes around the book. Exactly. Yeah, I love what you've done here. Your first statement about
reading the book responsibly made me laugh, but when you went through history to see what has
happened for people taking this in a futurist or a literalist type of a thing. It's, whoa, this can be dangerous.
I'm excited to read it responsibly.
Yeah, so the number 666, here's always drawn their attention.
So back in the 1980s, well, it was Ronald Wilson Reagan,
six letters, six letters, six letters.
Okay, I've done, I've cracked the code, I figured out.
It's American democracy, that's the mark of the beast or something like that.
Well, then you get into the 1990s and we're all still here and people say, well, the sixth letter of the Hebrew alphabet is a letter W, W, W, W.
What are we thought? Oh, it's the internet. It's a worldwide web. Is how Satan's gonna infiltrate everybody and introduce the chaos of the end times. It's very easy to just let this get off the rails. If we
read this without just some general guidelines, some general caution in place.
So interesting. I know you're saying there's some fluid ways to look at this. Be careful. But
are you saying as a hard and fast rule, don't try to look for things John hid in the numbers
and the symbols that really we're talking about,
the United States in 2023.
Is that a hard and fast rule,
stay away from that area?
Great question.
And when it comes to other texts, again, letters of Paul,
I would say there are hard and fast rules you have to maintain.
Book of Revelation, again, I get much more cautious. But one of the hard and fast rules you have to maintain. Book of Revelation, again, I get much more cautious,
but one of the hard and fast rules
that I would say we need to maintain
is don't try to give everything a one-to-one correlation.
Don't assume that John is telling you
about one specific thing that is in a code
that you then have to crack.
I think that's where it becomes problematic.
I think the book of Revelation uses images because
images have polyvalent meaning. You can extract different meanings to those symbols. There are some
exceptions. I think the Lamb is Jesus. There's another way to take the Lamb. The dragon is Satan. I don't
think there's another way to take that. But the writer on the black horse from Revelation 6 or the
two witnesses in Revelation 11. The one thing I noticed among Latter-day Saints is every time we hear about apostles
traveling to the Holy Land, we get super duper worried because Revelation 11 predicts that
two witnesses are going to lie dead in the streets of Jerusalem for three and a half days.
We look for the one to one meaning there.
Well that must mean two apostles are going to go to Jerusalem and they're going to die
and be resurrected after three and a half days. So we get a little bit anxious when you hear about apostles traveling.
Don't want to say that's not what it means or that's not what's going to happen. I just
think if that's all we're looking for is that one to one hard and fast correlation, we're missing what the
book is trying to tell us. Now what an excellent limit. I like that.
If we were to describe apocalyptic, apocalyptic means revelation.
It has lots of symbolic, co-ecolumned, strange, character symbols, animals, beasts, things like that.
Would that be a way to describe apocalyptic? Because I know people have read the book of Daniel,
and we studied that last year. Can you tie how Daniel is apocalyptic
and how revelation is apocalyptic?
Yeah, and for those exact same reasons
that you mentioned, right,
the extreme use of numbers,
the extreme use of animal imagery,
those are all part and parts
of the apocalyptic tradition.
It's almost like it's a different language
that you have to learn.
I mean, it's written in English
or whatever language you're reading it in,
but it uses numbers.
7, 12, 4, 10, 144,000, 1000.
And these numbers, if you take them literally, you miss the point of what the number is trying
to say.
The numbers are metaphorical.
They're symbolic.
They're a language unto themselves.
You have four horsemen that are white, red, black, and pale. Those colors mean something symbolically.
There is a second language of sorts.
The language of symbolism when it comes to apocalyptic literature.
That you see in the book of Daniel, that you see an Ezekiel to some extent,
and that you see in the book of Revelation.
Again, another thing I have to do before you start is remember that the book is symbolic,
and these symbols mean something. What does 7 mean? It could mean that it's 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
or 7 could mean something like completion or perfection. But if something has 7 eyes and 7
horns, you could imagine something with literally 7 eyes and 7 horns, or you could say horns
represent power, eyes represent wisdom,
seven represents perfection or completion. So I'm looking at something that is complete or
perfect in its wisdom and power. And those are two very, very different things. You'll almost have
to learn a second language when you deal with apocalyptic literature. And that's the case for Daniel,
and that's the case for the Book of Revelation. Excellent. Nick, I've heard it said that in order to grasp the book of Revelation,
you need to have a background or an understanding of the Old Testament.
Almost as if John is saying, I hope you know your Old Testament or else you might miss quite a bit.
That's in this book. Is there anything to that?
Oh, absolutely. Just like symbolism itself is a second language you have to learn.
It's understand book revelation. The third language you have to learn is the Old Testament.
Of all the verses in the book of Revelation, probably 75% of them contain at least one
illusion to an Old Testament text. The language of the book of Revelation is Old Testament Scripture. John is taking images
from Ezekiel, he's taking images from Daniel, he's taking references to Exodus and Genesis,
and he's in a way extracting them from the Old Testament and re-situating them in a new context,
that new context is Christ and Christianity. You have to understand the meaning, and we'll
see that especially in chapters 2 and 3. Chapters 2 and 3 is all about these references to things from
the Hebrew Bible, from the Old Testament. And so if you don't know your Old Testament, there's
entire messages in this book that are just going to go just whisper right over your head. John is
demanding that before you read this book, make sure you brush up on the Old Testament.
It's good thing that we have someone here to guide us. Thank you for being here. With that, are you think we're ready to take a look at chapter 1? Well, let's just start at the beginning
here. Hank, would you just mind reading the first verse for us? Absolutely. The revelation of Jesus
Christ, which God gave unto Him, to show unto his servants things
which must shortly come to pass, and he sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant,
John.
This verse, there's a lot to unpack.
The name of the book is the book of Revelation or the apocalypse of St. John, the revelation
that second word there, right, the word is apocalypse. And the unveiling of what
Jesus Christ, there we get our theme, there we get our topic, it's going to be about the unveiling,
not of the future, not of what's going to happen. It's the unveiling of Jesus Christ. John's primary
direction to us is as you read this book and you look for a lens of interpretation, you need to ask yourself,
what does this have to do with Jesus Christ? What does this teach me about Jesus Christ?
There's another way you could take that. You could take of as from the revelation from Jesus Christ,
both of them worked fine, the revelation about Jesus Christ. But the sense of verse 1 here,
I think is John saying, look before I even get started, it's going to get crazy. It's going to get crazy quickly. Let's not lose sight
of what matters here, which is the point. Exactly. And then, of course, things which must
shortly come to pass, we can argue about, is that mean 10 years? Does that mean 100 years?
Does that mean 1000 years? And that's one of the arguments is, what does that mean? To me, it seems to mean shortly this Hashtag application of John's audience in the first century. And, of
course, our first reference to his servant, John, okay, which again, Christians today see John the
revelator and John the Apostles two different John's book of Mormon tells us this servant John is
John the beloved. And, thank you, you want to just continue on, first two,
who bear record of the Word of God and of the testimony of Jesus Christ
and of all things that He saw.
Record here literally means witness,
a statement of truth, what John is going to tell you
is almost his testimony in court.
It is, if he's standing up, raising his arm,
putting it on the Bible and saying,
I'm going to tell you what I saw. This is my witness, and it's a witness of
the Word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ. Which again, you could take a couple
different ways. This is John's testimony of Jesus, or is this Jesus Christ witness of God,
and I tend to lean towards the ladder there. What John is going to say is, here's how Jesus Christ witnesses of the Father.
So we're going to see God,
the Father's plan unveiled
through his son, Jesus Christ.
Okay, we're going all the way to the top here.
Excellent.
We're going to keep going, verse three.
Blessed is he that readeth.
Hey, that's good news.
There you go.
Blessed is he that readeth,
and they that hear the words of this prophecy,
and keep those things which are written therein for the time is at hand.
Here we get in verse 3, the first of a pattern of sevens that's going to appear in the book of
Revelation. We're going to have seven blesseds that will occur over the course of the book of
Revelation. In chapters 2 and 3, we get seven churches. In chapter 6, we get seven seals. In chapter eight, we get seven trumpets
to be followed by seven bowls. We get our first indication of this important of seven occurring
early on here in the book of Revelation. So that would be something to track this use of seven
throughout the book. I like that they that hear the words. In the first century context,
this would be read orally. If you don't have a written text, so to
speak. So someone's getting up in sacrament and reading this out loud, it would take about 90 minutes
to read the book of Revelation from beginning to end. You can imagine again just a congregation,
as somebody stands up there reading the book of Revelation to them, as they're hearing themselves
and their experiences represented in the text. It's mentioned as a prophecy, we have our second now indication of genre, first one apocalyptic,
now it's called a prophecy, and the time is at hand.
The important things are happening now.
So this is again, why I always get suspicious of people want to say, well, this is about
the future, this is about things thousands of years in the future.
John says the time is at hand. Something important is happening now. We need to figure out what that is.
Excellent. Do you want to go to verse four? Sure. Because it starts with John. So we probably ought to have
John. John. There you go. John, that's a big J there for you.
Verse four. John to the seven churches which are in Asia, grace be unto you and
peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven spirits which
are before his throne. Here we have John now introducing this proper. Notice it takes
the form of a letter at this point. Remember Paul, which write his letter Paul an apostle to the saints who live in Galatians and like that, right?
John to the seven churches.
So now we've entered into that epistle,
John Ra that we talked about.
So again, where it gets confusing.
Seven churches will meet those seven churches in chapters two and three.
And again, the question becomes,
is this seven specific churches or is this seven symbolically?
Is he addressing this to the complete or perfect or universal church?
Anybody who considers themselves a part of God's complete and perfect church, I have a
message for you.
Or is it perhaps both?
Are both meanings implied there?
From Him which is, in which was, in which is to come, we get our first reference back to the Old Testament.
Remember Exodus chapter 3 verse 14, the name of God, I am the one who is, or I am the one that exists.
We seem to be saying that connecting this divine being here in verse 4,
who John's going to talk about with that Jehovah figure in Exodus 3, 14,
the one who is the
one who was and wishes to come.
Exodus 314.
John, you're a good reader.
Let's have you keep reading.
First five.
And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, and the first begotten of the dead, and
the prince of the kings of the earth, unto him that loved us and washed us from
our sins in his own blood.
Beautiful imagery there, right?
Put this in a first century context.
One of the questions that Christians would be asking is, is Jesus powerful enough to be
able to save me?
I mean, I've got the Roman Emperor,
and he's pretty powerful.
You talk about this fellow named Jesus,
is he powerful enough to beat the Roman Emperor?
Is he powerful enough to beat these other divine beings
that you might have heard about?
What we're gonna start to do is we're gonna start
to build Jesus Christ up as a God in whom you can trust.
He's the first begotten of the dead, the prince of the kings of the earth.
He's the Messiah, essentially.
He's God's anointed one.
What did he do?
He loved unto him that loved us, and in Greek, this is actually present tense, even though
in King James, it sounds like it's a past tense or a perfect tense.
He loves us. He
continues to love us. He loves us in the present. And he washed us. That's a past tense.
That's a completed action. He washed us. The atonement has been performed. It's been completed.
And you are made clean by a God who's powerful and loves you and wants to help you and wants to
help you make it through this world that is perilous and dangerous and scary.
It's always interesting to me that blood is for us. It's a stain that needs to be washed and cleaned, but Christ's blood is a cleansing agent.
The book of Revelation is going to play on that image. And to get to chapter 7, we're going to see the 144,000 are washed clean.
They're made white through the blood of the Lamb. And that's not how it's supposed to work.
Blood does not make things white, blood stains things. But somehow, in Jesus' case, makes
you clean. The book of Revelation has paradoxes that run all the way through. And one of those
paradoxes is, blood turns your clothes, your garments white. Wow. Okay, verse six. Yep. And have made us kings and priests unto God and his father,
to him be glory and dominion forever and ever, amen. Yeah. These first verses, four, five,
and six are the these, the statement of sorts. This is what you expect when you get to the book of Revelation.
You're going to be introduced to Jesus Christ.
You're going to understand that he's the one who loves you and saves you.
And then what does Jesus want to do?
He wants to make you kings and queens priests and priestesses.
And we have another allusion to Exodus here.
In this case, Exodus 19, where we're told that Moses wants to take the Israelites
and make them a kingdom of priests or as King James translates it, kings and priests,
but it's more literally a kingdom of priests.
You'll start to see that why Joseph Smith was so attracted to the book of Revelation,
that you'll start to see language like kings and priests, you'll start to see seals become
a very big deal in subsequent
chapters. We'll start to see echoes of our own tradition as we work our way more and more into the
book of Revelation. The cool thing about this is when you get to chapters two and three, the churches
are promised images that have to do with kingship and priesthood. So here we're told, Jesus makes
you kings and priests, queens and priestesses, and then chapters
two and three will actually see the promises and how the promise of being coming to king and
a priest is actually brought about. And then in chapter five, we'll revisit this exact same image
again, come to come full circle. Let's keep going here. Verse seven says, he come with the clouds. Every
eye shall see him. They also which pierced him.
And all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him, even so, amen. We're getting a couple
of amen's here. Come with with clouds. What does that bring to mind? Daniel chapter seven,
right? The prophecy of one like the Son of Man. Who is this guy, Jesus? Okay, well, he's also the
powerful Son of Man who is going to come on the clouds of heaven with the Son of Man. Who is this guy Jesus? Okay, well, he's also the powerful Son of Man.
He who's going to come on the clouds of heaven with the angels behind him and conquering the earth.
We get a passage from Zechariah 12 here. They also which pierced him.
You have to be fluent in the language of the Old Testament to understand all these illusions
that are coming through here. This is a good example of how John adopts and adapts
a language from Jewish scripture,
Daniel 7, Zechariah 12, things like that.
Is this the first time we see that name title
for Christ being Alpha and Omega?
Yeah, this is where we start to see the description
of God and Jesus in these absolute terms.
Alpha, Omega, the first letter in Greek
and the last letter in Greek.
The beginning and the end, the first and the last. The idea here is we want to situate Jesus and Jesus' father as having absolute power. You
can put your trust in them because they can overcome this Roman Empire that has all this power on
earth. This is one of the ways the book of Revelation is going to do this is with those titles that
stretch from one end all
the way to the other.
Okay.
I like how, inversated, says that like three times.
I'm alpha and omega.
I'm the beginning and the ending.
I'm that which is that which was that which is to come.
It's, are you getting this?
You can trust me.
I've seen it all.
I can do it all. Yeah.
Okay, let's keep going.
I'll read me.
I, John, who also am your brother and companion,
intribulation and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ,
was in the aisle that is called Patmills,
for the word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ.
This is where we can situate things a little bit more
historically. One of the things the Romans would do,
especially with astrologers and soothsayers,
if you had people that were predicting gloom and doom upon Rome,
they would relegate you to an island to cool off for a while.
We shouldn't see John being in prison here.
He's not being sentenced to hard labor. They're just saying, go cool your jets for a while since We shouldn't see John being in prison here. He's not being sentenced to hard labor.
They're just saying, go cool your jets for a while since you've been predicting this stuff,
kind of doom and gloom about what's going on here in Rome. And he says, while he's there
on this island of Patmos, which is about 13 square miles, you can walk from one side
to the other in about half a day to the island in the Aegean Sea. While he's there, he
says I was put there
for the testimony of Jesus Christ.
Christians are still this nebulous group.
There's really no clear idea what to do with them.
Are they Jews?
Are they something else?
Later on, that's gonna be more of a policy in place.
But right now, it's just, look, we don't know quite what to do
with them.
They're saying things, let's send them over here.
Wait, for things to cool off a little bit.
We don't know how long he's there. Then he comes back, but this seems to be at the
instigation of Rome, specifically for what he's saying about Jesus Christ. Nick, when he says,
I am your companion, intribulation. What's the audience, the people he's writing to? What have they
been through? We'll see this more when we get to chapters 2 and 3. What used to be said about the book of Revelation and about early Christianity was there was
a smith of persecution, like Christians to the lions, that the Christians in the first
century had all these terrible things happen to them.
There probably was some persecution.
Paul mentions persecution, say, for example, in First Thessalonians, but it's probably overplayed
a little bit as far as Christians being killed, Christians being fed to the lions, things like that.
It's probably more not an imperial persecution of sorts, although Nero, the Emperor Nero did have a reputation for persecution Christians, and the Emperor who's currently in charge at the time of this. If we assume a later date with the book of Revelation is the Emperor Demission, who reigns from 81 to 96 AD,
perhaps doesn't look very fondly upon the Christians,
but it's probably the tribulation is coming from their neighbors.
It's coming from the fact that Christians who live in cities
like Corinth, like Ephesus,
aren't playing along with the other members of society.
They aren't attending the temple.
They aren't eating the food that's offered to idols
that everyone's expected to eat.
We might say today in America, we have a civil religion.
We stand up for the Pledge of Allegiance.
We take off our hats when the flag enters the room.
We have holidays that reflect patriotism
and things like that.
The ancient world was the same way.
And all of a sudden, the Christians aren't playing along. They're not standing up for the pledge of allegiance. They're not putting
their hands over their hearts. They're not doing the thing you expect them to do. People are saying,
we don't know what to do with you. You're unpatriotic. So the Christians are stuck between,
do we go along with what the world wants us to do and accommodate as best we can, or do we stick to our beliefs and hold
our ground even though we risk upsetting our neighbor, upsetting people in our community.
That seems to be more the case of what's happening here at the end of the first century.
When John says, my companion tribulation is probably something more like this.
They're having a very hard time carving out their identity and society.
That's really helpful. Why don't we look at verse 11 saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the first
and the last repetition of those ideas again, what thou seest right in a book? We're being told now
that what John is going to see is going to write in a book. In this case, it would be a scroll. I then
send it unto the seven churches which are in Asia.
Then we're given, again, we talked about seven blessings
earlier.
Now we're going to be introduced to the seven churches.
And they are Ephesus, Smirna, Pergamum,
Thiatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and Leodicea.
Think about these seven churches as they all form
a semi-circle of sorts in
Asia Minor. So there are all churches that are next to each other. All of them are
within a couple days travel from one another. John may very well have been
familiar or maybe founded some of those churches. What we're going to see in
chapters two and three is each of these seven churches is going to get their own
specific message. Some of those churches are doing well.
Others of those churches are not doing very well,
but each of them will be promised something specific.
Verse 11 really sets the stage for John to write down
his vision and then brings these seven churches
into the conversation.
And Nick, you said earlier, are the seven churches symbolic
or are they real?
These are real congregations. These are real congregations.
These are real congregations.
There are churches at these places.
The question is, should we interpret this today as,
I mean, seven, were there more than seven churches?
Absolutely, it could be eight or nine or 10,
but he chooses seven because seven has a specific meaning.
And so as we look at this and say,
how should we interpret it?
For century context, these are real churches,
but does it have meaning to us today?
In other words, when we reach chapters two and three
and we get these really cool blessings,
can we apply them to us because we are quote unquote
part of the seven churches in the sense
that they are God's universal or complete or perfect church?
But just goes to a question of application,
but absolutely, these are real first century congregations
with real people would be undergoing real problems.
Let's keep going here,
because it seems that John sees the Lord himself
and describes him in ways that we're maybe not used to.
Yeah, so should we just go to verse 13 then?
Yeah, in the midst of the seven candlesticks,
one like unto the Son of Man,
which again, controversial phrased,
does it mean someone who's like a human being,
or does this mean somebody, the Son of Man,
in the sense that Jesus is this messianic semi-divine figure,
probably more the latter, in this case,
probably closer to Daniel, Son of Man,
than Ezekiel, Son of Man,
clothed with garment down to his foot,
and gird about the paps with a golden girdle.
There's something majestic about this. You're supposed to see him as well dressed like and to say an emperor or something like this.
There's majesty in this description here, but you could also see priesthood in this as well. His head and his hairs were white like wool,
His head and his hairs were white like wool, echoes of the ancient of days in Daniel 7, as white as snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire, signifying divine power.
His feet, like a defined brass, is if they burned in a furnace, his voice is the sound
of many waters.
And he had in his right hand, connoting strength.
We'll see the right hand again in chapter 5.
Notice the seven stars. He uses the right hand, his strong hand, to protect the seven stars.
And that's going to come into play later on. God in his role as a protector. Contrast him. You are in his right hand.
And out of his mouth, when it's sharp too edge sword, the image here being one of defense, God can defend
you. He can protect you. God's word being like a two edged sword.
We see this in Hebrews. We actually see this very prominently
later on in Revelation 19, what comes out of God's mouth, right,
a sharp, too edged sword, and his countenance as the sun shine
at in his strength. John's reaction, when I saw him, I fell at his feet
as dead. He's overwhelmed by this image. It's unlike anything John has ever seen before. And I
love this passage. He laid his right hand. Again, he's been holding, protecting the seven stars
in his right hand. He takes that same right hand, that same hand of represents power,
and lays it on John, offering him that same protection, fear not, I am the first in the
last. Again, you can trust me. Literally, I've got your back. I'm the one you should be
following.
I have the keys of death and hell. Yep. You're okay. When I read this, should I say,
oh, this is how the Savior literally looked?
Or should I say, this is John symbolically describing
the Lord.
I will lean more towards the last.
Again, symbolism is its language unto itself.
Fire means something.
Right hand means something.
And so John is using symbols to describe certain ideals,
certain features, certain characteristics of the Lord.
And symbols can just carry more meaning than, say,
just a word, and he was powerful.
And I'll relay that to you by saying,
his eyes were like fire or something like that.
His voice was as his mouth came out of two-edged sword.
He just had this incredible power of speech.
He's relying on you as a reader understanding how symbols work.
I would actually say, more often than not, when you're reading the book of Revelation,
air on the side of metaphor and symbol before you take a literal meaning.
If metaphor or symbol doesn't work and you want to take it literally, that's good.
That's helpful.
But more often than not, John's assuming I think you'll read this metaphorically.
Figurative first, literal second.
Exactly.
Maybe even figurative first, figurative second, figurative third, literal fourth.
Okay.
We'll trouble the more literally we take the book of Revelation.
Close out chapter one, write the things which thou hast seen,
Revelation chapter one, the things which are
Revelation two and three, these seven churches that you have contact with
and the things which shall be hereafter,
Revelation four through twenty-two. Here we get the structure in verse 19.
Hmm. Fantastic. Things which you have seen,
things which now are, things which shall be hereafter. So we could watch for those. Yes, exactly.
It gives you an outline of what things are going to be, where they're going to be, why they're
going to be in this particular order. And how to interpret them? Revelation 2 and 3,
take it as present circumstances. Revelation 4 through 22,
we're going to have a different picture. Now we're dealing with apocalyptic. What's the end game from God's perspective?
I noticed in chapters 2 and 3 that there's breaks along the way as he talks to the angel of the church of Ephesus.
And then that's verse 1, chapter 2, verse 8, the angel of the church of Ephesus. And then that's verse one, chapter two, verse eight,
the angel of the church of Smirna.
You go along and there's these individual letters
to these congregations.
That's absolutely right.
This is the epistle part of this,
is each church is gonna get their own short letter,
which gives them commendation.
In some cases gives them condemnation, then it leaves them with a promise. If you can turn things around, or if you
continue on your course, you'll be blessed in some fashion. The this letter,
chapter 2 and 3, or maybe the whole vision would be taken to these churches
specifically. Okay, but the idea that each of them is individually addressed here.
This is maybe an itinerant route that a missionary would take.
You can hit all these churches in about a two-day walk from each other.
Oh, okay. Each one starts with to the angel of the church of
fill in the blank. And then it finishes with he that overcomes. Like you said, if there's a fixed
structure for each one of these, they'll all follow the exact same pattern. Each one has its own
problems. Each one is very unique. Each one is given its own unique
blessing. We could hit on all seven of them quickly, just maybe just talk about what the problem is and then maybe what they're promised
Because I think that's where the application will come in is what is this church dealing with and then what is this church
promised by overcoming what's going on?
Is this to be seen as
here's the Lord speaking to this congregation? Yeah, because what John is going to do is John is
going to write essentially what God is telling him to write. He's going to scribe for these
couple of chapters. These are individualized blessings from the Lord. So the Mapleton Sixth Lord gets a letter from the Lord.
Yes, essentially something like that.
I know what problems you're having.
Which ones do you want to look at, Nick?
Well, we can start with the first one, Ephesus here.
In chapter two, verse one, unto the angel of the Church of Ephesus,
one of the largest cities in the world.
Ephesus was famous for the worship of the goddess Artemis. There was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
It was the Temple of Artemis. A problem that's identified in verse two.
He says, first of all, I know your works, I know your labor, I know your patience, and
how thou canst not bear them with your evil. Thou hast tried them, which say they are apostles
and are not, and has found them liars.
So he's like, you've been patient, you've been doing the best you can.
There are some that have come among you and you've recognized who they are that they aren't
necessarily what they say they're going to be. But unfortunately, verse four, the Lord says,
I do have a problem with what you're doing. You've left thy first love.
Don't know quite what that means. Maybe the love you had at first.
Maybe this was a congregation that originally was very open,
very welcoming, but over time has become more closed off.
They've stopped loving their neighbors because their neighbors have been
giving them grief.
You're not where you used to be.
Is that something like that? There's behavior you used to be. Is that something like that.
There's behavior you used to have that was good.
You've lost that specific behavior.
I think kind of that outreach we might say today.
You were a congregation that had some outreach,
but you've tapered off in that.
I want you to turn it around.
Feels like an Alma five type.
That's at same sense.
Go back to the basics.
And then verse six, that will hateest the deeds of the Nickelatins. Probably
this is again, a theme we're going to see throughout here, this
has to do with eating food offered idols. They're filling
pressure to go to the temple of Artemis, for example, from
like first Corinthians eight, Paul has this conflict about what
to do with meat offered idols. And the the issue was this is where the parties were held
This is where your socials as a community would be and you were expected to be there and participate in this and
People are looking at you sideways because you're not going to the big community parties anymore
And there's people in Ephesus who are like well is it such a big deal?
Can we do this?
Can we accommodate a little bit?
Can't we go to the temple of Ephesus?
Just to have a party on Saturday,
then go to church on Sunday?
So the challenge here is accommodation,
assimilating with religion.
God's saying, no, no, you can't.
Okay, and he's like, good for you for not doing it.
Okay, you hate the people who are doing that.
Keep that up.
This is, I think, the biggest problem for these churches
is how do they live in the world, but not of the world?
If we kind of look for a modern takeaway,
I mean, this is something that Latter-day Saints,
you're gonna get a lot of pressure socially,
a lot of pressure politically,
a lot of people might look at you sideways
because you're not doing the things
that people think you should be doing.
So what should you do?
Should you accommodate a little bit,
or should you hold your ground
and do what you know you're supposed to do?
That's an age-old conflict here.
And some of these churches are doing better than others.
Some churches are doing, yeah, we're good.
We're not accommodating.
Other churches are, unfortunately, accommodating.
The Lord's gonna have some harsh things to say.
Then he closes out.
Every one of these closes out on a positive note.
But verse seven, he, the hath an ear,
let him hear with the spirit, say it,
unto the churches, to him that overcome.
And that'll be a constant theme.
There's something about overcoming here.
Will I give to eat of the tree of life,
which is in the midst of the paradise of God?
So we have this first promise of,
in some fashion, hearkney back to Genesis, back to Ezekiel, but also ahead to the
end of the book of Revelation, where we're told that in God's new kingdom, when
Zion's built on the earth, right on both sides of the street, was a tree of
life. So there's something about eternal life rests with me and I offer it to
those who can overcome the challenges that the world offers you.
Got it.
Who's next?
Inline for the letters.
Next in line is the Church of Smirna, and that everything all is well at the Church of Smirna.
These guys are doing great.
Verse 9, he says,
I know that works in tribulation and poverty.
Smirna was traditionally a very rich, prosperous city, but he says, you know, your poverty, I know the blasphemy.
This is probably the slander.
People are saying things about Christians
because they won't go to the temple, which is not necessarily about worship.
It's just eating at the temple is a civic responsibility,
and their Christians won't do it.
Of them which say they are Jews and are not,
because they're not true Israel in a sense,
because the idea here, because they haven't accepted Jesus,
in acceptance of Jesus, as Paul says,
is a mark of true Israel.
But they are the synagogue of Satan,
which is kind of harsh.
We want to be careful here.
Just get this very easily become anti-Jewish,
a little bit.
The idea is there's the congregation of the Lord,
where the righteous are,
and there's something called the synagogue of Satan,
where the wicked are,
and in apocalyptic literature,
this is one of the hallmarks.
Everything's very dualistic.
Like, there's good and there's bad,
and there's no middle ground.
There's black and there's white,
but there's no gray area.
You're either in the congregation of the Lord,
or you're in the synagogue of Satan,
church of the Lamb, church of the devil. That's very book of Mormon 1st Nephi 11. Yeah, the same. 1st Nephi 14. This or that? Yeah. Yep, absolutely. He says, look, verse 10,
be thou faith on to death, and I will give thee a crown of life. So here we have another nice
image of,
call it exaltation if you want to,
bring a lot of these saint lens into it.
That's the idea.
You will have a space in my new kingdom.
Probably the image here is of a laurel wreath.
In the ancient world, athletic competition,
the winner would be given a laurel wreath
to wear like a crown.
And that's probably the image.
We shouldn't see like a crown that a king would wear, but someone who's triumphed in a competition
is the idea. You've made it through, like Paul says, I brand the race. I finished my course.
I won the wrestling match. And here that same idea, you overcame the obstacles. And so
you get what winners get, which is a laurel wreath. But But in a sense dying is its own victory you die you move on and what do you get you get a you get a loral race?
You won the competition the people at smirna. They're doing okay
Yeah, these have been individualized
Ephesus it's you were doing well. You're not doing as well as you used to smirna. It's hey
You're doing really well keep going going. Yep. Absolutely. Okay.
It's first 12.
We get our third church, which is the church in Pergamum.
First 13, I know that it works without dwellest, even where Satan's seat is.
In Pergamum, there was a humongous altar to Zeus.
That's probably what he means here on their acropolis.
This big altar to Zeus, he calls Satan's seat. And he tells us that a man named Antipas was slain among you, probably as a result of persecution.
So that's probably where he says, Satan dwells in your city because one of my disciples, Antipas,
was killed there. So he has some harsh things to say about what's going on in Pergamum. We don't know who Antipas is, but something bad happens to him.
And as a result, again, the Lord has some harsh things to say about this.
Verse 14, I have a few things against these.
He says, because thou hast there them that hold the doctrine of Baileum.
And this takes us back again to Baileum in the Old Testament.
He lures Israel into apostasy by convincing them
to worship the Moabite gods.
And what the problem is assimilation.
They start to indulge in Moabite practices
because of the Moabite women.
And that seems to be the case here.
The people in Pergamum are assimilating
into common cultural practices, like eating things offered
unto idols. You're going along with it. Maybe they're even participating in the ritual
and the sacrifice, which for the Lord is a big no-no, to commit fornication, he says.
And that's probably idolatry, not fornication, the sense of anything immoral, sexual sense, but in the book of Revelation,
I think when we're talking about fornication, you'll see this with the image of the prostitute in Revelation 17 and 18,
probably more about idolatry than about anything else.
And they're feeling the pressure.
Something we can relate to, right, you feel the pressure from society to act in a certain way,
your neighbors are expecting to act a certain way, your coworkers expect you to act a certain
way. And in Pergamum, they're doing it. They're going along with what their
neighbors and coworkers wanted to do. And God has to step in here and say, you
can't do it.
You're different when you chose Christianity, you chose to be different. Stay
different.
You know, so verse 16, repent, or else I will come unto thee quickly, which does not sound like a good
thing. Okay, we'll fight against them with the sword of my mouth. That's a promise that only applies
to some people read this and say, well, this is the Lord saying he's going to second coming, it's going
to happen fast. It's just this church. He just says this church, I will come unto you quickly. But
notice what they get. This is fun. In verse 17, to him that overcome,
will I give to eat of the hidden manna? Not entirely sure what that means, but it suggests something
secret that the Lord is going to reveal. Are there echoes here to the Messianic banquet? When I come
and establish my kingdom, you're going to be part of it. Is it a reference to the manna that's
traditionally in the arch of the covenant? You'll be brought into the presence of the Lord in some I'm going to establish my kingdom. You're going to be part of it. Is it a reference to the manna that's traditionally
in the arch of the covenant?
Do you be brought into the presence of the Lord
in some aspect?
Of course, I will give him a white stone.
This is familiar to us from DNC 130.
What this perhaps means in context is when someone would be
put on trial, the way that you would decide if they were
acquitted or they were condemned, we should have
like a white stone and a black stone.
And if you cast the white stone, it was for acquittal. If you cast the black stone, it was for a verdict of guilty.
God is saying here, I'll give you a white stone meaning you will be acquitted. You'll be declared not guilty. You'll be vindicated.
You'll be judged as not guilty. And in that stone, a new name will be written, perhaps Jesus's own name, as we'll
see, could be a different name, which no man knows save a thee that receive a fit. So
there's a lot of fun things there. If we're using for Old Testament reference to
Syrizae 62, the Gentile shall see thy righteousness, all kings of thy glory, and now shall be
called by a new name. Perhaps something
of a kind to that, and you'll be given a crown of glory, a royal diadem in the hand of thy God,
Isaiah says. So perhaps something, again, like that is in mind here, to go back to Al-Mafive.
You have his image in your account and it's his name written on your forehead, so to speak.
That's kind of the idea to declareclare this day, whom you serve.
You can serve the broader community,
where you can be my disciple and serve me.
If you serve me, I'll claim you as my own.
I will be there for you when you need me.
Yeah, that is a different promise than the first two.
Yeah, there's a lot of fun stuff there, right?
Not that all of them aren't nice promises,
but those are a little bit more intriguing than
just a generic crown of righteousness or something like that.
Yeah, you're right.
Something you would pause and say, oh, what does he mean?
And it takes some time to figure that out.
What is this hidden man?
What is this white stone?
And of course, DNC 130, Joseph specifically addresses this.
The white stone mentioned in Revelation 2, 17
will become a year-end thummum to each individual
who receives one.
A white stone is given to each of those
who come into the celestial kingdom
where on a new name is written.
Joseph gives a standard interpretation
of this specific verse in DNC 130.
So again, a lot to play with there.
That's interesting.
I'm reading on Bible Hub, the pulpit commentary. He's referencing
trench. Trench is explanation of the white stone as an illusion to the Yermen Thumum, which the
high priest wore. So this isn't something that's unique just to Joseph Smith. It is not. That's the
case. You think of the high priest. He has the breastplate. And in the pouches of Yermen Thumum.
And the Yermen Thumum would work because the priest would ask a yes or no question.
And if he pulls out the white stone, it's a yes.
He pulls out the black stone, it's a no or something like that.
And that's how you would divinate in ancient Israel.
That's that idea.
There's a priestly significance to this in the sense that the white stone is the Yermen
Thumam.
And we saw in chapter one where he says, I'll make you kings and priests. Crown of righteousness. Now a white stone is the Euryman Thumma. And we saw in chapter one where he says, I'll make you kings and priests,
crown of righteousness, now a white stone.
Okay, we're getting these images of kingship and priesthood
that are being stressed in these chapters.
The idea of this being the Euryman Thumma
is not necessarily unique for Latter-day Saints.
There's a long interpretation actually
of the white stone having Euryman Thumma implications.
Wow, that's great.
That's a lot of fun.
All right, so we're on our fourth church here in verse 18.
Yeah, this is the longest of these individual letters,
and it's the most severe, the most serious,
which is dressed specifically to Thyatira.
And as we can see in verse 20, this is the reason why.
And notwithstanding, I have a few things against the because thou
sufferest that woman Jezebel. Probably not her real name, and using symbolism here, Jezebel
brings up images of what? She's like the wicked woman of the Old Testament, right? Yeah,
yeah, idolatry. They introduce an idolatry to the Israelites. She calls herself a prophetess, which is not unusual.
The Old Testament is full of prophetesses.
Miriam Holda, Isaiah's wife, it's called a prophetess.
To teach and seduce my servants to commit fornication,
probably not sexual but religious infidelity,
and to eat things sacrifice to idols.
We see the same problem occurring.
Do we accommodate with society or not?
Not just about eating at Texas Roadhouse,
right? I know, thanks, favorite restaurant.
Hey, there's more implied here
when it comes to eating meat off for the idols.
He says, I gave her space to repent,
but she repented not.
Then verse 22, which is a difficult verse,
but I will cast her into a bed She repented not. Then verse 22, which is a difficult verse,
but I will cast her into a bed,
and them that commit adultery
with her into great tribulation,
except they repent of their deeds,
and I will kill her children with death.
This is the PG-13 part you were telling us about.
Yes, this is part where it gets a little bit tricky.
And depending on how you interpret this,
you could say that anybody is
the Jezebel and talk about what's going to happen to them and have some vindication in punishing them.
The bed here probably just means a sick bed. That's how it's used in the Old Testament.
And I will kill or show them with death, probably meaning plague or sickness again.
Either Lord will bring a plague upon them if they don't repent. That's not
that unusual. But the language itself just casts her on a bed and I'll kill her children. I mean,
that's pretty intense. But the promise is made to Thyatira, just as this made to the other churches
in verse 27, if you overcome, I'll give you power over the nations. In other words, I as the Messiah will share my authority, and he shall rule them with
a rod of iron.
Even though things are problematic in Thyatira, they have their problems, and they're big
problems.
The Lord still holds out hope.
There's still time to repent.
There's still time to turn around.
And what's the promise?
You can co-rule at my side as the Messiah.
And that's the promise? You can co-rule at my side as the Messiah.
And that's pretty cool. Nick, with this letter, I can see my children going, wow, is the Lord really going to wipe out these people who sin? Could I take this to be just a contrast of sin versus
righteousness and what sin brings and what righteousness brings.
It goes to how you interpret the Old Testament as a whole.
When we see the Lord bringing plagues upon people,
why do those literal plagues
or those more symbolic of the sinful behavior
of a community?
The consequences of sin.
Exactly.
The absence of the spirit or something.
Yeah, I'm more comfortable with that, I think.
Yeah, me too.
And I would strictly be saying, the Lord is going to specifically kill your children.
Just more that, be aware that what you do has implications upon your family.
Generations.
Behavior, you demonstrate has implications upon your children and their children and their
children.
There's implications if you follow Jezebel.
If you follow idolatry,
then your kids are going to have to struggle with that. And a plague will come upon them,
and they'll have to deal with the consequences. I would probably lean more towards that
interpretation here, probably. Now, me too.
All right. We have three more churches.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.