Delphi Wesleyan Church
## Overview - Lecture focused on Revelation 19:11–21 and its theological implications. - Main themes: Christ as warrior-king, justice and mercy of God, human responsibility, repentance, and final judgment. - Purpose: Help students understand how the revelation of Christ’s return fits with God’s character and human accountability. ## Key Passages Read - Revelation 19:11–21 (summary) - Vision of heaven opening; rider on a white horse called Faithful and True. - Rider judges with justice, wages war, eyes like blazing fire, many crowns. - Robe dipped in blood; name: the Word of God; King of kings, Lord of lords. - Armies of heaven follow, wielding a sword from his mouth, ruling with an iron scepter. - Angel calls birds to the “great supper” to eat the flesh of the defeated. - Beast and false prophet captured and thrown into the lake of fire; rest killed by the sword from the rider’s mouth. ## Main Topics and Points - Revelation’s Purpose - Revelation = revelation of Jesus Christ (Rev. 1:1). - Its goal: show servants what must soon take place and call for heed and obedience (Rev. 1:3). - The Paradox: Christ as Loving Savior and Righteous Judge - Same Jesus who died for sinners returns as righteous judge and warrior. - God’s love includes justice; patience is extended for repentance but has limits. - The first coming was atonement; the second coming is judgment. - Just War and Justice - Topic framed by question: Is there such a thing as a just war? - Historical reference: Crusades presented as attempts to defend persecuted Christians (speaker’s view). - Biblical picture: Christ wages a just war against persistent, unrepentant evil. - Characteristics of the Returning Christ (from Rev. 19) - Faithful and True: faithful to covenant promises and people. - Judge and Warrior: executes justice and wages war against evil. - Eyes like blazing fire: omniscient, piercing vision of truth and sin. - Many crowns: supreme authority over all rulers. - Robe dipped in blood: interpreted by most scholars as the blood of those judged. - Sword from mouth / iron scepter: authoritative word and firm rule. - Title: King of kings and Lord of lords. - Human Responsibility and Accountability - Freedom to choose implies responsibility and eventual accountability. - God’s patience aims at repentance; persistent rejection leads to judgment. - Warnings to churches in Revelation 2–3 show rewards for victory and consequences for failure. - Examples of failure: cowardice (taking mark of the beast), tolerance of false teaching, worldliness, and indifference. - The Final Judgment Scenes - Gathering of armies against Christ, defeat of beast and false prophet. - Two cast alive into lake of fire; others killed by sword from Christ’s mouth. - Bird imagery: vultures gather for the great supper—symbol of total defeat and exposure. - Universal scope: all social classes—free and slave, great and small—face judgment.
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