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INTRODUCTION TO SERMONS ON REVELATION FOR GROWTH GROUP DISCUSSION

The Book of the Revelation was written around 96AD by the apostle John on the Island of Patmos, not far from Ephesus in the then Roman Province of Asia.

The reason for writing was to encourage the seven churches in that province in the face of cruel persecution by the Roman authorities who were forcing all citizens to swear loyalty to the Empire by publicly affirming that Caesar, in this case Domitian, was a god. The penalty for refusal was death.

The book really is a letter to be read out in the seven churches and includes a short letter to each of the churches dealing with their particular problems. It is, by definition, a pastoral letter, not some puzzle book offering secret insights into various future events.

It is best known for the fantastic imagery, the strange use of numbers and various multiples of them, as a means of conveying its message.

The first point to make is that these images are not to be taken literally. They are a kind of security code for other things that the readers understood but which outsiders could not.

The task of the reader is to understand the reality behind the images.

Much of the imagery is taken from the Old Testament. Some of the rest is able to be understood with a little cross referencing. The meaning of some of what is left has been lost and we just have accept that. That is not a serious problem because no vital doctrine or message is lost by our not knowing what all the images mean. Often similar points are made by using other images from other parts of the letter or elsewhere in the Bible.

Another important principle of interpretation is to see that the main burden of this letter is about the past, namely Christ’s victory over evil in his death and resurrection, and that he is ruling in honour and glory in heaven now. The titles, The Lamb that was Slain and The Lion of Judah of the Root of David, encapsulates this reality.

The letter is about the pastoral and personal challenges facing the members of the seven churches, mostly from the threat of persecution. That is to say, it is more concerned about helping the readers cope with their troubles than revealing to curious readers, far removed from their predicament, secrets about when and how the world will end.

There are of course several references to the return of Christ to judge the world, to put down evil once and for all and to elevate his faithful people to the place of honour around the throne of God and of the Lamb. These promises are also clothed in dramatic imagery, most of which can be worked out. Their meanings accord with other parts of the New Testament.

An important feature of The Revelation is the way it is structured. For example:

Chapters 1 – 3 contain a fearsome vision of Christ, and a about their various letter to each of the seven churches problems.

Chapters 4 – 5 contain a vision of heaven, focusing in turn on God as creator, and on Jesus as saviour, portrayed as the one who was slain and now lives and as the Lion of Judah, the long promised king who rules the world.

Chapters 6 – 7 speaks of the Seven Seals, depicting the war upon people.

Chapters 7 – 11 speaks of Seven Trumpets, depicting chaos in creation.

Chapters 12 – 14 speaks of Seven Signs of persecution of the people of the Lamb.

Chapters 15 – 16 speaks of seven plagues depicting destruction of the cosmos.

Chapters 17 – 20 speaks of the destruction of Babylon (ancient Rome), the Beast, false prophet and the Dragon.

It is very important to understand these events are not one after another but concurrent. In other words, they depict events that have been occurring in one way or another ever since the fall in Genesis 3 and will continue up until when Christ returns.

It is this realization which makes The Revelation so relevant to us today. Christians of every age have had to deal with satanic opposition and with the inherent physical weaknesses of this fallen world. We need to know that the return of Jesus will bring all this to an end.

Chapters 21 – 22 speaks of the new age of peace and tranquility which Christians will enjoy when our Lord returns. They are depicted as the New Jerusalem coming out from God.

Bishop Paul Barnett has written a brilliant book called Revelation Apocalypse Now and Then. He gives the key points to understanding this wonderful book as follows:

  1. Recognise its pastoral intention to encourage believers to keep following the Lamb.
  2. Acknowledge that John has intimate knowledge of the churches and their cities.
  3. The ability to decode the symbols of the book – numbers, colours and animals.
  4. The cycle (war, chaos, persecution) each depict the 1,000 years, [the period between Christ’s earthly life and his return] concluding with his people triumphant in heaven.
  5.  The letter combines the Preterist (present), fururist (future) and Historicist (past).

QUESTIONS FOR GROWTH GROUP DISCUSSION

  1. Looking at what is said about Jesus in Chapter 1, and comparing it to what is written in Daniel 7:9-14 for the Jews suffering in exile, what promises are available to us that surpass what the exiles had in their day?
  2. When looking at the description of Jesus in the vision in 1:12 to 16, what meaning do you think would be conveyed to the members of the seven churches as they heard it read to them?
  3. The churches who received the Revelation were experiencing persecution. Observing how things are going in our day, what kinds of suffering do you think Christians in Australia could be called upon to experience in the coming years?
  4. How might we prepare for times of trial?

Romans 3:1-20 – God is not the unfaithful one

A breakdown on this passage was not supplied. It may be added to this blog for the sake of completion but the timeliness of the post is missed.

Romans 3:3 was a tricky sentence to untangle but Paul is stating that God cannot be blamed for unfaithfulness to the covenant when it is the Jews who have been unfaithful – let God be true and every man a liar!

Romans 3:20 marks the conclusion of Paul’s second point of the gospel – that everybody is guilty of sin especially the Jew – since the law can’t save you, it only reveals our sin.

Romans 1:1-15 – The Start of New Things

Hello everyone and welcome to the first mailout from this blog site – Growth Group Resources. These emails are aimed to help you and not to bog you down with extra work! The aim is to feed timely information to your email inbox in order to prepare for your upcoming Growth Group meetings. It is not mandatory information! It is here to help if you need or want it.

I expect that most groups will be getting back together in this first week of February. Since it is a new year it is a good opportunity to restart your group. Even if all of your members are the same from last year, it can be very helpful to welcome the group and go over some basics to make the year feel like a new beginning.

Orientate your group to the group’s culture.

I have found it helpful in the past to talk to the members of my groups about what they expect for the group – what they expect of themselves, of others in the group and of the leaders. You may help the group to uncover areas like growing in gospel maturity, growing in number and in caring for one another pastorally.

Make everybody feel at home. See if you need to organise a supper/morning tea roster. Discuss what you will be doing each time you meet. Discuss how you might follow each other up or pray for one another.

I think it is always a good idea at the beginning of the year to begin the group again. A fresh start!

Beginning a new book of the bible

We will be reading through the book of Romans all year as a church – this is unusual because we would normally divide the year up between Old and New Testaments and between books of the bible and topics. I’m excited to be devoting the bulk of this year to studying this one book because it has been such a life changing book for so many people – maybe you have a story of how it has helped your faith.

In your first study for the year, you may like to help the group get an overview of the whole book of Romans. You could do this in three steps 1) chat about what you know about the book 2) Read Romans 1:1-15 and ask a few observational questions 3) take a helicopter tour through the whole book via a list of memorable verses. You may not have time to do all of what is suggested in this post, so think through what you want to get out of the time together and how you want the meeting to end.

Firstly – Talk about what you know about the book of Romans

Discuss what you all know about the apostle Paul who wrote it. Summarize some points from an introduction to the book from a study bible, or from the New Bible Dictionary. You might discuss some stories of famous people who were influenced by this book (see an article by The Influence of the Letter to the Romans on four theologians – also make use of a discussion of The Theme of Romans_morris).

Secondly – Read and discuss Romans 1:1-15

Read Romans 1:1-7

What do these verses teach us about Paul, the gospel and about Jesus Christ?

 

Read Romans 1:8-15

What do these verses tell us about the relationship between Paul and the church in Rome? Ie, what is he thankful for? What does he hope for?

 

What does Paul see as his primary job description?

 

Thirdly – Look up some memorable verses in Romans.

You might just look up the verses in the first 8 chapters and then let the group read the rest on their own during the week.

Romans
1:16, 1:17,
3:10-12, 3:20, 3:23-24
4:25, 5:8, 6:14, 6:23, 8:1-2, 8:16, 8:17, 8:28, 8:38-39
9:14-16, 10:11-13
12:2, 12:9-10, 13:1, 13:10, 13:11, 14:8, 14:17, 15:20
16:25-27

Prayer for the week:

Dear Father God, thank you for the good news that you have promised from ancient times – the good news regarding your Son who is our Lord by faith. Help us to serve you by knowing the gospel in order to share it with others. We look forward to all that we will learn from Romans and ask for your Spirit of understanding and encouragement. May we also be mutually encouraged by one another’s faith this year. Amen.