Read: Revelation 1:12-20. Visions
of God: “I saw.”*
In last week's lesson we read that John was instructed to "Write what you see." This week we understand what it was that he saw, that is, Visions of God. A study of these visions as well as the background visions of the Old Testament is one of the most beautiful and inspiring studies in the Bible. How did John "see" these visions? They were given as manifestations of Light.
Seeing requires
light. Light, in the Scriptures, is of a threefold nature: First, the literal light which gives sight to the eyes, revealing natural
things; secondly, the light of understanding; thirdly, the light of spiritual
revelation. By the light of the eyes man is oriented to his natural
surroundings; by the light of understanding he may know abstractions such as
truth and beauty; by the light of spiritual revelation, he may know God. What John saw was through spiritual revelation.
Literal light
requires natural eyesight; the light of understanding requires access to the
means of illumination usually by the aid of a teacher; spiritual light requires
the mediation of the Holy Ghost Who will "lead you into all truth." Literal
meaning may be received by any capable of communication; understanding and perception
of truth may be received by those capable of translating symbols; but spiritual
revelation comes only through a peculiar and particular relationship and
orientation between God and Man.
Mankind ever
complains as did Job that God is hidden, but it is
not because God chooses to be hidden. It is rather that Man has strayed from
his appointed place and therefore cannot see, for the manifestation of God's
light requires a peculiar orientation just as the appearance of the rainbow or
the northern lights require certain conditions of orientation between the
elements of the phenomena and the viewer. The revelation of the glory of God,
the Light Most Precious, is the supreme
experience of Beauty.
The Book of the
Revelation of Jesus Christ describes the manifestation of
the Light Most Precious. He is manifest in
Light as God is also ever manifest in Light. Jesus is The Light of the World,
and we, His people, are the bearers of His Light, the most awesome privilege
possible.
The symbols of the Revelation of Jesus Christ must therefore be understood as symbols of Light, and not, as has often been supposed, grotesque caricatures of
strange creatures. The symbols are those of the natural lights of the starry heavens:
the sun, moon, stars, planets and constellations. Every earthly symbol is too
poor to reveal Christ in His glory, and even the
symbols of the starry heavens cannot fully reveal Him, for they, too, are at
best only symbols, the penultimate but not the ultimate, for:
Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard,
neither have entered the heart of Man the things which God hath prepared for
them that love Him. But God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit: for the
Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God, (1Corinthians 2:9).
We must now see
Christ in symbols for we are under the
veil, which is our flesh.
For now we see through a glass
darkly, but then face to face: now, I know in part, but then shall I know even
as also I am known, (1Corinthians 13:12).
Even as the flesh
is a veil to us, so also is the heavens a veil in the sense of being the
clothing of God: "Who coverest
thyself with light as with a garment: who stretchest out the heavens like a
curtain," (Psalm 104:2). God is clothed with
light and the heavens are His garment, or curtain. On this view, then, the most
logical way to "unveil" Christ is through this
"curtain" and the unveiling is the display of that dazzling heavenly
Light, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Although in the symbol
the lights are those of the veil, in the reality of the Spirit the veil is
removed.
Images
In receiving the
Vision, or Revelation, we must be cautioned against concrete images of God for these were
forbidden by the second commandment. There was ever, in the writings of the Old
Testament, a care taken not to give the manifestation of God a form which could
be taken for an idol. The fact cannot be overemphasized that God is a Spirit
and therefore cannot be confined to any form. When God revealed Himself in a
visible form, according to the Scriptures, He revealed Himself in mediums of
Light which, while visible, could
never be taken as an idol-form neither could it be made by the works of men's
hands. We may safely say that God is always revealed in some form of light and
there is no other visible form in which He has revealed Himself.
Those revelations
of light included color, reflections, and luminous displays such as that of fire,
smoke, or shaped light such as the rainbow or the shining of precious jewels or
the glow of precious metals. This
manifestation of light in which God shewed Himself was His visible glory.
(His glory, however, was also manifest in other than visible forms, for
example, the audible Voice and the written Word.)
Before sin brought
about the necessity of the veil, God walked with Adam in an open way, but
afterwards He only revealed His Light, or His glory, which might
also be interpreted His garment. Repeatedly
we are told that no man hath seen God.
Moses prayed: "I beseech thee, shew me thy glory,"
(Exodus 33:18), for he was afraid that to see God meant certain death. How
marvelous it is when God breaks through the veil of our doubting flesh to shew
us His glory. This is what we see in the Revelation, for Christ is "the brightness
of His glory, and the express image of His person," (Hebrews 1:3).
Appearances of God in Light
When God appeared
to the seventy elders of Israel along with Moses, Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, they "saw the God of heaven" but amazingly, He is not described!
Rather, the surrounding light is described: "There
was under his feet as it were a paved work of a sapphire stone, and as it were
the body of heaven in his clearness," (Exodus 24:10).
Again, when Isaiah saw his wonderful vision, he,
too, hesitates to describe the Lord Himself.
He says:
In the year that King Uzziah
died, I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his
train filled the temple. Above it stood the seraphim: each one had six wings;
with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet and with
twain he did fly. And one cried unto another and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the
Lord of hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory...for mine eyes have seen
the King, the Lord of hosts, (Isaiah 6:1-3, 5d).
We marvel that
the prophet evades the central subject of the vision and describes the
surrounding scene instead!
Ezekiel also says: "As I was among the captives by the river of Chebar, ...the
heavens were opened and I saw visions of God," (Ezekiel 1:1). He gives a lengthy description of the scene
but when he describes the central figure it is in terms of light:
And above the firmament over
their heads there was the likeness of a throne, in appearance like sapphire,
and seated above the likeness of a throne was a likeness as it were of a human
form. And upward from what had the appearance of his loins I saw as it were
gleaming bronze, like the appearance of fire enclosed round about; and downward
from what had the appearance of his loins I saw as it were the appearance of
fire, and there was brightness round about him. Like the appearance of the bow that
is in the cloud on the day of rain, so was the appearance of the brightness
round about. Such was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord.
And when I saw it, I fell upon my face, and I heard the voice of one speaking, (Ezekiel 1:26-28, RSV).
In Ezekiel 8:2 he again describes the
vision of God:
A likeness as the appearance
of fire: from the appearance of his loins even downward, fire: from the
appearance of his loins even upward, as the appearance of brightness, as the
colour of amber."
Then in chapter 40
he simply states that: "Behold,
there was a Man, whose appearance was like the appearance of brass."
When Daniel saw the Ancient of Days, he
could but describe the light and colour:
Whose garment was white as
snow, and the hair of his head like the pure wool: his throne was like the
fiery flame, and his wheels as burning fire.
A fiery stream issued and came forth from before him, (Daniel 7:9-10).
Here the only
thing not described as pure light is that his hair was like the pure wool.
Although we might visualize the texture of the wool or its warmth, the writer
here, in this context, no doubt had the whiteness of wool in mind, the colour
or glow.
We should point
out that these visions of the glory
or Light of God were from heaven; they
were high and lifted up. In Ezekiel's vision, for example, he gives a full description of the cherubim, the chariots, wheels, and
turning fire, giving a feeling of swift and powerful motion. These cherubim or living creatures are not hairy animals
but rather are "moving things,"
i.e. the constellations of the stars and their movements in the starry heavens.
The wheel itself is the great turning sky, and the
wheel-in-the-middle-of-the-wheel is the Lord Jesus Christ, symbolized by the polar circle upon which the apparent movement of
the whole universe is turned, The Almighty, the Pantokrator.
In all these
visions, we see that the highest symbols possible to be used in describing God
are the symbols of the starry heavens. It is these same symbols which are used
in the Book of Revelation of Jesus Christ.
*(For other visions of God see also Exodus 13:21-2; 14:19, 24; 33:9-10,
20-23; 24:10-11; Psalm 78:14; 105:39; Isaiah 6:1-13; Ezekiel 1; 26-28; 8:2; Daniel 7:9-10; Acts 22:6-11; 1John
1:1-2.)
This lesson is an edited excerpt from my book Revelation In Context.
This lesson is an edited excerpt from my book Revelation In Context.
My Book is available at the Living Word Bookstore in Shawnee, Oklahoma and is also available online at www.amazon.com or www.xulonpress.com.
Free downloads are available at www.revelationincontext.sermon.net .
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