War in Heaven
The saints overcome the Dragon through the death of the Lamb and their faithful witness even unto death – Revelation 12:11.
In Chapter 12 of the book of Revelation,
the “sign of the Great Red Dragon” appears in the heavens, signifying
that the “war” has commenced between his forces and those of the “son”
who is destined to “shepherd the nations.” But the result of Satan’s
attempt to destroy the “son” is his expulsion from “heaven,” and
the proclamation of the victory of the “brethren.”
The “war”
between the “Dragon” and “Michael and his angels” is the heavenly
counterpart to the conflicts on the earth described in the larger passage - the
Devil’s attempt to destroy the “son,” the woman “clothed with the sun,”
and the “rest of her seed.”
And
this cosmic battle is also echoed in the daily struggles of the seven churches
of Asia, as recorded in the seven letters in chapters 2 and 3, both in the persecuting
activities of their opponents and the deceptions propagated by deceivers within
the churches (e.g., “Jezebel… who teaches my servants to eat things offered
to idols”).
EXPULSION
And
the description of the “war” uses language from the prophet Daniel’s
vision of Michael when he stood firm in his fight on behalf of God’s people:
- “And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince who stands for the children of your people; and there shall be a time of trouble such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and at that time your people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book” - (Daniel 12:1).
- And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels going forth to war with the dragon; and the dragon warred and his angels, and they prevailed not, neither was their place found anymore in heaven” - (Revelation 12:7-8).
- “Then was the iron, the clay, the brass, the silver, and the gold, broken in pieces together, and became like the chaff of the summer threshing-floors; and the wind carried them away so that no place was found for them: and the stone that smote the image became a great mountain, and filled the whole earth” - (Daniel 2:35).
Having
failed in his attempt to destroy the “son,” no place remains for the “Dragon”
in the courts of heaven. The description of his expulsion alludes to the interpretation
of King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream by Daniel.
The
Babylonian ruler dreamed of a great image composed of several materials, which represented
four “kingdoms.” A “stone cut out without hands” smote the image,
meaning all four kingdoms represented by it, and it crushed them into dust. After that,
“no place was found for them”
and the stone became a great mountain that filled the whole earth, representing
God’s everlasting kingdom - (Daniel 2:35).
The
book of Revelation graphically portrays the victory of God’s kingdom,
beginning in chapter 12 with the birth and exaltation of the messianic “son.”
But first, the “Dragon” must be defeated.
THE SERPENT
Satan is
called “the Ancient Serpent,” an identification that links him to the “serpent”
in the Garden of Eden. Like Eve, the “woman clothed with the sun” is the
mortal enemy of the “Dragon” - (Genesis 3:1, 3:14).
But he
is also named the “Devil and Satan.” The terms mean “slanderer” and
“adversary,” respectively. In Eden, he claimed that God’s warning not to eat
fruit from the “tree of knowledge of good and evil” was untrue, and thus,
he slandered Yahweh by insinuating that He had ulterior motives and spoke falsely
- (Genesis 3:1-5).
The
Devil is the one who is “deceiving the whole habitable earth.” This, also,
echoes the Genesis story when Eve excused her disobedience by blaming the Serpent
- “the Serpent deceived me,
and I ate.” The reference to the “habitable earth” demonstrates that
humanity has always been the target of the Serpent’s deceptive activities - (Genesis
3:13).
Satan is
also called the “Great Red Dragon,” an echo of Ezekiel 29:1-3 in
which the king of Egypt is compared to a “great dragon.” This is an
example of how Revelation folds imagery from the history of Israel into
its narrative about the “Lamb” and his “saints.”
CHRIST’S VICTORY
In the
vision, the expulsion of Satan did not occur at a point in the remote past, nor
is it still waiting for a future event. As elsewhere in the New Testament, his
defeat resulted from the death, resurrection, and exaltation of Jesus, the “Lamb” - (Luke
10:18, Colossians 2:14-15, Hebrews 2:14, Revelation 5:5-14).
The “casting”
of the Dragon from heaven parallels the earlier image of a “great mountain
burning with fire that was cast into the sea,” and the picture of
Satan being “cast into the Abyss” at the start of the “thousand years”- (Revelation 8:8, 20:3).
The “loud
voice heard in heaven” interprets the vision as it breaks into a hymn of
praise, an interpretive pattern found elsewhere in the book.
The
hymn declares the defeat of the “Dragon” by “Christ” and the
latter’s resultant victory. The Devil has lost his legal basis to accuse the “brethren”
before God. Now, they are declared “not guilty” in the heavenly court, and therefore,
they are exempt from the “second death” - (Revelation 1:10, 2:11,
5:6-14, 7:9-17,14:2-5, 15:3-4, 20:6).
With Christ’s victory, the Devil’s role as the “accuser of the brethren” has come to an end. No longer does he or death have a legal claim on their life.
Moreover,
his defeat means the inauguration of the “kingdom of our God” and the commencement
of Christ’s reign (“Now, has come the
salvation, the power, and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of his
Christ”).
However,
though knocked down, the “Dragon” is not yet out of the fight. Following
his expulsion, he assumes the role of the deceiver of the “whole habitable
earth,” and he uses it to persecute the “woman” and her “seed.”
HIS REIGN
The
hymn’s language echoes the messianic promises from the second Psalm, and it reiterates
words heard earlier when the seventh trumpet sounded - “The kingdom of
the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall
reign unto the ages of ages.”
While the kingdom may wait for its consummation at the end of the age, its commencement began with the death and exaltation to the “throne” of the messianic “son.”
The
martyrs of the fifth seal were told to wait for vindication “a little while until
the number should be made full of their fellow-servants also…who were going to
be slain as even they.” The “little time” allotted to the “Dragon”
during which he deceived the “habitable earth” refers to this same
period, as do the “twelve hundred and sixty days,” the “forty-two
months,” and the “time, times and half a time” during which he wages
“war” on the “saints.”
However,
from now on, as the Devil persecutes “those who have the testimony of Jesus,”
he only succeeds in sealing his own doom, and thus, demonstrating the victory
achieved already by the “son” - (Revelation 6:9, 11:2-3, 12:6-14, 13:5-6).
Those
who are “tabernacling in heaven” refers to the righteous in contrast to the
ungodly, “those who dwell on the earth.” The reference is not spatial;
it does not refer to angels or disembodied spirits.
Instead,
the “saints” who follow the “Lamb” are the ones who now “tabernacle
in heaven.” Their lives are oriented toward and belong to God, not the
fallen world order or the “Dragon.” They belong to the realm from which
Satan has been ejected, and no longer are they under his legal jurisdiction - (Revelation
7:15, 11:1-2, 13:6).
Finally,
the declaration of victory for the “saints” provides the explanation for how they “overcome”
their “accuser,” the Devil. They “overcame him by the blood of the
Lamb, and because of the word of their testimony; and they loved not their life
even unto death.”
The “brethren,” including the overcoming “saints”
from the “churches of Asia,” overcome the “Dragon” because of the
sacrificial death of Jesus, and by giving faithful “testimony” before
their accusers even if doing so means personal loss, economic deprivation, and martyrdom.
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