Revelation 22:7: “Behold I am coming soon: Blessed is the one who keeps the words of the prophecy of this book.” 

Understanding the text

Christ says, “I am coming soon.”  But it’s been two thousand years since John wrote down the things he saw on a particular Sunday in the first century.  The final day of judgement has not come.  Unless… is Christ talking about the final day of judgment here?

One of the major failures in conservative interpretation of the apocalyptic sections in scripture is ignoring the time markers in the text.  They use passages like “to the Lord, a day is like a thousand years,” to supplement their view that these God gave these passages from his time-perspective rather than speaking with man’s notion of time.  Or they lift these time markers out of their original contexts and argue that God’s people have to have the attitude that Christ’s coming is always near.  They, then, are guilty of abstracting the time markers from their original context.

On the other hand, Liberal text-critics have long argued that the early church believed in an imminent coming. Christ’s final judgment was coming within the 1st or 2nd generation of Christians.     Christ himself says, “Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place” (Matthew 24:34).  We can think of a passage like Romans 13, “For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed.” Also, 1st Thessalonians 5, where Paul encourages the Thessalonians to watch out for the Day of the Lord. 

Of course, the problem with the liberal interpretation is their belief that the church was wrong to believe that Christ was coming soon.   If Paul and Christ were mistaken about the coming of Christ, how are we to trust in the other promises of God? 

There is a third option: Christ did come soon, but not in the way we think of the coming of Christ.  We are reading the final coming of Christ into this text. The truth is a lot of the apocalyptic sections in scripture refer to the imminent judgment of God upon the city of Jerusalem. Christ came to call his own to himself, but his own did not receive him. Many continued to reject God, when through his church, God called upon them to repent of their hard hearts and believe in the one they had crucified (Acts 2:36).  Further, they persecuted the church of Christ.  God is now coming in judgment.  In Revelation, God prepares the church for the trials that are coming.  

Christ’s coming in 70 A. D.  in no way undermines the truth that he is finally coming again to judge the living and the dead.    In 1 Corinthians 15 and Revelation 20:11-15, Christ promises that the final judgment is still coming.  The judgment upon Jerusalem is a foretaste of that judgment.

This view doesn’t answer every question we might have, but it is by far more satisfactory than any other view.  The scripture proves its own integrity.  It is hard to argue that there is no sense in the New Testament of the coming of Christ.  Here we have confirmation that the scripture means what it says. Just as day means day in Genesis 1, so soon means soon in Revelation 22:7. 

However, those who are used to the view that we ought to expect Christ’s final return tomorrow are often left wondering how to apply Christ’s words here to their own lives.  How is it a comfort to us today that Christ came upon the clouds to judge Jerusalem in 70 A.D?

The comfort of the text

Christ proved his Lordship by fulfilling his promise to judge Jerusalem.  Just as God provides proofs of the cross and the resurrection, so he provides proof of the ascension of Christ.  God vindicates those who believe in his name, by destroying the temple, the other institution that claims God’s name.  Christ also proves that he continues to be with the church.  He preserves her through the terrible persecutions of the Jews and the Romans. Even though she experienced great tribulation, Christ proved that he would protect her to the end.  God comforts the church today with the knowledge that he has vindicated his church. He will vindicate her again, even until the final day.

God gives us a perspective on how he works through the church in history.  “In history” is the important word here.  We are not merely a small group of elect travelling through this world in order to get to heaven, we are on the mission of Christ to reconcile the world to himself.  If we abstract the words “I am coming soon” from the text and see this as a reference to final judgment instead of Christ’ active coming in history, we can lose the importance of the work Christ is doing through the church to reconcile the nations to himself.

Through the fall of the Roman Empire, God demonstrated that his church was bigger than the Roman Empire.  In the Reformation, God proved that he could save a church that had forgotten the centrality of Christ. Through the modern age, God has expanded his church, despite the predictions of the death of Christianity.   God is using the war on terror. God is using failing governments. And God is using the Covid-19 crisis for the sake of his church.  God does not wait until the last day to vindicate his church, but he is actively at work in history. 

We can think of the vision in Daniel 2.  The stone, Christ, that God uses to tumble over the nations of this world, becomes the foundation for a mighty mountain.  God is working in history through the suffering of his saints to vindicate his saints.  God in Christ is convicting the world of sin and calling all men to repentance. 

Revelation reveals a cycle of contraction and expansion.  Through the generations Christ brings the saints into various tribulations.  At the same time, Christ uses those tribulations to purify his church, but more, to witness to his work.  Christ brings his saints through tribulation so he might vindicate them. Once God has vindicated the saints, there is a new outpouring of blessing. This new blessing is followed by a new desire among the nations to serve God. We can think of the vindication of the Jews in the book of Esther. Many convert to Judaism at that moment.

 In this way, God comforts us that he is using our suffering to strengthen his church.  We reflect Christ, in that through the cross, through tribulation, we point to the salvation of God. We re-affirm here, as well, that this is not through our strength. It is, rather, an application fo the salvation won on the cross of Christ. 

That is how we are to understand the current viral crisis.  God is doing this for the sake of his church. He will vindicate the righteous one who continues to do righteousness, the holy one who continues to be holy.  “Blessed are those who wash their robes so they can have access to the tree fo life and can enter into the city by the gates.”  Wash your robes by placing your trust in the Lord Jesus Christ.  Our Lord, who lives and reigns with the great Father of all, with the Holy Spirit, calls you to “Come, and drink of the water of life.”