Sermon Bible Commentary
Revelation 9:15
The Triumph of Christianity.
This book of the Apocalypse is confessedly one of those Scriptures that Scripture itself speaks of as "hard to be understood." Yet it must not on that account be neglected. Nay, perhaps, on that very account it is deserving of the most painstaking study.
I. Note well the topography, or, as I might truly say, the geography, of the text. The event concerning which this seventh angel is sounding, and which occasions these great voices of jubilation in heaven, is not an event which is happening in the region of heaven; but it is an event which is to occur on this earth. They are rejoicing over this event which is thus foreshadowed: that "the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ." Through the whole of Scripture, it is this earth, which was the scene of the usurper's conquest, and the scene of the Redeemer's conflict with him, and the scene of the Redeemer's travail, and toil, and agony, and shame, and death, and the scene of all His Church's conflicts and sufferings, that is yet to be the theatre of His triumphs. He is not to win in some ghostly region far away, and leave this world to the devil or to ashes. But here, in this tangible world, is He yet to triumph, and over the field of His sufferings is He yet to wield His sceptre. The prayer that has been going up from the Church for two millenniums shall yet receive its glorious answer, "Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven."
II. Let me next observe that, as an earnest of the final triumph, there has already been a partial fulfilment of this prophecy. Has nothing been done yet to make "the kingdoms of this world the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ"? Take a map of Europe and see; take the page of history and see. All along the line there has been victory. Though the enemy has vastly outnumbered the Church's little armies, and though there has been hard fighting, and though it has suffered reverses and repulses, and though its sufferings have been great and its martyrs many, yet defeat it has never known up till now. And though the battle is still prolonged, and its final victory not actually grasped, yet all is tending that way, and the issue cannot be doubtful. The Church's
"Battle once begun,
Bequeathed from bleeding sire to son,
Though baffled oft, is ever won."
R. Glover, Christian World Pulpit,vol. xxviii., p. 371.
(with 1 Corinthians 15:24; 1 Corinthians 15:28)
The Coming of the Kingdom the Sure Hope of the Church.
When we read these passages, "The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of His Christ; and He shall reign for ever and ever," and again, "Then cometh the end, when He shall have delivered up the kingdom to the Father, and God shall be all and in all," we are transported in thought to the utmost verge of future history. The end stands in contrast to the beginning. Sin began in man putting God off the throne of his heart and will; redemption ends in "God being all and in all." Again, we have seen how Israel was trained to the idea of an invisible King, and how all the national institutions of law, temple, monarchy, priesthood, were to be witnesses for Him, being pictures of an ideal state. In the shattering of the earthly symbolism and the advent of Christ, the training passed from the narrow limits of a nation to the whole world, and from external domain to inward and spiritual obedience. The true theocracy is reached when "the end comes," and "the kingdoms of the world have become the kingdom of the Lord." The advance of that kingdom of God is by the increasing recognition of the truth, the truth of God and the truth of humanity as in Christ, sin and evil passing away as the mind of Christ possesses the spirit of man. But in what sense can the kingdoms of the world become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ?
I. The kingdoms of the world are something more than the various political states empire, monarchy, or republic into which nationalities are divided. The true kingdoms of the world are the moral forces and interests which bear sway over human life. There are the kingdom of commerce, with its penetrating influences, the kingdom of science, with its vast interests, the kingdom of literature, of art, of public opinion, all of which govern in that inner sphere which gives shape to history and character to movements. When we weigh what these kingdoms are we can perceive the possibility of their becoming the kingdoms of the Lord without any arrestment of movement or any shock to the methods in which they now control society. Life need not be of the world, but "the pride of life" constitutes it worldly. If we take away "the lust" and "the pride," then "the eye," and "the flesh," and "life" remain, but purified and true parts of the kingdom of God.
II. From these hints we can imagine the kind of victory secured by the coming of the kingdom of God. Already we can see how the aspect of civilisation has been changed by the inward influence of the Christian spirit, as in the case of marriage, slavery, and a thousand cruelties that have passed away as the mist vanishes when the sun arises in its strength. Let us imagine the diffusive power of the heavenly leaven to have penetrated the entire "lump" of human interest. To believe in the possibility of such an end is itself ennobling. It is good for us even to hope that Christ will yet reign, not by the forceful putting down of all authority, but by winning the willing homage of every heart.
D. Macleod, Christ and Society,p. 107.
References: Revelation 11:15. J. Halsey, Christian World Pulpit,vol. xxxiii., p. 264.Revelation 11:19. Spurgeon, Sermons,vol. xxvii., No. 1621.Revelation 12:7. Ibid., Evening by Evening,p: 337. Revelation 12:7. H. S. Holland, Christian World Pulpit,vol. xxxvi., p. 209. Revelation 12:10. Expositor,1st series, vol. ii., p. 405.Revelation 12:11. Spurgeon, Sermons,vol. xxi., No. 1237; Preacher's Monthly,vol. vii., p. 77. Revelation 12:12. Spurgeon, Sermons,vol. xxv., No. 1502.