Location: Silver Lake Wesleyan Camp
Text: Revelation 11:1-13
Introduction
- The end times teaching of my childhood and 1990s: A Thief in the Night, Left Behind. These do not reflect what most Bible scholars actually think the Bible teaches exactly.
- I approach Revelation 11 with fear and trembling. But if I have it wrong, the message can be supported from elsewhere in Scripture. We preach from the whole Bible despite uncertainty of interpretation.
I. We are the temple.
- Is it the temple of John's day? Is it some end times rebuilt temple? Or does it symbolize something else?
- Most date Revelation to a time after John's temple. The idea of a future rebuilt temple is biblically dubious and theologically problematic (cf. Hebrews and Revelation 21:22).
- Down south, there seems a fair amount of conflating of modern Israel with Christianity when modern Israel is not Christian, and there are far more Palestinian Christians than Israeli ones. Of course we love people of every nation, tribe, and tongue.
- Clue in Revelation 12:6 -- The woman is the true Israel, the church. She has fled to the wilderness (cf. Mark 13:14) after her son (Jesus) was snatched away to God's throne. The 3.5 years in Revelation thus refers to the "church age."
- The temple is measured, protected. But the court outside is trampled by the Gentiles for 42 months, the church age.
- What does this mean? It means that we are the temple. Cf. 1 Cor. 3:16.
- A key to Revelation is that this current age is both the tribulation and the millennium, both at the same time, the best of times and the worst of times.
- We are marked, measured by God. But our courts are trampled by the world.
- When times are good, it's easy to forget that we are not of the world, that we are citizens of a heavenly country (Phil. 3:20). Some down south have forgotten the distinction, confusing the two. Let me warn you here in Canada if you should ever find Christians trying to take over your government for Christ.
- Remember who you are. Illustration of time I was around people whose values overlapped significantly with me but still were of a different belief. I constantly reminded myself. "I don't really belong."
- That's how we ultimately are in the world. The world will trample, but we are marked by God.
II. We are the witnesses.
- Who are the witnesses? Two people from John's day? Two people from the end times? Or do they symbolize something else?
- 11:6 seems a fairly clear allusion to Elijah and Moses. Meanwhile, the mention of the two olive trees makes us think of Joshua and Zerubbabel (Zech. 4). Once again, we have tribulation and millennium.
- Moses and Elijah are the Law and Prophets, witnesses to the world. Joshua and Zerubbabel represent the rebuilt "temple" and the new covenant. For "3.5 days" they witness.
- Once again, this is the church in this current age. In other words, they are us.
- We are the witnesses. 1 Peter 3:15. Although this is often cited as a basis for argumentative apologetics, the context of 1 Peter is much more one of "exile" and persecution. We give witness when we are on trial (tribulation).
- The two witnesses face a double whammy. The beast (Rome) kills them in "the great city" (Jerusalem). Jerusalem is "Sodom and Gomorrah." What a twisted situation. Jerusalem should have been faithful but wasn't. Rome trampled on them.
- Reminds me of Jurassic World. They're being chased by one dinosaur. Then comes a T-Rex.
- It seems inevitable that the institutional church will fail us like Jerusalem failed God.
III. We are the vindicated
- The passage ends with the resurrection of the two witnesses after 3.5 days, after the tribulation, after the church age. So we will be vindicated. So there will be judgment.
- Vindication comes through the cross, not around it.
- Revenge is not the goal, although there are consequences in judgment on the world and "Jerusalem."
- It is a corporate vindication. There will be justice in the end. "Rome" will be judged.
Conclusion
- We are a "peculiar people" (T-shirts from my childhood youth group, 1 Pet. 2:9, KJV).
- Revelation 11 is about now. We are in a time when Christ has begun to reign. Yet we are in a time when we may face tribulation.
- Remember who you are. We are a faithful witness. In this life we may be trampled on, but God wins in the end.

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