A New Heaven and a New Earth: 40 Practical Insights from John’s Book of Revelation: Dear Theophilus Bible Study Series, #8
By Peter DeHaan
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About this ebook
Gain insight into one of the most intriguing books of the Bible: Revelation
The end times. The second coming. When Jesus returns. No matter how you refer to the last book of the Bible, Revelation is an epic battle between good and evil. Through evocative imagery that sparks our imagination, the final book in the New Testament can both intrigue and confuse believers.
Stop spinning your wheels, trying to unlock the secret code of what might happen when, how, and where.
A New Heaven and a New Earth: 40 Practical Insights from John's Book of Revelation will help you read Revelation and study it with the goal of applying it to your life today. Even if you've been in church your whole life, it will inspire you to hope in Christ's return and the establishment of a new heaven and earth.
Through forty daily readings, you'll discover how Revelation can best inform what we do, think, and believe today. A combination of Bible study teaching through a devotional style, you'll discover practical and understandable insights you can apply to your life and spiritual journey right now.
In this Bible study devotional on Revelation, you'll:
- gain a fresh approach to the book of Revelation
- explore how to apply it to your life in meaningful ways
- gain a broader and more impactful view of John's Revelation
- hold on to hope that good will triumph over evil in the end
- trust in a God who holds the past, present, and future in his hands
Join Peter DeHaan, a lifetime student of the Bible and founder of the A Bible a Day website, in this study on Revelation that will teach and encourage you. Through forty daily insights, you'll gain practical application about the final book of the Bible and feel more confident in your understanding of this often-confusing book.
Through short readings, application questions, and additional biblical references, you'll receive hope and assurance that God is in control over every future event. This book is ideal for individuals, small groups, and Bible studies.
If you've ever wondered how Revelation can apply to your life, then start with A New Heaven and a New Earth to discover what God's final words can teach you.
Get your copy today.
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A New Heaven and a New Earth - Peter DeHaan
The Book of Revelation
When I ask people what book of the Bible they’d like to understand better, the most frequent response is Revelation. I get that. John’s future-focused vision recorded in the book of Revelation overflows with evocative imagery that sparks our imagination even as we struggle to make sense of it.
Revelation is an intriguing prophecy, full of fascinating allusions, overflowing with enigma. What does it mean? When will it happen?
Many people have invested time—perhaps too much time—attempting to interpret the uncertainty of John’s epic vision. Even with their best work, it’s as if we see into the mirror dimly (1 Corinthians 13:12).
Additionally, each person who tries to explain this vision often piles on additional complexity to an already complicated narrative. Too often, I fear, in a pursuit of clarity they end up connecting dots that may not relate.
We should not strive to make Revelation into something it’s not. It’s not a precise cipher detailing what will happen in the future. We also shouldn’t try to link John’s compelling narrative with real people, places, or events. Instead, we should understand Revelation as the glorious mystery it is, embracing one essential, concluding idea: In the end God will prevail, vanquishing the enemy permanently and living for eternity with his purified bride, the Church of Jesus.
The goal of this book is to take a fresh approach. Read on to find out what to expect and what not to expect in this book. As you move forward, my prayer is that you will walk away with practical and understandable insights that you can apply to your life and spiritual journey today.
To begin, let’s consider the three basic options we could take to explore the book of Revelation.
A Future Look
The apostle John’s vision as recorded in the book of Revelation is a future-focused glimpse into what will one day be. The most common investigation into Revelation examines this prophetic future and attempts to explain it.
If you’re someone who wants a detailed treatise on what the end times will look like, I’m about to disappoint you.
Here is the essential summary, the key takeaway concerning the future, from the book of Revelation:
At the end of time, we will see an epic battle between good and evil.
God wins.
The end.
The details don’t matter to us today. Not really. Here’s why.
First, let’s consider prophecies in the Old Testament, which anticipated Jesus, the coming Messiah who would save God’s people. Though today we can read the Old Testament text with clarity and understand what the prophecies predicted, most people in Jesus’s day got it wrong. Even his disciples were slow to catch on (Luke 24:25).
Two thousand years ago, most everyone’s understanding of the prophets was to expect a military savior who would free the people from the tyranny of an oppressing ruling nation (John 12:13). Few people expected a spiritual savior who would free them from the tyranny of sin (Matthew 1:21 and 1 Timothy 1:15).
The people of that day had much less information to deal with than we do now, whereas we have a multitude of narratives and conflicting views constantly bombarding us. If they were confused then—in a simpler time—how much more likely are we to face confusion and make a wrong assessment of John’s New Testament prophecy?
Next, Jesus says that no one will know when the end will happen. Yet many attempt to use Revelation as a primer to unlock the code that will reveal exactly what Jesus said is unknown (Matthew 24:36, Mark 13:32, and Revelation 3:3). Paul and Peter agree with Jesus (1 Thessalonians 5:1–3 and 2 Peter 3:10).
Third, many people think we’re currently living in the last times and that the end is near. Yet Jesus’s followers thought the same thing two millennia ago (1 Peter 4:7). Every generation, I suspect, has voiced this same perspective ever since. As such, I don’t think the end is near. I don’t expect to be around for these end time events (Matthew 24:6, Mark 13:7, and Luke 21:9).
Last, even if we did correctly interpret John’s vision of what will be, what difference would it make? What will happen will happen. And if we are here when it happens, there’s nothing we can do about it but remain faithful to Jesus and seek his strength to stand up under what will occur at that time.
A Past Look
The second basic approach to take in understanding the book of Revelation is to apply its narrative to the culture of that day. That is to take John’s imagery from his vision and connect it with the events from the perspective of life 2,000 years ago.
Though this makes for a most interesting excursion, what effect would this new knowledge have on how we live our life today? Though we’d know more, we’d only be amassing knowledge and not informing our actions and our attitudes to affect our faith journey. Jesus wants changed hearts, not changed minds.
Another weakness of this approach is that we must rely on historical accounts of the past to enlighten us on that day’s correlation with the imagery of John’s vision. The items we connect will be only as accurate as the version of history we choose to consider. Just as historical accounts disagree, any conclusions we make would diverge.
To put this in a more practical perspective, how often have we heard a preacher explain the historical context surrounding a passage of Scripture? The explanation illuminates our understanding (our knowledge), but later another teacher offers a different—and sometimes conflicting—historical perspective. Therefore, connecting Scripture with history is only as valuable as the accuracy of the historical account we follow.
This effort can produce a most intellectually satisfying result, but we can expect little more from it.
A Present Look
The third approach we can take to the book of Revelation is to explore the ways that we can apply it to our lives today. Though taking a future look or a past glance have their intellectual rewards, we can benefit most by seeking how Revelation can best inform what we do, think, and believe today.
That’s the goal of this book.
In doing so, we will not ignore the essential future-focused message and the hope it provides, but we will do so only to the extent that it illuminates our understanding today.
What do you think about the concise, three-line summary of the book of Revelation? How willing are you to look at the book of Revelation from a fresh perspective?
[Discover more about how to embrace the book of Revelation in 2 Timothy 3:16.]
1: The Revelation of Jesus
Revelation 1:1–3
The revelation from Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show his servants what must soon take place. (Revelation 1:1)
We think of the book of Revelation as John’s revelation, but, in fact, it is Jesus’s. John is only the recipient. This revelation comes from Jesus. Father God gave it to him. Jesus shares this revelation with John through a supernatural vision as the apostle communes with God in the spiritual realm (Revelation 1:10).
An angel shows up in John’s vision to reveal Jesus’s revelation. The intent of the vision—that is, the revelation—is to show John what will soon take place.
As we comprehend time, we can easily conclude that soon has already occurred, since we are now 2,000 years distant from John’s recording of these words. Yet we must acknowledge that God views time differently than we do. A thousand years to us are but a day to him and a day to us may be a thousand years to him (Psalm 90:4 and 2 Peter 3:8).
So when we read John’s words that the time is near, this shouldn’t perplex us. If we literally equate 2,000 years of our time to two days for God, then we are but two