Caveat again: Dr. Hahn is a Catholic convert. His views, and my own, are colored by the Catholic Church. If I thought these view were totally without merit for non-Catholic readers, I wouldn't publish this in the way I have. Still, you'll see how my Catholic faith impacts my view, and that's fine by me.
THE IMPORTANT PARTS
I first of all want to stress that most people who espouse the three views I illustrated in the last post miss out a bit on the important parts of Revelation:
A) The promise of salvation - see a lot of this book, but specifically Chapter 7: verses 9 through 17; Chapter 21, verses 1 through 5, Chapter 22, verses 4 and 5
B) Descriptions of the Worship that goes on in Heaven - again, this is all over the book, but here's a few spots: Chapter 4, verses 7 though 11; Chapter 5, verses 11 through 14; Chapter 7, verses 9 through 14; Chapter 19: verses 4 through 9
C) Final equality of all in Heaven - One very telling passage (note: this does not say that Saints can't intercede for people on Earth, only that, in Heaven, God is the ONLY subject of adoration) - Chapter 19, verse 10 - "At this I fell at his feet to worship him. But he said to me, "Do not do it! I am a fellow servant with you and with your brothers who hold to the testimony of Jesus. Worship God! For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy."("him" in the passage is the angel showing him the vision).
MY VIEW, BASICALLY
My view is simply that the book of Revelation is both forward-looking (t0 the final coming of Jesus) and fulfilled in ancient times. These are not contradictory, because many things in history are cyclical, but Jesus has not yet returned in manifest glory.
Right in the Beginning of the book, Saint John tells you that Jesus' coming will be obvious. We WILL know when the Second Coming Happens. - Ch 1, Verse 7 -
"Look, he is coming with the clouds,
and every eye will see him,
even those who pierced him;
and all the peoples of the earth will mourn because of him. So shall it be! Amen."
and every eye will see him,
even those who pierced him;
and all the peoples of the earth will mourn because of him. So shall it be! Amen."
We need to understand that there is still something unfulfilled in our time from this vision.
We need also to understand that much of the book was really a commentary on the times John lived in. Because he could not explicitly critique Rome from captivity, he used coded language educated Jews could understand.
Examples:
The number of the beast: Note what Saint John says - "This calls for wisdom. If anyone has insight, let him calculate the number of the beast, for it is man's number. His number is 666." (Ch 13, verse 18)
1) "This calls for wisdom" - This is a CODE
2) "If anyone has insight, let me calculate the number of the beast, for it is man's number." - This code is calling out a SPECIFIC PERSON, and it's something you the reader in the know (familiar with the Hebrew system of correspondence between numbers and letters, as well as how that would translate to Greek, the language this book is written in) can figure out
3) "His number is 666" - Scholars a lot smarter than me believe that Emperor Nero's name is the coded person.
I will also point out the double meaning here. 6 is the number before 7. Seven is a complete number in the Old Testament (again, pointing to the fact that the people who are referenced as the audience here should know SOMETHING about the Old Testament). There are seven days in a week, and the Seventh Day (The Sabbath) is the Holy Day. Six is incomplete. Tripling some value is a kind of hyperbole that is common in the Bible; if you want to make something REALLY one way, you make the number large. So, the Beast is REALLY incomplete, REALLY far from God. In Saint John of Patmos' world, the farthest thing from God, the thing that stands in God's way the most, is the Roman Empire.
The Beast of the Sea - (CH 13) - A military power, with control of the Sea (the Mediterranean WAS the Sea for the Hebrews) - Guess who? Yep, Rome. Note the message of perseverance and the warning to NOT try and resist militarily (remember the terrible suffering of the Jews who made their last stand at Masada?). See verses 9 and 10.
The obvious, big tell that Saint John means Rome - (CH 17) verse 9, describing the woman who consorts with the Beast - "This calls for a mind with wisdom. The seven heads are seven hills on which the woman sits."
Again, "This calls for wisdom" - I am writing in code
"The seven heads are seven hills on which the woman sits." The Beast's seven heads, where the woman sits, is, yep, Rome. Rome is famous for sitting in ancient times on seven hills.
BACK TO THE IMPORTANT PARTS
All that aside, the important parts of Revelation that most gloss over in their haste to interpret signs are REALLY important. These are not only the reflections of our future, not just a historical glimpse into early Christianity, but they are also guides to our worship NOW.
In The Lamb's Supper, Dr. Hahn explicitly lays out how the practice of the Catholic Mass mirrors the worship in Revelation. While I understand non-Catholics will not be familiar with the Mass, trust me, a lot of the passages above are directly incorporated or referenced in ceremony in the Mass.
Now, if you're not Catholic, how does all this part about the worship in Heaven apply to you? To be frank, the SAME WAY. While you may not agree, I believe we Christians are ALL called to mirror the vision of Heavenly worship. I go so far as to think that the mirror of Heavenly worship is the real revealed thing in Revelation.
Do you have to use the same words? No. In my next post, about literalism in Biblical interpretation, I'll lay out why. What is important is that you capture the SPIRIT of Revelation in your worship. Biblical scholars can spell that out far better than I ever could.

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