The Seven Trumpets of Revelation

 

Chapter 17

Being Chosen –

That’s What It’s All About

 

“And I will give [power] unto my two witnesses, and they shall prophesy a thousand two hundred [and] threescore days, clothed in sackcloth” (Revelation 11:3).

It is interesting that in the previous verse it notes that the outer court had been given to the Gentiles. The apostate church, the wicked, those hurting God’s people (i.e., the red and pale horses of the second and fourth Seals), within an end-time setting, are those “Gentiles.” Since it is attached to the temple as one of its courtyards, they claim to be God’s people. They are Christian in name, but God gives or assigns the outer court – not part of the true work going on within the temple – to that people. Later in Revelation, that group will be called by the name “Babylon!”

Here in verse 3 God “gives” again. But now a beautiful and endearing contrast is portrayed: “I will give” (doso) power to “my” witnesses. This expression is made in strong and emphatic language – as if to say, “You’re going to persecute my people for three and a half years? I’ll give them special power for three and a half years!”

I’m awed and really want that kind of God, don’t you? He is permitting sin to reveal its true colors in this very end-time setting, but His special attention is on those loyal to Him – His two witnesses. Though He permits persecution and even martyrdom, He will soon come and remove them from this terrible world. His temple people, in spite of what they are going through, still speak or prophesy for Him. That’s the focus of the next several verses. They bravely represent the Daniel prophecy from that little open book!

Jesus notes that He has two witnesses. Why two? The Jewish theocracy required two witnesses to validate any testimony (Deuteronomy 17:6, 19:15; Numbers 35:30; cf. Hebrews 10:28). That represented a legal metaphor within a spiritual setting. Most fascinating is the tie this has to a similar legal/spiritual setting in, yes, Daniel. It is in the area of the “little book.”

Gabriel had asked when the end-time issues of sin and rebellion of the Daniel 8 little horn would happen (Daniel 8:13). Jesus, in His first personal appearance to Daniel, said that holiness would be vindicated or even be adjudicated after 2300 atonement years (Daniel 8:14). Contextually, only a part of Gabriel’s questions were answered. In Daniel 12 the rest of his queries were answered, including a new question by Daniel when he asked when the deliverance of God’s people and special resurrection would occur. Jesus, in a third appearance to Daniel, said at the end of “time times and half [time]” (three and a half years)!

Verses 2 and 3 here in Revelation present an end-time three and a half year period which, again, Daniel called the “appointed time” (cf. Habakkuk 2:2-3). They are all the same time period! As we saw in our discussion of the tenth chapter, that little open book was that unsealed portion of Daniel. It is that message that is to go to the world by the two witnesses.

What makes it a legal matter? A courtroom drama is underway. The hour of judgment of the living has come [first angel’s message (Revelation 14:6-7), especially over the Sabbath issue]. That is the meaning of measuring the temple (Revelation 11:1). God has given a time limit for these legal proceedings to be completed. Satan and his representatives are trying to hurt their case by persecuting and tampering with God’s witnesses. We know that will not set well with the Judge.

Part of the little book of Daniel involves the Sabbath (related to the daily) and a false Sabbath (the abomination and transgression). Jesus’ declaration in 10:6 that time would no longer be delayed had Sabbath language within its context. All these amazing links tell us, unequivocally, that when the three and a half years begin, the pivotal issue will be over the Sabbath. In 10:6 Jesus is decreeing, “Let that time period begin.”

The second angel’s message declares that Babylon is fallen (a carry-through issue from Daniel 8). That coincides with the Gentiles in the outer court theme here! The third angel’s message in Revelation 14 ties to the legal covenant theme of Daniel 8–12 – but it begins by a “woe” on all who identify with the false Sabbath – a “mark” of the beast.

The Sabbath recalls the Creator and His creation. But – after sin came it also represented deliverance and rest from sin. This was embellished in a broader view of the Ten Commandments presented in Deuteronomy 5. Now we can see as never before the incredible links throughout Scripture, all pointing to the great restoration that comes in God’s redemptive plan right at the end of that three and a half year appointed time.

In this wonderful prophetic book, Jesus is introduced as the model “witness,” called a “faithful witness” (1:5, 3:14). Then the church is seen as a persevering witness (6:9, 12:11, 17:6, 20:4), bearing the “testimony of Jesus.” Intriguingly, John earlier talked of a forensic ministry of the Spirit (John 16:8-11) that especially ties with all these end-time judicial issues unfolding in this apocalyptic setting.

Because the persecution and witnessing is for three and a half years, it is not a long interim legal message between the two Advents of 1260 years plus. It is final-period history when the antichrist, the beast and its harlot rider will “conquer” the church (13:7) – and then be “conquered” by the church (12:11).

The witnesses are to “prophesy” with the most important message ever given to mortals. It contains the everlasting gospel, the three angels’ themes and very specifically what is in the “little scroll.” That contains a timing message that explicitly states that probation will be closed within three and a half years – forever. No mortal voice will have been asked to notify the world of a more solemn message than this. That is why they are clothed in sackcloth! Elijah (II Kings 1:8) and John the Baptist (Mark 1:6) did the same when mourning for the sin of the nation and anticipating the judgment that was pending (cf. Joel 1:8, Amos 8:10). No wonder that right after the close of probation the sun turns “black like sackcloth” (Revelation 6:12). There is then no more light that will ever shine on the rebellious world again. Sackcloth also is symbolic for being sorrowful for sin [I Chronicles 21:16, Jonah 3:5-9, Matthew 11:21 (cf. Isaiah 3:24, 22:12; Jeremiah 4:8, 6:26)].

This imagery draws on the spirit of those who are sealed in Ezekiel 8:4, who sigh and cry over the sins of the people. Drawing all the Scriptural themes of sackcloth together, it is clear that these two witnesses are fearless, calling all to repentance and addressing the sin issue among God’s people.

Who are these two witnesses? Scholars with profound insight into the symbolic imagery of Revelation 10 and 11 so often revert to literalism,  assigning these two especially as the returned men, Moses and Elijah. We will explore in greater detail its meaning, beginning with the next verse.

 

 


Endtime Issues June 2006 - EndtimeIssues.com