Thursday 14 November 2019

Heaven's Perspective on Martyrdom


A sermon given at Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
Remembrance Sunday 10 November 2019

Revelation 20.1-10
Daniel 7.9-14

Listen to this sermon here:

The capacity of humans to give their lives for something they believe in
            is both glorious and terrifying.

Jesus himself said,
            ‘No one has greater love than this,
            to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.’ (Jn15.13)

And the willingness of people to put their own lives at risk,
            or to knowingly pay the ultimate price,
for the love of their fellow humans,
            is quality that echoes the sacrificial death of Jesus on the cross.

This much is a glory of humanity.

But the other side of the coin:
            the person who dies to kill, to maim, and to scar,
                        the terrorist suicide bomber, for example,
            is as terrifying as the other example is glorious.

And so it is that today, on Remembrance Sunday,
            as we recall the sacrifices and victims of war,
we come to consider heaven’s perspective on martyrdom.

And as we do so we need to tease out something important
            in what we mean by martyrdom.

You see, I do not believe that the terrorist suicide bomber is a martyr.
            They may think that they are, and others may claim it of them,
            but I want to resist that label.

Martyrs are those who stand up for their beliefs
            to the point where others take their lives from them;
they are not those who take the lives of others
            in the pursuit of their cause.

When Liz and I are travelling, we enjoy visiting local churches,
            and particularly looking at the artwork on the walls
            and around the various altars and chapels.

And often we find that the devotional focus,
            particularly in Roman Catholic Churches, is an act of martyrdom.
So some saint is depicted holding his own severed head,
            or with her eyes on a plate,
indicating the manner of their martyrdom for the name of Christ.

Of course, martyrdom - giving one’s life for Christ,
            goes right back to the early years of Christianity;
think of the stoning of Stephen,
            or of Saul’s murderous campaign against the early Christians before his conversion.

As Christianity spread through the Roman Empire
            in the middle decades of the first century,
largely due to Paul’s post-persecution missionary activities,
            the Roman state quickly became the chief agent of Christian martyrdom.

Probably the most famous and notorious example
            is that of the Emperor Nero, who in 64, just thirty years after Jesus,
                        ordered Christians to be rounded up and torn apart by dogs,
                        or burnt alive to light his gardens at night.

It is almost certainly this persecution by Nero,
            and the ongoing sporadic martyrdoms that followed it,
which lie behind our reading this morning from the book of Revelation.

Now, I’m well aware that these ten verses
            are some of the most controversial in the whole of the Bible.
I once wrote a 70,000 word thesis on their interpretation,
            but I promise not to go through all of that this morning.

The word ‘millennium’ is one of those ‘hot topic’ catch-phrases
            which people often associate with the book of Revelation.

This is one of those words
            which has acquired something of a life of its own
            which has taken it far beyond the pages of the book where it started.

In contemporary culture, the ‘millennium’
            has come to mean a dawning thousand-year golden age,
            such as the ‘Age of Aquarius’ or even the ‘Third Reich’ of Nazi Germany.

For some Christians, the ‘coming millennium’
            is regarded as the key to understanding the whole book of Revelation,
            with endless discussions about whether Jesus will return to the earth
                        before or after the millennium.

But this morning I’m not going to talk at length about pre, post, or a millennialism.
            I’m not going to lecture on partial rapture dispensationalism.
                        and how this particular interpretation of these verses
                        can be seen as directly influencing Donald Trump’s withdrawal
                        from the Paris Climate Accord,
            because those Christians who are Trump’s power base
                        don’t believe that it is a human responsibility
                        to work for the good of creation.

Instead, I’m going to talk about how these verses
            address the pastoral problem of martyrdom.

After all, today is a day when we are remembering those
            who have paid the ultimate price for their beliefs.

Within the book of Revelation itself,
            the ‘thousand years’ of the millennium has a primarily pastoral function.

As we’ve seen, Revelation is written to those who have faced dreadful persecution,
            and who have heard stories or even personally witnessed
                        Christians being executed for their faith.


And the thing is, from the point of view
            of the first century recipients of the book of Revelation,
                        those attending the seven churches of Asia Minor,
            the death of a believer through martyrdom
                        would have appeared to be
                        the ultimate victory for the satanic beast of the empire.

However, John wants his readers to realize
            that when viewed from heaven’s perspective,
                        martyrdom is not a defeat but a victory,
and so he describes those who have been martyred
            for their testimony to Jesus
            as reigning with Christ for a ‘thousand years’ (20.4).

As we delve into this passage in a bit more depth now,
            I’d like us to keep clear in our minds that, as far as John is concerned,
                        this is an image of great comfort,
            it’s seeking to assure those reading it that when seen from above,
                        the martyrdom of the faithful believer
                        is the precise opposite of what it appears when seen from below.

An emperor might reign for a decade or two,
            but Christ reigns, and all the martyrs with him, for a thousand years!

I think it’s probably helpful at this stage to outline
            how the image of a ‘thousand years’ functions within the passage:

An angel comes from heaven and binds the dragon,
            throwing him into the pit and locking it over him,
and Satan is therefore unable to deceive the nations for a thousand years.

John then describes a judgement scene,
            with those seated on the thrones being given authority to judge,
                        and, without elaborating this any further,
            he moves on to depict those who have been beheaded
                        for their testimony to Jesus.

These martyrs are raised to life
            and reign with Christ for ‘a thousand years’.

Then, at the end of this millennium Satan is released,
            rampages on the earth for a while,
            and tries unsuccessfully to overpower the faithful saints.

Those who have followed Satan are then consumed by fire from heaven,
            and the Devil is thrown into the lake of fire for ever.

At this point the second resurrection and the final judgement take place.

I think this little cameo scene raises a number of questions for us,
            which if we can come to an answer to them,
            will help us better understand what John is doing here.

The first question is,

Question 1: Why a thousand years?

Is there any clue in the choice of this particular number
            that can aid our interpretation of the passage?

The two main biblical texts
            that provide the background to the thousand years are

Psalm 90.4: ‘For a thousand years in your sight are like yesterday when it is past, or like a watch in the night’,

and 2 Peter 3.8, ‘with the Lord one day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like one day.’

The passage from 2 Peter,
            which is in essence a kind of commentary on Ps. 90.4,
represents a strand of thought
            present within first century Judaism
whereby some believed that the course of the world’s history
            could be found paralleled in the seven days of creation.

By this understanding history would run
            for six thousand years from creation,
            and then would be followed by a thousand year sabbath age.

Some of you will have come across this in Christian teaching about the end times as well,
            and I can remember some wonderful charts
            dividing human history into six different ‘ages’
            all culminating in the thousand year period of glorious rest.

But what we can take from this
            is that John is drawing on an already established tradition in Judaism
                        of a thousand year golden age,
            when he speaks of the martyrs reigning with Christ for a millennium.

On to our next question

Question 2: Why is the last judgement split by the millennium?

The millennium passage separates the beginning of the last judgement (20.4)
            from its conclusion (20.11–15)

What it looks like John is doing here,
            is reworking the passage we had read earlier from the Book of Daniel (7.9–14)

Both Revelation and Daniel contain descriptions of
            thrones (Rev. 20.4; Dan. 7.9),
            open books (Rev. 20.10; Dan. 7.10),
            a beast that is destroyed (Rev. 19.11–21; Dan. 7.11–12),
            and a kingdom that is handed over to the ‘son of man’ (Rev. 20.4–6; Dan. 7.13–14).

What John does, however, is alter the ordering of these items
            from the way they appear in the book of Daniel
            in order to make a theological point.

And what John achieves by altering Daniel’s ordering is, in effect,
            a commentary on the final judgement.

John separates the initial stages of the final judgement from its conclusion,
            by inserting the millennium, the thousand year reign of the martyrs.
And this allows John to use the millennium
            as a metaphor for the vindication of the martyrs

What this means is that the millennium is not something
            that will be worked out in human history at all,
rather it is purely a theological and pastoral metaphor.

As we’ve seen, martyrdom forms a significant part of the backdrop
            to the book of Revelation.

John was writing to those who may have seen friends and family martyred,
            and who may have feared that they would face
            the possibility of martyrdom themselves.

Understood from an earthly perspective,
            the killing of a believer represents the ultimate triumph of evil over good,
but what John achieves in this passage
            is to convey the message that from a heavenly perspective,
at the very instant the beast creates martyrs by putting believers to death,
            the destruction of the beast and the vindication of the martyrs is assured.

The situation facing the recipients of Revelation is therefore utterly reversed.

If they go to their deaths for their faith,
            they do so demonstrating not the victory of the beast,
but rather as those whose witness through martyrdom
            will assure the destruction of the beast,
and as those who will themselves be vindicated.

The New Testament scholar Richard Bauckham comments:

This shows that the theological point of the millennium
            is solely to demonstrate the triumph of the martyrs:
that those whom the beast put to death
            are those who will truly live…
and that those who contested [the beast’s] right to rule and suffered for it
            are those who will in the end rule as universally as he
            - and for much longer: a thousand years![i]

In this way, the millennium functions as a kind of hyperbole,
            an overstatement for dramatic effect.

Within John’s visionary framework,
            it represents the period of time during which the beast is bound
            and during which the martyrs rule with Christ.

However, this is not to suggest that John intends it
            as predictive prophecy for the distant future,
or as being worked out in a temporal sense
            during the course of human history.

Rather, it is best understood as a metaphor
            for the scale and magnitude of the vindication
            of those who suffer and die for the kingdom of God.

So, on to our next question:

Question 3: Why is Satan released again after the millennium?

It’s weird, isn’t it?

Why is Satan let out of the pit again at the end of the thousand years,
            to make war on the saints,
before finally being destroyed a bit later in the story?

I think that, just like the image of the millennium,
            this also needs to be understood
                        in terms of John’s overriding pastoral concern
            to provide his recipients with a new perspective on martyrdom.

So in the same way that the millennium functions metaphorically,
            so too does the release of Satan.

These are both metaphors to help John’s readers
            understand the problem of martyrdom.

Those to whom John was writing
            were not only those who feared they might themselves face martyrdom,
            but those who had survived seeing their fellow Christians martyred.

In spite of John’s assurance that martyrdom was actually victory over the beast,
            their present experience was one
                        where evil continued to be experienced as rampant in the land.

It could appear to them
            that the victory of the martyrs was short-lived to say the least.

By depicting Satan rampant in the land again,
            even after the vindication of the martyrs,
and then showing his unsuccessful attempts
            to re-take the kingdom of the righteous,
John was providing assurance to his recipients
            that martyrdom was not in vain.

Satan is defeated even though he is still rampant in the land;
            his fate has been sealed by the victory of Christ
            and the evidence of the blood of the martyrs.[ii]

Which brings me to my final question:

Question 4: Where does John locate his audience within the narrative?

Throughout the book of Revelation,
            as we have seen in previous weeks,
John is constantly encouraging his readers to locate themselves within the text.

Those reading the work are invited not only
            to identify themselves as various characters within the narrative,
but also to find their circumstances reflected
            in the imagery that John constructs.

So John’s first audience could equate their own experiences
            of suffering and martyrdom
            with those of Jesus the slain Lamb,
while finding their hope of resurrection
            expressed through the continued existence of the Lamb on the throne.

Some of John’s audience may have found themselves
            suffering the betrayal of Maundy Thursday,
                        or the fear of Good Friday morning,
            or they may have seen others join Jesus on the cross
                        through suffering a martyrs death.

In its invitation to identify with Jesus,
            Revelation therefore encourages its readers
to interpret their own lives
            according to the lived example of Jesus himself,
            with the events of the cross becoming real in their lives.

A helpful way to understand John’s imagery
            of the millennium and the subsequent release of Satan
            is therefore to read it in the light of the crucifixion story.

Readers of Revelation are invited
            to locate themselves in the space of Easter Saturday,
                        awaiting resurrection and restoration,
            confidently hopeful,
                        but still living with the present pain of Friday’s grief and horror.

By this reading, the martyrs have departed the present life of suffering
            and gone to vindication (20.1–7),
and Satan’s hold on the world has been broken
            through the sacrificial deaths of both Jesus and the martyrs.

However, in the present experience of John’s audience,
            Satan is still loose in the world
            making war on the dwelling places of the saints.

In this way, the Easter weekend can be seen as a paradigm
            for reading the story of the Church as presented in our passage for this morning.

The following table expresses these correspondences:
 
 
 The interpretation of the millennium I’ve been offering here
            is based on an understanding of the millennium as a metaphor.

Few contemporary academic interpreters
            would claim to interpret the millennium literally
            so that it describes a period of exactly one thousand years,
                        when those martyred will be raised
                        to reign over the nations of the earth alongside Christ.

However, many interpreters who hold the millennium as symbolic
            continue to interpret it as a symbol of the outworking of God in history
                        in a temporal sense.

Many of the readings of the millennium
            that most of us have encountered in Church over the years
still take the sequence of events in the passage literally,
            even if the number one thousand is taken as symbolic,
and people end up assigning great importance
            to the precise order in which things occur.

Whilst on the one hand, people reject any expectation
            that the events described by John will really happen in history,
on the other hand they still treat the text as if John thinks he is describing events
            that will happen in history.

What I’ve been trying to do this morning
            is offer an interpretation of the millennium passage as a metaphor
            in order to avoid these difficulties.

Once it is accepted that John was consciously writing using metaphor,
            any compulsion to reconcile the temporal difficulties within the text is relieved,
and we are freed to concentrate on the theological meaning of the passage.

So I’m suggesting that John uses the metaphor of the millennium
            for a very specific function;
to provide his audience with the perspective they need
            to understand the relationship between martyrdom and victory in Christ.

Thus the millennium functions for John
            as a metaphor which provides a perspective
            on the very real human experience of martyrdom.

And one of the tragedies of the last two thousand years,
            is that again and again, the beast has continued to take the lives of the saints.

Down to this present day,
            people have suffered and died for their faith.

From the Christians being thrown to the lions
            in the amphitheatres of the Roman empire,

to the Anabaptist martyrs of the sixteenth century,
            to the – on average – eleven Christians who will be killed today for their faith.

The martyrdom of the faithful is real,
            and the power of the beast is not yet ended in our world.

We live in the shadow of the cross,
            and the beast stalks our world, taking victims wherever it can.

So, I would suggest,
            the message of Revelation that death is not the end,
                        that death is not defeat,
            is a message we need to hear and proclaim and live into being in our lives.

The martyrs are not lost to God,
            they reign with Christ.
And every unjust death of martyr and victim
            is another nail in the eternal coffin of the beast.

So today, on Remembrance Sunday,
            as we remember the victims of war,
            and the sacrifices made by so many,
let us not despair,
            but rather let us rejoice
            that God holds the innocent in an eternal embrace of love.

And let us pray for an end to violence in our world.
 Let us pray that God's peaceable kingdom comes on earth,
  as it is in heaven.

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